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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #66236 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66236)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 37, Vol. I, September 13, 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. 37, Vol. I, September 13, 1884
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Robert Chambers
-
-Release Date: September 7, 2021 [eBook #66236]
-
-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. 37, VOL. I, SEPTEMBER 13,
-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. 37.—VOL. I. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1884. PRICE 1½ _d._]
-
-
-
-
-JOINT-STOCK COMPANIES AND ‘LIMITED LIABILITY.’
-
-
-Readers of newspapers must have frequently observed in the advertising
-columns of most of the daily journals lengthy prospectuses setting
-forth in roseate terms the why and the wherefore of various public
-Companies. These prospectuses are published with the view of inducing
-investors, or those having capital at command, to embark money in
-the projected undertakings, the majority of which are new ventures,
-formed, perhaps, to work a tin or silver mine; to manufacture some
-patented article; to advance money on land and house property; to
-conduct banking or insurance business; to construct tramways; to rear
-and sell cattle on some prairie of the Far West; or some other of
-the hundred-and-one openings that present themselves for commercial
-dealings. Indeed, there is no end to the variety of objects that may
-be selected as fitting media for joint-stock enterprise. The titles
-of the Companies bear the word ‘Limited’ tacked on to them. It is the
-purpose of this article to explain the meaning of the term, and at the
-same time give a slight general exposition of the law affecting such
-joint-stock Companies.
-
-A Company of the nature indicated above is simply an association or
-partnership entered into by a number of individuals—not fewer than
-seven—who take shares, not necessarily in equal proportions, in the
-joint-stock of the concern, the main object being the proportionate
-division of possible profits. When the joint agreement complies with
-the obligations laid down by statute, and is registered according to
-law, the subscribers become a corporation, and their Company has a
-common seal and ‘perpetual succession,’ to use a legal expression. It
-is only recently, comparatively speaking, that joint-stock Companies
-have existed in large numbers. Formerly, the formation of a Company
-was a difficult and costly operation, as a Royal Charter had to be
-specially obtained, or an Act of Parliament passed for the purpose.
-In the year 1844, however, an Act came into force which enabled
-joint-stock Companies to become incorporated by registering in a
-particular way, after certain preliminaries had been gone through.
-Still the manner of proceeding was inconvenient, and something simpler
-was urgently required. Business men and investors wanted greater
-facilities for launching joint-stock enterprises, and for the risking
-of a certain sum of money, and no more, in such concerns, thereby
-setting a limit to their liability. According to the old law of
-partnership, each and every member of a corporation or Company was
-liable to the utmost extent of his means for the liabilities that
-might have been contracted on behalf of the undertaking. A recent and
-peculiarly disastrous instance of this occurred in the ruinous downfall
-of the City of Glasgow Bank, which with its collapse brought beggary to
-families innumerable, the various shareholders being liable to their
-last farthing for the enormous load of debt due by the bank at the time
-of the crash.
-
-What is now known as ‘limited liability’ was first introduced in
-1855, parliament having slowly moved in the matter, and passed an Act
-formulating the principle. It was, however, in the year following
-that ‘limited liability’ was placed on a firm footing, the previous
-Act being repealed, and a new one passed, which likewise embodied
-procedure for what is called the ‘winding-up’ or dissolution of
-Companies. Various laws affecting the constitution and proceedings of
-joint-stock corporations had been passed previously and in addition
-to those mentioned above; but there being much confusion, through
-the many separate statutes, a successful attempt was made in 1862
-to consolidate the various laws, and ‘The Companies’ Act’ was then
-passed. This statute is now the recognised code applicable to the
-joint-stock Companies of the United Kingdom; and new Companies, with
-few exceptions, are incorporated under its provisions. This general
-Act also enabled Companies then existent to register themselves under
-the new order of things. It may not be generally known that this
-statute prohibits the formation of partnerships exceeding a given
-number of partners, unless such associations are incorporated under
-the provisions of the Act, or by a special Act of Parliament, or by
-letters-patent—modes so unusual that they may be almost laid out of
-consideration. It would thus appear that partnerships of individuals
-in excess of the number set down by law and not incorporated, are
-illegal. As already stated, a Company must have not fewer than seven
-shareholders; and not more than twenty people can enter into a business
-with the object of gaining money, unless legally incorporated, though
-exceptions are made if the business be mining within the jurisdiction
-of the Court of Stannaries. The term ‘stannaries’ refers to the tin
-mines and works of Devon and Cornwall. If the business be that of
-banking, the number of persons is restricted to ten. One essential
-feature of joint-stock investment is that the shares therein may be
-transferred by any member holding them without the consent of the other
-shareholders, unless, of course, the rules of the particular Company
-provide otherwise. Now, in ordinary partnerships, a partner must obtain
-the consent of his fellow-partners before disposing of his interest in
-the concern.
-
-All joint-stock Companies, even at the present time, are not
-incorporated under the Act of 1862. When the object of a proposed
-undertaking is a great public work, such as the construction of a
-line of railway, canal or water works, and when compulsory powers
-are required to purchase land, it is usual to obtain a special Act
-of Parliament in order to establish the Company and regulate its
-proceedings. As of old, such an endeavour is difficult and, as a rule,
-costly to carry through successfully. Difficult from the fact that
-most schemes of supposed public utility are sure to have a host of
-opponents, who fight the matter inch by inch. Costly, too, because,
-if a private bill is opposed in its passage through the Committees of
-the Houses of Parliament, counsel—who require enormous fees—have to be
-engaged to defend the interests of the promoters; witnesses to give
-evidence as to the necessity for the line of railway, water-works, or
-whatever it may happen to be, have to be sent to London and kept there
-at much expense; and the solicitors who distribute the expenses retain
-always a considerable share for themselves. It must not be forgotten,
-too, that newspapers share to a certain extent in the spoil, as the
-long parliamentary notices of private bills which appear generally
-during the month of November in each year have to be paid for at a
-goodly rate.
-
-After the Act of 1862 became law, a great number of Companies were
-originated, and each year sees them increasing, though the financial
-panic of 1866 was a great check to the promoters of such concerns,
-and a caution to enthusiastic believers in them. As may be supposed,
-Great Britain is foremost in this mode of investment; though several
-continental countries, notably France and the Netherlands, possess many
-commercial associations based on the plan of limited liability. In the
-United States, also, the method of limited responsibility has been long
-adopted. The evil experiences of the ‘black year’ of 1866 resulted in
-the passing of a short Act of Parliament in 1867, amending in some
-degree that of 1862, and affording a certain amount of protection to
-intending shareholders. These have been supplemented by other Acts,
-the latest of which passed in 1880. It is far from creditable to our
-commercial morality that many Companies started of late years have
-proved to be worthless bubbles, profitable only to their promoters and
-wire-pullers, and ruinous to the luckless investors. The legislature
-protects the pockets of the public to some extent; but it remains for
-intending shareholders in joint-stock Companies to aid themselves, by
-first inquiring thoroughly into the merits of the undertaking into
-which they propose embarking capital, and believing nothing that is not
-put before them in clear, definite, unambiguous language.
-
-Limited liability may be attained in two ways. The shareholders of a
-Company can limit their liability either to the amount not paid up on
-their shares—if there be any so unpaid—or to such sum as each may agree
-to contribute to the assets of the Company, if it should require to
-be wound up. In other words, the liability may be limited by shares
-or limited by guarantee. Most Companies are limited by shares. By
-this it is meant that a shareholder is liable to be called upon to
-pay, if required, a sum of money regulated by the shares he holds.
-Once the amount is paid, his liability is at an end, and he need not
-pay a farthing more, however great the liabilities of the concern may
-be. To put the matter on a plainer footing. If A B, a supposititious
-shareholder, take a hundred shares in a limited Company, which has,
-say, a capital of fifty thousand pounds in ten thousand shares of five
-pounds each, he of course risks five hundred pounds in the concern,
-and no more. The whole amount may not be paid up at once; but he is
-required to make good the sum, should it be wanted. The usual plan in
-applying for shares in a new Company with a share capital as indicated
-above is to pay a portion—say ten shillings per share—on application,
-other ten shillings on allotment, and the remainder of the five pounds
-by calls of perhaps one pound each at intervals of probably three
-months. However, the division of the payments depends greatly on the
-nature of the undertaking; some Companies can be worked at first with a
-comparatively small portion of the stated capital. If A B has only paid
-two pounds per share, and the Company in which he is a part-proprietor
-should unfortunately require to be wound up, he is liable to be called
-upon by the liquidator in charge of the winding-up to pay the remaining
-amount, so as to make his shares fully paid up. When the liability
-is by guarantee, each member of the Company undertakes, in the event
-of the concern being dissolved, to contribute a fixed sum towards
-the assets and the winding-up expenses. This sum being fixed at the
-formation of the Company, each member knows the utmost sum he will have
-to contribute, should it prove a failure and liquidation be resorted
-to. Some financiers think the latter plan of limited liability the
-better of the two. In Companies constituted in the ordinary manner, it
-is common to find that all the capital has been called-up, so that if
-the evil day does arrive, and creditors, growing clamorous, institute
-proceedings for winding-up, they may find the original capital
-dissipated and nothing left to satisfy their demands, save, possibly, a
-worked-out mine and a quantity of old-fashioned or worthless machinery.
-Now, under the guarantee system there is always a fund, more or less
-great, available for the payment of liabilities; and this fund cannot
-be handled by directors or officials, but must remain intact, to be
-used for its destined purpose. From the creditors’ point of view, this
-is highly satisfactory; but the guarantee system is not likely to
-recommend itself to shareholders where capital is required to carry on
-the business.
-
-When a Company is to be started, the first step is the drawing-up
-of a Memorandum of Association. This document details the name of
-the Company, its registered office, the objects of the undertaking,
-whatever they may be, the manner of liability, the amount of capital,
-and how it is to be divided into shares. Then the persons—not fewer
-than seven—who are desirous of forming themselves into a Company
-subscribe their names, stating the number of shares they agree to take.
-All the law requires them to take is one share each, so that a Company
-with a very large nominal capital of one-pound shares might begin and
-perhaps carry on operations with a real capital of seven pounds only,
-represented by the seven shares issued to the original septet forming
-the Company. The fixing of a title is comparatively easy, though, of
-course, it must not clash with that of any existing corporation. Once
-named, it is seldom that a Company changes its cognomen; still, if
-desirous of doing so, there are provisions in the Act for enabling
-this to be done. The registered office of the Company demands some
-explanation. A registered office of a joint-stock Company may be termed
-its house or domicile, where legal documents may be served, where the
-books required by Act of Parliament are kept, and where the association
-is to be found ‘in the body,’ so to speak. The place of business or
-works of the Company may be elsewhere—Timbuctoo, Colorado, or anywhere
-else, if the Company’s sphere of operations be foreign; but the
-registered office must be in Great Britain, that is, if the corporation
-is one of British origin. It may be noted that once the office is fixed
-in any one part of the United Kingdom—England, for example—it cannot be
-shifted to Scotland or Ireland, though it may be removed to any other
-place in England. The same rule applies to Scotland and Ireland. Thus,
-if the office of a Scotch Company be registered as being at Dundee, it
-could not legally be changed to Carlisle; though it could be removed,
-should occasion require, to Wick or Edinburgh, or to any other city or
-town in Scotland.
-
-When the Memorandum of Association is properly settled, it is necessary
-to consider whether the Company should be registered with Articles
-of Association or without them. These Articles are the rules and
-regulations for the management of the Company, the issuing of shares,
-the holding of meetings, the auditing of books and accounts, and
-such-like necessary business. Unlimited Companies, and also those
-limited by guarantee, cannot be registered without special Articles of
-Association; but for the ordinary class of Companies—that is, those
-limited by shares—the Act gives a form of Articles which may be adopted
-by promoters in whole or in part or not at all, and with or without
-special articles in addition. If these are not adopted, it is necessary
-to have special Articles for the guidance of the business. After the
-Memorandum and Articles have been duly signed and witnessed, they are
-next stamped and taken to the Registrar of Joint-stock Companies.
-If the registered office is in England and Wales, the Registrar at
-Somerset House, London, is the proper official to apply to; if in
-Scotland or Ireland, then the respective Registrars at Edinburgh and
-Dublin take the matter in hand. Should everything be in due legal form,
-a certificate of registration is issued, and the Company becomes a
-corporation.
-
-A Company may begin business as soon as it is registered; but this is
-not usual, as it is seldom that a sufficient number of shares have
-been subscribed to afford the requisite capital. To procure this,
-either before or after registration, the promoters issue a prospectus,
-stating the objects and prospects of the undertaking, and inviting
-investors to become shareholders in the Company. It may be taken for
-granted that the objects and intentions of the Company are set forth in
-very captivating style, and that the best face is put on the matter,
-so that those having capital at command and on the outlook for media
-for investment may be induced to subscribe. The great vehicle for
-giving publicity to these prospectuses is the daily and weekly press,
-though thousands of them, printed in quarto or folio, are sent through
-the post to the private addresses of well-to-do persons throughout
-the country. If the advertising has had due effect, and a sufficient
-subscription has been obtained, the directors hold a meeting and
-proceed to allot shares. Of course, it is not always the case that the
-shares are subscribed by the public; in fact it is a matter of chance
-whether they are ‘taken up’ or not. In the case of a failure of this
-kind, it is said then that the Company has failed to ‘float,’ and the
-heavy preliminary expenses thus fall upon the originators. In allotting
-shares to subscribers, the directors may accept or reject applications,
-or allot a smaller number of shares than that applied for; and they
-are not compelled to allot in proportion to the applicants. Thus A B
-may get the hundred shares he wanted; while X Y, who likewise desired
-one hundred shares, only has fifty put down to his name. All these
-preliminary matters being fairly and squarely gone through, the Company
-can then proceed to business, though there are various forms to be
-complied with, the description of which scarcely comes within the scope
-of the present article.
-
-The beginning of the ‘last scene of all, that ends, or may end, this
-strange eventful history,’ is the winding-up proceedings. A joint-stock
-Company once formed, can only be dissolved by means of ‘winding-up.’
-The general grounds for winding-up may be stated as follows: whenever
-the Company passes a special resolution to that effect—whenever
-business is not commenced within a year from the incorporation of
-the Company, or when business is suspended for one year—whenever the
-members are reduced below the legal number of seven—whenever the
-Company is unable to pay its lawful debts—and lastly, whenever the
-Court deems it just and equitable that the Company should be wound-up.
-The liquidating or winding-up is generally a tedious process; but it
-will not be necessary to detail here the varied forms of procedure
-which come under that head. What has been here set down is simply
-the A B C of the subject, the varied ramifications of which cover a
-deal of ground, and occasionally run into many dark thickets, some
-of them dangerous to creditors, some to directors, but nearly all to
-shareholders. These last ought always to walk warily, and never, if
-possible, without full knowledge and the best procurable advice of
-stockbrokers, bankers, lawyers, and others versed in the mysteries and
-risks of speculation, whether ‘limited’ or otherwise.
-
-
-
-
-BY MEAD AND STREAM.
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVI.—DOWNHILL.
-
-After that dumb leave-taking of Madge at the station, Philip returned
-to his chambers, passing through the human torrent of Cheapside
-without any sense of sound, touch, or feeling. The room in which she
-had so lately stood looked desolate somehow; and yet her visit was
-like an ill-remembered dream. Only the plaintive voice with the faint
-‘Good-bye’ haunted his ears. The sound was still in them, move where he
-would.
-
-He tried to shake off the stupor which had fastened upon him as the
-natural result of narcotics, overstrained nerves, and want of sleep.
-One clear idea remained to him: so far as Madge was concerned, he had
-acted as a man ought to act in his circumstances. Dick Crawshay would
-speedily satisfy her on that score. There was a tinge of bitterness in
-this reflection; and the bitterness brought a gleam of light, although
-not sufficient yet to dispel the confused shadows of his brain. It
-sufficed, however, to make him aware that it was Wrentham’s vague
-whisperings about Beecham, and Madge’s strange association with that
-person, which had urged him to act so harshly. For after all, there
-was no reason why he should not work his way out of the mess and win
-sufficient means to make Madge content, however far the position might
-be below that in which he would like to place her. But the haunting
-voice echoed its ‘Good-bye,’ and it seemed as if he had put away the
-love which might have sustained him in this time of trial. ‘What a
-fool, what a fool!’ And he paced the floor restlessly, repeating that
-melancholy confession.
-
-He wished Wrentham would come back, so that he might discuss the state
-of affairs again, and obtain explanations of certain items in the
-accounts he had gone over during the night. There he was at last, and
-something particular must have happened to make him knock so violently.
-
-He threw open the door, and Mr Shield entered in his hurried blustering
-way, bringing with him a mixed aroma of brandy and gin. His bushy beard
-and whiskers were tangled, and his somewhat bloodshot eyes stared
-fiercely into space.
-
-‘Pretty mess—horrible mess,’ he muttered in his jerky manner, as he
-forced his way into the room and flung his huge form on the couch; ‘and
-I can’t get you out of it. I’m in a mess too.’
-
-The surprise at the appearance of Shield, his rough manner, and the
-announcement he made, roused Philip most effectually from his own
-morbid broodings.
-
-‘You in a mess, sir—I do not understand.’ In his bewilderment, he
-omitted the welcome which he would have given at any other time, and
-did not even express surprise that Shield should have answered his
-letter in person.
-
-‘You’ll get it into your head quick enough.—Give me a drink
-first—brandy, if you have it. Take a cigar. They’re first-rate. Drink,
-smoke, and I’ll tell you.’
-
-He threw a huge cigar on the table, and lit one himself in a furious
-way. But, in spite of his rough reckless manner, he was watching Philip
-narrowly from under his heavy eyebrows. Philip having mechanically
-placed a bottle and glass on the table, stood waiting explanations.
-
-‘Light up.’ (The command was obeyed slowly.) ‘Give us soda.... Ah,
-that’s better. Take some—you’ll want it to keep your courage up.’
-
-‘Not at present, thank you. I should be glad if you would tell me
-at once the meaning of your strange statement that you too are in
-difficulties. That fact makes my loss of your money so much the worse.’
-
-‘It’s bad—bad. Easily told. Think of me doing it! Got into a bogus
-thing—lost every available penny I had. That’s why there is no help for
-you.’
-
-Mr Shield did not look like a person who had fallen from the height of
-fortune to the depth of poverty. He drank and smoked as one indifferent
-to the severest buffets of fate.
-
-‘Gracious powers—you cannot be serious!’ ejaculated Philip.
-
-‘Fact, all the same. Not ruin exactly; but not a brass farthing to come
-to me for a year or more.’
-
-Philip paced the floor in agitation, unable to realise immediately the
-horrible calamity which had befallen his uncle. But the severity of the
-shock had the effect of rousing him to new life and vigour. All his
-misfortunes dwindled to pettiness beside those of his benefactor. He
-stopped before him, calm, and with an expression of firmness to which
-the lines made by recent calamities added strength. There was no more
-wildness in the eyes; he had suddenly grown old.
-
-‘I understand, Mr Shield, that your present position is no better than
-my own?’ he said slowly.
-
-‘Not much—maybe worse.’
-
-‘It shall not be worse, for whatever I can gain by any labour or skill
-is yours.’
-
-‘So?’ grunted Shield as he drank and stared at the man through clouds
-of smoke.
-
-‘Yes, my course is plain,’ Philip went on deliberately; ‘we must sell
-the works and material for what they will fetch; they ought to fetch
-more than enough to clear off the debts.’
-
-‘Well?’
-
-‘I believed—and still believe—that if you had been able to make the
-necessary advances, we could have carried the scheme to a successful
-issue, notwithstanding my blunders. My first mistake was in beginning
-on too big a scale. That cannot be helped. Now we have to look the ruin
-straight in the face, and whatever work can do to make you feel your
-losses less, it shall be done.’
-
-‘Don’t see how it’s to be done,’ muttered Shield, as if finding a
-difficulty somewhere.
-
-‘We’ll try our best at anyrate; and you will believe, Mr Shield, that
-I should never have touched the money, if there had ever occurred to
-me a suspicion that you might some day feel the loss of it. You will
-remember that I always understood your wealth to be almost unlimited.’
-
-‘_My_ wealth never was, and isn’t likely to be. Been a mighty fall in
-diamonds lately.’
-
-‘Well, I understood so.’ (The emphasis on the ‘my’ was not observed by
-Philip.) ‘However, I hope you agree to accept the only return I can
-make for all your kindness to me.’
-
-‘Don’t see how it’s to be done,’ growled Shield, again finding a
-difficulty somewhere.
-
-‘We must find that out, sir,’ said Philip with quiet resolution.
-
-‘Got to find your way out of this mess first. The works won’t
-bring half enough to clear off your debts. You’ve been cheated all
-round—paying the highest price for rubbish’——
-
-‘Impossible!’ interrupted Philip. ‘Wrentham may have made mistakes; but
-he is too much a man of business to have done that.’
-
-‘Fact it was done, all the same. Then there’s no time to turn round.
-That bill you drew on me falls due in a week or so.’
-
-Philip had been about to say, ‘Wrentham must account to us, if the
-materials have not been according to sample and order;’ but Wrentham
-was driven from his mind by the last sentence, which Shield jerked out
-before any interruption was possible.
-
-‘Bill!—What bill?’
-
-‘The one for six thousand—your brother Coutts discounted it, and’....
-Here Shield made a long pause, looking steadily at Philip ... ‘but it
-was not signed by Austin Shield.’
-
-The huge fist came down on the table with a thump that made the
-glasses rattle and the lamp shake. Philip stared for an instant,
-thunder-stricken by this new revelation. He recovered quickly, and gave
-a prompt answer.
-
-‘If there is such a bill—I did not sign it either.’
-
-Then they glared at each other through the smoke. Shield’s face with
-its shaggy hair always looked like that of a Scotch terrier, in which
-only the eyes give a hint of expression. Suddenly his hand was thrust
-out and grasped Philip’s with hearty satisfaction.
-
-‘Right! Was sure of it without a word from you; but your brother is not
-sure that your signature is not genuine.’
-
-‘Did he say so?’ (How the pale cheeks flushed with indignation at the
-thought that Coutts should admit the one signature to be a forgery, and
-doubt whether his was or not.)
-
-‘Didn’t say it—looked it,’ answered Shield with jerky emphasis.
-
-‘When did you see him?’
-
-‘Yesterday.’
-
-‘Why did he not come to me then, as soon as he had seen you?’
-
-‘Don’t know’—but there was a low guttural sound, as if Shield were
-inwardly chuckling with self-congratulation that he understood very
-well why Coutts had chosen to go to him and not to his brother.
-
-Philip was annoyed and puzzled by this curious transaction. He had
-always regarded his brother as such a keen trader, that it was
-difficult to understand how a mistake of this magnitude could be made
-by him.
-
-‘Did he say how he came to deal with a bill for so large an amount
-without mentioning it to me?’
-
-‘Says he took it in the ordinary way of business from your manager
-Wrentham. Had no reason to doubt its genuineness till afterwards when
-he came to compare signatures. Then he called on me.’
-
-‘Wrentham!’ Philip started to his feet. ‘Can the man have been cheating
-me all along?’
-
-‘Looks like it.’
-
-‘He ought to be here now. I’ll send for him’——
-
-‘Stop! There’s more in the affair and more to be got out of it than we
-see at this minute. We have more than a week to work in. Let’s work.’
-
-‘Willingly; but in this matter we have nothing more to do than
-repudiate the forgery, and leave Coutts and the police to settle with
-the forger.’
-
-He felt bitter enough towards Coutts to have little regret for the loss
-which was about to fall on him. He would have felt still more bitter
-if he had known how eagerly Coutts had made use of this forged bill to
-endeavour to ingratiate himself into the place which Philip held in
-their uncle’s estimation.
-
-Wrentham had assured Coutts, and given him what appeared to be
-conclusive evidence, that Shield had realised fabulous sums out of
-the diamond fields, and had it in his power to realise as much more
-if he chose to work the ground. The greedy eyes of Coutts Hadleigh
-had gleamed with wild fancies suggested by these disclosures of the
-man who had been for a time one of Shield’s London agents; and who
-must therefore be able to speak with certainty of his affairs; and the
-greedy brain had been for months busy devising schemes by which he
-might win the rich man’s esteem and confidence, with the prospect of a
-share, at least, of his possessions. This forged bill afforded him the
-opportunity he desired, and he made the most of it without committing
-himself to any definite charge against his brother.
-
-The cleverest men are apt to judge others in some degree by reflection
-of their own natures, and so go wide of the mark. Coutts tried to reach
-the good-will of Mr Shield through his pocket; and he went wide of his
-mark. He was, however, at present happy in the idea that he had scored
-a bull’s-eye.
-
-‘That all you see to do?’ queried Shield after a pause, during which he
-watched Philip.
-
-‘So far as the forgery is concerned, that is all.’
-
-‘Ah.... I see more. Maybe we can get back a little of the waste. No
-saying. Worth trying. Anyhow, we can have a grin at the beggars who
-thought us bigger fools than we looked. That’s what we’ve got to work
-for.’
-
-‘I don’t quite see what advantage we are to obtain in that way.’
-
-‘Clear enough, though. We recover a part of what is lost—maybe the
-greater part. Don’t give Wrentham or your brother a hint till you see
-me again. Go on with your arrangements as if you had heard nothing.’
-
-‘Very well, since it is your wish. Meanwhile, I shall get another bed
-fitted up here, so that you can occupy it as soon as you are obliged to
-leave the hotel. We’ll manage to keep on the chambers somehow.’
-
-‘All right,’ said Shield, nodding his head heavily. ‘But you don’t know
-what you are bringing on yourself. I’m fond of _that_.’
-
-He pointed with his cigar to the brandy bottle. Philip gave his
-shoulders an impatient jerk; he had no need for this confession.
-
-‘I hope not too fond, sir; although it is easy to understand how a man
-leading such a solitary life as yours has been may contract the habit
-of looking for comfort from that false friend. But if it be so, then it
-is better you should be with me than with strangers.’
-
-‘Kind—very kind. I thank you. And now that I’ve given you all this bad
-news, here’s a bit of good news. Found an old friend of mine—takes
-interest in everything. Says he’ll make an offer for the works if on
-investigation he finds anything practicable in your scheme. More; if
-he finds that your failure is not due to negligence, he’ll make you an
-offer for your services as manager of some sort.’
-
-This was indeed good news, and Philip’s eyes brightened with pleasure;
-but his first thought was for others.
-
-‘Then we shall not starve, uncle, thank heaven; and if your friend has
-capital enough, I may see my project carried out under my own direction
-yet.’
-
-‘Maybe. Don’t be too jolly over it. Beecham’s a crotchety cur, and may
-change the whole thing.’
-
-‘Beecham!—Is he the friend you mean?’
-
-‘Yes. Says he knows you, and rather likes you.’
-
-‘He is very kind,’ said Philip coldly; ‘but there is a possibility of
-our not agreeing if brought into frequent contact.’
-
-‘No fear of that, no fear of that.—I’m off. Good-night.’
-
-But before going off, he helped himself from the brandy bottle again;
-then, without the slightest indication of unsteadiness, strode out of
-the room and got into the hansom which was waiting for him.
-
-
-
-
-PENCIL-MAKING.
-
-
-At the head of the beautiful valley of Borrowdale lies the little
-hamlet of Seathwaite. Near a clump of historic yews, six or eight
-whitewashed cottages nestle, a favourite haunt of artists, and the one
-solitary place in England where plumbago is to be found in absolute
-purity. Here the mountains converge on either side, until Glaramara
-at last fills the gap and closes in the vale. Travellers who wish
-to proceed farther, must go, either on horseback or on foot, over
-Sty Head Pass, and so into Wastdale, or past Scafell, into Langdale.
-Secluded little spot in Cumberland as this is, its hidden treasure was
-well known to our ancestors at least two hundred years ago; nor did
-any sentimental ideas of spoiling the lovely scenery deter them from
-mining into the mountain-side in search of that peculiar form of carbon
-commonly known as blacklead, plumbago, or graphite. The first and by
-far the most generally used of these names is a decided misnomer, for
-although there are many lead-mines in Cumberland, plumbago contains no
-trace of lead, but is one of the two crystallised forms in which carbon
-exists; the other being the diamond. Plumbago as found here lies in
-nests or pockets—or _sops_, as they are locally named. These sops are
-cavernous holes, varying in size from a few cubic inches to several
-cubic feet, and occur in the solid rock, resembling on a large scale
-what are known as air-holes in iron castings. The miners follow certain
-veins of granite as a guide to the sops, and come upon them suddenly
-in the heart of the mountain. It is in these that the plumbago—or
-_wad_, as the workmen call it—is found, in the form of black lumps,
-just like eggs in a nest. Some pieces are as small as peas, and others
-as large as big melons. How that plumbago came there, is a great
-puzzle to geologists. Odd pieces have been occasionally turned up by
-husbandmen whilst delving the ground; but it is probable that these
-were originally imbedded in the rocks, masses of which, having become
-detached by frost and rain, fell into the valley, and in their descent
-were broken up, and so laid bare the plumbago that was inside.
-
-Owing to its power of standing great heat, our forefathers used
-plumbago for crucibles, a large portion being sent to the Mint for
-operations connected with coining. Pencils were also made of it; and
-people who have been accustomed to hear of Cumberland lead-pencils,
-may imagine that they are yet; but it is a mistake. A drawing-pencil
-made of this virgin graphite cannot be manufactured to cost less than
-a shilling; and who, except for some exceptional work, would give such
-a price? The scientific chemist has stepped in and supplied a cheaper
-article. Conté, a Frenchman, about the end of last century, was the
-first to suggest a substitute, or rather a partial one; and since then,
-his idea has been step by step worked out and perfected, until to-day
-we are able to produce a commercial pencil at the wholesale price of
-less than one farthing. Even crucibles are now rarely made from it; so
-that, what with one thing and another, the Borrowdale mine has been
-closed for the last five years. Many of the visitors suppose that the
-stoppage of the works is caused by the mine having been exhausted.
-This, however, is a mistake, as there is every reason to believe that
-there are yet very large quantities of plumbago in the rock; but the
-cost of production, and the discovery of cheaper substitutes, render
-further mining impracticable as a commercial undertaking.
-
-To give an idea of the difference in value of plumbago—the last lot
-from this mine sold in London brought thirty shillings per pound; and
-it has been known to sell for one hundred and sixty shillings; whilst
-the price at present for best foreign is about forty shillings per
-hundredweight, or, say, fourpence per pound. Inferior qualities, such
-as are used for blackleading grates, &c., can be bought much cheaper.
-Foreign plumbago is chiefly imported from Ceylon and Bohemia, where it
-is found in veins in large quantities; but as this kind cannot be used
-for pencils in its crude state, it has to be ‘manufactured.’ This is
-done largely at Keswick; so that, after all, when a purchaser buys a
-‘best Cumberland pencil,’ he is not altogether deceived; for although
-the blacklead does come from Ceylon and the cedar from Florida, were
-they not first introduced to each other by the Keswick workman, toiling
-at his bench in the water-turned mills on the banks of the Greta? The
-Borrowdale graphite varies much in degree of hardness; consequently,
-in the old days when it was made into pencils, each lump was tested
-and sorted according to the depth of colour it produced on a piece of
-paper. The classification was from H.H.H. or very hard, to B.B.B.B.
-or very soft and black. The graphite was then sawn by hand into
-strips, which were inserted into a slot or groove in the wood, and the
-whole glued together and turned in a lathe into a pencil. The method
-of to-day is quite different, and there being great competition in
-this trade, speed combined with good work is the principal end to be
-attained to bring the cost as low as possible.
-
-The three mills at Keswick employ about a hundred workpeople, males and
-females. The men earn on an average about twenty-five shillings per
-week, and the women about twelve. The blacklead—we are now speaking
-of imported plumbago—is first crushed and then mixed with what is
-technically called a _binding_, the composition of which is a trade
-secret and varies at each mill. Its purpose is, as the term denotes,
-to give a glutinous consistency to the powdered plumbago and also to
-add to the blackness of its marking qualities. Lampblack, sulphuric
-acid, gum-arabic, resin, and several other substances are used in this
-binding. The whole is worked into a pulp between revolving stones. It
-is then partially dried and again crushed. Whilst in this half-dry
-state, it is forced through a mould under considerable pressure. These
-moulds are of various sizes, from a very big one a quarter-inch square,
-used for fancy walking-sticks—a mere catchpenny, and purchased only by
-tourists as mementoes—to the little round ones used for putting into
-pencil-cases and which are called ‘lead-points.’ The intermediate sizes
-are known as Carpenters, Drawing, Pocket-book, and Programme. A workman
-receives the thin strip of blacklead as it is slowly forced through the
-mould, and at intervals breaks it off, carefully placing it on a board
-between pieces of wood. By this means a large quantity can be kept
-without fear of damage. When sufficient is moulded to compose a baking,
-the oven is heated; and these long slips, which are exactly the size of
-the lead in a pencil, are cut into lengths of about four inches, and
-packed with care in cast-iron crucibles. These are then put into the
-oven, and allowed to remain at a red heat for two hours. When gently
-cooled, the leads are ready for pencils.
-
-In another part of the manufactory, a different kind of work is going
-on—that of preparing, or rather working the wood, for it undergoes
-no change but that of shape. Cedar is universally used, except in
-very low qualities and carpenters’ pencils. Most of this wood comes
-from America; and Florida is one of the largest exporting States. The
-chief reasons for using cedar are—that it is easily worked, is soft,
-straight-grained, free from knots, and is sweet-scented. Am eminent
-firm of toilet-soap makers have taken note of this last quality, and
-purchase all the cedar sawdust that is made in these pencil-mills. A
-minimum of waste is one of the sure signs of an advanced civilisation.
-Many and various circular saws reduce the cedar logs into strips of
-two sizes—one, about thirty inches long, an inch and a quarter wide,
-and three-eighths of an inch thick; the other, of the same dimensions,
-but only half the thickness. These are examined; and any having
-defects, such as knots, cracks, &c., are laid aside, to be used in
-shorter lengths, the bad places having been cut out. The thicker or
-three-eighth-inch strips are then passed through the grooving-machine,
-which cuts out three perfect and clean grooves up the whole length.
-These are now ready to receive the strips of lead, which are first
-dipped in glue and placed by girls into the grooves, which they exactly
-fill. The wood has now the appearance of having three black lines
-running parallel along the whole length. This surface is then brushed
-over with hot glue and the thinner strip placed firmly on it. If any
-pencil is looked at closely, the joining of these two pieces will be
-easily noticed. The whole is placed, with many similar ones, in a
-frame, where they are pressed firmly together until the glue has quite
-set.
-
-It will be understood that now each piece is composed of two strips
-of wood, firmly glued together, inside which, three grooves, filled
-with plumbago composition, run from one end to the other—about thirty
-inches, or sufficient to make four pencils to each groove—that is,
-twelve pencils in all. The length of a finished pencil is seven inches.
-These pieces are then taken to a very curious machine and passed twice
-through. The first time, the top surface is ploughed from end to end
-into what resembles three distinct semicircular ridges; the piece is
-then turned, and the other side treated in a similar manner. The result
-of this second ploughing is that three perfectly circular and entirely
-separate lengths are seen to emerge from the machine. On examining
-any one of these, it will be found to be a pencil thirty inches long,
-having the vein of blacklead exactly in the centre. This is an American
-invention, and has done much to reduce the cost of the modern pencil.
-
-The pencils, however, have to pass through many hands before they can
-claim to be finished. Women rub them with fine sand-paper, other women
-varnish and polish them, and then they are cut by a circular saw into
-seven-inch lengths. For the first time, they could now be recognised by
-a child as pencils. A thin shaving is taken off each end, which gives
-them a finished appearance and causes the lead to shine, as the saw
-does not cut clean enough for a fastidious public. Lastly, the pencil
-is stamped, not necessarily always with the maker’s name, for nowadays
-he occasionally sinks his individuality for the purpose of selling his
-wares; and for an order of a gross, some makers will stamp any village
-stationer’s name on each pencil.
-
-
-
-
-MR PUDSTER’S RETURN.
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-Mr Gideon Maggleby had been married rather less than two-and-twenty
-hours, when at about nine o’clock on the morning of March 23, 1868, he
-walked into the room in which he had so often breakfasted and dined
-with his late friend and partner, Solomon Pudster. Mr Maggleby, who was
-pre-eminently a man of business, had not seen fit to go to the Isle
-of Wight or to Paris to spend his honeymoon; and Mrs Maggleby, who
-was nothing if not a woman of sound sense, had loyally accepted the
-decision of her third lord and master. They had agreed to stay in town,
-and not to allow their new happiness to interfere with their material
-interests in Mincing Lane. Mr Maggleby had determined, however, to make
-a holiday of the day after his wedding; to stay at home in the morning
-with his wife, to escort her to Madame Tussaud’s in the afternoon, and
-to take her to the play in the evening.
-
-With this comfortable programme in his mind’s eye, Mr Maggleby came
-down to breakfast in his flowered dressing-gown. Mrs Maggleby, he knew,
-would not be many minutes behind him, and he therefore rang the bell
-for the coffee, and turned lazily towards the table, upon which lay
-two piles of letters. The smaller heap chiefly consisted of missives
-addressed to Mrs Pudster, for the marriage of the previous day had not
-as yet been noised abroad in the country, and Mrs Maggleby had several
-female correspondents who communicated with her much more often than
-she communicated with them. The larger bundle was made up of letters
-addressed either to Mr Maggleby or to Messrs Pudster and Maggleby, the
-letters to the firm having been already brought down from Mincing Lane
-by a confidential clerk.
-
-It was a chilly morning; and Mr Maggleby, with the letters in his hand,
-sank into an easy-chair by the fireside, and then began to polish
-his spectacles. But ere he had time to complete that operation, one
-envelope attracted the attention of his not very dim-sighted eyes.
-It bore the post-mark ‘Plymouth,’ and was addressed in a familiar
-hand-writing. Without waiting to put on his spectacles, Mr Maggleby
-seized this envelope and tore it open. For an instant he stared at the
-letter which it contained; then he turned white, and fell back with a
-groan. But Mr Maggleby was a man of considerable self-command, and he
-soon partly recovered himself.
-
-‘Maria must not see me in this agitated state,’ he murmured, as he
-rose. ‘I shall go back to my dressing-room, and decide upon some plan
-of action before I face her.’ And with unsteady steps, he quitted the
-dining-room, taking with him the letter that was the cause of his
-emotion.
-
-Almost immediately afterwards, a servant entered with the coffee and
-some covered dishes, which she set upon the table; and no sooner had
-she withdrawn than Mrs Maggleby appeared. Mrs Maggleby looked blooming,
-and was evidently in capital spirits. She caught up her letters, sat
-down smiling in the very easy-chair from which her husband had risen a
-few minutes earlier, and began to read. The first letters to be opened
-were, of course, those which were addressed to her in her new name.
-They contained congratulations upon her marriage. Then she attacked
-the envelopes that were addressed to Mrs Pudster. One contained a
-bill; another contained a request for Mrs Pudster’s vote and interest
-on behalf of Miss Tabitha Gabbles, a maiden lady who was seeking
-admission into the Home for the Daughters of Decayed Trinity Pilots;
-and a third brought a lithographed letter from the Marquis of Palmyra,
-imploring the recipient to make some small subscription to the funds
-of the Association for the Encouragement of Asparagus Culture in the
-Scilly Islands. There were also letters from Miss Martha Tigstake
-and Mrs Benjamin Bowery, dealing with nothing in particular and with
-everything in general; and finally there was a letter bearing the
-post-mark ‘Plymouth.’ Mrs Maggleby opened it carelessly; but a single
-glance at its contents caused her to start up, grasp convulsively at
-the mantelpiece, utter an exclamation, and tremble like a leaf.
-
-‘Poor Gideon!’ she said. ‘What a fearful blow! He mustn’t see me in
-this agitated state. I shall go up-stairs again, and decide upon some
-plan of action before I face him.’ And Mrs Maggleby, letter in hand and
-pale as death, quitted the room, leaving the coffee and the eggs and
-bacon and the crumpets to get cold.
-
-Three-quarters of an hour later, Mr Maggleby ventured down-stairs
-again. He was dressed as if to go to the City, and in his hand he held
-a letter which bore the simple address, ‘Maria.’ This letter he laid
-upon his wife’s plate. It was worded as follows:
-
- MY DEAREST LIFE—I am suddenly and unexpectedly summoned to
- Mincing Lane on business of the greatest importance. I do
- not know exactly when I shall return, but you must not be
- anxious.—Yours devotedly,
-
- GIDEON.
-
-Mr Maggleby hastily seized a tepid crumpet, and without the formality
-of seating himself at the table, devoured the clammy dainty. Then,
-hearing his wife upon the stairs, he rushed like a madman from the
-room, and an instant afterwards, left the house and quietly closed the
-front-door behind him.
-
-Mrs Maggleby, whose face bore traces of recent weeping, entered the
-dining-room as if she expected to find the place tenanted by a ghost.
-Discovering, however, that it was empty, she resumed her seat by the
-fire, and, with an hysterical outburst, buried her head in her hands.
-
-‘Poor dear Gideon!’ she sobbed. ‘What will become of him and me? We
-shall be imprisoned for life; I know we shall. The house will have to
-be shut up; the business will go to ruin; the servants will have to
-know all. Oh, it is too terrible! But I must compose myself. Gideon
-will be coming down, and I must be prepared to break the news to him;’
-and with great self-command, Mrs Maggleby wiped her eyes and seated
-herself at the table. As she did so, she caught sight of her husband’s
-note, which she eagerly opened.
-
-‘He has gone!’ she exclaimed despairingly, when she had read it. ‘I am
-left alone to bear the trial!—Ah, Gideon, you little know how cruel you
-are. But I must follow you. We must concert measures at once.’
-
-Once more she went up-stairs. She put on her bonnet and cloak; she
-covered her flushed face with a thick veil; and without saying a word
-to any of her servants, she left the house, and made the best of her
-way to the nearest cabstand.
-
-Meantime, Mr Maggleby had been driven to his place of business in
-Mincing Lane. He entered his office, and sat down as if dazed, in
-his private room. Hearing of his principal’s unexpected arrival, the
-head-clerk, Mr John Doddard, almost immediately appeared. He too was
-scared and breathless.
-
-‘Read, sir, read!’ he gasped as he thrust an open letter into Mr
-Maggleby’s hand.
-
-Mr Maggleby mechanically took the letter, and read aloud as follows:
-
- _On board S.S. Camel, off Plymouth, Tuesday._
-
- DEAR MR DODDARD—As you are probably not expecting me, I send a
- line ashore to let you know that I hope to return in time to
- be at business at the usual hour on Thursday. Please take care
- that there is a good fire in my private room, as a visit to
- Demerara always, as you know, renders me particularly sensitive
- to cold and damp. I am writing to Mr Maggleby. We have had a
- capital voyage so far, but the weather in the Channel threatens
- to be rather dirty. I shall land at Gravesend; and if you can
- find out when the _Camel_ is likely to be there, you may send
- down some one to meet me.—Yours faithfully,
-
- SOLOMON PUDSTER.
-
-‘I knew it!’ ejaculated Mr Maggleby. ‘I have just received the letter
-that he speaks of.’
-
-‘What does it all mean?’ asked Mr Doddard. ‘I seem to be dreaming, sir.
-We buried poor Mr Pudster eight months ago, didn’t we?’
-
-‘So I thought,’ murmured Mr Maggleby vaguely. ‘But this letter is
-certainly in his handwriting. And look at the post-mark. There it is,
-as plain as possible: “Plymouth, Mar. 22, 1868.” That was yesterday;
-and to-day is Wednesday, March 23d.—Just read my letter, Mr Doddard!’
-and he pulled from his pocket a missive, which he handed to his clerk.
-
-Mr Doddard read as follows:
-
- _On board S.S. Camel, off Plymouth, Tuesday._
-
- MY DEAR GIDEON—Here I am almost at home again. I fancy that you
- didn’t expect to see me just at present; for I wasn’t able to
- write to you before we left Demerara; so, as we are now sending
- ashore here, I post you a few lines to prepare you for the
- surprise. It is, as you know, quite unusual for vessels of this
- line to call at Plymouth, and therefore I haven’t time to send
- you a long letter; though, if we also call at Southampton, I
- will write again from there. I have told Doddard to send some
- one to meet me at Gravesend; let him take down any letters that
- you may want me to see at once.—Yours affectionately,
-
- SOLOMON.
-
-‘Well, I never did!’ cried Mr Doddard. ‘Yet I could swear to Mr
-Pudster’s handwriting anywhere. It is a terrible thing for a man who
-ought to be lying quietly in his coffin to come back like this, and
-upset every one’s calculations.’
-
-‘You are certain about the handwriting?’ asked Mr Maggleby anxiously.
-
-‘Quite certain!’ replied Mr Doddard. ‘What a frightful thing for poor
-Mrs Pudster!’
-
-‘Mrs Maggleby, you mean!’ said Mr Maggleby. ‘Yes. I don’t know how to
-break it to her. It’s a case of bigamy; isn’t it?’
-
-‘Let us hope for the best, sir. Mr Pudster won’t prosecute, I fancy,
-considering the peculiar character of the circumstances. It’s his
-fault. That’s my opinion. I could swear, even now, that we buried
-him. He must have revived in his coffin, and been dug up again by the
-gravediggers; and must then have gone over to Demerara, in order to
-avoid shocking his poor wife.’
-
-‘I wonder our Demerara agents didn’t say something about it when they
-wrote by the last mail,’ said Mr Maggleby.
-
-‘Oh, of course he kept them quiet, sir. But it’s a cruel case—that’s
-all I have to say. And though I have known Mr Pudster these thirty
-years, and liked him too, I don’t hesitate to say that he’s not
-behaving straightforwardly in this piece of business.’
-
-‘Hush! Wait until you know of his motives,’ said Mr Maggleby.
-
-‘He can’t excuse himself, sir, I tell you,’ rejoined Mr Doddard warmly.
-‘If he comes back, I go. So there! And I say it with all respect to
-you, sir. When a man’s once dead, he’s got no right to come back again.
-It isn’t natural; and what’s more, it isn’t business-like.’
-
-The bitterness of Mr Doddard’s remarks in this connection may be partly
-accounted for by consideration of the fact that Mr Maggleby had a few
-days previously announced his intention of taking the head-clerk into
-partnership at an early date. Mr Pudster’s return would of course knock
-this project on the head.
-
-‘Well, Doddard,’ said Mr Maggleby, ‘we can’t mend matters by talking.
-We can only wait; and perhaps, when we see Mr Pudster, we shall find
-that’——
-
-But Mr Maggleby’s philosophical remarks were suddenly cut short by the
-unexpected arrival of Mrs Maggleby upon the scene. She rushed into
-the private room, stretched forth a letter, and fell sobbing upon her
-husband’s neck.
-
-Mr Maggleby placed his wife in a chair, opened a cupboard, gave her a
-glass of wine, took the letter, and read it. Like the others, it was
-dated from on board the _Camel_, off Plymouth. ‘MY OWN DEAREST WIFE,’
-it ran—‘In a few hours from this I shall, I hope, be with you once
-more, never again to leave you. I ought to have already apprised you of
-the probable date of my return; but at the last moment before starting,
-I had no opportunity of writing. How glad I shall be to see you! My
-long absence has been a great trial to me, and I feel sure that it has
-also tried you; but it is now almost at an end. I will, if possible,
-write again from Southampton, and tell you exactly when to expect me.
-The sea in the Channel is so rough that at present it is difficult to
-say when we shall get into the river.—Your ever loving husband,
-
- SOLOMON.’
-
-‘It is most painful!’ gasped Mrs Maggleby. ‘What can we do, Gideon? You
-must manage to meet Solomon at Gravesend. Look in the newspaper, and
-see whether the _Camel_ has been signalled yet. He must hear first of
-what has happened either from my lips or from yours; and I am really
-not well enough to go myself. I thought that he was lying cold in
-his coffin. Oh, that I should have committed bigamy! I ought to have
-remained faithful to his memory. This is my punishment. But he must—he
-shall forgive me.’
-
-Mr Doddard had gone into the outer office, and had sent a clerk for
-a copy of the _Times_. With this he now returned; and the paper was
-opened on Mr Maggleby’s table, and eagerly scanned for news of the
-_Camel_.
-
-‘Here we have it!’ said Mr Doddard at last. ‘“Steamship _Camel_, from
-Demerara to London, with cargo and passengers, was signalled off Dover
-at one o’clock this morning.”—Then Mr Pudster will be at Gravesend in
-an hour or two, sir.’
-
-‘Go, Gideon, go!’ exclaimed Mrs Maggleby. ‘Lose no time. Take a special
-train if necessary. Tell him all, and implore his forgiveness.’
-
-‘Yes, I think I had better go, Maria,’ said Mr Maggleby. ‘I will send
-a clerk home with you, and will telegraph to you as soon as I see
-your—your late husband. In the meantime, try to be calm. Please tell
-them to call a cab, Doddard.’
-
-Mr Doddard returned to the outer office, and despatched a messenger for
-two cabs. Mr Maggleby handed Mrs Maggleby into one of them, and a clerk
-followed her. Then the unfortunate man went back for a moment to his
-private room to study Bradshaw on the best and speediest route from
-London to Gravesend. There was a train at a quarter past eleven. It was
-then a quarter to eleven.
-
-‘And when will he be at Gravesend?’ asked Mr Maggleby.
-
-Mr Doddard turned again to the _Times_. But instead of at once lighting
-upon the shipping news, his eye fell upon a paragraph that occupied
-a not very conspicuous position at the foot of the page. Suddenly he
-uttered a cry.
-
-‘What’s the matter, Doddard?’ demanded Mr Maggleby, who was rapidly
-growing impatient.
-
-Mr Doddard replied by bursting into a paroxysm of laughter. ‘By Jove!’
-he exclaimed, ‘this is too ridiculous! I never heard of such a thing in
-my life! It is like a play! Ha, ha, ha!’
-
-‘Your merriment is rather ill-timed,’ cried Mr Maggleby reproachfully.
-‘Tell me when Mr Pudster will arrive at Gravesend; and be quick, or I
-shall lose that train.’
-
-‘A _pump_, too!’ continued the head-clerk hilariously.
-
-‘You’re mad, I think,’ said Mr Maggleby. ‘What do you mean?’
-
-‘Well, read this, sir,’ answered Mr Doddard, and he handed the _Times_
-to his principal and pointed to the paragraph.
-
-Mr Maggleby testily took the paper, adjusted his spectacles, and read:
-
-‘EXTRAORDINARY DISCOVERY AT PLYMOUTH.—The corporation of Plymouth
-recently decided to remove an old and disused pump which for many
-years has stood handleless and dry on the Hoe. Yesterday morning,
-some workmen proceeded to remove it, and in its interior they were
-astonished to discover a number of letters, which had, it is supposed,
-been put into the hole into which the handle formerly fitted, under the
-delusion that the pump was a post-office pillar letter-box. The letters
-were at once taken to the Plymouth post-office, and were without delay
-forwarded to their destinations.’
-
-‘Can it be true?’ ejaculated Mr Maggleby, with a great sigh of relief.
-‘Then the fact of the _Camel_ having been signalled last night off
-Dover is merely a coincidence?’
-
-‘Most certainly,’ said Mr Doddard.
-
-‘Thank Heaven!’ cried Mr Maggleby fervently. ‘Send the cab away,
-Doddard. But no! I’ll go home again at once, and set my poor wife
-at ease. Ha, ha! I do remember now, that when poor Mr Pudster came
-home from his last voyage, he discovered that some letters which he
-had posted at Plymouth had not been delivered. We didn’t miss them,
-because, as you recollect, Doddard, he wrote again from Southampton.’
-
-‘Of course he did, sir,’ said Mr Doddard. ‘Well, let us congratulate
-ourselves. It would have been a fearful business for Mrs Maggleby to
-have to go through.’
-
-‘And it would have been bad for you, Doddard, for it would have spoilt
-your chance of a partnership for some time to come. Now, I’m off.’
-
-Mr Maggleby put the _Times_ in his pocket, and departed; and when he
-reached his home and showed the paper to his wife, the couple sat
-together for at least half an hour, talking over the extraordinary
-nature of the adventure.
-
-‘Well, we shall be able to go to Madame Tussaud’s and the theatre after
-all, Maria,’ said Mr Maggleby at luncheon.
-
-And go they did; and what is more, Mr Doddard became a partner a
-fortnight later, the firm thenceforward being known as Maggleby and
-Doddard.
-
-
-
-
-THE FORESIGHT OF INSECTS FOR THEIR YOUNG.
-
-
-In no manner is the mysterious influence of instinct over the insect
-world more remarkably manifested than by the care taken by parent
-insects for the future welfare of offspring which they are destined
-never to behold. As the human parent upon his deathbed makes the best
-provision he can for the sustenance and prosperity of his infant
-children, whom death has decreed that he may not in person watch over,
-so those insects which nature has decreed shall be always the parents
-of orphan children, led by an unerring influence within, do their best
-to provide for the wants of the coming generation.
-
-The butterfly, after flitting through her short life, seeks out a spot
-whereon to deposit her numerous eggs, not—as one might expect of a
-creature devoid of mind—upon any chance plant, or even upon the plant
-or flower from which she herself has been wont to draw her sustenance,
-but upon the particular plant which forms the invariable food of the
-larvæ of her species. The various kinds of clothes-moths penetrate into
-our cupboards, drawers, and everywhere where furs, woollen garments,
-&c., are stored, that they may there lay their eggs, to hatch into
-the burrowing grubs which are the terror of our housekeepers. The
-ichneumon tribe, one of nature’s greatest counterpoises to keep down
-the too rapid increase of the insect world, lay their eggs in the larvæ
-of other insects, which eggs when hatched develop into a devouring
-brood, which ungratefully turn upon and devour the helpless creature
-that sheltered them as a nest. The female ichneumon having discovered
-a caterpillar or grub which her instinct informs her has not been
-previously attacked, at once proceeds to thrust her ovipositor into the
-writhing body of her victim, depositing one or more eggs, according
-to the size of the living food-supply. When hatched, the larvæ devour
-and live upon their foster-parent, avoiding in a marvellous way the
-vital parts of their victim, whose life is most accurately timed to
-last until its young tormentors are full grown, and not beyond. At one
-time, we were led to believe in occasional instances of the instinct
-of female ichneumons being at fault, by observing them apparently
-ovipositing upon the dry shells of pupæ from which the butterflies
-had escaped. This, however, we subsequently found to be an erroneous
-idea, the fact of the matter being, that the caterpillar upon which the
-parent ichneumon had laid her fatal egg, had had time, before the full
-development of the young ichneumon grub, to turn to the pupal stage.
-What, then, we saw was the young ichneumon fly just emerged from the
-dry pupal case, the contents of which it had first devoured in its own
-larval stage, then, itself turning to a pupa, it had lain, thus doubly
-incased, until, having broken forth a perfect fly, it rested upon its
-late prison, awaiting sufficient strength to come to its wings. What a
-wooden horse of Troy such a chrysalis would prove, if introduced into
-the breeding establishment of a collector!
-
-Other members of the ichneumon tribe do not actually insert their eggs
-into the destined food-supply of their young; but, as it were, going
-deeper into calculation of future events, content themselves with
-laying them in close proximity to the eggs of some member of the tribe
-upon which it is their mission to prey.
-
-There is an old saying—
-
- Big fleas have little fleas
- Upon their backs to bite ’em;
- Little fleas have smaller fleas,
- So on _ad infinitum_;
-
-which is very true, inasmuch as from the great humble-bee down to
-the tiniest corn-thrips—a mere speck of dust to the naked eye—all
-insects have their parasites, and generally their own special species
-of ichneumon, to prevent their over-increase and to preserve the due
-balance of nature. There is a species of longicorn beetle, found
-in Pennsylvania, which feeds upon the tender bark of young hickory
-shoots. When laying-time arrives, the female, having deposited her eggs
-in cavities perforated in the bark, carefully cuts a groove, about
-one-tenth of an inch wide and deep, round the shoot just below where
-her treasures lie. The object, or rather we suppose we ought to say
-the consequence, of this act is the withering and decay of the shoot,
-a provision for the sustenance of her young, which, when in their
-larval state, live upon dead wood! This remarkable insect is called the
-hickory girder from the above-mentioned habit, which, we think, is one
-of the most extraordinary instances of foresight, through a mere blind
-instinct, that have ever come under observation.
-
-The gadfly (_Œustrus equi_), whose larvæ are the bots which inhabit
-the intestines of the horse, gains for her progeny that comfortable
-position by entrapping the animal itself into introducing her eggs
-within its stomach. For this purpose, she lays her eggs upon such
-portions of the horse’s body as he is in the habit of frequently
-licking, such as the knees, shoulders, &c. The unerring nature of her
-instinct is shown by the fact that she never chooses as a nidus any
-portion of the body which the horse is unable to reach with its tongue.
-Having thus been introduced into their natural feeding-grounds, the
-bots there pass their larval existence, until, it becoming time for
-them to assume the pupal form, they go forth with the animal’s dung
-to reach the earth, burrow into it, and therein pass the insects’
-purgatory.
-
-Again, one of the grain-moths (_Gelechia cerealella_) shows remarkable
-instinct in adapting itself to circumstances according to the time of
-year when it has to deposit its eggs. The first generation of these
-moths, emerging in May from pupæ which have lain in the granaries
-through the winter, lay their countless eggs upon the as yet ungathered
-corn, upon which their young play havoc until, having passed through
-the necessary stages, they come out in the autumn as the second
-generation amidst the now stored-up grain. Now, however, their instinct
-prompts them, not, like the first generation, to go forth to the fields
-to seek the proper nest and future nourishment of their young, but
-bids them deposit their eggs upon the store of wheat ready at hand.
-Thus, two following generations of the same insect are led by their
-instincts to different habits to suit the altered and, in the last
-case, unnatural position of their infants’ destined food-supply.
-
-The interesting mason-wasp, having with great care and skill bored
-out a cylindrical hole in some sunny sandbank, deposits at the bottom
-of this refuge her eggs. Next, provident mother as she is, she seeks
-out about a dozen small caterpillars, always of the same species, and
-immures them alive in the pit, as food for her cruel children. In
-making her selection of grubs to be thus buried alive, she rejects any
-that may not have reached maturity; not, we imagine, upon the score of
-their not being so full-flavoured, but because, when not full grown,
-they require food to keep them alive; whereas, when of mature age, they
-will live a long time without nourishment, ready to turn to chrysalides
-when opportunity occurs.
-
-These are but a few of the instances which might be adduced in
-illustration of this foresight in insects, which compensates for
-their not being allowed in person to superintend the welfare of their
-offspring. In many cases, it would be better for human progeny were
-their parents thus endowed with an unerring instinct, rather than with
-an uncertain will.
-
-
-
-
-A BREAK-NECK VENTURE.
-
-
-It is more than thirty years since my medico-military lines were cast
-in the little picturesque station of Badulla, the capital of Oovah,
-in the interior of Ceylon. This district was the centre of very
-considerable European enterprise in coffee-growing, and, both socially
-and commercially, was an important unit of the Kandian provinces; hence
-government, in addition to a small garrison of troops, had established
-in it a staff of its Civil servants, for the administration of fiscal
-and judicial affairs, and it is concerning one of these officials—the
-assistant district judge, as he was called—that my story is now to be
-told.
-
-The judge was a young gentleman of good parts and attractive manners.
-He was a dead-shot, an excellent angler, a perfect rider, a very Dr
-Grace or Spofforth of a cricketer, and an intelligent, chatty, pleasant
-companion to boot. He had also a sure foot and a steady head. He could
-walk along the verge of a rocky precipice with a sheer descent of
-hundreds of feet as unconcernedly as many a man trudges over a turnpike
-road. Chaffingly, we were wont to tell him that he had entirely
-mistaken his vocation in life, and that instead of being ‘an upright
-judge,’ trying ‘niggers,’ he ought to have been another Blondin,
-trundling wheelbarrows on a rope stretched across Adam’s Bridge from
-Manaar to Ramisseram, and cooking a prawn curry in a stove when in
-the very middle of the Straits. However, even in the capacity of the
-aforesaid judge, this proclivity of being able to walk safely upon next
-to nothing once stood him in good need, as I myself witnessed.
-
-One afternoon he came into my quarters holding in his hand a letter,
-which the post had just brought him. I ought perhaps to mention
-that thirty odd years ago there were neither railroads nor electric
-telegraphs in Ceylon, and that travelling was comparatively slow, and
-to some extent uncertain. In the case of our station, however, we had
-little to complain of. The postal authorities at Colombo forwarded
-our mail-bags to Kandy—the first seventy-two miles of the way—by a
-daily two-horsed coach; and from that city to their destination,
-‘runners’ carried the letters. But these ‘runners’ now and again met
-with accidents of various sorts, such as being killed by elephants
-or tigers; and it so happened that something of the sort—I forget
-what—having occurred to detain my friend’s letter, it was older by more
-than twenty-four hours than it should have been, when he got it.
-
-‘I must be off sharp to Colombo,’ said he, addressing me as he entered
-my room. ‘I have had awfully bad news: it is a question of life or
-death with a very dear friend there. I can’t lose a moment over my
-departure. But get leave from the Commandant, and keep me company as
-far as Attempyttia—it is only a dozen miles away—and we will talk over
-things as we go along.’
-
-‘All right,’ I said; ‘I’m your man.’
-
-In a very few minutes the required permission was obtained; after
-which my pony was saddled and we were off. After leaving me at the
-travellers’ bungalow at Attempyttia, my companion would have to proceed
-to Kandy, to catch the downward coach, leaving at daylight next morning
-for Colombo. To accomplish this—some eighty odd miles—he would be
-forced to ride all night, assisted stage by stage with fresh mounts,
-which the kind-hearted coffee-planters, whether known or unknown to
-him, would willingly place at his disposal.
-
-‘Let’s see,’ said the judge. ‘I’ve a good fourteen or fifteen hours
-before me to find that highly respectable rattle-trap of a royal
-mail-coach drawn up at the post-office at gun-fire to-morrow morning.
-Fourteen hours, six miles an hour, including stoppages—eighty-four
-miles! A snail’s pace; but I won’t calculate upon more speed. Bar
-accidents, I’m safe to do it, and do it I must.’
-
-So on we galloped, little heeding the romantic scenery through which we
-were hurrying, and the faster too, as the sun was becoming obscured by
-thick, heavy, black rain-clouds, which were gathering over it and all
-around.
-
-‘We are in for a drenching,’ I remarked.
-
-‘If a drenching were all,’ was the reply, ‘it would not much matter;
-but’——
-
-‘Well! But what?’
-
-‘The Badulla Oya, the river which runs through the deep gorge between
-the spurs of the hills you see yonder—I know that river well. In dry
-weather, it is little more than a shallow streamlet, over the stones of
-which an inch or two of water trickles. But when these sudden monsoon
-downpours come on, it has the unpleasant knack of swelling, swelling,
-until it becomes a large, wide, deep mountain torrent, tearing like mad
-to empty itself somewhere. And you have no idea of the rapidity with
-which this metamorphosis is accomplished. Let’s push on, for the river
-crosses the highway; and by Jove, here is the rain and no mistake!’
-
-A vivid flash of lightning, a loud clap of thunder right overhead, and
-before its reverberations were half ended among the echoing mountains,
-a deluge of rain was upon us. We were soaked to the skin in a few
-seconds.
-
-‘How far is the river?’ I asked.
-
-‘Good five miles; and five miles with these flood-gates of the skies
-opened, mean touch and go. Twenty to one, the Badulla Oya will be
-swollen and impassable.’
-
-‘Is there no canoe or bridge?’
-
-‘Canoe! What on earth, in your Ceylon griffinage, are you dreaming
-about? As for a bridge, well, metaphorically speaking, there is a thing
-which the natives call a bridge; but practically, not what you and I
-and the department of Public Works would class as one. However, it will
-not be long before you see what sort of a concern the bridge is like.’
-
-We now hastened as fast as the animals we rode could lay hoofs to
-ground; but before the five miles were traversed and the banks of the
-river reached, we distinctly heard it roaring.
-
-‘It is down already,’ said my companion.
-
-Down it was with a vengeance, as we presently realised. Over a bed of
-rocky boulders it foamed and boiled and tumbled, a dark, deep, angry
-chocolate-coloured torrent, sixty feet wide at least.
-
-Squatting under a large tree on the bank opposite to us, accepting the
-situation with that stolid indifference for which the Asiatic is so
-very remarkable, and chewing betel, that panacea for all the ills which
-Singhalese flesh is heir to, was a Kandian villager, well advanced in
-years. The judge hailed him in his own language. ‘Hi! father! Did you
-swim the river?’
-
-‘Am I a fish, think you, my son?’ the man responded.
-
-‘Did you cross it by the bridge, then?’
-
-‘Does the English _mahatmeya_ [gentleman] take me for a Wanderoo
-monkey, or for a jungle-cat, to walk upon broken twigs high up in the
-air?’ he answered evasively.
-
-‘How, then, did you manage to get over?’
-
-‘I have not got over at all. I have come from my village on this side,
-and I wait here until the flood subsides.’
-
-‘How long will that be, think you?’
-
-‘If the rain ceases, the river will be again fordable in three or four
-hours. If the rain continues—who can tell? Buddha only knows!’
-
-‘Three or four hours!’ muttered my companion despondingly. ‘Too long,
-much too long for me.’ Then again speaking to the Kandian: ‘Is there
-any possibility of crossing the bridge?’ he asked.
-
-‘None, none, my master. Alas! it has been shattered for some time past,
-and has not yet been repaired.’
-
-‘Let’s go,’ said my friend to me, ‘and reconnoitre.’
-
-We dismounted, gave our ponies to the horsekeepers, who had closely
-followed us, and walked a short distance along the bank. Suspended in
-the air, resting upon the forked branches of two forest trees, which
-grew nearly opposite each other on either side of the stream, were
-the relics of one of those primitive bridges which the Singhalese
-villagers build to enable them to pass ravines and mountain torrents.
-Bamboo and the withes of a ground creeper called waywel are the usual
-materials they employ; but if they can get slabs of timber, they use
-them as well. This was the case here: the rough-hewn trunk of a tall
-but slender cocoa-nut palm spanned the river, its ends being firmly
-fastened to the two trees which served to support it. Originally,
-a sort of hand-rail of the waywel had been tied to uprights nailed
-along the stem; and thus hemmed in, the bridge was safe enough to
-traverse by any one not subject to dizziness on ‘giddy heights;’ but
-as time and mischief had partly removed this protection, leaving long
-gaps with nothing to hold on by, a more precarious, break-neck, risky
-crossing, save for the monkeys, no one could possibly imagine. Picture
-to yourself this tapering pole strung at a height over a deep rushing
-whirlpool of a current, and you will comprehend what we saw and what I
-fairly shuddered at.
-
-Not so, my companion. He sprang up the tree, and stood for a moment
-or two upon the end of the mutilated bridge. Then he said quite
-determinedly: ‘I’ve made up my mind; I’m going over.’
-
-‘Are you mad?’ I exclaimed; ‘going over that narrow, frail,
-up-in-the-clouds thing? Why, it’s certain death if you fall.’
-
-‘Even so, old man; but I have walked with sure steps narrower planks
-than this.’
-
-‘Perhaps so; but not with a torrent rolling under you.—Don’t attempt
-it!’ I exclaimed; ‘wait until the waters go down.’
-
-‘Wait! for four hours or more. Impossible! As I told you when we
-started, my errand is a vital one. I must be in Colombo on Sunday
-at the latest; and as to-day is Friday, to do that I must hit off
-to-morrow’s coach in Kandy. Well, you and the other fellows have often
-joked me about my Blondin-like propensities; I am going to try now how
-nearly I can tread upon the heels of that worthy acrobat. Never fear; I
-will get across safely enough. It is a pity, however, that the nigger
-architects have not been a little more liberal in their breadth of
-timber; but your Singhalese native is invariably a skinflint.’
-
-Again I attempted to combat the foolhardiness of my friend; but he
-threw me off, said half jocosely, half in earnest:
-
- ‘I have set my life upon a cast,
- And I will stand the hazard of the die;’
-
-and with the words in his mouth, began the crossing.
-
-I am not, generally speaking, a nervous man, and I have had to witness
-some trying things in my time; but now I confess that fear and
-trembling came over me, and that I could not look upon my friend in his
-perilous transit. I half crouched and cowered behind a tree, my heart
-in my mouth, and every nerve strung to its utmost degree of tension. I
-expected every instant to hear a shriek, a splash, and then to see my
-friend buffeting with and carried away by the boiling torrent. Now and
-again, the voices of the old Singhalese and the Malabar horsekeepers,
-who had crept up to the neighbourhood of the bridge, broke upon my
-ears, first as if in tones of entreaty and warning, then in those
-of astonishment, and lastly in shouts of admiration and joy. At the
-jubilant sounds I roused myself, looked up, and hurrahed, too, at the
-very top of my voice, for on the opposite bank the adventurous judge
-stood safe and sound!
-
-A weight such as I had never borne before was removed from my breast.
-‘Thank goodness you’re all right!’ I called out.
-
-‘Yes, as a trivet,’ he replied.—‘Now, screw _your_ courage to the
-sticking-place and run over.’
-
-‘Am I a jungle-cat, or a Wanderoo monkey, or even a district judge
-in the Ceylon Civil Service, to walk upon a hair? No; my good sir.
-If I took two steps upon that infinitesimally narrow palm’s trunk,
-my doctoring occupation would be gone.—Thank you; no! I’ll return to
-Badulla, and resume my physicking there.’
-
-‘Good-bye, then. I’ll write to you from Kandy, if I can.’
-
-He was gone. And it will no doubt satisfy the reader’s curiosity to
-learn that, thanks to the mounts provided by friendly coffee-planters,
-he caught the coach, went on to Colombo, and found the person for whom
-he had risked his life out of danger and in a fair way of recovery.
-
-
-
-
-CURIOUS ANTIPATHIES IN ANIMALS.
-
-DOGS.
-
-
-All sincere lovers of the animal creation are pleased to listen to the
-recitation of anecdotes illustrating the love and affection of animals
-for their lord and master, man. Many of these stories are deeply
-interesting, as showing the wondrous intelligence and reasoning powers
-so often exhibited; and others are deeply affecting, as proving an
-amount of genuine, unasked, unselfish love, that we fear is not always
-too abundant amongst educated bipeds. It is not unlikely that numbers
-of such acts are never heard of; as many men—well-meaning enough in
-other ways—are in the habit of looking on the dog or the cat as a
-mere animal and nothing more; and therefore, whatever it might do, or
-whatever sagacity it might display, the creature would be treated with
-indifference and passed by without notice. Byron, who loved animals as
-well as most folks, was quite aware of this, when he wrote, with so
-much truth:
-
- But the poor dog—in life the firmest friend,
- The first to welcome, foremost to defend—
- Unhonoured falls—unnoticed all his worth,
- Denied in heaven the soul he held on earth.
-
-Strongly deprecating this indifference, it has always been the writer’s
-delight to record every well-authenticated instance of remarkable
-sagacity in animals, in whatever way they have been brought under his
-notice. The cases referred to have come under the immediate notice
-either of the writer, or of friends on whose word he can rely.
-
-Some years ago, a lady, who was a friend of our family, possessed a
-beautiful black-and-tan ‘King Charles’ called Prinney. A most engaging
-and affectionate creature, he never showed the smallest symptom of
-temper, or anything disagreeable save in one thing, and that was, a
-fixed aversion to a particular melody. Music generally, either vocal
-or instrumental, he never took the smallest notice of, or exhibited
-the slightest dislike to; but if any one played, sang, whistled, or
-even hummed the well-known and popular duet from the opera of _Norma_
-known by the name of ‘Si, fin’ al ora,’ no matter where he was or what
-he was doing, he would start up and commence the most dismal howling,
-with his nose elevated in the air. If the music did not cease on this
-melancholy and earnest appeal, he would make frantic efforts to get
-out of the room, rearing on his hind-legs, scratching violently at the
-door, and continuing his howling until some one opened the door and let
-him out. We took great pains to investigate this curious antipathy,
-but could never arrive at anything like a satisfactory conclusion.
-As before stated, the dog never objected to music generally, as many
-dogs have been known to do, nor even to single airs closely resembling
-the _Norma_ melody; but so soon as we commenced that one—even though
-we purposely jumbled it up with some other—he would instantly detect
-it, and take his part of the ‘howling obligato’ with an energy and
-determination which nothing could stop.
-
-It had been suggested that the dog had on some particular occasion been
-severely beaten, or ill-treated, when this melody was either played or
-sung, and thus it was painfully impressed on the dog’s mind and memory.
-But this could not have been the case, for my friend had received him
-as a puppy, and certainly never ill-treated him, or even whipped him.
-What, therefore, could have been the peculiar connection in the dog’s
-mind between this one particular melody, and some fear of ill-usage or
-pain—for nothing but such a recollection could have caused his piteous
-howling, which always indicated intense fear or dread—is a mystery,
-and one which it seems impossible to solve, or even explain on any
-reasonable grounds.
-
-The following anecdote somewhat resembles the last, inasmuch as the
-peculiar antipathy shown is also in connection with music, although not
-to any particular melody, as in Prinney’s case. A little white terrier
-belonging to my grandfather had a peculiar antipathy to the pianoforte,
-for as soon as any one began to play, Rose would walk into the middle
-of the room, and then, quietly seating herself, facing the instrument,
-elevate her nose, and commence a long series of howlings, but without
-any display of anger or temper, or any attempt to run away. It might
-have been her own original way of expressing applause, or approbation
-of pianoforte-playing in general, for it should be specially noted that
-no other music, vocal or instrumental, ever affected the dog. Musical
-friends, one with his flute, another with his fiddle, often came in,
-but Rose never took notice of either of these until the pianoforte
-began; then at once began her demonstration. Now, what could have
-caused this curious antipathy—if it was an actual antipathy—to the
-sound of one particular musical instrument? The dog was born and bred
-at a farmhouse in Surrey, and farmhouses in those primitive days never
-possessed such an unheard-of luxury as a pianoforte; and therefore,
-until she came into my grandfather’s keeping—and she came direct from
-Surrey—she could never have heard the sound of such an instrument.
-How, then, are we to explain her singular procedure? I fear it is only
-another ‘dog mystery,’ and must ever remain so.
-
-A third, and certainly most remarkable, case of musical antipathy is
-all the more singular because it was not exhibited towards any special
-melody or instrument, but towards one particular person only—a lady.
-The dog—a beautiful and very amiable Clumber spaniel—belonged to an
-uncle of ours who always brought Wag with him whenever he paid us a
-visit, for the dog was a universal favourite; but, unluckily, he had
-always to be put out of the room when one of the ladies of our family
-was going to sing, because he seemed to have a violent antipathy, not
-to music or singing generally, but only to the voice of this lady;
-and, what is perhaps still more odd, he always seemed, personally, to
-be very fond of her; but the moment she began to sing, he would start
-up and commence whining, growling, and at last barking, gradually
-increasing in force, until he got to a grand _fortissimo_. He would
-run up in front of the lady, and get so angry, that any one would have
-supposed he was going to fly at her. But this he never attempted,
-and as the Scotch say, ‘His bark was waur than his bite.’ This lady
-possessed a brilliant soprano voice; and it has been suggested that
-the clear, ringing, penetrating tones must have produced a peculiar
-vibration or sensation, perhaps causing sharp pain, in the dog’s ears,
-which might have occasioned his extraordinary action, for it must be
-remembered that this lady’s voice, and hers alone, produced the effect
-described.
-
-The next case of unreasoning antipathy was that of a very handsome
-half-bred bull-terrier, called Charley. He belonged to a friend of
-ours, the vicar of a beautiful parish in Kent, and was an affectionate,
-good-tempered dog, never known to bite, snarl, growl, or do anything
-disagreeable to his friends. He would romp and play with the children
-on the vicarage lawn by the hour together, and never lose his temper,
-though often sorely tried by the thoughtless teasing of his little
-playmates. Yet he, too, had his peculiarity, which was, that if any
-one—master, friend, or stranger—approached him rubbing the palms of his
-hands slowly together, and at the same time repeating his name very
-deliberately, ‘Char-ley, Char-ley,’ the dog would instantly get into a
-state of wild fury. He would bark violently, until the bark ended in
-that peculiar sort of scream often noticed in small dogs when greatly
-excited or angered. He would make a rush at the offending person, and
-then suddenly retreat backwards, throwing out his fore-paws with sudden
-jerks at each bark; and although the person might cease the action, yet
-it would be some time before Charley recovered his usual equanimity,
-going about the room uttering little short barks, and a sort of odd
-sound between the end of a growl and the beginning of a whine!
-
-When this curious antipathy was first noticed, it so much surprised
-and interested the vicar—who was a devoted lover of animals—that he
-took a great amount of trouble to try to find out what could have been
-the original cause. He thought the dog might have been taught this
-merely as a clever trick; but he could never procure any evidence to
-show that such had been the case on the part of any one in the vicarage
-or village. What could have caused these extraordinary bursts of
-passion and anger at so simple an act as merely rubbing the palms of
-the hands together? There was nothing in the act itself calculated to
-irritate or frighten any animal, and therefore the greater the mystery
-at the strange effect produced. As the vicar could discover nothing
-through his investigations, he had to ‘accept the inevitable,’ and come
-to the conclusion that it was unaccountable.
-
-
-
-
-CURIOUS NEWSPAPERS.
-
-
-That great engine that never sleeps, as Thackeray once described
-the press, not unfrequently displays its energy and enterprise in
-the performance of feats both novel and interesting. All are more
-or less familiar with the daring and intrepidity of its ‘specials,’
-who in their eagerness to supply those at home with full and graphic
-descriptions of stirring scenes, expose themselves to the risk of
-being shot; while the public spirit and enterprise of the different
-journals are shown by the lavish way in which they spend their money
-in the laying of special cables or in the hiring of special steamers
-or trains. These are matters of every-day occurrence, on which plenty
-has been, and will continue to be written; but at the present moment we
-wish to confine the attention of our readers to the history of a few
-novel and curious broadsheets which have appeared at different times.
-
-In 1828 a paper was published called the _Cherokee Phœnix_, which is
-interesting on more accounts than one. It was published in English and
-Cherokee, the latter portion being printed with characters invented
-after years of patient labour and thought by one of the Indians,
-whose curiosity had been excited by the ‘speaking leaf,’ as he called
-a newspaper which he one day heard a white man read with surprising
-readiness and facility. After producing his alphabet, he taught it to
-the other members of his tribe, and eventually, with the assistance of
-government, was enabled to start the _Phœnix_. Very similar was the
-_Sandwich Islands Gazette_, first started in 1835, and boasting of
-wood-cuts, for which the publisher received a license from the king,
-worded as follows: ‘_To STEPHEN D. MACKINTOSH._—I assent to the letter
-which you have sent me. It affords me pleasure to see the works of
-other lands and things that are new. If I was there, I should very much
-like to see. I have said to Kivan, “Make printing-presses.” My thought
-is ended.—Love to you and Reynolds.—_By KING KAINKEAGUOLI._’ This paper
-was of eight octavo pages, and was published in English. The present
-ruler of the Sandwich Islands shares the liberal views expressed in
-the above letter of his predecessor. Since that time, the practice of
-publishing papers in the native tongues has spread rapidly; and in
-India alone at the present moment no fewer than three hundred and
-thirty newspapers, with a total circulation of more than one hundred
-and ten thousand, are printed in the languages spoken in the different
-provinces.
-
-A most curious paper is the official Chinese paper, called _King-Pan_,
-which claims to have been started as early as 911, and to have appeared
-at irregular intervals till 1351, when it came out regularly every
-week. At the commencement of the present century, it became a ‘daily,’
-at the price of two _kehs_—about a halfpenny. By a decree of the
-emperor, a short time back, it was ordered that three editions were to
-be printed every day—the first or morning edition, on yellow paper, is
-devoted to commercial intelligence; the second or afternoon edition
-contains official and general news; and the third, on red paper, is a
-summary of the two earlier editions, with the addition of political
-and social articles. The editorial duties are performed by six members
-of the Scientific Academy, who are appointed by government. The
-circulation is about fourteen thousand daily.
-
-On board the _Hecla_, one of the ships belonging to Captain Edward
-Parry’s expedition in search of the north-west passage, a paper was
-printed called the _North Georgia Gazette and Winter Chronicle_. The
-first number was dated the 1st November 1819, and its twenty-first and
-last the 20th March 1820. The _Great Britain_ steamer, which started
-for Australia on the 21st of August 1852, may claim to have inaugurated
-the practice of publishing a newspaper on board ship, as a paper,
-entitled the _Great Britain Times_, was published every week during the
-voyage, and distributed amongst the passengers. At the present time,
-these sea-born broadsheets are a source of considerable amusement, and
-go a long way to relieve the monotony of the passage, as the passengers
-not only read but supply the articles. Burlesque telegrams, jokes made
-by the passengers, and all the news, whether social, nautical, or
-personal, of the voyage, are published in their columns. One well-known
-American journal has even purchased a steamer and fitted it up as
-a regular floating newspaper office. The editors, sub-editors, and
-journalists all live on board; and by this means, news which has been
-picked up during the voyage can be set up without loss of time; whilst
-the details of any incident can be fully authenticated by the steamer
-calling at the scene of action. This steamer plies between Memphis and
-New Orleans, distributing the papers on its journeys, and collecting
-every item of news current along the banks of the Mississippi.
-
-Before the 67th Regiment left England for British Burmah, the officers
-spent a sum of money in purchasing a printing-press and types, with
-which they published a paper called _Our Chronicle_, soon after
-they landed at Rangoon. The editorial staff and compositors were
-all connected with the regiment, and the journal was regarded as
-a phenomenon in the annals of the press. Another military journal
-deserving mention is, or was, the _Cuartal Real_, the official organ
-of the Carlists, published during the war on the almost inaccessible
-summit of the Pena de la Plata.
-
-Though America is the land of big things, in newspaper matters it can
-boast of possessing the smallest paper in the world. This diminutive
-journal is the _Madoc Star_, which very properly has for its motto,
-‘Twinkle, twinkle, little star.’ It is published weekly. Its dimensions
-are three inches and a half by three inches; and it consists of
-four pages, the first being devoted to foreign news, the second to
-mining notes, the last two to local news. If we may believe the Paris
-_Rappel_, America has recently issued two startling novelties combining
-utility with entertainment. The first is a newspaper printed on cotton
-cloth, and is called the _Pocket-handkerchief_, which at once explains
-the purpose to which it is to be put when intellectual demands have
-been satisfied. The other is called the _Necktie_, being printed with
-gold letters upon silk, and is said to be highly ornamental and of
-great elegance. This is practical literature with a vengeance.
-
-
-
-
-THE DAWN OF PEACE.
-
-
- Sweet dawn of peace, how lovely is thy breaking!
- With summer blossoms round thy smiling brow,
- From troubled dreams of dead and dying, waking,
- Gladly we hasten forth to greet thee now.
- Heaven’s brightest gems are gleaming in thy tresses;
- Thy voice of melody bids discord cease;
- And ’neath the magic of thy fond caresses,
- All earth grows beautiful, fair dawn of peace.
-
- Earth’s feathered minstrels plume their wings with gladness,
- And hail thy coming with a burst of song;
- While weary Age, bowed down with care and sadness,
- Passes contented through life’s busy throng.
- What though the summer of our lives be over,
- Our steps may falter, but our hearts rejoice,
- When, o’er fair fields of fragrant crimson clover,
- Steals the dear music of thy heavenly voice.
-
- The nation kneels in humble adoration,
- For angels follow in thy glittering train,
- Singing sweet hymns of praise; while all creation
- Mingles its voice in the triumphant strain.
- No bloodstains mar thy robe of snowy whiteness,
- Though thou hast paused o’er many a gory bed,
- Shedding a halo of celestial brightness
- Round the still forms of the unburied dead.
-
- To the lone mother by her childless ingle,
- Bright as a star thy radiant face appears;
- And golden hopes, like morning sunbeams, mingle
- With the pure fountain of her joyous tears.
- Fades the dark memory of long nights of sorrow;
- Her worn cheek glows; her heart’s wild doubtings cease.
- To Love and Home, her boy shall come to-morrow,
- Borne in thy pitying arms, blest dawn of peace.
-
- Delighted childhood flings white chains of daisies,
- As Youth’s best offering, at thy gracious feet;
- The dome of heaven seems echoing forth thy praises;
- Where muffled drums made mourning, glad hearts beat;
- And while the merry lark is proudly soaring
- In joyous rapture from the emerald sod,
- Pæans of praise our grateful souls are pouring,
- For thou art welcome as a smile from God!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Printed and Published by W. & R. CHAMBERS, 47 Paternoster Row, LONDON,
-and 339 High Street, EDINBURGH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_All Rights Reserved._
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR
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-1884 ***
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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. 37, Vol. I, September 13, 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. 37, Vol. I, September 13, 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-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: Robert Chambers</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: September 7, 2021 [eBook #66236]</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. 37, VOL. I, SEPTEMBER 13, 1884 ***</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_577">{577}</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="#JOINT-STOCK_COMPANIES_AND">JOINT-STOCK COMPANIES AND ‘LIMITED LIABILITY.’</a><br />
-<a href="#BY_MEAD_AND_STREAM">BY MEAD AND STREAM.</a><br />
-<a href="#PENCIL-MAKING">PENCIL-MAKING.</a><br />
-<a href="#MR_PUDSTERS_RETURN">MR PUDSTER’S RETURN.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_FORESIGHT_OF_INSECTS_FOR">THE FORESIGHT OF INSECTS FOR THEIR YOUNG.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_BREAK-NECK_VENTURE">A BREAK-NECK VENTURE.</a><br />
-<a href="#CURIOUS_ANTIPATHIES_IN_ANIMALS">CURIOUS ANTIPATHIES IN ANIMALS.</a><br />
-<a href="#CURIOUS_NEWSPAPERS">CURIOUS NEWSPAPERS.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_DAWN_OF_PEACE">THE DAWN OF PEACE.</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. 37.—Vol. I.</span></p>
-<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<em>d.</em></p>
-<p class="floatc">SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1884.</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="JOINT-STOCK_COMPANIES_AND">JOINT-STOCK COMPANIES AND
-‘LIMITED LIABILITY.’</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Readers</span> of newspapers must have frequently
-observed in the advertising columns of most of
-the daily journals lengthy prospectuses setting
-forth in roseate terms the why and the
-wherefore of various public Companies. These
-prospectuses are published with the view of
-inducing investors, or those having capital at
-command, to embark money in the projected
-undertakings, the majority of which are new ventures,
-formed, perhaps, to work a tin or silver
-mine; to manufacture some patented article; to
-advance money on land and house property; to
-conduct banking or insurance business; to construct
-tramways; to rear and sell cattle on some
-prairie of the Far West; or some other of
-the hundred-and-one openings that present themselves
-for commercial dealings. Indeed, there
-is no end to the variety of objects that may be
-selected as fitting media for joint-stock enterprise.
-The titles of the Companies bear the word
-‘Limited’ tacked on to them. It is the purpose
-of this article to explain the meaning of the
-term, and at the same time give a slight general
-exposition of the law affecting such joint-stock
-Companies.</p>
-
-<p>A Company of the nature indicated above is
-simply an association or partnership entered
-into by a number of individuals—not fewer
-than seven—who take shares, not necessarily
-in equal proportions, in the joint-stock of
-the concern, the main object being the proportionate
-division of possible profits. When the
-joint agreement complies with the obligations
-laid down by statute, and is registered according
-to law, the subscribers become a corporation,
-and their Company has a common seal and ‘perpetual
-succession,’ to use a legal expression.
-It is only recently, comparatively speaking, that
-joint-stock Companies have existed in large numbers.
-Formerly, the formation of a Company
-was a difficult and costly operation, as a Royal
-Charter had to be specially obtained, or an Act
-of Parliament passed for the purpose. In the
-year 1844, however, an Act came into force which
-enabled joint-stock Companies to become incorporated
-by registering in a particular way, after
-certain preliminaries had been gone through.
-Still the manner of proceeding was inconvenient,
-and something simpler was urgently required.
-Business men and investors wanted greater facilities
-for launching joint-stock enterprises, and
-for the risking of a certain sum of money, and
-no more, in such concerns, thereby setting a
-limit to their liability. According to the old
-law of partnership, each and every member of
-a corporation or Company was liable to the
-utmost extent of his means for the liabilities
-that might have been contracted on behalf of
-the undertaking. A recent and peculiarly
-disastrous instance of this occurred in the
-ruinous downfall of the City of Glasgow Bank,
-which with its collapse brought beggary to
-families innumerable, the various shareholders
-being liable to their last farthing for the enormous
-load of debt due by the bank at the time
-of the crash.</p>
-
-<p>What is now known as ‘limited liability’ was
-first introduced in 1855, parliament having slowly
-moved in the matter, and passed an Act formulating
-the principle. It was, however, in the
-year following that ‘limited liability’ was placed
-on a firm footing, the previous Act being repealed,
-and a new one passed, which likewise embodied
-procedure for what is called the ‘winding-up’ or
-dissolution of Companies. Various laws affecting
-the constitution and proceedings of joint-stock
-corporations had been passed previously and in
-addition to those mentioned above; but there
-being much confusion, through the many separate
-statutes, a successful attempt was made in
-1862 to consolidate the various laws, and ‘The
-Companies’ Act’ was then passed. This statute
-is now the recognised code applicable to the
-joint-stock Companies of the United Kingdom;
-and new Companies, with few exceptions, are
-incorporated under its provisions. This general
-Act also enabled Companies then existent to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_578">{578}</span>
-register themselves under the new order of
-things. It may not be generally known that
-this statute prohibits the formation of partnerships
-exceeding a given number of partners,
-unless such associations are incorporated under
-the provisions of the Act, or by a special Act
-of Parliament, or by letters-patent—modes so
-unusual that they may be almost laid out of
-consideration. It would thus appear that
-partnerships of individuals in excess of the
-number set down by law and not incorporated,
-are illegal. As already stated, a Company must
-have not fewer than seven shareholders; and
-not more than twenty people can enter into
-a business with the object of gaining money,
-unless legally incorporated, though exceptions are
-made if the business be mining within the
-jurisdiction of the Court of Stannaries. The
-term ‘stannaries’ refers to the tin mines and
-works of Devon and Cornwall. If the business
-be that of banking, the number of persons is
-restricted to ten. One essential feature of joint-stock
-investment is that the shares therein may
-be transferred by any member holding them
-without the consent of the other shareholders,
-unless, of course, the rules of the particular
-Company provide otherwise. Now, in ordinary
-partnerships, a partner must obtain the consent
-of his fellow-partners before disposing of his
-interest in the concern.</p>
-
-<p>All joint-stock Companies, even at the present
-time, are not incorporated under the Act of 1862.
-When the object of a proposed undertaking is a
-great public work, such as the construction of a
-line of railway, canal or water works, and when
-compulsory powers are required to purchase land,
-it is usual to obtain a special Act of Parliament
-in order to establish the Company and regulate
-its proceedings. As of old, such an endeavour
-is difficult and, as a rule, costly to carry through
-successfully. Difficult from the fact that most
-schemes of supposed public utility are sure to
-have a host of opponents, who fight the matter
-inch by inch. Costly, too, because, if a private
-bill is opposed in its passage through the Committees
-of the Houses of Parliament, counsel—who
-require enormous fees—have to be engaged
-to defend the interests of the promoters; witnesses
-to give evidence as to the necessity for
-the line of railway, water-works, or whatever
-it may happen to be, have to be sent to
-London and kept there at much expense; and
-the solicitors who distribute the expenses retain
-always a considerable share for themselves.
-It must not be forgotten, too, that newspapers
-share to a certain extent in the spoil, as the
-long parliamentary notices of private bills which
-appear generally during the month of November
-in each year have to be paid for at a goodly
-rate.</p>
-
-<p>After the Act of 1862 became law, a great
-number of Companies were originated, and each
-year sees them increasing, though the financial
-panic of 1866 was a great check to the promoters
-of such concerns, and a caution to enthusiastic
-believers in them. As may be supposed, Great
-Britain is foremost in this mode of investment;
-though several continental countries, notably
-France and the Netherlands, possess many commercial
-associations based on the plan of limited
-liability. In the United States, also, the method
-of limited responsibility has been long adopted.
-The evil experiences of the ‘black year’ of 1866
-resulted in the passing of a short Act of Parliament
-in 1867, amending in some degree that
-of 1862, and affording a certain amount of protection
-to intending shareholders. These have
-been supplemented by other Acts, the latest
-of which passed in 1880. It is far from creditable
-to our commercial morality that many
-Companies started of late years have proved
-to be worthless bubbles, profitable only to their
-promoters and wire-pullers, and ruinous to the
-luckless investors. The legislature protects the
-pockets of the public to some extent; but it
-remains for intending shareholders in joint-stock
-Companies to aid themselves, by first inquiring
-thoroughly into the merits of the undertaking
-into which they propose embarking capital, and
-believing nothing that is not put before them in
-clear, definite, unambiguous language.</p>
-
-<p>Limited liability may be attained in two ways.
-The shareholders of a Company can limit their
-liability either to the amount not paid up on
-their shares—if there be any so unpaid—or to
-such sum as each may agree to contribute to
-the assets of the Company, if it should require
-to be wound up. In other words, the liability
-may be limited by shares or limited by guarantee.
-Most Companies are limited by shares. By this
-it is meant that a shareholder is liable to be
-called upon to pay, if required, a sum of money
-regulated by the shares he holds. Once the
-amount is paid, his liability is at an end, and
-he need not pay a farthing more, however great
-the liabilities of the concern may be. To put
-the matter on a plainer footing. If A B, a supposititious
-shareholder, take a hundred shares in a
-limited Company, which has, say, a capital
-of fifty thousand pounds in ten thousand shares
-of five pounds each, he of course risks five hundred
-pounds in the concern, and no more. The
-whole amount may not be paid up at once; but
-he is required to make good the sum, should it
-be wanted. The usual plan in applying for
-shares in a new Company with a share capital
-as indicated above is to pay a portion—say ten
-shillings per share—on application, other ten
-shillings on allotment, and the remainder of the
-five pounds by calls of perhaps one pound each
-at intervals of probably three months. However,
-the division of the payments depends greatly on
-the nature of the undertaking; some Companies
-can be worked at first with a comparatively small
-portion of the stated capital. If A B has only
-paid two pounds per share, and the Company
-in which he is a part-proprietor should unfortunately
-require to be wound up, he is liable to
-be called upon by the liquidator in charge of
-the winding-up to pay the remaining amount, so
-as to make his shares fully paid up. When
-the liability is by guarantee, each member of
-the Company undertakes, in the event of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_579">{579}</span>
-concern being dissolved, to contribute a fixed
-sum towards the assets and the winding-up
-expenses. This sum being fixed at the formation
-of the Company, each member knows the
-utmost sum he will have to contribute, should
-it prove a failure and liquidation be resorted
-to. Some financiers think the latter plan of
-limited liability the better of the two. In Companies
-constituted in the ordinary manner, it
-is common to find that all the capital has been
-called-up, so that if the evil day does arrive, and
-creditors, growing clamorous, institute proceedings
-for winding-up, they may find the original
-capital dissipated and nothing left to satisfy
-their demands, save, possibly, a worked-out mine
-and a quantity of old-fashioned or worthless
-machinery. Now, under the guarantee system
-there is always a fund, more or less great, available
-for the payment of liabilities; and this fund
-cannot be handled by directors or officials, but
-must remain intact, to be used for its destined
-purpose. From the creditors’ point of view, this
-is highly satisfactory; but the guarantee system
-is not likely to recommend itself to shareholders
-where capital is required to carry on the business.</p>
-
-<p>When a Company is to be started, the first
-step is the drawing-up of a Memorandum of
-Association. This document details the name of
-the Company, its registered office, the objects of
-the undertaking, whatever they may be, the
-manner of liability, the amount of capital, and
-how it is to be divided into shares. Then the
-persons—not fewer than seven—who are desirous
-of forming themselves into a Company subscribe
-their names, stating the number of shares they
-agree to take. All the law requires them to take
-is one share each, so that a Company with a very
-large nominal capital of one-pound shares might
-begin and perhaps carry on operations with a real
-capital of seven pounds only, represented by the
-seven shares issued to the original septet forming
-the Company. The fixing of a title is comparatively
-easy, though, of course, it must not clash
-with that of any existing corporation. Once
-named, it is seldom that a Company changes its
-cognomen; still, if desirous of doing so, there
-are provisions in the Act for enabling this to be
-done. The registered office of the Company
-demands some explanation. A registered office
-of a joint-stock Company may be termed its
-house or domicile, where legal documents may
-be served, where the books required by Act of
-Parliament are kept, and where the association
-is to be found ‘in the body,’ so to speak. The
-place of business or works of the Company may
-be elsewhere—Timbuctoo, Colorado, or anywhere
-else, if the Company’s sphere of operations be
-foreign; but the registered office must be in
-Great Britain, that is, if the corporation is one
-of British origin. It may be noted that once
-the office is fixed in any one part of the United
-Kingdom—England, for example—it cannot be
-shifted to Scotland or Ireland, though it may
-be removed to any other place in England. The
-same rule applies to Scotland and Ireland. Thus,
-if the office of a Scotch Company be registered
-as being at Dundee, it could not legally be
-changed to Carlisle; though it could be removed,
-should occasion require, to Wick or Edinburgh,
-or to any other city or town in Scotland.</p>
-
-<p>When the Memorandum of Association is properly
-settled, it is necessary to consider whether
-the Company should be registered with Articles of
-Association or without them. These Articles are
-the rules and regulations for the management of
-the Company, the issuing of shares, the holding
-of meetings, the auditing of books and accounts,
-and such-like necessary business. Unlimited
-Companies, and also those limited by guarantee,
-cannot be registered without special Articles of
-Association; but for the ordinary class of Companies—that
-is, those limited by shares—the Act
-gives a form of Articles which may be adopted
-by promoters in whole or in part or not at all,
-and with or without special articles in addition.
-If these are not adopted, it is necessary to have
-special Articles for the guidance of the business.
-After the Memorandum and Articles have been
-duly signed and witnessed, they are next stamped
-and taken to the Registrar of Joint-stock Companies.
-If the registered office is in England and
-Wales, the Registrar at Somerset House, London,
-is the proper official to apply to; if in Scotland
-or Ireland, then the respective Registrars at Edinburgh
-and Dublin take the matter in hand.
-Should everything be in due legal form, a certificate
-of registration is issued, and the Company
-becomes a corporation.</p>
-
-<p>A Company may begin business as soon as it
-is registered; but this is not usual, as it is
-seldom that a sufficient number of shares have
-been subscribed to afford the requisite capital.
-To procure this, either before or after registration,
-the promoters issue a prospectus, stating
-the objects and prospects of the undertaking, and
-inviting investors to become shareholders in the
-Company. It may be taken for granted that the
-objects and intentions of the Company are set
-forth in very captivating style, and that the best
-face is put on the matter, so that those having
-capital at command and on the outlook for media
-for investment may be induced to subscribe.
-The great vehicle for giving publicity to these
-prospectuses is the daily and weekly press, though
-thousands of them, printed in quarto or folio,
-are sent through the post to the private addresses
-of well-to-do persons throughout the country.
-If the advertising has had due effect, and a
-sufficient subscription has been obtained, the
-directors hold a meeting and proceed to allot
-shares. Of course, it is not always the case
-that the shares are subscribed by the public; in
-fact it is a matter of chance whether they are
-‘taken up’ or not. In the case of a failure of
-this kind, it is said then that the Company
-has failed to ‘float,’ and the heavy preliminary
-expenses thus fall upon the originators. In
-allotting shares to subscribers, the directors
-may accept or reject applications, or allot a
-smaller number of shares than that applied
-for; and they are not compelled to allot in
-proportion to the applicants. Thus A B may
-get the hundred shares he wanted; while
-X Y, who likewise desired one hundred shares,
-only has fifty put down to his name. All these
-preliminary matters being fairly and squarely
-gone through, the Company can then proceed
-to business, though there are various forms to
-be complied with, the description of which
-scarcely comes within the scope of the present
-article.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_580">{580}</span></p>
-
-<p>The beginning of the ‘last scene of all, that
-ends, or may end, this strange eventful history,’
-is the winding-up proceedings. A joint-stock
-Company once formed, can only be dissolved by
-means of ‘winding-up.’ The general grounds
-for winding-up may be stated as follows: whenever
-the Company passes a special resolution to
-that effect—whenever business is not commenced
-within a year from the incorporation of the
-Company, or when business is suspended for
-one year—whenever the members are reduced
-below the legal number of seven—whenever the
-Company is unable to pay its lawful debts—and
-lastly, whenever the Court deems it just and
-equitable that the Company should be wound-up.
-The liquidating or winding-up is generally
-a tedious process; but it will not be necessary
-to detail here the varied forms of procedure
-which come under that head. What has been
-here set down is simply the A B C of the subject,
-the varied ramifications of which cover a deal
-of ground, and occasionally run into many dark
-thickets, some of them dangerous to creditors,
-some to directors, but nearly all to shareholders.
-These last ought always to walk warily, and
-never, if possible, without full knowledge and the
-best procurable advice of stockbrokers, bankers,
-lawyers, and others versed in the mysteries
-and risks of speculation, whether ‘limited’ or
-otherwise.</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 XLVI.—DOWNHILL.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">After</span> that dumb leave-taking of Madge at the
-station, Philip returned to his chambers, passing
-through the human torrent of Cheapside without
-any sense of sound, touch, or feeling. The room
-in which she had so lately stood looked desolate
-somehow; and yet her visit was like an ill-remembered
-dream. Only the plaintive voice
-with the faint ‘Good-bye’ haunted his ears.
-The sound was still in them, move where he
-would.</p>
-
-<p>He tried to shake off the stupor which had
-fastened upon him as the natural result of
-narcotics, overstrained nerves, and want of sleep.
-One clear idea remained to him: so far as
-Madge was concerned, he had acted as a man
-ought to act in his circumstances. Dick Crawshay
-would speedily satisfy her on that score.
-There was a tinge of bitterness in this reflection;
-and the bitterness brought a gleam of
-light, although not sufficient yet to dispel the
-confused shadows of his brain. It sufficed, however,
-to make him aware that it was Wrentham’s
-vague whisperings about Beecham, and
-Madge’s strange association with that person,
-which had urged him to act so harshly. For
-after all, there was no reason why he should
-not work his way out of the mess and win
-sufficient means to make Madge content, however
-far the position might be below that in
-which he would like to place her. But the
-haunting voice echoed its ‘Good-bye,’ and it
-seemed as if he had put away the love which
-might have sustained him in this time of trial.
-‘What a fool, what a fool!’ And he paced the
-floor restlessly, repeating that melancholy confession.</p>
-
-<p>He wished Wrentham would come back, so
-that he might discuss the state of affairs again,
-and obtain explanations of certain items in the
-accounts he had gone over during the night.
-There he was at last, and something particular
-must have happened to make him knock so
-violently.</p>
-
-<p>He threw open the door, and Mr Shield
-entered in his hurried blustering way, bringing
-with him a mixed aroma of brandy and gin.
-His bushy beard and whiskers were tangled, and
-his somewhat bloodshot eyes stared fiercely into
-space.</p>
-
-<p>‘Pretty mess—horrible mess,’ he muttered in
-his jerky manner, as he forced his way into the
-room and flung his huge form on the couch;
-‘and I can’t get you out of it. I’m in a mess
-too.’</p>
-
-<p>The surprise at the appearance of Shield, his
-rough manner, and the announcement he made,
-roused Philip most effectually from his own
-morbid broodings.</p>
-
-<p>‘You in a mess, sir—I do not understand.’
-In his bewilderment, he omitted the welcome
-which he would have given at any other time,
-and did not even express surprise that Shield
-should have answered his letter in person.</p>
-
-<p>‘You’ll get it into your head quick enough.—Give
-me a drink first—brandy, if you have it.
-Take a cigar. They’re first-rate. Drink, smoke,
-and I’ll tell you.’</p>
-
-<p>He threw a huge cigar on the table, and lit
-one himself in a furious way. But, in spite of
-his rough reckless manner, he was watching
-Philip narrowly from under his heavy eyebrows.
-Philip having mechanically placed a bottle and
-glass on the table, stood waiting explanations.</p>
-
-<p>‘Light up.’ (The command was obeyed slowly.)
-‘Give us soda.... Ah, that’s better. Take
-some—you’ll want it to keep your courage up.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not at present, thank you. I should be glad
-if you would tell me at once the meaning of
-your strange statement that you too are in
-difficulties. That fact makes my loss of your
-money so much the worse.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s bad—bad. Easily told. Think of me
-doing it! Got into a bogus thing—lost every
-available penny I had. That’s why there is no
-help for you.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Shield did not look like a person who had
-fallen from the height of fortune to the depth
-of poverty. He drank and smoked as one indifferent
-to the severest buffets of fate.</p>
-
-<p>‘Gracious powers—you cannot be serious!’
-ejaculated Philip.</p>
-
-<p>‘Fact, all the same. Not ruin exactly; but
-not a brass farthing to come to me for a year or
-more.’</p>
-
-<p>Philip paced the floor in agitation, unable
-to realise immediately the horrible calamity
-which had befallen his uncle. But the severity
-of the shock had the effect of rousing him
-to new life and vigour. All his misfortunes
-dwindled to pettiness beside those of his benefactor.
-He stopped before him, calm, and with
-an expression of firmness to which the lines
-made by recent calamities added strength. There<span class="pagenum" id="Page_581">{581}</span>
-was no more wildness in the eyes; he had suddenly
-grown old.</p>
-
-<p>‘I understand, Mr Shield, that your present
-position is no better than my own?’ he said
-slowly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Not much—maybe worse.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It shall not be worse, for whatever I can
-gain by any labour or skill is yours.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So?’ grunted Shield as he drank and stared
-at the man through clouds of smoke.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, my course is plain,’ Philip went on
-deliberately; ‘we must sell the works and material
-for what they will fetch; they ought to fetch
-more than enough to clear off the debts.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I believed—and still believe—that if you
-had been able to make the necessary advances,
-we could have carried the scheme to a successful
-issue, notwithstanding my blunders. My first
-mistake was in beginning on too big a scale.
-That cannot be helped. Now we have to look
-the ruin straight in the face, and whatever work
-can do to make you feel your losses less, it shall
-be done.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t see how it’s to be done,’ muttered
-Shield, as if finding a difficulty somewhere.</p>
-
-<p>‘We’ll try our best at anyrate; and you will
-believe, Mr Shield, that I should never have
-touched the money, if there had ever occurred
-to me a suspicion that you might some day
-feel the loss of it. You will remember that I
-always understood your wealth to be almost
-unlimited.’</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>My</i> wealth never was, and isn’t likely to be.
-Been a mighty fall in diamonds lately.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I understood so.’ (The emphasis on
-the ‘my’ was not observed by Philip.) ‘However,
-I hope you agree to accept the only return
-I can make for all your kindness to me.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t see how it’s to be done,’ growled Shield,
-again finding a difficulty somewhere.</p>
-
-<p>‘We must find that out, sir,’ said Philip with
-quiet resolution.</p>
-
-<p>‘Got to find your way out of this mess first.
-The works won’t bring half enough to clear off
-your debts. You’ve been cheated all round—paying
-the highest price for rubbish’——</p>
-
-<p>‘Impossible!’ interrupted Philip. ‘Wrentham
-may have made mistakes; but he is too much a
-man of business to have done that.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Fact it was done, all the same. Then there’s
-no time to turn round. That bill you drew on
-me falls due in a week or so.’</p>
-
-<p>Philip had been about to say, ‘Wrentham must
-account to us, if the materials have not been
-according to sample and order;’ but Wrentham
-was driven from his mind by the last sentence,
-which Shield jerked out before any interruption
-was possible.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bill!—What bill?’</p>
-
-<p>‘The one for six thousand—your brother
-Coutts discounted it, and’.... Here Shield
-made a long pause, looking steadily at Philip ...
-‘but it was not signed by Austin Shield.’</p>
-
-<p>The huge fist came down on the table with
-a thump that made the glasses rattle and the
-lamp shake. Philip stared for an instant,
-thunder-stricken by this new revelation. He
-recovered quickly, and gave a prompt answer.</p>
-
-<p>‘If there is such a bill—I did not sign it
-either.’</p>
-
-<p>Then they glared at each other through the
-smoke. Shield’s face with its shaggy hair always
-looked like that of a Scotch terrier, in which
-only the eyes give a hint of expression. Suddenly
-his hand was thrust out and grasped
-Philip’s with hearty satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>‘Right! Was sure of it without a word from
-you; but your brother is not sure that your
-signature is not genuine.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Did he say so?’ (How the pale cheeks flushed
-with indignation at the thought that Coutts
-should admit the one signature to be a forgery,
-and doubt whether his was or not.)</p>
-
-<p>‘Didn’t say it—looked it,’ answered Shield
-with jerky emphasis.</p>
-
-<p>‘When did you see him?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yesterday.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why did he not come to me then, as soon
-as he had seen you?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t know’—but there was a low guttural
-sound, as if Shield were inwardly chuckling with
-self-congratulation that he understood very well
-why Coutts had chosen to go to him and not
-to his brother.</p>
-
-<p>Philip was annoyed and puzzled by this
-curious transaction. He had always regarded
-his brother as such a keen trader, that it was
-difficult to understand how a mistake of this
-magnitude could be made by him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Did he say how he came to deal with a bill
-for so large an amount without mentioning it
-to me?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Says he took it in the ordinary way of
-business from your manager Wrentham. Had
-no reason to doubt its genuineness till afterwards
-when he came to compare signatures. Then he
-called on me.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Wrentham!’ Philip started to his feet. ‘Can
-the man have been cheating me all along?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Looks like it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He ought to be here now. I’ll send for
-him’——</p>
-
-<p>‘Stop! There’s more in the affair and more
-to be got out of it than we see at this minute.
-We have more than a week to work in. Let’s
-work.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Willingly; but in this matter we have nothing
-more to do than repudiate the forgery, and
-leave Coutts and the police to settle with the
-forger.’</p>
-
-<p>He felt bitter enough towards Coutts to have
-little regret for the loss which was about to fall
-on him. He would have felt still more bitter
-if he had known how eagerly Coutts had made
-use of this forged bill to endeavour to ingratiate
-himself into the place which Philip held in their
-uncle’s estimation.</p>
-
-<p>Wrentham had assured Coutts, and given him
-what appeared to be conclusive evidence, that
-Shield had realised fabulous sums out of the
-diamond fields, and had it in his power to realise
-as much more if he chose to work the ground.
-The greedy eyes of Coutts Hadleigh had gleamed
-with wild fancies suggested by these disclosures
-of the man who had been for a time one of
-Shield’s London agents; and who must therefore
-be able to speak with certainty of his affairs;
-and the greedy brain had been for months busy
-devising schemes by which he might win the
-rich man’s esteem and confidence, with the prospect
-of a share, at least, of his possessions. This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_582">{582}</span>
-forged bill afforded him the opportunity he
-desired, and he made the most of it without
-committing himself to any definite charge against
-his brother.</p>
-
-<p>The cleverest men are apt to judge others in
-some degree by reflection of their own natures,
-and so go wide of the mark. Coutts tried to
-reach the good-will of Mr Shield through his
-pocket; and he went wide of his mark. He
-was, however, at present happy in the idea that
-he had scored a bull’s-eye.</p>
-
-<p>‘That all you see to do?’ queried Shield after
-a pause, during which he watched Philip.</p>
-
-<p>‘So far as the forgery is concerned, that is
-all.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah.... I see more. Maybe we can get back
-a little of the waste. No saying. Worth trying.
-Anyhow, we can have a grin at the beggars who
-thought us bigger fools than we looked. That’s
-what we’ve got to work for.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t quite see what advantage we are to
-obtain in that way.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Clear enough, though. We recover a part of
-what is lost—maybe the greater part. Don’t give
-Wrentham or your brother a hint till you see
-me again. Go on with your arrangements as if
-you had heard nothing.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very well, since it is your wish. Meanwhile,
-I shall get another bed fitted up here, so that
-you can occupy it as soon as you are obliged to
-leave the hotel. We’ll manage to keep on the
-chambers somehow.’</p>
-
-<p>‘All right,’ said Shield, nodding his head
-heavily. ‘But you don’t know what you are
-bringing on yourself. I’m fond of <i>that</i>.’</p>
-
-<p>He pointed with his cigar to the brandy bottle.
-Philip gave his shoulders an impatient jerk; he
-had no need for this confession.</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope not too fond, sir; although it is easy
-to understand how a man leading such a solitary
-life as yours has been may contract the habit of
-looking for comfort from that false friend. But
-if it be so, then it is better you should be with
-me than with strangers.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Kind—very kind. I thank you. And now
-that I’ve given you all this bad news, here’s a
-bit of good news. Found an old friend of mine—takes
-interest in everything. Says he’ll make
-an offer for the works if on investigation he finds
-anything practicable in your scheme. More; if
-he finds that your failure is not due to negligence,
-he’ll make you an offer for your services
-as manager of some sort.’</p>
-
-<p>This was indeed good news, and Philip’s eyes
-brightened with pleasure; but his first thought
-was for others.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then we shall not starve, uncle, thank
-heaven; and if your friend has capital enough,
-I may see my project carried out under my own
-direction yet.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Maybe. Don’t be too jolly over it. Beecham’s
-a crotchety cur, and may change the whole
-thing.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Beecham!—Is he the friend you mean?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes. Says he knows you, and rather likes
-you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He is very kind,’ said Philip coldly; ‘but
-there is a possibility of our not agreeing if brought
-into frequent contact.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No fear of that, no fear of that.—I’m off.
-Good-night.’</p>
-
-<p>But before going off, he helped himself from
-the brandy bottle again; then, without the
-slightest indication of unsteadiness, strode out
-of the room and got into the hansom which was
-waiting for him.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PENCIL-MAKING">PENCIL-MAKING.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">At</span> the head of the beautiful valley of Borrowdale
-lies the little hamlet of Seathwaite. Near a
-clump of historic yews, six or eight whitewashed
-cottages nestle, a favourite haunt of artists, and
-the one solitary place in England where plumbago
-is to be found in absolute purity. Here the
-mountains converge on either side, until Glaramara
-at last fills the gap and closes in the vale.
-Travellers who wish to proceed farther, must
-go, either on horseback or on foot, over Sty Head
-Pass, and so into Wastdale, or past Scafell, into
-Langdale. Secluded little spot in Cumberland
-as this is, its hidden treasure was well known
-to our ancestors at least two hundred years ago;
-nor did any sentimental ideas of spoiling the
-lovely scenery deter them from mining into the
-mountain-side in search of that peculiar form of
-carbon commonly known as blacklead, plumbago,
-or graphite. The first and by far the most generally
-used of these names is a decided misnomer,
-for although there are many lead-mines in Cumberland,
-plumbago contains no trace of lead, but
-is one of the two crystallised forms in which
-carbon exists; the other being the diamond.
-Plumbago as found here lies in nests or pockets—or
-<i>sops</i>, as they are locally named. These sops
-are cavernous holes, varying in size from a few
-cubic inches to several cubic feet, and occur in
-the solid rock, resembling on a large scale what
-are known as air-holes in iron castings. The
-miners follow certain veins of granite as a guide
-to the sops, and come upon them suddenly in the
-heart of the mountain. It is in these that the
-plumbago—or <i>wad</i>, as the workmen call it—is
-found, in the form of black lumps, just like eggs
-in a nest. Some pieces are as small as peas, and
-others as large as big melons. How that plumbago
-came there, is a great puzzle to geologists.
-Odd pieces have been occasionally turned up
-by husbandmen whilst delving the ground; but
-it is probable that these were originally imbedded
-in the rocks, masses of which, having
-become detached by frost and rain, fell into the
-valley, and in their descent were broken up, and
-so laid bare the plumbago that was inside.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to its power of standing great heat, our
-forefathers used plumbago for crucibles, a large
-portion being sent to the Mint for operations
-connected with coining. Pencils were also made
-of it; and people who have been accustomed
-to hear of Cumberland lead-pencils, may imagine
-that they are yet; but it is a mistake. A
-drawing-pencil made of this virgin graphite
-cannot be manufactured to cost less than a
-shilling; and who, except for some exceptional
-work, would give such a price? The scientific<span class="pagenum" id="Page_583">{583}</span>
-chemist has stepped in and supplied a cheaper
-article. Conté, a Frenchman, about the end
-of last century, was the first to suggest a substitute,
-or rather a partial one; and since then,
-his idea has been step by step worked out
-and perfected, until to-day we are able to produce
-a commercial pencil at the wholesale price
-of less than one farthing. Even crucibles are
-now rarely made from it; so that, what with
-one thing and another, the Borrowdale mine has
-been closed for the last five years. Many of the
-visitors suppose that the stoppage of the works
-is caused by the mine having been exhausted.
-This, however, is a mistake, as there is every
-reason to believe that there are yet very large
-quantities of plumbago in the rock; but the cost
-of production, and the discovery of cheaper
-substitutes, render further mining impracticable
-as a commercial undertaking.</p>
-
-<p>To give an idea of the difference in value of
-plumbago—the last lot from this mine sold in
-London brought thirty shillings per pound; and
-it has been known to sell for one hundred and
-sixty shillings; whilst the price at present for
-best foreign is about forty shillings per hundredweight,
-or, say, fourpence per pound. Inferior
-qualities, such as are used for blackleading grates,
-&amp;c., can be bought much cheaper. Foreign
-plumbago is chiefly imported from Ceylon and
-Bohemia, where it is found in veins in large
-quantities; but as this kind cannot be used for
-pencils in its crude state, it has to be ‘manufactured.’
-This is done largely at Keswick; so that,
-after all, when a purchaser buys a ‘best Cumberland
-pencil,’ he is not altogether deceived;
-for although the blacklead does come from Ceylon
-and the cedar from Florida, were they not first
-introduced to each other by the Keswick workman,
-toiling at his bench in the water-turned
-mills on the banks of the Greta? The Borrowdale
-graphite varies much in degree of hardness;
-consequently, in the old days when it was made
-into pencils, each lump was tested and sorted
-according to the depth of colour it produced on
-a piece of paper. The classification was from
-H.H.H. or very hard, to B.B.B.B. or very soft
-and black. The graphite was then sawn by
-hand into strips, which were inserted into a
-slot or groove in the wood, and the whole glued
-together and turned in a lathe into a pencil.
-The method of to-day is quite different, and
-there being great competition in this trade,
-speed combined with good work is the principal
-end to be attained to bring the cost as low as
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>The three mills at Keswick employ about a
-hundred workpeople, males and females. The
-men earn on an average about twenty-five shillings
-per week, and the women about twelve.
-The blacklead—we are now speaking of imported
-plumbago—is first crushed and then mixed with
-what is technically called a <i>binding</i>, the composition
-of which is a trade secret and varies
-at each mill. Its purpose is, as the term denotes,
-to give a glutinous consistency to the powdered
-plumbago and also to add to the blackness of its
-marking qualities. Lampblack, sulphuric acid,
-gum-arabic, resin, and several other substances
-are used in this binding. The whole is worked
-into a pulp between revolving stones. It is then
-partially dried and again crushed. Whilst in
-this half-dry state, it is forced through a mould
-under considerable pressure. These moulds are
-of various sizes, from a very big one a quarter-inch
-square, used for fancy walking-sticks—a
-mere catchpenny, and purchased only by tourists
-as mementoes—to the little round ones used
-for putting into pencil-cases and which are
-called ‘lead-points.’ The intermediate sizes are
-known as Carpenters, Drawing, Pocket-book,
-and Programme. A workman receives the thin
-strip of blacklead as it is slowly forced through
-the mould, and at intervals breaks it off, carefully
-placing it on a board between pieces
-of wood. By this means a large quantity can
-be kept without fear of damage. When sufficient
-is moulded to compose a baking, the oven
-is heated; and these long slips, which are
-exactly the size of the lead in a pencil, are cut
-into lengths of about four inches, and packed
-with care in cast-iron crucibles. These are then
-put into the oven, and allowed to remain at a
-red heat for two hours. When gently cooled, the
-leads are ready for pencils.</p>
-
-<p>In another part of the manufactory, a different
-kind of work is going on—that of preparing, or
-rather working the wood, for it undergoes no
-change but that of shape. Cedar is universally
-used, except in very low qualities and carpenters’
-pencils. Most of this wood comes from America;
-and Florida is one of the largest exporting States.
-The chief reasons for using cedar are—that it is
-easily worked, is soft, straight-grained, free from
-knots, and is sweet-scented. Am eminent firm of
-toilet-soap makers have taken note of this last
-quality, and purchase all the cedar sawdust that
-is made in these pencil-mills. A minimum
-of waste is one of the sure signs of an advanced
-civilisation. Many and various circular saws
-reduce the cedar logs into strips of two sizes—one,
-about thirty inches long, an inch and a
-quarter wide, and three-eighths of an inch thick;
-the other, of the same dimensions, but only half
-the thickness. These are examined; and any
-having defects, such as knots, cracks, &amp;c., are
-laid aside, to be used in shorter lengths, the bad
-places having been cut out. The thicker or
-three-eighth-inch strips are then passed through
-the grooving-machine, which cuts out three perfect
-and clean grooves up the whole length. These
-are now ready to receive the strips of lead, which
-are first dipped in glue and placed by girls into
-the grooves, which they exactly fill. The wood
-has now the appearance of having three black
-lines running parallel along the whole length.
-This surface is then brushed over with hot
-glue and the thinner strip placed firmly on it.
-If any pencil is looked at closely, the joining of
-these two pieces will be easily noticed. The
-whole is placed, with many similar ones, in a
-frame, where they are pressed firmly together
-until the glue has quite set.</p>
-
-<p>It will be understood that now each piece is
-composed of two strips of wood, firmly glued
-together, inside which, three grooves, filled with
-plumbago composition, run from one end to the
-other—about thirty inches, or sufficient to make<span class="pagenum" id="Page_584">{584}</span>
-four pencils to each groove—that is, twelve pencils
-in all. The length of a finished pencil is
-seven inches. These pieces are then taken to a
-very curious machine and passed twice through.
-The first time, the top surface is ploughed from
-end to end into what resembles three distinct
-semicircular ridges; the piece is then turned,
-and the other side treated in a similar manner.
-The result of this second ploughing is that three
-perfectly circular and entirely separate lengths
-are seen to emerge from the machine. On examining
-any one of these, it will be found to be a
-pencil thirty inches long, having the vein of
-blacklead exactly in the centre. This is an American
-invention, and has done much to reduce
-the cost of the modern pencil.</p>
-
-<p>The pencils, however, have to pass through
-many hands before they can claim to be finished.
-Women rub them with fine sand-paper, other
-women varnish and polish them, and then they
-are cut by a circular saw into seven-inch lengths.
-For the first time, they could now be recognised
-by a child as pencils. A thin shaving is
-taken off each end, which gives them a finished
-appearance and causes the lead to shine, as the
-saw does not cut clean enough for a fastidious
-public. Lastly, the pencil is stamped, not necessarily
-always with the maker’s name, for nowadays
-he occasionally sinks his individuality for
-the purpose of selling his wares; and for an
-order of a gross, some makers will stamp any
-village stationer’s name on each pencil.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="MR_PUDSTERS_RETURN">MR PUDSTER’S RETURN.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER II.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr Gideon Maggleby</span> had been married rather
-less than two-and-twenty hours, when at about
-nine o’clock on the morning of March 23, 1868,
-he walked into the room in which he had so often
-breakfasted and dined with his late friend and
-partner, Solomon Pudster. Mr Maggleby, who
-was pre-eminently a man of business, had not
-seen fit to go to the Isle of Wight or to Paris
-to spend his honeymoon; and Mrs Maggleby,
-who was nothing if not a woman of sound sense,
-had loyally accepted the decision of her third
-lord and master. They had agreed to stay in
-town, and not to allow their new happiness to
-interfere with their material interests in Mincing
-Lane. Mr Maggleby had determined, however,
-to make a holiday of the day after his wedding;
-to stay at home in the morning with his wife,
-to escort her to Madame Tussaud’s in the afternoon,
-and to take her to the play in the
-evening.</p>
-
-<p>With this comfortable programme in his mind’s
-eye, Mr Maggleby came down to breakfast in his
-flowered dressing-gown. Mrs Maggleby, he knew,
-would not be many minutes behind him, and he
-therefore rang the bell for the coffee, and turned
-lazily towards the table, upon which lay two
-piles of letters. The smaller heap chiefly consisted
-of missives addressed to Mrs Pudster, for
-the marriage of the previous day had not as
-yet been noised abroad in the country, and Mrs
-Maggleby had several female correspondents who
-communicated with her much more often than
-she communicated with them. The larger bundle
-was made up of letters addressed either to Mr
-Maggleby or to Messrs Pudster and Maggleby,
-the letters to the firm having been already
-brought down from Mincing Lane by a confidential
-clerk.</p>
-
-<p>It was a chilly morning; and Mr Maggleby,
-with the letters in his hand, sank into an easy-chair
-by the fireside, and then began to polish
-his spectacles. But ere he had time to complete
-that operation, one envelope attracted the attention
-of his not very dim-sighted eyes. It bore
-the post-mark ‘Plymouth,’ and was addressed in
-a familiar hand-writing. Without waiting to
-put on his spectacles, Mr Maggleby seized this
-envelope and tore it open. For an instant he
-stared at the letter which it contained; then
-he turned white, and fell back with a groan.
-But Mr Maggleby was a man of considerable
-self-command, and he soon partly recovered
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>‘Maria must not see me in this agitated state,’
-he murmured, as he rose. ‘I shall go back to
-my dressing-room, and decide upon some plan
-of action before I face her.’ And with unsteady
-steps, he quitted the dining-room, taking with
-him the letter that was the cause of his
-emotion.</p>
-
-<p>Almost immediately afterwards, a servant
-entered with the coffee and some covered dishes,
-which she set upon the table; and no sooner
-had she withdrawn than Mrs Maggleby appeared.
-Mrs Maggleby looked blooming, and was evidently
-in capital spirits. She caught up her
-letters, sat down smiling in the very easy-chair
-from which her husband had risen a few minutes
-earlier, and began to read. The first letters to
-be opened were, of course, those which were
-addressed to her in her new name. They contained
-congratulations upon her marriage. Then
-she attacked the envelopes that were addressed
-to Mrs Pudster. One contained a bill; another
-contained a request for Mrs Pudster’s vote and
-interest on behalf of Miss Tabitha Gabbles, a
-maiden lady who was seeking admission into
-the Home for the Daughters of Decayed Trinity
-Pilots; and a third brought a lithographed
-letter from the Marquis of Palmyra, imploring
-the recipient to make some small subscription
-to the funds of the Association for the Encouragement
-of Asparagus Culture in the Scilly Islands.
-There were also letters from Miss Martha Tigstake
-and Mrs Benjamin Bowery, dealing with nothing
-in particular and with everything in general;
-and finally there was a letter bearing the post-mark
-‘Plymouth.’ Mrs Maggleby opened it
-carelessly; but a single glance at its contents
-caused her to start up, grasp convulsively at the
-mantelpiece, utter an exclamation, and tremble
-like a leaf.</p>
-
-<p>‘Poor Gideon!’ she said. ‘What a fearful
-blow! He mustn’t see me in this agitated
-state. I shall go up-stairs again, and decide
-upon some plan of action before I face him.’
-And Mrs Maggleby, letter in hand and pale as
-death, quitted the room, leaving the coffee and
-the eggs and bacon and the crumpets to get
-cold.</p>
-
-<p>Three-quarters of an hour later, Mr Maggleby
-ventured down-stairs again. He was dressed as
-if to go to the City, and in his hand he held
-a letter which bore the simple address, ‘Maria.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_585">{585}</span>
-This letter he laid upon his wife’s plate. It
-was worded as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My dearest Life</span>—I am suddenly and unexpectedly
-summoned to Mincing Lane on business
-of the greatest importance. I do not know
-exactly when I shall return, but you must
-not be anxious.—Yours devotedly,</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Gideon</span>.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr Maggleby hastily seized a tepid crumpet,
-and without the formality of seating himself at
-the table, devoured the clammy dainty. Then,
-hearing his wife upon the stairs, he rushed
-like a madman from the room, and an instant
-afterwards, left the house and quietly closed the
-front-door behind him.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs Maggleby, whose face bore traces of
-recent weeping, entered the dining-room as if
-she expected to find the place tenanted by a
-ghost. Discovering, however, that it was empty,
-she resumed her seat by the fire, and, with an
-hysterical outburst, buried her head in her hands.</p>
-
-<p>‘Poor dear Gideon!’ she sobbed. ‘What will
-become of him and me? We shall be imprisoned
-for life; I know we shall. The house will have
-to be shut up; the business will go to ruin;
-the servants will have to know all. Oh, it is too
-terrible! But I must compose myself. Gideon
-will be coming down, and I must be prepared
-to break the news to him;’ and with great self-command,
-Mrs Maggleby wiped her eyes and
-seated herself at the table. As she did so, she
-caught sight of her husband’s note, which she
-eagerly opened.</p>
-
-<p>‘He has gone!’ she exclaimed despairingly,
-when she had read it. ‘I am left alone to bear
-the trial!—Ah, Gideon, you little know how
-cruel you are. But I must follow you. We
-must concert measures at once.’</p>
-
-<p>Once more she went up-stairs. She put on
-her bonnet and cloak; she covered her flushed
-face with a thick veil; and without saying a
-word to any of her servants, she left the house,
-and made the best of her way to the nearest
-cabstand.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, Mr Maggleby had been driven to
-his place of business in Mincing Lane. He
-entered his office, and sat down as if dazed, in
-his private room. Hearing of his principal’s
-unexpected arrival, the head-clerk, Mr John
-Doddard, almost immediately appeared. He too
-was scared and breathless.</p>
-
-<p>‘Read, sir, read!’ he gasped as he thrust an
-open letter into Mr Maggleby’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Maggleby mechanically took the letter,
-and read aloud as follows:</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><i>On board S.S. Camel, off Plymouth, Tuesday.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Mr Doddard</span>—As you are probably
-not expecting me, I send a line ashore to let
-you know that I hope to return in time to be at
-business at the usual hour on Thursday. Please
-take care that there is a good fire in my private
-room, as a visit to Demerara always, as you
-know, renders me particularly sensitive to cold
-and damp. I am writing to Mr Maggleby. We
-have had a capital voyage so far, but the weather
-in the Channel threatens to be rather dirty. I
-shall land at Gravesend; and if you can find
-out when the <i>Camel</i> is likely to be there, you
-may send down some one to meet me.—Yours
-faithfully,</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Solomon Pudster</span>.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>‘I knew it!’ ejaculated Mr Maggleby. ‘I
-have just received the letter that he speaks of.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What does it all mean?’ asked Mr Doddard.
-‘I seem to be dreaming, sir. We buried poor
-Mr Pudster eight months ago, didn’t we?’</p>
-
-<p>‘So I thought,’ murmured Mr Maggleby vaguely.
-‘But this letter is certainly in his handwriting.
-And look at the post-mark. There it is, as
-plain as possible: “Plymouth, Mar. 22, 1868.”
-That was yesterday; and to-day is Wednesday,
-March 23d.—Just read my letter, Mr Doddard!’
-and he pulled from his pocket a missive, which
-he handed to his clerk.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Doddard read as follows:</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><i>On board S.S. Camel, off Plymouth, Tuesday.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My dear Gideon</span>—Here I am almost at
-home again. I fancy that you didn’t expect to
-see me just at present; for I wasn’t able to
-write to you before we left Demerara; so, as
-we are now sending ashore here, I post you a
-few lines to prepare you for the surprise. It
-is, as you know, quite unusual for vessels of
-this line to call at Plymouth, and therefore I
-haven’t time to send you a long letter; though,
-if we also call at Southampton, I will write
-again from there. I have told Doddard to send
-some one to meet me at Gravesend; let him take
-down any letters that you may want me to see
-at once.—Yours affectionately,</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Solomon</span>.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>‘Well, I never did!’ cried Mr Doddard.
-‘Yet I could swear to Mr Pudster’s handwriting
-anywhere. It is a terrible thing for a
-man who ought to be lying quietly in his
-coffin to come back like this, and upset every
-one’s calculations.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You are certain about the handwriting?’
-asked Mr Maggleby anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>‘Quite certain!’ replied Mr Doddard. ‘What
-a frightful thing for poor Mrs Pudster!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Mrs Maggleby, you mean!’ said Mr Maggleby.
-‘Yes. I don’t know how to break it to her.
-It’s a case of bigamy; isn’t it?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Let us hope for the best, sir. Mr Pudster
-won’t prosecute, I fancy, considering the peculiar
-character of the circumstances. It’s his fault.
-That’s my opinion. I could swear, even now,
-that we buried him. He must have revived in
-his coffin, and been dug up again by the gravediggers;
-and must then have gone over to
-Demerara, in order to avoid shocking his poor
-wife.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I wonder our Demerara agents didn’t say
-something about it when they wrote by the last
-mail,’ said Mr Maggleby.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, of course he kept them quiet, sir. But
-it’s a cruel case—that’s all I have to say. And
-though I have known Mr Pudster these thirty
-years, and liked him too, I don’t hesitate to say
-that he’s not behaving straightforwardly in this
-piece of business.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Hush! Wait until you know of his motives,’
-said Mr Maggleby.</p>
-
-<p>‘He can’t excuse himself, sir, I tell you,’
-rejoined Mr Doddard warmly. ‘If he comes
-back, I go. So there! And I say it with all
-respect to you, sir. When a man’s once dead,
-he’s got no right to come back again. It isn’t
-natural; and what’s more, it isn’t business-like.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_586">{586}</span></p>
-
-<p>The bitterness of Mr Doddard’s remarks in
-this connection may be partly accounted for by
-consideration of the fact that Mr Maggleby had a
-few days previously announced his intention of
-taking the head-clerk into partnership at an early
-date. Mr Pudster’s return would of course
-knock this project on the head.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Doddard,’ said Mr Maggleby, ‘we can’t
-mend matters by talking. We can only wait;
-and perhaps, when we see Mr Pudster, we shall
-find that’——</p>
-
-<p>But Mr Maggleby’s philosophical remarks were
-suddenly cut short by the unexpected arrival of
-Mrs Maggleby upon the scene. She rushed into
-the private room, stretched forth a letter, and
-fell sobbing upon her husband’s neck.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Maggleby placed his wife in a chair, opened
-a cupboard, gave her a glass of wine, took the
-letter, and read it. Like the others, it was dated
-from on board the <i>Camel</i>, off Plymouth. ‘<span class="smcap">My own
-dearest Wife</span>,’ it ran—‘In a few hours from
-this I shall, I hope, be with you once more, never
-again to leave you. I ought to have already
-apprised you of the probable date of my return;
-but at the last moment before starting, I had no
-opportunity of writing. How glad I shall be to
-see you! My long absence has been a great trial
-to me, and I feel sure that it has also tried you;
-but it is now almost at an end. I will, if
-possible, write again from Southampton, and tell
-you exactly when to expect me. The sea in the
-Channel is so rough that at present it is difficult
-to say when we shall get into the river.—Your
-ever loving husband,</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Solomon</span>.’
-</p>
-
-<p>‘It is most painful!’ gasped Mrs Maggleby.
-‘What can we do, Gideon? You must manage
-to meet Solomon at Gravesend. Look in the
-newspaper, and see whether the <i>Camel</i> has been
-signalled yet. He must hear first of what has
-happened either from my lips or from yours;
-and I am really not well enough to go myself.
-I thought that he was lying cold in his coffin.
-Oh, that I should have committed bigamy! I
-ought to have remained faithful to his memory.
-This is my punishment. But he must—he shall
-forgive me.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Doddard had gone into the outer office,
-and had sent a clerk for a copy of the <i>Times</i>.
-With this he now returned; and the paper was
-opened on Mr Maggleby’s table, and eagerly
-scanned for news of the <i>Camel</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘Here we have it!’ said Mr Doddard at last.
-‘“Steamship <i>Camel</i>, from Demerara to London,
-with cargo and passengers, was signalled off
-Dover at one o’clock this morning.”—Then Mr
-Pudster will be at Gravesend in an hour or two,
-sir.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Go, Gideon, go!’ exclaimed Mrs Maggleby.
-‘Lose no time. Take a special train if necessary.
-Tell him all, and implore his forgiveness.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, I think I had better go, Maria,’ said Mr
-Maggleby. ‘I will send a clerk home with you,
-and will telegraph to you as soon as I see your—your
-late husband. In the meantime, try to be
-calm. Please tell them to call a cab, Doddard.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Doddard returned to the outer office, and
-despatched a messenger for two cabs. Mr
-Maggleby handed Mrs Maggleby into one of
-them, and a clerk followed her. Then the
-unfortunate man went back for a moment to his
-private room to study Bradshaw on the best and
-speediest route from London to Gravesend.
-There was a train at a quarter past eleven. It
-was then a quarter to eleven.</p>
-
-<p>‘And when will he be at Gravesend?’ asked
-Mr Maggleby.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Doddard turned again to the <i>Times</i>. But
-instead of at once lighting upon the shipping
-news, his eye fell upon a paragraph that occupied
-a not very conspicuous position at the foot
-of the page. Suddenly he uttered a cry.</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s the matter, Doddard?’ demanded Mr
-Maggleby, who was rapidly growing impatient.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Doddard replied by bursting into a paroxysm
-of laughter. ‘By Jove!’ he exclaimed,
-‘this is too ridiculous! I never heard of such a
-thing in my life! It is like a play! Ha, ha, ha!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Your merriment is rather ill-timed,’ cried Mr
-Maggleby reproachfully. ‘Tell me when Mr
-Pudster will arrive at Gravesend; and be quick,
-or I shall lose that train.’</p>
-
-<p>‘A <i>pump</i>, too!’ continued the head-clerk
-hilariously.</p>
-
-<p>‘You’re mad, I think,’ said Mr Maggleby.
-‘What do you mean?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, read this, sir,’ answered Mr Doddard,
-and he handed the <i>Times</i> to his principal and
-pointed to the paragraph.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Maggleby testily took the paper, adjusted
-his spectacles, and read:</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Extraordinary Discovery at Plymouth.</span>—The
-corporation of Plymouth recently decided to
-remove an old and disused pump which for many
-years has stood handleless and dry on the Hoe.
-Yesterday morning, some workmen proceeded to
-remove it, and in its interior they were astonished
-to discover a number of letters, which had, it
-is supposed, been put into the hole into which
-the handle formerly fitted, under the delusion
-that the pump was a post-office pillar letter-box.
-The letters were at once taken to the Plymouth
-post-office, and were without delay forwarded to
-their destinations.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Can it be true?’ ejaculated Mr Maggleby,
-with a great sigh of relief. ‘Then the fact of
-the <i>Camel</i> having been signalled last night off
-Dover is merely a coincidence?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Most certainly,’ said Mr Doddard.</p>
-
-<p>‘Thank Heaven!’ cried Mr Maggleby fervently.
-‘Send the cab away, Doddard. But no! I’ll
-go home again at once, and set my poor wife at
-ease. Ha, ha! I do remember now, that when
-poor Mr Pudster came home from his last voyage,
-he discovered that some letters which he had
-posted at Plymouth had not been delivered. We
-didn’t miss them, because, as you recollect,
-Doddard, he wrote again from Southampton.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course he did, sir,’ said Mr Doddard.
-‘Well, let us congratulate ourselves. It would
-have been a fearful business for Mrs Maggleby
-to have to go through.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And it would have been bad for you, Doddard,
-for it would have spoilt your chance of a partnership
-for some time to come. Now, I’m off.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Maggleby put the <i>Times</i> in his pocket, and
-departed; and when he reached his home and
-showed the paper to his wife, the couple sat
-together for at least half an hour, talking over
-the extraordinary nature of the adventure.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, we shall be able to go to Madame
-Tussaud’s and the theatre after all, Maria,’ said
-Mr Maggleby at luncheon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_587">{587}</span></p>
-
-<p>And go they did; and what is more, Mr
-Doddard became a partner a fortnight later, the
-firm thenceforward being known as Maggleby
-and Doddard.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_FORESIGHT_OF_INSECTS_FOR">THE FORESIGHT OF INSECTS FOR
-THEIR YOUNG.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> no manner is the mysterious influence of
-instinct over the insect world more remarkably
-manifested than by the care taken by parent
-insects for the future welfare of offspring which
-they are destined never to behold. As the
-human parent upon his deathbed makes the best
-provision he can for the sustenance and prosperity
-of his infant children, whom death has decreed
-that he may not in person watch over, so those
-insects which nature has decreed shall be always
-the parents of orphan children, led by an unerring
-influence within, do their best to provide for the
-wants of the coming generation.</p>
-
-<p>The butterfly, after flitting through her short
-life, seeks out a spot whereon to deposit her
-numerous eggs, not—as one might expect of a
-creature devoid of mind—upon any chance plant,
-or even upon the plant or flower from which
-she herself has been wont to draw her sustenance,
-but upon the particular plant which
-forms the invariable food of the larvæ of her
-species. The various kinds of clothes-moths
-penetrate into our cupboards, drawers, and
-everywhere where furs, woollen garments, &amp;c.,
-are stored, that they may there lay their
-eggs, to hatch into the burrowing grubs which
-are the terror of our housekeepers. The ichneumon
-tribe, one of nature’s greatest counterpoises
-to keep down the too rapid increase of
-the insect world, lay their eggs in the larvæ of
-other insects, which eggs when hatched develop
-into a devouring brood, which ungratefully turn
-upon and devour the helpless creature that
-sheltered them as a nest. The female ichneumon
-having discovered a caterpillar or grub which
-her instinct informs her has not been previously
-attacked, at once proceeds to thrust her ovipositor
-into the writhing body of her victim, depositing
-one or more eggs, according to the size of the
-living food-supply. When hatched, the larvæ
-devour and live upon their foster-parent, avoiding
-in a marvellous way the vital parts of their
-victim, whose life is most accurately timed to
-last until its young tormentors are full grown, and
-not beyond. At one time, we were led to believe
-in occasional instances of the instinct of female
-ichneumons being at fault, by observing them
-apparently ovipositing upon the dry shells of
-pupæ from which the butterflies had escaped.
-This, however, we subsequently found to be an
-erroneous idea, the fact of the matter being,
-that the caterpillar upon which the parent
-ichneumon had laid her fatal egg, had had time,
-before the full development of the young
-ichneumon grub, to turn to the pupal stage.
-What, then, we saw was the young ichneumon
-fly just emerged from the dry pupal case, the
-contents of which it had first devoured in its
-own larval stage, then, itself turning to a pupa,
-it had lain, thus doubly incased, until, having
-broken forth a perfect fly, it rested upon its late
-prison, awaiting sufficient strength to come to
-its wings. What a wooden horse of Troy such
-a chrysalis would prove, if introduced into the
-breeding establishment of a collector!</p>
-
-<p>Other members of the ichneumon tribe do not
-actually insert their eggs into the destined food-supply
-of their young; but, as it were, going
-deeper into calculation of future events, content
-themselves with laying them in close proximity
-to the eggs of some member of the tribe upon
-which it is their mission to prey.</p>
-
-<p>There is an old saying—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Big fleas have little fleas</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Upon their backs to bite ’em;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Little fleas have smaller fleas,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">So on <i>ad infinitum</i>;</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>which is very true, inasmuch as from the great
-humble-bee down to the tiniest corn-thrips—a
-mere speck of dust to the naked eye—all insects
-have their parasites, and generally their own
-special species of ichneumon, to prevent their
-over-increase and to preserve the due balance
-of nature. There is a species of longicorn beetle,
-found in Pennsylvania, which feeds upon the
-tender bark of young hickory shoots. When
-laying-time arrives, the female, having deposited
-her eggs in cavities perforated in the bark,
-carefully cuts a groove, about one-tenth of
-an inch wide and deep, round the shoot just
-below where her treasures lie. The object,
-or rather we suppose we ought to say the
-consequence, of this act is the withering and
-decay of the shoot, a provision for the sustenance
-of her young, which, when in their larval state,
-live upon dead wood! This remarkable insect
-is called the hickory girder from the above-mentioned
-habit, which, we think, is one of the
-most extraordinary instances of foresight, through
-a mere blind instinct, that have ever come under
-observation.</p>
-
-<p>The gadfly (<i>Œustrus equi</i>), whose larvæ are
-the bots which inhabit the intestines of the horse,
-gains for her progeny that comfortable position
-by entrapping the animal itself into introducing
-her eggs within its stomach. For this purpose,
-she lays her eggs upon such portions of the
-horse’s body as he is in the habit of frequently
-licking, such as the knees, shoulders, &amp;c. The
-unerring nature of her instinct is shown by the
-fact that she never chooses as a nidus any
-portion of the body which the horse is unable
-to reach with its tongue. Having thus been
-introduced into their natural feeding-grounds, the
-bots there pass their larval existence, until, it
-becoming time for them to assume the pupal
-form, they go forth with the animal’s dung
-to reach the earth, burrow into it, and therein
-pass the insects’ purgatory.</p>
-
-<p>Again, one of the grain-moths (<i>Gelechia
-cerealella</i>) shows remarkable instinct in adapting
-itself to circumstances according to the time of
-year when it has to deposit its eggs. The first
-generation of these moths, emerging in May
-from pupæ which have lain in the granaries
-through the winter, lay their countless eggs
-upon the as yet ungathered corn, upon which
-their young play havoc until, having passed
-through the necessary stages, they come out
-in the autumn as the second generation amidst
-the now stored-up grain. Now, however, their
-instinct prompts them, not, like the first generation,
-to go forth to the fields to seek the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_588">{588}</span>
-proper nest and future nourishment of their
-young, but bids them deposit their eggs upon
-the store of wheat ready at hand. Thus, two
-following generations of the same insect are led
-by their instincts to different habits to suit the
-altered and, in the last case, unnatural position
-of their infants’ destined food-supply.</p>
-
-<p>The interesting mason-wasp, having with great
-care and skill bored out a cylindrical hole in
-some sunny sandbank, deposits at the bottom of
-this refuge her eggs. Next, provident mother as
-she is, she seeks out about a dozen small caterpillars,
-always of the same species, and immures
-them alive in the pit, as food for her cruel
-children. In making her selection of grubs to
-be thus buried alive, she rejects any that may
-not have reached maturity; not, we imagine, upon
-the score of their not being so full-flavoured,
-but because, when not full grown, they require
-food to keep them alive; whereas, when of
-mature age, they will live a long time without
-nourishment, ready to turn to chrysalides when
-opportunity occurs.</p>
-
-<p>These are but a few of the instances which
-might be adduced in illustration of this foresight
-in insects, which compensates for their not being
-allowed in person to superintend the welfare of
-their offspring. In many cases, it would be
-better for human progeny were their parents
-thus endowed with an unerring instinct, rather
-than with an uncertain will.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_BREAK-NECK_VENTURE">A BREAK-NECK VENTURE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is more than thirty years since my medico-military
-lines were cast in the little picturesque
-station of Badulla, the capital of Oovah, in the
-interior of Ceylon. This district was the centre
-of very considerable European enterprise in
-coffee-growing, and, both socially and commercially,
-was an important unit of the Kandian
-provinces; hence government, in addition to a
-small garrison of troops, had established in it
-a staff of its Civil servants, for the administration
-of fiscal and judicial affairs, and it is concerning
-one of these officials—the assistant district judge,
-as he was called—that my story is now to be
-told.</p>
-
-<p>The judge was a young gentleman of good
-parts and attractive manners. He was a dead-shot,
-an excellent angler, a perfect rider, a very
-Dr Grace or Spofforth of a cricketer, and an
-intelligent, chatty, pleasant companion to boot.
-He had also a sure foot and a steady head. He
-could walk along the verge of a rocky precipice
-with a sheer descent of hundreds of feet as
-unconcernedly as many a man trudges over
-a turnpike road. Chaffingly, we were wont to
-tell him that he had entirely mistaken his
-vocation in life, and that instead of being ‘an
-upright judge,’ trying ‘niggers,’ he ought to
-have been another Blondin, trundling wheelbarrows
-on a rope stretched across Adam’s Bridge
-from Manaar to Ramisseram, and cooking a
-prawn curry in a stove when in the very
-middle of the Straits. However, even in the
-capacity of the aforesaid judge, this proclivity
-of being able to walk safely upon next to
-nothing once stood him in good need, as I
-myself witnessed.</p>
-
-<p>One afternoon he came into my quarters
-holding in his hand a letter, which the post
-had just brought him. I ought perhaps to
-mention that thirty odd years ago there were
-neither railroads nor electric telegraphs in
-Ceylon, and that travelling was comparatively
-slow, and to some extent uncertain. In the
-case of our station, however, we had little to
-complain of. The postal authorities at Colombo
-forwarded our mail-bags to Kandy—the first
-seventy-two miles of the way—by a daily two-horsed
-coach; and from that city to their
-destination, ‘runners’ carried the letters. But
-these ‘runners’ now and again met with accidents
-of various sorts, such as being killed by
-elephants or tigers; and it so happened that
-something of the sort—I forget what—having
-occurred to detain my friend’s letter, it was
-older by more than twenty-four hours than
-it should have been, when he got it.</p>
-
-<p>‘I must be off sharp to Colombo,’ said he,
-addressing me as he entered my room. ‘I have
-had awfully bad news: it is a question of life or
-death with a very dear friend there. I can’t
-lose a moment over my departure. But get leave
-from the Commandant, and keep me company
-as far as Attempyttia—it is only a dozen miles
-away—and we will talk over things as we go
-along.’</p>
-
-<p>‘All right,’ I said; ‘I’m your man.’</p>
-
-<p>In a very few minutes the required permission
-was obtained; after which my pony was saddled
-and we were off. After leaving me at the
-travellers’ bungalow at Attempyttia, my companion
-would have to proceed to Kandy, to catch
-the downward coach, leaving at daylight next
-morning for Colombo. To accomplish this—some
-eighty odd miles—he would be forced to ride
-all night, assisted stage by stage with fresh
-mounts, which the kind-hearted coffee-planters,
-whether known or unknown to him, would
-willingly place at his disposal.</p>
-
-<p>‘Let’s see,’ said the judge. ‘I’ve a good
-fourteen or fifteen hours before me to find that
-highly respectable rattle-trap of a royal mail-coach
-drawn up at the post-office at gun-fire
-to-morrow morning. Fourteen hours, six miles
-an hour, including stoppages—eighty-four miles!
-A snail’s pace; but I won’t calculate upon more
-speed. Bar accidents, I’m safe to do it, and do
-it I must.’</p>
-
-<p>So on we galloped, little heeding the romantic
-scenery through which we were hurrying, and
-the faster too, as the sun was becoming obscured
-by thick, heavy, black rain-clouds, which were
-gathering over it and all around.</p>
-
-<p>‘We are in for a drenching,’ I remarked.</p>
-
-<p>‘If a drenching were all,’ was the reply, ‘it
-would not much matter; but’——</p>
-
-<p>‘Well! But what?’</p>
-
-<p>‘The Badulla Oya, the river which runs
-through the deep gorge between the spurs of the
-hills you see yonder—I know that river well.
-In dry weather, it is little more than a shallow
-streamlet, over the stones of which an inch or
-two of water trickles. But when these sudden
-monsoon downpours come on, it has the unpleasant
-knack of swelling, swelling, until it becomes
-a large, wide, deep mountain torrent, tearing like
-mad to empty itself somewhere. And you have
-no idea of the rapidity with which this metamorphosis
-is accomplished. Let’s push on, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_589">{589}</span>
-the river crosses the highway; and by Jove, here
-is the rain and no mistake!’</p>
-
-<p>A vivid flash of lightning, a loud clap of
-thunder right overhead, and before its reverberations
-were half ended among the echoing mountains,
-a deluge of rain was upon us. We were
-soaked to the skin in a few seconds.</p>
-
-<p>‘How far is the river?’ I asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘Good five miles; and five miles with these
-flood-gates of the skies opened, mean touch and
-go. Twenty to one, the Badulla Oya will be
-swollen and impassable.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Is there no canoe or bridge?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Canoe! What on earth, in your Ceylon
-griffinage, are you dreaming about? As for a
-bridge, well, metaphorically speaking, there is a
-thing which the natives call a bridge; but practically,
-not what you and I and the department
-of Public Works would class as one. However,
-it will not be long before you see what sort
-of a concern the bridge is like.’</p>
-
-<p>We now hastened as fast as the animals we
-rode could lay hoofs to ground; but before
-the five miles were traversed and the banks
-of the river reached, we distinctly heard it
-roaring.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is down already,’ said my companion.</p>
-
-<p>Down it was with a vengeance, as we presently
-realised. Over a bed of rocky boulders it foamed
-and boiled and tumbled, a dark, deep, angry
-chocolate-coloured torrent, sixty feet wide at
-least.</p>
-
-<p>Squatting under a large tree on the bank
-opposite to us, accepting the situation with that
-stolid indifference for which the Asiatic is so
-very remarkable, and chewing betel, that panacea
-for all the ills which Singhalese flesh is heir
-to, was a Kandian villager, well advanced
-in years. The judge hailed him in his own
-language. ‘Hi! father! Did you swim the
-river?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Am I a fish, think you, my son?’ the man
-responded.</p>
-
-<p>‘Did you cross it by the bridge, then?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Does the English <i>mahatmeya</i> [gentleman] take
-me for a Wanderoo monkey, or for a jungle-cat,
-to walk upon broken twigs high up in the
-air?’ he answered evasively.</p>
-
-<p>‘How, then, did you manage to get over?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I have not got over at all. I have come
-from my village on this side, and I wait here
-until the flood subsides.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How long will that be, think you?’</p>
-
-<p>‘If the rain ceases, the river will be again
-fordable in three or four hours. If the rain
-continues—who can tell? Buddha only knows!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Three or four hours!’ muttered my companion
-despondingly. ‘Too long, much too long
-for me.’ Then again speaking to the Kandian:
-‘Is there any possibility of crossing the bridge?’
-he asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘None, none, my master. Alas! it has been
-shattered for some time past, and has not yet
-been repaired.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Let’s go,’ said my friend to me, ‘and reconnoitre.’</p>
-
-<p>We dismounted, gave our ponies to the horsekeepers,
-who had closely followed us, and walked
-a short distance along the bank. Suspended in
-the air, resting upon the forked branches of
-two forest trees, which grew nearly opposite
-each other on either side of the stream, were
-the relics of one of those primitive bridges
-which the Singhalese villagers build to enable
-them to pass ravines and mountain torrents.
-Bamboo and the withes of a ground creeper
-called waywel are the usual materials they
-employ; but if they can get slabs of timber,
-they use them as well. This was the case
-here: the rough-hewn trunk of a tall but
-slender cocoa-nut palm spanned the river, its
-ends being firmly fastened to the two trees
-which served to support it. Originally, a sort
-of hand-rail of the waywel had been tied
-to uprights nailed along the stem; and thus
-hemmed in, the bridge was safe enough to
-traverse by any one not subject to dizziness
-on ‘giddy heights;’ but as time and mischief
-had partly removed this protection, leaving long
-gaps with nothing to hold on by, a more
-precarious, break-neck, risky crossing, save for
-the monkeys, no one could possibly imagine.
-Picture to yourself this tapering pole strung
-at a height over a deep rushing whirlpool of
-a current, and you will comprehend what we
-saw and what I fairly shuddered at.</p>
-
-<p>Not so, my companion. He sprang up the
-tree, and stood for a moment or two upon the
-end of the mutilated bridge. Then he said
-quite determinedly: ‘I’ve made up my mind;
-I’m going over.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Are you mad?’ I exclaimed; ‘going over that
-narrow, frail, up-in-the-clouds thing? Why, it’s
-certain death if you fall.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Even so, old man; but I have walked with
-sure steps narrower planks than this.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps so; but not with a torrent rolling
-under you.—Don’t attempt it!’ I exclaimed; ‘wait
-until the waters go down.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Wait! for four hours or more. Impossible!
-As I told you when we started, my errand is a
-vital one. I must be in Colombo on Sunday at
-the latest; and as to-day is Friday, to do that
-I must hit off to-morrow’s coach in Kandy. Well,
-you and the other fellows have often joked me
-about my Blondin-like propensities; I am going
-to try now how nearly I can tread upon the heels
-of that worthy acrobat. Never fear; I will get
-across safely enough. It is a pity, however, that
-the nigger architects have not been a little more
-liberal in their breadth of timber; but your
-Singhalese native is invariably a skinflint.’</p>
-
-<p>Again I attempted to combat the foolhardiness
-of my friend; but he threw me off, said
-half jocosely, half in earnest:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘I have set my life upon a cast,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And I will stand the hazard of the die;’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>and with the words in his mouth, began the
-crossing.</p>
-
-<p>I am not, generally speaking, a nervous man,
-and I have had to witness some trying things
-in my time; but now I confess that fear and
-trembling came over me, and that I could not
-look upon my friend in his perilous transit.
-I half crouched and cowered behind a tree, my
-heart in my mouth, and every nerve strung to
-its utmost degree of tension. I expected every
-instant to hear a shriek, a splash, and then
-to see my friend buffeting with and carried
-away by the boiling torrent. Now and again,
-the voices of the old Singhalese and the Malabar<span class="pagenum" id="Page_590">{590}</span>
-horsekeepers, who had crept up to the neighbourhood
-of the bridge, broke upon my ears, first
-as if in tones of entreaty and warning, then
-in those of astonishment, and lastly in shouts
-of admiration and joy. At the jubilant sounds
-I roused myself, looked up, and hurrahed, too,
-at the very top of my voice, for on the opposite
-bank the adventurous judge stood safe and
-sound!</p>
-
-<p>A weight such as I had never borne before
-was removed from my breast. ‘Thank goodness
-you’re all right!’ I called out.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, as a trivet,’ he replied.—‘Now, screw
-<i>your</i> courage to the sticking-place and run
-over.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Am I a jungle-cat, or a Wanderoo monkey,
-or even a district judge in the Ceylon Civil
-Service, to walk upon a hair? No; my good
-sir. If I took two steps upon that infinitesimally
-narrow palm’s trunk, my doctoring
-occupation would be gone.—Thank you; no!
-I’ll return to Badulla, and resume my physicking
-there.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Good-bye, then. I’ll write to you from
-Kandy, if I can.’</p>
-
-<p>He was gone. And it will no doubt satisfy
-the reader’s curiosity to learn that, thanks to
-the mounts provided by friendly coffee-planters,
-he caught the coach, went on to Colombo, and
-found the person for whom he had risked his
-life out of danger and in a fair way of
-recovery.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CURIOUS_ANTIPATHIES_IN_ANIMALS">CURIOUS ANTIPATHIES IN ANIMALS.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3">DOGS.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">All</span> sincere lovers of the animal creation are
-pleased to listen to the recitation of anecdotes
-illustrating the love and affection of animals
-for their lord and master, man. Many of
-these stories are deeply interesting, as showing
-the wondrous intelligence and reasoning powers
-so often exhibited; and others are deeply affecting,
-as proving an amount of genuine, unasked,
-unselfish love, that we fear is not always too
-abundant amongst educated bipeds. It is not
-unlikely that numbers of such acts are never
-heard of; as many men—well-meaning enough
-in other ways—are in the habit of looking on the
-dog or the cat as a mere animal and nothing
-more; and therefore, whatever it might do, or
-whatever sagacity it might display, the creature
-would be treated with indifference and passed by
-without notice. Byron, who loved animals as
-well as most folks, was quite aware of this, when
-he wrote, with so much truth:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">But the poor dog—in life the firmest friend,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The first to welcome, foremost to defend—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Unhonoured falls—unnoticed all his worth,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Denied in heaven the soul he held on earth.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Strongly deprecating this indifference, it has
-always been the writer’s delight to record every
-well-authenticated instance of remarkable sagacity
-in animals, in whatever way they have been
-brought under his notice. The cases referred
-to have come under the immediate notice either
-of the writer, or of friends on whose word he
-can rely.</p>
-
-<p>Some years ago, a lady, who was a friend of our
-family, possessed a beautiful black-and-tan ‘King
-Charles’ called Prinney. A most engaging and
-affectionate creature, he never showed the smallest
-symptom of temper, or anything disagreeable
-save in one thing, and that was, a fixed aversion
-to a particular melody. Music generally,
-either vocal or instrumental, he never took the
-smallest notice of, or exhibited the slightest dislike
-to; but if any one played, sang, whistled,
-or even hummed the well-known and popular
-duet from the opera of <i>Norma</i> known by
-the name of ‘Si, fin’ al ora,’ no matter where
-he was or what he was doing, he would start
-up and commence the most dismal howling, with
-his nose elevated in the air. If the music did
-not cease on this melancholy and earnest appeal,
-he would make frantic efforts to get out of
-the room, rearing on his hind-legs, scratching
-violently at the door, and continuing his howling
-until some one opened the door and let him out.
-We took great pains to investigate this curious
-antipathy, but could never arrive at anything
-like a satisfactory conclusion. As before stated,
-the dog never objected to music generally, as
-many dogs have been known to do, nor even
-to single airs closely resembling the <i>Norma</i>
-melody; but so soon as we commenced that one—even
-though we purposely jumbled it up with
-some other—he would instantly detect it, and
-take his part of the ‘howling obligato’ with an
-energy and determination which nothing could
-stop.</p>
-
-<p>It had been suggested that the dog had on
-some particular occasion been severely beaten,
-or ill-treated, when this melody was either played
-or sung, and thus it was painfully impressed on
-the dog’s mind and memory. But this could not
-have been the case, for my friend had received
-him as a puppy, and certainly never ill-treated
-him, or even whipped him. What, therefore,
-could have been the peculiar connection in the
-dog’s mind between this one particular melody,
-and some fear of ill-usage or pain—for nothing
-but such a recollection could have caused his
-piteous howling, which always indicated intense
-fear or dread—is a mystery, and one which it
-seems impossible to solve, or even explain on
-any reasonable grounds.</p>
-
-<p>The following anecdote somewhat resembles
-the last, inasmuch as the peculiar antipathy
-shown is also in connection with music, although
-not to any particular melody, as in Prinney’s
-case. A little white terrier belonging to my
-grandfather had a peculiar antipathy to the
-pianoforte, for as soon as any one began to
-play, Rose would walk into the middle of
-the room, and then, quietly seating herself,
-facing the instrument, elevate her nose, and
-commence a long series of howlings, but without
-any display of anger or temper, or any
-attempt to run away. It might have been her
-own original way of expressing applause, or
-approbation of pianoforte-playing in general, for
-it should be specially noted that no other music,
-vocal or instrumental, ever affected the dog.
-Musical friends, one with his flute, another
-with his fiddle, often came in, but Rose
-never took notice of either of these until the
-pianoforte began; then at once began her
-demonstration. Now, what could have caused
-this curious antipathy—if it was an actual<span class="pagenum" id="Page_591">{591}</span>
-antipathy—to the sound of one particular musical
-instrument? The dog was born and bred at a
-farmhouse in Surrey, and farmhouses in those
-primitive days never possessed such an unheard-of
-luxury as a pianoforte; and therefore, until
-she came into my grandfather’s keeping—and she
-came direct from Surrey—she could never have
-heard the sound of such an instrument. How,
-then, are we to explain her singular procedure?
-I fear it is only another ‘dog mystery,’ and must
-ever remain so.</p>
-
-<p>A third, and certainly most remarkable, case
-of musical antipathy is all the more singular
-because it was not exhibited towards any special
-melody or instrument, but towards one particular
-person only—a lady. The dog—a beautiful and
-very amiable Clumber spaniel—belonged to an
-uncle of ours who always brought Wag with
-him whenever he paid us a visit, for the dog
-was a universal favourite; but, unluckily, he had
-always to be put out of the room when one of the
-ladies of our family was going to sing, because
-he seemed to have a violent antipathy, not to
-music or singing generally, but only to the voice
-of this lady; and, what is perhaps still more odd,
-he always seemed, personally, to be very fond of
-her; but the moment she began to sing, he would
-start up and commence whining, growling, and
-at last barking, gradually increasing in force,
-until he got to a grand <i>fortissimo</i>. He would
-run up in front of the lady, and get so angry,
-that any one would have supposed he was going
-to fly at her. But this he never attempted,
-and as the Scotch say, ‘His bark was waur
-than his bite.’ This lady possessed a brilliant
-soprano voice; and it has been suggested that the
-clear, ringing, penetrating tones must have produced
-a peculiar vibration or sensation, perhaps
-causing sharp pain, in the dog’s ears, which might
-have occasioned his extraordinary action, for it
-must be remembered that this lady’s voice, and
-hers alone, produced the effect described.</p>
-
-<p>The next case of unreasoning antipathy was
-that of a very handsome half-bred bull-terrier,
-called Charley. He belonged to a friend of
-ours, the vicar of a beautiful parish in Kent,
-and was an affectionate, good-tempered dog,
-never known to bite, snarl, growl, or do anything
-disagreeable to his friends. He would
-romp and play with the children on the vicarage
-lawn by the hour together, and never lose his
-temper, though often sorely tried by the thoughtless
-teasing of his little playmates. Yet he, too,
-had his peculiarity, which was, that if any one—master,
-friend, or stranger—approached him
-rubbing the palms of his hands slowly together,
-and at the same time repeating his name very
-deliberately, ‘Char-ley, Char-ley,’ the dog would
-instantly get into a state of wild fury. He would
-bark violently, until the bark ended in that
-peculiar sort of scream often noticed in small dogs
-when greatly excited or angered. He would make
-a rush at the offending person, and then suddenly
-retreat backwards, throwing out his fore-paws
-with sudden jerks at each bark; and although
-the person might cease the action, yet it would
-be some time before Charley recovered his usual
-equanimity, going about the room uttering little
-short barks, and a sort of odd sound between the
-end of a growl and the beginning of a whine!</p>
-
-<p>When this curious antipathy was first noticed,
-it so much surprised and interested the vicar—who
-was a devoted lover of animals—that he took
-a great amount of trouble to try to find out
-what could have been the original cause. He
-thought the dog might have been taught this
-merely as a clever trick; but he could never
-procure any evidence to show that such had been
-the case on the part of any one in the vicarage
-or village. What could have caused these extraordinary
-bursts of passion and anger at so simple
-an act as merely rubbing the palms of the hands
-together? There was nothing in the act itself
-calculated to irritate or frighten any animal, and
-therefore the greater the mystery at the strange
-effect produced. As the vicar could discover
-nothing through his investigations, he had to
-‘accept the inevitable,’ and come to the conclusion
-that it was unaccountable.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CURIOUS_NEWSPAPERS">CURIOUS NEWSPAPERS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">That</span> great engine that never sleeps, as Thackeray
-once described the press, not unfrequently displays
-its energy and enterprise in the performance of
-feats both novel and interesting. All are more
-or less familiar with the daring and intrepidity
-of its ‘specials,’ who in their eagerness to supply
-those at home with full and graphic descriptions
-of stirring scenes, expose themselves to the risk
-of being shot; while the public spirit and enterprise
-of the different journals are shown by the
-lavish way in which they spend their money in
-the laying of special cables or in the hiring of
-special steamers or trains. These are matters of
-every-day occurrence, on which plenty has been,
-and will continue to be written; but at the
-present moment we wish to confine the attention
-of our readers to the history of a few novel and
-curious broadsheets which have appeared at different
-times.</p>
-
-<p>In 1828 a paper was published called the
-<i>Cherokee Phœnix</i>, which is interesting on more
-accounts than one. It was published in English
-and Cherokee, the latter portion being printed
-with characters invented after years of patient
-labour and thought by one of the Indians, whose
-curiosity had been excited by the ‘speaking leaf,’
-as he called a newspaper which he one day
-heard a white man read with surprising readiness
-and facility. After producing his alphabet,
-he taught it to the other members of his tribe,
-and eventually, with the assistance of government,
-was enabled to start the <i>Phœnix</i>. Very
-similar was the <i>Sandwich Islands Gazette</i>, first
-started in 1835, and boasting of wood-cuts, for
-which the publisher received a license from the
-king, worded as follows: ‘<i>To <span class="smcap">Stephen D. Mackintosh</span>.</i>—I
-assent to the letter which you have
-sent me. It affords me pleasure to see the
-works of other lands and things that are new.
-If I was there, I should very much like to see.
-I have said to Kivan, “Make printing-presses.”
-My thought is ended.—Love to you and Reynolds.—<i>By
-<span class="smcap">King Kainkeaguoli</span>.</i>’ This paper
-was of eight octavo pages, and was published in
-English. The present ruler of the Sandwich
-Islands shares the liberal views expressed in the
-above letter of his predecessor. Since that time,
-the practice of publishing papers in the native
-tongues has spread rapidly; and in India alone
-at the present moment no fewer than three<span class="pagenum" id="Page_592">{592}</span>
-hundred and thirty newspapers, with a total
-circulation of more than one hundred and ten
-thousand, are printed in the languages spoken in
-the different provinces.</p>
-
-<p>A most curious paper is the official Chinese
-paper, called <i>King-Pan</i>, which claims to have been
-started as early as 911, and to have appeared at
-irregular intervals till 1351, when it came out
-regularly every week. At the commencement of
-the present century, it became a ‘daily,’ at the
-price of two <i>kehs</i>—about a halfpenny. By a decree
-of the emperor, a short time back, it was ordered
-that three editions were to be printed every day—the
-first or morning edition, on yellow paper, is
-devoted to commercial intelligence; the second
-or afternoon edition contains official and general
-news; and the third, on red paper, is a summary
-of the two earlier editions, with the addition of
-political and social articles. The editorial duties
-are performed by six members of the Scientific
-Academy, who are appointed by government. The
-circulation is about fourteen thousand daily.</p>
-
-<p>On board the <i>Hecla</i>, one of the ships belonging
-to Captain Edward Parry’s expedition in search
-of the north-west passage, a paper was printed
-called the <i>North Georgia Gazette and Winter
-Chronicle</i>. The first number was dated the 1st
-November 1819, and its twenty-first and last the
-20th March 1820. The <i>Great Britain</i> steamer,
-which started for Australia on the 21st of August
-1852, may claim to have inaugurated the practice
-of publishing a newspaper on board ship, as a
-paper, entitled the <i>Great Britain Times</i>, was published
-every week during the voyage, and distributed
-amongst the passengers. At the present
-time, these sea-born broadsheets are a source of
-considerable amusement, and go a long way to
-relieve the monotony of the passage, as the passengers
-not only read but supply the articles.
-Burlesque telegrams, jokes made by the passengers,
-and all the news, whether social, nautical,
-or personal, of the voyage, are published in their
-columns. One well-known American journal has
-even purchased a steamer and fitted it up as
-a regular floating newspaper office. The editors,
-sub-editors, and journalists all live on board;
-and by this means, news which has been picked
-up during the voyage can be set up without loss
-of time; whilst the details of any incident can
-be fully authenticated by the steamer calling at
-the scene of action. This steamer plies between
-Memphis and New Orleans, distributing the papers
-on its journeys, and collecting every item of news
-current along the banks of the Mississippi.</p>
-
-<p>Before the 67th Regiment left England for
-British Burmah, the officers spent a sum of
-money in purchasing a printing-press and types,
-with which they published a paper called <i>Our
-Chronicle</i>, soon after they landed at Rangoon.
-The editorial staff and compositors were all connected
-with the regiment, and the journal was
-regarded as a phenomenon in the annals of the
-press. Another military journal deserving mention
-is, or was, the <i>Cuartal Real</i>, the official organ
-of the Carlists, published during the war on the
-almost inaccessible summit of the Pena de la
-Plata.</p>
-
-<p>Though America is the land of big things, in
-newspaper matters it can boast of possessing the
-smallest paper in the world. This diminutive
-journal is the <i>Madoc Star</i>, which very properly has
-for its motto, ‘Twinkle, twinkle, little star.’ It is
-published weekly. Its dimensions are three inches
-and a half by three inches; and it consists of four
-pages, the first being devoted to foreign news,
-the second to mining notes, the last two to local
-news. If we may believe the Paris <i>Rappel</i>,
-America has recently issued two startling novelties
-combining utility with entertainment. The
-first is a newspaper printed on cotton cloth, and
-is called the <i>Pocket-handkerchief</i>, which at once
-explains the purpose to which it is to be put
-when intellectual demands have been satisfied.
-The other is called the <i>Necktie</i>, being printed
-with gold letters upon silk, and is said to be
-highly ornamental and of great elegance. This
-is practical literature with a vengeance.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_DAWN_OF_PEACE">THE DAWN OF PEACE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">Sweet</span> dawn of peace, how lovely is thy breaking!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With summer blossoms round thy smiling brow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From troubled dreams of dead and dying, waking,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Gladly we hasten forth to greet thee now.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Heaven’s brightest gems are gleaming in thy tresses;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Thy voice of melody bids discord cease;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And ’neath the magic of thy fond caresses,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">All earth grows beautiful, fair dawn of peace.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Earth’s feathered minstrels plume their wings with gladness,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And hail thy coming with a burst of song;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">While weary Age, bowed down with care and sadness,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Passes contented through life’s busy throng.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">What though the summer of our lives be over,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Our steps may falter, but our hearts rejoice,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When, o’er fair fields of fragrant crimson clover,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Steals the dear music of thy heavenly voice.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The nation kneels in humble adoration,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">For angels follow in thy glittering train,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Singing sweet hymns of praise; while all creation</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Mingles its voice in the triumphant strain.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">No bloodstains mar thy robe of snowy whiteness,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Though thou hast paused o’er many a gory bed,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Shedding a halo of celestial brightness</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Round the still forms of the unburied dead.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">To the lone mother by her childless ingle,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Bright as a star thy radiant face appears;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And golden hopes, like morning sunbeams, mingle</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With the pure fountain of her joyous tears.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Fades the dark memory of long nights of sorrow;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Her worn cheek glows; her heart’s wild doubtings cease.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To Love and Home, her boy shall come to-morrow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Borne in thy pitying arms, blest dawn of peace.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Delighted childhood flings white chains of daisies,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">As Youth’s best offering, at thy gracious feet;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The dome of heaven seems echoing forth thy praises;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Where muffled drums made mourning, glad hearts beat;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And while the merry lark is proudly soaring</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In joyous rapture from the emerald sod,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Pæans of praise our grateful souls are pouring,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">For thou art welcome as a smile from God!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">Printed and Published by <span class="smcap">W. &amp; R. Chambers</span>, 47 Paternoster
-Row, <span class="smcap">London</span>, and 339 High Street, <span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center"><i>All Rights Reserved.</i></p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 37, VOL. I, SEPTEMBER 13, 1884 ***</div>
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