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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65897 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65897)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII, No. 369,
-January 22, 1887, 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: The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII, No. 369, January 22, 1887
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: July 22, 2021 [eBook #65897]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER, VOL. VIII,
-NO. 369, JANUARY 22, 1887 ***
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE GIRL’S OWN PAPER]
-
-VOL. VIII.—NO. 369.] JANUARY 22, 1887. [PRICE ONE PENNY.
-
-
-
-
-CARMEN SYLVA, POETESS AND QUEEN.
-
-BY THE REV. JOHN KELLY, Translator of “Hymns of the Present Century.”
-
-[Illustration: THE QUEEN OF ROUMANIA (“CARMEN SYLVA”).]
-
-_All rights reserved._]
-
-
-PART I.
-
- Carmen the song and Sylva the wood,
- Join them together, the wood-song is heard;
- If in the woods I had not been born,
- Ne’er should I sing a song night or morn.
- I’ve often learnt from the melody
- Of birds, and woods have whispered to me,
- While my heart beat time within my breast,
- And wood and song have sung me to rest.
-
-Such, roughly rendered, is the explanation that the gifted and
-distinguished authoress gives of the _nom de plume_ which she has
-assumed. In the last line there is a reference to the woodland
-castle—Mon Repos, or My Rest—where she passed her youth.
-
-Her father was Hermann, Prince of Wied, a cultivated and thoughtful
-man, fond of philosophical speculation, and a writer on topics
-connected with his favourite studies. Her mother was Princess Maria
-of Nassau, who is described as “a woman of great beauty and true
-elevation of soul, of strong will, keen understanding, self-sacrificing
-spirit and indefatigable activity, inexorably strict with reference to
-herself, but overflowing with kindness and consideration towards all
-with whom she is brought in contact.”[1]
-
-Elizabeth, the subject of our sketch, now the Queen of Roumania, was
-born on the 29th of December, 1843. As a child, she was impetuous in
-temper, reserved and resolute in disposition, and unbending in will.
-Her imagination was very lively. In her fourth year she was placed
-under the charge of a governess to receive regular instruction. Up to
-that time her mother had been her sole teacher. She was so lively that
-she suffered physical torture if she had to sit quite quiet. Once,
-when she was sitting for her portrait, along with her younger brother,
-Prince William, she resolved to keep still. Hardly had she done so for
-five minutes before she suddenly fell off her chair in a fainting fit.
-Her mother’s former governess, Fraülein Lavater, who came to Mon Repos
-for some months every year, was the only one who could tranquilise her.
-
-Very early Princess Elizabeth displayed a charitable and sympathetic
-disposition. She used to accompany her mother on visits to the poor,
-and thus she became acquainted with their needs. She would give away
-whatever she could dispense with; yet she was not destitute of sound
-practical sense. One day her mother gave her a large piece of woollen
-stuff. The little Princess was overjoyed, and exclaimed—
-
-“Now I can give away all my clothes!”
-
-“Had you not better give the woollen stuff to the poor children?” said
-her mother; “your white clothes would be of less use to them than the
-coarse stuff.” It was a new thought to the child, and she at once
-perceived the reasonableness of the suggestion, and acted on it.
-
-In November, 1850, her youngest brother Otto was born. He was
-afflicted with an organic malady, and in order to procure the best
-professional advice, the family went to Bonn in the spring of 1851.
-Many distinguished men—artists and _savans_—gathered around the
-princely family. Among others the patriot-poet, Ernst Moritz Arndt,
-then eighty-two years old, was a daily visitor. He read his patriotic
-songs to them. The Princess Elizabeth sat upon his knees while he did
-so, and listened with rapt attention and flushed cheeks. Many a time
-the venerable poet placed his hands upon her head and explained to her
-the beautiful name which she bore. “Elizabeth,” he said, “signifies
-‘God is rest.’”
-
-The present Crown Prince of Germany, then a student of Bonn, was also a
-frequent visitor.
-
-It was at this time that the future Queen first saw Roumanians. They
-were the brothers Stourdza, who were then studying at the University.
-
-Princess Elizabeth for a long time cherished the wish to sit on the
-form in the school with the village children. One morning, bursting
-into the room where her mother was much occupied, she asked if she
-might go with some farm children to the school. The Princess Maria
-did not hear the question, but nodded kindly to the child. Princess
-Elizabeth, taking this sign for permission, rushed off to the
-neighbouring farmhouse. There she heard that the children had already
-gone to school. She followed them quickly, and entered the schoolroom
-while the singing lesson was going on. The teacher was highly flattered
-when he saw the Princess standing at a form, and quite happily joining
-with full voice in the singing. The farmers’ little daughters, who had
-some notion of Court etiquette, regarded it as quite unseemly that
-the daughter of a Prince should join with such a very loud voice in
-singing with the village children! As soon as the Princess’s voice was
-heard above the voices of the other children, the girl next her put her
-hand on her mouth, and sought to impress upon her Serene Highness the
-impropriety of her position.
-
-Meanwhile the greatest consternation was felt at the Castle on account
-of the disappearance of the Princess Elizabeth. Servants were sent
-out in all directions. For a long time they searched the neighbouring
-beechwoods and surrounding villages in vain. At last they found the
-little Princess, full of delight with her exploit, in the village
-school of Rodenbach. The missing child was carried back to the Castle,
-and confinement to her room for the rest of the day was the issue of
-the morning’s exploit.
-
-She was a born ruler of others. In playing with children of her own
-age, whether of her own or of peasant rank, her ascendancy was at once
-acknowledged and yielded to. She was the ringleader in the wildest
-games. The fantastic ideas which came into her head, and on which she
-acted, overmastered her for the time. They were realities to her.
-
-Her literary genius was early developed. She composed occasional
-pieces when she was nine and ten years old. At twelve years of age
-she attempted to write a novel. At fourteen she had invented dramas
-and tragedies. The more terrible the scenes were, the better was she
-pleased. Morning and night she was devising stories. She was subject
-to alternations of high spirits and depression, and total lack of
-self-confidence. She would be tormented by the idea that she was
-disagreeable and insupportable to everyone. “I could not help it,” she
-confesses; “I could not be gentle, I could only be impetuous. I was
-heartily thankful to all who had patience with me. I was better when
-the safety-valve of writing poetry was opened to me.”
-
-In order to moderate the exuberance of her feelings, her mother took
-her at every opportunity to scenes where she might be deeply impressed
-by the realities of life. She was present at many a sick and death
-bed. Her brother’s case familiarised her with the sufferings that
-many have to endure. The first deathbed at which she was present was
-her grandmother’s, the Duchess of Nassau’s. It made an ineffaceable
-impression upon her. The sight of the body excited no terror in her
-mind. Her thoughts went beyond death. She hastened to the garden. The
-roses were in full bloom. She gathered the most beautiful, and returned
-with them to the chamber of death, and decorated the bed and the room
-with them. Her conception of death was poetical. Her mother had taught
-her to take a bright view of it.
-
-Brought up by her mother in the fear of God, her first visit to church
-was a memorable occasion to her. Henceforward the Sundays and holydays
-were the bright spots in her life. With devout attention she followed
-the course of the service, and was deeply impressed by the exposition
-of Holy Scripture. She meditated on what she heard for days, and often
-wrote down the sermons.
-
-At the end of six years her governess, Miss Jossé, who discharged her
-difficult duties with great fidelity and zeal, left Neuwied, and the
-Princess was placed under the care of a tutor, Mr. Sauerwein. On his
-arrival at the Castle the Princess Maria received him with the words:
-“You are getting a little spirit of contradiction for your pupil. She
-has no traditional faith. Her first questions always are, ‘why?’ and
-‘is it true?’”
-
-Mr. Sauerwein was a distinguished linguist; had resided a long time
-in England, and was an enthusiast for that country, its history and
-institutions. He gave all his lessons in the English language. Latin
-and Italian were translated into English. The Princess read Ovid,
-Horace, and parts of Cicero with him, and wrote Latin, English, and
-Italian exercises. She also learnt arithmetic and geometry. Lessons
-in physical science she took along with a companion and most intimate
-friend, Maria von Bibra. She was taught French by a Parisian lady,
-and in the evening after tea read the old chroniclers, as well as
-the dramatists. Schiller and other German classics were studied. At
-fifteen she took a keen interest in politics, and was a diligent reader
-of newspapers. From a very early period she had a great fondness
-for legends and folklore. “I would throw away,” she says, “the most
-beautiful history, or even comparative grammar, to the study of which I
-was passionately devoted, into a corner, for a little legend.”
-
-Romances were forbidden till she was nineteen years of age. Then she
-was permitted to read “Ivanhoe” and others. Everything that was likely
-to excite her too lively imagination was purposely withheld from her.
-
-At the beautifully situated Castle of Mon Repos, with its fine view
-of the Rhine and its splendid beechwoods, the Princess Elizabeth was
-in her element. She delighted to roam in the woods in the stormiest
-weather, when it was raining in torrents or snowing heavily. The house
-was too strait for her, and she would go forth, accompanied by three
-dogs of St. Bernard, to enjoy the battle of the elements. In autumn,
-when the yellow leaves lay in heaps on the ground, she would wander for
-hours, listening to the rustling of the leaves. Every leaf, blade of
-grass, bird, and flower—every sunbeam that lighted upon the landscape,
-had a meaning for her. She would return home with her head full of
-poetical ideas, which she would write down. These poetical effusions
-tranquillised her mind. No one knew anything of them. She kept them a
-profound secret. Her mother wisely concluded that the best thing to do
-was to let her take her own way. The Prince used to say, when she was
-determined to have her own way, “We must not compel people for their
-own happiness; we must allow them to attain to insight.”
-
-At sixteen years of age the Princess began to write all her poems
-regularly in a book. She put all her thoughts and feelings into verse,
-which from henceforward formed her diary. Until she was thirty years
-of age she knew nothing of the technical part of the art of poetry. A
-time came, however, when she thought she ought to despise poetry, and
-when she threw herself with all her might into the study of music. She
-got into such a nervous condition, however, that her mother had to
-forbid her playing the piano for two years. Then she took to her pencil
-and painting. This failed to satisfy her, and she despaired of her
-abilities, and believed that she would never attain the ideal at which
-she aimed.
-
-All who knew the Princess at this time retain a vivid impression of
-her vivacity and grace, of her slender figure, fresh complexion, her
-luxuriant dark brown hair, and large blue eyes, which looked as if
-they would penetrate and search the very soul. Without being exactly
-beautiful, the intellectual refinement of her features made her
-countenance very attractive. From her surroundings she was called
-Princess Wood-rose.
-
-When governesses and tutor had left the Castle, Pastor Harder, the
-Mennonite Baptist preacher from Neuwied, came every day to teach the
-Princess logic, history, and church history. She profited much from
-her intercourse with him. She could open her heart freely to him on
-subjects on which she exercised the strictest reserve with everyone
-else. His preaching went to her heart. Her poetical diary contains many
-entries written after the services.
-
-In 1860 she was confirmed, after being prepared for the rite by the
-Ecclesiastical Councillor Dilthey, in presence of all her sponsors, the
-nearest relatives of the houses of Wied and Nassau, and the present
-Empress of Germany, at that time Princess of Prussia.
-
-Times of sore trial came to her. Her father was always ill. The
-sufferings of her little invalid brother increased, and her mother was
-absorbed by anxious duties. During her brother’s illness, to whom her
-mother wholly devoted herself, the Princess was thrown much into the
-society of her father. She worked with him, copied for him, and read
-to him. He would discuss with her the questions on which he wrote.
-The intelligence and receptivity of his daughter delighted him. The
-house was, however, too quiet for the lively girl. It was therefore
-decided that the invitation of Queen Augusta should be accepted, and
-that Fraülein Lavater should accompany her to Berlin. She found it
-difficult to keep within the bounds of Court etiquette, and converse in
-a becoming manner. She felt most at home in the family of the Princess
-of Hohenzollern, who passed the winter in Berlin.
-
-It was at this time she first met her future husband, then Prince
-Charles of Hohenzollern. The story is told that one day as she,
-according to her custom, was bounding quickly down the stairs in the
-Castle, she slipped on the last steps, and was prevented from falling
-by Prince Charles, who caught her in his arms.
-
-Soon after her return home the cases of her brother and father were
-pronounced to be hopeless. Prince Otto’s sufferings increased from
-month to month. His mother sought to prepare him for his end by
-pointing him to Christ and heaven. In January, 1862, Prince Hermann
-was unable to leave his bed. Princess Elizabeth nursed her father,
-while her mother was incessant in her attendance on her beloved son.
-On the 16th of February, 1862, Prince Otto died. “Thank God! thank God
-for ever and ever!” was the exclamation of his bereaved mother, as she
-stood by his body. His father, family, friends and connections from far
-and near, all who loved and admired the boy, joined with his mother in
-her thanksgiving.
-
-After the funeral the family paid a visit to Baden-Baden. On their
-return the young Princess threw herself with all the ardour of her
-nature into the work of teaching. In the Castle there was a lame boy,
-who had been received on account of his delicate health, and at a farm
-in the neighbourhood of Mon Repos the Baroness von Bibra resided for
-some time with two little nieces. With these three little children the
-Princess set up a school. Her mother observed with quiet satisfaction
-the patience, perseverance, and aptitude to teach displayed by her
-daughter. The boy, Rudolf Wackernagel, made such progress that he was
-able to enter the fifth class in the Gymnasium at Basle.
-
-The winter of 1862-63 was passed with her parents at Baden-Baden on
-account of her father’s health. Here she “came out.” From entries in
-her diary it would appear that she had offers of marriage at this time.
-There are some lines in which she writes of the kind of love that alone
-brings happiness, and she adds that a maiden rejects anyone who does
-not really love her. “A maiden,” she says, “is happy in her parents’
-house, from whence she casts modest looks into the world.”
-
-In the autumn of 1863 she went with her aunt, the Grand Duchess Helena
-of Russia, to Ouchy, on the Lake of Geneva, and for the winter to St.
-Petersburg. On the way to the latter place she saw her father for the
-last time at Wiesbaden. He did not expect ever to see his daughter
-again. Everybody was charmed with her at the Russian Court. She did
-not feel at ease, however, amid the grandeur which surrounded her.
-Her imagination was excited by all that she saw and heard, but her
-nerves suffered. The Grand Duchess sought to calm her mind by varied
-but regular occupation. The day was filled with music, reading, study
-of the Russian language, etc. Rubinstein first, and afterwards Clara
-Schumann, taught her music. When she expected Rubinstein to come,
-her excitement was so great that it almost took away her breath. She
-regarded him with such veneration that she lost all heart, from a sense
-of her own little talent. The climate and nervous excitement brought
-on gastric fever. For weeks she was confined to bed. It was her first
-illness. She had never tasted medicine before she was twenty. She could
-hardly believe, therefore, that she was really ill. As soon as she
-was able to do so, she buried herself in a philosophical work by her
-father, a copy of which he had sent her, and wrote to him telling him
-the pleasure it gave her. She enjoyed the seclusion from the gaieties
-that were going on. “It is very strange,” she wrote to her father;
-“yesterday I read ninety pages of philosophy, and was so rested that
-everyone was astonished at my looking so well. But if only two or
-three ladies come, and tell me the gossip of the town, and of all the
-things that are going on, it makes me droop like a withered leaf.”
-When she was well enough she resumed her social intercourse with the
-Grand Duchess, but had a sudden relapse. It was an anxious time for
-her mother: her husband dangerously ill, her daughter invalided at
-a distance, and she not there to nurse her! “I know she is in God’s
-hands,” she wrote, “and under the care of faithful and loving friends,
-but that does not take the pain, the load of sorrow, from my heart.”
-The Princess Elizabeth was able to venture into the open air again at
-the beginning of March. It seemed as if her recovery would be rapid.
-A few days later, however, she received the tidings of her father’s
-death. She loved her father with enthusiastic tenderness. She owed
-her intellectual development, for the most part, to him. Her grief
-was heightened by the thought that she had not been with him in his
-last days. But no murmur escaped her lips. She bore the blow with such
-composure and resignation that everyone about her was deeply impressed
-and touched. She sought to comfort and strengthen her mother. “We shall
-fill the desolate void with our love,” she wrote, “and therein find our
-happiness.” She regarded her father as a shining example, and sought
-to think and act according to his ideas. In the judgments she formed,
-she imitated his mildness and candour, which condemned nothing without
-fully proving it.
-
-At Easter she left St. Petersburg with the Grand Duchess Helena, and
-visited Moscow, and in June returned to Germany. Her mother met her in
-Leipzig. The meeting, as may be imagined, was very affecting. After
-their return to Mon Repos a reaction from the recent excitement and
-agitation which she had experienced set in, and the Princess Elizabeth
-was overcome by apathy. Her mother, therefore, gladly consented to her
-accompanying the Grand Duchess Helena to Ouchy.
-
-During the years 1866, 1867, 1868, she paid visits with her aunt or
-mother to Switzerland, Italy, France, and Sweden, meeting with much to
-interest her.
-
-Little did she think at the end of this time of the career on which
-she was so soon to enter. She always wished to have “a calling” in
-life. She did not wish to live a life of pleasure, or the life of an
-intellectual _dilettante_, but one of real usefulness. She resolved
-to devote herself to the work of education, and be the teacher of a
-school. Her mother consented, on the condition that she should go
-through a regular course of preparatory training for the purpose, and
-pass an examination. But “man proposes and God disposes.” During the
-spring of 1869, while she was with her mother in Bonn, they received
-an invitation from the Prince of Hohenzollern to pay a visit to
-Düsseldorf. The mother divined the purpose of the proposed visit, but
-the daughter had no suspicion of it. She was delighted only with the
-prospect of seeing the Princess of Hohenzollern and Princess Marie,
-whom she had met in Berlin, and with whom she had corresponded ever
-since.
-
-(_To be concluded._)
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Aus “Carmen Sylva’s Leben,” von Natalie, Freiin von Stachelberg—(From
-“Carmen Sylva’s Life,” by Nathalie, Baroness of Stachelberg. Third
-revised edition. Heidelberg. 1886).
-
-
-
-
-THE SHEPHERD’S FAIRY.
-
-A PASTORALE.
-
-BY DARLEY DALE, Author of “Fair Katherine,” etc.
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-Leaving the Priory on her right, Fairy went down the street in which
-stands the pretty old wooden house in which Anne of Cleves is said to
-have lived, and which goes by her name, from whence she turned up a
-lane into the High-street, and going to the bottom of the hill on which
-the High-street is built, she paused at a blacksmith’s shop.
-
-The blacksmith was the father of the veterinary whom Fairy was
-seeking, and both men were standing in the shed, the blacksmith in his
-apron, with his hammer in his hand, scratching his head, and looking
-exceedingly puzzled, the veterinary in his shirt-sleeves, which looked
-like a protest against the heat which streamed from his father’s forge.
-He, too, looked equally puzzled.
-
-In the centre of the shed stood a third figure, a gentleman,
-tall, thin, young, and dark—if not handsome, at least very
-good-looking—with an aristocratic air about him which at once caught
-Fairy’s fancy. She saw at a glance he was unlike anyone she had ever
-met before, by the cut of his clothes and the dark moustache, in days
-when moustaches were rarely seen in England; she half suspected he was
-not English, and his first words, in a strong foreign accent, confirmed
-this idea.
-
-“I want to take it wif me, a horse’s iron, the iron of a horse.”
-
-Fairy’s appearance in the shed caused the stranger to turn round, and
-seeing a lady he took off his hat and bowed so profoundly, at the same
-time stepping back, and gracefully hinting, by a wave of his hand,
-that his business would wait till hers was concluded, removed any
-lingering doubts in her mind as to his nationality. He was French, she
-was sure, and for the first time in her life, to her knowledge, Fairy
-found herself face to face with a Frenchman, as great a curiosity then
-as a Japanese or Chinaman is now.
-
-Fairy returned his elaborate bow with a pretty inclination of her
-graceful head, and briefly stated her business to the veterinary,
-who, however, seemed to hesitate at first to come at once, and Fairy
-was obliged to resort to a little judicious flattery to induce him to
-comply with her request.
-
-While she was speaking the stranger had an opportunity of indulging
-in a good look at her without her being aware of it. How pretty she
-was! fresher and brighter and prettier than ever among the dark,
-grimy surroundings of the blacksmith’s shop, which formed a striking
-background for this brilliant little vision of youth and health and
-beauty, the red glow of the furnace sending a rosy reflection over
-her white dress, and kindling the soft golden lights in her hair into
-a burning auburn. How simply she was dressed too! the first of her
-countrywomen who understood the art of dressing herself who had yet
-crossed the stranger’s path, he afterwards told her; and yet her boots
-and gloves, about which Fairy was very particular, fitted her tiny
-hands and feet to perfection.
-
-Where did she come from, this blooming little creature, who looked as
-if a puff of wind might blow her away, so small and slight and dainty
-was she? And in default of wind the young Frenchman was by no means
-sure that she would not suddenly spread out a pair of wings from among
-the folds of her white drapery and fly away! At any rate he determined
-to speak to her first and satisfy himself that she was flesh and blood,
-and not a mere sprite or vision, so as she turned to leave, after
-having prevailed upon the veterinary to do her bidding at once, he
-stepped forward, and, with another grand bow and a smile, he said, in
-his native tongue—
-
-“Mademoiselle peut-elle parler Français?”
-
-“Mais oui, monsieur,” answered Fairy.
-
-“Pardon mille fois, mademoiselle est Française?” said the Frenchman,
-with true French politeness.
-
-“Mais non, monsieur,” laughed Fairy, in a half-reproachful,
-half-deprecating tone.
-
-“Mademoiselle speaks like a native, but will she have the kindness to
-tell me what is the English for fer-de-cheval; I have forgotten?”
-
-“A horseshoe,” said Fairy.
-
-“A horseshoe,” lisped the Frenchman.
-
-“A horseshoe, and he asked for a horse’s iron; no wonder I didn’t know
-what he meant,” growled the blacksmith, proceeding to get the article
-in question.
-
-“A horseshoe—a horse’s iron,” laughed the veterinary, in an undertone
-of scorn, as he went his way to look after John Shelley’s sheep.
-
-“Yes,” said the Frenchman, in French, to Fairy, “I want a horseshoe.
-They tell me a horseshoe always brings good luck, so I am going to keep
-one in my room.”
-
-“Oh, but it is no use to buy a horseshoe; you must find it, pick it up
-on the road, and keep it for it to bring good luck,” laughed Fairy,
-speaking French.
-
-“Is that it? Well, never mind, this horseshoe has brought me some
-good luck at any rate already.” And then, fearing he was presuming
-too much on his brief acquaintance to pay the compliment his last
-speech implied, he added, apologetically, “I have not often the good
-luck to meet a lady out of France who speaks French so fluently as
-mademoiselle.”
-
-“Monsieur is very kind to say so, but unless I can be of any further
-use I must say good morning,” said Fairy, moving to the door.
-
-The young Frenchman uttered a thousand thanks, bowed lower than ever,
-and stood uncovered at the door of the shed, watching till Fairy’s
-little figure and fluttering white skirts disappeared from view.
-
-“Rum ways! Is Mr. Parlez-vous, with his outlandish talk, going to
-stand there all day in the broiling sun? He’ll have a sunstroke if
-he does. He is the queerest customer ever darkened my door,” growled
-the blacksmith, as he hammered on his anvil to attract the stranger’s
-attention.
-
-The stranger had no intention of moving until Fairy had disappeared
-from view, and then he put on his hat and walked up to the anvil.
-
-“Who is that lady?” he asked.
-
-“Nobody knows,” growled the surly old blacksmith.
-
-“What is her name?”
-
-“Can’t say; nobody knows,” answered the blacksmith, in a still surlier
-tone, though to do him justice he thought this fine gentleman’s sudden
-interest in the shepherd’s Fairy, as people called her, boded no good
-to Fairy.
-
-“How much is the horse-iron—shoe, I mean?”
-
-“Sixpence, sir.”
-
-The Frenchman laid down half-a-crown, and pushing it towards the
-blacksmith, gave him a meaning look as he repeated the question.
-
-“What is that lady’s name?”
-
-The blacksmith understood well enough that if he gave a satisfactory
-answer no change would be required, and soothing his conscience with
-the thought that after all it was no business of his—he was only
-answering a civil question, he said, “They call her the shepherd’s
-Fairy.”
-
-“But what is her real name?” and the Frenchman produced another
-half-crown, and held it temptingly in his finger and thumb.
-
-“I never heard tell of any name but that; she is John Shelley’s foster
-daughter,” answered the man, glancing at the second half-crown, which
-was now lying by the side of the first.
-
-“And where does John Shelley live?”
-
-“At Bournemer, about a mile and a half from here.”
-
-“_Comment?_ How do you call it, Bonnemère? How can I get there?”
-
-“Can’t say; it ain’t easy to find,” said the blacksmith, thinking the
-Frenchman had had his five shillings’ worth, and, as was evident from
-his manner, resolved not to enlighten him any further.
-
-“Easy or difficult, I shall find it, my civil friend,” said the
-young Frenchman, in French, and then, raising his hat, he wished
-the blacksmith good-day, and left the forge, muttering to himself a
-criticism on the manners of these English not over flattering to our
-nation.
-
-“Palavering jackanapes, talking a tongue that no one understands but
-himself! What has the shepherd’s Fairy to do with him, I should like
-to know? But there don’t appear to be any scarcity of half-crowns with
-him; seems made up of them. A queer customer—a mighty queer customer;
-I wonder where he hails from.” And so saying, the blacksmith went to
-his door to look after the young Frenchman.
-
-The stranger walked up the High-street to the Crown, where he had left
-his horse, and when it was brought to him, innocently asked the ostler
-if he could get back to Oafham, where he was staying, by Bournemer.
-
-“Yes, sir; you can go across yonder meadows; there is a drift right
-through them which will bring you out close upon John Shelley, the
-shepherd’s, house; go past that and turn sharp to your right, that
-will take you straight back to the park,” said the ostler, giving the
-stranger all the information he required for nothing.
-
-A few minutes later the blacksmith strolled casually up to the inn, and
-inquired of the ostler who that foreign gentleman was.
-
-“Dunnow; reckon he is some relation of Lady Oafham up at Oafham Park;
-they say my lady’s sister is married to a French gentleman; anyhow, he
-is staying there. I know the mare.”
-
-“He is a rum customer, wherever he is staying. He didn’t happen to ask
-you where John Shelley lived, did he now?” said the blacksmith.
-
-“No, but I happened to tell him,” returned the ostler.
-
-“More fool you, then. Ah! he is a queer customer.” And muttering to
-himself all the way down the street, the blacksmith returned to his
-forge.
-
-Meanwhile the French gentleman rode slowly off in the direction
-indicated by the ostler, keeping his horse to a walking pace for fear
-he should overtake Fairy, who, after a little while, he discerned as
-a little speck of white some way in front of him. He paid no heed to
-the ostler’s directions now; where that speck of white led he would
-follow, but at a safe distance, lest he should frighten or annoy her if
-discovered. Keeping well in the rear, he saw Fairy finally turn into
-the field in which the shepherd’s cottage stood, and as soon as she was
-out of sight he put his horse into a canter, and rode past, taking a
-good survey, as he passed, of the house of the shepherd’s Fairy, whom
-he had traced to her home.
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-HINTS ON PRACTISING SINGING AND PRESERVING THE VOICE.
-
-BY AN EXPERIENCED TEACHER.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-PART I.
-
-WHAT TO AVOID.
-
-It will most likely surprise my readers that I should begin this
-article by telling them when _not to practise_. I think this a very
-essential point, although not often spoken of by teachers.
-
-I heard, a short time ago, of a young lady desirous of having singing
-lessons, whose instructor said it would be best for her to practise
-three times a day for ten minutes. The girl, being engaged in teaching
-most of the day, found it difficult to manage her time, but contrived,
-by having the first ten minutes before breakfast, to fit in the three
-intervals. No wonder her throat got bad and her health suffered!
-
-If, among my readers, there should be one similarly occupied, believe
-me, it is not wise to take lessons during the term, as talking for so
-long a time is sufficient exercise for the throat and chest. Wait till
-the holidays, and then begin.
-
-If you tire the vocal chords and the surrounding parts, you weaken
-instead of strengthening them, and injure the purity of tone.
-
-We will suppose you have had your first lesson, say, of forty-five
-minutes; and on reaching home feel inclined to practise, to impress
-on your mind your teacher’s corrections. Yet you must not do so; as
-you have already sung enough. By all means, look over the music you
-have used and mark anything you may be likely to forget; also start a
-note-book, and make memoranda of the hints received from time to time.
-
-Say that your lesson takes place in the morning; probably in the
-afternoon you will be able to take a quarter of an hour in which to
-practise. In this way, you will have done far more good than if you sat
-straightway down to the piano when you were excited and heated after
-your first lesson, when you might have been tempted to try over your
-songs, to settle which to take the next time, and have gone from one
-thing to another, till, to your great surprise, it is lunch time, and,
-it may chance, instead of your usual good appetite you have none. An
-artistic temperament is often very excitable, and if this is your case
-you will perceive how much you would have taken out of yourself in that
-one morning.
-
-Should you be out of health, do not practise; you may sing a little,
-going through one song or two (no more) will cheer you; but do not try
-exercises, for your voice will not be in its usual state, consequently
-you will be likely to force it.
-
-Again, if it ever happens that you are cross, or vexed, do not choose
-that time either. Do not sing your exercises after a long walk, or
-after a hearty meal, nor after bending for any length of time over
-needlework, writing, or any occupations causing stooping.
-
-On many of these occasions you could practise the pianoforte; singers
-should well study their accompaniments.
-
-All these “don’ts” are especially addressed to the zealous student,
-whose very enthusiasm may do much harm.
-
-The dilatory one may say, “If I am to practise at none of these times,
-when, then, shall I do so?”
-
-There are plenty of opportunities still, but it depends greatly on home
-duties how the time should be apportioned.
-
-We will imagine the first thing after breakfast some domestic task
-calls your attention. When you are at liberty, go then to your
-piano (this should be scrupulously kept in tune), but first spend
-five minutes in practising breathing—of which I shall speak later
-on—then sing for five minutes sustained notes, _without crescendo_,
-the “mezza di voce” < > being a finishing study which must not be
-attempted till the voice is fully under control; then give five to
-slow scale passages, and five more to simple distances of thirds,
-or what particular exercise your teacher may have given. Before the
-mid-day meal you may be able to give a few minutes again to sustained
-notes; but mind, only use your middle ones. These should have the chief
-attention for quite a month or more before either the upper or lower
-ones are tried.
-
-Another interval can well be given some time after noon; and in the
-evening practise your songs—as at that time you might annoy other
-persons with your exercises. They are not calculated to cheer the heart
-of the listener, especially when imperfectly done, as they will be at
-first.
-
-
-PART II.
-
-CHIEFLY ON RESPIRATION.
-
-We will now turn our attention to the different ways of breathing.
-
-In throat or collar-bone breathing (the wrong method) the region of the
-upper ribs is most strongly distended; the collar-bone, part of the
-breast-bone, the shoulders, the spine, and in laboured breathing even
-the head, take part in this mode.
-
-It is fatiguing and injurious, yet it is very general, both in speaking
-and singing; and in time it would make the voice weak and tremulous.
-There is little doubt it produces a tendency to sore throat. Some
-authorities even say that imperfect respiration is one of the causes of
-consumption, and that practising deep breathing in the proper manner is
-a preventive.
-
-Most likely if you were told to inhale deeply, you would open your
-mouth and try to expand the chest from above. This is quite wrong; it
-is styled collar-bone breathing.
-
-It is a mistake to suppose the upper part of the chest is the chief
-reservoir of air required for the voice; that is brought into play by
-nature at times of exhaustion only.
-
-Now for the proper mode: diaphragmatic or abdominal respiration. The
-diaphragm is a muscular membrane stretching from the front to the back,
-and in a state of rest is arched upwards towards the lungs, but on
-inhaling, its sides contract and the arch is flattened, causing the
-cavity of the chest to become enlarged, and the air rushes in by the
-windpipe and distends the lungs. When the muscles are relaxed, the
-elasticity of the lungs squeezes out the air, and the diaphragm is
-drawn up again to its original form.
-
-A good position in which to acquire this mode of inspiration, is to lie
-down at full length on the back, the head as low as the body, and begin
-to inhale slowly (the clothes must be quite loose), then you will find
-the parts below the ribs expand like a pair of bellows. Another way.
-Sit on a chair—it must not be low and easy—with your hands folded
-behind it and breathe leisurely; or, stand perfectly upright, put your
-hands behind you, and draw in the air gently but deeply, retaining it
-for ten seconds or more, then let it go as slowly as possible.
-
-Do not try to take too deep a breath at first, or you will find you
-cannot retain it. Your power will gradually increase.
-
-Practise, without singing, sometimes in one of these positions,
-sometimes in another, twice or thrice a day, but not for many minutes
-at a time. It will strengthen the lungs and organs of digestion. You
-will now have found how important it is for the clothing to be loose, I
-hope.
-
-It is well to close the mouth when one wishes to take breath.
-Especially at long rests the singer should do so, as it prevents the
-throat and vocal chords from getting dry. If they do become so the
-voice loses sweetness.
-
-Remember a good tone does not depend on the great volume of air
-ejected: indeed, too much breath expended will make it uncertain. Flat
-singing is now and then the result of this forcing. The air must be
-given out gradually, not jerked out.
-
-Avoid coughing; it is an injurious habit easily got into; if you feel
-an inclination to do so before beginning to sing, check it if possible,
-and instead quietly swallow.
-
-Let me advise you not to eat nuts or similar dry things before singing,
-and here is another hint. Do not sit in a low chair with the feet
-perched up on a stool after meals, as the digestive faculties cannot
-act well in such a position. With an impaired digestion the voice may
-become affected.
-
-Never talk in the open air if the weather is cold and damp, nor when
-travelling, nor at any time, if it can be avoided, where there is much
-noise.
-
-Many persons wrap up the throat excessively. One of my pupils came
-once with no less than two silk handkerchiefs under a fur-lined cloak,
-besides wearing a boa. A silk scarf is enough even for the winter; fur
-is not healthy to wear unless it is in the form of a loose mantle.
-
-It is a good plan on getting up each morning to bathe the neck with
-cold water, afterwards drying well, using plenty of friction, also to
-gargle the throat with cold water.
-
-For the expansion of the chest, I strongly advise the use, night and
-morning, of an elastic chest expander. It must be strong enough to
-require a distinct effort to stretch it, and the exercise must be
-persevered with for ten minutes at a time, until the muscles begin to
-ache. By-and-by it can be used for a longer period.
-
-The singer must observe the laws of health, remembering that the vocal
-organ is but an instrument, though played on by the soul.
-
-A few more words before closing this article. Perchance one of my
-readers may be anxious to sing well, though unable to have the benefit
-of receiving lessons. In that case, I do not advise the study of
-exercises, unless some tuition has first been received from a competent
-person, as bad habits are so easily formed though not so easily got rid
-of.
-
-Let the songs you choose lie well within your range of voice, without
-runs or shakes; nothing being more absurd than to hear ornaments badly
-executed.
-
-When it is possible, try to hear a professional render a song that you
-know. There are many ballad concerts given, and the music that will be
-performed is generally advertised. Take your copy with you, and mark
-all places where breath is taken, where a _crescendo_ is made, and
-where the time is slackened or accelerated. You will get a good lesson
-on a song in this way, and if you persevere your style will by degrees
-improve.
-
-Before singing a new song, practise the accompaniment well, then study
-the words, making it a rule to recite them, that you may give proper
-effect to both music and poetry. Try always to bear in mind, what is
-worth doing at all is worth doing well.
-
-
-
-
-MERLE’S CRUSADE.
-
-BY ROSA NOUCHETTE CAREY, Author of “Aunt Diana,” “For Lilias,” etc.
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-ANOTHER GUEST AT MARSHLANDS.
-
-The following two or three weeks passed rapidly and pleasantly; but for
-two serious drawbacks that hindered my thorough enjoyment, I should
-have owned myself perfectly happy, but Mrs. Markham and Rolf were
-perpetual thorns in my side.
-
-A consciousness of being disliked by any human being, however
-uncongenial to us, is always a disagreeable discovery. The cause of
-the repellent action of one mind on another may be an interesting
-psychological study, but in practice it brings us to a sadder and lower
-level. I knew Mrs. Markham honestly disliked me; but the cause of such
-marked disfavour utterly baffled me.
-
-Most people found her fascinating; she was intellectual and refined,
-and had many good qualities, but she was not essentially womanly.
-Troubles and the loss of her children had hardened her; embittered
-by disappointment, for her married life, short as it was, had been
-singularly unhappy, she had come back to her father’s house a cold,
-resentful woman, who masked unhappiness under an air of languid
-indifference, and whose strong will and concealed love of power
-governed the whole household. “Adelaide manages us all,” Miss Cheriton
-would say, laughing, and I used to wonder if she ever rebelled against
-her sister’s dictates. I knew the squire was like wax in the hands of
-his eldest daughter; he was one of those indolent, peace-loving men who
-are always governed by their womankind; his wife had ruled him, and now
-his widowed daughter held the reins. I think Gay was like her father;
-she went on her own way and shut her eyes to anything disagreeable.
-It would never have done for me to quarrel openly with Mrs. Markham;
-common sense and respect for my mistress’s sister kept me silent
-under great provocation. I controlled my words, and in some measure
-I controlled voice and outward manner, but my inward antagonism must
-have revealed itself now and then by an unguarded tone.
-
-My chief difficulty was to prevent her spoiling Joyce. After the first,
-she had become very fond of the child, and was always sending for her
-to the drawing-room, and loading her with toys and sweetmeats. Mr.
-Morton’s orders had been very stringent about sweetmeats, and again and
-again I was obliged to confiscate poor Joyce’s goodies as she called
-them. I had extracted from her a promise that she should eat nothing
-out of the nursery, and nothing could induce the child to disobey me.
-
-“Nurse says I mustn’t, Aunt Adda,” was her constant remark, and Mrs.
-Markham chose to consider herself aggrieved at this childish obstinacy.
-She spoke to me once about it with marked displeasure.
-
-“I have had children of my own, and I suppose I know what is good for
-them,” she said, with a touch of scorn in her voice; “you have no right
-to enforce such ridiculous rules on Joyce.”
-
-“I have Mrs. Morton’s orders,” I replied, curtly; “Dr. Myrtle told me
-to be very careful of Joyce’s diet; I cannot allow her to eat things I
-know will hurt her,” and I continued to confiscate the goodies.
-
-But though I was firm in all that concerned the children’s health,
-there were many occasions on which I was obliged to submit to Mrs.
-Markham’s interference; very often my plans for the day were frustrated
-for no legitimate cause. I was disposed to think sometimes that she
-acted in this way just to vex me and make me lose my temper. If we
-were starting for the beach, Judson would bring us a message that
-her mistress would prefer my taking the children into the orchard,
-and sometimes on a hot afternoon, when we were comfortably ensconced
-on the bench under the apple trees, Judson would inform us that Mrs.
-Markham thought we had better go down to the sea. Sometimes I yielded
-to these demands, if I thought the children would not suffer by them,
-but at other times I would tell Judson that the sun was too hot or
-the children too tired, and that we had better remain as we were. If
-this was the case, Mrs. Markham would sometimes come out herself and
-argue the matter, but I always stood my ground boldly; though I was
-perfectly aware that the afternoon’s post would convey a letter to
-Prince’s Gate, complaining of my impertinence in disputing her orders.
-
-My mistress’s letters were my chief comfort, and they generally came
-on the morning after one of these disputes. She would write to me so
-affectionately, and tell me how she missed me as well as the children,
-and though she never alluded openly to what had occurred, there was
-always a little sentence of half-veiled meaning that set my mind at
-rest.
-
-“My sister Gay tells me that the children are getting so brown and
-strong with the sea air,” she wrote once, “and that dear little Joyce
-has quite a nice colour. Thank you so much for your ceaseless care of
-them; you know I trust you implicitly, Merle, and I have no fear that
-you will disappoint me; your good sense will carry you safely through
-any little difficulty that may arise. Write to me as often as you can;
-your letters are so nice. I am very busy and very tired, for this ball
-has entailed so much work and fuss, but your letters seem to rest me.”
-
-Rolf was also a serious impediment to my enjoyment. Ever since I had
-helped him with his kite, he had attached himself to me, and insisted
-on joining us in all our walks, and in spending the greater part of his
-day with us. I was tolerably certain in my own mind that this childish
-infatuation excited Mrs. Markham’s jealousy. Until we had arrived
-she had been Rolf’s sole companion; he had accompanied her in her
-drives, harassed her from morning to night with his ceaseless demands
-for amusements, and had been the secretly dreaded torment of all the
-visitors to Marshlands, except Mr. Hawtry, who was rather good to him.
-
-His precocity, his love of practical jokes, and his rough impertinence,
-made him at feud with the whole household; the servants disliked him,
-and were always bringing complaints of Master Rolf. I believe Judson
-was fond of him in a way, but then she had had charge of him from a
-baby.
-
-When Rolf began to desert the drawing-room for the nursery, Mrs.
-Markham used all her efforts to coax him back to her side, but she
-might as well have spoken to the wind. Rolf played with Joyce on the
-beach; he raced her up and down the little hillocks in the orchard,
-or hunted with her for wild flowers in the lanes that surrounded
-Marshlands. When the children were asleep, he invaded my quiet with
-requests to mend his broken toys or join him in some game. I grew quite
-expert in rigging his new boat, and dressed toy soldiers and sailors
-by the dozen. Sometimes I was inclined to rebel at such waste of time,
-but I remembered that Rolf had no playfellows; it was better for him to
-be playing spillikins or go-bang with me in the nursery than lounging
-listlessly about the drawing-room, listening to grown-up people’s talk;
-a natural child’s life was better for his health. Miss Cheriton told me
-more than once that people who came to the house thought Rolf so much
-improved. Certainly he was not so pale and fretful after a long morning
-spent on the beach in wading knee-deep to sail his boat or digging sand
-wells which Joyce filled out of her bucket. When he grew too rough or
-boisterous I always called Joyce away, and with Hannah and myself to
-look after them no harm could come to the children.
-
-I grew rather fond of Rolf, after a time, and his company would not
-have been irksome to me, but for his tiresome habit of repeating the
-speeches he had heard in the drawing-room. He always checked himself
-when he remembered, or when I held up my finger, but the half sentence
-would linger in my memory.
-
-But this was not the worst. I soon found out that anything I told him
-found its way into the drawing-room; in fact, Rolf was an inveterate
-chatterbox. With all his good intentions, he could not hold his tongue,
-and mischief was often the result.
-
-It was my habit to teach the children little lessons under the guise
-of a story, sometimes true, sometimes a mere invention. Rolf called
-them “Fenny’s Anecdotes,” but I had never discovered an anecdote about
-crossness.
-
-One day I found myself being severely lectured by Mrs. Markham for
-teaching her son the doctrine of works. “As though we should be saved
-by our works, Miss Fenton!” she finished, virtuously.
-
-I was too much puzzled to answer; I had no notion what she meant
-until I remembered that I had induced Rolf to part with some of his
-pocket-money to relieve a poor blind man that we found sitting by the
-wayside. Rolf had been sorry for the man, and still more for the gaunt,
-miserable-looking woman by his side; but when we had gone on our way,
-followed by voluble Irish blessings, Rolf had rather feelingly lamented
-his sixpence, and I had told him a little story inculcating the beauty
-of almsgiving, which had impressed him considerably, and he had
-retailed a garbled version of it to his mother—hence her rebuke to me.
-I forget what my defence was, only I remember I repudiated indignantly
-any such doctrine; but this sort of misunderstanding was constantly
-arising. If only Rolf would have held his tongue!
-
-But these were mere surface troubles, and I often managed to forget
-that there was such a person as Mrs. Markham in the world; and, in
-spite of a few trifling drawbacks, I look back upon this summer as one
-of the happiest in my life.
-
-I was young and healthy, and I perfectly revelled in the country sights
-and sounds with which I was surrounded. I hardly knew which I enjoyed
-most—the long delicious mornings on the beach, when I sat under the
-breakwater taking care of Reggie, or the afternoons in the orchard,
-with the brown bees humming round the hives and the children playing
-with Fidgets on the grass, while the old white pony looked over the
-fence at us, and the sheep nibbled at our side. I used to send Hannah
-home for an hour or two while I watched over the children; it was hard
-for her to be so near home and not enjoy Molly’s company; and those
-summer afternoons were lazy times for all of us.
-
-I think Miss Cheriton added largely to my happiness. I had never had
-a friend since my school-days, and it was refreshing to me to come in
-contact with this bright young creature. I was a little too grave for
-my age, and I felt she did me good.
-
-I soon found she resembled my mistress in one thing: she was very
-unselfish, and thought more of other people’s pleasures than her own.
-She used to say herself that it was only a sublime sort of selfishness
-that she liked to see everyone happy round her. “A gloomy face hinders
-all enjoyment,” was her constant remark. But I never knew anyone who
-excelled more in little kindly acts. She would bring me fruit or
-flowers almost daily; and when she found I was fond of reading, she
-selected books for me she thought I should like.
-
-When Mrs. Markham did not use the carriage—a very rare occasion, as
-she had almost a monopoly of it—she would take us for long country
-drives, and she would contrive all sorts of little surprises for us.
-Once when we returned from a saunter in the lanes, we found our tea
-table laid in the orchard, and Miss Cheriton presiding, in a gay little
-hat trimmed with cornflowers and poppies. There was a basket of flowers
-in the centre of the table, and a heap of red and yellow fruit. We had
-quite a little feast that evening, and all the time we were sitting
-there, there were broods of chickens running over the grass, that Gay
-had enticed into the orchard to please the children, and grey rabbits,
-and an old lame duck that was her pensioner, and went by the name of
-Cackles.
-
-“Oh, auntie, do have another feast,” Joyce would say to her, almost
-daily; but Miss Cheriton could not always be with us; visitors were
-very plentiful at Marshlands, and Gay’s company was much courted by the
-young people of Netherton and Orton-upon-Sea.
-
-I knew Mr. Hawtry was a constant visitor, for we often met him in
-our walks; and it seemed to me that his face was always set in the
-direction of Marshlands.
-
-When Rolf was with us he was never allowed to pass without notice, and
-then he would stop and speak to the children, especially to Joyce, who
-soon got over her shyness with him.
-
-“Mother says Mr. Hawtry comes to see Aunt Gay,” Rolf remarked once,
-when he was out of hearing; “she told grandpapa so one day, and asked
-him if it would not be a good thing; and grandpapa laughed and nodded;
-you know his way. What did mother mean?”
-
-“No doubt she meant that Mr. Hawtry was a kind friend,” I returned,
-evasively. How is one to silence a precocious child? But of course it
-was easy to understand Mrs. Markham’s hint.
-
-I wondered sometimes if Mr. Hawtry were a favoured suitor. He and Miss
-Cheriton certainly seemed on the best of terms; she always seemed glad
-to see him, but her manner was very frank with him.
-
-I took it into my head that Gay had more than one admirer. I deduced
-this inference from a slight occurrence that took place one day.
-
-I was on the terrace with the children one morning, when a young
-clergyman in a soft felt hat came up the avenue. I knew him at once as
-the boyish-faced curate at Netherton Church, who had read the service
-the last two Sundays. I had liked his voice and manner, they were so
-reverent, but I remembered that I thought him very young. He was a
-tall, broad-shouldered young man, and though not exactly handsome, had
-a bright, pleasant-looking face.
-
-Rolf hailed him at once as an old acquaintance. “Holloa, Mr. Rossiter;
-it is no use your going on to the house; mother is not well and cannot
-see you, and Aunt Gay is with the bees.”
-
-Mr. Rossiter seemed a little confused at this. He stopped and regarded
-Rolf with some perplexity.
-
-“I am sorry Mrs. Markham is not well, but perhaps I can see Mr.
-Cheriton.”
-
-“Oh, grandpapa has gone to Orton; there is only me at home; you see,
-Miss Fenton does not count. If you want Aunt Gay I will show you the
-way to the kitchen garden.” And as Mr. Rossiter accepted this offer
-with alacrity, they went off together.
-
-We were going down to the beach that morning, and I was only waiting
-for Hannah to get the perambulator ready, but as a quarter of an hour
-elapsed and Rolf did not make his appearance, Joyce and I went in
-search of him.
-
-I found him standing by the beehives, talking to Miss Cheriton and Mr.
-Rossiter. They all looked very happy, and Mr. Rossiter was laughing at
-something the boy had said; such a ringing, boyish laugh it was.
-
-When I called Rolf they all looked round, and Miss Cheriton came
-forward to speak to me. I thought she looked a little uncomfortable,
-and I never saw her with such a colour.
-
-“Are you going down to the beach? I wish I could come too, it is such
-a lovely morning, but Mr. Rossiter wants me to go to the schools; Miss
-Parsons, the schoolmistress, is ill, and they need help. It is so
-tiresome,” speaking with a pettish, spoilt-child air, turning to the
-young clergyman; “Miss Parsons always does get ill at inconvenient
-times.”
-
-“I know you would not fail us if it were ever so inconvenient,”
-answered Mr. Rossiter, looking full at her—he had such nice clear
-eyes; “you are far too kind to desert us in such a strait.”
-
-But she made no answer to this, and went back to the beehive, and after
-a moment’s irresolution Mr. Rossiter followed her.
-
-“Do you like Mr. Rossiter?” asked Rolf, in his blunt way, as we walked
-down the avenue. “I do, awfully; he is such a brick. He plays cricket
-with me sometimes, and he has promised to teach me to swim, only mother
-won’t let him, in spite of all grandpapa says about my being brought up
-like a girl. Grandpapa means me to learn to swim and ride, only mother
-is so frightened ever since the black pony threw me. I am to have a
-quieter one next year.”
-
-“Have you known Mr. Rossiter long?” I asked, carelessly.
-
-“Oh, pretty long. Mother can’t bear him coming so often to the house;
-she says he is so awkward, and then he is poor. Mother doesn’t like
-poor people; she always says it is their own fault; that they might get
-on better. Do you know, Fenny, Mr. Rossiter has only two little rooms
-at Mrs. Saunders’, you know that low house looking on the cornfields;
-quite poky little rooms they are, because mother and I went there.
-Mother asked him if he did not find it dreadfully dull at Netherton,
-and he laughed and said, ‘Oh, dear no;’ he had never been more
-comfortable; the people at Netherton were so kind and hospitable; and
-though mother does not like him, he comes just as often as though she
-did.” And I soon verified Rolf’s words; Mr. Rossiter came very often to
-Marshlands.
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-
-
-
-I ONLY WISH I HAD.
-
-BY MEDICUS.
-
-
-There are five hundred of my lady readers, at the very least, who can
-easily guess the reason why Medicus did not appear before them so
-regularly last summer.
-
-“Five hundred!” I think I hear some girls say; “why are these five
-hundred in the secret? And what about all the other thousands?”
-
-Stay, and I will tell you. For four months this last season I was “on
-the road,” travelling in my own chariot—I am surely not wrong in
-calling it a chariot, seeing it is twenty feet in length—throughout
-the length and breadth of Merrie England, and I put down the minimum
-of Girl’s Own readers who visited this chariot and its owner at five
-hundred, though, seeing that schools with their teachers, numbering
-from twenty to seventy, sometimes paid a visit to me, all of whom were
-ardent admirers of the “beautifully and tastefully illustrated G. O.
-P.”—the girls’ own words—a thousand might be nearer the mark.
-
-But what, it may be asked, has this to do with the non-appearance of
-Medicus before his readers? Why, everything; because I find it all but
-impossible to do literary work “on the road.”
-
-I might have done more, though.
-
-“I only wish I had.”
-
-And these words form the text on which I desire this month to speak a
-few homely words to my girls, young or not young.
-
-“I only wish I had.” How often a medical man hears those same words;
-spoken, it may be, with blanched lips, by some poor mortal who is
-languishing on a bed of sickness and pain. “I only wish I had.” Had
-what? Taken better care of health while it lasted.
-
-I sat by the bedside of a poor girl some years ago, and heard her
-repeat those same words frequently. I had somewhat more time to spare
-then than I have now, or I could not have sat there for an hour or two
-at a time reading to her or to myself. She did not speak much, being in
-the final stage of consumption, but she assured me again and again it
-was “such company” to have me there, so what could I do?
-
-“I wish I had.” These words, it seemed to me, were too often on her
-lips. Sometimes it was only the first two words, “I wish,” she
-breathed, as if the weakened lungs and voice refused to add the others.
-I think I see Esther D—— even now, a long, thin, pale hand on the
-coverlet, a white, thin face, with a flush on the high cheeks, little
-blue veins meandering over the temples, and sad blue eyes, with dark
-dilated and glistening pupils.
-
-“I wish I had.” Wish she had what? Taken a word or two of advice I gave
-her in a friendly way, just before she started for the seaside on a
-holiday trip.
-
-She looked bright, strong, and beautiful that day, though I could tell,
-from her transparent skin, her too soft hair and drooping eyelashes,
-that in her veins were the seeds of our island illness, and that it
-would need but little to fan it into flame.
-
-“I mean to enjoy myself thoroughly,” she said, her eyes dancing with
-good humour.
-
-“Yes,” I said, as I bade her good-bye, “but not excitedly, Esther; and
-remember what I said about night air, damp feet, and warm clothing.”
-
-There was a little impatient toss of the head, and just about half a
-frown, and I smiled, expecting her to say, “Oh, bother!” but she did
-not.
-
-Well, poor Esther died.
-
-But I know of nothing more sad when one is ill than the thought that
-the illness might have been avoided.
-
-“I wish I had been more careful.”
-
-If you let your thimble fall, it will drop to the ground, will it not?
-This is a law of Nature; and as sure and certain is every other law of
-Nature. Nature will forgive, but she never will forget. If you, for
-example, sit in wet clothes, evaporation takes place; in other words,
-the damp of your clothes passes off in steam, and, as water requires
-so much heat to convert it into steam, it takes this heat from the
-nearest source, and that is from your body. It absorbs animal heat.
-What is the consequence? Why, baby there could understand this simple
-lesson in physiology. The consequence is that the surface of the body
-becomes chilled. Well, then another law of Nature comes into force.
-The law is this: Cold contracts. Cold contracts everything, even iron.
-Witness the difference in the length of railway iron rails in summer
-and winter. Given a sun-heat of, say, one hundred and twenty degrees,
-and they are all close together at the ends. Given a winter temperature
-of thirty-two degrees, or under, and the rails do not touch, but gap.
-
-And the cold on the surface of the body contracts the veins and
-arteries. With what result? With the result that the blood is to some
-extent squeezed—to use simple language—out of them, and, as it must
-flow somewhere, it rushes in upon the internal organs of the body.
-
-Now, we all of us have some one organ weaker than the others, and
-it is this organ that suffers from a surfeit of blood in its veins,
-driven inwards by a chill. It may be Miss Ada’s liver, and she has in
-consequence “a horrid bilious attack,” as I have heard it called, or it
-may be worse, suppression of the bile entirely, followed naturally by
-blood poisoning and jaundice.
-
-It may be Miss Ada’s lungs. The blood is driven in upon the surface
-thereof; this surface becomes congested and red, though no one can see
-it. Nature tries to relieve the congestion by throwing off through
-the walls of the veins or arteries the watery portion of the blood.
-This tickles the lungs, and a cough is the result. But the very act of
-coughing increases the mischief tenfold, and what was at first water
-may become matter.
-
-Nor may the mischief end here; for, if inclined to have consumption,
-the tubercle, as it is called, will now be deposited in the lung
-surface or tissue. Why? Because, the veins being congested and
-enlarged, the flow through them is more sluggish. I do hope I’m making
-myself understood! The flow, I say, is more sluggish, and deleterious
-matter, that otherwise would have been washed or carried away in the
-secretions, gets time and opportunity to settle.
-
-Now do you understand how a chill from a draught or from damp clothing
-may cause mischief of even a fatal character?
-
-Will you take my advice, and wear judicious clothing, or will you wait
-till the mischief is done, and then say, “I wish I had”?
-
-Mind, I do not wish you to go about, even during the cold months of
-winter, swaddled with as much clothing as a mummy, but I do wish you to
-wear woollen clothing—next the skin, at all events.
-
-Age has nothing at all to do with it. The young are even more apt to
-catch deadly colds than the older or middle-aged.
-
-I often wish there was some woollen material manufactured in this
-country—thin, warm, and soft, with a smooth surface that would render
-it perfectly suitable for underclothing for the most delicate-skinned
-girl. Flannel, such as is sold in the shops, has its good points, but
-it really has many objectionable ones. I hear new flannel extolled. I
-may be fastidious, but I really do not care for its perfume. Then there
-are your woollen jerseys, or whatever you call them, and merino ditto.
-Why, they are so rough, I, myself, would rather fall back upon silk.
-
-[Illustration: “I WISH I HAD BEEN MORE CAREFUL.”]
-
-In Germany, I believe, they have a material that is eminently suitable
-for the purpose I am advocating.
-
-There is a chance for some manufacturer to come to the front.
-Meanwhile, our girls will go on wearing linen and catching colds; and
-I do assure my readers that they would be both astonished and shocked
-were I to tell them the average number of fatal illnesses brought
-on annually in England from neglect of proper precautions for the
-preservation of health.
-
-But if winter hath its dangers from cold, and wet, and frost, neither
-is summer exempt.
-
-Would I have girls wear wool in summer? Undoubtedly.
-
-Wool is not only a protection against cold, but against intense heat as
-well. It is a go-between, so to speak.
-
-We all know that thatched houses are warm in winter and cool in summer,
-but possibly the words of Stanley, the great African traveller, may
-be new to many, although the truth they contain rests upon the same
-natural basis as that about thatched houses. I cannot give the exact
-words of this truly great man, but they are to this effect:—
-
-“The only way a European can withstand the intense heat of tropical
-Africa is by wearing garments of wool.”
-
-This is very easily understood. Wool is a non-conductor. In winter,
-therefore, it conserves or retains the internal or animal heat, and in
-summer it will defend the skin and the blood from becoming fevered by
-the scorching rays of the sun.
-
-I do not expect my youngest readers to be interested in one-half of
-what I am now writing, but I most earnestly desire their mothers and
-guardians to lay my words to heart, and to act upon them, so that they
-may not hereafter have to say, with sighs of regret—
-
-“I wish I had.”
-
-There is one other little matter I wish to point out to my thoughtful
-mamma-readers, with regard to clothing, and that is, the absurdity of
-not having dress, either for boys or girls, made the same thickness at
-the back as at the front.
-
-It really is ridiculous to clothe the chest in front and leave it to
-starve between the shoulders. I have before now pointed out to you that
-people catch colds in the chest far more often from chills caught from
-behind. _Verbum sap._
-
-Well, now I shall change my tune, and go on to another subject which
-also has a bearing upon colds and coughs and ill-health of every kind
-engendered by wintry weather.
-
-One-half of the people in this country are not breakfast-eaters.
-
-Are you really a breakfast-eater? Do you get hungry as soon as you have
-had your bath? As soon as you have said your good-morning, do your
-eyes roam over the table-cloth with a wholesome desire to know what is
-on board? If you are healthy, and have discussed that matutinal meal,
-nothing can hurt you all day. You may walk through the most unwholesome
-streets and lanes in the City, and come forth intact.
-
-On the other hand, do you feel languid when you get up? Do you cast a
-longing, lingering glance behind you as you commence to dress? Do you
-come downstairs caring little what is to eat? Are your fingers numb
-and cold? Do you require to slowly sip a cup of tea before getting an
-appetite even for toast and butter, and that new-laid egg you have to
-coax yourself to eat? If so you are not in health. Go not anywhere
-during the day where you are likely to breathe a tainted air, or be
-influenced by cold or damp. If you do not take my advice in this
-respect you may live to say—“I wish I had.”
-
-But have I no remedy to suggest for my breakfastless readers?
-
-Oh, yes, I have! There is a cause for everything. Your want of appetite
-in the morning may depend on one or other of many things. To be sure,
-it may be constitutional. You may have a weak heart and be altogether
-delicate in consequence. But ten to one you have nothing of the sort.
-Besides, if your heart be only functionally weak, do not forget that it
-is a muscular organ, as much so as your forearm or biceps, and, like
-the biceps, can be strengthened by good food and plenty of pleasant
-exercise in the open air.
-
-But there are other reasons why appetite absents itself at the
-breakfast hour. As my space is nearly filled, I can but name a few.
-
-Late suppers are inimical to health in the morning. They create
-restless nights, or, if the nights be not restless quite, the sleep is
-not refreshing. The stomach ought to sleep as well as other organs; and
-if it does not, depend upon it that it will not be fit for its duties
-next morning.
-
-Badly ventilated rooms. Sleeping in a room where there is not an
-abundance of fresh air is poisoning to the blood. The carbonic is not
-burned off therefrom, and dulness and lethargy are the result. You
-awake in the morning feeling your sleep has done you little good,
-feeling you would like just another hour. Believe me, if you slept as
-long thus as Rip Van Winkle, you would feel precisely the same when you
-opened your eyes.
-
-Want of exercise and neglect of the bath also destroy the appetite for
-the morning meal.
-
-And medicines will not make up for want of obedience to Nature’s laws.
-But if you return to these with heart and soul, then a mixture of
-infusion of quassia, say a tablespoonful, with ten drops of dilute
-phosphoric acid, and twenty of the compound tincture of bark, may be
-taken with great benefit, a quarter of an hour before breakfast and
-dinner.
-
-See, then, to your appetite as well as clothing, especially in cold,
-inclement weather, and may you never have those bitter, regretful words
-to utter—“I wish I had.”
-
-
-
-
-THE INHERITANCE OF A GOOD NAME.
-
-BY LOUISA MENZIES.
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE CALLING IN LIFE CHOSEN.
-
-As Eveline had said, what seemed an accident determined Mark’s choice
-of an occupation. A cousin of his mother’s came to spend a few days
-at the rectory. He had recently lost a very promising son, and was
-much softened and saddened by his trouble, and in his saddened mood
-his thoughts turned to his cousin James, whom he remembered a bright
-and cheery lad, very much his own junior. He knew that there were two
-lads at Rosenhurst, one the son of his cousin James, the other of
-his widowed cousin Margaret, and he thought with interest of him who
-bore his own name, and wondered whether he in any way resembled his
-lost Edward—whether he was a true Echlin, like his father, earnest,
-teachable, and faithful.
-
-Miles Echlin was the head of a publishing house, holding a high
-position in London, and by the death of his son, not only he himself
-but the business had experienced an irreparable loss. He wanted
-comfort, he wanted help, and in this saddened mood he came down to
-Rosenhurst Rectory. Lady Elgitha, fully alive to the fact that many
-sons of noble houses were at the present time engaged in commerce, was
-at some trouble to be civil to him, and schooled her son to proper
-behaviour; but outward civility did not impose on the keen-sighted man
-of business, and before he had been twelve hours at the rectory he was
-convinced that Gilbert was indolent, opinionated, and selfish.
-
-Margaret and her children came to dinner, and there was much pleasant
-chat among the elders about the days when they had been children, and
-when Miles had thought it a great treat to spend the holidays with his
-uncle at Westborough, but he had little opportunity then for making
-acquaintance with Mark and Eveline; but when next morning he walked
-over with the rector to the cottage, Miles felt at once the calm and
-restful sense of home, where all the members were in harmony, and where
-the grave, handsome face looking down from the wall seemed to his
-mind, saddened by recent sorrow, to promise him sympathy. He had known
-Michael Fenner very slightly, being at the time of Margaret’s marriage
-already much immersed in business, but a glance at the picture of her
-husband, and at Margaret’s own composed and gentle face, assured him
-that she would listen, not only with patience, but with true interest,
-to what he should tell her about his son, and so it came about that
-during his stay at Rosenhurst he spent most of his time at the
-cottage, and talked much with and of Mark.
-
-At the end of four days he returned to town, and in less than a
-fortnight there came a letter from him inviting Mark to come and stay
-with him in town, and offering him a share in his business if he would
-devote himself to the study of it.
-
-It was not without hesitation that Mark acceded to the proposal; either
-of the callings he had been meditating on would, he thought, have been
-more to his taste, but in either he would have been a comparatively
-poor man, unable to do much for his mother and sister, and he could
-not flatter himself that in either he was much wanted. Here there was
-a place left vacant which he might fill, a positive call from a weary
-heart which he might comfort.
-
-His mother was slow to give her opinion in the matter; it was too easy,
-too pleasant for her to have her son occupied in work which would not
-take him very far away, which would not overtax his energies; she could
-hardly believe that it would be desirable for his highest interests;
-she feared lest James and Elgitha might be vexed that the offer had not
-been made first to Gilbert. Of course Miles was a sort of tradesman,
-and Elgitha could scarcely be supposed to admire trade; still she
-might have liked Gilbert to have been first consulted.
-
-She took the letter up to the rectory, and laid it before her brother.
-The rector read it carefully, and returned it to her with a sigh and a
-smile.
-
-“I suppose Mark will go,” he said.
-
-“He has not made up his mind yet,” said Margaret.
-
-“Does he dislike the idea of desk work?”
-
-“I don’t think he ever thought of disliking it. If he were to be
-a teacher or a clergyman he would have a great deal of desk work,
-wouldn’t he?”
-
-“Certainly, and promotion is so slow; unless he happened to possess the
-gift of oratory, he might be a curate at forty.”
-
-“I fancy he thought rather of being a teacher.”
-
-“Very hard work; breaking stones on the road is play to it,” said the
-gentle rector, who had no talent for teaching, though he had a very
-pretty talent for preaching. “It seems a pity that he should not close
-with Miles’ offer; Mark would be a treasure to him.”
-
-“You think he would?”
-
-“Can you doubt it? Don’t you know what he is to you and to me? On all
-grounds I think he should accept it, if he has no personal dislike to
-the arrangement. At all events he should go and try.”
-
-So Mark went, and Gilbert, with many a shrug, pronounced him a lucky
-fellow, and promised to come and dine with him.
-
-The rector took occasion, on Mark’s departure, to speak to his son as
-to his own path in life.
-
-“Mark has made his start in life, Gilbert. Don’t you think it would be
-advisable for you to make up your mind as to what you will do?”
-
-“Yes, sir, I suppose it would; but it is so hard to make up one’s mind
-when one has no special vocation. Mark’s a lucky fellow; his mind was
-made up for him.”
-
-“I have very good reason to think that if you had had Mark’s aptitude,
-the offer would have been made to you.”
-
-“It is a pity I hadn’t; but I don’t suppose it’s a man’s fault not
-caring for things. It must be a great bore to you, sir, to have a son
-like me, who doesn’t care for any of the things you care for. I don’t
-suppose two men were ever more unlike.”
-
-“I don’t ask you to consider what I should like you to do; that,
-perhaps, would be unfair; but only to see that, taking your own view,
-what you are doing will not pay. If I were to die, there would not be
-more than enough for your mother and sister.”
-
-“So you have told me before; so the mother has told me. It is
-unfortunate that I have no taste for anything. I don’t find that I care
-about doing the same thing for two days together.”
-
-“Does it never occur to you that there is such a thing as duty?”
-
-“A very useful dissyllable, no doubt, sir, and telling in a song;
-but it is very much gone out of fashion nowadays, with the Church
-Catechism, high pews, and church clerks. No one considers that he ought
-to be ‘content with that state of life,’ etc.”
-
-“Gilbert,” said Mr. Echlin, more sternly than he had ever spoken to
-his son, “if you do not woo duty as a mistress, she will drive you
-as a taskmistress. The man who has no love of duty had better never
-have been born. He has no high aims, no ennobling thoughts. Do not, I
-beseech you, give me the misery of knowing that my only son is an idle
-man.”
-
-“Do not distress yourself, father. I suppose I shall drop into
-something before long. There can be no hurry. If you had ten children
-it would be another matter. There’s Elgitha; she has energy enough, and
-cares about lots of things. If you would send her to Girton, sir, I
-feel sure she’d take a double first, and like it.”
-
-“She might do very much worse, I believe,” said Mr. Echlin, turning
-away. He went into his study with a sore heart to write his Sunday
-sermon on the beauty of holiness, and Gilbert found half an hour’s
-amusement in teasing his sister’s canaries.
-
-It was not long before Mark Fenner’s start in life brought changes
-to Rosenhurst. The more Miles Echlin knew him, the better he liked
-him. Mark possessed one of those strong natures that rests in itself,
-never impatient to thrust itself forward, and never much occupied
-with a consideration of its own wants or pleasures. Accepting in the
-fullest and heartiest sense all the duties that were comprehended in
-the partnership offered him by his mother’s cousin, and loving them
-because they were duties, he set himself with all his heart to master
-the technicalities of the business, and entered into the enthusiasms of
-the old publisher with all a young man’s energy.
-
-“It was a lucky thing, sir, that visit to Rosenhurst,” said Evans, Mr.
-Echlin’s head clerk and factotum, when Mark had been some six months in
-London. “Mr. Fenner is a born publisher. He takes to the printer’s ink
-as a babe to its mother’s milk. As things have turned out, it really
-seems quite providential.”
-
-“I am glad you think so, Evans; it is my own opinion exactly. I hope
-the lad is satisfied. How those dear ladies at the cottage must miss
-him!”
-
-When Mr. Echlin left his office after this conversation, he took his
-leisurely way to Manchester-square. It had always been a principle with
-him to live within an easy walk of his business, having early imbibed
-a taste for that most healthy of all exercises, and having found that
-there was no better time for thinking over business. Indeed, for many
-years he had never embarked upon an undertaking until he had turned it
-over in his mind during two or three days’ walk to and fro.
-
-As he strolled home that evening it was June, and the whole earth
-was singing with gladness. The City’s great heart was throbbing with
-welcome to the sweet summer, and stretching out eager hands for the
-fruits and flowers of the country. Roses and strawberries lay in
-tempting proximity in the shops, women’s clothes fluttered airily
-in the breeze, and young men skimmed cheerily along, taking note of
-the luncheon-bars where American drinks were for sale, while elderly
-men looked fresh and rosy in light trousers, light hats, and light
-waistcoats.
-
-As Mr. Echlin walked on, nodding to an acquaintance here, exchanging
-a word or two there, his mind was pursuing some such train of thought
-as this:—How fine the weather was; it was a pleasure to breathe.
-This time last year Edward had been by his side; it was on the 18th
-of June; he remembered it because he had made a little excuse for the
-extravagance, saying that we ought not to forget the anniversary of
-Waterloo; and they had stopped to buy the first basket of strawberries.
-How little had either of them thought that the course of their quiet
-life would so soon be broken! It was a dismal thing to think that he
-had let him go to Rome at that time of the year. But then he seemed so
-strong; nothing ever ailed him. Dr. Dickenson said, indeed, that he had
-no reserve force—weak vital energy, like his dear mother. To wish him
-“good-bye” for a six weeks’ holiday, and never to see him alive again!
-Well, well, it was sad. Such a son, too, and with all his future so
-easy before him! Well, well, it wouldn’t be so very long that he would
-have to survive him; he was almost sixty; it could not be so very
-long. And now he had Mark Fenner. Strange that all the time Edward was
-with him he had never thought of going down to Rosenhurst to see James
-and poor Margaret. And then his thoughts carried him to the little
-cottage at the rectory gate, where the two women lived who must miss
-their good son and brother so much, and who must be so much missed by
-him.
-
-Thus meditating, he reached his own door, which he opened, according to
-his custom, with a latchkey, and passed down the cool passage into the
-large, cool, but rather sombre dining-room.
-
-The table was laid for two, the silver and glass shining on the white
-damask, while the old butler stood with his smile of welcome by the
-shining mahogany sideboard, whereon was displayed the usual row of
-bottles—port, sherry, and claret, with a dessert of early strawberries
-and biscuits. It was all very comfortable, but just a trifle dreary;
-so, at least, Miles thought it must be to the young man who was now
-knocking at the door, who was to use the second knife and fork and be
-his companion all the evening.
-
-At the cottage at Rosenhurst what would the young man’s mother and
-sister be doing now? Perhaps sitting down to their modest meal, waited
-on by the little country damsel with round eyes and rosy cheeks;
-perhaps going through the more stately but rather dismal ceremonial of
-“dining at the rectory.”
-
-All the evening, while they dined, read the papers, and, later on,
-in deference to the beauty of the night, strolled through the quiet
-streets towards the Regent’s Park, and saw the moon hanging like a
-silver disc in the sky—while Mark, following his lead, discoursed
-of the lovely woods of Sunbridge, of the hedges fragrant with wild
-roses and honeysuckle, of the sweet, pure air, of his mother and her
-garden, of his sister singing in the twilight to the old piano—there
-always lay the thought suggested to him by the words of Evans in
-the afternoon, “As things have turned out, it really seems quite
-providential.” Mark Fenner was already much more to him than he could
-ever have hoped from one who was not his own son; he was doing his
-work with all his heart, with all his soul, and with all his strength,
-accepting it as the business of his life. But might not he for his
-part—he, Miles Echlin—do something on his side also to make the lad’s
-life brighter—to make the house in Manchester-square, now for nearly
-thirty years his home, a little more cheery and a little more homelike
-to the boy who had grown up in the little cottage at the rectory gate
-at Rosenhurst?
-
-If there is much cause of lamentation at the overcrowded dwellings of
-the poor, something might also be said plaintive and touching about the
-desolation of the houses of the wealthy—of the rich carpets so seldom
-trodden, the couches on which no limbs ever find repose, the mirrors
-reflecting nothing but each other, of the soft beds which are never
-pressed, and all the elaborate machinery of modern life gathered into
-chamber after chamber, and never used. Extremes meet, and the rich man
-in the desolation of his empty chambers may be as much in need of pity
-as the poor man crowded out of his one apartment by the superabundance
-of his domestic ties.
-
-The house which Miles Echlin called home consisted of suites of
-reception-rooms furnished in the costliest taste of thirty years ago,
-when Mrs. Echlin was alive, and Edward, a bright boy of three, was
-making sunshine in the house, while there was a possibility of sons and
-daughters yet to come; but the cheery little wife, for whose sake and
-by whose direction the furnishing had been done, took a cold—a mere
-nothing, it seemed—and passed almost suddenly out of the life so full
-of hope and happiness for her, just as a bright flame which makes the
-whole room glad is blown out by a puff of wind coming one knows not
-whence. Then Miles, saddened and sobered, went about his work, caring
-little for the large house, only seeing that it was properly cleaned
-and aired, walking methodically through the great rooms, and coming
-at last to live in two of them, his dining-room and a small sleeping
-room, which had been his dressing-room while his wife was alive. A few
-friends came to see him at intervals, and there were some to whom the
-silent house was a home whenever they came to town; but Miles had no
-heart for company. When Edward should be grown up would be time enough;
-the boy should marry, and then the house would once again echo with
-laughter and song; he should make his own choice—it would be sure to
-be a worthy one, and they would find a corner for the old man, and
-not think him in the way. Edward grew up, and was all that his father
-wished him to be; then came the second bitter disappointment, and the
-big house was more empty and silent than ever.
-
-On that June evening, as he strolled with Mark through the quiet
-streets, and glanced up at the lighted windows in the houses of his
-neighbours, at the groups of people, old and young, on the high
-balconies, and caught the waves of laughter or song, the silence,
-the darkness of the house into which they introduced themselves by a
-latchkey, seemed almost unendurable. The gas was turned low in the
-dining-room; the portrait of Mrs. Echlin looked thin and spectral;
-the plate and glass on the sideboard suggested anything but good
-cheer, looking rather like mummies from which the life has long since
-departed. Mark turned up the gas, and they saw that it wanted five
-minutes to ten. What a long evening it had been. Mark was tired,
-and thought, if Mr. Echlin didn’t mind, he would go to bed; he said
-something in apology about country habits; he did not say that he was
-up every morning before six practising certain technicalities which
-were necessary for the carrying on the business; nor did he complain
-of the heat and closeness of the office, though both were trying to a
-country lad.
-
-Mr. Echlin wished him “good-night” kindly, but rather like one in a
-dream, and when the butler came in at eleven, according to custom, with
-his master’s candle, and to carry up the plate, he still sat in the
-same chair, but he was leaning back with a satisfied look; the inkstand
-and blotting-pad were on the table, and a sealed letter lay before him.
-
-“Are you ready for your candle, sir?” said Martin, taking all in at a
-glance.
-
-“Yes, quite,” replied the master, rising briskly from his chair.
-“Good-night, Martin; fine weather for the country.”
-
-“Splendid for the crops, sir,” said Martin, a cockney to the backbone,
-who was imbued with the idea that the more the sun blazed the better
-the corn grew; but as he turned out the gas the old man wondered to
-whom his master had been writing, a wonder which was not relieved in
-the morning, as was generally the case on the rare occasions when Mr.
-Echlin wrote a letter at home, by his being requested to post it, for
-his master brought the letter down with him, laid it on the mantelpiece
-with the direction downwards, and carried it out in his own hand when
-he went to business, all which unusual proceedings served to fix
-Martin’s attention on the letter, and to impress him with the idea that
-it must be a document of much importance.
-
-(_To be concluded._)
-
-
-
-
-AN APPEAL FOR AN OLD FRIEND.
-
-BY ANNE BEALE.
-
-
-Five years ago the first appeal for the Princess Louise Home was
-inserted in THE GIRL’S OWN PAPER. It appeared in the weekly number
-dated February 25, 1882. The response to it was hearty and immediate,
-and from all parts of the habitable globe arrived contributions in
-money and goods towards a bazaar for the benefit of this “National
-Society for the Protection of Young Girls.” The bazaar was held in May,
-but the account of it was given in the number for July 22, 1882.
-
-Every subscriber likes to know what becomes of his or her donations;
-therefore we purpose to look into results by paying another visit to
-our old friends at Woodhouse, Wanstead, before terrifying our readers
-by announcing another fancy fair.
-
-“Old friends” is almost a misnomer, for new faces greet us everywhere
-as we enter the precincts of the grounds and ancient abode. Mrs.
-Talbot, the esteemed matron, has resigned, and Mrs. Macdonald reigns
-in her stead. Miss Tidd, the originator and untiring secretary of the
-bazaar, is happily married. So is the schoolmistress, who, it will be
-remembered, was also a pupil trained at the Home. The monatresses of
-to-day are the scholars of five years ago, and our own particular girls
-have diminished in number. Thanks to the bazaar and collateral causes,
-we have been privileged to gain admission for nearly a dozen, of whom
-the greater number are in service and doing well, and when we make
-urgent demands for our girls, four only respond to them; but they have
-not forgotten us. We find two in the kitchen and two in the laundry,
-and hear that a couple of these are going to service after Christmas.
-They all look rosy and happy, in spite of the fumes that surround
-them; for the young cooks are bending over two gigantic saucepans,
-whence issues a very savoury odour, and the juvenile laundresses are
-enveloped in the less appetising exhalations from damp linen; for
-this is folding, drying, and mangling day, and one of our particular
-girls is turning the mangle. This large and commodious laundry has
-been erected, opened, and utilised since our last visit to Woodhouse.
-There are different compartments for sorting, washing, drying, ironing,
-mangling, packing, and delivering, which all communicate with one
-another. We live and learn; for we had scarcely realised before all
-the processes of laundry work. And this is all done by manual toil;
-for there is no steam. Seven of the elder girls are at present in
-training under a special experienced matron and laundry-maid, and as
-customers increase, more will be drafted off to this particular work,
-and open the other parts of the establishment to an increased number of
-inmates. As laundries almost invariably pay, it is confidently hoped
-that the income of the Home will be greatly increased by this agency,
-and both friends and strangers are “cordially invited,” as the phrase
-now is, to try it. The tariff of charges is the ordinary one laid down
-in London and the neighbourhood, and arrangements have been made with
-those ubiquitous carriers, Carter and Paterson, to fetch and return
-boxes and hampers of linen from and to any part of this vast metropolis
-free of charge; and customers may count on being supplied with the said
-boxes and hampers gratis and securely padlocked. What could they want
-more? “Good washing and ironing,” is the reply; and we trust these will
-follow the demand. Over a thousand articles have to be washed weekly
-for the inmates of the Home alone; so under all circumstances the hand
-is kept in.
-
-Our laundresses boast of a separate establishment, which they have
-called Primrose Cottage, probably after the Primrose League, of which
-they have heard. This is a long room with a long green-baize-covered
-table, communicating with the laundry. A short time ago it was a sort
-of outhouse; now it is a sitting and dining-room, adorned with texts.
-If funds only came in, many other tumble-down and ill-paved portions
-of this country seat might be vastly amended. But neither Rome nor
-Woodhouse was built or repaired in a day. Soon, however, we hope to
-see a splendid drying-ground replace the present one, for the asphalted
-roof of the laundries offers every facility for it. If we may be
-permitted to make a personal remark, we would venture to say that a
-rosier, healthier set of laundry-girls could nowhere be seen, and the
-roses extend from face to arms. As we descend from Primrose Cottage to
-the laundry, we are arrested by a remark made by the secretary, as he
-points upwards to an iron girder—
-
-“This was a great encouragement to me. This iron came from Providence,
-and bears that name. I took it as a good sign, and worked on in faith,”
-he says.
-
-Assuredly there is the word “Providence” stamped on the iron, and we
-will not pause to inquire whence its origin, but hasten onwards to see
-what the Divine Providence is doing for His rescued children, and what
-He requires us to do.
-
-Most of them are in the playground, and their ringing voices and
-laughter sound mirthful, and convey no impression of the depraved homes
-from which they have been taken. About a dozen of them, however, are
-gathered round a fire in what is called their playroom, which might be
-better paved and appointed, if only those—we dare not mention funds
-again in this place, seeing we are about to make an appeal vigorous
-enough to melt hearts harder than these very rough stones on which
-the children play. A bundle of picture text cards attracts the whole
-school into the playroom, and we are soon surrounded by about fifty
-girls of ages varying from eleven to fifteen and over, all thankful
-for very small mercies. We are thus enabled to declare them very
-well-mannered; for instead of pressing forward to seize on the coveted
-card, they stand back, each urging a companion to the front. Slight
-touches indicate character and training, and this reticence speaks for
-itself. In spite of many difficulties inseparable from the education of
-girls mostly born and bred in a doubtful atmosphere, it is possible to
-cultivate a certain delicacy and refinement amongst them.
-
-“I am sorry to be obliged to leave you; but I am going to take this
-girl to her place,” interrupts the matron, as a respectable-looking,
-neatly-dressed maiden appears amongst her schoolfellows to bid them
-good-bye.
-
-She has passed her term of years in the Home, and is about to make her
-start in life. A good outfit and a respectable place have been provided
-for her somewhere in Kent, and the kind matron will not lose sight of
-her until she places her in the care of her new mistress. Indeed, the
-girls are never lost sight of, as their touching letters and frequent
-returns home prove, as well as the communications made to the matron on
-each change of place.
-
-“If you keep your situation and have a good character for one clear
-year, the committee will give you a guinea as a reward, together with a
-new dress,” says the secretary, encouragingly.
-
-How little we realise the feelings of the young servant as she leaves
-the best home she has known for a stranger one, and hurries off to
-the train about to whirl her away into a new world! When we inquire
-her previous history, we are told that she was “surrounded by immoral
-influences, and rescued just in time.”
-
-Let us hope that her mistress will be able to write of her as
-many mistresses have written this year of girls sent to service
-before her—in terms of high commendation. Here are one or two
-extracts:—“Mary has been in my service for three years, and I have
-much pleasure in testifying to her continued good behaviour. She works
-hard, is very trustworthy, and I should be very sorry to part with
-her.” “Ellen is a very good girl, and during the two years she has been
-with me has given me great satisfaction. I hope she may remain with me
-many years,” etc.
-
-When we consider what may have been the fate of these young people
-had not friends of the Home intervened, we are thankful for what our
-readers have done to help them. We are attracted by one who sits rather
-apart, and is bigger than the others. She was rescued from a life of
-such awful terrorism that even now, when reproved, she hides under the
-beds, creeping from one to another like a wild animal. She has, it is
-said, lost half her wits from fear; but it is hoped that kindness may
-recall them from their “wool-gathering.” She seems less perplexed than
-she was.
-
-We should like to linger, and learn the story of all the girls; but
-we are summoned from the outworks to the keep, where lessons and
-housework alternate, just as they did when last we were here. As to
-the dormitories, they are literally ablaze with colour, for a generous,
-anonymous donor has sent seventy scarlet woollen coverlets, and each
-bed boasts of one. But there are at present only sixty-one inmates,
-and, accordingly, nine of the said coverlets are set aside. We are
-anxious to fill the home, which will hold one hundred. Therefore
-that last resource, a bazaar, is still in contemplation. Adverse
-circumstances prevented its taking place in 1886, the jubilee year
-of the Institution; so we hope that 1887, the jubilee year of our
-well-beloved Queen, may see it consummated. Will the readers of THE
-GIRL’S OWN PAPER continue their kind efforts, and send us work or
-money, as seems to them best? Some eight hundred pounds resulted from
-the last bazaar, which was mainly attributable to the start they gave
-it; and already numerous contributions have been received, the work of
-their willing fingers. Five years ago the office of the Princess Louise
-Home was crowded with packages containing their gifts. May it be so
-again, and may the writer once more be privileged to record them, and
-may another round dozen or more of girls be safely housed, taught, and
-placed in service, as the result of their labours.
-
-Several distinguished and influential ladies have already promised
-their aid in various ways, and we are stirring ourselves up to hope for
-“a great success.” H. R. H. the Princess Louise will open the bazaar,
-life and health being granted to her. We will pray that they may be
-extended and lengthened, and that she may see the Home that bears her
-name full to overflowing.
-
-We are thankful that our readers have such good memories, and that
-they have not forgotten this, their first love, while contracting an
-attachment for another, equally worthy. Happily the philanthropic heart
-is large, and its hand ever open.
-
-We have been so long the historian of the Home that we find nothing
-new to say about it, therefore we will wind up by a visit to the
-secretary’s private abode, in order to see one of the girls, now in his
-service, who was a Woodhouse bird when last we looked into the nest.
-A drive across Wanstead Flats, through a portion of the Forest, and
-past the picturesque village, brings us to his hospitable domicile.
-Hence he walks almost daily to oversee the Home, so that he, at least,
-is not idle, since he must also supervise monetary matters in London
-diurnally. We congratulate him on having such a quiet halting-ground
-midway.
-
-It would be out of place to describe it, or the excellent luncheon
-of which we partook, but it is quite allowable to say that the neatly
-dressed, rosy-faced parlour-maid waits uncommonly well, and that she
-is a good specimen of Woodhouse training. We are gratified by her
-recognising us, and if all the readers of THE GIRL’S OWN PAPER could
-have seen her bright smile of welcome and respectable appearance, they
-would have rejoiced with us. But she is only one of the many who have
-been aided. During the fifty years of the existence of the Institution,
-nearly three thousand have been rescued from danger of one kind and
-another, fifteen hundred of whom have been received since it has
-been known as “The Princess Louise Home.” Forty-three of these were
-admitted only last year. Close upon eleven hundred have become domestic
-servants, and who can calculate the inestimable good done to them and
-society by rescuing them from indescribable evils?
-
-As we stood upon the platform of the Snaresbrook Station awaiting the
-train, we moralised on this. Sunset with its heavenly glow overspread
-Epping Forest and Wanstead-park, beyond which lies the Home. We reflect
-on the Divine love which has inspired in the human heart the desire to
-devote all we see around us to the overworked citizens of the largest
-city in the world; and to open to some of her tempted children the
-gates of the rescue house in the distance. We recognize in the evening
-glow that God’s love never fails. We will strive to obey His command,
-which says “Let brotherly love continue.”
-
-We perceive both degrees of love in the subjoined list, and feel
-assured that Christ’s little ones will be still held in tender
-remembrance.
-
-In addition to the seventy coverlets already mentioned, we are
-requested to state that 224 valuable articles have been received at the
-Home from a lady who desires her name not to be announced. These vary
-from scarlet blankets to children’s hose.
-
-Lady Greenall and Mrs. Edward Lloyd have also sent magnificent gifts of
-clothing, made and unmade; and “The Hampton Court Association of Ladies
-for the Care of Friendless Girls” has likewise contributed a valuable
-parcel of clothing, through the Dowager Lady Clifford.
-
-In money, three guineas from Lady Martin and ten shillings from C. W.
-B. D. have been received.
-
-Contributions sent to the Secretary, Mr. Gillham, at 32,
-Sackville-street, W., will be immediately acknowledged by him, and
-subsequently in this Magazine.
-
-
-
-
-“SHE COULDN’T BOIL A POTATO;”
-
-OR,
-
-THE IGNORANT HOUSEKEEPER, AND HOW SHE ACQUIRED KNOWLEDGE.
-
-BY DORA HOPE.
-
-
-Although Mrs. Wilson was very much better, her improvement still
-greatly depended upon having perfect quiet and freedom from all
-excitement, and her nurses found that if she was in any way disturbed
-or agitated in the evening, she either lay awake the greater part of
-the night, or, when worn out for want of sleep, was compelled to take
-the soothing medicine, which always had a depressing effect upon her
-next day.
-
-One evening, Ella had just left her aunt, who was drowsily watching
-nurse’s final preparations for the night, when the whole house suddenly
-rang with piercing screams and cries for help from the kitchen.
-
-Greatly annoyed and frightened, Ella ran downstairs to stop the
-noise, and, on reaching the kitchen, was horrified to find Annie,
-the housemaid, rushing about the room with her dress in flames, and
-shrieking wildly for someone to save her. The cook, meanwhile, was
-crouching in a corner with her apron over her head, so that, as she
-said afterwards, she “might not see Annie burnt to death before her
-eyes.”
-
-Ella quickly shut the kitchen-door, thereby stopping the draught of
-air, which was blowing the flames in all directions, and then, with
-more presence of mind, although not much better success, than the cook,
-she seized a jug of water, and flung it over the flames, and ran for
-more.
-
-Unfortunately, it was burning oil that had caught fire, and was setting
-alight to the matting that covered the floor, and the water only spread
-the mischief further.
-
-Happily, nurse now appeared in the doorway, and instantly perceiving
-what was the matter, tore up a heavy hearthrug, and wrapping it
-round Annie, soon succeeded in extinguishing the flames; while Ella,
-perceiving the good effect of her plan, promptly imitated her example,
-and pulling up doormats, and anything woollen she could reach, threw
-them on the burning oil on the floor, and she and nurse soon stamped
-out the flames.
-
-Directly the fire was quite out, nurse urged Ella to return to her
-aunt, while she herself examined the extent of Annie’s burns. Happily,
-the poor girl was wearing a dress of thick woollen material, which had
-taken a long time to ignite, so that, although her muslin apron had
-made a great blaze, she herself was hardly injured at all. It was, in
-reality, Mrs. Wilson who suffered the most, the excitement causing her
-a sleepless night, followed next day by a violent headache and feverish
-attack.
-
-After breakfast the following day, Ella made up her mind to hold a
-solemn inquiry into the causes of the accident, the result of which
-filled her with amazement that the whole house had not been burnt down
-long ago.
-
-There was no gas in the house, and, as a great deal of oil was
-required, a large tin vessel containing several gallons was kept (or
-was supposed to be) in an outhouse; while, in order to avoid the danger
-of taking a light near this supply of oil, Mrs. Wilson had given
-instructions that the lamps should always be cleaned and re-filled
-during the morning.
-
-But the outhouse was cold, and the lamps were often forgotten until
-they were wanted in the evening; so the large can of oil had been
-surreptitiously brought into one of the pantries, where it could be
-more easily got at.
-
-On this occasion, as on many others, Annie had forgotten to fill the
-hall lamp, and when it reminded her of the fact by smoking, making a
-choking smell, and finally going out, she took it down and filled it,
-using the naked flame of a benzoline lamp to light the dark little
-pantry.
-
-Even this foolhardy act did not, as it might have done, set the whole
-store of oil in flames, and she actually trimmed and re-lighted the
-lamp in safety, and was carrying it through the kitchen, when a sudden
-draught blew the flame of the benzoline lamp against her hand, on which
-some oil was spilled. This flamed up, and the frightened girl dropped
-both lamps. The larger one exploded in the fall, setting fire to the
-oil and to her own apron, and, but for nurse’s quickness and presence
-of mind, she would probably have been burned to death.
-
-All this information, very unwillingly given, added to cook’s remark
-that there was not a lamp that would burn properly in the house, so
-frightened Ella that she felt inclined to give up the use of lamps
-altogether, and burn nothing but candles. On second thoughts, however,
-and after consulting Mrs. Mobberly, to whom she always referred in all
-her difficulties, she sent instead for the man who had supplied the
-lamps, and had them all reviewed.
-
-He declared that all the mischief arose from the dirty state of the
-lamps, which, much to the indignation of the maids, he requested Ella
-to look at, to prove the truth of his words.
-
-“If you have good lamps, and keep them perfectly clean, and burn good
-oil, you are quite safe,” he said; “but if you neglect any of those
-three, they are the most dangerous things you can have about a house.”
-
-Ella honestly acknowledged that she knew nothing at all about lamps,
-and had never cleaned one in her life, but she was determined to
-understand the matter thoroughly now, and begged the man to explain
-exactly what cleansing was necessary to keep them in good order.
-
-He advised that the lamp glasses and globes should be washed every week
-with warm water, soap, and soda, but they must be most carefully dried
-before using. The different parts of the burner should be brushed out,
-or rubbed clean with a cloth every day; and at least once in two months
-the whole brass fittings taken off and well washed.
-
-In a well-made lamp all parts of the burner should take to pieces in
-order to be cleaned. The wick-tube and perforated plate through which
-the air has to pass to feed the flame should be most particularly seen
-to. Charred wick and paper, match heads and dust are often allowed to
-fill up the holes of the grid, causing a poor flame, a bad smell, and,
-not unfrequently, an explosion.
-
-“Don’t be afraid of plenty of warm water and soap and soda,” the man
-repeated; “only you’d better look out pretty sharp, miss, and see that
-they get the whole thing perfectly dry before it is lighted again, or
-you’ll be having another explosion, and perhaps you won’t come off as
-well next time.”
-
-Ella thanked the man for his goodnatured advice, and determined
-henceforward to examine the lamps for herself every day, to make sure
-her directions were really carried out. Both she and the nurse made
-as light as possible of the affair to Mrs. Wilson, who, on seeing for
-herself that Annie was not much the worse, was quite contented that
-it had been a very trifling matter which had unnecessarily frightened
-them; and feeling herself worn out and irritable with sleeplessness,
-and the consequent feverishness, she indulged in some rather biting
-sarcasms on the “hysterical young ladies of the present day, who make a
-fuss about nothing at all,” and begged Ella to remember that she liked
-the house kept quiet last thing at night.
-
-These very undeserved reproaches were rather hard for poor Ella to
-bear, but she managed to keep silence, and as soon as she was released
-consoled herself by writing a doleful letter to her mother, with a full
-account of the whole affair, adding the oft-repeated remark that “she
-would never be able to manage a house—it was not in her.”
-
-As she expected, her letter brought a speedy reply.
-
-“You must not be discouraged, my child,” wrote her mother, “when
-you have to accept blame for the faults of others; that is the very
-essence of self-denial, to give up everything, even the credit you
-feel you have deserved, for the sake of others; and if it cost you no
-effort to do, it would be no denial of self. At any rate you have been
-successful, for the very fact that you are blamed proves that you have
-saved Aunt Mary the worry and annoyance of knowing her servants to be
-careless and incompetent, and thereby you have done much to help on her
-recovery.
-
-“Now about the lamps. My own experience has taught me one or two other
-lessons, which I will pass on to you.
-
-“The wick must fit the lamp, and be the right kind for that particular
-burner. If you are not sure about the kind to get, they will always
-advise you if you go to a good shop to buy the wick.
-
-“Then, again, the oil is not (or should not be) all burnt out before
-the lamp is refilled, but fresh oil is added to what is already in.
-After this process has been continued some time, however, the oil
-becomes turbid, and gives a disagreeable smell when the lamp is
-lighted. To avoid this, the oil should occasionally be emptied out of
-the lamp, and the whole thing washed before being refilled with fresh
-oil.
-
-“You cannot insist too strongly on proper care being used in filling
-the lamps; one brilliant housemaid we had when you were children was
-caught filling a lamp holding it over the kitchen fire, that the oil
-might run over on to the fire, and not make a mess on the floor. After
-that I filled them myself till I got a maid whom I could thoroughly
-trust.
-
-“And do not try to be economical in buying the oil; I cannot advise you
-which kind to use, as I do not remember what the lamps are like, but go
-to a good shop, and get the best they recommend. I have generally used
-a very good kind, called ‘water-white.’ The poor oils throw off a most
-explosive gas at a low heat, and do not give so much light as better
-oils. If you are careful on all these points, you need not be in the
-least nervous about the lamps; we have always used them till the last
-year or two, and have never had an explosion or accident of any sort.”
-
-With all this information to guide her, coupled with her own
-observation of the construction of the lamps, Ella felt herself
-mistress of the situation, and determined that for once she would
-insist upon having her own way.
-
-She had the oil removed to the little outhouse again, the door of which
-she locked, and kept the key herself, only giving it to Annie at the
-time she had appointed for filling the lamps.
-
-The result of this decided measure was that Annie became sullen and
-disobliging, while the cook, taking her part, made rude remarks in
-a tone purposely loud enough for Ella to hear, about the discomfort
-of having two mistresses in the house; and nurse caught her, a short
-time afterwards, complaining to Mrs. Wilson of Ella’s overbearing
-ways and unreasonable orders, and of the “nasty, stuck-up ways” of
-the nurse. She was very quickly and unceremoniously turned out of the
-room; but the mischief was already done, for Mrs. Wilson, with the
-natural irritableness of an invalid, insisted on having the servants
-admitted to the room whenever they wished to see her, and partly, too,
-in consequence of her weakness, which made her unwilling to have any
-kind of upset in the house, and partly that she believed the servants
-to be honest and trustworthy, while she knew Ella was ignorant and
-inexperienced, Mrs. Wilson made matters worse by always taking their
-part, and blaming Ella for actions which had existed only in the
-imaginations of the maids.
-
-One complaint especially annoyed Ella. At home they had always been
-accustomed to arrange the work and the meals on Sundays so that not
-only the family, but the servants also, might attend a Bible class in
-the afternoon, in addition to the regular morning or evening service;
-and as she was very anxious that the servants at Hapsleigh should have
-the same liberty, Ella had done as much as she could of the necessary
-work for the sick room herself on that day, and had so managed that one
-or other of the maids had been able to go out every Sunday afternoon
-since her arrival.
-
-It was, therefore, with considerable surprise and vexation that Mrs.
-Wilson one morning showed her a note she had just received from the
-teacher of the Bible class Annie was supposed to attend, asking if she
-could be spared to come once in the month, so that the lady should not
-lose sight of her altogether.
-
-This was rather too much for Ella’s patience, and after with some
-difficulty convincing Mrs. Wilson that the girl had not even once been
-hindered from attending the class, she went straight off to call on
-the teacher. It seemed that Annie had lamented to that lady that with
-sickness in the house and an unreasonable young mistress, she would be
-unable to attend the class until Mrs. Wilson was well again; whereas
-in reality she had been going every Sunday to visit some friends whom
-she knew would be disapproved of both by her mistress and her teacher.
-
-However, happily for all parties, matters were coming to a crisis.
-
-Ella went, as usual, one morning to speak to the old gardener, whom
-she found digging in a secluded corner of the garden, with the ducks
-following closely at his heels, and poking with their flat bills into
-the freshly-turned earth, searching for worms or any other choice
-morsels that good fortune might bring in their way.
-
-The old man evidently had something on his mind, and, after the usual
-greetings and inquiries after Mrs. Wilson, he stuck his spade into the
-earth and leaned his arms on the top of it, as if prepared for a long
-conversation; at which the old drake cocked his head on one side, and
-stared at him out of one eye with an air of virtuous indignation at
-having his own labours interrupted in this way.
-
-The conversation did not seem easy to begin, however, and it was only
-after a good deal of hesitation that he said at last—
-
-“I’ve lived along of the missus now these forty year.”
-
-“Yes, I know you have, Mallard. Why, I remember you all my life,”
-replied Ella, wondering what was coming.
-
-“Well, Miss Ella, I ain’t told no tales, and I ain’t goin’ to tell no
-tales; but what I say I say; and that is as ’ow there’s things goes
-on in this ’ouse as ’adn’t ought to; and I ain’t lived along o’ the
-family, man and boy, these forty years without knowin’ as when the
-doors is locked at night they ought to be locked, and not so many goin’
-in and out as what there is.”
-
-And having finished this enigmatical speech, accompanied by many
-mysterious nods and winks, the old man pulled up his spade, and,
-touching his hat to Ella, disappeared amongst the bushes, leaving Ella
-and the ducks gazing after him in mutual astonishment.
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-
-
-
-NOTES FOR FEBRUARY.
-
-
-A paper in _Science Gossip_ for August, 1886, gives a very interesting
-description of the sprouting of a sycamore seed.
-
-These seeds have wings especially adapted for floating a heavy body. In
-November they are caught by the wind, and whirl round and round till
-they reach the earth. They always grow in pairs, although, if looked
-for now among the grass or on the wayside, many of them will be found
-single, having been separated from their companions. If a few of the
-double seeds are brought into the house, placed in a warm situation
-under a bell glass, and kept watered, their growth may be watched, and
-some marvels of nature learned.
-
-Every process is wonderful: the separation of the double seed, showing
-their junction to the stalk, then the appearance of the rootlets which
-are the first signs of growth, and then the cotyledons, or “nursing
-leaves,” whose function in life is to nourish and protect the pair of
-true leaves hidden within their embrace, till they are strong enough to
-defend themselves, when the cotyledons fall off and die.
-
-The folding of the cotyledon is a study in itself. “They are folded so
-as to occupy the least space, _i.e._, first fold in half, and then in
-half again, like a ribbon reduplicate, and not coiled round (circinate)
-like a fern frond, which, growing later in the season, requires less
-protection.”
-
-So the life goes on, showing fresh wonders and beauties at every stage
-of its growth, each step showing the wisdom and love of the great
-Creator and Designer.
-
-Plants grown indoors need constant care; it is advisable only to keep
-as many as can be properly attended to. Very few can stand gas, and
-all thrive better if removed when it is lighted. The watering, too,
-needs careful attention; they should not be kept too wet during the
-cold weather, although they must never get quite dry. They need plenty
-of light, so it is important that the windows should be kept clean, to
-allow a full measure of sunshine. The pots must be kept clean, and when
-a green growth appears on the outside they should be well scrubbed.
-They must not stand in a draught, which causes a chill, and checks the
-growth of the plants.
-
-Outdoor gardening this month depends greatly on the weather. If cold,
-all tender plants must still be protected, and even if warm they should
-not be encouraged to grow, as frosts may be expected for some time to
-come yet. Unless it is actually frosty, rose-trees needing it may be
-pruned, also raspberry, gooseberry, and currant trees. Turf may be
-re-laid, and, if necessary, grass-seed sown; the grass should be rolled
-after wet weather.
-
-Pay attention to bulbs now; crocuses and snowdrops should be starting.
-As soon as tulips, hyacinths, and other bulbs show their foliage, they
-should be protected at night by a light covering, until the frosts are
-over.
-
-In February, annuals may be sown indoors in boxes, and gradually
-hardened off for the garden, where everything should now be made tidy
-and ready for the spring, which will soon be coming.
-
-In the warmer counties of England the wild daffodil will soon be
-flowering. The old-fashioned “daffy-down-dilly,” though only of late
-years fashionable in town drawing-rooms, has always been a favourite
-with poets and artists, and all true lovers of the country. Wordsworth
-gives a beautiful description of “a host of golden daffodils.”
-
- “Ten thousand saw I at a glance,
- Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.”
-
-And who does not remember Herrick’s quaint but beautiful verses,
-beginning:
-
- “Fair daffodils, we weep to see
- You haste away so soon.”
-
-Or Spenser’s equally charming description of Cymoënt with her
-companions playing by a pond, and
-
- “Gathering sweete daffadillyes, to have made
- Gay girlonds from the sun their forheads fayr to shade.”
-
-The name sometimes given them of “Lent Lilies” is peculiar to places
-where they flower; in colder countries, where it would have no
-significance, the name is unknown.
-
-Like every other growing thing, the daffodil has much about it worthy
-of notice. It deals in sixes; six lobes to the corolla, and six pollen
-stamens, but a three-lobed ovary, and only one seed-leaf.
-
-The wild daffodil has little scent, but being, like the majority of
-spring flowers, of a bright yellow colour, it is easily seen by the
-day-flying insects, on whose visits it depends for fertilisation, while
-some of its near relatives, which are chiefly visited by night moths,
-are white and strongly scented, in order to be conspicuous even in the
-darkness.
-
-At this time of year, when the more hardy birds are beginning to return
-to our shores, as well as in autumn when they are migrating, a great
-number of our songsters are killed annually by flying against telegraph
-wires.
-
-Those that fly by night are the most frequent victims, but besides
-these many either fly or are blown against the wires, and killed or
-injured so severely that they die before long.
-
-
-
-
-ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
-
-
-EDUCATIONAL.
-
-MELISSA MATHESON.—The Braille System is the invention of M. Louis
-Braille, who was a blind professor at one of the national French
-institutions for the blind in Paris. The work of copying the cut-books
-is done by ladies, and the blind copy the embossed copy five times at
-least. You can obtain full particulars on applying to the secretary,
-British and Foreign Blind Association, 33, Cambridge-square, Hyde Park,
-London, W.
-
-A LOVER OF HISTORY.—Sir William Wallace was defeated at Falkirk, July,
-1298, by Edward I., brought to London, and hanged at Smithfield, 24th
-August, 1305, seven years afterwards. His public life extends over a
-period of fifteen months, and as to the history of his private life,
-there is an absolute blank. The whole of the fables about Sir William
-Wallace are the product of Blind Harry’s imagination.
-
-A MARTINITE.—You do not mention where you live, so our help will not
-be as effectual as it might be. You would obtain evening classes at the
-Birkbeck Institution, Bream’s-buildings, Chancery-lane, E.C., in all
-the branches you name. Subscriptions, 4s. quarterly, 12s. annually.
-
-S. A. U.—We should think you fully capable of taking a situation as
-governess with your certificates, which say so much for your general
-education, as well as attainments in music. Your handwriting is
-certainly not good, and looks uncultured. The only way you can improve
-it is to take some pretty handwriting and form yours on it.
-
-M. B. B.—You should write to the secretary of the College of
-Preceptors, 42, Queen-square, Bloomsbury, W.C., for their prospectus,
-and all information for the current year or coming term. It holds
-half-yearly pupils’ examinations, the certificates given being
-recognised as guarantees of a good and general education. The fee is
-10s.
-
-
-ART.
-
-MERMAID.—Seaweed taken from rocks should be placed in a basin of cold
-fresh water to spread itself out, and removed from thence on to a sheet
-of blotting-paper by sliding a card under it. See directions already
-given, and the article on how to preserve seaweed.
-
-MEMORY.—The price mentioned in the article upon crystoleum for
-finished pictures was obtainable when the work was new, at which time
-the paper was written. Five years have elapsed since that time, and
-many people have learnt the art, so that the price it could fetch at
-first is no longer given, unless the work be very superior and the
-subject of large dimensions.
-
-MARY.—Fan painting is decidedly remunerative, and has the advantage of
-being home-work; but a certain amount of originality is essential for
-it, as well as practical skill and experience and very great neatness.
-
-
-MISCELLANEOUS.
-
-WINIFRED MARY wants “a remedy for taking sunburn off the face and
-hands.” Shut yourself up in a bandbox, my dear, and when winter clouds
-and winds return you may open the lid and inspect the condition of
-your complexion. If a cure have been effected, come out; if not, shut
-yourself up in the dark a little longer. If you live to rejoice in the
-return of the summer’s sunshine you had better wear gloves and a veil.
-
-ROSE HENSHAW.—We regret our inability to avail ourselves of your
-story. If you send your address in full, it shall be returned to you.
-
-LIZZIE HERBERT.—We are glad you are happy in your marriage, even in
-the circumstances you name. But “one swallow does not make a summer.”
-We only laid down general rules, more especially for girls in the upper
-ranks of life. In your special case you seem to have acted wisely.
-
-HEZEKIAH.—We think that the “best thing to make you look as if you had
-not been crying” is not to cry. We imagine that your royal namesake
-cared little whether his eyes were red or not, because his was real
-grief.
-
-ANNE S.—No stranger could venture to give advice for deafness
-without seeing the patients and becoming acquainted with a variety
-of circumstances connected with them. Deafness may be hereditary or
-accidental, from a cold, an abscess, a plug of cotton, a secretion of
-wax, a fall, and thickening of the membrane, or a broken drum from a
-loud noise. It is an ailment too serious for guess-work.
-
-VIOLET.—The sons of a commoner could not inherit the rank their own
-father did not hold merely because their mother’s former husband was a
-peer. However, there are some few peerages that run in the female line,
-the mother being a peeress “in her own right,” not by marriage only.
-See our letters on “Girls’ Allowances,” in vol. v., pages 54, 91, 246
-and 764.
-
-MYRTLE.—Provided a licence were obtained, the marriage would be legal
-anywhere. If “Myrtle” is a Protestant, the ceremony should be performed
-by her own minister as well.
-
-FITZGERALD.—We are much obliged for the account of your visit to
-Wales, and regret that we can make no use of it; but it is very well
-written for a girl of your age.
-
-UNE JEUNE FILLE.—You would find a mention in the “Princesses of Wales”
-of the Princess Charlotte, at page 773, vol. vi. We have read the
-verses, but as yet they do not show much promise of future poetry in
-them.
-
-A SORROWFUL WIFE.—The Act passed last session will enable you to
-summon your husband for maintenance without the intervention of the
-Poor Law Guardians. Hitherto deserted wives have been obliged to throw
-themselves on the parish before taking proceedings; but the necessity
-for so doing no longer exists, and the benefit cannot be too widely
-known, as it is a very excellent change.
-
-E. G. (Leeds).—We sympathise much with you in your sorrow and trouble,
-and were glad to hear from you.
-
-MARGUERITE VANCE.—She would be his niece by the half-blood, and, of
-course, he could not marry her.
-
-WINNIE must keep her feet dry and warm, and place herself away from the
-fire when she comes in from a walk, as the heat of the fire will make
-her nose burn.
-
-ELLA KINGSLEY.—Sir Walter Scott, Mrs. Oliphant, Mrs. Craik, Rosa N.
-Carey, and Anne Beale, are all good and careful writers, whose books
-are quite fit for young girls to read.
-
-MINNIE M. (Maidstone).—Your verses are pretty, and give some promise,
-but need correction.
-
-POLLY.—The condition of your hair seems to imply a deterioration of
-your general health, for which you probably need tonics and better
-living. Vaseline is highly spoken of for the hair, and might be of use.
-
-MAGGIE.—1. As silkworms’ eggs are sold in Covent Garden Market,
-perhaps they might buy yours, if they can be proved thoroughly healthy
-and strong. 2. The acidulated drops such as are almost universally sold
-are most injurious to the enamel of the teeth.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-CECILIA.—Your lines on “Evangeline” give some promise for the future.
-The first sixteen lines are correct, the last sixteen are not so,
-neither in the number of feet nor fall of the beat, or emphasis.
-
-MAY.—The fault lies with yourself if you “hold back,” and be “unable
-to raise yourself from sin to a certain extent,” because our Divine
-Lord has promised to “give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him.” It
-most certainly is not our Father’s will that we should not “attain
-grace for a little while.” The evil will that keeps you back is that
-of your own heart and of the arch-tempter and deceiver. In reciting to
-uneducated people or children, select what they can comprehend, but
-what is good, though simple.
-
-MISS DAYNS.—Persons requiring any publication issued by the Religious
-Tract Society, whether a number of this paper or otherwise, should
-apply to the publisher (as we are always telling our correspondents),
-as the Editor has nothing to do with that department. He regrets that
-he has no knowledge of what Miss Dayns’s question was, nor in which
-number it may yet be answered. The number of answers inserted depends
-on the amount of space.
-
-CHRISTABEL.—Ash Wednesday is the first day in Lent in the English and
-Roman Church. In the latter the priest makes the sign of the cross
-on the foreheads of the people, saying, “Remember thou art but dust
-and ashes, and to dust thou shalt return.” Shrove Tuesday is the day
-preceding Lent, when in the latter church the people go to confess and
-be shriven.
-
-UNA.—1. We think the process of hardening, as carried out by exposure
-to cold, is of questionable wisdom in most cases. 2. We have made no
-personal trial of the instrument you name, but heard a friend commend
-its utility.
-
-VIVIAN KATE.—1. A young man who presumed to introduce himself to a
-girl could know nothing of common propriety nor of the respect due to
-an unprotected woman. Any knowledge of etiquette in such an individual
-is, of course, out of the question. In the circles of society where the
-rules of etiquette obtain, such impertinent intrusion on the part of a
-man would not be tolerated. 2. Wash the blue sateen in tepid water.
-
-HOPEFULL.—The water takes up all the camphor requisite, and will last
-for some time in the wash. You can use it again when you make it fresh.
-
-DORA (Aged 13) sends a poem, written when confined to the house by
-indisposition one Sunday, from which we can only quote one verse—
-
- “And one, though pale, yet _beautiful_,
- Lay in a darkened room,
- But the sweet texts she uttered
- Seemed to dispel the gloom.”
-
-Did she mean this description of an invalid to apply to herself?
-
-MARY.—1. The town named by you, Altrincham, in Cheshire, is usually
-spelt “Altringham,” and pronounced accordingly. 2. We say “crocuses,”
-not “croci.”
-
-LONELY GIRL writes her _nom de plume_ so illegibly that we cannot
-decipher it, so do not know what she wrote about on the first occasion
-that she addressed us; but she may feel happy in the assurance that
-we do not think, judging from her second letter, that she could have
-written anything needing the apology she now makes on the chance of
-having done so.
-
-ANTI-ANT.—You may keep the ants from shelves by keeping the latter
-washed with a strong solution of alum and water. You should also
-sprinkle insecticide powder over the floor, only be careful if you have
-a cat. Should this prove insufficient, apply to a chemist. Without
-doubt, Sir John Lubbock would appreciate his pets’ all-pervading
-presence as little as you do were he a guest in your house and found
-them, as you say, in his “meat, bacon, bread, cheese, pastry, sugar,
-plate, and cup” at all times and seasons!
-
-GWENDOLINE R.—1. We could not condense into two or three lines all the
-rules of lawn tennis contained in the manuals of instruction respecting
-the game. You should buy one of these. 2. Eat no more sweetmeats if you
-wish to cure your complaints.
-
-GERANIUM should write to our publisher. The editor’s department is
-perfectly distinct from his.
-
-FEATHERS.—Curl the ostrich feathers by gently drawing every filament
-between the edge of a blunt penknife and your thumb.
-
-POLLY.—1. By “elective affinity” we suppose natural selection was
-meant. 2. Your handwriting is rather a poor one.
-
-KATHERINE VAN HEMSKIRK.—We are sure that you could not do better than
-send the articles of clothing you name to the Home for Upper-class
-Children, 11, South-grove, Tunbridge Wells. Any of our readers who have
-school books or any suitable books for such a home would do a useful
-and charitable act in sending contributions of these kinds to this
-little institution.
-
-BUCHAN and J. B.—The verses by these young people express good
-sentiments in feeble language. They ought to make themselves acquainted
-with the rules of metrical composition. This at least could be
-accomplished, though the gift of original ideas cannot be acquired by
-any amount of study.
-
-ONE OF TWO.—For the meaning of girls’ Christian names, see our
-articles in vol. iv. In Webster’s large illustrated dictionary of the
-English language you will find those of most names, male as well as
-female.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Transcriber’s Note—the following changes have been made to this text.
-
-Page 261: dont’s to don’ts—“don’ts”.]
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER, VOL. VIII, NO.
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII, No. 369, January 22, 1887, 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: The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII, No. 369, January 22, 1887</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Various</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 22, 2021 [eBook #65897]</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 and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER, VOL. VIII, NO. 369, JANUARY 22, 1887 ***</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">{257}</span></p>
-
-<h1 class="faux">THE GIRL’S OWN PAPER</h1>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="header" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
-<img class="w100" src="images/header.jpg" alt="The Girl's Own Paper." />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="center">
-<div class="header">
-<p class="floatl"><span class="smcap">Vol. VIII.—No. 369.]</span></p>
-<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">[Price One Penny.</span></p>
-<p class="floatc">JANUARY 22, 1887.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">[Transcriber&#8217;s Note: This Table of Contents was not present in the original.]</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-
-
-
-<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
-
-<a href="#CARMEN_SYLVA_POETESS_AND_QUEEN">CARMEN SYLVA, POETESS AND QUEEN.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_SHEPHERDS_FAIRY">THE SHEPHERD’S FAIRY.</a><br />
-<a href="#HINTS_ON_PRACTISING_SINGING_AND_PRESERVING_THE_VOICE">HINTS ON PRACTISING SINGING AND PRESERVING THE VOICE.</a><br />
-<a href="#MERLES_CRUSADE">MERLE’S CRUSADE.</a><br />
-<a href="#I_ONLY_WISH_I_HAD">I ONLY WISH I HAD.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_INHERITANCE_OF_A_GOOD_NAME">THE INHERITANCE OF A GOOD NAME.</a><br />
-<a href="#AN_APPEAL_FOR_AN_OLD_FRIEND">AN APPEAL FOR AN OLD FRIEND.</a><br />
-<a href="#SHE_COULDNT_BOIL_A_POTATO">“SHE COULDN’T BOIL A POTATO.”</a><br />
-<a href="#NOTES_FOR_FEBRUARY">NOTES FOR FEBRUARY.</a><br />
-<a href="#ANSWERS_TO_CORRESPONDENTS">ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.</a><br />
-
-<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
-
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CARMEN_SYLVA_POETESS_AND_QUEEN">CARMEN SYLVA, POETESS AND QUEEN.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3"><span class="smcap">By the Rev.</span> JOHN KELLY, Translator of “Hymns of the Present Century.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_257" style="max-width: 21.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_257.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p class="center">THE QUEEN OF ROUMANIA (“CARMEN SYLVA”).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="smalltext"><i>All rights reserved.</i>]</p>
-
-
-<h3>PART I.</h3>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">Carmen</span> the song and Sylva the wood,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Join them together, the wood-song is heard;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">If in the woods I had not been born,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ne’er should I sing a song night or morn.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I’ve often learnt from the melody</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of birds, and woods have whispered to me,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">While my heart beat time within my breast,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And wood and song have sung me to rest.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Such, roughly rendered, is the explanation that the gifted and
-distinguished authoress gives of the <i>nom de plume</i> which she
-has assumed. In the last line there is a reference to the woodland
-castle—Mon Repos, or My Rest—where she passed her
-youth.</p>
-
-<p>Her father was Hermann, Prince of Wied, a cultivated and
-thoughtful man, fond of philosophical speculation, and a writer
-on topics connected with his favourite studies. Her mother
-was Princess Maria of Nassau, who is described as “a woman
-of great beauty and true elevation of soul, of strong will, keen
-understanding, self-sacrificing spirit and indefatigable activity,
-inexorably strict with reference to herself, but overflowing with
-kindness and consideration towards all with whom she is
-brought in contact.”<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth, the subject of our sketch, now the Queen of
-Roumania, was born on the 29th of December, 1843. As a
-child, she was impetuous in temper, reserved and resolute in
-disposition, and unbending in will. Her imagination was very
-lively. In her fourth year she was placed under the charge of a
-governess to receive regular instruction. Up to that time her
-mother had been her sole teacher. She was so lively that she
-suffered physical torture if she had to sit quite quiet. Once,
-when she was sitting for her portrait, along with her younger
-brother, Prince William, she resolved to keep still. Hardly
-had she done so for five minutes before she suddenly fell off her
-chair in a fainting fit. Her mother’s former governess, Fraülein
-Lavater, who came to Mon Repos for some months every year,
-was the only one who could tranquilise her.</p>
-
-<p>Very early Princess Elizabeth displayed a charitable and
-sympathetic disposition. She used to accompany her mother
-on visits to the poor, and thus she became acquainted with
-their needs. She would give away whatever she could dispense
-with; yet she was not destitute of sound practical sense.
-One day her mother gave her a large piece of woollen stuff.
-The little Princess was overjoyed, and exclaimed—</p>
-
-<p>“Now I can give away all my clothes!”</p>
-
-<p>“Had you not better give the woollen stuff to the poor
-children?” said her mother; “your white clothes would be
-of less use to them than the coarse stuff.” It was a new
-thought to the child, and she at once perceived the reasonableness
-of the suggestion, and acted on it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">{258}</span></p>
-
-<p>In November, 1850, her youngest brother
-Otto was born. He was afflicted with an
-organic malady, and in order to procure the
-best professional advice, the family went to
-Bonn in the spring of 1851. Many distinguished
-men—artists and <i>savans</i>—gathered
-around the princely family. Among others
-the patriot-poet, Ernst Moritz Arndt, then
-eighty-two years old, was a daily visitor. He
-read his patriotic songs to them. The
-Princess Elizabeth sat upon his knees while
-he did so, and listened with rapt attention
-and flushed cheeks. Many a time the
-venerable poet placed his hands upon her head
-and explained to her the beautiful name which
-she bore. “Elizabeth,” he said, “signifies
-‘God is rest.’”</p>
-
-<p>The present Crown Prince of Germany,
-then a student of Bonn, was also a frequent
-visitor.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this time that the future Queen
-first saw Roumanians. They were the brothers
-Stourdza, who were then studying at
-the University.</p>
-
-<p>Princess Elizabeth for a long time cherished
-the wish to sit on the form in the school
-with the village children. One morning,
-bursting into the room where her mother
-was much occupied, she asked if she might
-go with some farm children to the school.
-The Princess Maria did not hear the question,
-but nodded kindly to the child. Princess
-Elizabeth, taking this sign for permission,
-rushed off to the neighbouring farmhouse.
-There she heard that the children had already
-gone to school. She followed them quickly,
-and entered the schoolroom while the singing
-lesson was going on. The teacher was highly
-flattered when he saw the Princess standing
-at a form, and quite happily joining with full
-voice in the singing. The farmers’ little
-daughters, who had some notion of Court
-etiquette, regarded it as quite unseemly that
-the daughter of a Prince should join with such
-a very loud voice in singing with the village
-children! As soon as the Princess’s voice was
-heard above the voices of the other children,
-the girl next her put her hand on her mouth,
-and sought to impress upon her Serene Highness
-the impropriety of her position.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the greatest consternation was
-felt at the Castle on account of the disappearance
-of the Princess Elizabeth. Servants
-were sent out in all directions. For a long
-time they searched the neighbouring beechwoods
-and surrounding villages in vain. At
-last they found the little Princess, full of delight
-with her exploit, in the village school of
-Rodenbach. The missing child was carried
-back to the Castle, and confinement to her
-room for the rest of the day was the issue of
-the morning’s exploit.</p>
-
-<p>She was a born ruler of others. In
-playing with children of her own age,
-whether of her own or of peasant rank, her
-ascendancy was at once acknowledged and
-yielded to. She was the ringleader in the
-wildest games. The fantastic ideas which
-came into her head, and on which she acted,
-overmastered her for the time. They were
-realities to her.</p>
-
-<p>Her literary genius was early developed.
-She composed occasional pieces when she
-was nine and ten years old. At twelve years
-of age she attempted to write a novel. At
-fourteen she had invented dramas and tragedies.
-The more terrible the scenes were, the
-better was she pleased. Morning and night
-she was devising stories. She was subject to
-alternations of high spirits and depression,
-and total lack of self-confidence. She
-would be tormented by the idea that she was
-disagreeable and insupportable to everyone.
-“I could not help it,” she confesses; “I
-could not be gentle, I could only be impetuous.
-I was heartily thankful to all who had
-patience with me. I was better when the
-safety-valve of writing poetry was opened
-to me.”</p>
-
-<p>In order to moderate the exuberance of her
-feelings, her mother took her at every
-opportunity to scenes where she might be
-deeply impressed by the realities of life. She
-was present at many a sick and death bed.
-Her brother’s case familiarised her with the
-sufferings that many have to endure. The
-first deathbed at which she was present was
-her grandmother’s, the Duchess of Nassau’s.
-It made an ineffaceable impression upon her.
-The sight of the body excited no terror in her
-mind. Her thoughts went beyond death.
-She hastened to the garden. The roses were
-in full bloom. She gathered the most
-beautiful, and returned with them to the
-chamber of death, and decorated the bed and
-the room with them. Her conception of
-death was poetical. Her mother had taught
-her to take a bright view of it.</p>
-
-<p>Brought up by her mother in the fear of
-God, her first visit to church was a memorable
-occasion to her. Henceforward the Sundays
-and holydays were the bright spots in her life.
-With devout attention she followed the course
-of the service, and was deeply impressed by
-the exposition of Holy Scripture. She
-meditated on what she heard for days, and
-often wrote down the sermons.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of six years her governess, Miss
-Jossé, who discharged her difficult duties with
-great fidelity and zeal, left Neuwied, and the
-Princess was placed under the care of a
-tutor, Mr. Sauerwein. On his arrival at the
-Castle the Princess Maria received him with
-the words: “You are getting a little spirit of
-contradiction for your pupil. She has no
-traditional faith. Her first questions always
-are, ‘why?’ and ‘is it true?’”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Sauerwein was a distinguished linguist;
-had resided a long time in England, and
-was an enthusiast for that country, its history
-and institutions. He gave all his lessons in
-the English language. Latin and Italian
-were translated into English. The Princess
-read Ovid, Horace, and parts of Cicero with
-him, and wrote Latin, English, and Italian
-exercises. She also learnt arithmetic and
-geometry. Lessons in physical science she
-took along with a companion and most
-intimate friend, Maria von Bibra. She was
-taught French by a Parisian lady, and in the
-evening after tea read the old chroniclers, as
-well as the dramatists. Schiller and other
-German classics were studied. At fifteen she
-took a keen interest in politics, and was a
-diligent reader of newspapers. From a very
-early period she had a great fondness for
-legends and folklore. “I would throw
-away,” she says, “the most beautiful history,
-or even comparative grammar, to the study of
-which I was passionately devoted, into a
-corner, for a little legend.”</p>
-
-<p>Romances were forbidden till she was nineteen
-years of age. Then she was permitted
-to read “Ivanhoe” and others. Everything
-that was likely to excite her too lively imagination
-was purposely withheld from her.</p>
-
-<p>At the beautifully situated Castle of Mon
-Repos, with its fine view of the Rhine and
-its splendid beechwoods, the Princess Elizabeth
-was in her element. She delighted to
-roam in the woods in the stormiest weather,
-when it was raining in torrents or snowing
-heavily. The house was too strait for her,
-and she would go forth, accompanied by three
-dogs of St. Bernard, to enjoy the battle of the
-elements. In autumn, when the yellow leaves
-lay in heaps on the ground, she would wander
-for hours, listening to the rustling of the
-leaves. Every leaf, blade of grass, bird, and
-flower—every sunbeam that lighted upon the
-landscape, had a meaning for her. She would
-return home with her head full of poetical
-ideas, which she would write down. These
-poetical effusions tranquillised her mind. No
-one knew anything of them. She kept them
-a profound secret. Her mother wisely concluded
-that the best thing to do was to let
-her take her own way. The Prince used to
-say, when she was determined to have her own
-way, “We must not compel people for their
-own happiness; we must allow them to attain
-to insight.”</p>
-
-<p>At sixteen years of age the Princess began
-to write all her poems regularly in a book.
-She put all her thoughts and feelings into
-verse, which from henceforward formed her
-diary. Until she was thirty years of age she
-knew nothing of the technical part of the
-art of poetry. A time came, however, when
-she thought she ought to despise poetry, and
-when she threw herself with all her might
-into the study of music. She got into such
-a nervous condition, however, that her mother
-had to forbid her playing the piano for two
-years. Then she took to her pencil and
-painting. This failed to satisfy her, and she
-despaired of her abilities, and believed that
-she would never attain the ideal at which she
-aimed.</p>
-
-<p>All who knew the Princess at this time
-retain a vivid impression of her vivacity and
-grace, of her slender figure, fresh complexion,
-her luxuriant dark brown hair, and large blue
-eyes, which looked as if they would penetrate
-and search the very soul. Without being exactly
-beautiful, the intellectual refinement
-of her features made her countenance very
-attractive. From her surroundings she was
-called Princess Wood-rose.</p>
-
-<p>When governesses and tutor had left the
-Castle, Pastor Harder, the Mennonite Baptist
-preacher from Neuwied, came every day
-to teach the Princess logic, history, and
-church history. She profited much from her
-intercourse with him. She could open her
-heart freely to him on subjects on which she
-exercised the strictest reserve with everyone
-else. His preaching went to her heart. Her
-poetical diary contains many entries written
-after the services.</p>
-
-<p>In 1860 she was confirmed, after being prepared
-for the rite by the Ecclesiastical Councillor
-Dilthey, in presence of all her sponsors,
-the nearest relatives of the houses of Wied
-and Nassau, and the present Empress of
-Germany, at that time Princess of Prussia.</p>
-
-<p>Times of sore trial came to her. Her father
-was always ill. The sufferings of her little
-invalid brother increased, and her mother was
-absorbed by anxious duties. During her
-brother’s illness, to whom her mother wholly
-devoted herself, the Princess was thrown much
-into the society of her father. She worked
-with him, copied for him, and read to him.
-He would discuss with her the questions on
-which he wrote. The intelligence and receptivity
-of his daughter delighted him. The
-house was, however, too quiet for the lively
-girl. It was therefore decided that the invitation
-of Queen Augusta should be accepted,
-and that Fraülein Lavater should accompany
-her to Berlin. She found it difficult to keep
-within the bounds of Court etiquette, and converse
-in a becoming manner. She felt most
-at home in the family of the Princess of
-Hohenzollern, who passed the winter in Berlin.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this time she first met her future
-husband, then Prince Charles of Hohenzollern.
-The story is told that one day as she,
-according to her custom, was bounding quickly
-down the stairs in the Castle, she slipped on the
-last steps, and was prevented from falling by
-Prince Charles, who caught her in his arms.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after her return home the cases of her
-brother and father were pronounced to be
-hopeless. Prince Otto’s sufferings increased
-from month to month. His mother sought
-to prepare him for his end by pointing him to
-Christ and heaven. In January, 1862, Prince
-Hermann was unable to leave his bed.
-Princess Elizabeth nursed her father, while<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">{259}</span>
-her mother was incessant in her attendance
-on her beloved son. On the 16th of February,
-1862, Prince Otto died. “Thank God!
-thank God for ever and ever!” was the exclamation
-of his bereaved mother, as she
-stood by his body. His father, family, friends
-and connections from far and near, all who
-loved and admired the boy, joined with his
-mother in her thanksgiving.</p>
-
-<p>After the funeral the family paid a visit to
-Baden-Baden. On their return the young
-Princess threw herself with all the ardour of
-her nature into the work of teaching. In the
-Castle there was a lame boy, who had been
-received on account of his delicate health, and
-at a farm in the neighbourhood of Mon Repos
-the Baroness von Bibra resided for some time
-with two little nieces. With these three
-little children the Princess set up a school.
-Her mother observed with quiet satisfaction
-the patience, perseverance, and aptitude to
-teach displayed by her daughter. The boy,
-Rudolf Wackernagel, made such progress that
-he was able to enter the fifth class in the
-Gymnasium at Basle.</p>
-
-<p>The winter of 1862-63 was passed with
-her parents at Baden-Baden on account of her
-father’s health. Here she “came out.” From
-entries in her diary it would appear that she
-had offers of marriage at this time. There are
-some lines in which she writes of the kind of
-love that alone brings happiness, and she adds
-that a maiden rejects anyone who does not
-really love her. “A maiden,” she says, “is
-happy in her parents’ house, from whence she
-casts modest looks into the world.”</p>
-
-<p>In the autumn of 1863 she went with her
-aunt, the Grand Duchess Helena of Russia, to
-Ouchy, on the Lake of Geneva, and for the
-winter to St. Petersburg. On the way to the
-latter place she saw her father for the last
-time at Wiesbaden. He did not expect ever
-to see his daughter again. Everybody was
-charmed with her at the Russian Court. She
-did not feel at ease, however, amid the grandeur
-which surrounded her. Her imagination
-was excited by all that she saw and heard,
-but her nerves suffered. The Grand Duchess
-sought to calm her mind by varied but regular
-occupation. The day was filled with music,
-reading, study of the Russian language, etc.
-Rubinstein first, and afterwards Clara Schumann,
-taught her music. When she expected
-Rubinstein to come, her excitement was so
-great that it almost took away her breath.
-She regarded him with such veneration that
-she lost all heart, from a sense of her own
-little talent. The climate and nervous excitement
-brought on gastric fever. For weeks she
-was confined to bed. It was her first illness.
-She had never tasted medicine before she was
-twenty. She could hardly believe, therefore,
-that she was really ill. As soon as she was
-able to do so, she buried herself in a
-philosophical work by her father, a copy
-of which he had sent her, and wrote to
-him telling him the pleasure it gave
-her. She enjoyed the seclusion from the
-gaieties that were going on. “It is very
-strange,” she wrote to her father; “yesterday
-I read ninety pages of philosophy, and
-was so rested that everyone was astonished
-at my looking so well. But if only two or
-three ladies come, and tell me the gossip of
-the town, and of all the things that are going
-on, it makes me droop like a withered leaf.”
-When she was well enough she resumed her
-social intercourse with the Grand Duchess,
-but had a sudden relapse. It was an anxious
-time for her mother: her husband dangerously
-ill, her daughter invalided at a distance,
-and she not there to nurse her! “I know she
-is in God’s hands,” she wrote, “and under
-the care of faithful and loving friends, but that
-does not take the pain, the load of sorrow,
-from my heart.” The Princess Elizabeth was
-able to venture into the open air again at the
-beginning of March. It seemed as if her
-recovery would be rapid. A few days later,
-however, she received the tidings of her
-father’s death. She loved her father with
-enthusiastic tenderness. She owed her intellectual
-development, for the most part, to
-him. Her grief was heightened by the thought
-that she had not been with him in his last
-days. But no murmur escaped her lips. She
-bore the blow with such composure and
-resignation that everyone about her was
-deeply impressed and touched. She sought
-to comfort and strengthen her mother. “We
-shall fill the desolate void with our love,” she
-wrote, “and therein find our happiness.” She
-regarded her father as a shining example, and
-sought to think and act according to his ideas.
-In the judgments she formed, she imitated his
-mildness and candour, which condemned
-nothing without fully proving it.</p>
-
-<p>At Easter she left St. Petersburg with the
-Grand Duchess Helena, and visited Moscow,
-and in June returned to Germany. Her
-mother met her in Leipzig. The meeting,
-as may be imagined, was very affecting.
-After their return to Mon Repos a reaction
-from the recent excitement and agitation
-which she had experienced set in, and the
-Princess Elizabeth was overcome by apathy.
-Her mother, therefore, gladly consented to
-her accompanying the Grand Duchess Helena
-to Ouchy.</p>
-
-<p>During the years 1866, 1867, 1868, she paid
-visits with her aunt or mother to Switzerland,
-Italy, France, and Sweden, meeting with
-much to interest her.</p>
-
-<p>Little did she think at the end of this time
-of the career on which she was so soon to
-enter. She always wished to have “a calling”
-in life. She did not wish to live a life of
-pleasure, or the life of an intellectual <i>dilettante</i>,
-but one of real usefulness. She
-resolved to devote herself to the work of
-education, and be the teacher of a school.
-Her mother consented, on the condition that
-she should go through a regular course of
-preparatory training for the purpose, and
-pass an examination. But “man proposes
-and God disposes.” During the spring of
-1869, while she was with her mother in
-Bonn, they received an invitation from the
-Prince of Hohenzollern to pay a visit to
-Düsseldorf. The mother divined the purpose
-of the proposed visit, but the daughter had
-no suspicion of it. She was delighted only
-with the prospect of seeing the Princess of
-Hohenzollern and Princess Marie, whom she
-had met in Berlin, and with whom she had
-corresponded ever since.</p>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>To be concluded.</i>)</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_SHEPHERDS_FAIRY">THE SHEPHERD’S FAIRY.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3">A PASTORALE.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3"><span class="smcap">By</span> DARLEY DALE, Author of “Fair Katherine,” etc.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XVI.</h3>
-
-<div class="ddropcapbox illowe15_625" id="i_259">
- <img class="w100 idropcap" src="images/i_259.jpg" alt="L" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="uppercase">eaving</span> the Priory
-on her right, Fairy
-went down the
-street in which
-stands the pretty
-old wooden house
-in which Anne of
-Cleves is said to
-have lived, and
-which goes by
-her name, from whence she turned up
-a lane into the High-street, and going
-to the bottom of the hill on which the
-High-street is built, she paused at a
-blacksmith’s shop.</p>
-
-<p>The blacksmith was the father of the
-veterinary whom Fairy was seeking, and
-both men were standing in the shed, the
-blacksmith in his apron, with his hammer
-in his hand, scratching his head,
-and looking exceedingly puzzled, the
-veterinary in his shirt-sleeves, which
-looked like a protest against the heat
-which streamed from his father’s forge.
-He, too, looked equally puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>In the centre of the shed stood a third
-figure, a gentleman, tall, thin, young,
-and dark—if not handsome, at least very
-good-looking—with an aristocratic air
-about him which at once caught Fairy’s
-fancy. She saw at a glance he was unlike
-anyone she had ever met before, by
-the cut of his clothes and the dark moustache,
-in days when moustaches were
-rarely seen in England; she half suspected
-he was not English, and his first
-words, in a strong foreign accent, confirmed
-this idea.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to take it wif me, a horse’s
-iron, the iron of a horse.”</p>
-
-<p>Fairy’s appearance in the shed caused
-the stranger to turn round, and seeing a
-lady he took off his hat and bowed so
-profoundly, at the same time stepping
-back, and gracefully hinting, by a wave
-of his hand, that his business would
-wait till hers was concluded, removed
-any lingering doubts in her mind as to
-his nationality. He was French, she
-was sure, and for the first time in her
-life, to her knowledge, Fairy found herself
-face to face with a Frenchman, as
-great a curiosity then as a Japanese or
-Chinaman is now.</p>
-
-<p>Fairy returned his elaborate bow with
-a pretty inclination of her graceful head,
-and briefly stated her business to the
-veterinary, who, however, seemed to
-hesitate at first to come at once, and
-Fairy was obliged to resort to a little
-judicious flattery to induce him to comply
-with her request.</p>
-
-<p>While she was speaking the stranger
-had an opportunity of indulging in a
-good look at her without her being
-aware of it. How pretty she was!
-fresher and brighter and prettier than
-ever among the dark, grimy surroundings<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">{260}</span>
-of the blacksmith’s shop, which
-formed a striking background for this
-brilliant little vision of youth and health
-and beauty, the red glow of the furnace
-sending a rosy reflection over her white
-dress, and kindling the soft golden
-lights in her hair into a burning auburn.
-How simply she was dressed too! the
-first of her countrywomen who understood
-the art of dressing herself who
-had yet crossed the stranger’s path, he
-afterwards told her; and yet her boots
-and gloves, about which Fairy was very
-particular, fitted her tiny hands and
-feet to perfection.</p>
-
-<p>Where did she come from, this blooming
-little creature, who looked as if a
-puff of wind might blow her away, so
-small and slight and dainty was she?
-And in default of wind the young Frenchman
-was by no means sure that she
-would not suddenly spread out a pair of
-wings from among the folds of her white
-drapery and fly away! At any rate he
-determined to speak to her first and
-satisfy himself that she was flesh and
-blood, and not a mere sprite or vision,
-so as she turned to leave, after having
-prevailed upon the veterinary to do her
-bidding at once, he stepped forward,
-and, with another grand bow and a
-smile, he said, in his native tongue—</p>
-
-<p>“Mademoiselle peut-elle parler Français?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mais oui, monsieur,” answered
-Fairy.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon mille fois, mademoiselle est
-Française?” said the Frenchman, with
-true French politeness.</p>
-
-<p>“Mais non, monsieur,” laughed
-Fairy, in a half-reproachful, half-deprecating
-tone.</p>
-
-<p>“Mademoiselle speaks like a native,
-but will she have the kindness to tell me
-what is the English for fer-de-cheval; I
-have forgotten?”</p>
-
-<p>“A horseshoe,” said Fairy.</p>
-
-<p>“A horseshoe,” lisped the Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p>“A horseshoe, and he asked for a
-horse’s iron; no wonder I didn’t know
-what he meant,” growled the blacksmith,
-proceeding to get the article in
-question.</p>
-
-<p>“A horseshoe—a horse’s iron,”
-laughed the veterinary, in an undertone
-of scorn, as he went his way to look
-after John Shelley’s sheep.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the Frenchman, in French,
-to Fairy, “I want a horseshoe. They
-tell me a horseshoe always brings good
-luck, so I am going to keep one in my
-room.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but it is no use to buy a horseshoe;
-you must find it, pick it up on the
-road, and keep it for it to bring good
-luck,” laughed Fairy, speaking French.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that it? Well, never mind, this
-horseshoe has brought me some
-good luck at any rate already.” And
-then, fearing he was presuming too
-much on his brief acquaintance to pay
-the compliment his last speech implied,
-he added, apologetically, “I have not
-often the good luck to meet a lady out
-of France who speaks French so fluently
-as mademoiselle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Monsieur is very kind to say so,
-but unless I can be of any further use I
-must say good morning,” said Fairy,
-moving to the door.</p>
-
-<p>The young Frenchman uttered a thousand
-thanks, bowed lower than ever,
-and stood uncovered at the door of the
-shed, watching till Fairy’s little figure
-and fluttering white skirts disappeared
-from view.</p>
-
-<p>“Rum ways! Is Mr. Parlez-vous,
-with his outlandish talk, going to stand
-there all day in the broiling sun? He’ll
-have a sunstroke if he does. He is the
-queerest customer ever darkened my
-door,” growled the blacksmith, as he
-hammered on his anvil to attract the
-stranger’s attention.</p>
-
-<p>The stranger had no intention of moving
-until Fairy had disappeared from
-view, and then he put on his hat and
-walked up to the anvil.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is that lady?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody knows,” growled the surly
-old blacksmith.</p>
-
-<p>“What is her name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t say; nobody knows,” answered
-the blacksmith, in a still surlier tone,
-though to do him justice he thought
-this fine gentleman’s sudden interest in
-the shepherd’s Fairy, as people called
-her, boded no good to Fairy.</p>
-
-<p>“How much is the horse-iron—shoe,
-I mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sixpence, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchman laid down half-a-crown,
-and pushing it towards the
-blacksmith, gave him a meaning look
-as he repeated the question.</p>
-
-<p>“What is that lady’s name?”</p>
-
-<p>The blacksmith understood well
-enough that if he gave a satisfactory
-answer no change would be required,
-and soothing his conscience with the
-thought that after all it was no business
-of his—he was only answering a civil
-question, he said, “They call her the
-shepherd’s Fairy.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what is her real name?” and
-the Frenchman produced another half-crown,
-and held it temptingly in his
-finger and thumb.</p>
-
-<p>“I never heard tell of any name but
-that; she is John Shelley’s foster
-daughter,” answered the man, glancing
-at the second half-crown, which
-was now lying by the side of the first.</p>
-
-<p>“And where does John Shelley live?”</p>
-
-<p>“At Bournemer, about a mile and a
-half from here.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Comment?</i> How do you call it,
-Bonnemère? How can I get there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t say; it ain’t easy to find,”
-said the blacksmith, thinking the
-Frenchman had had his five shillings’
-worth, and, as was evident from his
-manner, resolved not to enlighten him
-any further.</p>
-
-<p>“Easy or difficult, I shall find it, my
-civil friend,” said the young Frenchman,
-in French, and then, raising his hat, he
-wished the blacksmith good-day, and
-left the forge, muttering to himself a
-criticism on the manners of these
-English not over flattering to our
-nation.</p>
-
-<p>“Palavering jackanapes, talking a
-tongue that no one understands but himself!
-What has the shepherd’s Fairy
-to do with him, I should like to know?
-But there don’t appear to be any
-scarcity of half-crowns with him; seems
-made up of them. A queer customer—a
-mighty queer customer; I wonder
-where he hails from.” And so saying,
-the blacksmith went to his door to look
-after the young Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p>The stranger walked up the High-street
-to the Crown, where he had left
-his horse, and when it was brought to
-him, innocently asked the ostler if he
-could get back to Oafham, where he was
-staying, by Bournemer.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir; you can go across yonder
-meadows; there is a drift right through
-them which will bring you out close
-upon John Shelley, the shepherd’s, house;
-go past that and turn sharp to your
-right, that will take you straight back to
-the park,” said the ostler, giving the
-stranger all the information he required
-for nothing.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes later the blacksmith
-strolled casually up to the inn, and
-inquired of the ostler who that foreign
-gentleman was.</p>
-
-<p>“Dunnow; reckon he is some relation
-of Lady Oafham up at Oafham
-Park; they say my lady’s sister is
-married to a French gentleman; anyhow,
-he is staying there. I know the
-mare.”</p>
-
-<p>“He is a rum customer, wherever he
-is staying. He didn’t happen to ask you
-where John Shelley lived, did he now?”
-said the blacksmith.</p>
-
-<p>“No, but I happened to tell him,” returned
-the ostler.</p>
-
-<p>“More fool you, then. Ah! he is a
-queer customer.” And muttering to himself
-all the way down the street, the
-blacksmith returned to his forge.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the French gentleman rode
-slowly off in the direction indicated by
-the ostler, keeping his horse to a walking
-pace for fear he should overtake
-Fairy, who, after a little while, he discerned
-as a little speck of white some
-way in front of him. He paid no heed to
-the ostler’s directions now; where that
-speck of white led he would follow, but
-at a safe distance, lest he should frighten
-or annoy her if discovered. Keeping
-well in the rear, he saw Fairy finally turn
-into the field in which the shepherd’s
-cottage stood, and as soon as she was
-out of sight he put his horse into a
-canter, and rode past, taking a good
-survey, as he passed, of the house of
-the shepherd’s Fairy, whom he had
-traced to her home.</p>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_260" style="max-width: 25em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_260.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">{261}</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="HINTS_ON_PRACTISING_SINGING_AND_PRESERVING_THE_VOICE">HINTS ON PRACTISING SINGING AND PRESERVING THE VOICE.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3"><span class="smcap">By</span> AN EXPERIENCED TEACHER.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp45" id="i_261" style="max-width: 18.75em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_261.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>PART I.</h3>
-
-<p class="ph3">WHAT TO AVOID.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> will most likely surprise my readers that I
-should begin this article by telling them when
-<i>not to practise</i>. I think this a very essential
-point, although not often spoken of by
-teachers.</p>
-
-<p>I heard, a short time ago, of a young
-lady desirous of having singing lessons,
-whose instructor said it would be best for
-her to practise three times a day for ten
-minutes. The girl, being engaged in teaching
-most of the day, found it difficult to manage
-her time, but contrived, by having the first
-ten minutes before breakfast, to fit in the
-three intervals. No wonder her throat got
-bad and her health suffered!</p>
-
-<p>If, among my readers, there should be one
-similarly occupied, believe me, it is not wise
-to take lessons during the term, as talking for
-so long a time is sufficient exercise for the
-throat and chest. Wait till the holidays, and
-then begin.</p>
-
-<p>If you tire the vocal chords and the
-surrounding parts, you weaken instead of
-strengthening them, and injure the purity of
-tone.</p>
-
-<p>We will suppose you have had your first
-lesson, say, of forty-five minutes; and on
-reaching home feel inclined to practise, to
-impress on your mind your teacher’s corrections.
-Yet you must not do so; as you
-have already sung enough. By all means,
-look over the music you have used and mark
-anything you may be likely to forget; also
-start a note-book, and make memoranda of
-the hints received from time to time.</p>
-
-<p>Say that your lesson takes place in the
-morning; probably in the afternoon you will
-be able to take a quarter of an hour in which
-to practise. In this way, you will have done
-far more good than if you sat straightway
-down to the piano when you were excited and
-heated after your first lesson, when you might
-have been tempted to try over your songs, to
-settle which to take the next time, and have
-gone from one thing to another, till, to your
-great surprise, it is lunch time, and, it may
-chance, instead of your usual good appetite
-you have none. An artistic temperament is
-often very excitable, and if this is your case
-you will perceive how much you would have
-taken out of yourself in that one morning.</p>
-
-<p>Should you be out of health, do not practise;
-you may sing a little, going through one
-song or two (no more) will cheer you; but do
-not try exercises, for your voice will not be in
-its usual state, consequently you will be likely
-to force it.</p>
-
-<p>Again, if it ever happens that you are cross,
-or vexed, do not choose that time either. Do
-not sing your exercises after a long walk, or
-after a hearty meal, nor after bending for any
-length of time over needlework, writing, or
-any occupations causing stooping.</p>
-
-<p>On many of these occasions you could practise
-the pianoforte; singers should well study
-their accompaniments.</p>
-
-<p>All these “don’ts” are especially addressed
-to the zealous student, whose very
-enthusiasm may do much harm.</p>
-
-<p>The dilatory one may say, “If I am to practise
-at none of these times, when, then, shall
-I do so?”</p>
-
-<p>There are plenty of opportunities still, but it
-depends greatly on home duties how the time
-should be apportioned.</p>
-
-<p>We will imagine the first thing after breakfast
-some domestic task calls your attention.
-When you are at liberty, go then to your piano
-(this should be scrupulously kept in tune), but
-first spend five minutes in practising breathing—of
-which I shall speak later on—then sing
-for five minutes sustained notes, <i>without
-crescendo</i>, the “mezza di voce” &#119186; &#119187; being
-a finishing study which must not be attempted
-till the voice is fully under control; then give
-five to slow scale passages, and five more to
-simple distances of thirds, or what particular
-exercise your teacher may have given. Before
-the mid-day meal you may be able to give a
-few minutes again to sustained notes; but
-mind, only use your middle ones. These
-should have the chief attention for quite a
-month or more before either the upper or
-lower ones are tried.</p>
-
-<p>Another interval can well be given some
-time after noon; and in the evening practise
-your songs—as at that time you might
-annoy other persons with your exercises.
-They are not calculated to cheer the heart of
-the listener, especially when imperfectly done,
-as they will be at first.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<h3>PART II.</h3>
-
-<p class="ph3">CHIEFLY ON RESPIRATION.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> will now turn our attention to the different
-ways of breathing.</p>
-
-<p>In throat or collar-bone breathing (the wrong
-method) the region of the upper ribs is most
-strongly distended; the collar-bone, part of
-the breast-bone, the shoulders, the spine, and
-in laboured breathing even the head, take
-part in this mode.</p>
-
-<p>It is fatiguing and injurious, yet it is very
-general, both in speaking and singing; and
-in time it would make the voice weak and
-tremulous. There is little doubt it produces
-a tendency to sore throat. Some authorities
-even say that imperfect respiration is one of
-the causes of consumption, and that practising
-deep breathing in the proper manner is a preventive.</p>
-
-<p>Most likely if you were told to inhale deeply,
-you would open your mouth and try to expand
-the chest from above. This is quite wrong;
-it is styled collar-bone breathing.</p>
-
-<p>It is a mistake to suppose the upper part of
-the chest is the chief reservoir of air required
-for the voice; that is brought into play by
-nature at times of exhaustion only.</p>
-
-<p>Now for the proper mode: diaphragmatic
-or abdominal respiration. The diaphragm is
-a muscular membrane stretching from the front
-to the back, and in a state of rest is arched
-upwards towards the lungs, but on inhaling,
-its sides contract and the arch is flattened,
-causing the cavity of the chest to become enlarged,
-and the air rushes in by the windpipe
-and distends the lungs. When the muscles are
-relaxed, the elasticity of the lungs squeezes out
-the air, and the diaphragm is drawn up again
-to its original form.</p>
-
-<p>A good position in which to acquire this
-mode of inspiration, is to lie down at full
-length on the back, the head as low as the
-body, and begin to inhale slowly (the clothes
-must be quite loose), then you will find the
-parts below the ribs expand like a pair of
-bellows. Another way. Sit on a chair—it
-must not be low and easy—with your hands
-folded behind it and breathe leisurely; or,
-stand perfectly upright, put your hands
-behind you, and draw in the air gently but
-deeply, retaining it for ten seconds or more,
-then let it go as slowly as possible.</p>
-
-<p>Do not try to take too deep a breath at first,
-or you will find you cannot retain it. Your
-power will gradually increase.</p>
-
-<p>Practise, without singing, sometimes in one
-of these positions, sometimes in another,
-twice or thrice a day, but not for many minutes
-at a time. It will strengthen the lungs and
-organs of digestion. You will now have
-found how important it is for the clothing
-to be loose, I hope.</p>
-
-<p>It is well to close the mouth when one
-wishes to take breath. Especially at long
-rests the singer should do so, as it prevents the
-throat and vocal chords from getting dry. If
-they do become so the voice loses sweetness.</p>
-
-<p>Remember a good tone does not depend on
-the great volume of air ejected: indeed, too
-much breath expended will make it uncertain.
-Flat singing is now and then the result of this
-forcing. The air must be given out gradually,
-not jerked out.</p>
-
-<p>Avoid coughing; it is an injurious habit
-easily got into; if you feel an inclination to
-do so before beginning to sing, check it if
-possible, and instead quietly swallow.</p>
-
-<p>Let me advise you not to eat nuts or similar
-dry things before singing, and here is another
-hint. Do not sit in a low chair with the feet
-perched up on a stool after meals, as the
-digestive faculties cannot act well in such a
-position. With an impaired digestion the
-voice may become affected.</p>
-
-<p>Never talk in the open air if the weather is
-cold and damp, nor when travelling, nor at
-any time, if it can be avoided, where there is
-much noise.</p>
-
-<p>Many persons wrap up the throat
-excessively. One of my pupils came once
-with no less than two silk handkerchiefs under
-a fur-lined cloak, besides wearing a boa. A
-silk scarf is enough even for the winter;
-fur is not healthy to wear unless it is in the
-form of a loose mantle.</p>
-
-<p>It is a good plan on getting up each
-morning to bathe the neck with cold water,
-afterwards drying well, using plenty of
-friction, also to gargle the throat with cold
-water.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">{262}</span></p>
-
-<p>For the expansion of the chest, I strongly
-advise the use, night and morning, of an
-elastic chest expander. It must be strong
-enough to require a distinct effort to stretch it,
-and the exercise must be persevered with for
-ten minutes at a time, until the muscles begin
-to ache. By-and-by it can be used for a
-longer period.</p>
-
-<p>The singer must observe the laws of health,
-remembering that the vocal organ is but an
-instrument, though played on by the soul.</p>
-
-<p>A few more words before closing this
-article. Perchance one of my readers may be
-anxious to sing well, though unable to have the
-benefit of receiving lessons. In that case, I
-do not advise the study of exercises, unless
-some tuition has first been received from a
-competent person, as bad habits are so easily
-formed though not so easily got rid of.</p>
-
-<p>Let the songs you choose lie well within
-your range of voice, without runs or shakes;
-nothing being more absurd than to hear
-ornaments badly executed.</p>
-
-<p>When it is possible, try to hear a professional
-render a song that you know. There are many
-ballad concerts given, and the music that will
-be performed is generally advertised. Take
-your copy with you, and mark all places where
-breath is taken, where a <i>crescendo</i> is made,
-and where the time is slackened or accelerated.
-You will get a good lesson on a song in this
-way, and if you persevere your style will by
-degrees improve.</p>
-
-<p>Before singing a new song, practise the
-accompaniment well, then study the words,
-making it a rule to recite them, that you may
-give proper effect to both music and poetry.
-Try always to bear in mind, what is worth
-doing at all is worth doing well.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="MERLES_CRUSADE">MERLE’S CRUSADE.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3"><span class="smcap">By</span> ROSA NOUCHETTE CAREY, Author of “Aunt Diana,” “For Lilias,” etc.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XV.</h3>
-
-<p class="ph3">ANOTHER GUEST AT MARSHLANDS.</p>
-
-<div class="ddropcapbox illowe12_5" id="i_262">
- <img class="w100 idropcap" src="images/i_262.jpg" alt="T" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="uppercase">he</span> following two
-or three weeks
-passed rapidly
-and pleasantly;
-but for two serious
-drawbacks that
-hindered my thorough
-enjoyment,
-I should have
-owned myself perfectly
-happy, but
-Mrs. Markham and Rolf were perpetual
-thorns in my side.</p>
-
-<p>A consciousness of being disliked by
-any human being, however uncongenial to
-us, is always a disagreeable discovery.
-The cause of the repellent action of one
-mind on another may be an interesting
-psychological study, but in practice it
-brings us to a sadder and lower level. I
-knew Mrs. Markham honestly disliked
-me; but the cause of such marked disfavour
-utterly baffled me.</p>
-
-<p>Most people found her fascinating;
-she was intellectual and refined, and had
-many good qualities, but she was not
-essentially womanly. Troubles and the
-loss of her children had hardened her;
-embittered by disappointment, for her
-married life, short as it was, had been
-singularly unhappy, she had come back
-to her father’s house a cold, resentful
-woman, who masked unhappiness under
-an air of languid indifference, and
-whose strong will and concealed love of
-power governed the whole household.
-“Adelaide manages us all,” Miss
-Cheriton would say, laughing, and I
-used to wonder if she ever rebelled
-against her sister’s dictates. I knew
-the squire was like wax in the hands of
-his eldest daughter; he was one of those
-indolent, peace-loving men who are
-always governed by their womankind;
-his wife had ruled him, and now his
-widowed daughter held the reins. I
-think Gay was like her father; she went
-on her own way and shut her eyes to
-anything disagreeable. It would never
-have done for me to quarrel openly with
-Mrs. Markham; common sense and
-respect for my mistress’s sister kept me
-silent under great provocation. I controlled
-my words, and in some measure
-I controlled voice and outward manner,
-but my inward antagonism must have
-revealed itself now and then by an unguarded
-tone.</p>
-
-<p>My chief difficulty was to prevent her
-spoiling Joyce. After the first, she had
-become very fond of the child, and was
-always sending for her to the drawing-room,
-and loading her with toys and
-sweetmeats. Mr. Morton’s orders had
-been very stringent about sweetmeats,
-and again and again I was obliged to
-confiscate poor Joyce’s goodies as she
-called them. I had extracted from her
-a promise that she should eat nothing
-out of the nursery, and nothing could
-induce the child to disobey me.</p>
-
-<p>“Nurse says I mustn’t, Aunt Adda,”
-was her constant remark, and Mrs.
-Markham chose to consider herself
-aggrieved at this childish obstinacy.
-She spoke to me once about it with
-marked displeasure.</p>
-
-<p>“I have had children of my own, and
-I suppose I know what is good for
-them,” she said, with a touch of scorn in
-her voice; “you have no right to enforce
-such ridiculous rules on Joyce.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have Mrs. Morton’s orders,” I
-replied, curtly; “Dr. Myrtle told me to
-be very careful of Joyce’s diet; I cannot
-allow her to eat things I know will hurt
-her,” and I continued to confiscate the
-goodies.</p>
-
-<p>But though I was firm in all that
-concerned the children’s health, there
-were many occasions on which I was
-obliged to submit to Mrs. Markham’s
-interference; very often my plans for
-the day were frustrated for no legitimate
-cause. I was disposed to think sometimes
-that she acted in this way just to
-vex me and make me lose my temper.
-If we were starting for the beach,
-Judson would bring us a message that
-her mistress would prefer my taking the
-children into the orchard, and sometimes
-on a hot afternoon, when we were
-comfortably ensconced on the bench
-under the apple trees, Judson would inform
-us that Mrs. Markham thought we
-had better go down to the sea. Sometimes
-I yielded to these demands, if I
-thought the children would not suffer by
-them, but at other times I would tell
-Judson that the sun was too hot or the
-children too tired, and that we had better
-remain as we were. If this was the
-case, Mrs. Markham would sometimes
-come out herself and argue the matter,
-but I always stood my ground boldly;
-though I was perfectly aware that the
-afternoon’s post would convey a letter to
-Prince’s Gate, complaining of my impertinence
-in disputing her orders.</p>
-
-<p>My mistress’s letters were my chief
-comfort, and they generally came on the
-morning after one of these disputes.
-She would write to me so affectionately,
-and tell me how she missed me as well
-as the children, and though she never
-alluded openly to what had occurred,
-there was always a little sentence of
-half-veiled meaning that set my mind at
-rest.</p>
-
-<p>“My sister Gay tells me that the
-children are getting so brown and
-strong with the sea air,” she wrote
-once, “and that dear little Joyce has
-quite a nice colour. Thank you so much
-for your ceaseless care of them; you
-know I trust you implicitly, Merle, and
-I have no fear that you will disappoint
-me; your good sense will carry you
-safely through any little difficulty that
-may arise. Write to me as often as you
-can; your letters are so nice. I am
-very busy and very tired, for this ball
-has entailed so much work and fuss, but
-your letters seem to rest me.”</p>
-
-<p>Rolf was also a serious impediment to
-my enjoyment. Ever since I had helped
-him with his kite, he had attached
-himself to me, and insisted on joining
-us in all our walks, and in spending the
-greater part of his day with us. I was
-tolerably certain in my own mind that
-this childish infatuation excited Mrs.
-Markham’s jealousy. Until we had
-arrived she had been Rolf’s sole companion;
-he had accompanied her in her
-drives, harassed her from morning to
-night with his ceaseless demands for
-amusements, and had been the secretly
-dreaded torment of all the visitors to
-Marshlands, except Mr. Hawtry, who
-was rather good to him.</p>
-
-<p>His precocity, his love of practical
-jokes, and his rough impertinence,
-made him at feud with the whole household;
-the servants disliked him, and
-were always bringing complaints of
-Master Rolf. I believe Judson was
-fond of him in a way, but then she had
-had charge of him from a baby.</p>
-
-<p>When Rolf began to desert the drawing-room
-for the nursery, Mrs. Markham
-used all her efforts to coax him back to
-her side, but she might as well have
-spoken to the wind. Rolf played with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">{263}</span>
-Joyce on the beach; he raced her up
-and down the little hillocks in the
-orchard, or hunted with her for wild
-flowers in the lanes that surrounded
-Marshlands. When the children were
-asleep, he invaded my quiet with requests
-to mend his broken toys or
-join him in some game. I grew quite
-expert in rigging his new boat,
-and dressed toy soldiers and sailors
-by the dozen. Sometimes I was inclined
-to rebel at such waste of time,
-but I remembered that Rolf had no
-playfellows; it was better for him to
-be playing spillikins or go-bang with me
-in the nursery than lounging listlessly
-about the drawing-room, listening to
-grown-up people’s talk; a natural
-child’s life was better for his health.
-Miss Cheriton told me more than once
-that people who came to the house
-thought Rolf so much improved. Certainly
-he was not so pale and fretful
-after a long morning spent on the beach
-in wading knee-deep to sail his boat or
-digging sand wells which Joyce filled
-out of her bucket. When he grew too
-rough or boisterous I always called
-Joyce away, and with Hannah and myself
-to look after them no harm could
-come to the children.</p>
-
-<p>I grew rather fond of Rolf, after a
-time, and his company would not have
-been irksome to me, but for his tiresome
-habit of repeating the speeches he had
-heard in the drawing-room. He always
-checked himself when he remembered, or
-when I held up my finger, but the half
-sentence would linger in my memory.</p>
-
-<p>But this was not the worst. I soon
-found out that anything I told him found
-its way into the drawing-room; in fact,
-Rolf was an inveterate chatterbox.
-With all his good intentions, he could
-not hold his tongue, and mischief was
-often the result.</p>
-
-<p>It was my habit to teach the children
-little lessons under the guise of a story,
-sometimes true, sometimes a mere invention.
-Rolf called them “Fenny’s
-Anecdotes,” but I had never discovered
-an anecdote about crossness.</p>
-
-<p>One day I found myself being severely
-lectured by Mrs. Markham for teaching
-her son the doctrine of works. “As
-though we should be saved by our works,
-Miss Fenton!” she finished, virtuously.</p>
-
-<p>I was too much puzzled to answer; I
-had no notion what she meant until I
-remembered that I had induced Rolf to
-part with some of his pocket-money to
-relieve a poor blind man that we found
-sitting by the wayside. Rolf had been
-sorry for the man, and still more
-for the gaunt, miserable-looking
-woman by his side; but when we had
-gone on our way, followed by voluble
-Irish blessings, Rolf had rather feelingly
-lamented his sixpence, and I had told
-him a little story inculcating the beauty
-of almsgiving, which had impressed him
-considerably, and he had retailed a
-garbled version of it to his mother—hence
-her rebuke to me. I forget what
-my defence was, only I remember I
-repudiated indignantly any such doctrine;
-but this sort of misunderstanding
-was constantly arising. If only Rolf
-would have held his tongue!</p>
-
-<p>But these were mere surface troubles,
-and I often managed to forget that there
-was such a person as Mrs. Markham in
-the world; and, in spite of a few trifling
-drawbacks, I look back upon this summer
-as one of the happiest in my life.</p>
-
-<p>I was young and healthy, and I perfectly
-revelled in the country sights and
-sounds with which I was surrounded.
-I hardly knew which I enjoyed most—the
-long delicious mornings on the
-beach, when I sat under the breakwater
-taking care of Reggie, or the
-afternoons in the orchard, with the
-brown bees humming round the hives
-and the children playing with Fidgets
-on the grass, while the old white pony
-looked over the fence at us, and the
-sheep nibbled at our side. I used to
-send Hannah home for an hour or two
-while I watched over the children; it
-was hard for her to be so near home and
-not enjoy Molly’s company; and those
-summer afternoons were lazy times for
-all of us.</p>
-
-<p>I think Miss Cheriton added largely
-to my happiness. I had never had a
-friend since my school-days, and it was
-refreshing to me to come in contact with
-this bright young creature. I was a little
-too grave for my age, and I felt she did
-me good.</p>
-
-<p>I soon found she resembled my mistress
-in one thing: she was very unselfish,
-and thought more of other people’s
-pleasures than her own. She used to
-say herself that it was only a sublime
-sort of selfishness that she liked to see
-everyone happy round her. “A gloomy
-face hinders all enjoyment,” was her
-constant remark. But I never knew
-anyone who excelled more in little
-kindly acts. She would bring me fruit or
-flowers almost daily; and when she
-found I was fond of reading, she selected
-books for me she thought I should
-like.</p>
-
-<p>When Mrs. Markham did not use the
-carriage—a very rare occasion, as she
-had almost a monopoly of it—she would
-take us for long country drives, and she
-would contrive all sorts of little surprises
-for us. Once when we returned
-from a saunter in the lanes, we found
-our tea table laid in the orchard, and
-Miss Cheriton presiding, in a gay little
-hat trimmed with cornflowers and
-poppies. There was a basket of flowers
-in the centre of the table, and a heap of
-red and yellow fruit. We had quite a
-little feast that evening, and all the time
-we were sitting there, there were broods
-of chickens running over the grass, that
-Gay had enticed into the orchard to
-please the children, and grey rabbits,
-and an old lame duck that was her
-pensioner, and went by the name of
-Cackles.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, auntie, do have another feast,”
-Joyce would say to her, almost daily;
-but Miss Cheriton could not always be
-with us; visitors were very plentiful at
-Marshlands, and Gay’s company was
-much courted by the young people of
-Netherton and Orton-upon-Sea.</p>
-
-<p>I knew Mr. Hawtry was a constant
-visitor, for we often met him in our
-walks; and it seemed to me that his
-face was always set in the direction of
-Marshlands.</p>
-
-<p>When Rolf was with us he was never
-allowed to pass without notice, and then
-he would stop and speak to the children,
-especially to Joyce, who soon got over
-her shyness with him.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother says Mr. Hawtry comes to
-see Aunt Gay,” Rolf remarked once,
-when he was out of hearing; “she told
-grandpapa so one day, and asked him
-if it would not be a good thing; and
-grandpapa laughed and nodded; you
-know his way. What did mother
-mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt she meant that Mr.
-Hawtry was a kind friend,” I returned,
-evasively. How is one to silence a precocious
-child? But of course it was easy
-to understand Mrs. Markham’s hint.</p>
-
-<p>I wondered sometimes if Mr. Hawtry
-were a favoured suitor. He and Miss
-Cheriton certainly seemed on the best
-of terms; she always seemed glad to see
-him, but her manner was very frank
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>I took it into my head that Gay had
-more than one admirer. I deduced this
-inference from a slight occurrence that
-took place one day.</p>
-
-<p>I was on the terrace with the children
-one morning, when a young clergyman
-in a soft felt hat came up the avenue.
-I knew him at once as the boyish-faced
-curate at Netherton Church, who had
-read the service the last two Sundays.
-I had liked his voice and manner, they
-were so reverent, but I remembered that
-I thought him very young. He was a
-tall, broad-shouldered young man, and
-though not exactly handsome, had a
-bright, pleasant-looking face.</p>
-
-<p>Rolf hailed him at once as an old
-acquaintance. “Holloa, Mr. Rossiter;
-it is no use your going on to the house;
-mother is not well and cannot see you,
-and Aunt Gay is with the bees.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Rossiter seemed a little confused
-at this. He stopped and regarded
-Rolf with some perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry Mrs. Markham is not
-well, but perhaps I can see Mr. Cheriton.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, grandpapa has gone to Orton;
-there is only me at home; you see, Miss
-Fenton does not count. If you want
-Aunt Gay I will show you the way to the
-kitchen garden.” And as Mr. Rossiter
-accepted this offer with alacrity, they
-went off together.</p>
-
-<p>We were going down to the beach
-that morning, and I was only waiting
-for Hannah to get the perambulator
-ready, but as a quarter of an hour
-elapsed and Rolf did not make his
-appearance, Joyce and I went in search
-of him.</p>
-
-<p>I found him standing by the beehives,
-talking to Miss Cheriton and Mr. Rossiter.
-They all looked very happy, and
-Mr. Rossiter was laughing at something
-the boy had said; such a ringing, boyish
-laugh it was.</p>
-
-<p>When I called Rolf they all looked
-round, and Miss Cheriton came forward
-to speak to me. I thought she looked
-a little uncomfortable, and I never saw
-her with such a colour.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going down to the beach?
-I wish I could come too, it is such a
-lovely morning, but Mr. Rossiter wants
-me to go to the schools; Miss Parsons,
-the schoolmistress, is ill, and they need<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">{264}</span>
-help. It is so tiresome,” speaking with
-a pettish, spoilt-child air, turning to the
-young clergyman; “Miss Parsons always
-does get ill at inconvenient
-times.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know you would not fail us if it were
-ever so inconvenient,” answered Mr.
-Rossiter, looking full at her—he had
-such nice clear eyes; “you are far too
-kind to desert us in such a strait.”</p>
-
-<p>But she made no answer to this, and
-went back to the beehive, and after a
-moment’s irresolution Mr. Rossiter followed
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you like Mr. Rossiter?” asked
-Rolf, in his blunt way, as we walked
-down the avenue. “I do, awfully; he is
-such a brick. He plays cricket with me
-sometimes, and he has promised to teach
-me to swim, only mother won’t let him,
-in spite of all grandpapa says about my
-being brought up like a girl. Grandpapa
-means me to learn to swim and
-ride, only mother is so frightened ever
-since the black pony threw me. I am
-to have a quieter one next year.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you known Mr. Rossiter long?”
-I asked, carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, pretty long. Mother can’t bear
-him coming so often to the house; she
-says he is so awkward, and then he is
-poor. Mother doesn’t like poor people;
-she always says it is their own fault; that
-they might get on better. Do you
-know, Fenny, Mr. Rossiter has only
-two little rooms at Mrs. Saunders’, you
-know that low house looking on the
-cornfields; quite poky little rooms they
-are, because mother and I went there.
-Mother asked him if he did not find it
-dreadfully dull at Netherton, and he
-laughed and said, ‘Oh, dear no;’ he
-had never been more comfortable; the
-people at Netherton were so kind and
-hospitable; and though mother does not
-like him, he comes just as often as
-though she did.” And I soon verified
-Rolf’s words; Mr. Rossiter came very
-often to Marshlands.</p>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="I_ONLY_WISH_I_HAD">I ONLY WISH I HAD.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3"><span class="smcap">By</span> MEDICUS.</p>
-
-
-<div class="ddropcapbox illowe14_0625" id="i_264">
- <img class="w100 idropcap" src="images/i_264.jpg" alt="T" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="uppercase">here</span> are five hundred
-of my lady readers,
-at the very least,
-who can easily guess
-the reason why Medicus
-did not appear
-before them so regularly
-last summer.</p>
-
-<p>“Five hundred!”
-I think I hear some
-girls say; “why are
-these five hundred in the
-secret? And what about all
-the other thousands?”</p>
-
-<p>Stay, and I will tell you.
-For four months this last
-season I was “on the road,”
-travelling in my own chariot—I
-am surely not wrong in
-calling it a chariot, seeing it is
-twenty feet in length—throughout the length
-and breadth of Merrie England, and I put
-down the minimum of Girl’s Own readers who
-visited this chariot and its owner at five hundred,
-though, seeing that schools with their
-teachers, numbering from twenty to seventy,
-sometimes paid a visit to me, all of whom
-were ardent admirers of the “beautifully and
-tastefully illustrated G. O. P.”—the girls’ own
-words—a thousand might be nearer the mark.</p>
-
-<p>But what, it may be asked, has this to do
-with the non-appearance of Medicus before
-his readers? Why, everything; because I
-find it all but impossible to do literary work
-“on the road.”</p>
-
-<p>I might have done more, though.</p>
-
-<p>“I only wish I had.”</p>
-
-<p>And these words form the text on which I
-desire this month to speak a few homely words
-to my girls, young or not young.</p>
-
-<p>“I only wish I had.” How often a medical
-man hears those same words; spoken, it may
-be, with blanched lips, by some poor mortal
-who is languishing on a bed of sickness and
-pain. “I only wish I had.” Had what?
-Taken better care of health while it lasted.</p>
-
-<p>I sat by the bedside of a poor girl some
-years ago, and heard her repeat those same
-words frequently. I had somewhat more
-time to spare then than I have now, or I
-could not have sat there for an hour or two
-at a time reading to her or to myself. She
-did not speak much, being in the final stage
-of consumption, but she assured me again and
-again it was “such company” to have me
-there, so what could I do?</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I had.” These words, it seemed
-to me, were too often on her lips. Sometimes
-it was only the first two words, “I
-wish,” she breathed, as if the weakened
-lungs and voice refused to add the others. I
-think I see Esther D—— even now, a long,
-thin, pale hand on the coverlet, a white, thin
-face, with a flush on the high cheeks, little
-blue veins meandering over the temples, and
-sad blue eyes, with dark dilated and glistening
-pupils.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I had.” Wish she had what? Taken
-a word or two of advice I gave her in a
-friendly way, just before she started for the
-seaside on a holiday trip.</p>
-
-<p>She looked bright, strong, and beautiful
-that day, though I could tell, from her transparent
-skin, her too soft hair and drooping
-eyelashes, that in her veins were the seeds of
-our island illness, and that it would need but
-little to fan it into flame.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean to enjoy myself thoroughly,” she
-said, her eyes dancing with good humour.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” I said, as I bade her good-bye, “but
-not excitedly, Esther; and remember what I
-said about night air, damp feet, and warm
-clothing.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a little impatient toss of the
-head, and just about half a frown, and I
-smiled, expecting her to say, “Oh, bother!”
-but she did not.</p>
-
-<p>Well, poor Esther died.</p>
-
-<p>But I know of nothing more sad when one
-is ill than the thought that the illness might
-have been avoided.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I had been more careful.”</p>
-
-<p>If you let your thimble fall, it will drop to
-the ground, will it not? This is a law of
-Nature; and as sure and certain is every other
-law of Nature. Nature will forgive, but she
-never will forget. If you, for example, sit in
-wet clothes, evaporation takes place; in other
-words, the damp of your clothes passes off in
-steam, and, as water requires so much heat to
-convert it into steam, it takes this heat from
-the nearest source, and that is from your body.
-It absorbs animal heat. What is the consequence?
-Why, baby there could understand
-this simple lesson in physiology. The consequence
-is that the surface of the body
-becomes chilled. Well, then another law of
-Nature comes into force. The law is this:
-Cold contracts. Cold contracts everything,
-even iron. Witness the difference in the
-length of railway iron rails in summer and
-winter. Given a sun-heat of, say, one hundred
-and twenty degrees, and they are all close
-together at the ends. Given a winter temperature
-of thirty-two degrees, or under, and the
-rails do not touch, but gap.</p>
-
-<p>And the cold on the surface of the body
-contracts the veins and arteries. With what
-result? With the result that the blood is to
-some extent squeezed—to use simple language—out
-of them, and, as it must flow somewhere,
-it rushes in upon the internal organs of the
-body.</p>
-
-<p>Now, we all of us have some one organ
-weaker than the others, and it is this organ
-that suffers from a surfeit of blood in its veins,
-driven inwards by a chill. It may be Miss
-Ada’s liver, and she has in consequence “a
-horrid bilious attack,” as I have heard it called,
-or it may be worse, suppression of the bile
-entirely, followed naturally by blood poisoning
-and jaundice.</p>
-
-<p>It may be Miss Ada’s lungs. The blood is
-driven in upon the surface thereof; this surface
-becomes congested and red, though no one can
-see it. Nature tries to relieve the congestion
-by throwing off through the walls of the veins
-or arteries the watery portion of the blood.
-This tickles the lungs, and a cough is the
-result. But the very act of coughing increases
-the mischief tenfold, and what was at first
-water may become matter.</p>
-
-<p>Nor may the mischief end here; for, if inclined
-to have consumption, the tubercle, as it
-is called, will now be deposited in the lung
-surface or tissue. Why? Because, the veins
-being congested and enlarged, the flow
-through them is more sluggish. I do hope
-I’m making myself understood! The flow, I
-say, is more sluggish, and deleterious matter,
-that otherwise would have been washed or
-carried away in the secretions, gets time and
-opportunity to settle.</p>
-
-<p>Now do you understand how a chill from a
-draught or from damp clothing may cause
-mischief of even a fatal character?</p>
-
-<p>Will you take my advice, and wear judicious
-clothing, or will you wait till the mischief is
-done, and then say, “I wish I had”?</p>
-
-<p>Mind, I do not wish you to go about, even
-during the cold months of winter, swaddled
-with as much clothing as a mummy, but I do
-wish you to wear woollen clothing—next the
-skin, at all events.</p>
-
-<p>Age has nothing at all to do with it. The
-young are even more apt to catch deadly colds
-than the older or middle-aged.</p>
-
-<p>I often wish there was some woollen
-material manufactured in this country—thin,
-warm, and soft, with a smooth surface that
-would render it perfectly suitable for underclothing
-for the most delicate-skinned girl.
-Flannel, such as is sold in the shops, has its
-good points, but it really has many objectionable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">{266}</span>
-ones. I hear new flannel extolled. I
-may be fastidious, but I really do not care for
-its perfume. Then there are your woollen
-jerseys, or whatever you call them, and
-merino ditto. Why, they are so rough, I, myself,
-would rather fall back upon silk.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp57" id="i_265" style="max-width: 28.125em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_265.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p class="center">“I WISH I HAD BEEN MORE CAREFUL.”</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In Germany, I believe, they have a material
-that is eminently suitable for the purpose I
-am advocating.</p>
-
-<p>There is a chance for some manufacturer to
-come to the front. Meanwhile, our girls will
-go on wearing linen and catching colds; and I
-do assure my readers that they would be both
-astonished and shocked were I to tell them
-the average number of fatal illnesses brought
-on annually in England from neglect of
-proper precautions for the preservation of
-health.</p>
-
-<p>But if winter hath its dangers from cold,
-and wet, and frost, neither is summer exempt.</p>
-
-<p>Would I have girls wear wool in summer?
-Undoubtedly.</p>
-
-<p>Wool is not only a protection against cold,
-but against intense heat as well. It is a go-between,
-so to speak.</p>
-
-<p>We all know that thatched houses are warm
-in winter and cool in summer, but possibly the
-words of Stanley, the great African traveller,
-may be new to many, although the truth they
-contain rests upon the same natural basis as
-that about thatched houses. I cannot give
-the exact words of this truly great man, but
-they are to this effect:—</p>
-
-<p>“The only way a European can withstand the
-intense heat of tropical Africa is by wearing
-garments of wool.”</p>
-
-<p>This is very easily understood. Wool is a
-non-conductor. In winter, therefore, it conserves
-or retains the internal or animal heat,
-and in summer it will defend the skin and the
-blood from becoming fevered by the scorching
-rays of the sun.</p>
-
-<p>I do not expect my youngest readers to be
-interested in one-half of what I am now
-writing, but I most earnestly desire their
-mothers and guardians to lay my words to
-heart, and to act upon them, so that they
-may not hereafter have to say, with sighs of
-regret—</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I had.”</p>
-
-<p>There is one other little matter I wish to
-point out to my thoughtful mamma-readers,
-with regard to clothing, and that is, the
-absurdity of not having dress, either for boys
-or girls, made the same thickness at the back
-as at the front.</p>
-
-<p>It really is ridiculous to clothe the chest in
-front and leave it to starve between the
-shoulders. I have before now pointed out to
-you that people catch colds in the chest far
-more often from chills caught from behind.
-<i>Verbum sap.</i></p>
-
-<p>Well, now I shall change my tune, and go
-on to another subject which also has a bearing
-upon colds and coughs and ill-health of every
-kind engendered by wintry weather.</p>
-
-<p>One-half of the people in this country are
-not breakfast-eaters.</p>
-
-<p>Are you really a breakfast-eater? Do you
-get hungry as soon as you have had your
-bath? As soon as you have said your good-morning,
-do your eyes roam over the table-cloth
-with a wholesome desire to know what
-is on board? If you are healthy, and have
-discussed that matutinal meal, nothing can
-hurt you all day. You may walk through the
-most unwholesome streets and lanes in the
-City, and come forth intact.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, do you feel languid
-when you get up? Do you cast a longing,
-lingering glance behind you as you commence
-to dress? Do you come downstairs caring
-little what is to eat? Are your fingers numb
-and cold? Do you require to slowly sip a
-cup of tea before getting an appetite even for
-toast and butter, and that new-laid egg you
-have to coax yourself to eat? If so you are
-not in health. Go not anywhere during the
-day where you are likely to breathe a tainted
-air, or be influenced by cold or damp. If you
-do not take my advice in this respect you may
-live to say—“I wish I had.”</p>
-
-<p>But have I no remedy to suggest for my
-breakfastless readers?</p>
-
-<p>Oh, yes, I have! There is a cause for
-everything. Your want of appetite in the
-morning may depend on one or other of many
-things. To be sure, it may be constitutional.
-You may have a weak heart and be altogether
-delicate in consequence. But ten to one you
-have nothing of the sort. Besides, if your
-heart be only functionally weak, do not forget
-that it is a muscular organ, as much so as your
-forearm or biceps, and, like the biceps, can be
-strengthened by good food and plenty of
-pleasant exercise in the open air.</p>
-
-<p>But there are other reasons why appetite
-absents itself at the breakfast hour. As my
-space is nearly filled, I can but name a few.</p>
-
-<p>Late suppers are inimical to health in the
-morning. They create restless nights, or, if the
-nights be not restless quite, the sleep is
-not refreshing. The stomach ought to sleep
-as well as other organs; and if it does not,
-depend upon it that it will not be fit for its
-duties next morning.</p>
-
-<p>Badly ventilated rooms. Sleeping in a
-room where there is not an abundance of fresh
-air is poisoning to the blood. The carbonic
-is not burned off therefrom, and dulness
-and lethargy are the result. You awake in
-the morning feeling your sleep has done you
-little good, feeling you would like just another
-hour. Believe me, if you slept as long thus
-as Rip Van Winkle, you would feel precisely
-the same when you opened your eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Want of exercise and neglect of the bath
-also destroy the appetite for the morning
-meal.</p>
-
-<p>And medicines will not make up for want of
-obedience to Nature’s laws. But if you return
-to these with heart and soul, then a mixture
-of infusion of quassia, say a tablespoonful,
-with ten drops of dilute phosphoric acid, and
-twenty of the compound tincture of bark, may
-be taken with great benefit, a quarter of an
-hour before breakfast and dinner.</p>
-
-<p>See, then, to your appetite as well as clothing,
-especially in cold, inclement weather, and
-may you never have those bitter, regretful
-words to utter—“I wish I had.”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_INHERITANCE_OF_A_GOOD_NAME">THE INHERITANCE OF A GOOD NAME.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3"><span class="smcap">By</span> LOUISA MENZIES.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE CALLING IN LIFE CHOSEN.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">As</span> Eveline had said, what seemed an accident
-determined Mark’s choice of an occupation.
-A cousin of his mother’s came to spend a few
-days at the rectory. He had recently lost a
-very promising son, and was much softened
-and saddened by his trouble, and in his saddened
-mood his thoughts turned to his cousin
-James, whom he remembered a bright and
-cheery lad, very much his own junior. He
-knew that there were two lads at Rosenhurst,
-one the son of his cousin James, the other of
-his widowed cousin Margaret, and he thought
-with interest of him who bore his own name,
-and wondered whether he in any way resembled
-his lost Edward—whether he was a true
-Echlin, like his father, earnest, teachable, and
-faithful.</p>
-
-<p>Miles Echlin was the head of a publishing
-house, holding a high position in London,
-and by the death of his son, not only he himself
-but the business had experienced an irreparable
-loss. He wanted comfort, he wanted
-help, and in this saddened mood he came down
-to Rosenhurst Rectory. Lady Elgitha, fully
-alive to the fact that many sons of noble
-houses were at the present time engaged in
-commerce, was at some trouble to be civil to
-him, and schooled her son to proper behaviour;
-but outward civility did not impose on the
-keen-sighted man of business, and before he
-had been twelve hours at the rectory he was
-convinced that Gilbert was indolent, opinionated,
-and selfish.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret and her children came to dinner,
-and there was much pleasant chat among the
-elders about the days when they had been
-children, and when Miles had thought it a
-great treat to spend the holidays with his
-uncle at Westborough, but he had little
-opportunity then for making acquaintance
-with Mark and Eveline; but when next
-morning he walked over with the rector to
-the cottage, Miles felt at once the calm and
-restful sense of home, where all the members
-were in harmony, and where the grave, handsome
-face looking down from the wall seemed
-to his mind, saddened by recent sorrow, to
-promise him sympathy. He had known
-Michael Fenner very slightly, being at the
-time of Margaret’s marriage already much
-immersed in business, but a glance at
-the picture of her husband, and at Margaret’s
-own composed and gentle face, assured him
-that she would listen, not only with patience,
-but with true interest, to what he should tell
-her about his son, and so it came about that
-during his stay at Rosenhurst he spent most
-of his time at the cottage, and talked much
-with and of Mark.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of four days he returned to
-town, and in less than a fortnight there came
-a letter from him inviting Mark to come and
-stay with him in town, and offering him a
-share in his business if he would devote himself
-to the study of it.</p>
-
-<p>It was not without hesitation that Mark
-acceded to the proposal; either of the callings
-he had been meditating on would, he
-thought, have been more to his taste, but in
-either he would have been a comparatively
-poor man, unable to do much for his mother
-and sister, and he could not flatter himself
-that in either he was much wanted. Here
-there was a place left vacant which he might
-fill, a positive call from a weary heart which
-he might comfort.</p>
-
-<p>His mother was slow to give her opinion
-in the matter; it was too easy, too pleasant
-for her to have her son occupied in work
-which would not take him very far away,
-which would not overtax his energies; she
-could hardly believe that it would be desirable
-for his highest interests; she feared lest
-James and Elgitha might be vexed that the
-offer had not been made first to Gilbert. Of
-course Miles was a sort of tradesman, and
-Elgitha could scarcely be supposed to admire<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">{267}</span>
-trade; still she might have liked Gilbert to
-have been first consulted.</p>
-
-<p>She took the letter up to the rectory, and
-laid it before her brother. The rector read
-it carefully, and returned it to her with a sigh
-and a smile.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose Mark will go,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“He has not made up his mind yet,” said
-Margaret.</p>
-
-<p>“Does he dislike the idea of desk work?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think he ever thought of disliking
-it. If he were to be a teacher or a clergyman
-he would have a great deal of desk work,
-wouldn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, and promotion is so slow; unless
-he happened to possess the gift of oratory, he
-might be a curate at forty.”</p>
-
-<p>“I fancy he thought rather of being a
-teacher.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very hard work; breaking stones on the
-road is play to it,” said the gentle rector,
-who had no talent for teaching, though he
-had a very pretty talent for preaching. “It
-seems a pity that he should not close with
-Miles’ offer; Mark would be a treasure to
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“You think he would?”</p>
-
-<p>“Can you doubt it? Don’t you know
-what he is to you and to me? On all grounds
-I think he should accept it, if he has no personal
-dislike to the arrangement. At all
-events he should go and try.”</p>
-
-<p>So Mark went, and Gilbert, with many a
-shrug, pronounced him a lucky fellow, and
-promised to come and dine with him.</p>
-
-<p>The rector took occasion, on Mark’s departure,
-to speak to his son as to his own path
-in life.</p>
-
-<p>“Mark has made his start in life, Gilbert.
-Don’t you think it would be advisable for you
-to make up your mind as to what you will
-do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, I suppose it would; but it is so
-hard to make up one’s mind when one has no
-special vocation. Mark’s a lucky fellow; his
-mind was made up for him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have very good reason to think that if
-you had had Mark’s aptitude, the offer would
-have been made to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is a pity I hadn’t; but I don’t suppose
-it’s a man’s fault not caring for things. It
-must be a great bore to you, sir, to have a son
-like me, who doesn’t care for any of the things
-you care for. I don’t suppose two men were
-ever more unlike.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t ask you to consider what I should
-like you to do; that, perhaps, would be unfair;
-but only to see that, taking your own
-view, what you are doing will not pay. If I
-were to die, there would not be more than
-enough for your mother and sister.”</p>
-
-<p>“So you have told me before; so the
-mother has told me. It is unfortunate that
-I have no taste for anything. I don’t find
-that I care about doing the same thing for
-two days together.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does it never occur to you that there is
-such a thing as duty?”</p>
-
-<p>“A very useful dissyllable, no doubt, sir,
-and telling in a song; but it is very
-much gone out of fashion nowadays, with the
-Church Catechism, high pews, and church
-clerks. No one considers that he ought to
-be ‘content with that state of life,’ etc.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gilbert,” said Mr. Echlin, more sternly
-than he had ever spoken to his son, “if you
-do not woo duty as a mistress, she will drive
-you as a taskmistress. The man who has no
-love of duty had better never have been born.
-He has no high aims, no ennobling thoughts.
-Do not, I beseech you, give me the misery of
-knowing that my only son is an idle man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not distress yourself, father. I suppose
-I shall drop into something before long.
-There can be no hurry. If you had ten children
-it would be another matter. There’s
-Elgitha; she has energy enough, and cares
-about lots of things. If you would send her
-to Girton, sir, I feel sure she’d take a double
-first, and like it.”</p>
-
-<p>“She might do very much worse, I believe,”
-said Mr. Echlin, turning away. He went
-into his study with a sore heart to write
-his Sunday sermon on the beauty of holiness,
-and Gilbert found half an hour’s amusement
-in teasing his sister’s canaries.</p>
-
-<p>It was not long before Mark Fenner’s start
-in life brought changes to Rosenhurst. The
-more Miles Echlin knew him, the better he
-liked him. Mark possessed one of those
-strong natures that rests in itself, never impatient
-to thrust itself forward, and never
-much occupied with a consideration of its
-own wants or pleasures. Accepting in the
-fullest and heartiest sense all the duties that
-were comprehended in the partnership offered
-him by his mother’s cousin, and loving them
-because they were duties, he set himself with
-all his heart to master the technicalities of
-the business, and entered into the enthusiasms
-of the old publisher with all a young man’s
-energy.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a lucky thing, sir, that visit to
-Rosenhurst,” said Evans, Mr. Echlin’s head
-clerk and factotum, when Mark had been
-some six months in London. “Mr. Fenner
-is a born publisher. He takes to the printer’s
-ink as a babe to its mother’s milk. As things
-have turned out, it really seems quite providential.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am glad you think so, Evans; it is my
-own opinion exactly. I hope the lad is satisfied.
-How those dear ladies at the cottage
-must miss him!”</p>
-
-<p>When Mr. Echlin left his office after this
-conversation, he took his leisurely way to
-Manchester-square. It had always been a
-principle with him to live within an easy walk
-of his business, having early imbibed a taste
-for that most healthy of all exercises, and
-having found that there was no better time
-for thinking over business. Indeed, for many
-years he had never embarked upon an undertaking
-until he had turned it over in his
-mind during two or three days’ walk to and
-fro.</p>
-
-<p>As he strolled home that evening it was
-June, and the whole earth was singing with
-gladness. The City’s great heart was throbbing
-with welcome to the sweet summer, and
-stretching out eager hands for the fruits and
-flowers of the country. Roses and strawberries
-lay in tempting proximity in the shops,
-women’s clothes fluttered airily in the breeze,
-and young men skimmed cheerily along, taking
-note of the luncheon-bars where American
-drinks were for sale, while elderly men looked
-fresh and rosy in light trousers, light hats,
-and light waistcoats.</p>
-
-<p>As Mr. Echlin walked on, nodding to an
-acquaintance here, exchanging a word or two
-there, his mind was pursuing some such train
-of thought as this:—How fine the weather
-was; it was a pleasure to breathe. This time
-last year Edward had been by his side; it
-was on the 18th of June; he remembered it
-because he had made a little excuse for the
-extravagance, saying that we ought not to
-forget the anniversary of Waterloo; and they
-had stopped to buy the first basket of strawberries.
-How little had either of them thought
-that the course of their quiet life would so
-soon be broken! It was a dismal thing to
-think that he had let him go to Rome at that
-time of the year. But then he seemed so
-strong; nothing ever ailed him. Dr. Dickenson
-said, indeed, that he had no reserve force—weak
-vital energy, like his dear mother.
-To wish him “good-bye” for a six weeks’
-holiday, and never to see him alive again!
-Well, well, it was sad. Such a son, too, and
-with all his future so easy before him! Well,
-well, it wouldn’t be so very long that he would
-have to survive him; he was almost sixty; it
-could not be so very long. And now he had
-Mark Fenner. Strange that all the time Edward
-was with him he had never thought of
-going down to Rosenhurst to see James and
-poor Margaret. And then his thoughts carried
-him to the little cottage at the rectory
-gate, where the two women lived who must
-miss their good son and brother so much, and
-who must be so much missed by him.</p>
-
-<p>Thus meditating, he reached his own door,
-which he opened, according to his custom,
-with a latchkey, and passed down the cool
-passage into the large, cool, but rather sombre
-dining-room.</p>
-
-<p>The table was laid for two, the silver and
-glass shining on the white damask, while the
-old butler stood with his smile of welcome by
-the shining mahogany sideboard, whereon was
-displayed the usual row of bottles—port,
-sherry, and claret, with a dessert of early
-strawberries and biscuits. It was all very
-comfortable, but just a trifle dreary; so, at
-least, Miles thought it must be to the young
-man who was now knocking at the door, who
-was to use the second knife and fork and be
-his companion all the evening.</p>
-
-<p>At the cottage at Rosenhurst what would
-the young man’s mother and sister be doing
-now? Perhaps sitting down to their modest
-meal, waited on by the little country damsel
-with round eyes and rosy cheeks; perhaps
-going through the more stately but rather
-dismal ceremonial of “dining at the rectory.”</p>
-
-<p>All the evening, while they dined, read the
-papers, and, later on, in deference to the
-beauty of the night, strolled through the quiet
-streets towards the Regent’s Park, and saw
-the moon hanging like a silver disc in the
-sky—while Mark, following his lead, discoursed
-of the lovely woods of Sunbridge, of
-the hedges fragrant with wild roses and honeysuckle,
-of the sweet, pure air, of his mother
-and her garden, of his sister singing in the
-twilight to the old piano—there always lay
-the thought suggested to him by the words
-of Evans in the afternoon, “As things have
-turned out, it really seems quite providential.”
-Mark Fenner was already much more to him
-than he could ever have hoped from one who
-was not his own son; he was doing his work
-with all his heart, with all his soul, and with
-all his strength, accepting it as the business
-of his life. But might not he for his part—he,
-Miles Echlin—do something on his side
-also to make the lad’s life brighter—to make
-the house in Manchester-square, now for
-nearly thirty years his home, a little more
-cheery and a little more homelike to the boy
-who had grown up in the little cottage at the
-rectory gate at Rosenhurst?</p>
-
-<p>If there is much cause of lamentation at the
-overcrowded dwellings of the poor, something
-might also be said plaintive and touching
-about the desolation of the houses of the
-wealthy—of the rich carpets so seldom trodden,
-the couches on which no limbs ever find
-repose, the mirrors reflecting nothing but each
-other, of the soft beds which are never pressed,
-and all the elaborate machinery of modern
-life gathered into chamber after chamber, and
-never used. Extremes meet, and the rich
-man in the desolation of his empty chambers
-may be as much in need of pity as the poor
-man crowded out of his one apartment by
-the superabundance of his domestic ties.</p>
-
-<p>The house which Miles Echlin called home
-consisted of suites of reception-rooms furnished
-in the costliest taste of thirty years
-ago, when Mrs. Echlin was alive, and Edward,
-a bright boy of three, was making sunshine in
-the house, while there was a possibility of
-sons and daughters yet to come; but the
-cheery little wife, for whose sake and by whose
-direction the furnishing had been done, took
-a cold—a mere nothing, it seemed—and passed
-almost suddenly out of the life so full of hope
-and happiness for her, just as a bright flame<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">{268}</span>
-which makes the whole room glad is blown
-out by a puff of wind coming one knows not
-whence. Then Miles, saddened and sobered,
-went about his work, caring little for the large
-house, only seeing that it was properly cleaned
-and aired, walking methodically through the
-great rooms, and coming at last to live in two
-of them, his dining-room and a small sleeping
-room, which had been his dressing-room while
-his wife was alive. A few friends came to see
-him at intervals, and there were some to whom
-the silent house was a home whenever they
-came to town; but Miles had no heart for
-company. When Edward should be grown up
-would be time enough; the boy should marry,
-and then the house would once again echo
-with laughter and song; he should make his
-own choice—it would be sure to be a worthy
-one, and they would find a corner for the old
-man, and not think him in the way. Edward
-grew up, and was all that his father wished
-him to be; then came the second bitter disappointment,
-and the big house was more
-empty and silent than ever.</p>
-
-<p>On that June evening, as he strolled with
-Mark through the quiet streets, and glanced
-up at the lighted windows in the houses of his
-neighbours, at the groups of people, old and
-young, on the high balconies, and caught the
-waves of laughter or song, the silence, the
-darkness of the house into which they introduced
-themselves by a latchkey, seemed
-almost unendurable. The gas was turned
-low in the dining-room; the portrait of Mrs.
-Echlin looked thin and spectral; the plate
-and glass on the sideboard suggested anything
-but good cheer, looking rather like
-mummies from which the life has long since
-departed. Mark turned up the gas, and they
-saw that it wanted five minutes to ten. What
-a long evening it had been. Mark was tired,
-and thought, if Mr. Echlin didn’t mind, he
-would go to bed; he said something in
-apology about country habits; he did not say
-that he was up every morning before six
-practising certain technicalities which were
-necessary for the carrying on the business;
-nor did he complain of the heat and closeness
-of the office, though both were trying to a
-country lad.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Echlin wished him “good-night”
-kindly, but rather like one in a dream, and
-when the butler came in at eleven, according
-to custom, with his master’s candle, and to carry
-up the plate, he still sat in the same chair, but
-he was leaning back with a satisfied look; the
-inkstand and blotting-pad were on the table,
-and a sealed letter lay before him.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you ready for your candle, sir?” said
-Martin, taking all in at a glance.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, quite,” replied the master, rising
-briskly from his chair. “Good-night, Martin;
-fine weather for the country.”</p>
-
-<p>“Splendid for the crops, sir,” said Martin,
-a cockney to the backbone, who was imbued
-with the idea that the more the sun blazed
-the better the corn grew; but as he turned
-out the gas the old man wondered to whom
-his master had been writing, a wonder which
-was not relieved in the morning, as was generally
-the case on the rare occasions when Mr.
-Echlin wrote a letter at home, by his being
-requested to post it, for his master brought the
-letter down with him, laid it on the mantelpiece
-with the direction downwards, and
-carried it out in his own hand when he went
-to business, all which unusual proceedings
-served to fix Martin’s attention on the letter,
-and to impress him with the idea that it must
-be a document of much importance.</p>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>To be concluded.</i>)</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="AN_APPEAL_FOR_AN_OLD_FRIEND">AN APPEAL FOR AN OLD FRIEND.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3"><span class="smcap">By</span> ANNE BEALE.</p>
-
-
-<div class="ddropcapbox illowe15_625" id="i_268">
- <img class="w100 idropcap" src="images/i_268.jpg" alt="F" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="uppercase">ive</span> years ago the first
-appeal for the Princess
-Louise Home
-was inserted in <span class="smcap">The
-Girl’s Own Paper</span>.
-It appeared in the
-weekly number dated
-February 25, 1882.
-The response to it
-was hearty and immediate,
-and from all
-parts of the habitable globe arrived contributions
-in money and goods towards a
-bazaar for the benefit of this “National
-Society for the Protection of Young Girls.”
-The bazaar was held in May, but the account
-of it was given in the number for July
-22, 1882.</p>
-
-<p>Every subscriber likes to know what becomes
-of his or her donations; therefore we
-purpose to look into results by paying another
-visit to our old friends at Woodhouse, Wanstead,
-before terrifying our readers by announcing
-another fancy fair.</p>
-
-<p>“Old friends” is almost a misnomer, for
-new faces greet us everywhere as we enter the
-precincts of the grounds and ancient abode.
-Mrs. Talbot, the esteemed matron, has resigned,
-and Mrs. Macdonald reigns in her
-stead. Miss Tidd, the originator and untiring
-secretary of the bazaar, is happily married.
-So is the schoolmistress, who, it will be
-remembered, was also a pupil trained at the
-Home. The monatresses of to-day are the
-scholars of five years ago, and our own particular
-girls have diminished in number.
-Thanks to the bazaar and collateral causes,
-we have been privileged to gain admission for
-nearly a dozen, of whom the greater number
-are in service and doing well, and when we
-make urgent demands for our girls, four only
-respond to them; but they have not forgotten
-us. We find two in the kitchen
-and two in the laundry, and hear that a couple
-of these are going to service after Christmas.
-They all look rosy and happy, in spite of the
-fumes that surround them; for the young
-cooks are bending over two gigantic saucepans,
-whence issues a very savoury odour, and
-the juvenile laundresses are enveloped in the
-less appetising exhalations from damp linen;
-for this is folding, drying, and mangling day,
-and one of our particular girls is turning the
-mangle. This large and commodious laundry
-has been erected, opened, and utilised since
-our last visit to Woodhouse. There are different
-compartments for sorting, washing,
-drying, ironing, mangling, packing, and delivering,
-which all communicate with one
-another. We live and learn; for we had
-scarcely realised before all the processes of
-laundry work. And this is all done by manual
-toil; for there is no steam. Seven of the elder
-girls are at present in training under a special
-experienced matron and laundry-maid, and as
-customers increase, more will be drafted off
-to this particular work, and open the other
-parts of the establishment to an increased
-number of inmates. As laundries almost invariably
-pay, it is confidently hoped that the
-income of the Home will be greatly increased
-by this agency, and both friends and strangers
-are “cordially invited,” as the phrase now is,
-to try it. The tariff of charges is the ordinary
-one laid down in London and the neighbourhood,
-and arrangements have been made with
-those ubiquitous carriers, Carter and Paterson,
-to fetch and return boxes and hampers of
-linen from and to any part of this vast metropolis
-free of charge; and customers may
-count on being supplied with the said boxes
-and hampers gratis and securely padlocked.
-What could they want more? “Good washing
-and ironing,” is the reply; and we trust
-these will follow the demand. Over a thousand
-articles have to be washed weekly for the
-inmates of the Home alone; so under all circumstances
-the hand is kept in.</p>
-
-<p>Our laundresses boast of a separate establishment,
-which they have called Primrose
-Cottage, probably after the Primrose League,
-of which they have heard. This is a long
-room with a long green-baize-covered table,
-communicating with the laundry. A short
-time ago it was a sort of outhouse; now it is
-a sitting and dining-room, adorned with texts.
-If funds only came in, many other tumble-down
-and ill-paved portions of this country
-seat might be vastly amended. But neither
-Rome nor Woodhouse was built or repaired
-in a day. Soon, however, we hope to see a
-splendid drying-ground replace the present
-one, for the asphalted roof of the laundries
-offers every facility for it. If we may be permitted
-to make a personal remark, we would
-venture to say that a rosier, healthier set of
-laundry-girls could nowhere be seen, and the
-roses extend from face to arms. As we descend
-from Primrose Cottage to the laundry,
-we are arrested by a remark made by the
-secretary, as he points upwards to an iron
-girder—</p>
-
-<p>“This was a great encouragement to me.
-This iron came from Providence, and bears
-that name. I took it as a good sign, and
-worked on in faith,” he says.</p>
-
-<p>Assuredly there is the word “Providence”
-stamped on the iron, and we will not pause to
-inquire whence its origin, but hasten onwards
-to see what the Divine Providence is doing for
-His rescued children, and what He requires us
-to do.</p>
-
-<p>Most of them are in the playground, and
-their ringing voices and laughter sound mirthful,
-and convey no impression of the depraved
-homes from which they have been taken.
-About a dozen of them, however, are gathered
-round a fire in what is called their playroom,
-which might be better paved and appointed,
-if only those—we dare not mention funds
-again in this place, seeing we are about to
-make an appeal vigorous enough to melt
-hearts harder than these very rough stones on
-which the children play. A bundle of picture
-text cards attracts the whole school into the
-playroom, and we are soon surrounded by
-about fifty girls of ages varying from eleven to
-fifteen and over, all thankful for very small
-mercies. We are thus enabled to declare
-them very well-mannered; for instead of pressing
-forward to seize on the coveted card, they
-stand back, each urging a companion to the
-front. Slight touches indicate character and
-training, and this reticence speaks for itself.
-In spite of many difficulties inseparable from
-the education of girls mostly born and bred
-in a doubtful atmosphere, it is possible to
-cultivate a certain delicacy and refinement
-amongst them.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry to be obliged to leave you;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">{269}</span>
-but I am going to take this girl to her place,”
-interrupts the matron, as a respectable-looking,
-neatly-dressed maiden appears
-amongst her schoolfellows to bid them good-bye.</p>
-
-<p>She has passed her term of years in the
-Home, and is about to make her start in life.
-A good outfit and a respectable place have
-been provided for her somewhere in Kent,
-and the kind matron will not lose sight of her
-until she places her in the care of her new
-mistress. Indeed, the girls are never lost sight
-of, as their touching letters and frequent returns
-home prove, as well as the communications
-made to the matron on each change of
-place.</p>
-
-<p>“If you keep your situation and have a
-good character for one clear year, the committee
-will give you a guinea as a reward, together
-with a new dress,” says the secretary,
-encouragingly.</p>
-
-<p>How little we realise the feelings of the
-young servant as she leaves the best home she
-has known for a stranger one, and hurries
-off to the train about to whirl her away into
-a new world! When we inquire her previous
-history, we are told that she was “surrounded
-by immoral influences, and rescued just in
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>Let us hope that her mistress will be able
-to write of her as many mistresses have written
-this year of girls sent to service before her—in
-terms of high commendation. Here are
-one or two extracts:—“Mary has been in
-my service for three years, and I have
-much pleasure in testifying to her continued
-good behaviour. She works hard, is very
-trustworthy, and I should be very sorry to
-part with her.” “Ellen is a very good girl,
-and during the two years she has been with
-me has given me great satisfaction. I hope
-she may remain with me many years,” etc.</p>
-
-<p>When we consider what may have been
-the fate of these young people had not friends
-of the Home intervened, we are thankful for
-what our readers have done to help them.
-We are attracted by one who sits rather
-apart, and is bigger than the others. She was
-rescued from a life of such awful terrorism
-that even now, when reproved, she hides
-under the beds, creeping from one to another
-like a wild animal. She has, it is said, lost
-half her wits from fear; but it is hoped that
-kindness may recall them from their “wool-gathering.”
-She seems less perplexed than
-she was.</p>
-
-<p>We should like to linger, and learn the
-story of all the girls; but we are summoned
-from the outworks to the keep, where lessons
-and housework alternate, just as they did
-when last we were here. As to the dormitories,
-they are literally ablaze with colour, for a
-generous, anonymous donor has sent seventy
-scarlet woollen coverlets, and each bed boasts
-of one. But there are at present only sixty-one
-inmates, and, accordingly, nine of the said
-coverlets are set aside. We are anxious to
-fill the home, which will hold one hundred.
-Therefore that last resource, a bazaar, is still
-in contemplation. Adverse circumstances
-prevented its taking place in 1886, the
-jubilee year of the Institution; so we hope
-that 1887, the jubilee year of our well-beloved
-Queen, may see it consummated. Will the
-readers of <span class="smcap">The Girl’s Own Paper</span> continue
-their kind efforts, and send us work or money,
-as seems to them best? Some eight hundred
-pounds resulted from the last bazaar, which
-was mainly attributable to the start they gave
-it; and already numerous contributions have
-been received, the work of their willing
-fingers. Five years ago the office of the
-Princess Louise Home was crowded with
-packages containing their gifts. May it be so
-again, and may the writer once more be
-privileged to record them, and may another
-round dozen or more of girls be safely housed,
-taught, and placed in service, as the result of
-their labours.</p>
-
-<p>Several distinguished and influential ladies
-have already promised their aid in various
-ways, and we are stirring ourselves up to
-hope for “a great success.” H. R. H. the
-Princess Louise will open the bazaar, life and
-health being granted to her. We will pray
-that they may be extended and lengthened,
-and that she may see the Home that bears her
-name full to overflowing.</p>
-
-<p>We are thankful that our readers have such
-good memories, and that they have not forgotten
-this, their first love, while contracting
-an attachment for another, equally worthy.
-Happily the philanthropic heart is large, and
-its hand ever open.</p>
-
-<p>We have been so long the historian of the
-Home that we find nothing new to say about
-it, therefore we will wind up by a visit to the
-secretary’s private abode, in order to see one
-of the girls, now in his service, who was a
-Woodhouse bird when last we looked into the
-nest. A drive across Wanstead Flats,
-through a portion of the Forest, and past the
-picturesque village, brings us to his hospitable
-domicile. Hence he walks almost daily to
-oversee the Home, so that he, at least, is not
-idle, since he must also supervise monetary
-matters in London diurnally. We congratulate
-him on having such a quiet halting-ground
-midway.</p>
-
-<p>It would be out of place to describe it, or
-the excellent luncheon of which we partook,
-but it is quite allowable to say that the neatly
-dressed, rosy-faced parlour-maid waits uncommonly
-well, and that she is a good specimen
-of Woodhouse training. We are gratified
-by her recognising us, and if all the readers of
-<span class="smcap">The Girl’s Own Paper</span> could have seen her
-bright smile of welcome and respectable
-appearance, they would have rejoiced with us.
-But she is only one of the many who have
-been aided. During the fifty years of the
-existence of the Institution, nearly three
-thousand have been rescued from danger of
-one kind and another, fifteen hundred of
-whom have been received since it has been
-known as “The Princess Louise Home.”
-Forty-three of these were admitted only last
-year. Close upon eleven hundred have
-become domestic servants, and who can
-calculate the inestimable good done to them
-and society by rescuing them from indescribable
-evils?</p>
-
-<p>As we stood upon the platform of the
-Snaresbrook Station awaiting the train, we
-moralised on this. Sunset with its heavenly
-glow overspread Epping Forest and Wanstead-park,
-beyond which lies the Home. We
-reflect on the Divine love which has inspired
-in the human heart the desire to devote all we
-see around us to the overworked citizens of
-the largest city in the world; and to open to
-some of her tempted children the gates of the
-rescue house in the distance. We recognize
-in the evening glow that God’s love never
-fails. We will strive to obey His command,
-which says “Let brotherly love continue.”</p>
-
-<p>We perceive both degrees of love in the
-subjoined list, and feel assured that Christ’s
-little ones will be still held in tender remembrance.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the seventy coverlets already
-mentioned, we are requested to state that 224
-valuable articles have been received at the
-Home from a lady who desires her name not
-to be announced. These vary from scarlet
-blankets to children’s hose.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Greenall and Mrs. Edward Lloyd
-have also sent magnificent gifts of clothing,
-made and unmade; and “The Hampton
-Court Association of Ladies for the Care of
-Friendless Girls” has likewise contributed a
-valuable parcel of clothing, through the
-Dowager Lady Clifford.</p>
-
-<p>In money, three guineas from Lady Martin
-and ten shillings from C. W. B. D. have been
-received.</p>
-
-<p>Contributions sent to the Secretary, Mr.
-Gillham, at 32, Sackville-street, W., will be
-immediately acknowledged by him, and
-subsequently in this Magazine.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SHE_COULDNT_BOIL_A_POTATO">“SHE COULDN’T BOIL A POTATO;”
-<br />
-<span class="smalltext">OR,</span>
-<br />
-THE IGNORANT HOUSEKEEPER, AND HOW SHE ACQUIRED KNOWLEDGE.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3"><span class="smcap">By</span> DORA HOPE.</p>
-
-
-<div class="ddropcapbox illowe14_0625" id="i_269">
- <img class="w100 idropcap" src="images/i_269.jpg" alt="A" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="uppercase">lthough</span> Mrs. Wilson was
-very much better, her improvement
-still greatly depended
-upon having perfect
-quiet and freedom
-from all excitement, and
-her nurses found that if
-she was in any way disturbed
-or agitated in the evening, she either
-lay awake the greater part of the night, or,
-when worn out for want of sleep, was compelled
-to take the soothing medicine, which
-always had a depressing effect upon her next
-day.</p>
-
-<p>One evening, Ella had just left her aunt,
-who was drowsily watching nurse’s final preparations
-for the night, when the whole
-house suddenly rang with piercing screams
-and cries for help from the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>Greatly annoyed and frightened, Ella ran
-downstairs to stop the noise, and, on reaching
-the kitchen, was horrified to find Annie, the
-housemaid, rushing about the room with her
-dress in flames, and shrieking wildly for someone
-to save her. The cook, meanwhile, was
-crouching in a corner with her apron over
-her head, so that, as she said afterwards, she
-“might not see Annie burnt to death before
-her eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>Ella quickly shut the kitchen-door, thereby
-stopping the draught of air, which was blowing
-the flames in all directions, and then, with
-more presence of mind, although not much
-better success, than the cook, she seized a jug
-of water, and flung it over the flames, and ran
-for more.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">{270}</span></p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, it was burning oil that had
-caught fire, and was setting alight to the matting
-that covered the floor, and the water only
-spread the mischief further.</p>
-
-<p>Happily, nurse now appeared in the doorway,
-and instantly perceiving what was the
-matter, tore up a heavy hearthrug, and
-wrapping it round Annie, soon succeeded in
-extinguishing the flames; while Ella, perceiving
-the good effect of her plan, promptly
-imitated her example, and pulling up doormats,
-and anything woollen she could reach,
-threw them on the burning oil on the floor,
-and she and nurse soon stamped out the
-flames.</p>
-
-<p>Directly the fire was quite out, nurse urged
-Ella to return to her aunt, while she herself
-examined the extent of Annie’s burns. Happily,
-the poor girl was wearing a dress of thick
-woollen material, which had taken a long time
-to ignite, so that, although her muslin apron
-had made a great blaze, she herself was hardly
-injured at all. It was, in reality, Mrs. Wilson
-who suffered the most, the excitement causing
-her a sleepless night, followed next day by a
-violent headache and feverish attack.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast the following day, Ella
-made up her mind to hold a solemn inquiry
-into the causes of the accident, the result of
-which filled her with amazement that the
-whole house had not been burnt down long
-ago.</p>
-
-<p>There was no gas in the house, and, as a
-great deal of oil was required, a large tin vessel
-containing several gallons was kept (or was
-supposed to be) in an outhouse; while, in
-order to avoid the danger of taking a light
-near this supply of oil, Mrs. Wilson had given
-instructions that the lamps should always be
-cleaned and re-filled during the morning.</p>
-
-<p>But the outhouse was cold, and the lamps
-were often forgotten until they were wanted
-in the evening; so the large can of oil had
-been surreptitiously brought into one of the
-pantries, where it could be more easily got
-at.</p>
-
-<p>On this occasion, as on many others, Annie
-had forgotten to fill the hall lamp, and when it
-reminded her of the fact by smoking, making a
-choking smell, and finally going out, she took
-it down and filled it, using the naked flame of
-a benzoline lamp to light the dark little
-pantry.</p>
-
-<p>Even this foolhardy act did not, as it might
-have done, set the whole store of oil in flames,
-and she actually trimmed and re-lighted the
-lamp in safety, and was carrying it through
-the kitchen, when a sudden draught blew the
-flame of the benzoline lamp against her hand,
-on which some oil was spilled. This flamed
-up, and the frightened girl dropped both
-lamps. The larger one exploded in the fall,
-setting fire to the oil and to her own apron,
-and, but for nurse’s quickness and presence of
-mind, she would probably have been burned to
-death.</p>
-
-<p>All this information, very unwillingly given,
-added to cook’s remark that there was not a
-lamp that would burn properly in the house,
-so frightened Ella that she felt inclined to
-give up the use of lamps altogether, and burn
-nothing but candles. On second thoughts,
-however, and after consulting Mrs. Mobberly,
-to whom she always referred in all her
-difficulties, she sent instead for the man who
-had supplied the lamps, and had them all
-reviewed.</p>
-
-<p>He declared that all the mischief arose from
-the dirty state of the lamps, which, much to
-the indignation of the maids, he requested
-Ella to look at, to prove the truth of his
-words.</p>
-
-<p>“If you have good lamps, and keep them
-perfectly clean, and burn good oil, you are
-quite safe,” he said; “but if you neglect any
-of those three, they are the most dangerous
-things you can have about a house.”</p>
-
-<p>Ella honestly acknowledged that she knew
-nothing at all about lamps, and had never
-cleaned one in her life, but she was determined
-to understand the matter thoroughly now, and
-begged the man to explain exactly what
-cleansing was necessary to keep them in good
-order.</p>
-
-<p>He advised that the lamp glasses and globes
-should be washed every week with warm
-water, soap, and soda, but they must be most
-carefully dried before using. The different
-parts of the burner should be brushed out, or
-rubbed clean with a cloth every day; and at
-least once in two months the whole brass
-fittings taken off and well washed.</p>
-
-<p>In a well-made lamp all parts of the burner
-should take to pieces in order to be cleaned.
-The wick-tube and perforated plate through
-which the air has to pass to feed the flame
-should be most particularly seen to. Charred
-wick and paper, match heads and dust are
-often allowed to fill up the holes of the grid,
-causing a poor flame, a bad smell, and, not
-unfrequently, an explosion.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be afraid of plenty of warm water
-and soap and soda,” the man repeated; “only
-you’d better look out pretty sharp, miss, and
-see that they get the whole thing perfectly dry
-before it is lighted again, or you’ll be having
-another explosion, and perhaps you won’t
-come off as well next time.”</p>
-
-<p>Ella thanked the man for his goodnatured
-advice, and determined henceforward to
-examine the lamps for herself every day, to
-make sure her directions were really carried out.
-Both she and the nurse made as light as
-possible of the affair to Mrs. Wilson, who, on
-seeing for herself that Annie was not much the
-worse, was quite contented that it had been a
-very trifling matter which had unnecessarily
-frightened them; and feeling herself worn out
-and irritable with sleeplessness, and the
-consequent feverishness, she indulged in some
-rather biting sarcasms on the “hysterical
-young ladies of the present day, who make a
-fuss about nothing at all,” and begged Ella to
-remember that she liked the house kept quiet
-last thing at night.</p>
-
-<p>These very undeserved reproaches were
-rather hard for poor Ella to bear, but she
-managed to keep silence, and as soon as she
-was released consoled herself by writing a
-doleful letter to her mother, with a full
-account of the whole affair, adding the oft-repeated
-remark that “she would never be
-able to manage a house—it was not in her.”</p>
-
-<p>As she expected, her letter brought a speedy
-reply.</p>
-
-<p>“You must not be discouraged, my child,”
-wrote her mother, “when you have to accept
-blame for the faults of others; that is the
-very essence of self-denial, to give up everything,
-even the credit you feel you have
-deserved, for the sake of others; and if it cost
-you no effort to do, it would be no denial of
-self. At any rate you have been successful,
-for the very fact that you are blamed proves
-that you have saved Aunt Mary the worry and
-annoyance of knowing her servants to be
-careless and incompetent, and thereby you
-have done much to help on her recovery.</p>
-
-<p>“Now about the lamps. My own experience
-has taught me one or two other lessons, which
-I will pass on to you.</p>
-
-<p>“The wick must fit the lamp, and be the
-right kind for that particular burner. If you
-are not sure about the kind to get, they will
-always advise you if you go to a good shop to
-buy the wick.</p>
-
-<p>“Then, again, the oil is not (or should not
-be) all burnt out before the lamp is refilled,
-but fresh oil is added to what is already in.
-After this process has been continued some
-time, however, the oil becomes turbid, and
-gives a disagreeable smell when the lamp is
-lighted. To avoid this, the oil should
-occasionally be emptied out of the lamp, and
-the whole thing washed before being refilled
-with fresh oil.</p>
-
-<p>“You cannot insist too strongly on proper
-care being used in filling the lamps; one
-brilliant housemaid we had when you were
-children was caught filling a lamp holding it
-over the kitchen fire, that the oil might run
-over on to the fire, and not make a mess on
-the floor. After that I filled them myself till
-I got a maid whom I could thoroughly trust.</p>
-
-<p>“And do not try to be economical in buying
-the oil; I cannot advise you which kind to
-use, as I do not remember what the lamps are
-like, but go to a good shop, and get the best
-they recommend. I have generally used a
-very good kind, called ‘water-white.’ The
-poor oils throw off a most explosive gas at
-a low heat, and do not give so much light as
-better oils. If you are careful on all these
-points, you need not be in the least nervous
-about the lamps; we have always used them
-till the last year or two, and have never had
-an explosion or accident of any sort.”</p>
-
-<p>With all this information to guide her,
-coupled with her own observation of the construction
-of the lamps, Ella felt herself mistress
-of the situation, and determined that for
-once she would insist upon having her own
-way.</p>
-
-<p>She had the oil removed to the little outhouse
-again, the door of which she locked,
-and kept the key herself, only giving it to
-Annie at the time she had appointed for filling
-the lamps.</p>
-
-<p>The result of this decided measure was that
-Annie became sullen and disobliging, while
-the cook, taking her part, made rude remarks
-in a tone purposely loud enough for Ella to
-hear, about the discomfort of having two mistresses
-in the house; and nurse caught her, a
-short time afterwards, complaining to Mrs.
-Wilson of Ella’s overbearing ways and unreasonable
-orders, and of the “nasty, stuck-up
-ways” of the nurse. She was very quickly
-and unceremoniously turned out of the room;
-but the mischief was already done, for Mrs.
-Wilson, with the natural irritableness of an
-invalid, insisted on having the servants admitted
-to the room whenever they wished to
-see her, and partly, too, in consequence of her
-weakness, which made her unwilling to have
-any kind of upset in the house, and partly that
-she believed the servants to be honest and
-trustworthy, while she knew Ella was ignorant
-and inexperienced, Mrs. Wilson made
-matters worse by always taking their part, and
-blaming Ella for actions which had existed
-only in the imaginations of the maids.</p>
-
-<p>One complaint especially annoyed Ella. At
-home they had always been accustomed to
-arrange the work and the meals on Sundays so
-that not only the family, but the servants also,
-might attend a Bible class in the afternoon,
-in addition to the regular morning or evening
-service; and as she was very anxious that the
-servants at Hapsleigh should have the same
-liberty, Ella had done as much as she could
-of the necessary work for the sick room herself
-on that day, and had so managed that one or
-other of the maids had been able to go out
-every Sunday afternoon since her arrival.</p>
-
-<p>It was, therefore, with considerable surprise
-and vexation that Mrs. Wilson one morning
-showed her a note she had just received from
-the teacher of the Bible class Annie was supposed
-to attend, asking if she could be spared
-to come once in the month, so that the lady
-should not lose sight of her altogether.</p>
-
-<p>This was rather too much for Ella’s patience,
-and after with some difficulty convincing Mrs.
-Wilson that the girl had not even once been
-hindered from attending the class, she went
-straight off to call on the teacher. It seemed
-that Annie had lamented to that lady that
-with sickness in the house and an unreasonable
-young mistress, she would be unable to attend
-the class until Mrs. Wilson was well again;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">{271}</span>
-whereas in reality she had been going every
-Sunday to visit some friends whom she knew
-would be disapproved of both by her mistress
-and her teacher.</p>
-
-<p>However, happily for all parties, matters
-were coming to a crisis.</p>
-
-<p>Ella went, as usual, one morning to speak
-to the old gardener, whom she found digging
-in a secluded corner of the garden, with the
-ducks following closely at his heels, and poking
-with their flat bills into the freshly-turned
-earth, searching for worms or any other choice
-morsels that good fortune might bring in their
-way.</p>
-
-<p>The old man evidently had something on
-his mind, and, after the usual greetings and
-inquiries after Mrs. Wilson, he stuck his spade
-into the earth and leaned his arms on the top
-of it, as if prepared for a long conversation;
-at which the old drake cocked his head on
-one side, and stared at him out of one eye with
-an air of virtuous indignation at having his own
-labours interrupted in this way.</p>
-
-<p>The conversation did not seem easy to begin,
-however, and it was only after a good
-deal of hesitation that he said at last—</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve lived along of the missus now these
-forty year.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know you have, Mallard. Why, I
-remember you all my life,” replied Ella, wondering
-what was coming.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Miss Ella, I ain’t told no tales, and
-I ain’t goin’ to tell no tales; but what I say I
-say; and that is as ’ow there’s things goes on
-in this ’ouse as ’adn’t ought to; and I ain’t
-lived along o’ the family, man and boy, these
-forty years without knowin’ as when the doors
-is locked at night they ought to be locked, and
-not so many goin’ in and out as what there
-is.”</p>
-
-<p>And having finished this enigmatical
-speech, accompanied by many mysterious nods
-and winks, the old man pulled up his spade,
-and, touching his hat to Ella, disappeared
-amongst the bushes, leaving Ella and the
-ducks gazing after him in mutual astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="NOTES_FOR_FEBRUARY">NOTES FOR FEBRUARY.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A paper</span> in <i>Science Gossip</i> for August, 1886,
-gives a very interesting description of the
-sprouting of a sycamore seed.</p>
-
-<p>These seeds have wings especially adapted
-for floating a heavy body. In November they
-are caught by the wind, and whirl round and
-round till they reach the earth. They always
-grow in pairs, although, if looked for now
-among the grass or on the wayside, many of
-them will be found single, having been separated
-from their companions. If a few of the
-double seeds are brought into the house,
-placed in a warm situation under a bell glass,
-and kept watered, their growth may be
-watched, and some marvels of nature learned.</p>
-
-<p>Every process is wonderful: the separation
-of the double seed, showing their junction to
-the stalk, then the appearance of the rootlets
-which are the first signs of growth, and then
-the cotyledons, or “nursing leaves,” whose
-function in life is to nourish and protect the
-pair of true leaves hidden within their embrace,
-till they are strong enough to defend
-themselves, when the cotyledons fall off and
-die.</p>
-
-<p>The folding of the cotyledon is a study in
-itself. “They are folded so as to occupy the
-least space, <i>i.e.</i>, first fold in half, and then in
-half again, like a ribbon reduplicate, and not
-coiled round (circinate) like a fern frond,
-which, growing later in the season, requires
-less protection.”</p>
-
-<p>So the life goes on, showing fresh wonders
-and beauties at every stage of its growth, each
-step showing the wisdom and love of the great
-Creator and Designer.</p>
-
-<p>Plants grown indoors need constant care;
-it is advisable only to keep as many as can be
-properly attended to. Very few can stand
-gas, and all thrive better if removed when it
-is lighted. The watering, too, needs careful
-attention; they should not be kept too wet
-during the cold weather, although they must
-never get quite dry. They need plenty of
-light, so it is important that the windows
-should be kept clean, to allow a full measure
-of sunshine. The pots must be kept clean,
-and when a green growth appears on the outside
-they should be well scrubbed. They
-must not stand in a draught, which causes a
-chill, and checks the growth of the plants.</p>
-
-<p>Outdoor gardening this month depends
-greatly on the weather. If cold, all tender
-plants must still be protected, and even if
-warm they should not be encouraged to
-grow, as frosts may be expected for some time
-to come yet. Unless it is actually frosty, rose-trees
-needing it may be pruned, also raspberry,
-gooseberry, and currant trees. Turf may be
-re-laid, and, if necessary, grass-seed sown; the
-grass should be rolled after wet weather.</p>
-
-<p>Pay attention to bulbs now; crocuses and
-snowdrops should be starting. As soon as
-tulips, hyacinths, and other bulbs show
-their foliage, they should be protected at
-night by a light covering, until the frosts are
-over.</p>
-
-<p>In February, annuals may be sown indoors
-in boxes, and gradually hardened off for the
-garden, where everything should now be made
-tidy and ready for the spring, which will soon
-be coming.</p>
-
-<p>In the warmer counties of England the wild
-daffodil will soon be flowering. The old-fashioned
-“daffy-down-dilly,” though only of
-late years fashionable in town drawing-rooms,
-has always been a favourite with poets and
-artists, and all true lovers of the country.
-Wordsworth gives a beautiful description of
-“a host of golden daffodils.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Ten thousand saw I at a glance,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And who does not remember Herrick’s
-quaint but beautiful verses, beginning:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Fair daffodils, we weep to see</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You haste away so soon.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Or Spenser’s equally charming description of
-Cymoënt with her companions playing by a
-pond, and</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Gathering sweete daffadillyes, to have made</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gay girlonds from the sun their forheads fayr to shade.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The name sometimes given them of “Lent
-Lilies” is peculiar to places where they
-flower; in colder countries, where it would
-have no significance, the name is unknown.</p>
-
-<p>Like every other growing thing, the daffodil
-has much about it worthy of notice. It deals
-in sixes; six lobes to the corolla, and six
-pollen stamens, but a three-lobed ovary, and
-only one seed-leaf.</p>
-
-<p>The wild daffodil has little scent, but being,
-like the majority of spring flowers, of a bright
-yellow colour, it is easily seen by the day-flying
-insects, on whose visits it depends for
-fertilisation, while some of its near relatives,
-which are chiefly visited by night moths, are
-white and strongly scented, in order to be conspicuous
-even in the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>At this time of year, when the more hardy
-birds are beginning to return to our shores, as
-well as in autumn when they are migrating,
-a great number of our songsters are killed
-annually by flying against telegraph wires.</p>
-
-<p>Those that fly by night are the most
-frequent victims, but besides these many either
-fly or are blown against the wires, and killed
-or injured so severely that they die before
-long.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ANSWERS_TO_CORRESPONDENTS">ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<h3>EDUCATIONAL.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot_ans">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Melissa Matheson.</span>—The Braille System is the
-invention of M. Louis Braille, who was a blind
-professor at one of the national French institutions
-for the blind in Paris. The work of copying the cut-books
-is done by ladies, and the blind copy the embossed
-copy five times at least. You can obtain full
-particulars on applying to the secretary, British and
-Foreign Blind Association, 33, Cambridge-square,
-Hyde Park, London, W.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A Lover of History.</span>—Sir William Wallace was
-defeated at Falkirk, July, 1298, by Edward I.,
-brought to London, and hanged at Smithfield,
-24th August, 1305, seven years afterwards. His
-public life extends over a period of fifteen months,
-and as to the history of his private life, there is an
-absolute blank. The whole of the fables about Sir
-William Wallace are the product of Blind Harry’s
-imagination.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A Martinite.</span>—You do not mention where you live,
-so our help will not be as effectual as it might be.
-You would obtain evening classes at the Birkbeck
-Institution, Bream’s-buildings, Chancery-lane, E.C.,
-in all the branches you name. Subscriptions, 4s.
-quarterly, 12s. annually.</p>
-
-<p>S. A. U.—We should think you fully capable of taking
-a situation as governess with your certificates, which
-say so much for your general education, as well as
-attainments in music. Your handwriting is certainly
-not good, and looks uncultured. The only way you
-can improve it is to take some pretty handwriting
-and form yours on it.</p>
-
-<p>M. B. B.—You should write to the secretary of the
-College of Preceptors, 42, Queen-square, Bloomsbury,
-W.C., for their prospectus, and all information for
-the current year or coming term. It holds half-yearly
-pupils’ examinations, the certificates given being
-recognised as guarantees of a good and general
-education. The fee is 10s.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>ART.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot_ans">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mermaid.</span>—Seaweed taken from rocks should be placed
-in a basin of cold fresh water to spread itself out, and
-removed from thence on to a sheet of blotting-paper by
-sliding a card under it. See directions already given,
-and the article on how to preserve seaweed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Memory.</span>—The price mentioned in the article upon
-crystoleum for finished pictures was obtainable when
-the work was new, at which time the paper was
-written. Five years have elapsed since that time,
-and many people have learnt the art, so that the
-price it could fetch at first is no longer given, unless
-the work be very superior and the subject of large
-dimensions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mary.</span>—Fan painting is decidedly remunerative, and
-has the advantage of being home-work; but a
-certain amount of originality is essential for it, as
-well as practical skill and experience and very
-great neatness.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">{272}</span></p>
-
-
-<h3>MISCELLANEOUS.</h3>
-
-<div class="figright illowp35" id="i_272" style="max-width: 17.5625em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_272.jpg" alt="CORRESPONDENCE." />
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot_ans">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Winifred Mary</span> wants “a remedy for taking sunburn
-off the face and hands.” Shut yourself up in a
-bandbox, my dear, and when winter clouds and
-winds return you may open the lid and inspect the
-condition of your complexion. If a cure have been
-effected, come out; if not, shut yourself up in the
-dark a little longer. If you live to rejoice in the
-return of the summer’s sunshine you had better wear
-gloves and a veil.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Rose Henshaw.</span>—We regret our inability to avail
-ourselves of your story. If you send your address
-in full, it shall be returned to you.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Lizzie Herbert.</span>—We are glad you are happy in
-your marriage, even in the circumstances you name.
-But “one swallow does not make a summer.” We
-only laid down general rules, more especially for
-girls in the upper ranks of life. In your special case
-you seem to have acted wisely.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Hezekiah.</span>—We think that the “best thing to make
-you look as if you had not been crying” is not to
-cry. We imagine that your royal namesake cared
-little whether his eyes were red or not, because his
-was real grief.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Anne S.</span>—No stranger could venture to give advice
-for deafness without seeing the patients and becoming
-acquainted with a variety of circumstances connected
-with them. Deafness may be hereditary or accidental,
-from a cold, an abscess, a plug of cotton, a
-secretion of wax, a fall, and thickening of the membrane,
-or a broken drum from a loud noise. It is an
-ailment too serious for guess-work.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Violet.</span>—The sons of a commoner could not inherit
-the rank their own father did not hold merely
-because their mother’s former husband was a peer.
-However, there are some few peerages that run in
-the female line, the mother being a peeress “in her
-own right,” not by marriage only. See our letters
-on “Girls’ Allowances,” in vol. v., pages 54, 91, 246
-and 764.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Myrtle.</span>—Provided a licence were obtained, the marriage
-would be legal anywhere. If “Myrtle” is
-a Protestant, the ceremony should be performed by
-her own minister as well.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Fitzgerald.</span>—We are much obliged for the account of
-your visit to Wales, and regret that we can make no
-use of it; but it is very well written for a girl of your
-age.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Une Jeune Fille.</span>—You would find a mention in the
-“Princesses of Wales” of the Princess Charlotte, at
-page 773, vol. vi. We have read the verses, but as
-yet they do not show much promise of future poetry
-in them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A Sorrowful Wife.</span>—The Act passed last session
-will enable you to summon your husband for maintenance
-without the intervention of the Poor Law
-Guardians. Hitherto deserted wives have been
-obliged to throw themselves on the parish before
-taking proceedings; but the necessity for so doing
-no longer exists, and the benefit cannot be too widely
-known, as it is a very excellent change.</p>
-
-<p>E. G. (Leeds).—We sympathise much with you in
-your sorrow and trouble, and were glad to hear from
-you.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Marguerite Vance.</span>—She would be his niece by the
-half-blood, and, of course, he could not marry her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Winnie</span> must keep her feet dry and warm, and place
-herself away from the fire when she comes in from a
-walk, as the heat of the fire will make her nose
-burn.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Ella Kingsley.</span>—Sir Walter Scott, Mrs. Oliphant,
-Mrs. Craik, Rosa N. Carey, and Anne Beale, are all
-good and careful writers, whose books are quite fit
-for young girls to read.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Minnie M.</span> (Maidstone).—Your verses are pretty, and
-give some promise, but need correction.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Polly.</span>—The condition of your hair seems to imply a
-deterioration of your general health, for which you
-probably need tonics and better living. Vaseline is
-highly spoken of for the hair, and might be of use.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Maggie.</span>—1. As silkworms’ eggs are sold in Covent
-Garden Market, perhaps they might buy yours, if
-they can be proved thoroughly healthy and strong.
-2. The acidulated drops such as are almost universally
-sold are most injurious to the enamel of the teeth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Cecilia.</span>—Your lines on “Evangeline” give some promise
-for the future. The first sixteen lines are correct,
-the last sixteen are not so, neither in the number of
-feet nor fall of the beat, or emphasis.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">May.</span>—The fault lies with yourself if you “hold
-back,” and be “unable to raise yourself from sin to
-a certain extent,” because our Divine Lord has promised
-to “give the Holy Spirit to them that ask
-Him.” It most certainly is not our Father’s will
-that we should not “attain grace for a little while.”
-The evil will that keeps you back is that of your own
-heart and of the arch-tempter and deceiver. In
-reciting to uneducated people or children, select what
-they can comprehend, but what is good, though
-simple.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Miss Dayns.</span>—Persons requiring any publication
-issued by the Religious Tract Society, whether a
-number of this paper or otherwise, should apply to
-the publisher (as we are always telling our correspondents),
-as the Editor has nothing to do with that
-department. He regrets that he has no knowledge
-of what Miss Dayns’s question was, nor in which
-number it may yet be answered. The number of
-answers inserted depends on the amount of space.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Christabel.</span>—Ash Wednesday is the first day in Lent
-in the English and Roman Church. In the latter
-the priest makes the sign of the cross on the foreheads
-of the people, saying, “Remember thou art
-but dust and ashes, and to dust thou shalt return.”
-Shrove Tuesday is the day preceding Lent, when in
-the latter church the people go to confess and be
-shriven.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Una.</span>—1. We think the process of hardening, as carried
-out by exposure to cold, is of questionable wisdom
-in most cases. 2. We have made no personal trial of
-the instrument you name, but heard a friend commend
-its utility.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Vivian Kate.</span>—1. A young man who presumed to introduce
-himself to a girl could know nothing of common
-propriety nor of the respect due to an unprotected
-woman. Any knowledge of etiquette in such an
-individual is, of course, out of the question. In the
-circles of society where the rules of etiquette obtain,
-such impertinent intrusion on the part of a man
-would not be tolerated. 2. Wash the blue sateen in
-tepid water.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Hopefull.</span>—The water takes up all the camphor
-requisite, and will last for some time in the wash.
-You can use it again when you make it fresh.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dora</span> (Aged 13) sends a poem, written when confined
-to the house by indisposition one Sunday, from which
-we can only quote one verse—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“And one, though pale, yet <i>beautiful</i>,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Lay in a darkened room,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But the sweet texts she uttered</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Seemed to dispel the gloom.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Did she mean this description of an invalid to apply
-to herself?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mary.</span>—1. The town named by you, Altrincham, in
-Cheshire, is usually spelt “Altringham,” and pronounced
-accordingly. 2. We say “crocuses,” not
-“croci.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Lonely Girl</span> writes her <i>nom de plume</i> so illegibly
-that we cannot decipher it, so do not know what she
-wrote about on the first occasion that she addressed
-us; but she may feel happy in the assurance that we
-do not think, judging from her second letter, that
-she could have written anything needing the apology
-she now makes on the chance of having done so.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Anti-Ant.</span>—You may keep the ants from shelves by
-keeping the latter washed with a strong solution of
-alum and water. You should also sprinkle insecticide
-powder over the floor, only be careful if you
-have a cat. Should this prove insufficient, apply to
-a chemist. Without doubt, Sir John Lubbock would
-appreciate his pets’ all-pervading presence as little
-as you do were he a guest in your house and found
-them, as you say, in his “meat, bacon, bread, cheese,
-pastry, sugar, plate, and cup” at all times and
-seasons!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Gwendoline R.</span>—1. We could not condense into two or
-three lines all the rules of lawn tennis contained in
-the manuals of instruction respecting the game. You
-should buy one of these. 2. Eat no more sweetmeats
-if you wish to cure your complaints.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Geranium</span> should write to our publisher. The editor’s
-department is perfectly distinct from his.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Feathers.</span>—Curl the ostrich feathers by gently drawing
-every filament between the edge of a blunt penknife
-and your thumb.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Polly.</span>—1. By “elective affinity” we suppose natural
-selection was meant. 2. Your handwriting is rather a
-poor one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Katherine van Hemskirk.</span>—We are sure that you
-could not do better than send the articles of clothing
-you name to the Home for Upper-class Children, 11,
-South-grove, Tunbridge Wells. Any of our readers
-who have school books or any suitable books for such
-a home would do a useful and charitable act in sending
-contributions of these kinds to this little institution.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Buchan</span> and J. B.—The verses by these young people
-express good sentiments in feeble language. They
-ought to make themselves acquainted with the rules
-of metrical composition. This at least could be
-accomplished, though the gift of original ideas cannot
-be acquired by any amount of study.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">One of Two.</span>—For the meaning of girls’ Christian
-names, see our articles in vol. iv. In Webster’s large
-illustrated dictionary of the English language you
-will find those of most names, male as well as
-female.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="footnotes"><p class="ph3">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> Aus “Carmen Sylva’s Leben,” von Natalie, Freiin von Stachelberg—(From
-“Carmen Sylva’s Life,” by Nathalie, Baroness of Stachelberg.
-Third revised edition. Heidelberg. 1886).</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p>[Transcriber’s Note—the following changes have been made to this text.</p>
-
-<p>Page 261: dont’s to don’ts—“don’ts”.]</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL'S OWN PAPER, VOL. VIII, NO. 369, JANUARY 22, 1887 ***</div>
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