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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65951 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65951)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 30, Vol. I, July 26, 1884, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art,
- Fifth Series, No. 30, Vol. I, July 26, 1884
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: July 29, 2021 [eBook #65951]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Susan Skinner, Eric Hutton and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 30, VOL. I, JULY 26,
-1884 ***
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
-CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL
-
-OF
-
-POPULAR
-
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART
-
-Fifth Series
-
-ESTABLISHED BY WILLIAM AND ROBERT CHAMBERS, 1832
-
-CONDUCTED BY R. CHAMBERS (SECUNDUS)
-
-NO. 30.—VOL. I. SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1884. PRICE 1½_d._]
-
-
-
-
-A SCOTTISH MARINE STATION.
-
-
-The ocean has been watched and studied for ages in innumerable
-aspects—it has been looked at from points of view wide asunder as the
-poles—it has been sung of by poets, and fished in by fishermen, and
-sailed over by sailors for thousands of years; but it is still a region
-of mystery and wonder. There are very many things about the sea which
-are quite unknown to this day; in fact, the science of marine phenomena
-is yet in its early youth, only emerging from its infancy. The study of
-the physical, chemical, and biological conditions of the sea has always
-been surrounded by a sort of halo of romance, a scientific glamour that
-almost led men to believe that such research was like fishing—valuable
-results might be looked for in return for little labour, if the proper
-opportunity could be found. But the opportunity only occurred at wide
-intervals, and then the happy few who were fortunate enough to form the
-scientific staff of such expeditions as that of the _Challenger_ were
-regarded with unmixed envy by the many who were eager to do similar
-work if they could get the chance.
-
-The wonders discovered by the chief scientific cruises of recent years
-have greatly increased the interest of the public in the science of
-the sea, and this public interest has quite lately assumed a tangible
-form in the foundation of the Scottish Marine Station for Scientific
-Research at Granton, near Edinburgh. To understand the importance and
-value of this Station, one must know something of the difficulties
-presented to any one who wishes to solve some special problem connected
-with the life which swarms in the waters around our coasts. He must
-rely on the help of fishermen for collecting specimens; and if he
-cannot go to the expense of hiring a boat and crew, he requires to
-content himself with any selection of their ‘rubbish’ which they may be
-pleased to make. Should he wish to examine any locality minutely, he
-must purchase a dredge and tow-nets, leads and lines, and bottles and
-boxes to contain the specimens which may be obtained. The difficulty
-is only half overcome when the work of collecting is over. It is
-impossible to convey the creatures alive to any distance; and after
-a few attempts to do so, the naturalist either hires a room in the
-fishing-village for his work, or gives up the study of marine life
-altogether; unless he steer a middle course, and content himself
-with a bare enumeration of species and a description of the external
-appearance of his specimens.
-
-The individual who is desirous of making chemical or physical
-observations on the wide sea is in a still more evil case. His
-apparatus is more costly and more complicated than that of the
-biologist; it is less easy to manage in a boat not specially adapted
-for the purpose; and the immediate vicinity of a laboratory is of
-the first importance. The obstacles, in fact, are so numerous, that
-observations of this nature have been almost entirely neglected in
-Great Britain. Now and then, it is true, the fire of scientific
-enthusiasm burns strong enough in a man to enable him to overcome
-all difficulties, and to carry on a brilliant research with complete
-success to a satisfactory conclusion. The work of such men is
-monumental; but they do not appear many times in a century. The name of
-one marine chemist is associated with Edinburgh; it is that of Dr John
-Murray, who in the year 1816 made a series of researches on sea-water
-collected at Trinity. His work settled a most important point of
-theoretical chemistry, and it is referred to as of value to this day.
-
-That the progress of marine research was hindered by the trouble and
-expense of carrying it out—and in honesty it must be said that the
-latter was always the more powerful deterrent—has long been apparent;
-and for many years attempts, more or less successful, have been made
-to remedy this state of affairs. In response to energetic appeals
-from various learned Societies, government has repeatedly lent
-gunboats for scientific purposes, and the _Porcupine_, _Lightning_,
-_Triton_, and other ships have done much good work. The culmination
-of government enterprise was reached in 1873, when the _Challenger_
-was fitted out for an entirely scientific cruise, and circumnavigated
-the world investigating the phenomena of the ocean everywhere. How
-much was accomplished by the three years’ voyage can only be realised
-by those who are familiar with the thirteen large volumes which have
-been already published describing the collections and observations;
-but the general reader may form an idea of the magnitude of the work
-done by reflecting that specialists have been engaged in examining and
-describing the collections since the return of the ship in 1876, and
-that this work is still in progress.
-
-Since the return of the _Challenger_, a number of short scientific
-trips have been made in the vicinity of the British coast by gunboats
-and hired vessels; and the results of these have been such as to show
-the extreme advisability of something more permanent being set on foot.
-The success of the Marine Observatories at Naples and at Marseilles,
-and of the small movable laboratory kept up for two summers by the
-university of Aberdeen, proved that Marine Stations were practicable
-and desirable. It was the consideration of the difficulties in the
-way of young men who wished to devote themselves to the examination
-of marine phenomena, but who were unable of themselves to meet the
-great expense of such work, that led Mr John Murray, Director of the
-_Challenger_ Expedition Commission, to start a Marine Station in the
-neighbourhood of Edinburgh. A submerged quarry on the shore at Granton,
-which quarry has been in communication with the sea for nearly thirty
-years, was selected as the site, and a floating laboratory was formally
-opened there during the festivities of the Edinburgh University
-Tercentenary celebration this spring.
-
-The Marine Station has now been open for several months, and the
-working arrangements have attained a certain degree of completeness.
-The accommodation which exists at present includes a floating
-laboratory, ‘the Ark,’ where zoological, botanical, and chemical work
-is being carried on by the permanent staff and other investigators.
-There is also a steam-yacht, the _Medusa_, fitted out with all the
-arrangements for trawling, dredging, sounding, and taking the other
-necessary observations. She is manned by an efficient crew, and has the
-advantage of the services of an engineer who was on the _Challenger_
-during her scientific cruise. The _Medusa_ is a capital seaboat,
-though, from her small size, when in rough weather, she sometimes tries
-the sea-going capabilities of the workers. The creatures brought up
-by the dredge or trawl are kept alive in boxes, the water in which
-must be changed at intervals, though, when there is a heavy sea and a
-head-wind, as often happens, this service is performed by the waves,
-which break over the bows in magnificent spray showers, very beautiful
-to watch from the dry security of the after-cabin. On arriving at
-the Ark, the animals are transferred to aquaria or glass dishes, in
-which a constant current of thoroughly aërated sea-water can be kept
-up, and in these they live very happily. The larger specimens are
-usually placed in wire cages moored to the Ark, where they enjoy all
-the advantages of life except freedom. For short excursions in the
-neighbourhood of Granton, there is a good sailing-boat, the _Raven_;
-and work in the haven in which the Ark lies can also be carried on
-by the little _Dove_, and the two Norwegian skiffs belonging to the
-Station, whose names, _Appendicularia_ and _Asymptote_, are mystifying
-to the uninitiated. A row round the quarry at low water reveals the
-immense richness of the vegetable and animal life which inhabits
-its waters. There are growths of sponges of different colour, with
-gracefully interlacing branches like a coral grove, where bright-hued
-sea-anemones spread their tentacles, and crabs and other crustacea
-crawl and swim about at their pleasure. And not only are the commoner
-forms of marine life abundant; rarer species may be found frequently.
-The beautiful nudibranch mollusc _Eolus_ lives in the quarry; and the
-great fifteen-spined-stickleback builds its nest there, and it has
-been seen keeping guard over its door while its mate and young remain
-comfortably within.
-
-The work which is being carried on at the Marine Station at present is
-divided between four workers. Mr J. T. Cunningham, the naturalist in
-charge, is making a research into the development of the Teleostian
-fishes, the great group to which most of our food-fishes, such as the
-cod, herring, and haddock, belong. Mr J. R. Henderson has commenced to
-form a collection of all the animal life of the Firth of Forth; while
-Mr John Rattray is proceeding with a similar collection of the algæ or
-seaweeds, and is also making a detailed study of the diatoms of the
-district, a piece of work which has never previously been attempted. Mr
-Hugh Robert Mill has charge of the daily meteorological observations at
-the Station, and he is working at the chemical and physical study of
-estuary-water, examining the variations in saltness and in temperature
-which occur from the fresh water to the open sea, and comparing them at
-different seasons. The work at the Station is thus seen to be purely
-scientific; and the results which will ultimately be obtained must
-be of great practical importance. Any scientific man is welcomed to
-work at the Station on special problems, without charge, and several
-gentlemen have taken advantage of the privilege.
-
-It may give a better idea of the working of the various departments if
-the actual methods employed be shortly described.
-
-Zoological specimens are collected in various ways. The ‘trawl’ is a
-wide-meshed net tied up at one end. The net’s mouth is attached above
-to a stout wooden beam that unites two iron runners; the lower side
-is a strong cable, the ground-rope, which rubs along the sea-bottom.
-The fish, alarmed by the ground-rope, rise up and are caught in the
-net, which is carried along so rapidly that escape is impossible. In
-using the trawl the vessel must steam quickly, and the ground trawled
-over must be free from rocks. It is only employed for the capture of
-the larger kinds of fish, such as flounders, haddock, and cod. The
-‘dredge’ is the true naturalist’s implement. It is a small-meshed net,
-closed at one end, and fixed to a rectangular iron frame at the other.
-When drawn along, it scrapes the bottom, and brings up everything
-that it encounters, mud and shells, and all living creatures that are
-not quick enough to get away. After a run over good ground, when the
-dredge is hauled up—an operation that is performed on the _Medusa_
-by a gun-metal wire-rope and a steam winch—and emptied on deck, the
-profusion of animal life that lies in a struggling heap before one is
-quite bewildering. There are pectens and oysters, alcyonarians (usually
-known as ‘dead-men’s-fingers’), sea-anemones of all sizes and colours,
-swimming-crabs and spider-crabs and soldier-crabs, whelks and mussels,
-zoophytes and algæ, ascidians (commonly called ‘sea-squirts’), sponges,
-sea-urchins, star-fishes of every kind from the magnificent sun-star,
-‘rose-jacynth to the finger-tips,’ to the common brittle-star and
-‘five-fingers;’ and there are other things more than can be numbered.
-The dredge and trawl explore the bottom, but are useless for collecting
-specimens from the surface or intermediate depths; and ‘tow-nets’—bags
-of muslin or canvas sewn on hoops and drawn after the vessel—are
-employed for this purpose. The creatures caught in the tow-net are
-usually small; when the contents of the net are placed in a bottle, the
-water seems full of bright spots darting about in all directions; but
-under the microscope the specks discover themselves to be beautifully
-formed crustaceans shining in glassy armour. But the tow-net often
-catches larger things. An exquisite transparent _medusa_ or jelly-fish,
-its umbrella several inches in diameter, rayed with purple, and
-carrying a fringe of graceful pendent tentacles, is often brought on
-board its namesake; and hosts of smaller species of these beautiful
-creatures are always to be found. It is in the tow-net, too, that the
-floating ova of fishes, about which there has been so much discussion
-recently, are caught.
-
-The chemical and physical work done at sea is chiefly the collection
-of samples of water and the observation of temperature. Water from any
-moderate depth is collected by lashing a bottle to the sounding-line
-and lowering it to the proper point; the stopper is then pulled out
-by a cord and the bottle allowed to fill. The water in the bottle
-is not changed in its ascent, as the mouth is narrow and it always
-hangs vertically. When the sea is rough or the depth is great, it
-is necessary to employ some other means. The ‘slip-water-bottle’ is
-convenient for most purposes. It consists of a brass disc covered
-with india-rubber, and supporting a central column to which the line
-is attached. This is lowered to the required depth, and then a hollow
-brass cylinder, open below, but closed above except for a hole that
-just allows the line to pass, is allowed to slip down the line. The
-base of the cylinder strikes on the rubber-covered disc, and securely
-incloses a sample of the water, which is run off by a stop-cock into
-a bottle after the whole has been hauled on board. The water must
-always be brought to the laboratory in stoppered bottles, which are
-entirely filled, and have had the stoppers tied down from the moment of
-collecting.
-
-The temperature of surface-water is usually taken by drawing a
-bucketful and placing an ordinary bath-thermometer in it for a few
-minutes. The precautions of hanging the thermometer in the centre of
-the bucket and placing it in the shade must be observed. Temperature
-at greater depths may be observed in several ways. Three methods
-have been tried at the Marine Station. The first is by means of a
-‘cistern-thermometer,’ used by the late Sir Robert Christison for
-ascertaining the temperature of the water in the deep Scottish lochs,
-which was presented to the Station by Sir Alexander Christison. It
-consists of a thermometer, the bulb of which is in the centre of a
-conical copper vessel capable of containing about five pints. When
-this is lowered into the sea, the water passes through the instrument;
-but on hauling up, the valves on the upper side are closed, and it
-is brought on board full of water from the greatest depth it had
-reached. Experiment shows that the water has not had time to change
-its temperature in the few minutes that elapse between collecting it
-and reading the thermometer. A more common instrument, though one not
-found so suitable for use in shallow water, is the Miller-Casella
-thermometer, the form chiefly employed on the _Challenger_. It is
-a self-registering thermometer with a maximum and minimum arm,
-which register the highest and lowest temperatures met with in each
-immersion. As the temperature of the sea almost invariably decreases
-with increase of depth, the lowest temperature is considered to be that
-of the lowest point reached.
-
-The third form of thermometer has been found the most convenient, and,
-with some modification, the best for the purposes of the Station. It
-is Negretti and Zambra’s deep-sea thermometer, and its principle is
-that when the temperature of the water is attained by the thermometer
-the instrument is made to turn over; the mercury column always breaks
-at the same point, a contraction near the bulb; the part which
-had been beyond the bulb remaining in the inverted tube, which is
-graduated so as to show the temperature at the moment of inversion.
-Its great advantage is that no subsequent change of temperature
-affects the instrument until it is set again. Its great defect is that
-it is difficult to be sure when it has turned over. The simple and
-ingenious inverting mechanism of Magnaghi is hardly trustworthy; but an
-improvement has been effected, in consequence of the experience gained
-at the Scottish Station, which makes the turning of the thermometer, or
-of any number of thermometers on the same line, a matter of certainty.
-
-The transparency of the water is measured roughly by noting the depth
-to which a large white disc continues visible when immersed. In the
-course of a trip from Grangemouth to the Isle of May, the colour of the
-water was observed to vary from dirty yellow to clear blue-green; and
-the disc, at first visible only three feet below the surface, was seen
-at a depth of six feet at Inchgarvie, at fifteen feet off Inchkeith,
-and at no less than sixty feet a little east of the May. Although the
-water of the upper reaches of the firth has been rendered muddy by the
-admixture of river-water, that at the May Island remains beautifully
-clear.
-
-The routine-work of a biological and chemical laboratory is not of
-much interest to most people. For every day of collecting, with its
-fresh sea-air and new sea-sights, there must be several spent on the
-Ark in preserving the specimens, pressing plants, dissecting, mounting
-microscopic objects, observing densities, analysing water, calculating
-results, and such things; and all this work does not always tend to
-preserve an odourless atmosphere.
-
-It is not intended that the Marine Station shall long continue of its
-present small dimensions. The experiment, so far as it has gone, has
-been so successful that it is now proposed to erect a large house on
-shore near the quarry, where there will be commodious laboratories,
-large aquaria, and rooms for the accommodation of the workers. In
-the meantime, Mr Irvine of Royston has generously given the use of
-an old manufactory which stands close to the sea beside the quarry.
-It was formerly used as a tannery, and so contains a number of large
-water-tight tanks built in the ground. There is a steam pumping-engine;
-and a very simple modification of the existing pipes will secure
-the supply of abundance of sea-water. The tanks will be used for
-experiments on fish-breeding; and the buildings in the works can be
-employed as laboratories without much alteration.
-
-The Marine Station is intended to be a centre from which branches will
-extend to other parts of the country. It is in contemplation to erect
-a permanent marine observatory on the Clyde; and there will also be a
-portable station, probably a floating laboratory on the plan of the
-Ark, which can be taken to any part of the coast where it is desirable
-to make an extended series of observations.
-
-The Granton Station is, with the exception of an annual grant of three
-hundred pounds from the Scottish Meteorological Society, entirely
-supported by voluntary subscription; and the heartiness with which the
-appeals to the public have been responded to by donations of money,
-apparatus, and material, shows how thoroughly the people of Scotland
-realise the importance of the work which is being done. The Government
-Grant Committee of the London Royal Society has made certain allowances
-to the members of the scientific staff for special researches; but this
-is not in any sense a government endowment of the Station, the Treasury
-having definitely refused to give any money for such a purpose.
-Although government support is an extremely desirable thing, the
-willing aid of an enlightened public is still better, and the Scottish
-Marine Station at Granton has this aid.[1]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] We will be glad to receive and acknowledge any donations in aid of
-the Granton Marine Station.—ED. _C. J._, Edinburgh.
-
-
-
-
-BY MEAD AND STREAM.
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIX.—THE OTHER SIDE.
-
-It seemed very curious to Madge that she should become the confidant
-of those two men, with whose fate that of her mother had been so sadly
-associated. She was thrust into the ungracious position of arbiter
-between them; she had to decide whether or not the one was false and
-treacherous, or the other the victim of his own hasty passion and
-self-deceived in his accusations. She was satisfied that Mr Beecham had
-spoken under the conviction of the truth of what he told her; and Mr
-Hadleigh had just shown her that—if innocent—he could be magnanimous,
-by his willingness to meet in friendliness one whom he had so long
-regarded as his implacable foe.
-
-The position involved so much in the result to her and to Philip, that
-she felt a little bewildered, and almost afraid of what she was about
-to hear. But she could forgive: that knowledge steadied her.
-
-Mr Hadleigh with his formal courtesy asked her to be seated. He stood
-at the window, and she could see that the white gloom of the coming
-snowstorm was reflected on his face.
-
-‘May I inquire where you have met Mr Shield?’
-
-She was obliged to reply as she had done to a question put by Philip,
-which, although different, was to the same purport: ‘I may not tell you
-yet.’
-
-‘Philip knows that you have met him?’
-
-‘No.’ It was most uncomfortable to have to give these evasive answers,
-which seemed to make her the one who had to give explanations. She
-observed that Mr Hadleigh’s heavy eyebrows involuntarily lifted.
-
-‘I ought not to have asked. Pardon me.’
-
-Something in his tone and manner plainly showed that he had penetrated
-her secret and Mr Beecham’s.
-
-‘I am sorry not to be able to give you a direct answer.’
-
-‘It does not matter,’ he said with a slight movement of the hand, as
-if he were putting the whole subject of her acquaintance with Shield
-aside. ‘I know, from the exclamation you made a little while ago, that
-he has told you with all his bitterness why he and I have not been
-friends.’
-
-‘There was no bitterness, Mr Hadleigh, but much sadness.’
-
-‘I am pleased to hear it, and I will try to give you my explanation in
-the same spirit. First about George Laurence. I never heard his name
-until after my marriage; and it is therefore unnecessary to say that
-when I did hear it, and learned the nature of his former relations with
-my wife, it was not possible for me to receive him in my house, or for
-him to regard me as a desirable acquaintance. There were unfortunate
-consequences following upon this peculiar position; but they may pass.
-They made my life a hard and solitary one.’
-
-He paused, and as he looked out into the dull atmosphere, the vague
-stare in his eyes, as if he were seeking something which he could not
-see, became pathetic. Madge began to understand that expression now,
-and the meaning of the melancholy, which was concealed from others
-under a mask of cold reserve. She sympathised, but could say nothing.
-
-‘I never spoke to the man, and saw him only a few times. But
-acquaintances of mine, who thought the news would be agreeable to me,
-told me of his ways of life and predicted the end, which came quickly.
-The mistake made by Philip’s mother and Mr Shield was in believing
-that it was not until after her marriage that Laurence neglected his
-business and took to dissipation. Men who had known him for several
-years previous to that date informed me that his habits were little
-altered after it. Nights spent in billiard-rooms and other places;
-days wasted on racecourses and his fortune squandered. He attempted to
-retrieve all by one daring speculation. Success would have enabled him
-to go on for a longer or shorter time, according to the use he made of
-the money; failure meant disgrace and a charge of fraud. He failed, and
-escaped the law by taking poison.’
-
-‘Are you sure of this?’ ejaculated Madge, startled and shocked by this
-very different version of the sentimental story she had heard.
-
-‘I will show you the newspaper report of the inquest, and a copy of the
-accountant’s report to the creditors on what estate was left. They will
-suffice to satisfy you that there is no error in anything I have said.’
-
-‘Why was it that Mr Shield, who was his most intimate friend, knew
-nothing of this?’
-
-‘He must have known something, but not all. His ways were quiet and
-studious, and what he did see, he did not regard with the eyes of
-experience. I do not think that Laurence attempted to deceive him; for
-men who fall into his course of life soon become blind to its evils and
-consequences; and so, without premeditation, he did deceive him. Mr
-Shield, being a man as passionate in his friendships as in his hates,
-would listen to no ill of his friend. But there is one thing more which
-I have never repeated, and never until now allowed any one over whom I
-had influence to repeat. You, however, must learn it from the lips of
-one who witnessed the scene.’
-
-He rang the bell, and Terry the butler appeared. It was one of Mr
-Terry’s strict points of discipline in his kingdom below stairs that
-without his sanction no one but himself should answer the drawing-room
-bell. Obeying a motion of the master’s hand, he advanced with a portly
-gravity becoming the dignity of his office.
-
-‘You were an attendant in the Cosmos Club about the date of my
-marriage?’ said the master.
-
-‘I was, sir, then, and for six months before, and a good while after.’
-
-‘You recollect what was said about the marriage a few evenings after it
-took place?’
-
-‘Perfectly, sir, because you told me to write it down, as you thought
-some day it might be useful to you.’
-
-‘The day has come. Tell us what you heard.’
-
-‘There was a small dinner-party in the strangers’ room, and I had
-charge of it. The gentlemen were particularly merry, and in fact
-there was a remarkable quantity of wine used. Your marriage, sir, was
-mentioned; and Mr Laurence, who was the gayest of the company, although
-he took less wine than any other gentleman, proposed the health of the
-happy couple. I recollect his very words, sir. He says: “I was in the
-swim for the girl myself; but this beggar, Hadleigh, cut me out; that
-was luck for me, so here’s luck to them;” and the toast was drunk with
-perfect enthusiasm. Mr Laurence made away with himself some time after;
-and I heard the gentlemen whisper among themselves, when referring to
-the sad event, that it was a question of doing that or of doing a spell
-of penal servitude. That’s all, sir.’
-
-The master nodded: Mr Terry bowed and retired with the portly gravity
-with which he had entered.
-
-Mr Hadleigh turned to Madge. The butler’s story produced the effect
-desired: she was convinced, for she felt sure that no man who loved
-could speak so lightly—or speak at all—of the woman he loved in a
-company of club bacchanalians.
-
-‘But why did you not tell this to Mr Shield?’ was her reproachful
-exclamation.
-
-‘Because he would not listen to anything I had to say. From the time
-of the marriage until after the death of Laurence, we never met. Then
-he came to me, mad with passion, and poured out a volley of abuse. I
-was patient because he was her brother; and silent because it was as
-hopeless to expect a man drunk with rage to be reasonable as one drunk
-with alcohol. In his last words to me he accused me of murder. We have
-never spoken together since.—Do you think me guilty?’
-
-‘I do not believe it,’ she replied decisively; ‘nor would he have
-believed it, if what you have told me had been made known to him in
-time.’
-
-‘I am grateful to you,’ said Mr Hadleigh, bending his head; ‘but I
-perceive you do not know Mr Shield. Time and solitude alter most men,
-and they must have had a peculiar effect upon him to have enabled him
-to make such a deep impression on you. He used to be obstinate to the
-last degree, and once he had formed an opinion, he held to it in spite
-of reason.’
-
-‘He must be changed indeed, then, Mr Hadleigh. I am sure that when he
-had had time to think, he would have understood it all but’——
-
-She paused; and his keen eyes rested searchingly on her troubled face.
-
-‘I know what you would say, and I see that you have doubted me. Ah
-well, ah well; it is a pity; but that, too, shall be made clear to you,
-I trust.’
-
-She looked up again hopefully.
-
-‘Oh, if you will do that!’ The tone was like that of an appeal.
-
-‘It can be done, I think.... You have been told that it was I who, in
-my enmity to Shield, took advantage of his long absence and silence to
-set abroad the report that he was married. I did not. The story was on
-the tongue of everybody hereabouts for months, and I, like the rest,
-believed it. There are only two men who would have said that I spoke
-the falsehood—the one is the man who invented it; the other is Shield
-himself.’
-
-‘You knew the man?’
-
-‘I did.’
-
-‘Then why, why did you not denounce him in time?’
-
-‘Because I did not know him until after your mother’s wedding; and then
-I thought she would learn the truth only too soon for her peace of
-mind.’
-
-‘How did you discover him, then?’
-
-‘The scoundrel revealed himself. He came to me, and insolently told me
-that, knowing the state of affairs between Shield and me, he thought
-he would do me a good service. So he had given him a blow which he
-would not get over in a hurry. I knew something of the man, and at once
-suspected his meaning. I inquired how he had struck the blow; and he
-explained that it was he who had brought about matters so that when
-Shield came home he found his sweetheart already married to somebody
-else.’
-
-Poor Madge was weeping bitter tears in her heart, but there were none
-in her eyes: they were full of eagerness and wonder. She was drawing
-nearer and nearer to the truth, which would enable her to effect the
-purpose Philip so much desired.
-
-‘It is the advantage of my nature,’ Mr Hadleigh went on calmly, ‘that
-I can listen to a scoundrel without losing temper. On this occasion, I
-asked how he knew that Shield had returned. “I have seen him,” he said;
-“and he is cut up enough to please even you. Now, having done this
-job for you, I expect you to give me something for my trouble.”—“How
-much?”—“A hundred is not too much to ask for the satisfaction of
-knowing that your bitterest foe has got it hot.”—I asked him to write
-down that he had been the first to report in the village that Austin
-Shield was married, although at the time he had no authority for the
-statement.—“That looks like a confession,” he said.—“Exactly. I mean it
-to be one.”—After thinking for a moment, the fellow said: “All right;
-it won’t matter to me, for to-morrow I am off to the diggings.”’
-
-Mr Hadleigh stopped and looked out at the window again, as if the scene
-he was recalling even now filled him with indignation. He resumed:
-
-‘When he had written the memorandum and signed it, I told him my
-opinion of his villainous transaction, and threatened to have him
-horsewhipped through the village. At the same time I rang the bell.
-Although disappointed, “Bah!” said he; “I always thought you were a
-sneak, without the pluck to give the fellow who hates you a hiding.
-Shield has the right stuff in him; he gave me the money for telling him
-that you employed me to tell the lie. That paper you swindled out of
-me isn’t worth a rap. You have no witnesses.”—He got out of the room
-before I could reach him, and escaped pursuit.... He was right; the
-paper was useless to me.’
-
-‘Who was the man?’
-
-‘Richard Towers. Your aunt will tell you what a scamp he was.’
-
-‘But what motive could he have for such a cruel wrong?’
-
-‘Unknown to Shield, he was his rival; and it was his own satisfaction
-he sought in spreading the falsehood, as it was his own interests he
-served by endeavouring to make capital of it out of both Shield and me
-by playing upon the unfortunate misunderstandings between us.’
-
-Madge was now calm and thoughtful. She, too, saw what a powerless
-instrument the villain’s memorandum was unless it could be proved that
-he had written it. Who would not say Mr Hadleigh himself had written
-it, to escape blame?
-
-‘Have you got the memorandum still?’ she asked suddenly. ‘Will you give
-it to me?’
-
-‘But it is useless, except to satisfy those who trust me that I had no
-part in the disgraceful affair.’
-
-‘It is not quite useless, Mr Hadleigh. There are letters bearing that
-man’s name amongst my grandfather’s papers, and Mr Shield can compare
-the handwriting. That will be enough to assure him that you are
-blameless, even if he be so ungenerous as you imagine. Give me the
-paper.’
-
-A clever thought; and Mr Hadleigh was struck by her quickness in seeing
-it and the energy with which she took up his cause. He did not know
-that she was working for Philip.
-
-‘You will make a good advocate,’ he said with that far-off look in his
-eyes. ‘You shall have the paper. It is in the safe in my room.’
-
-‘Thank you, thank you! I will wait here till you send it to me.’
-
-(_To be continued._)
-
-
-
-
-THE LARGEST STATUES IN THE WORLD, ANCIENT AND MODERN.
-
-
-A piece of interesting news comes to us from Egypt regarding a
-discovery recently made in Lower Egypt, by Mr Flinders Petrie, of
-the fragments of a colossal statue of King Rameses II., which,
-calculating the height from the fragments which remain, must have stood
-considerably over one hundred feet in height! The material employed
-is granite; and the executing of such a work in such a material, and
-when completed, rearing it into position, must have involved a profound
-knowledge not only of high art but of engineering skill. Is it possible
-that the statue could have been cut out whole in one piece? If so, what
-lever-power did the Egyptians possess to raise such an enormous weight
-into a perpendicular position?
-
-Certain it is that these ancient builders knew well how to get over,
-and did get over, prodigious difficulties, as witness their obelisks,
-and the enormous stones which compose the platform of the magnificent
-Temple of the Sun at Baalbec. As there is no stone quarry near, how
-these vast stones could possibly have been conveyed thither in the
-first place, and then raised to their position, has been an enigma
-to all modern architects and engineers by whom the temple has been
-critically examined, and who have freely confessed that, even with all
-our modern science of steam-cranes, hydraulic jacks, and railways,
-the transport and raising of such immense cyclopean masses would have
-undoubtedly presented many serious difficulties, if indeed it could be
-accomplished at all.
-
-Many of our readers will doubtless remember Mr Poynter’s grand picture
-in the Royal Academy of London, a few years ago, entitled ‘Israel in
-Egypt.’ It represented an enormous mass of sculpture mounted on a
-wheeled truck, dragged along by hundreds of the unfortunate captive
-Israelites, who are smarting under the whips of their cruel drivers.
-Mr Poynter had good authority for his ‘motive-power’ as shown in his
-picture. So far as we can discover from ancient works or ancient
-sculptures, the hugest stone masses were transported mainly by force of
-human muscles, with few mechanical expedients. Levers and rollers seem
-to have been almost, if not altogether, unknown. The mass was generally
-placed on a kind of sledge, the ground over which it was to pass
-lubricated with some oily substance, and the sheer strength of human
-shoulders was then applied.
-
-The most colossal and by far the most remarkable statue of modern
-days is that most elaborate and rather eccentric gift of the French
-nation to the people of America. Not only is it remarkable for its
-enormous height and gigantic proportions, but for the very singular
-and ingenious manner in which it has been constructed, so singular,
-indeed, that at first sight it is somewhat difficult to comprehend the
-manner in which it has been built up piece by piece, especially when
-we mention that the several pieces of copper composing the figure have
-_not_ been cast. How, then, have they been made? This we will try to
-explain.
-
-The statue is a female figure of Liberty, having on her head a crown,
-and holding aloft in her hand a torch. The figure is one hundred and
-five feet high; but, reckoning the extreme height to the top of the
-torch, the marvellous altitude of one hundred and thirty-seven feet
-nine inches is reached. The statue is to be reared on a pedestal of
-solid granite eighty-three feet high, so that the entire work will
-rise to the immense height of two hundred and twenty feet nine inches!
-The artist is M. Bartholdi (the family name, by-the-bye, of the great
-composer best known as ‘Mendelssohn’).
-
-Having first carefully constructed a model in clay about life-size,
-this was repeatedly enlarged until the necessary form and size were
-obtained. The next step was to obtain plaster-casts from the clay,
-and these casts were then reproduced by clever artists in hard wood.
-The wooden blocks were then in their turn placed in the hands of
-coppersmiths, who by the hammer alone, it is stated, gave the copper
-sheets the exact form of the wooden moulds or models; and thus, in this
-peculiar and laborious manner, the outside copper ‘skin’ of the statue
-was formed and, to all outward appearance, completed. But as the copper
-is only one-eighth of an inch thick, an inner skin is also provided,
-placed about a foot behind the first, whilst the intermediate space
-will be filled in with sand, especially at the lower extremities, to
-give the whole a steadfast foundation.
-
-The stability of the figure will not, however, be left to depend
-solely on these sheets of thin copper and loose sand; and therefore
-the interior, from top to bottom, will be strengthened by a framework
-of girders and supports, by which the whole will be knit together in
-one firm, compact, unyielding mass. As the sheets of copper and the
-interior framework are simply secured in the ordinary manner by rivets,
-when it is desired to remove this metallic mountain, all that has to
-be done is to unrivet the several plates, take down, and pack on board
-ship for New York.
-
-It is proposed to place this gigantic ‘Liberty’ on Bedloe’s Island,
-a very small islet lying about two miles south of the Battery and
-Castle Garden, the lowest point of the island of Manhattan on which
-the city of New York is built, so that travellers approaching the city
-by water on that side will get a fine view of the statue of ‘Liberty
-enlightening the World.’
-
-This mighty work of art, after many years of close and anxious
-labour, has recently been formally handed over by M. Jules Ferry to
-the minister of the United States, as a free gift from the people of
-France to the people of America—a token of love and admiration from
-the one republic to the other—and measures are being adopted to take
-the statue to pieces, with a view to its immediate transmission to New
-York, in which go-ahead city we shall doubtless soon hear of its final
-erection.
-
-If Mr Flinders Petrie’s discovery of the remains of the gigantic statue
-of Rameses II. in Lower Egypt, one hundred feet high of solid granite,
-is the largest statue of antiquity, the ‘Liberty’ of M. Bartholdi may
-certainly take rank as the most colossal production of modern days.
-
-
-
-
-A GREENROOM ROMANCE.
-
-
-IN THREE SCENES.—SCENE I.
-
-Mr Percy Montmorency was seated in front of a looking-glass in his
-dressing-room at the Pantheon Theatre, habited in the costume of
-Charles Surface, with the perruquier in attendance. The name of
-‘Montmorency’ was merely a _nom de théâtre_ assumed by Harry Stanley
-when he adopted the somewhat singular resolution of ‘fretting and
-strutting his hour’ on the boards of a metropolitan theatre; for
-Mr Stanley was the only child of his father Colonel Stanley, and
-consequently heir to that gallant officer’s estates in Yorkshire
-and elsewhere. For the rest, he was three-and-twenty, undeniably
-good-looking, and endowed with considerable abilities. Having completed
-the arrangement of the powdered wig, the perruquier withdrew a pace and
-contemplated the effect with well-simulated admiration. ‘Mr Charles
-Mathews never looked the part better, sir.’
-
-The actor seemed to coincide in the opinion of his flattering
-attendant, for he rose, and surveyed himself in the glass with
-admiration, which he made no attempt to conceal.
-
-‘A good house, Jackson?’
-
-‘Capital, sir. But a little cold. They’ll warm up when _you_ go on,
-sir.’
-
-‘Tell the call-boy I want him, Jackson.’
-
-Jackson withdrew; and Montmorency surrendered himself to a mental
-soliloquy, which assumed somewhat of this form: ‘I wonder what my
-father wishes to see me about? The same old story, I suppose—the folly
-and wickedness of the step I have taken. Well, of one thing I am
-certain: I am much better off in my present position, than wedded to
-that Barbadoes girl, Miss Anstruther, in spite of her money-bags, and
-whom I have never seen.’
-
-These reflections were put an end to by the entrance of the call-boy.
-
-‘If a gentleman giving the name of Colonel Stanley should call, show
-him in here.’
-
-‘He is outside, sir,’ replied the boy.
-
-‘Show him in at once,’ whereupon there entered a small wizen-faced old
-gentleman, with snow-white hair, and supporting himself on a stick.
-Montmorency advanced, shook hands with a great show of cordiality, and
-placed a chair, on which Colonel Stanley slowly seated himself, gazing
-round the small apartment with an unfeigned expression of curiosity.
-‘So this is a theatrical dressing-room. You are pretty snug.’
-
-The room certainly deserved the encomium of the old colonel. Paintings
-in oil and water colours nearly covered the walls; fancy pipes and
-cigar-boxes and scent-bottles littered the tables; a case of champagne
-reposed in one corner, while in the other was a small pile of seltzer
-water.
-
-The colonel, after indulging in a sigh, proceeded: ‘I have called,
-Harry, before I return to Yorkshire, to make one more appeal to you to
-give up your present mode of life, settle down as a landed proprietor
-in your native county, and marry Miss Anstruther.’
-
-It was now the turn of the young man to sigh as he replied:
-‘Impossible, my dear sir. I am already wedded—to the stage.’
-
-‘That may be; but unions can easily be dissolved by a divorce,
-especially in these days.’
-
-‘Not where the contracting parties are so attached to each other as
-I am to my profession. No, sir. If a man could take a wife on lease,
-for seven, fourteen, or twenty-one years, the case would be different.
-But the feeling that my lot in life was fixed—cut and dried, so to
-speak—the matter won’t bear a thought.’ The young man felt strongly
-inclined to indulge in a stage-walk, but the limited area of the
-apartment forbade such a physical relief. If the reader should consider
-the remarks of the actor somewhat flippant, it must be borne in mind
-that no one whose character did not fall under that definition would
-have acted as Harry Stanley had done.
-
-The old man scowled as he resumed: ‘I wonder you can respect yourself,
-dizened out and painted like a mummer at a pantomime.’
-
-‘I am of the same calling as the glory of England, Shakspeare the
-actor’——
-
-‘And poet—you forget that, sir—poet, sir,’ sharply retorted the colonel.
-
-‘I can assure you, sir, we have men of good family playing very
-small parts to-night. Trip took honours at Oxford, and Backbite is a
-Cambridge man.’
-
-‘Pray, sir,’ replied the colonel, ‘if that be the case, why do you all
-sail under false colours? Why resign the honoured name of Stanley for
-the Frenchified one of Montmorency?’
-
-The young man bowed as he responded: ‘Out of deference to the shallow
-scruples of the narrow-minded portion of Society.’
-
-‘Of which I constitute a member, eh?’
-
-It was in a more conciliatory tone that his son took up the argument.
-‘Pray, sir, let me ask you a question. Do poets and novelists never
-adopt a _nom de plume_? Did not Miss Evans style herself “George
-Eliot;” the late Governor-general of India, “Owen Meredith;”
-Mademoiselle de la Ramée, “Ouida;” Dickens, “Boz?”’
-
-‘That’ll do,’ interrupted the colonel. ‘Then one fine day you will be
-falling in love, as you call it, with one of these artful and painted
-sirens, and I shall find myself grandfather to a clown or a pantaloon!
-For, of course, you will bring up your offspring to _the_ profession,
-as you call it, as if there were no other profession in the world.’
-
-His son and heir drew himself proudly up as he replied: ‘No, sir; I
-trust I shall never forget that I own the honoured name of Stanley.’
-
-The colonel remained silent for several moments ere he observed: ‘I
-shall never understand why you declined even to see Miss Anstruther.’
-
-‘Because the very fact that the lady was labelled my future wife,’
-replied his son, ‘would have caused me to detest her at first sight.’
-
-The old colonel rose from his seat. ‘I can see very plainly that I am
-wasting both your time and my own.—I suppose you will have to do a
-little “tumbling” presently?’
-
-‘I do not make my first entrance till the third act. If you will go in
-front, you can have my box.’ Montmorency rang the bell as he spoke, and
-when the call-boy appeared, directed him to show his visitor into box A.
-
-The actor was indulging in a sigh of relief, when a head appeared at
-the half-closed door, and a voice exclaimed: ‘May I come in?’
-
-Montmorency bounded from his chair as he seized hold of the extended
-hand and drew the owner into the room. The new-comer was a young man
-of about the same age as the actor, and was habited in modern evening
-dress. Montmorency wrung the hand of his friend Vallance, and forced
-him into a seat. ‘Delighted to see you, Jack! Have a weed and a
-seltzer?’
-
-In a few seconds the two young men were similarly occupied, and
-immersed in the consumption of a couple of choice Partagas.
-
-The actor opened the ball. ‘You must have met an elderly party in the
-passage. That was the governor. He is very irate because I won’t fall
-in love by word of command, and marry Miss Anstruther, whom I have
-never seen.—By-the-bye, _you_ have seen her. What is she like?’
-
-‘A lovely girl,’ replied Vallance. ‘I met her at a ball at Scarborough,
-soon after her arrival from the West Indies. Faith, Harry, you might do
-worse.’
-
-‘And might do better; eh, Jack? But your ideas of beauty are so
-opposite to mine, as I remember of old. Now, if you wish to see a
-perfect vision of loveliness, go in front and see Fonblanque, the Lady
-Teazle of to-night.’
-
-‘You mean _Miss_ Fonblanque, I presume?’
-
-‘Exactly. The prefix “Miss” is frequently omitted in theatrical
-parlance. She is bewitching!’
-
-Vallance shakes his head. ‘Have a care, Harry. It would be a pity if
-you allied yourself with some unknown adventuress, after refusing the
-rich Miss Anstruther.’
-
-‘Well, to be candid, Jack, I _am_ afraid of myself. If I did not
-constantly call to my mind the fact that I am a Stanley, I should
-speedily succumb to the charms of the divine Fonblanque, so there is
-some benefit arising from birth after all.’
-
-‘And how long do you mean to pursue this mad freak of yours?’ inquired
-Vallance.
-
-‘Till I hear on good authority that the troublesome Miss Anstruther is
-engaged, or married.’
-
-‘And then?’
-
-‘Why, then I quit the mimic stage as suddenly as I entered upon it.’
-
-‘Meanwhile!’ ejaculated Vallance with an incredulous smile.
-
-‘Meanwhile,’ replied Montmorency loftily, ‘I contribute to the “gaiety
-of nations,” as Johnson said of Garrick; and therefore consider myself
-a far better member of society than a successful general, who has
-killed so many hundreds of his fellow-mortals; or a lawyer, who has set
-whole families by the ears in order to fill his pockets; or a doctor,
-who, as Tobin says, spends the greater part of his time in writing
-death-warrants in Latin.’
-
-Vallance examined his finger-nails for a few seconds, and after an
-embarrassing pause, said: ‘Harry, I am about to make a confession.’
-
-‘I cannot promise you absolution, Jack.’
-
-Vallance proceeded: ‘On the memorable night when I first beheld Miss
-Anstruther at the ball at Scarborough, I fell over head and ears in
-love with her.’
-
-‘You fell in love with her, did you!’ repeated Montmorency, in a tone
-of some annoyance. ‘You mean with her banking account. Remember, you
-are in the confession box.’
-
-‘On my honour, no!’ replied Vallance. ‘As you are aware, I could not
-afford to marry a penniless girl; but if I were as rich as Rothschild,
-and Miss Anstruther a pauper, I would marry her to-morrow, if she would
-have me.—You do not seem to like the idea?’
-
-‘Humanity is a strange compound, Jack. It grates upon my sense of
-propriety that any one else should step into my shoes and wed the woman
-intended for my wife, yet whom I have vowed never to marry.’
-
-‘Why, what a dog in the manger, you are!’
-
-‘I would not so much mind if a stranger were to win the heiress; but
-to know her as your wife, Jack, for the remainder of my existence, to
-repent probably of my obstinacy—— You are not in earnest, Jack?’
-
-‘Ah, but I am!’ replied Vallance, inwardly murmuring: ‘May I be
-forgiven the lie!’
-
-After a brief mental struggle, Montmorency continued: ‘Well, success
-attend you. You are a lucky fellow to walk off with such a prize; while
-I—I shall remain a humble stage-player.’
-
-‘Remember the peerless Fonblanque, Harry.’
-
-‘Ah! you are right. There is beauty, talent, wit, elegance, refinement,
-all enshrined in the admirable Lady Teazle of to-night. I shall now no
-longer hold back. To-night I shall know my fate. You have applied the
-touchstone.’
-
-The shrill voice of the call-boy now uttered the words ‘Charles
-Surface.’
-
-‘There is my call. So adieu for the present. Go in front, and call for
-me at the end of the show; and we will have a steak at the _Albion_
-together, and drink to the speedy nuptials of my _bête noire_, Miss
-Anstruther.’
-
-‘With whom?’
-
-‘Any one! I care not—no offence, Jack—so I am free.’
-
-Vallance proceeded straight to box A, and having tapped at the door,
-found himself face to face with Colonel Stanley, who eagerly exclaimed:
-‘Well, Vallance, has my plan succeeded?’
-
-‘I fear not, sir.’
-
-‘Give him a second dose the first opportunity. I never knew it fail.
-If you want to make a man fall in love with a particular woman, tell
-him she is half engaged, and she will instantly go up twenty per cent.
-in his estimation. That is how I came to marry his mother. Directly
-my father told me that Fred Spencer was mad after her, and that she
-was half inclined to marry him, I rushed to the attack, stormed the
-fortress, and carried off the prize! _I_ wasn’t going to let that puppy
-Spencer march off with her. A fellow with not a tithe of my personal
-recommendations.’ Here the colonel paused, as he beheld the countenance
-of his auditor completely engrossed with the scene; for in the lovely
-Lady Teazle of the play, Jack Vallance had recognised the West Indian
-heiress, Emily Anstruther!
-
-
-SCENE II.
-
-Along one of the tortuous passages leading to the dressing-rooms, a
-gentleman is conducting a lady, preceded by the dresser. They have
-evidently come from the audience part of the theatre, as they are
-both in modern evening dress. Presently the dresser pauses at a door,
-and after tapping, enters; and returns to invite the lady to invade
-the sacred precincts of the dressing-room of Miss Fonblanque, the
-representative of Lady Teazle. After a few whispered words to her
-escort, the lady accepts the invitation, and in another moment is
-clasped in the embrace of the actress. ‘My dear Julia!’
-
-‘My darling Emily!’
-
-Certainly, Lady Teazle fully deserved the rapturous praises of
-Montmorency. Her lovely dark eyes shone all the brighter from the
-contrast to the powdered wig; while her splendid figure was displayed
-to the utmost advantage by means of her handsome brocaded dress.
-
-‘And so you recognised me under these tinsel robes, Julia?’
-
-‘Your voice is unmistakable; I should have known it anywhere,
-Emily.—When do you intend to return to your own sphere?’
-
-‘First tell me, Julia, how you managed to penetrate these sacred
-precincts?’
-
-‘Oh! my husband, who knows everybody, said he could at once accomplish
-it, directly I told him you were my old schoolfellow at Barbadoes.—Now,
-answer me my question, there’s a dear!’
-
-‘I _have_ found my proper sphere; I am free, popular, and admired.
-Instead of one admirer, I have hundreds, and the number is increasing
-nightly. What can woman wish for more?’
-
-‘I’ll tell you, Emily: a nice husband, and domestic bliss.’
-
-The actress indulged in a scarcely audible sigh. ‘That might have been
-my lot. I mean the domestic bliss part of the affair, if I had not had
-it dinned into my ears from morning till night that there was only one
-road to happiness—a union with Mr Stanley, whom I have never seen.’
-
-‘You might have liked him very much.’
-
-‘Impossible, my dear Julia. The very fact of a man being ticketed like
-a prize animal at a show, and then his being introduced to you as your
-certain and future husband, would be quite sufficient to make me detest
-him.—No, Julia; when _I_ marry, I will myself make the selection, and
-he must be one who is ignorant that his intended is a rich heiress.’
-
-‘That will not be a very easy matter to accomplish, Emily.’
-
-‘Listen, Julia, and I’ll tell you a secret. There is a young man
-acting in this company—a Mr Percy Montmorency. He is all I could
-wish—handsome, clever, accomplished, and vastly agreeable.’
-
-‘Then you have _made_ your selection?’
-
-‘Not so, Julia. His profession renders our union impossible. He may
-be heir to a peerage; he may be a lawyer’s clerk. There is the most
-delightful mystery as to our antecedents, we play-actors! For instance,
-who would suppose that I was the rich West Indian heiress, who utilised
-her amateur theatrical talents, and adopted her present profession? And
-all in order to escape being pestered into an unwelcome and distasteful
-marriage. Heigh-ho! I wish I had never seen this captivating fellow.’
-
-Mrs Sydney sighed as she rejoined: ‘Ah, Emily, there is the danger
-of your present mode of life. Before you know where you are, finding
-yourself over head and ears in love with some handsome fellow, even of
-whose very name you are ignorant. As to the position in society of his
-progenitors, that is a point which would require the research of the
-Society of Antiquaries.’
-
-The actress looked solemnly in the face of her friend, and taking both
-her hands within her own, replied: ‘Julia, there is a fascination in
-the life of a successful actress, of which you can form no conception.
-There is the delight of selecting the costume you are to wear on
-the eventful evening. No trifle to a woman, as you will admit. Then
-there is the actual pleasure of wearing it, not for the sake of some
-half-dozen friends, whose envy in consequence is a poor reward, but the
-object of admiration to hundreds of spectators nightly! Then, instead
-of monotonous domesticity, executing crewel-work to the accompaniment
-of the snoring in an armchair of a bored husband, we have the nightly
-welcome from a thousand pair of hands, and the final call before the
-curtain amidst an avalanche of flowers! Your name on every tongue,
-your photo. in every print-shop in London, and your acts and deeds the
-subject of conversation at every dinner-table in the metropolis!’
-
-Mrs Sydney shook her head with a melancholy smile as the actress
-finished her oration. ‘I am still unconverted, Emily.’
-
-‘Quite right, Julia. If we were all actresses, there would be no
-audiences.’
-
-The inexorable call-boy here put a compulsory finish to the interview
-between the two friends, with the words ‘Lady Teazle.’
-
-
-SCENE III.
-
-Montmorency was seated in the greenroom at the conclusion of the play,
-engaged in that absent train of thought known as a brown-study. The
-more he saw of the fascinating Fonblanque, the more he was captivated.
-Every hour spent in her society but served to rivet more closely the
-chain which bound him to her. Should he condescend and make her an
-offer of his hand, she would naturally be influenced by a profound
-sense of gratitude, when she discovered that she had married a man
-of fortune and a Stanley! Whereas, if he had married the rich Miss
-Anstruther, he would have had her money-bags perpetually thrown in his
-face. A silver-toned utterance fell on his ears. Looking up, he beheld
-the subject of his cogitations.
-
-‘Allow me to congratulate you, Mr Montmorency, on your Charles Surface
-this evening. A double call before the curtain, and well deserved.’
-
-‘You are pleased to flatter me. The plaudits of the house to-night
-render any praise on my part of your Lady Teazle unnecessary. I regret
-that I am fated to lose so charming a compatriot.’
-
-Was it fancy that Montmorency imagined he detected a paler tint on the
-cheek of the actress, as she replied: ‘You are not going to leave us?’
-
-‘I fear so.’
-
-‘Wherefore?’
-
-‘You are the last person to whom I can confide the cause of my sudden
-departure.’
-
-Lady Teazle cast down her lovely eyes for a brief space, and then,
-in a voice in which the smallest possible _tremolo_ was perceptible,
-whispered: ‘Are you not happy here?’
-
-‘I fear, too much so,’ sighed Montmorency. ‘I have been living in a
-fool’s paradise lately.’
-
-‘How? In what way, Mr Montmorency?’
-
-‘I am in love.—You start. You do not believe in an actor, who is always
-simulating affection, ever falling under the influence of a real and
-veritable passion.’
-
-‘You wrong me; indeed, you do. The artistic nature is, and must be,
-more acutely sensitive than that possessed by ordinary mortals. Do I
-know the lady?’
-
-‘You see her every day—when you contemplate those charming features
-in the glass. Yes; it is _you_, Miss Fonblanque, whom I love, whom I
-adore!’
-
-How can we describe the flood of sensations which agitated the bosom of
-the heiress, as she listened to the avowal of affection from the lips
-of the only man she had ever loved! In low and trembling tones, she
-managed to reply: ‘Mr Montmorency, you are not rehearsing a scene in
-some new comedy?’
-
-‘I was never more serious in my life.’
-
-By this time, the pride of the Anstruthers had come to the assistance
-of the heiress. ‘I grieve very much that I cannot accept your offer. It
-is impossible.’
-
-‘Impossible! Why?’
-
-‘That I cannot explain.’
-
-‘We are both members of the same profession, and so far equal.’
-
-‘Pardon me,’ said Lady Teazle. ‘You know nothing of my antecedents,
-and’——
-
-‘And you know nothing of mine, you would say. Charming equality! Say,
-Miss Fonblanque, may I hope?’
-
-It was now the turn of the actress to sigh. ‘It would be cruel to raise
-hopes which can never be realised.’
-
-Montmorency let fall the hand which in his ardour he had seized, and
-drew himself proudly up. ‘That is your fixed answer?’
-
-‘It is.’
-
-Montmorency once more took possession of her taper fingers, and raising
-them to his lips, uttered the word ‘Farewell!’ and hastily left the
-greenroom.
-
-The dark melting eyes of the heiress gazed after his retreating figure,
-and large drops of moisture gathered in them. ‘I have half a mind to
-call him back,’ she mentally whispered.—‘No! I must remember I am an
-Anstruther.’
-
-Sinking on a couch, Lady Teazle felt her brain spinning round; then
-presently raising her eyes, she beheld—Mr Vallance!
-
-‘Have I not the honour of speaking to Miss Anstruther?’
-
-‘Since you recognise me, it would be affectation to deny my identity.
-Mr Vallance, may I ask you to preserve my secret?’
-
-‘From all save one individual—Mr Montmorency. Surely you knew that in
-the Charles Surface of this evening you beheld your rejected lover, Mr
-Stanley?’
-
-A film came slowly over the eyes of Miss Anstruther. ‘You are not
-joking, Mr Vallance?’
-
-‘The matter is too serious for jesting. But I will break a confidence.
-He loves you. He told me so half an hour ago.’
-
-The heiress could scarcely forbear a smile, as she reflected that
-her ears had drunk in the soft confession only five minutes ago. ‘Mr
-Vallance, will you do me a favour? Will you ask Mr Stanley to step
-here for a few minutes? But remember, you must on no account reveal my
-identity.’
-
-‘You may rely upon me, Miss Anstruther. I do not know what steps you
-mean to adopt; but there is no time to lose, for old Colonel Stanley is
-in front, and will, if he has recognised you, at once inform his son.’
-
-‘That is my fear; so haste.’
-
-Almost before the heiress could mature her plans, the rejected one
-appeared before her. He was very grave, and bowed with an air of deep
-humility, as the actress thus addressed him: ‘Mr Vallance and I are
-old acquaintances, so I commissioned him to ask you to return for a
-short time. I feel very anxious about our scenes in the _Hunchback_
-to-morrow. Would you mind running through the Modus and Helen scenes? I
-mean the second one.’
-
-Montmorency bowed. ‘With pleasure.’
-
-It would have been a lesson for half the actresses on the stage, could
-they have beheld the manner in which the saucy coquette of the play
-coaxed her lover, lured him on, fascinated him, and enveloped him in
-such a spell of witcheries, that no Modus that ever breathed could have
-been proof against her seductive wiles. The scene came to an unexpected
-termination, for Montmorency suddenly caught her in his arms, and as he
-held her clasped tight to his breast, exclaimed in rapid and excited
-tones: ‘This is not acting! If it be, you are the greatest actress that
-ever trod the boards. You love me! I see it in your sparkling eye; I
-read it in your blushing cheek! Say, am I not right?’
-
-Emily Anstruther remained perfectly passive in the arms of Harry
-Stanley, as she murmured ‘Yes!’
-
-The enraptured couple were so completely absorbed in reading love in
-each other’s eyes, that they had not observed the entrance of two
-gentlemen, Colonel Stanley and Mr Vallance.
-
-The old colonel was the first to speak. ‘Speak, sir! Is this a scene
-from a play?’
-
-By this time the heiress had left the sweet anchorage of her lover’s
-arms, and advancing to the old man, said: ‘Do you not recognise your
-godchild, Emily Anstruther?’
-
-But surprise had taken away the power of speech from the colonel.
-
-His son interposed. ‘I trust Miss Anstruther will acquit _me_ of any
-guilty knowledge of this fact—will believe that _I_ believed she was
-merely Miss Fonblanque the actress.’
-
-Emily Anstruther here cast down her eyes, while a deep blush mantled
-over her face and neck. ‘I am afraid _I_ am not equally innocent; for
-Mr Vallance informed me that I had refused my hated lover. But I have
-enough confidence in _his_ love for me, to hope for his belief in my
-unselfish love for _him_.’
-
-‘So you see, dad,’ exclaimed the younger Stanley, ‘Love not only rules
-the court, the camp, the grove, as the poet says, but does not disdain
-to flutter his wings in the greenroom.’
-
- _Author’s Note._—This story having been dramatised, and the
- provisions of the law as regards dramatic copyright having been
- duly complied with, any infringement of the author’s rights
- becomes actionable.
-
-
-
-
-HUMOROUS DEFINITIONS.
-
-
-A smart, pithy, or humorous definition often furnishes a happy
-illustration of the proverbial brevity which is the soul of wit. Wit
-itself has not inaptly been called ‘a pleasant surprise over truth;’
-and wisdom, often its near ally, is, in the opinion of a clever writer,
-‘nothing more than educated cunning.’ ‘Habits are what we learn and
-can’t forget,’ says the same author, who also defines silence as ‘a
-safe place to hide in,’ and a lie as ‘the very best compliment that
-can be paid to truth.’ ‘Show him an egg and instantly the air is full
-of feathers,’ said a humorist, defining a sanguine man. ‘A moral
-chameleon’ is a terse reckoning-up of a humbug. Man’s whole life has
-been cynically summed up in the sentence, ‘Youth is a blunder; middle
-life, a struggle; and old age, a regret.’
-
-Whimsical definitions are sometimes quite as neat and telling as those
-of a smarter kind. Dr Johnson confessed to a lady that it was pure
-ignorance that made him define ‘pastern, the knee of a horse;’ but he
-could hardly make the same excuse for defining pension, ‘an allowance
-made to any one without an equivalent.’ A patriot, some writer tells
-us, is ‘one who lives _for_ the promotion of his country’s union and
-dies _in_ it;’ and a hero, ‘he who, after warming his enemies, is
-toasted by his friends.’
-
-Of juvenile definitions, ‘dust is mud with the juice squeezed out;’
-scarcely so scientific as Palmerston’s definition of dirt as ‘matter
-in the wrong place.’ A fan, we learn, is ‘a thing to brush warm off
-with;’ and a monkey, ‘a small boy with a tail;’ ‘salt, what makes your
-potatoes taste bad when you don’t put any on;’ ‘wakefulness, eyes all
-the time coming unbuttoned;’ and ‘ice, water that stayed out too late
-in the cold and went to sleep.’
-
-A schoolboy asked to define the word ‘sob,’ whimpered out: ‘It means
-when a feller don’t mean to cry and it bursts out itself.’ Another
-defined a comma as ‘a period with a long tail.’ A youngster was asked
-to give his idea of the meaning of ‘responsibility,’ so he said: ‘Well,
-supposing I had only two buttons on my trousers, and one came off, all
-the responsibility would rest on the other button.’
-
-‘Give the definition of admittance,’ said a teacher to the head-boy.
-This went from the head to near the foot of the class, all being
-unable to tell the meaning of it, until it reached a little boy who
-had seen the circus bills posted about the village, and who exclaimed:
-‘Admittance means one shilling, and children half-price.’
-
-‘What is a junction, nurse?’ asked a seven-year-old fairy the other day
-on a railway platform.—‘A junction, my dear?’ answered the nurse, with
-the air of a very superior person indeed: ‘why, it’s a place where two
-roads separate.’
-
-To hit off a jury as ‘a body of men organised to find out which side
-has the smartest lawyer,’ is to satirise many of our ‘intelligent
-fellow-countrymen.’ The word ‘suspicion’ is, in the opinion of a
-jealous husband, ‘a feeling that compels you to try to find out
-something which you don’t wish to know.’ A good definition of a
-‘Pharisee’ is ‘a tradesman who uses long prayers and short weights;’ of
-a ‘humbug, one who agrees with everybody;’ and of a ‘tyrant, the other
-version of somebody’s hero.’ An American lady’s idea of a ballet-girl
-was, ‘an open muslin umbrella with two pink handles;’ and a Parisian’s
-of ‘chess, a humane substitute for hard labour.’ Thin soup, according
-to an Irish mendicant, is ‘a quart of water boiled down to a pint, to
-make it strong.’
-
-Of definitions of a bachelor—‘an un-altar-ed man,’ ‘a singular being,’
-and ‘a target for a miss,’ are apt enough. A walking-stick may be
-described as ‘the old man’s strength and the young man’s weakness;’
-and an umbrella as ‘a fair and foul weather friend’ who has had ‘many
-ups and downs in the world.’ A watch may be hit off as a ‘second-hand
-affair;’ spectacles as ‘second-sight’ or ‘friendly glasses;’ and a
-wig as ‘the top of the poll,’ ‘picked locks,’ and ‘poached hare.’ And
-any one who is troubled with an empty purse may be comforted with the
-reflection that ‘no trial could be lighter.’
-
-‘Custom is the law of fools,’ and ‘politeness is half-sister to
-charity’—the last a better definition than that which spitefully
-defines polite society as ‘a place where manners pass for too much,
-and morals for too little.’ ‘Fashion’ has been cleverly hit off as ‘an
-arbitrary disease which leads all geese to follow in single file the
-one goose that sets the style.’ An idea of the amusement of dancing is
-not badly conveyed by the phrases ‘embodied melody’ and ‘the poetry of
-motion.’
-
-The ‘Complete Angler’ as a definition of ‘a flirt’ is particularly
-happy. Beauty has been called ‘a short-lived tyranny,’ ‘a silent
-cheat,’ and ‘a delightful prejudice;’ while modesty has been declared
-‘the delicate shadow that virtue casts.’ Love has been likened to
-‘the sugar in a woman’s teacup, and man the spoon that stirs it up;’
-and a ‘true-lover’s-knot’ may not inaptly be termed ‘a dear little
-tie.’ Kisses have variously been defined as ‘a harmony in red,’ ‘a
-declaration of love by deed of mouth,’ and ‘lip-service.’
-
-‘Matrimony’ was defined by a little girl at the head of a confirmation
-class in Ireland, as ‘a state of torment into which souls enter to
-prepare them for another and better world.’
-
-‘Being,’ said the examining priest, ‘the answer for purgatory.’
-
-‘Put her down!’ said the curate, much ashamed of his pupil—‘put her
-down to the foot of the class!’
-
-‘Lave her alone,’ quoth the priest; ‘the lass may be right after all.
-What do you or I know about it?’
-
-
-
-
-THE MONTH:
-
-SCIENCE AND ARTS.
-
-
-Nearly seven millions sterling have been already expended upon the
-Panama Canal works, and according to all accounts, there is plenty
-to show for the money. The channel is being dredged out by enormous
-machines, which scoop out the softer earth and operate upon the
-debris of harder rocks, after the latter have been blasted. Colon,
-the Atlantic terminus of the canal, has, from the miserable and dirty
-little village which it presented some years ago, sprung into a
-prosperous town. The dry season has unfortunately been an unhealthy
-one, and there has been an epidemic of marsh-fever; but altogether we
-may take the general report of the Canal works as a satisfactory one.
-There is little doubt that the great work of uniting the Atlantic and
-Pacific Oceans will be accomplished within very few years.
-
-News has been received by the Geographical Society that their intrepid
-explorer, Mr Joseph Thomson, whose departure some months ago on an
-expedition to the region east and north-east of Lake Victoria Nyanza
-we briefly chronicled at the time, has safely returned to Zanzibar.
-Little is at present known as to what he has done, further than that he
-has successfully carried out his programme with the most satisfactory
-feature that the work has been done without any loss of life except
-from disease. We may look forward with great interest to Mr Thomson’s
-account of this his third successful expedition, the more so, as this
-time he has journeyed in a region of Africa untraversed by any previous
-explorer, and about which, therefore, the knowledge possessed by our
-best geographers is open to improvement.
-
-From a paper recently read before the Institution of Civil Engineers,
-by Mr G. H. Stayton, upon the Wood-pavements of London, we glean the
-following interesting particulars: The metropolis comprises nearly
-two thousand miles of streets, of which only fifty-three miles are
-at present laid with wood. Most of the wood used is in the form of
-rectangular blocks of yellow deal, principally Swedish. Neither elm nor
-oak will stand changes of temperature sufficiently well to fit them for
-this purpose; but pitch-pine answers well, and so does larch; though
-the supply of the latter limits its use. Creosoting the blocks has no
-value as a preservative, and the wood is now used plain, the joints
-being filled in with cement. The average cost of laying wood-pavement
-is about ten shillings and sixpence per square yard, and the expenses
-of maintenance compare very favourably with Macadam and other systems
-of pavement. ‘There is nothing new under the sun,’ even in the matter
-of wood-pavements, for we find, on reference to a _Mechanic’s Magazine_
-dated 1858, that wood-blocks, placed grain uppermost, as in all modern
-systems, are distinctly advocated as having many advantages over
-granite roads, diminution of cost and durability being among those
-stated.
-
-It has become customary to speak of the present epoch as the ‘Iron
-Age,’ in order to distinguish it from those two long periods of human
-interest known respectively as the Stone Age and the Bronze Age. But
-future historians may well be tempted to substitute the word steel
-for iron, for it is an undoubted fact that improved processes of
-manufacture, and the resulting easy and cheap production, are causing
-steel to be widely substituted for its parent metal. In railways,
-steel rails are now almost entirely replacing iron ones, and that
-modification of the metal known as ‘mild steel’ is finding great
-favour just now among shipbuilders. The Board of Trade have lately had
-representations made to them that the superiority of steel over iron
-for shipbuilding purposes should be officially recognised; and that
-this request is well grounded, the following instances will go far to
-prove. A steamer wrecked on the coast of the Isle of Wight remained
-for ten days in stormy weather perched on a ledge of rocks without
-breaking up. ‘If,’ says the engineer’s Report, ‘she had been built of
-iron instead of steel, there is not a doubt that she would have gone to
-pieces. The agent of another vessel wrecked at New Zealand last year
-reports to the owner that the vessel was eventually released from her
-rocky bed; ‘but, with a large number of passengers, would have been
-lost, had it not been for the beautiful quality of the material of
-which she is built, known as mild steel.’
-
-But there is one branch of the metal trade which shows a continually
-increasing activity, and which need not fear any rivalry from steel,
-and that is the tinplate trade. Many thousands of tons of this tinned
-iron—that is, thin sheets of iron coated with tin—are annually exported
-from this country, our best customers being the United States. We
-may presume that a large quantity of this metal comes back to us in
-the form of tins containing preserved meats, fish, and fruit. In
-Philadelphia, there are a number of factories for utilising these tins
-after they have been used. They are collected from the ash-heaps,
-the hotels and boarding-houses. The solder is melted and sold, to be
-used again; the tops and bottoms of the tins are turned into window
-sash-weights; the cylindrical portions are rolled out flat, and are
-made into covers for travelling trunks, and are used for many other
-purposes. The industry is said to be a very profitable one, for the
-expense of gathering the tins is covered by the sale of the solder, and
-the capital required is small. Such ingenious applications of waste
-materials most certainly deserve to succeed.
-
-What is known as ‘flashed glass’ consists of common white glass blown
-with a layer of coloured glass superposed on its surface, which surface
-can afterwards be eaten away in parts by the application of fluoric
-acid, so that any ornament or lettering can be executed upon it. The
-same principle in an extended form has lately been applied by Messrs
-Webb of Stourbridge to the production of most beautiful vases in what
-has been aptly called cameo glass. The vase is first blown in glass of
-three different descriptions, fused together, forming eventually three
-distinct layers of material—the innermost of a semi-opaque colour, the
-next white, and the outside of a tint to harmonise with the first or
-innermost. Now comes the artist’s work. The design being drawn upon the
-surface, the outer colour is removed so as to leave but a tint, deep or
-light as may be wanted in certain parts; next, the white is cut into
-so as to show up where required the ground colour behind. In this way
-the most intricate design is produced with the most artistic results.
-The operator employs not only fluoric acid, but makes use of the steel
-point, and also the ordinary emery wheel commonly used for engraving
-and cutting glass. Two of these vases are, as we write, on view at Mr
-Goode’s, South Audley Street, London.
-
-The first cable tramway laid in Europe has been opened on the steepest
-bit of road near London—namely, Highgate Hill, and is pronounced on
-all hands a complete success. It is to be hoped that the system will
-become as common in this country as it is in America, where not only
-steep gradients are thus dealt with, but level roads, such as our horse
-tramcars already traverse. The boon to horses would be immeasurable.
-At the present time, on British tramways more than twenty thousand
-horses are at work. The labour is so hard, that about one quarter of
-this number have annually to be replaced. This annual loss absorbs
-forty-three per cent. of the gross earnings, a consideration which will
-appeal more eloquently to the feelings of many than will the sufferings
-of the poor horses.
-
-Referring to the epidemic of smallpox in London, a correspondent of
-the _Times_ gives a valuable suggestion. He tells how an epidemic
-of the same dreaded disease was quickly stamped out in a South
-American village some years ago, and although our great metropolis
-bears but small resemblance to a village, the remedy in question
-might nevertheless be tried. Huge bonfires of old creosoted railway
-sleepers were made in the streets, and gas-tar was added occasionally
-to stimulate the flames. In the meantime, every house where a death
-or recovery occurred was lime-washed. With these precautions, which
-are manifestly applicable to other zymotic diseases, the visitation
-speedily vanished. Concerning this all-important subject we may have
-something further to say in a special paper.
-
-Meanwhile, there is no kind of doubt that the spread of infectious
-disease is attributable in great measure to personal ignorance,
-commonly called carelessness, as well as to that entire indifference
-as to the welfare of others which is so common to human nature. Some
-time since, an advertisement appeared to the following effect: ‘Should
-this meet the eye of the lady who travelled (by a particular train)
-with her two boys, one of whom was evidently just recovering from an
-illness, she may be pleased to learn that three of the four young
-ladies who were in the carriage are very ill with the measles.’ This is
-surpassed by a statement contained in a recent letter in the _Times_.
-A lady, finding that her boys, on recovering from a severe attack of
-scarlatina, suffered much from dandruff (the scales which separate from
-the scalp, and which, in fever, are a prolific source of contagion),
-took the sufferers to a leading West End hairdresser’s, so that their
-heads could receive a thorough cleansing with the machine-brush!
-
-We would in this connection draw attention to a novel system of
-providing for smallpox cases with the least amount of risk to others,
-which is established by the Metropolitan Asylums Board of London, and
-which will undergo in time further development. In addition to the
-five hospitals in different parts of London which have been opened
-whenever a fresh epidemic has broken out, there is a very elaborate
-ambulance system, by which a suitable carriage with a nurse and
-porter is despatched, as soon as notice is received, to the patient’s
-place of residence and removes the patient to the nearest hospital.
-This has been at work for some years; but in addition there are
-three ships moored on the Thames opposite Purfleet, two of which are
-hospital ships, the third being used as a residence for the staff,
-and containing offices, kitchens, workshops, &c. Some four miles
-inland there is a convalescent camp, consisting of tents for about one
-thousand patients, each heated and lighted by gas, and suitably fitted
-for the purpose in every way.
-
-To convey patients to the ships, an ambulance steamer runs as often
-as required, being fitted up as a travelling hospital, with beds,
-&c., and having a medical and nursing staff. Patients are removed to
-the river-side either direct from their homes, or from the hospitals,
-usually on comfortable beds, and carried on board the steamer, and
-thence down the river. Another steamer brings the recovered cases back;
-and when landed, they are conveyed in special carriages to their homes,
-free from infection in person and clothing.
-
-So far the problem of how to provide for an epidemic of smallpox in
-London is in a fair way of being solved, by a system which, though
-still in its earliest stage, is daily undergoing development and
-improvement. When yet another steamer is fitted out, there will be
-no difficulty in coping with a much larger epidemic than has visited
-London for many years, and at the same time treating patients with an
-amount of attention almost unknown till now.
-
-The proposal to revive the art of lacemaking in Ireland, to which
-we adverted some months ago, has now received more definite form. A
-scheme has been framed under the auspices of many influential persons,
-the chief features of which are as follows: Original designs are to
-be purchased under the advice of the best authorities on the subject.
-These designs will be sent to the lacemaking centres for execution. The
-specimens will then be exhibited and offered for sale. The expenses to
-set this machinery at work will amount to about five hundred pounds,
-much of which is already subscribed. Full information as to the project
-can be obtained from Mr Alan Cole, of the South Kensington Museum.
-
-Dr Von Pettenkofer has, according to the _Lancet_, been lately paying
-attention to the poisonous action of coal-gas on the human system, and
-a few notes of authenticated cases may be serviceable to those who
-pay little heed to an escape of gas so long as it does not in their
-opinion assume dangerous dimensions. The cases quoted all refer to
-escapes of gas into dwelling-houses after passing through a layer of
-earth, and we may note that such escapes are difficult of detection,
-for the earth robs the gas in great measure of its tell-tale odour.
-At Roveredo, three women were killed in their sleep by an escape
-from a broken pipe under the roadway thirty-five feet distant. At
-Cologne, three of one family were carried off by a similar escape at
-a distance of ninety-eight feet. At Breslau, a case is reported where
-the escape was no less than one hundred and fifteen feet away from
-its victim. It would seem that the dangerous constituent of coal-gas
-is carbonic oxide, which usually forms about eight per cent. of the
-vapour conveyed to our houses. Whether this noxious ingredient can,
-like other impurities, be eliminated in the process of purification at
-the gas-works, we do not know, but the question is certainly worth the
-attention of the authorities.
-
-The Observatory on the summit of Ben Nevis, which our readers will
-remember was opened in October last, will be completed this summer. The
-observations already made confirm the anticipations as to the value of
-a high level station, and the completion of the structure will add to
-the efficiency of the work done, for hitherto the observers have been
-cramped for space. A shelter for tourists forms part of the scheme,
-and travellers will be able to obtain light refreshment there, and if
-they desire it, can telegraph from the highest point in Britain to
-their friends below. The cost of completion will absorb about eight
-hundred pounds; but this estimate does not include the heavy outlay
-for carriage of materials on horseback up the bridle-path already
-constructed. It has been suggested that visitors on horseback using
-this path should pay a toll of five shillings—a modest sum, when it is
-considered that the expenses of maintenance are much increased by the
-soil being loosened by the horse’s hoofs, especially when the ground is
-in a soft condition.
-
-The small Chinese colony established at the International Health
-Exhibition is one of the principal attractions of the place. Visitors
-have now the opportunity of tasting various strange dishes which before
-they had only heard of by report. The much extolled bird-nest soup can
-be had here, together with shark-fins, _beches de mer_ (sea-slugs),
-edibles made of different seaweeds, shredded cucumber peels mixed with
-vinegar, and various other delicacies, which, we trust, are nicer
-than they seem to be by mere description. We may note that the South
-Kensington executive have already arranged for an Exhibition to follow
-on the present one. It is to be called the Exhibition of Inventions,
-and will include all kinds of appliances, one entire division being
-devoted to musical instruments.
-
-A long-felt want by paper-rulers and others has now been supplied by
-the new Patent Automatic Paper Feeding-machine. It has been invented
-by Mr William Archer, 204 Rose Street, Edinburgh—a paper-ruler who
-has spent his spare time during the last ten years in working it
-out, and who has now succeeded in patenting a Ruling-machine which
-is allowed to be the most accurate in use for feeding the paper in a
-continuous stream, or feeding to grippers at given intervals. It can be
-worked either by hand or steam-power, and it renders unnecessary the
-employment of boys or girls as paper-feeders. It can also be applied to
-hot rolling-machines; and it is expected that it will also be turned to
-use in connection with printing, &c.
-
-
-
-
-OCCASIONAL NOTES.
-
-
-THE NEW ORGAN IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY.
-
-The old-new, or the new-old, organ of Westminster Abbey was formally
-tried on the 24th of May, at the usual afternoon service, after which
-a recital, which served to exhibit the extreme beauty and power of
-some of the new work, was given. The new organ has fifty-six speaking
-stops, besides many mechanical stops, couplers, &c., and is placed in
-two lofty blocks, like the one in St Paul’s Cathedral, at the west
-end of the two choir screens, only that in this case the player sits
-between the two over the doorway of the choir. The magnificent oak
-case, designed by Mr Pearson, has not yet been erected, because the
-funds for the purpose—about fifteen hundred pounds—are not, as we
-write, yet collected. The principal bellows are blown by a gas-engine,
-and are placed in a vault below the cloisters, the pipes conveying the
-air being nearly one hundred feet in length. A curious arrangement
-exists to connect the keys with the pipes, which is done by tubes,
-through which, on the key being pressed, wind, under heavy pressure, is
-admitted, and acts instantly on a small bellows at the other end of the
-tube. This, on being inflated, pulls down the pallet or valve under the
-sound-board, and thus gives air to the pipe. This clever system is said
-not to get out of order or to be affected by changes of temperature.
-
-It may be interesting to state that this organ was in the first
-instance built by Schreider and Jordan so far back as 1730. Exactly a
-hundred years after (1830) it was added to by Elliott; and again in
-1848 and in 1868, Hill made many additions; and it has now been almost
-completely reconstructed by Messrs Hill and Son, of the same well-known
-firm. It may fairly be considered, with that in St Paul’s Cathedral,
-and All Saints, Margaret Street, to take rank as one of the finest
-church organs in London.
-
-
-THE ANTHROPOMETRICAL LABORATORY AT THE HEALTH EXHIBITION.
-
-Without intending the smallest disrespect to our numerous readers, we
-will venture to say that more than one will be inclined to ask the very
-obvious question, ‘What is anthropometry?’ Well, this fine-sounding,
-Greek-adapted name signifies the art of describing and recording, in a
-schedule provided for that purpose, the particulars appertaining to the
-condition, functions, powers, and capabilities of the human body and
-limbs. Every person visiting the Laboratory at the Health Exhibition
-can have his or her schedule filled up with a statement, ascertained
-on the spot, of his name or initials, age, sex, occupation, place of
-birth, colour of hair and eyes, height standing and sitting, weight,
-length of span of arms, strength of squeeze and of pull, swiftness and
-weight of direct fist-blow, capacity of chest, lungs, and breathing,
-as measured by a spirometer, acuteness of vision as measured by a
-test type, conditions of colour-sense, and acuteness of hearing. The
-ascertaining of these particulars, and any others of a like nature
-bearing immediately on the principal question, seems to be the especial
-business of the art of anthropometry. It may be objected that the
-collecting of these facts, though interesting enough to the individual
-practised upon and his family, can be of no possible use beyond that
-limit, or indeed anywhere else; but the gentleman who has originated
-this novel and ingenious scheme (Mr Francis Galton) proposes to keep a
-duplicate of the filled-up schedule which each person operated on will
-receive; and by this means he hopes to obtain a very large number of
-facts and statements, which will doubtless be ultimately arranged and
-tabulated, and made good use of by the originator, who may possibly
-submit them to the Registrar-general, or to the Statistical Society,
-for enrolment amongst their curious records. It is, at anyrate, in
-spite of its somewhat alarming Greek name, an interesting experiment.
-
-
-ADVICE TO INTENDING EMIGRANTS.
-
-A correspondent in New South Wales writes to us as follows: ‘Australia
-offers a wide field for the capitalist and the manual labourer, but
-I should not advise others to try their fortunes here. For educated
-persons, male or female, without capital, Australia is a death-trap.
-Such persons would, according to my observation, do far better in
-America, or in the English settlements in China. In China, young
-gentlemen possessing no other fortune than a good education, are soon
-employed in the warehouses and stores by the Chinese merchants, who
-value Englishmen whenever they can get them to take charge of the more
-responsible parts of their businesses. The Chinese Customs’ Departments
-also are open to educated young Englishmen. But in Australia, brains
-are not a marketable commodity; strong arms are more sought for.
-The streets of Sydney are thronged with hundreds of educated young
-Englishmen, who have come out here persuaded by their friends that work
-is easily got, as well as money, which is not the case, except in one
-or two kinds of labour. I know of scores of temperate young gentlemen
-out here who have done all they could to find employment, and failed;
-and at last have had to seek relief in the Refuge. Some commit suicide
-out of sheer despair.
-
-‘No one, unless he can swing a pickaxe well and is possessed of plenty
-of muscular strength, with not too much refinement in him, should think
-of coming out here to earn his bread, much less make his “pile,”
-unless he has some capital, say a few thousands, to start a warehouse,
-or take up land and go in for sheep-farming. Sometimes young educated
-men, who bring good letters of introduction and good characters also,
-are given government situations, as I am thankful to say was the case
-with me. But I should warn any educated young man who has no friends
-here or capital, against coming to Australia. Even where he brings
-letters, he often has great trouble to get a situation, as there are
-so many colonials’ sons hanging about doing nothing. The towns are
-overloaded with men, and the country is left untouched for want of
-capital in the majority of those who come out here.
-
-‘Servants of all classes do well here; ten shillings per week and board
-and lodging is the usual wage for female servants good or bad; and one
-pound per week with board and lodging for male servants. Governesses
-are an utter failure; hundreds are doing nothing here now; and when
-they do get employed, they don’t do much better than at home; sixty
-pounds with board and lodging is the usual salary; but they have to act
-as nurses often as well, for that sum.
-
-‘My advice to young gentlemen and ladies who are thinking of giving up
-their situations at home and emigrating to Australia in the hopes of
-getting work and good salary, is—Don’t.’
-
-
-A CURIOUS DISEASE.
-
-The _London Medical Record_ quotes some information regarding a strange
-disease that is met with in Siberia, and known to the Russians by the
-name of ‘Miryachit.’ The person affected seems compelled to imitate
-anything he hears or sees, and an interesting account is given of a
-steward who was reduced to a perfect state of misery by his inability
-to avoid imitating everything he heard and saw. One day the captain
-of the steamer, running up to him, suddenly clapping his hands at the
-same time, accidentally slipped, and fell hard on the deck. Without
-having been touched, the steward instantly clapped his hands and
-shouted; then, in helpless imitation, he, too, fell as hard, and almost
-precisely in the same manner and position as the captain. This disease
-has been met with in Java, where it is known as ‘Lata.’ In the case
-of a female servant who had the same irresistible tendency to imitate
-her mistress, the latter, one day at dessert, wishing to exhibit this
-peculiarity, and catching the woman’s eye, suddenly reached across the
-table, and seizing a large French plum, made pretence to swallow it
-whole. The woman rushed at the dish and put a plum in her mouth, and,
-after severe choking and semi-asphyxia, succeeded in swallowing it; but
-her mistress never tried the experiment again.
-
-
-ANOTHER UPHILL RAILWAY.
-
-The _Hôtel des Alpes_ at Chillon, and the _Hôtel de Mont Fleury_
-at Montreux, Switzerland, are situated at no great distance apart;
-but the difference of elevation between the two is over two hundred
-feet, and the incline very steep. To get over this difficulty, it is
-intended to call in the aid of that mighty power which has of late
-so prominently come to the front—electricity. After a long series of
-carefully conducted experiments, it has been determined that an uphill
-railway shall be constructed between the two hotels named, to be driven
-by electricity. An electric motor will be placed on a car to drive a
-cog-wheel; this wheel will gear into a central cogged rail, and by this
-means draw or pull the car up the ascent. Conductors placed beside the
-central rail will convey the current of the generator, which will be
-kept going by a five-horse-power locomotive engine. It is, however, in
-contemplation to drive the dynamo not by steam, but by water-power,
-abundance of which, descending from the hills, can be had close by, and
-only requires utilising. This railway will in many points resemble that
-up the Righi, only that electricity will be its driving-power instead
-of the odd-looking little engine so well known at the latter place; and
-when it is completed, it will certainly be a great boon to travellers
-frequenting these beautiful spots.
-
-
-
-
-EVENING ON THE LAKE.
-
-
- Upon the mountain-top the purple tints
- Fade into mist; and the rich golden glow
- Of the low-setting sun sinks to a gray
- Subdued and tender.
-
- Home the eagle hies,
- Swift, to his eyrie, his broad pinions stretched,
- Bearing him onwards, seeming motionless
- The while with rapid wing he cleaves the air,
- As ship the waters: now the grousecock crows
- On heathered knoll his vesper lullaby
- To his dear mate.
-
- And from the silver lake,
- Cradled in mountain-setting, echoing comes,
- With rippling music on the air, the plash
- Of dipping oars; and voices deep and low,
- Mingled with women’s trebles, tuneful break
- The evening silence!
-
- Grand indeed it is
- To be amid these mountain solitudes;
- And yet there is a sense of rest and calm,
- Soothing the spirit—stealing o’er the heart
- Like the soft notes of an Æolian harp,
- Falling like balm upon the troubled soul,
- And making the most worldly man to feel
- That there is over earth a higher heaven!
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Conductor of CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL begs to direct the attention of
-CONTRIBUTORS to the following notice:
-
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- High Street, Edinburgh.’
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-_If the above rules are complied with, the Editor will do his best to
-insure the safe return of ineligible papers._
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 30, Vol. I, July 26, 1884, by Various</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 30, Vol. I, July 26, 1884</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 29, 2021 [eBook #65951]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Susan Skinner, Eric Hutton and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 30, VOL. I, JULY 26, 1884 ***</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_465">{465}</span></p>
-
-<h1>CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL<br />
-OF<br />
-POPULAR<br />
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.</h1>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='center'>
-
-
-<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
-
-<a href="#A_SCOTTISH_MARINE_STATION">A SCOTTISH MARINE STATION.</a><br />
-<a href="#BY_MEAD_AND_STREAM">BY MEAD AND STREAM.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_LARGEST_STATUES_IN_THE_WORLD">THE LARGEST STATUES IN THE WORLD, ANCIENT AND MODERN.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_GREENROOM_ROMANCE">A GREENROOM ROMANCE.</a><br />
-<a href="#HUMOROUS_DEFINITIONS">HUMOROUS DEFINITIONS.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_MONTH">THE MONTH: SCIENCE AND ARTS.</a><br />
-<a href="#OCCASIONAL_NOTES">OCCASIONAL NOTES.</a><br />
-<a href="#EVENING_ON_THE_LAKE">EVENING ON THE LAKE.</a><br />
-
-<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
-
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter w100" id="header" style="max-width: 43.75em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/header.jpg" alt="Chambers’s Journal of Popular Literature, Science,
-and Art. Fifth Series. Established by William and Robert Chambers, 1832. Conducted by R. Chambers (Secundus)." />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<div class="center">
-<div class="header">
-<p class="floatl"><span class="smcap">No. 30.—Vol. I.</span></p>
-<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<em>d.</em></p>
-<p class="floatc">SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1884.</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_SCOTTISH_MARINE_STATION">A SCOTTISH MARINE STATION.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> ocean has been watched and studied for ages
-in innumerable aspects—it has been looked at
-from points of view wide asunder as the poles—it
-has been sung of by poets, and fished in by
-fishermen, and sailed over by sailors for thousands
-of years; but it is still a region of mystery
-and wonder. There are very many things about
-the sea which are quite unknown to this day;
-in fact, the science of marine phenomena is
-yet in its early youth, only emerging from its
-infancy. The study of the physical, chemical,
-and biological conditions of the sea has always
-been surrounded by a sort of halo of romance,
-a scientific glamour that almost led men to
-believe that such research was like fishing—valuable
-results might be looked for in return
-for little labour, if the proper opportunity could
-be found. But the opportunity only occurred
-at wide intervals, and then the happy few who
-were fortunate enough to form the scientific
-staff of such expeditions as that of the <i>Challenger</i>
-were regarded with unmixed envy by the
-many who were eager to do similar work if
-they could get the chance.</p>
-
-<p>The wonders discovered by the chief scientific
-cruises of recent years have greatly increased
-the interest of the public in the science
-of the sea, and this public interest has quite
-lately assumed a tangible form in the foundation
-of the Scottish Marine Station for Scientific
-Research at Granton, near Edinburgh. To understand
-the importance and value of this Station,
-one must know something of the difficulties
-presented to any one who wishes to solve
-some special problem connected with the life
-which swarms in the waters around our coasts.
-He must rely on the help of fishermen for
-collecting specimens; and if he cannot go
-to the expense of hiring a boat and crew,
-he requires to content himself with any selection
-of their ‘rubbish’ which they may be
-pleased to make. Should he wish to examine
-any locality minutely, he must purchase a dredge
-and tow-nets, leads and lines, and bottles
-and boxes to contain the specimens which
-may be obtained. The difficulty is only half
-overcome when the work of collecting is over.
-It is impossible to convey the creatures alive
-to any distance; and after a few attempts to
-do so, the naturalist either hires a room in
-the fishing-village for his work, or gives up the
-study of marine life altogether; unless he steer
-a middle course, and content himself with a
-bare enumeration of species and a description of
-the external appearance of his specimens.</p>
-
-<p>The individual who is desirous of making
-chemical or physical observations on the wide sea
-is in a still more evil case. His apparatus is more
-costly and more complicated than that of the
-biologist; it is less easy to manage in a boat not
-specially adapted for the purpose; and the
-immediate vicinity of a laboratory is of the first
-importance. The obstacles, in fact, are so numerous,
-that observations of this nature have been
-almost entirely neglected in Great Britain. Now
-and then, it is true, the fire of scientific enthusiasm
-burns strong enough in a man to enable
-him to overcome all difficulties, and to carry on
-a brilliant research with complete success to a
-satisfactory conclusion. The work of such men
-is monumental; but they do not appear many
-times in a century. The name of one marine
-chemist is associated with Edinburgh; it is that
-of Dr John Murray, who in the year 1816 made
-a series of researches on sea-water collected
-at Trinity. His work settled a most important
-point of theoretical chemistry, and it is referred
-to as of value to this day.</p>
-
-<p>That the progress of marine research was
-hindered by the trouble and expense of carrying
-it out—and in honesty it must be said that the
-latter was always the more powerful deterrent—has
-long been apparent; and for many years
-attempts, more or less successful, have been made
-to remedy this state of affairs. In response to
-energetic appeals from various learned Societies,
-government has repeatedly lent gunboats for
-scientific purposes, and the <i>Porcupine</i>, <i>Lightning</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_466">{466}</span>
-<i>Triton</i>, and other ships have done much good
-work. The culmination of government enterprise
-was reached in 1873, when the <i>Challenger</i>
-was fitted out for an entirely scientific cruise,
-and circumnavigated the world investigating the
-phenomena of the ocean everywhere. How much
-was accomplished by the three years’ voyage can
-only be realised by those who are familiar with
-the thirteen large volumes which have been
-already published describing the collections and
-observations; but the general reader may form
-an idea of the magnitude of the work done by
-reflecting that specialists have been engaged in
-examining and describing the collections since
-the return of the ship in 1876, and that this
-work is still in progress.</p>
-
-<p>Since the return of the <i>Challenger</i>, a number
-of short scientific trips have been made in the
-vicinity of the British coast by gunboats and
-hired vessels; and the results of these have
-been such as to show the extreme advisability of
-something more permanent being set on foot.
-The success of the Marine Observatories at Naples
-and at Marseilles, and of the small movable
-laboratory kept up for two summers by the
-university of Aberdeen, proved that Marine
-Stations were practicable and desirable. It was
-the consideration of the difficulties in the way
-of young men who wished to devote themselves
-to the examination of marine phenomena, but
-who were unable of themselves to meet the great
-expense of such work, that led Mr John Murray,
-Director of the <i>Challenger</i> Expedition Commission,
-to start a Marine Station in the neighbourhood
-of Edinburgh. A submerged quarry on the shore
-at Granton, which quarry has been in communication
-with the sea for nearly thirty years, was
-selected as the site, and a floating laboratory was
-formally opened there during the festivities of
-the Edinburgh University Tercentenary celebration
-this spring.</p>
-
-<p>The Marine Station has now been open for
-several months, and the working arrangements
-have attained a certain degree of completeness.
-The accommodation which exists at present includes
-a floating laboratory, ‘the Ark,’ where
-zoological, botanical, and chemical work is
-being carried on by the permanent staff and
-other investigators. There is also a steam-yacht,
-the <i>Medusa</i>, fitted out with all the arrangements
-for trawling, dredging, sounding, and taking the
-other necessary observations. She is manned by
-an efficient crew, and has the advantage of the
-services of an engineer who was on the <i>Challenger</i>
-during her scientific cruise. The <i>Medusa</i> is a
-capital seaboat, though, from her small size,
-when in rough weather, she sometimes tries
-the sea-going capabilities of the workers. The
-creatures brought up by the dredge or trawl
-are kept alive in boxes, the water in which
-must be changed at intervals, though, when
-there is a heavy sea and a head-wind, as often
-happens, this service is performed by the waves,
-which break over the bows in magnificent
-spray showers, very beautiful to watch from
-the dry security of the after-cabin. On
-arriving at the Ark, the animals are transferred
-to aquaria or glass dishes, in which a
-constant current of thoroughly aërated sea-water
-can be kept up, and in these they live very
-happily. The larger specimens are usually placed
-in wire cages moored to the Ark, where they
-enjoy all the advantages of life except freedom.
-For short excursions in the neighbourhood
-of Granton, there is a good sailing-boat,
-the <i>Raven</i>; and work in the haven in which
-the Ark lies can also be carried on by the little
-<i>Dove</i>, and the two Norwegian skiffs belonging
-to the Station, whose names, <i>Appendicularia</i> and
-<i>Asymptote</i>, are mystifying to the uninitiated. A
-row round the quarry at low water reveals the
-immense richness of the vegetable and animal
-life which inhabits its waters. There are growths
-of sponges of different colour, with gracefully
-interlacing branches like a coral grove, where
-bright-hued sea-anemones spread their tentacles,
-and crabs and other crustacea crawl and swim
-about at their pleasure. And not only are the
-commoner forms of marine life abundant; rarer
-species may be found frequently. The beautiful
-nudibranch mollusc <i>Eolus</i> lives in the quarry;
-and the great fifteen-spined-stickleback builds its
-nest there, and it has been seen keeping guard
-over its door while its mate and young remain
-comfortably within.</p>
-
-<p>The work which is being carried on at the
-Marine Station at present is divided between
-four workers. Mr J. T. Cunningham, the naturalist
-in charge, is making a research into the
-development of the Teleostian fishes, the great
-group to which most of our food-fishes, such as
-the cod, herring, and haddock, belong. Mr J.
-R. Henderson has commenced to form a collection
-of all the animal life of the Firth of Forth;
-while Mr John Rattray is proceeding with a
-similar collection of the algæ or seaweeds, and
-is also making a detailed study of the diatoms
-of the district, a piece of work which has never
-previously been attempted. Mr Hugh Robert
-Mill has charge of the daily meteorological
-observations at the Station, and he is working
-at the chemical and physical study of estuary-water,
-examining the variations in saltness and
-in temperature which occur from the fresh
-water to the open sea, and comparing them at
-different seasons. The work at the Station is
-thus seen to be purely scientific; and the
-results which will ultimately be obtained must be
-of great practical importance. Any scientific man
-is welcomed to work at the Station on special
-problems, without charge, and several gentlemen
-have taken advantage of the privilege.</p>
-
-<p>It may give a better idea of the working of
-the various departments if the actual methods
-employed be shortly described.</p>
-
-<p>Zoological specimens are collected in various
-ways. The ‘trawl’ is a wide-meshed net tied
-up at one end. The net’s mouth is attached
-above to a stout wooden beam that unites two
-iron runners; the lower side is a strong cable,
-the ground-rope, which rubs along the sea-bottom.
-The fish, alarmed by the ground-rope, rise up
-and are caught in the net, which is carried along
-so rapidly that escape is impossible. In using
-the trawl the vessel must steam quickly, and the
-ground trawled over must be free from rocks.
-It is only employed for the capture of the larger
-kinds of fish, such as flounders, haddock, and
-cod. The ‘dredge’ is the true naturalist’s implement.
-It is a small-meshed net, closed at one
-end, and fixed to a rectangular iron frame at
-the other. When drawn along, it scrapes the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_467">{467}</span>
-bottom, and brings up everything that it encounters,
-mud and shells, and all living creatures
-that are not quick enough to get away.
-After a run over good ground, when the
-dredge is hauled up—an operation that is performed
-on the <i>Medusa</i> by a gun-metal wire-rope
-and a steam winch—and emptied on deck,
-the profusion of animal life that lies in a
-struggling heap before one is quite bewildering.
-There are pectens and oysters, alcyonarians
-(usually known as ‘dead-men’s-fingers’), sea-anemones
-of all sizes and colours, swimming-crabs
-and spider-crabs and soldier-crabs, whelks and
-mussels, zoophytes and algæ, ascidians (commonly
-called ‘sea-squirts’), sponges, sea-urchins, star-fishes
-of every kind from the magnificent
-sun-star, ‘rose-jacynth to the finger-tips,’ to
-the common brittle-star and ‘five-fingers;’
-and there are other things more than can be
-numbered. The dredge and trawl explore the
-bottom, but are useless for collecting specimens
-from the surface or intermediate depths; and
-‘tow-nets’—bags of muslin or canvas sewn on
-hoops and drawn after the vessel—are employed
-for this purpose. The creatures caught in the
-tow-net are usually small; when the contents of
-the net are placed in a bottle, the water seems full
-of bright spots darting about in all directions; but
-under the microscope the specks discover themselves
-to be beautifully formed crustaceans shining
-in glassy armour. But the tow-net often catches
-larger things. An exquisite transparent <i>medusa</i>
-or jelly-fish, its umbrella several inches in diameter,
-rayed with purple, and carrying a fringe
-of graceful pendent tentacles, is often brought
-on board its namesake; and hosts of smaller
-species of these beautiful creatures are always to
-be found. It is in the tow-net, too, that the
-floating ova of fishes, about which there has
-been so much discussion recently, are caught.</p>
-
-<p>The chemical and physical work done at sea
-is chiefly the collection of samples of water and
-the observation of temperature. Water from any
-moderate depth is collected by lashing a bottle
-to the sounding-line and lowering it to the
-proper point; the stopper is then pulled out by
-a cord and the bottle allowed to fill. The
-water in the bottle is not changed in its ascent,
-as the mouth is narrow and it always hangs
-vertically. When the sea is rough or the depth is
-great, it is necessary to employ some other means.
-The ‘slip-water-bottle’ is convenient for most
-purposes. It consists of a brass disc covered with
-india-rubber, and supporting a central column
-to which the line is attached. This is lowered
-to the required depth, and then a hollow brass
-cylinder, open below, but closed above except for
-a hole that just allows the line to pass, is allowed
-to slip down the line. The base of the cylinder
-strikes on the rubber-covered disc, and securely
-incloses a sample of the water, which is run
-off by a stop-cock into a bottle after the whole
-has been hauled on board. The water must
-always be brought to the laboratory in stoppered
-bottles, which are entirely filled, and have had
-the stoppers tied down from the moment of
-collecting.</p>
-
-<p>The temperature of surface-water is usually
-taken by drawing a bucketful and placing an
-ordinary bath-thermometer in it for a few minutes.
-The precautions of hanging the thermometer in
-the centre of the bucket and placing it in the
-shade must be observed. Temperature at greater
-depths may be observed in several ways. Three
-methods have been tried at the Marine Station.
-The first is by means of a ‘cistern-thermometer,’
-used by the late Sir Robert Christison for ascertaining
-the temperature of the water in the
-deep Scottish lochs, which was presented to the
-Station by Sir Alexander Christison. It consists
-of a thermometer, the bulb of which is
-in the centre of a conical copper vessel capable
-of containing about five pints. When this is
-lowered into the sea, the water passes through
-the instrument; but on hauling up, the valves
-on the upper side are closed, and it is brought
-on board full of water from the greatest depth
-it had reached. Experiment shows that the
-water has not had time to change its temperature
-in the few minutes that elapse between
-collecting it and reading the thermometer. A
-more common instrument, though one not found
-so suitable for use in shallow water, is the Miller-Casella
-thermometer, the form chiefly employed
-on the <i>Challenger</i>. It is a self-registering thermometer
-with a maximum and minimum arm,
-which register the highest and lowest temperatures
-met with in each immersion. As the temperature
-of the sea almost invariably decreases
-with increase of depth, the lowest temperature is
-considered to be that of the lowest point reached.</p>
-
-<p>The third form of thermometer has been found
-the most convenient, and, with some modification,
-the best for the purposes of the Station. It is
-Negretti and Zambra’s deep-sea thermometer, and
-its principle is that when the temperature of the
-water is attained by the thermometer the instrument
-is made to turn over; the mercury column
-always breaks at the same point, a contraction
-near the bulb; the part which had been beyond
-the bulb remaining in the inverted tube, which
-is graduated so as to show the temperature at
-the moment of inversion. Its great advantage is
-that no subsequent change of temperature affects
-the instrument until it is set again. Its great
-defect is that it is difficult to be sure when it
-has turned over. The simple and ingenious
-inverting mechanism of Magnaghi is hardly
-trustworthy; but an improvement has been
-effected, in consequence of the experience gained
-at the Scottish Station, which makes the turning
-of the thermometer, or of any number of
-thermometers on the same line, a matter of
-certainty.</p>
-
-<p>The transparency of the water is measured
-roughly by noting the depth to which a large
-white disc continues visible when immersed. In
-the course of a trip from Grangemouth to the
-Isle of May, the colour of the water was observed
-to vary from dirty yellow to clear blue-green;
-and the disc, at first visible only three feet below
-the surface, was seen at a depth of six feet at
-Inchgarvie, at fifteen feet off Inchkeith, and at
-no less than sixty feet a little east of the May.
-Although the water of the upper reaches of the
-firth has been rendered muddy by the admixture
-of river-water, that at the May Island remains
-beautifully clear.</p>
-
-<p>The routine-work of a biological and chemical
-laboratory is not of much interest to most
-people. For every day of collecting, with its
-fresh sea-air and new sea-sights, there must be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_468">{468}</span>
-several spent on the Ark in preserving the
-specimens, pressing plants, dissecting, mounting
-microscopic objects, observing densities, analysing
-water, calculating results, and such things; and
-all this work does not always tend to preserve
-an odourless atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>It is not intended that the Marine Station
-shall long continue of its present small dimensions.
-The experiment, so far as it has gone,
-has been so successful that it is now proposed
-to erect a large house on shore near the quarry,
-where there will be commodious laboratories,
-large aquaria, and rooms for the accommodation
-of the workers. In the meantime, Mr Irvine
-of Royston has generously given the use of an
-old manufactory which stands close to the sea
-beside the quarry. It was formerly used as
-a tannery, and so contains a number of large
-water-tight tanks built in the ground. There
-is a steam pumping-engine; and a very simple
-modification of the existing pipes will secure
-the supply of abundance of sea-water. The
-tanks will be used for experiments on fish-breeding;
-and the buildings in the works can be employed
-as laboratories without much alteration.</p>
-
-<p>The Marine Station is intended to be a centre
-from which branches will extend to other parts
-of the country. It is in contemplation to erect
-a permanent marine observatory on the Clyde;
-and there will also be a portable station, probably
-a floating laboratory on the plan of the
-Ark, which can be taken to any part of the
-coast where it is desirable to make an extended
-series of observations.</p>
-
-<p>The Granton Station is, with the exception of
-an annual grant of three hundred pounds from
-the Scottish Meteorological Society, entirely
-supported by voluntary subscription; and the
-heartiness with which the appeals to the public
-have been responded to by donations of money,
-apparatus, and material, shows how thoroughly
-the people of Scotland realise the importance
-of the work which is being done. The Government
-Grant Committee of the London Royal
-Society has made certain allowances to the
-members of the scientific staff for special
-researches; but this is not in any sense a
-government endowment of the Station, the
-Treasury having definitely refused to give any
-money for such a purpose. Although government
-support is an extremely desirable thing,
-the willing aid of an enlightened public is still
-better, and the Scottish Marine Station at
-Granton has this aid.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak x-ebookmaker-important" id="BY_MEAD_AND_STREAM">BY MEAD AND STREAM.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XXXIX.—THE OTHER SIDE.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> seemed very curious to Madge that she should
-become the confidant of those two men, with
-whose fate that of her mother had been so sadly
-associated. She was thrust into the ungracious
-position of arbiter between them; she had to
-decide whether or not the one was false and
-treacherous, or the other the victim of his own
-hasty passion and self-deceived in his accusations.
-She was satisfied that Mr Beecham had spoken
-under the conviction of the truth of what he told
-her; and Mr Hadleigh had just shown her that—if
-innocent—he could be magnanimous, by his
-willingness to meet in friendliness one whom he
-had so long regarded as his implacable foe.</p>
-
-<p>The position involved so much in the result
-to her and to Philip, that she felt a little
-bewildered, and almost afraid of what she was
-about to hear. But she could forgive: that
-knowledge steadied her.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Hadleigh with his formal courtesy asked
-her to be seated. He stood at the window, and
-she could see that the white gloom of the coming
-snowstorm was reflected on his face.</p>
-
-<p>‘May I inquire where you have met Mr
-Shield?’</p>
-
-<p>She was obliged to reply as she had done to a
-question put by Philip, which, although different,
-was to the same purport: ‘I may not tell you
-yet.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Philip knows that you have met him?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No.’ It was most uncomfortable to have to
-give these evasive answers, which seemed to make
-her the one who had to give explanations. She
-observed that Mr Hadleigh’s heavy eyebrows
-involuntarily lifted.</p>
-
-<p>‘I ought not to have asked. Pardon me.’</p>
-
-<p>Something in his tone and manner plainly
-showed that he had penetrated her secret and
-Mr Beecham’s.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am sorry not to be able to give you a direct
-answer.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It does not matter,’ he said with a slight
-movement of the hand, as if he were putting the
-whole subject of her acquaintance with Shield
-aside. ‘I know, from the exclamation you made
-a little while ago, that he has told you with all
-his bitterness why he and I have not been
-friends.’</p>
-
-<p>‘There was no bitterness, Mr Hadleigh, but
-much sadness.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am pleased to hear it, and I will try to give
-you my explanation in the same spirit. First
-about George Laurence. I never heard his name
-until after my marriage; and it is therefore
-unnecessary to say that when I did hear it, and
-learned the nature of his former relations with
-my wife, it was not possible for me to receive
-him in my house, or for him to regard me as a
-desirable acquaintance. There were unfortunate
-consequences following upon this peculiar position;
-but they may pass. They made my life a
-hard and solitary one.’</p>
-
-<p>He paused, and as he looked out into the dull
-atmosphere, the vague stare in his eyes, as if he
-were seeking something which he could not see,
-became pathetic. Madge began to understand
-that expression now, and the meaning of the
-melancholy, which was concealed from others
-under a mask of cold reserve. She sympathised,
-but could say nothing.</p>
-
-<p>‘I never spoke to the man, and saw him only
-a few times. But acquaintances of mine, who
-thought the news would be agreeable to me, told
-me of his ways of life and predicted the end,
-which came quickly. The mistake made by
-Philip’s mother and Mr Shield was in believing
-that it was not until after her marriage that
-Laurence neglected his business and took to dissipation.
-Men who had known him for several
-years previous to that date informed me that his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_469">{469}</span>
-habits were little altered after it. Nights spent
-in billiard-rooms and other places; days wasted
-on racecourses and his fortune squandered. He
-attempted to retrieve all by one daring speculation.
-Success would have enabled him to go on
-for a longer or shorter time, according to the use
-he made of the money; failure meant disgrace
-and a charge of fraud. He failed, and escaped
-the law by taking poison.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Are you sure of this?’ ejaculated Madge,
-startled and shocked by this very different version
-of the sentimental story she had heard.</p>
-
-<p>‘I will show you the newspaper report of
-the inquest, and a copy of the accountant’s
-report to the creditors on what estate was left.
-They will suffice to satisfy you that there is
-no error in anything I have said.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why was it that Mr Shield, who was his
-most intimate friend, knew nothing of this?’</p>
-
-<p>‘He must have known something, but not all.
-His ways were quiet and studious, and what
-he did see, he did not regard with the eyes
-of experience. I do not think that Laurence
-attempted to deceive him; for men who fall
-into his course of life soon become blind to its
-evils and consequences; and so, without premeditation,
-he did deceive him. Mr Shield,
-being a man as passionate in his friendships
-as in his hates, would listen to no ill of his
-friend. But there is one thing more which I
-have never repeated, and never until now allowed
-any one over whom I had influence to repeat.
-You, however, must learn it from the lips of
-one who witnessed the scene.’</p>
-
-<p>He rang the bell, and Terry the butler appeared.
-It was one of Mr Terry’s strict points
-of discipline in his kingdom below stairs that
-without his sanction no one but himself should
-answer the drawing-room bell. Obeying a motion
-of the master’s hand, he advanced with a portly
-gravity becoming the dignity of his office.</p>
-
-<p>‘You were an attendant in the Cosmos Club
-about the date of my marriage?’ said the
-master.</p>
-
-<p>‘I was, sir, then, and for six months before,
-and a good while after.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You recollect what was said about the marriage
-a few evenings after it took place?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Perfectly, sir, because you told me to write
-it down, as you thought some day it might be
-useful to you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The day has come. Tell us what you heard.’</p>
-
-<p>‘There was a small dinner-party in the strangers’
-room, and I had charge of it. The gentlemen
-were particularly merry, and in fact there was
-a remarkable quantity of wine used. Your
-marriage, sir, was mentioned; and Mr Laurence,
-who was the gayest of the company, although
-he took less wine than any other gentleman,
-proposed the health of the happy couple. I
-recollect his very words, sir. He says: “I was
-in the swim for the girl myself; but this beggar,
-Hadleigh, cut me out; that was luck for me,
-so here’s luck to them;” and the toast was drunk
-with perfect enthusiasm. Mr Laurence made
-away with himself some time after; and I heard
-the gentlemen whisper among themselves, when
-referring to the sad event, that it was a question
-of doing that or of doing a spell of penal
-servitude. That’s all, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>The master nodded: Mr Terry bowed and
-retired with the portly gravity with which he
-had entered.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Hadleigh turned to Madge. The butler’s
-story produced the effect desired: she was convinced,
-for she felt sure that no man who loved
-could speak so lightly—or speak at all—of the
-woman he loved in a company of club bacchanalians.</p>
-
-<p>‘But why did you not tell this to Mr Shield?’
-was her reproachful exclamation.</p>
-
-<p>‘Because he would not listen to anything I
-had to say. From the time of the marriage
-until after the death of Laurence, we never met.
-Then he came to me, mad with passion, and
-poured out a volley of abuse. I was patient
-because he was her brother; and silent because
-it was as hopeless to expect a man drunk with
-rage to be reasonable as one drunk with alcohol.
-In his last words to me he accused me of
-murder. We have never spoken together since.—Do
-you think me guilty?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I do not believe it,’ she replied decisively;
-‘nor would he have believed it, if what you
-have told me had been made known to him
-in time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am grateful to you,’ said Mr Hadleigh, bending
-his head; ‘but I perceive you do not know
-Mr Shield. Time and solitude alter most men,
-and they must have had a peculiar effect upon
-him to have enabled him to make such a deep
-impression on you. He used to be obstinate to the
-last degree, and once he had formed an opinion,
-he held to it in spite of reason.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He must be changed indeed, then, Mr Hadleigh.
-I am sure that when he had had time to think,
-he would have understood it all but’——</p>
-
-<p>She paused; and his keen eyes rested searchingly
-on her troubled face.</p>
-
-<p>‘I know what you would say, and I see that
-you have doubted me. Ah well, ah well; it is
-a pity; but that, too, shall be made clear to
-you, I trust.’</p>
-
-<p>She looked up again hopefully.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, if you will do that!’ The tone was
-like that of an appeal.</p>
-
-<p>‘It can be done, I think.... You have
-been told that it was I who, in my enmity to
-Shield, took advantage of his long absence and
-silence to set abroad the report that he was
-married. I did not. The story was on the tongue
-of everybody hereabouts for months, and I, like
-the rest, believed it. There are only two men
-who would have said that I spoke the falsehood—the
-one is the man who invented it;
-the other is Shield himself.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You knew the man?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I did.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then why, why did you not denounce him in
-time?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Because I did not know him until after your
-mother’s wedding; and then I thought she would
-learn the truth only too soon for her peace of
-mind.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How did you discover him, then?’</p>
-
-<p>‘The scoundrel revealed himself. He came to
-me, and insolently told me that, knowing the state
-of affairs between Shield and me, he thought he
-would do me a good service. So he had given
-him a blow which he would not get over in a
-hurry. I knew something of the man, and at
-once suspected his meaning. I inquired how he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_470">{470}</span>
-had struck the blow; and he explained that it
-was he who had brought about matters so that
-when Shield came home he found his sweetheart
-already married to somebody else.’</p>
-
-<p>Poor Madge was weeping bitter tears in her
-heart, but there were none in her eyes: they
-were full of eagerness and wonder. She was
-drawing nearer and nearer to the truth, which
-would enable her to effect the purpose Philip so
-much desired.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is the advantage of my nature,’ Mr Hadleigh
-went on calmly, ‘that I can listen to a scoundrel
-without losing temper. On this occasion, I asked
-how he knew that Shield had returned. “I have
-seen him,” he said; “and he is cut up enough to
-please even you. Now, having done this job for
-you, I expect you to give me something for my
-trouble.”—“How much?”—“A hundred is not too
-much to ask for the satisfaction of knowing that
-your bitterest foe has got it hot.”—I asked him
-to write down that he had been the first to report
-in the village that Austin Shield was married,
-although at the time he had no authority for the
-statement.—“That looks like a confession,” he
-said.—“Exactly. I mean it to be one.”—After
-thinking for a moment, the fellow said: “All
-right; it won’t matter to me, for to-morrow I
-am off to the diggings.”’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Hadleigh stopped and looked out at the
-window again, as if the scene he was recalling
-even now filled him with indignation. He
-resumed:</p>
-
-<p>‘When he had written the memorandum and
-signed it, I told him my opinion of his villainous
-transaction, and threatened to have him horsewhipped
-through the village. At the same time
-I rang the bell. Although disappointed, “Bah!”
-said he; “I always thought you were a sneak,
-without the pluck to give the fellow who hates
-you a hiding. Shield has the right stuff in him;
-he gave me the money for telling him that you
-employed me to tell the lie. That paper you
-swindled out of me isn’t worth a rap. You have
-no witnesses.”—He got out of the room before I
-could reach him, and escaped pursuit.... He
-was right; the paper was useless to me.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Who was the man?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Richard Towers. Your aunt will tell you
-what a scamp he was.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But what motive could he have for such a
-cruel wrong?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Unknown to Shield, he was his rival; and it
-was his own satisfaction he sought in spreading
-the falsehood, as it was his own interests he served
-by endeavouring to make capital of it out of both
-Shield and me by playing upon the unfortunate
-misunderstandings between us.’</p>
-
-<p>Madge was now calm and thoughtful. She,
-too, saw what a powerless instrument the villain’s
-memorandum was unless it could be proved
-that he had written it. Who would not say Mr
-Hadleigh himself had written it, to escape blame?</p>
-
-<p>‘Have you got the memorandum still?’ she
-asked suddenly. ‘Will you give it to me?’</p>
-
-<p>‘But it is useless, except to satisfy those who
-trust me that I had no part in the disgraceful
-affair.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It is not quite useless, Mr Hadleigh. There
-are letters bearing that man’s name amongst my
-grandfather’s papers, and Mr Shield can compare
-the handwriting. That will be enough to assure
-him that you are blameless, even if he be so ungenerous
-as you imagine. Give me the paper.’</p>
-
-<p>A clever thought; and Mr Hadleigh was struck
-by her quickness in seeing it and the energy with
-which she took up his cause. He did not know
-that she was working for Philip.</p>
-
-<p>‘You will make a good advocate,’ he said with
-that far-off look in his eyes. ‘You shall have the
-paper. It is in the safe in my room.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Thank you, thank you! I will wait here till
-you send it to me.’</p>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>To be continued.</i>)</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_LARGEST_STATUES_IN_THE_WORLD">THE LARGEST STATUES IN THE WORLD,
-ANCIENT AND MODERN.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A piece</span> of interesting news comes to us from
-Egypt regarding a discovery recently made in
-Lower Egypt, by Mr Flinders Petrie, of the
-fragments of a colossal statue of King Rameses
-II., which, calculating the height from the fragments
-which remain, must have stood considerably
-over one hundred feet in height! The
-material employed is granite; and the executing
-of such a work in such a material, and when
-completed, rearing it into position, must have
-involved a profound knowledge not only of
-high art but of engineering skill. Is it possible
-that the statue could have been cut out
-whole in one piece? If so, what lever-power
-did the Egyptians possess to raise such an enormous
-weight into a perpendicular position?</p>
-
-<p>Certain it is that these ancient builders knew
-well how to get over, and did get over, prodigious
-difficulties, as witness their obelisks, and
-the enormous stones which compose the platform
-of the magnificent Temple of the Sun at Baalbec.
-As there is no stone quarry near, how these
-vast stones could possibly have been conveyed
-thither in the first place, and then raised to their
-position, has been an enigma to all modern
-architects and engineers by whom the temple has
-been critically examined, and who have freely
-confessed that, even with all our modern science
-of steam-cranes, hydraulic jacks, and railways,
-the transport and raising of such immense cyclopean
-masses would have undoubtedly presented
-many serious difficulties, if indeed it could be
-accomplished at all.</p>
-
-<p>Many of our readers will doubtless remember
-Mr Poynter’s grand picture in the Royal Academy
-of London, a few years ago, entitled ‘Israel in
-Egypt.’ It represented an enormous mass of
-sculpture mounted on a wheeled truck, dragged
-along by hundreds of the unfortunate captive
-Israelites, who are smarting under the whips
-of their cruel drivers. Mr Poynter had good
-authority for his ‘motive-power’ as shown in his
-picture. So far as we can discover from ancient
-works or ancient sculptures, the hugest stone
-masses were transported mainly by force of
-human muscles, with few mechanical expedients.
-Levers and rollers seem to have been almost,
-if not altogether, unknown. The mass was
-generally placed on a kind of sledge, the ground
-over which it was to pass lubricated with some
-oily substance, and the sheer strength of human
-shoulders was then applied.</p>
-
-<p>The most colossal and by far the most remarkable
-statue of modern days is that most elaborate
-and rather eccentric gift of the French<span class="pagenum" id="Page_471">{471}</span>
-nation to the people of America. Not only is
-it remarkable for its enormous height and
-gigantic proportions, but for the very singular
-and ingenious manner in which it has been
-constructed, so singular, indeed, that at first sight
-it is somewhat difficult to comprehend the manner
-in which it has been built up piece by piece,
-especially when we mention that the several
-pieces of copper composing the figure have <i>not</i>
-been cast. How, then, have they been made?
-This we will try to explain.</p>
-
-<p>The statue is a female figure of Liberty, having
-on her head a crown, and holding aloft in her
-hand a torch. The figure is one hundred and
-five feet high; but, reckoning the extreme height
-to the top of the torch, the marvellous altitude
-of one hundred and thirty-seven feet nine inches
-is reached. The statue is to be reared on a
-pedestal of solid granite eighty-three feet high,
-so that the entire work will rise to the immense
-height of two hundred and twenty feet nine
-inches! The artist is M. Bartholdi (the family
-name, by-the-bye, of the great composer best
-known as ‘Mendelssohn’).</p>
-
-<p>Having first carefully constructed a model in
-clay about life-size, this was repeatedly enlarged
-until the necessary form and size were obtained.
-The next step was to obtain plaster-casts from
-the clay, and these casts were then reproduced
-by clever artists in hard wood. The wooden
-blocks were then in their turn placed in the
-hands of coppersmiths, who by the hammer
-alone, it is stated, gave the copper sheets the
-exact form of the wooden moulds or models;
-and thus, in this peculiar and laborious manner,
-the outside copper ‘skin’ of the statue was formed
-and, to all outward appearance, completed. But
-as the copper is only one-eighth of an inch thick,
-an inner skin is also provided, placed about a foot
-behind the first, whilst the intermediate space
-will be filled in with sand, especially at the lower
-extremities, to give the whole a steadfast foundation.</p>
-
-<p>The stability of the figure will not, however,
-be left to depend solely on these sheets of thin
-copper and loose sand; and therefore the interior,
-from top to bottom, will be strengthened by a
-framework of girders and supports, by which
-the whole will be knit together in one firm,
-compact, unyielding mass. As the sheets of
-copper and the interior framework are simply
-secured in the ordinary manner by rivets, when
-it is desired to remove this metallic mountain,
-all that has to be done is to unrivet the several
-plates, take down, and pack on board ship for
-New York.</p>
-
-<p>It is proposed to place this gigantic ‘Liberty’
-on Bedloe’s Island, a very small islet lying about
-two miles south of the Battery and Castle Garden,
-the lowest point of the island of Manhattan on
-which the city of New York is built, so that
-travellers approaching the city by water on that
-side will get a fine view of the statue of ‘Liberty
-enlightening the World.’</p>
-
-<p>This mighty work of art, after many years of
-close and anxious labour, has recently been
-formally handed over by M. Jules Ferry to the
-minister of the United States, as a free gift
-from the people of France to the people of
-America—a token of love and admiration from
-the one republic to the other—and measures are
-being adopted to take the statue to pieces, with
-a view to its immediate transmission to New
-York, in which go-ahead city we shall doubtless
-soon hear of its final erection.</p>
-
-<p>If Mr Flinders Petrie’s discovery of the remains
-of the gigantic statue of Rameses II. in Lower
-Egypt, one hundred feet high of solid granite,
-is the largest statue of antiquity, the ‘Liberty’
-of M. Bartholdi may certainly take rank as the
-most colossal production of modern days.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_GREENROOM_ROMANCE">A GREENROOM ROMANCE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3 title="SCENE I.">IN THREE SCENES.—SCENE I.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr Percy Montmorency</span> was seated in front
-of a looking-glass in his dressing-room at the
-Pantheon Theatre, habited in the costume of
-Charles Surface, with the perruquier in attendance.
-The name of ‘Montmorency’ was merely
-a <i>nom de théâtre</i> assumed by Harry Stanley when
-he adopted the somewhat singular resolution of
-‘fretting and strutting his hour’ on the boards
-of a metropolitan theatre; for Mr Stanley was
-the only child of his father Colonel Stanley,
-and consequently heir to that gallant officer’s
-estates in Yorkshire and elsewhere. For the
-rest, he was three-and-twenty, undeniably good-looking,
-and endowed with considerable abilities.
-Having completed the arrangement of the
-powdered wig, the perruquier withdrew a pace
-and contemplated the effect with well-simulated
-admiration. ‘Mr Charles Mathews never looked
-the part better, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>The actor seemed to coincide in the opinion
-of his flattering attendant, for he rose, and
-surveyed himself in the glass with admiration,
-which he made no attempt to conceal.</p>
-
-<p>‘A good house, Jackson?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Capital, sir. But a little cold. They’ll warm
-up when <i>you</i> go on, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Tell the call-boy I want him, Jackson.’</p>
-
-<p>Jackson withdrew; and Montmorency surrendered
-himself to a mental soliloquy, which
-assumed somewhat of this form: ‘I wonder what
-my father wishes to see me about? The same
-old story, I suppose—the folly and wickedness
-of the step I have taken. Well, of one thing I
-am certain: I am much better off in my present
-position, than wedded to that Barbadoes girl,
-Miss Anstruther, in spite of her money-bags,
-and whom I have never seen.’</p>
-
-<p>These reflections were put an end to by the
-entrance of the call-boy.</p>
-
-<p>‘If a gentleman giving the name of Colonel
-Stanley should call, show him in here.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He is outside, sir,’ replied the boy.</p>
-
-<p>‘Show him in at once,’ whereupon there
-entered a small wizen-faced old gentleman, with
-snow-white hair, and supporting himself on a
-stick. Montmorency advanced, shook hands
-with a great show of cordiality, and placed a
-chair, on which Colonel Stanley slowly seated
-himself, gazing round the small apartment with
-an unfeigned expression of curiosity. ‘So this
-is a theatrical dressing-room. You are pretty
-snug.’</p>
-
-<p>The room certainly deserved the encomium of
-the old colonel. Paintings in oil and water
-colours nearly covered the walls; fancy pipes
-and cigar-boxes and scent-bottles littered the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_472">{472}</span>
-tables; a case of champagne reposed in one
-corner, while in the other was a small pile of
-seltzer water.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, after indulging in a sigh, proceeded:
-‘I have called, Harry, before I return
-to Yorkshire, to make one more appeal to you
-to give up your present mode of life, settle
-down as a landed proprietor in your native
-county, and marry Miss Anstruther.’</p>
-
-<p>It was now the turn of the young man to sigh
-as he replied: ‘Impossible, my dear sir. I am
-already wedded—to the stage.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That may be; but unions can easily be dissolved
-by a divorce, especially in these days.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not where the contracting parties are so
-attached to each other as I am to my profession.
-No, sir. If a man could take a wife on lease,
-for seven, fourteen, or twenty-one years, the case
-would be different. But the feeling that my lot
-in life was fixed—cut and dried, so to speak—the
-matter won’t bear a thought.’ The young man
-felt strongly inclined to indulge in a stage-walk,
-but the limited area of the apartment forbade
-such a physical relief. If the reader should
-consider the remarks of the actor somewhat
-flippant, it must be borne in mind that no one
-whose character did not fall under that definition
-would have acted as Harry Stanley had
-done.</p>
-
-<p>The old man scowled as he resumed: ‘I
-wonder you can respect yourself, dizened out
-and painted like a mummer at a pantomime.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am of the same calling as the glory of
-England, Shakspeare the actor’——</p>
-
-<p>‘And poet—you forget that, sir—poet, sir,’
-sharply retorted the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>‘I can assure you, sir, we have men of good
-family playing very small parts to-night. Trip
-took honours at Oxford, and Backbite is a Cambridge
-man.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pray, sir,’ replied the colonel, ‘if that be the
-case, why do you all sail under false colours?
-Why resign the honoured name of Stanley for
-the Frenchified one of Montmorency?’</p>
-
-<p>The young man bowed as he responded: ‘Out
-of deference to the shallow scruples of the
-narrow-minded portion of Society.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Of which I constitute a member, eh?’</p>
-
-<p>It was in a more conciliatory tone that his
-son took up the argument. ‘Pray, sir, let me
-ask you a question. Do poets and novelists
-never adopt a <i>nom de plume</i>? Did not Miss
-Evans style herself “George Eliot;” the late
-Governor-general of India, “Owen Meredith;”
-Mademoiselle de la Ramée, “Ouida;” Dickens,
-“Boz?”’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’ll do,’ interrupted the colonel. ‘Then
-one fine day you will be falling in love, as
-you call it, with one of these artful and painted
-sirens, and I shall find myself grandfather to a
-clown or a pantaloon! For, of course, you will
-bring up your offspring to <i>the</i> profession, as you
-call it, as if there were no other profession in
-the world.’</p>
-
-<p>His son and heir drew himself proudly up as
-he replied: ‘No, sir; I trust I shall never forget
-that I own the honoured name of Stanley.’</p>
-
-<p>The colonel remained silent for several moments
-ere he observed: ‘I shall never understand
-why you declined even to see Miss
-Anstruther.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Because the very fact that the lady was
-labelled my future wife,’ replied his son, ‘would
-have caused me to detest her at first sight.’</p>
-
-<p>The old colonel rose from his seat. ‘I can see
-very plainly that I am wasting both your time
-and my own.—I suppose you will have to do a
-little “tumbling” presently?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I do not make my first entrance till the
-third act. If you will go in front, you can
-have my box.’ Montmorency rang the bell as
-he spoke, and when the call-boy appeared,
-directed him to show his visitor into box A.</p>
-
-<p>The actor was indulging in a sigh of relief,
-when a head appeared at the half-closed door,
-and a voice exclaimed: ‘May I come in?’</p>
-
-<p>Montmorency bounded from his chair as he
-seized hold of the extended hand and drew the
-owner into the room. The new-comer was a
-young man of about the same age as the actor,
-and was habited in modern evening dress.
-Montmorency wrung the hand of his friend Vallance,
-and forced him into a seat. ‘Delighted
-to see you, Jack! Have a weed and a seltzer?’</p>
-
-<p>In a few seconds the two young men were
-similarly occupied, and immersed in the consumption
-of a couple of choice Partagas.</p>
-
-<p>The actor opened the ball. ‘You must have
-met an elderly party in the passage. That was
-the governor. He is very irate because I won’t
-fall in love by word of command, and marry
-Miss Anstruther, whom I have never seen.—By-the-bye,
-<i>you</i> have seen her. What is she like?’</p>
-
-<p>‘A lovely girl,’ replied Vallance. ‘I met her
-at a ball at Scarborough, soon after her arrival
-from the West Indies. Faith, Harry, you might
-do worse.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And might do better; eh, Jack? But your
-ideas of beauty are so opposite to mine, as I
-remember of old. Now, if you wish to see a
-perfect vision of loveliness, go in front and see
-Fonblanque, the Lady Teazle of to-night.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You mean <i>Miss</i> Fonblanque, I presume?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Exactly. The prefix “Miss” is frequently
-omitted in theatrical parlance. She is bewitching!’</p>
-
-<p>Vallance shakes his head. ‘Have a care, Harry.
-It would be a pity if you allied yourself with
-some unknown adventuress, after refusing the
-rich Miss Anstruther.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, to be candid, Jack, I <i>am</i> afraid of
-myself. If I did not constantly call to my mind
-the fact that I am a Stanley, I should speedily
-succumb to the charms of the divine Fonblanque,
-so there is some benefit arising from birth after
-all.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And how long do you mean to pursue this
-mad freak of yours?’ inquired Vallance.</p>
-
-<p>‘Till I hear on good authority that the troublesome
-Miss Anstruther is engaged, or married.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And then?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, then I quit the mimic stage as suddenly
-as I entered upon it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Meanwhile!’ ejaculated Vallance with an
-incredulous smile.</p>
-
-<p>‘Meanwhile,’ replied Montmorency loftily, ‘I
-contribute to the “gaiety of nations,” as Johnson
-said of Garrick; and therefore consider myself
-a far better member of society than a successful
-general, who has killed so many hundreds
-of his fellow-mortals; or a lawyer, who
-has set whole families by the ears in order to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_473">{473}</span>
-fill his pockets; or a doctor, who, as Tobin
-says, spends the greater part of his time in
-writing death-warrants in Latin.’</p>
-
-<p>Vallance examined his finger-nails for a few
-seconds, and after an embarrassing pause,
-said: ‘Harry, I am about to make a confession.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I cannot promise you absolution, Jack.’</p>
-
-<p>Vallance proceeded: ‘On the memorable night
-when I first beheld Miss Anstruther at the ball
-at Scarborough, I fell over head and ears in
-love with her.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You fell in love with her, did you!’ repeated
-Montmorency, in a tone of some annoyance.
-‘You mean with her banking account. Remember,
-you are in the confession box.’</p>
-
-<p>‘On my honour, no!’ replied Vallance. ‘As
-you are aware, I could not afford to marry a
-penniless girl; but if I were as rich as Rothschild,
-and Miss Anstruther a pauper, I would
-marry her to-morrow, if she would have me.—You
-do not seem to like the idea?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Humanity is a strange compound, Jack. It
-grates upon my sense of propriety that any one
-else should step into my shoes and wed the
-woman intended for my wife, yet whom I have
-vowed never to marry.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, what a dog in the manger, you are!’</p>
-
-<p>‘I would not so much mind if a stranger
-were to win the heiress; but to know her as
-your wife, Jack, for the remainder of my existence,
-to repent probably of my obstinacy—— You
-are not in earnest, Jack?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah, but I am!’ replied Vallance, inwardly
-murmuring: ‘May I be forgiven the lie!’</p>
-
-<p>After a brief mental struggle, Montmorency
-continued: ‘Well, success attend you. You are
-a lucky fellow to walk off with such a prize;
-while I—I shall remain a humble stage-player.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Remember the peerless Fonblanque, Harry.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah! you are right. There is beauty, talent,
-wit, elegance, refinement, all enshrined in the
-admirable Lady Teazle of to-night. I shall
-now no longer hold back. To-night I shall
-know my fate. You have applied the touchstone.’</p>
-
-<p>The shrill voice of the call-boy now uttered
-the words ‘Charles Surface.’</p>
-
-<p>‘There is my call. So adieu for the present.
-Go in front, and call for me at the end of the
-show; and we will have a steak at the <i>Albion</i>
-together, and drink to the speedy nuptials of
-my <i>bête noire</i>, Miss Anstruther.’</p>
-
-<p>‘With whom?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Any one! I care not—no offence, Jack—so
-I am free.’</p>
-
-<p>Vallance proceeded straight to box A, and
-having tapped at the door, found himself face
-to face with Colonel Stanley, who eagerly
-exclaimed: ‘Well, Vallance, has my plan succeeded?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I fear not, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Give him a second dose the first opportunity.
-I never knew it fail. If you want to make a
-man fall in love with a particular woman, tell
-him she is half engaged, and she will instantly
-go up twenty per cent. in his estimation. That
-is how I came to marry his mother. Directly
-my father told me that Fred Spencer was mad
-after her, and that she was half inclined to
-marry him, I rushed to the attack, stormed
-the fortress, and carried off the prize! <i>I</i> wasn’t
-going to let that puppy Spencer march off with
-her. A fellow with not a tithe of my personal
-recommendations.’ Here the colonel paused, as
-he beheld the countenance of his auditor completely
-engrossed with the scene; for in the
-lovely Lady Teazle of the play, Jack Vallance
-had recognised the West Indian heiress, Emily
-Anstruther!</p>
-
-
-<h3>SCENE II.</h3>
-
-<p>Along one of the tortuous passages leading to
-the dressing-rooms, a gentleman is conducting
-a lady, preceded by the dresser. They have
-evidently come from the audience part of the
-theatre, as they are both in modern evening
-dress. Presently the dresser pauses at a door,
-and after tapping, enters; and returns to invite
-the lady to invade the sacred precincts of the
-dressing-room of Miss Fonblanque, the representative
-of Lady Teazle. After a few whispered
-words to her escort, the lady accepts the invitation,
-and in another moment is clasped in the
-embrace of the actress. ‘My dear Julia!’</p>
-
-<p>‘My darling Emily!’</p>
-
-<p>Certainly, Lady Teazle fully deserved the
-rapturous praises of Montmorency. Her lovely
-dark eyes shone all the brighter from the
-contrast to the powdered wig; while her
-splendid figure was displayed to the utmost
-advantage by means of her handsome brocaded
-dress.</p>
-
-<p>‘And so you recognised me under these tinsel
-robes, Julia?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Your voice is unmistakable; I should have
-known it anywhere, Emily.—When do you
-intend to return to your own sphere?’</p>
-
-<p>‘First tell me, Julia, how you managed to
-penetrate these sacred precincts?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! my husband, who knows everybody, said
-he could at once accomplish it, directly I told
-him you were my old schoolfellow at Barbadoes.—Now,
-answer me my question, there’s a
-dear!’</p>
-
-<p>‘I <i>have</i> found my proper sphere; I am free,
-popular, and admired. Instead of one admirer,
-I have hundreds, and the number is increasing
-nightly. What can woman wish for more?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ll tell you, Emily: a nice husband, and
-domestic bliss.’</p>
-
-<p>The actress indulged in a scarcely audible
-sigh. ‘That might have been my lot. I mean
-the domestic bliss part of the affair, if I had
-not had it dinned into my ears from morning
-till night that there was only one road to
-happiness—a union with Mr Stanley, whom I
-have never seen.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You might have liked him very much.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Impossible, my dear Julia. The very fact
-of a man being ticketed like a prize animal at
-a show, and then his being introduced to you
-as your certain and future husband, would be
-quite sufficient to make me detest him.—No,
-Julia; when <i>I</i> marry, I will myself make the
-selection, and he must be one who is ignorant
-that his intended is a rich heiress.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That will not be a very easy matter to
-accomplish, Emily.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Listen, Julia, and I’ll tell you a secret. There
-is a young man acting in this company—a Mr
-Percy Montmorency. He is all I could wish—handsome,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_474">{474}</span>
-clever, accomplished, and vastly agreeable.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then you have <i>made</i> your selection?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not so, Julia. His profession renders our
-union impossible. He may be heir to a peerage;
-he may be a lawyer’s clerk. There is the most
-delightful mystery as to our antecedents, we play-actors!
-For instance, who would suppose that
-I was the rich West Indian heiress, who utilised
-her amateur theatrical talents, and adopted her
-present profession? And all in order to escape
-being pestered into an unwelcome and distasteful
-marriage. Heigh-ho! I wish I had never seen
-this captivating fellow.’</p>
-
-<p>Mrs Sydney sighed as she rejoined: ‘Ah,
-Emily, there is the danger of your present mode
-of life. Before you know where you are, finding
-yourself over head and ears in love with some
-handsome fellow, even of whose very name you
-are ignorant. As to the position in society of
-his progenitors, that is a point which would
-require the research of the Society of Antiquaries.’</p>
-
-<p>The actress looked solemnly in the face of her
-friend, and taking both her hands within her
-own, replied: ‘Julia, there is a fascination in
-the life of a successful actress, of which you can
-form no conception. There is the delight of
-selecting the costume you are to wear on the
-eventful evening. No trifle to a woman, as you
-will admit. Then there is the actual pleasure of
-wearing it, not for the sake of some half-dozen
-friends, whose envy in consequence is a poor
-reward, but the object of admiration to hundreds
-of spectators nightly! Then, instead of monotonous
-domesticity, executing crewel-work to the
-accompaniment of the snoring in an armchair
-of a bored husband, we have the nightly welcome
-from a thousand pair of hands, and the final
-call before the curtain amidst an avalanche of
-flowers! Your name on every tongue, your photo.
-in every print-shop in London, and your acts
-and deeds the subject of conversation at every
-dinner-table in the metropolis!’</p>
-
-<p>Mrs Sydney shook her head with a melancholy
-smile as the actress finished her oration. ‘I am
-still unconverted, Emily.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Quite right, Julia. If we were all actresses,
-there would be no audiences.’</p>
-
-<p>The inexorable call-boy here put a compulsory
-finish to the interview between the two friends,
-with the words ‘Lady Teazle.’</p>
-
-
-<h3>SCENE III.</h3>
-
-<p>Montmorency was seated in the greenroom at
-the conclusion of the play, engaged in that absent
-train of thought known as a brown-study. The
-more he saw of the fascinating Fonblanque, the
-more he was captivated. Every hour spent in
-her society but served to rivet more closely the
-chain which bound him to her. Should he
-condescend and make her an offer of his hand,
-she would naturally be influenced by a profound
-sense of gratitude, when she discovered that she
-had married a man of fortune and a Stanley!
-Whereas, if he had married the rich Miss
-Anstruther, he would have had her money-bags
-perpetually thrown in his face. A silver-toned
-utterance fell on his ears. Looking up, he
-beheld the subject of his cogitations.</p>
-
-<p>‘Allow me to congratulate you, Mr Montmorency,
-on your Charles Surface this evening.
-A double call before the curtain, and well
-deserved.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You are pleased to flatter me. The plaudits
-of the house to-night render any praise on my
-part of your Lady Teazle unnecessary. I regret
-that I am fated to lose so charming a compatriot.’</p>
-
-<p>Was it fancy that Montmorency imagined he
-detected a paler tint on the cheek of the actress,
-as she replied: ‘You are not going to leave
-us?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I fear so.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Wherefore?’</p>
-
-<p>‘You are the last person to whom I can confide
-the cause of my sudden departure.’</p>
-
-<p>Lady Teazle cast down her lovely eyes for a
-brief space, and then, in a voice in which the
-smallest possible <i>tremolo</i> was perceptible, whispered:
-‘Are you not happy here?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I fear, too much so,’ sighed Montmorency.
-‘I have been living in a fool’s paradise lately.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How? In what way, Mr Montmorency?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am in love.—You start. You do not believe
-in an actor, who is always simulating affection,
-ever falling under the influence of a real and
-veritable passion.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You wrong me; indeed, you do. The artistic
-nature is, and must be, more acutely sensitive
-than that possessed by ordinary mortals. Do I
-know the lady?’</p>
-
-<p>‘You see her every day—when you contemplate
-those charming features in the glass. Yes;
-it is <i>you</i>, Miss Fonblanque, whom I love, whom
-I adore!’</p>
-
-<p>How can we describe the flood of sensations
-which agitated the bosom of the heiress, as she
-listened to the avowal of affection from the lips
-of the only man she had ever loved! In low
-and trembling tones, she managed to reply: ‘Mr
-Montmorency, you are not rehearsing a scene in
-some new comedy?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I was never more serious in my life.’</p>
-
-<p>By this time, the pride of the Anstruthers
-had come to the assistance of the heiress. ‘I
-grieve very much that I cannot accept your offer.
-It is impossible.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Impossible! Why?’</p>
-
-<p>‘That I cannot explain.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We are both members of the same profession,
-and so far equal.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pardon me,’ said Lady Teazle. ‘You know
-nothing of my antecedents, and’——</p>
-
-<p>‘And you know nothing of mine, you would
-say. Charming equality! Say, Miss Fonblanque,
-may I hope?’</p>
-
-<p>It was now the turn of the actress to sigh.
-‘It would be cruel to raise hopes which can
-never be realised.’</p>
-
-<p>Montmorency let fall the hand which in his
-ardour he had seized, and drew himself proudly
-up. ‘That is your fixed answer?’</p>
-
-<p>‘It is.’</p>
-
-<p>Montmorency once more took possession of her
-taper fingers, and raising them to his lips, uttered
-the word ‘Farewell!’ and hastily left the greenroom.</p>
-
-<p>The dark melting eyes of the heiress gazed
-after his retreating figure, and large drops of
-moisture gathered in them. ‘I have half a mind<span class="pagenum" id="Page_475">{475}</span>
-to call him back,’ she mentally whispered.—‘No!
-I must remember I am an Anstruther.’</p>
-
-<p>Sinking on a couch, Lady Teazle felt her
-brain spinning round; then presently raising
-her eyes, she beheld—Mr Vallance!</p>
-
-<p>‘Have I not the honour of speaking to Miss
-Anstruther?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Since you recognise me, it would be affectation
-to deny my identity. Mr Vallance, may I ask
-you to preserve my secret?’</p>
-
-<p>‘From all save one individual—Mr Montmorency.
-Surely you knew that in the Charles
-Surface of this evening you beheld your rejected
-lover, Mr Stanley?’</p>
-
-<p>A film came slowly over the eyes of Miss
-Anstruther. ‘You are not joking, Mr Vallance?’</p>
-
-<p>‘The matter is too serious for jesting. But I
-will break a confidence. He loves you. He told
-me so half an hour ago.’</p>
-
-<p>The heiress could scarcely forbear a smile, as
-she reflected that her ears had drunk in the soft
-confession only five minutes ago. ‘Mr Vallance,
-will you do me a favour? Will you ask Mr
-Stanley to step here for a few minutes? But
-remember, you must on no account reveal my
-identity.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You may rely upon me, Miss Anstruther. I
-do not know what steps you mean to adopt; but
-there is no time to lose, for old Colonel Stanley
-is in front, and will, if he has recognised you,
-at once inform his son.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That is my fear; so haste.’</p>
-
-<p>Almost before the heiress could mature her
-plans, the rejected one appeared before her. He
-was very grave, and bowed with an air of deep
-humility, as the actress thus addressed him: ‘Mr
-Vallance and I are old acquaintances, so I commissioned
-him to ask you to return for a short
-time. I feel very anxious about our scenes in
-the <i>Hunchback</i> to-morrow. Would you mind running
-through the Modus and Helen scenes?
-I mean the second one.’</p>
-
-<p>Montmorency bowed. ‘With pleasure.’</p>
-
-<p>It would have been a lesson for half the
-actresses on the stage, could they have beheld
-the manner in which the saucy coquette of the
-play coaxed her lover, lured him on, fascinated
-him, and enveloped him in such a spell of
-witcheries, that no Modus that ever breathed
-could have been proof against her seductive
-wiles. The scene came to an unexpected termination,
-for Montmorency suddenly caught her in
-his arms, and as he held her clasped tight to
-his breast, exclaimed in rapid and excited tones:
-‘This is not acting! If it be, you are the
-greatest actress that ever trod the boards. You
-love me! I see it in your sparkling eye; I
-read it in your blushing cheek! Say, am I
-not right?’</p>
-
-<p>Emily Anstruther remained perfectly passive
-in the arms of Harry Stanley, as she murmured
-‘Yes!’</p>
-
-<p>The enraptured couple were so completely
-absorbed in reading love in each other’s eyes,
-that they had not observed the entrance of two
-gentlemen, Colonel Stanley and Mr Vallance.</p>
-
-<p>The old colonel was the first to speak. ‘Speak,
-sir! Is this a scene from a play?’</p>
-
-<p>By this time the heiress had left the sweet
-anchorage of her lover’s arms, and advancing to
-the old man, said: ‘Do you not recognise your
-godchild, Emily Anstruther?’</p>
-
-<p>But surprise had taken away the power of
-speech from the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>His son interposed. ‘I trust Miss Anstruther
-will acquit <i>me</i> of any guilty knowledge of this
-fact—will believe that <i>I</i> believed she was
-merely Miss Fonblanque the actress.’</p>
-
-<p>Emily Anstruther here cast down her eyes,
-while a deep blush mantled over her face and
-neck. ‘I am afraid <i>I</i> am not equally innocent;
-for Mr Vallance informed me that I had refused
-my hated lover. But I have enough confidence
-in <i>his</i> love for me, to hope for his belief in
-my unselfish love for <i>him</i>.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So you see, dad,’ exclaimed the younger
-Stanley, ‘Love not only rules the court, the
-camp, the grove, as the poet says, but does
-not disdain to flutter his wings in the greenroom.’</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Author’s Note.</i>—This story having been dramatised,
-and the provisions of the law as regards dramatic copyright
-having been duly complied with, any infringement
-of the author’s rights becomes actionable.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="HUMOROUS_DEFINITIONS">HUMOROUS DEFINITIONS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A smart</span>, pithy, or humorous definition often
-furnishes a happy illustration of the proverbial
-brevity which is the soul of wit. Wit itself
-has not inaptly been called ‘a pleasant surprise
-over truth;’ and wisdom, often its near ally,
-is, in the opinion of a clever writer, ‘nothing
-more than educated cunning.’ ‘Habits are what
-we learn and can’t forget,’ says the same author,
-who also defines silence as ‘a safe place to hide
-in,’ and a lie as ‘the very best compliment that
-can be paid to truth.’ ‘Show him an egg and
-instantly the air is full of feathers,’ said a
-humorist, defining a sanguine man. ‘A moral
-chameleon’ is a terse reckoning-up of a humbug.
-Man’s whole life has been cynically
-summed up in the sentence, ‘Youth is a
-blunder; middle life, a struggle; and old age, a
-regret.’</p>
-
-<p>Whimsical definitions are sometimes quite
-as neat and telling as those of a smarter
-kind. Dr Johnson confessed to a lady that
-it was pure ignorance that made him define
-‘pastern, the knee of a horse;’ but he could
-hardly make the same excuse for defining pension,
-‘an allowance made to any one without
-an equivalent.’ A patriot, some writer tells us,
-is ‘one who lives <i>for</i> the promotion of his
-country’s union and dies <i>in</i> it;’ and a hero,
-‘he who, after warming his enemies, is toasted
-by his friends.’</p>
-
-<p>Of juvenile definitions, ‘dust is mud with
-the juice squeezed out;’ scarcely so scientific
-as Palmerston’s definition of dirt as ‘matter
-in the wrong place.’ A fan, we learn, is ‘a
-thing to brush warm off with;’ and a monkey,
-‘a small boy with a tail;’ ‘salt, what makes
-your potatoes taste bad when you don’t put
-any on;’ ‘wakefulness, eyes all the time coming
-unbuttoned;’ and ‘ice, water that stayed out
-too late in the cold and went to sleep.’</p>
-
-<p>A schoolboy asked to define the word ‘sob,’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_476">{476}</span>
-whimpered out: ‘It means when a feller don’t
-mean to cry and it bursts out itself.’ Another
-defined a comma as ‘a period with a long tail.’
-A youngster was asked to give his idea of the
-meaning of ‘responsibility,’ so he said: ‘Well,
-supposing I had only two buttons on my trousers,
-and one came off, all the responsibility would rest
-on the other button.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Give the definition of admittance,’ said a
-teacher to the head-boy. This went from the
-head to near the foot of the class, all being
-unable to tell the meaning of it, until it reached
-a little boy who had seen the circus bills posted
-about the village, and who exclaimed: ‘Admittance
-means one shilling, and children half-price.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What is a junction, nurse?’ asked a seven-year-old
-fairy the other day on a railway platform.—‘A
-junction, my dear?’ answered the
-nurse, with the air of a very superior person
-indeed: ‘why, it’s a place where two roads
-separate.’</p>
-
-<p>To hit off a jury as ‘a body of men organised
-to find out which side has the smartest lawyer,’
-is to satirise many of our ‘intelligent fellow-countrymen.’
-The word ‘suspicion’ is, in the
-opinion of a jealous husband, ‘a feeling that
-compels you to try to find out something which
-you don’t wish to know.’ A good definition of
-a ‘Pharisee’ is ‘a tradesman who uses long
-prayers and short weights;’ of a ‘humbug, one
-who agrees with everybody;’ and of a ‘tyrant,
-the other version of somebody’s hero.’ An
-American lady’s idea of a ballet-girl was, ‘an
-open muslin umbrella with two pink handles;’
-and a Parisian’s of ‘chess, a humane substitute
-for hard labour.’ Thin soup, according to an
-Irish mendicant, is ‘a quart of water boiled down
-to a pint, to make it strong.’</p>
-
-<p>Of definitions of a bachelor—‘an un-altar-ed
-man,’ ‘a singular being,’ and ‘a target for a miss,’
-are apt enough. A walking-stick may be described
-as ‘the old man’s strength and the young
-man’s weakness;’ and an umbrella as ‘a fair and
-foul weather friend’ who has had ‘many ups
-and downs in the world.’ A watch may be hit
-off as a ‘second-hand affair;’ spectacles as ‘second-sight’
-or ‘friendly glasses;’ and a wig as ‘the
-top of the poll,’ ‘picked locks,’ and ‘poached
-hare.’ And any one who is troubled with an
-empty purse may be comforted with the reflection
-that ‘no trial could be lighter.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Custom is the law of fools,’ and ‘politeness
-is half-sister to charity’—the last a better definition
-than that which spitefully defines polite
-society as ‘a place where manners pass for too
-much, and morals for too little.’ ‘Fashion’ has
-been cleverly hit off as ‘an arbitrary disease
-which leads all geese to follow in single file the
-one goose that sets the style.’ An idea of the
-amusement of dancing is not badly conveyed by
-the phrases ‘embodied melody’ and ‘the poetry of
-motion.’</p>
-
-<p>The ‘Complete Angler’ as a definition of ‘a
-flirt’ is particularly happy. Beauty has been
-called ‘a short-lived tyranny,’ ‘a silent cheat,’
-and ‘a delightful prejudice;’ while modesty has
-been declared ‘the delicate shadow that virtue
-casts.’ Love has been likened to ‘the sugar in
-a woman’s teacup, and man the spoon that stirs
-it up;’ and a ‘true-lover’s-knot’ may not inaptly
-be termed ‘a dear little tie.’ Kisses have variously
-been defined as ‘a harmony in red,’ ‘a
-declaration of love by deed of mouth,’ and
-‘lip-service.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Matrimony’ was defined by a little girl at
-the head of a confirmation class in Ireland, as
-‘a state of torment into which souls enter to
-prepare them for another and better world.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Being,’ said the examining priest, ‘the answer
-for purgatory.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Put her down!’ said the curate, much ashamed
-of his pupil—‘put her down to the foot of the
-class!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Lave her alone,’ quoth the priest; ‘the lass
-may be right after all. What do you or I know
-about it?’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_MONTH">THE MONTH:
-<br />
-SCIENCE AND ARTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nearly</span> seven millions sterling have been already
-expended upon the Panama Canal works, and
-according to all accounts, there is plenty to show
-for the money. The channel is being dredged
-out by enormous machines, which scoop out the
-softer earth and operate upon the debris of
-harder rocks, after the latter have been blasted.
-Colon, the Atlantic terminus of the canal, has,
-from the miserable and dirty little village which
-it presented some years ago, sprung into a prosperous
-town. The dry season has unfortunately
-been an unhealthy one, and there has been an
-epidemic of marsh-fever; but altogether we may
-take the general report of the Canal works as a
-satisfactory one. There is little doubt that the
-great work of uniting the Atlantic and Pacific
-Oceans will be accomplished within very few
-years.</p>
-
-<p>News has been received by the Geographical
-Society that their intrepid explorer, Mr Joseph
-Thomson, whose departure some months ago on
-an expedition to the region east and north-east
-of Lake Victoria Nyanza we briefly chronicled
-at the time, has safely returned to Zanzibar.
-Little is at present known as to what he has
-done, further than that he has successfully carried
-out his programme with the most satisfactory
-feature that the work has been done without
-any loss of life except from disease. We may
-look forward with great interest to Mr Thomson’s
-account of this his third successful expedition,
-the more so, as this time he has journeyed in
-a region of Africa untraversed by any previous
-explorer, and about which, therefore, the knowledge
-possessed by our best geographers is open
-to improvement.</p>
-
-<p>From a paper recently read before the
-Institution of Civil Engineers, by Mr G. H.
-Stayton, upon the Wood-pavements of London,
-we glean the following interesting particulars:
-The metropolis comprises nearly two thousand
-miles of streets, of which only fifty-three miles
-are at present laid with wood. Most of the
-wood used is in the form of rectangular blocks
-of yellow deal, principally Swedish. Neither
-elm nor oak will stand changes of temperature
-sufficiently well to fit them for this purpose;
-but pitch-pine answers well, and so does larch;
-though the supply of the latter limits its use.
-Creosoting the blocks has no value as a preservative,
-and the wood is now used plain, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_477">{477}</span>
-joints being filled in with cement. The average
-cost of laying wood-pavement is about ten
-shillings and sixpence per square yard, and the
-expenses of maintenance compare very favourably
-with Macadam and other systems of pavement.
-‘There is nothing new under the sun,’ even
-in the matter of wood-pavements, for we find,
-on reference to a <i>Mechanic’s Magazine</i> dated
-1858, that wood-blocks, placed grain uppermost,
-as in all modern systems, are distinctly advocated
-as having many advantages over granite roads,
-diminution of cost and durability being among
-those stated.</p>
-
-<p>It has become customary to speak of the
-present epoch as the ‘Iron Age,’ in order to
-distinguish it from those two long periods of
-human interest known respectively as the Stone
-Age and the Bronze Age. But future historians
-may well be tempted to substitute the word
-steel for iron, for it is an undoubted fact that
-improved processes of manufacture, and the
-resulting easy and cheap production, are causing
-steel to be widely substituted for its parent
-metal. In railways, steel rails are now almost
-entirely replacing iron ones, and that modification
-of the metal known as ‘mild steel’ is finding
-great favour just now among shipbuilders.
-The Board of Trade have lately had representations
-made to them that the superiority of steel
-over iron for shipbuilding purposes should be
-officially recognised; and that this request is
-well grounded, the following instances will go
-far to prove. A steamer wrecked on the coast
-of the Isle of Wight remained for ten days in
-stormy weather perched on a ledge of rocks
-without breaking up. ‘If,’ says the engineer’s
-Report, ‘she had been built of iron instead of
-steel, there is not a doubt that she would have
-gone to pieces. The agent of another vessel
-wrecked at New Zealand last year reports to
-the owner that the vessel was eventually
-released from her rocky bed; ‘but, with a
-large number of passengers, would have been
-lost, had it not been for the beautiful quality
-of the material of which she is built, known
-as mild steel.’</p>
-
-<p>But there is one branch of the metal trade
-which shows a continually increasing activity,
-and which need not fear any rivalry from steel,
-and that is the tinplate trade. Many thousands
-of tons of this tinned iron—that is, thin sheets
-of iron coated with tin—are annually exported
-from this country, our best customers being the
-United States. We may presume that a large
-quantity of this metal comes back to us in the
-form of tins containing preserved meats, fish,
-and fruit. In Philadelphia, there are a number
-of factories for utilising these tins after they
-have been used. They are collected from the
-ash-heaps, the hotels and boarding-houses. The
-solder is melted and sold, to be used again;
-the tops and bottoms of the tins are turned
-into window sash-weights; the cylindrical portions
-are rolled out flat, and are made into covers
-for travelling trunks, and are used for many
-other purposes. The industry is said to be a
-very profitable one, for the expense of gathering
-the tins is covered by the sale of the solder,
-and the capital required is small. Such ingenious
-applications of waste materials most certainly
-deserve to succeed.</p>
-
-<p>What is known as ‘flashed glass’ consists of
-common white glass blown with a layer of
-coloured glass superposed on its surface, which
-surface can afterwards be eaten away in parts
-by the application of fluoric acid, so that any
-ornament or lettering can be executed upon it.
-The same principle in an extended form has
-lately been applied by Messrs Webb of Stourbridge
-to the production of most beautiful
-vases in what has been aptly called cameo
-glass. The vase is first blown in glass of three
-different descriptions, fused together, forming
-eventually three distinct layers of material—the
-innermost of a semi-opaque colour, the next
-white, and the outside of a tint to harmonise
-with the first or innermost. Now comes the
-artist’s work. The design being drawn upon
-the surface, the outer colour is removed so as
-to leave but a tint, deep or light as may be
-wanted in certain parts; next, the white is
-cut into so as to show up where required the
-ground colour behind. In this way the most
-intricate design is produced with the most
-artistic results. The operator employs not only
-fluoric acid, but makes use of the steel point,
-and also the ordinary emery wheel commonly
-used for engraving and cutting glass. Two of
-these vases are, as we write, on view at Mr
-Goode’s, South Audley Street, London.</p>
-
-<p>The first cable tramway laid in Europe has
-been opened on the steepest bit of road near
-London—namely, Highgate Hill, and is pronounced
-on all hands a complete success. It is
-to be hoped that the system will become as
-common in this country as it is in America,
-where not only steep gradients are thus dealt
-with, but level roads, such as our horse tramcars
-already traverse. The boon to horses
-would be immeasurable. At the present time,
-on British tramways more than twenty thousand
-horses are at work. The labour is so hard,
-that about one quarter of this number have
-annually to be replaced. This annual loss absorbs
-forty-three per cent. of the gross earnings, a consideration
-which will appeal more eloquently to
-the feelings of many than will the sufferings of
-the poor horses.</p>
-
-<p>Referring to the epidemic of smallpox in
-London, a correspondent of the <i>Times</i> gives a
-valuable suggestion. He tells how an epidemic
-of the same dreaded disease was quickly stamped
-out in a South American village some years ago,
-and although our great metropolis bears but small
-resemblance to a village, the remedy in question
-might nevertheless be tried. Huge bonfires
-of old creosoted railway sleepers were made in
-the streets, and gas-tar was added occasionally
-to stimulate the flames. In the meantime, every
-house where a death or recovery occurred was
-lime-washed. With these precautions, which are
-manifestly applicable to other zymotic diseases,
-the visitation speedily vanished. Concerning this
-all-important subject we may have something
-further to say in a special paper.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, there is no kind of doubt that
-the spread of infectious disease is attributable
-in great measure to personal ignorance, commonly
-called carelessness, as well as to that
-entire indifference as to the welfare of others
-which is so common to human nature. Some
-time since, an advertisement appeared to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_478">{478}</span>
-following effect: ‘Should this meet the eye
-of the lady who travelled (by a particular
-train) with her two boys, one of whom was
-evidently just recovering from an illness, she
-may be pleased to learn that three of the
-four young ladies who were in the carriage
-are very ill with the measles.’ This is surpassed
-by a statement contained in a recent
-letter in the <i>Times</i>. A lady, finding that her
-boys, on recovering from a severe attack of
-scarlatina, suffered much from dandruff (the
-scales which separate from the scalp, and which,
-in fever, are a prolific source of contagion), took
-the sufferers to a leading West End hairdresser’s,
-so that their heads could receive a thorough
-cleansing with the machine-brush!</p>
-
-<p>We would in this connection draw attention
-to a novel system of providing for smallpox
-cases with the least amount of risk to others,
-which is established by the Metropolitan Asylums
-Board of London, and which will undergo in
-time further development. In addition to the
-five hospitals in different parts of London which
-have been opened whenever a fresh epidemic has
-broken out, there is a very elaborate ambulance
-system, by which a suitable carriage with a
-nurse and porter is despatched, as soon as notice
-is received, to the patient’s place of residence
-and removes the patient to the nearest hospital.
-This has been at work for some years; but in
-addition there are three ships moored on the
-Thames opposite Purfleet, two of which are
-hospital ships, the third being used as a residence
-for the staff, and containing offices, kitchens,
-workshops, &amp;c. Some four miles inland there is
-a convalescent camp, consisting of tents for
-about one thousand patients, each heated and
-lighted by gas, and suitably fitted for the purpose
-in every way.</p>
-
-<p>To convey patients to the ships, an ambulance
-steamer runs as often as required, being
-fitted up as a travelling hospital, with beds,
-&amp;c., and having a medical and nursing staff.
-Patients are removed to the river-side either
-direct from their homes, or from the hospitals,
-usually on comfortable beds, and carried on
-board the steamer, and thence down the
-river. Another steamer brings the recovered
-cases back; and when landed, they are conveyed
-in special carriages to their homes, free from
-infection in person and clothing.</p>
-
-<p>So far the problem of how to provide for
-an epidemic of smallpox in London is in a fair
-way of being solved, by a system which, though
-still in its earliest stage, is daily undergoing
-development and improvement. When yet
-another steamer is fitted out, there will be no
-difficulty in coping with a much larger epidemic
-than has visited London for many years, and at
-the same time treating patients with an amount
-of attention almost unknown till now.</p>
-
-<p>The proposal to revive the art of lacemaking
-in Ireland, to which we adverted some months
-ago, has now received more definite form. A
-scheme has been framed under the auspices of
-many influential persons, the chief features of
-which are as follows: Original designs are to
-be purchased under the advice of the best
-authorities on the subject. These designs will
-be sent to the lacemaking centres for execution.
-The specimens will then be exhibited and offered
-for sale. The expenses to set this machinery at
-work will amount to about five hundred pounds,
-much of which is already subscribed. Full information
-as to the project can be obtained from
-Mr Alan Cole, of the South Kensington Museum.</p>
-
-<p>Dr Von Pettenkofer has, according to the
-<i>Lancet</i>, been lately paying attention to the
-poisonous action of coal-gas on the human
-system, and a few notes of authenticated cases
-may be serviceable to those who pay little heed to
-an escape of gas so long as it does not in their
-opinion assume dangerous dimensions. The cases
-quoted all refer to escapes of gas into dwelling-houses
-after passing through a layer of earth,
-and we may note that such escapes are difficult
-of detection, for the earth robs the gas in great
-measure of its tell-tale odour. At Roveredo,
-three women were killed in their sleep by an
-escape from a broken pipe under the roadway
-thirty-five feet distant. At Cologne, three of one
-family were carried off by a similar escape at
-a distance of ninety-eight feet. At Breslau, a
-case is reported where the escape was no less
-than one hundred and fifteen feet away from its
-victim. It would seem that the dangerous constituent
-of coal-gas is carbonic oxide, which
-usually forms about eight per cent. of the vapour
-conveyed to our houses. Whether this noxious
-ingredient can, like other impurities, be eliminated
-in the process of purification at the gas-works,
-we do not know, but the question is
-certainly worth the attention of the authorities.</p>
-
-<p>The Observatory on the summit of Ben Nevis,
-which our readers will remember was opened
-in October last, will be completed this summer.
-The observations already made confirm the anticipations
-as to the value of a high level station,
-and the completion of the structure will add
-to the efficiency of the work done, for hitherto
-the observers have been cramped for space. A
-shelter for tourists forms part of the scheme,
-and travellers will be able to obtain light refreshment
-there, and if they desire it, can telegraph
-from the highest point in Britain to their friends
-below. The cost of completion will absorb about
-eight hundred pounds; but this estimate does
-not include the heavy outlay for carriage of
-materials on horseback up the bridle-path already
-constructed. It has been suggested that visitors
-on horseback using this path should pay a toll
-of five shillings—a modest sum, when it is considered
-that the expenses of maintenance are
-much increased by the soil being loosened by the
-horse’s hoofs, especially when the ground is in
-a soft condition.</p>
-
-<p>The small Chinese colony established at the
-International Health Exhibition is one of the
-principal attractions of the place. Visitors have
-now the opportunity of tasting various strange
-dishes which before they had only heard of by
-report. The much extolled bird-nest soup can
-be had here, together with shark-fins, <i>beches de
-mer</i> (sea-slugs), edibles made of different seaweeds,
-shredded cucumber peels mixed with vinegar,
-and various other delicacies, which, we trust,
-are nicer than they seem to be by mere description.
-We may note that the South Kensington
-executive have already arranged for an Exhibition
-to follow on the present one. It is to be
-called the Exhibition of Inventions, and will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_479">{479}</span>
-include all kinds of appliances, one entire division
-being devoted to musical instruments.</p>
-
-<p>A long-felt want by paper-rulers and others
-has now been supplied by the new Patent
-Automatic Paper Feeding-machine. It has been
-invented by Mr William Archer, 204 Rose Street,
-Edinburgh—a paper-ruler who has spent his
-spare time during the last ten years in working
-it out, and who has now succeeded in patenting
-a Ruling-machine which is allowed to be the
-most accurate in use for feeding the paper in
-a continuous stream, or feeding to grippers at
-given intervals. It can be worked either by
-hand or steam-power, and it renders unnecessary
-the employment of boys or girls as paper-feeders.
-It can also be applied to hot rolling-machines;
-and it is expected that it will also be turned to
-use in connection with printing, &amp;c.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="OCCASIONAL_NOTES">OCCASIONAL NOTES.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>THE NEW ORGAN IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> old-new, or the new-old, organ of Westminster
-Abbey was formally tried on the 24th
-of May, at the usual afternoon service, after which
-a recital, which served to exhibit the extreme
-beauty and power of some of the new work, was
-given. The new organ has fifty-six speaking
-stops, besides many mechanical stops, couplers,
-&amp;c., and is placed in two lofty blocks, like the one
-in St Paul’s Cathedral, at the west end of the two
-choir screens, only that in this case the player
-sits between the two over the doorway of the
-choir. The magnificent oak case, designed by
-Mr Pearson, has not yet been erected, because
-the funds for the purpose—about fifteen hundred
-pounds—are not, as we write, yet collected. The
-principal bellows are blown by a gas-engine, and
-are placed in a vault below the cloisters, the pipes
-conveying the air being nearly one hundred
-feet in length. A curious arrangement exists to
-connect the keys with the pipes, which is done
-by tubes, through which, on the key being
-pressed, wind, under heavy pressure, is admitted,
-and acts instantly on a small bellows at the other
-end of the tube. This, on being inflated, pulls
-down the pallet or valve under the sound-board,
-and thus gives air to the pipe. This clever
-system is said not to get out of order or to
-be affected by changes of temperature.</p>
-
-<p>It may be interesting to state that this organ
-was in the first instance built by Schreider and
-Jordan so far back as 1730. Exactly a hundred
-years after (1830) it was added to by Elliott;
-and again in 1848 and in 1868, Hill made many
-additions; and it has now been almost completely
-reconstructed by Messrs Hill and Son,
-of the same well-known firm. It may fairly
-be considered, with that in St Paul’s Cathedral,
-and All Saints, Margaret Street, to take rank
-as one of the finest church organs in London.</p>
-
-
-<h3>THE ANTHROPOMETRICAL LABORATORY AT THE HEALTH EXHIBITION.</h3>
-
-<p>Without intending the smallest disrespect to
-our numerous readers, we will venture to say
-that more than one will be inclined to ask the
-very obvious question, ‘What is anthropometry?’
-Well, this fine-sounding, Greek-adapted name
-signifies the art of describing and recording,
-in a schedule provided for that purpose, the
-particulars appertaining to the condition, functions,
-powers, and capabilities of the human
-body and limbs. Every person visiting the Laboratory
-at the Health Exhibition can have his or
-her schedule filled up with a statement, ascertained
-on the spot, of his name or initials, age,
-sex, occupation, place of birth, colour of hair and
-eyes, height standing and sitting, weight, length
-of span of arms, strength of squeeze and of pull,
-swiftness and weight of direct fist-blow, capacity
-of chest, lungs, and breathing, as measured by a
-spirometer, acuteness of vision as measured by a
-test type, conditions of colour-sense, and acuteness
-of hearing. The ascertaining of these particulars,
-and any others of a like nature bearing
-immediately on the principal question, seems to
-be the especial business of the art of anthropometry.
-It may be objected that the collecting of
-these facts, though interesting enough to the
-individual practised upon and his family, can be
-of no possible use beyond that limit, or indeed
-anywhere else; but the gentleman who has
-originated this novel and ingenious scheme (Mr
-Francis Galton) proposes to keep a duplicate of
-the filled-up schedule which each person operated
-on will receive; and by this means he hopes to
-obtain a very large number of facts and statements,
-which will doubtless be ultimately arranged
-and tabulated, and made good use of by the originator,
-who may possibly submit them to the
-Registrar-general, or to the Statistical Society,
-for enrolment amongst their curious records. It
-is, at anyrate, in spite of its somewhat alarming
-Greek name, an interesting experiment.</p>
-
-
-<h3>ADVICE TO INTENDING EMIGRANTS.</h3>
-
-<p>A correspondent in New South Wales writes
-to us as follows: ‘Australia offers a wide field
-for the capitalist and the manual labourer, but
-I should not advise others to try their fortunes
-here. For educated persons, male or female,
-without capital, Australia is a death-trap. Such
-persons would, according to my observation, do
-far better in America, or in the English settlements
-in China. In China, young gentlemen
-possessing no other fortune than a good education,
-are soon employed in the warehouses and
-stores by the Chinese merchants, who value
-Englishmen whenever they can get them to take
-charge of the more responsible parts of their businesses.
-The Chinese Customs’ Departments also
-are open to educated young Englishmen. But in
-Australia, brains are not a marketable commodity;
-strong arms are more sought for. The streets of
-Sydney are thronged with hundreds of educated
-young Englishmen, who have come out here
-persuaded by their friends that work is easily
-got, as well as money, which is not the case,
-except in one or two kinds of labour. I know
-of scores of temperate young gentlemen out here
-who have done all they could to find employment,
-and failed; and at last have had to seek
-relief in the Refuge. Some commit suicide out
-of sheer despair.</p>
-
-<p>‘No one, unless he can swing a pickaxe
-well and is possessed of plenty of muscular
-strength, with not too much refinement in
-him, should think of coming out here to earn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_480">{480}</span>
-his bread, much less make his “pile,” unless
-he has some capital, say a few thousands, to
-start a warehouse, or take up land and go in
-for sheep-farming. Sometimes young educated
-men, who bring good letters of introduction and
-good characters also, are given government situations,
-as I am thankful to say was the case with
-me. But I should warn any educated young
-man who has no friends here or capital, against
-coming to Australia. Even where he brings
-letters, he often has great trouble to get a situation,
-as there are so many colonials’ sons hanging
-about doing nothing. The towns are overloaded
-with men, and the country is left untouched for
-want of capital in the majority of those who
-come out here.</p>
-
-<p>‘Servants of all classes do well here; ten shillings
-per week and board and lodging is the
-usual wage for female servants good or bad;
-and one pound per week with board and
-lodging for male servants. Governesses are an
-utter failure; hundreds are doing nothing here
-now; and when they do get employed, they don’t
-do much better than at home; sixty pounds with
-board and lodging is the usual salary; but they
-have to act as nurses often as well, for that
-sum.</p>
-
-<p>‘My advice to young gentlemen and ladies who
-are thinking of giving up their situations at
-home and emigrating to Australia in the hopes
-of getting work and good salary, is—Don’t.’</p>
-
-
-<h3>A CURIOUS DISEASE.</h3>
-
-<p>The <i>London Medical Record</i> quotes some information
-regarding a strange disease that
-is met with in Siberia, and known to the
-Russians by the name of ‘Miryachit.’ The
-person affected seems compelled to imitate anything
-he hears or sees, and an interesting
-account is given of a steward who was reduced
-to a perfect state of misery by his inability to
-avoid imitating everything he heard and saw.
-One day the captain of the steamer, running up
-to him, suddenly clapping his hands at the same
-time, accidentally slipped, and fell hard on the
-deck. Without having been touched, the steward
-instantly clapped his hands and shouted; then,
-in helpless imitation, he, too, fell as hard, and
-almost precisely in the same manner and position
-as the captain. This disease has been met with
-in Java, where it is known as ‘Lata.’ In the
-case of a female servant who had the same irresistible
-tendency to imitate her mistress, the
-latter, one day at dessert, wishing to exhibit this
-peculiarity, and catching the woman’s eye, suddenly
-reached across the table, and seizing a large
-French plum, made pretence to swallow it whole.
-The woman rushed at the dish and put a
-plum in her mouth, and, after severe choking
-and semi-asphyxia, succeeded in swallowing it;
-but her mistress never tried the experiment
-again.</p>
-
-
-<h3>ANOTHER UPHILL RAILWAY.</h3>
-
-<p>The <i>Hôtel des Alpes</i> at Chillon, and the <i>Hôtel
-de Mont Fleury</i> at Montreux, Switzerland, are
-situated at no great distance apart; but the
-difference of elevation between the two is over
-two hundred feet, and the incline very steep.
-To get over this difficulty, it is intended to call
-in the aid of that mighty power which has of
-late so prominently come to the front—electricity.
-After a long series of carefully conducted experiments,
-it has been determined that an uphill
-railway shall be constructed between the two
-hotels named, to be driven by electricity. An
-electric motor will be placed on a car to drive
-a cog-wheel; this wheel will gear into a central
-cogged rail, and by this means draw or pull
-the car up the ascent. Conductors placed beside
-the central rail will convey the current of the
-generator, which will be kept going by a five-horse-power
-locomotive engine. It is, however,
-in contemplation to drive the dynamo not by
-steam, but by water-power, abundance of which,
-descending from the hills, can be had close by,
-and only requires utilising. This railway will
-in many points resemble that up the Righi,
-only that electricity will be its driving-power
-instead of the odd-looking little engine so well
-known at the latter place; and when it is
-completed, it will certainly be a great boon to
-travellers frequenting these beautiful spots.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="EVENING_ON_THE_LAKE">EVENING ON THE LAKE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">Upon</span> the mountain-top the purple tints</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Fade into mist; and the rich golden glow</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of the low-setting sun sinks to a gray</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Subdued and tender.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent26">Home the eagle hies,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Swift, to his eyrie, his broad pinions stretched,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bearing him onwards, seeming motionless</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The while with rapid wing he cleaves the air,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">As ship the waters: now the grousecock crows</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On heathered knoll his vesper lullaby</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To his dear mate.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent18">And from the silver lake,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Cradled in mountain-setting, echoing comes,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With rippling music on the air, the plash</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of dipping oars; and voices deep and low,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Mingled with women’s trebles, tuneful break</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The evening silence!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent22">Grand indeed it is</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To be amid these mountain solitudes;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And yet there is a sense of rest and calm,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Soothing the spirit—stealing o’er the heart</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Like the soft notes of an Æolian harp,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Falling like balm upon the troubled soul,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And making the most worldly man to feel</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That there is over earth a higher heaven!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p>The Conductor of <span class="smcap">Chambers’s Journal</span> begs to direct
-the attention of <span class="smcap">Contributors</span> to the following notice:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot_ans">
-
-<p><i>1st.</i> All communications should be addressed to the
-‘Editor, 339 High Street, Edinburgh.’</p>
-
-<p><i>2d.</i> For its return in case of ineligibility, postage-stamps
-should accompany every manuscript.</p>
-
-<p><i>3d.</i> <span class="smcap">Manuscripts</span> should bear the author’s full <i>Christian</i>
-name, Surname, and Address, legibly written; and
-should be written on white (not blue) paper, and on
-one side of the leaf only.</p>
-
-<p><i>4th.</i> Offerings of Verse should invariably be accompanied
-by a stamped and directed envelope.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><i>If the above rules are complied with, the Editor will
-do his best to insure the safe return of ineligible papers.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">Printed and Published by <span class="smcap">W. &amp; R. Chambers</span>, 47 Paternoster
-Row, <span class="smcap">London</span>, and 339 High Street, <span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center"><i>All Rights Reserved.</i></p>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="footnotes"><p class="ph3">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> We will be glad to receive and acknowledge any
-donations in aid of the Granton Marine Station.—<span class="smcap">Ed.</span>
-<i>C. J.</i>, Edinburgh.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 30, VOL. I, JULY 26, 1884 ***</div>
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