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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #66575 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66575)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 45, Vol. I, November 8, 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. 45, Vol. I, November 8, 1884
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: October 20, 2021 [eBook #66575]
-
-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. 45, VOL. I, NOVEMBER 8,
-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. 45.—VOL. I. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1884. PRICE 1½_d._]
-
-
-
-
-THE STORY OF A VAST EXPLOSION.
-
-
-The greatest physical convulsion of recent times occurred on the
-morning of the 27th of August last year, the scene of the catastrophe
-being a small island in the Sunda Straits, which separate Sumatra and
-Java. It is a region which there is much reason to regard as one of the
-intensest foci of volcanic activity on the earth’s surface. The main
-facts connected with this event, although slow in coming to hand, are
-now fairly within the records of science. Krakatoa, the volcanic island
-which a year or two ago was seven miles long by five broad, is about
-thirty miles from the Java coast. When surveyed in 1868-69, the island
-was found to be clothed from base to summit with a luxuriant growth of
-forest and tropical vegetation, but uninhabited. A few weeks prior to
-the eruption, the volcano, which had been dormant for two centuries,
-gave signs of an awakening. On the 20th of May several shocks,
-accompanied by loud explosions and hollow reverberations, startled the
-inhabitants of the towns of Batavia and Buitenzorg, about ninety miles
-distant.[1] These disturbances continued for the next three months with
-more or less activity. On the 11th and 18th of August the energy of the
-volcano increased, and there were symptoms of a crisis. On the 26th and
-the night following, several eruptions took place, until the climax was
-reached on the following morning. The submarine base of the mountain
-then seems, according to all available evidence, to have literally
-‘caved in.’ This was apparently accompanied by an influx of the sea
-into the molten interior, the instantaneous development of superheated
-steam, and then an explosion which, for its colossal energy, is
-unparalleled in the annals of volcanic outbreaks.
-
-The enormous power of this eruption can only be adequately understood
-by its effects; these we now briefly summarise. The explosion itself,
-according to Dr Verbeek, one of the Dutch Commission appointed to
-investigate the nature and results of this catastrophe, caused the
-north part of the island to be blown away, and to fall eight miles to
-the north, forming what is now named Steer’s Island. Moreover, the
-north-east portion of the island of Krakatoa was also hurled into the
-air, passed over Lang Island, and fell at a distance of seven miles,
-forming what is now known as Calmeyer Island. In proof of this, we have
-the fact elicited by the newly made marine survey of the Straits, that
-‘_the bottom surrounding these new islands has not risen_.’ This would
-have been the case had they been upheaved in the usual way. Not only
-so, but the bottom round these new islands shows a slightly _increased
-depth_ in the direction of the submarine pit, nearly one thousand feet
-deep, which now marks the place the peak of Krakatoa occupied prior
-to the convulsion. But out of the midst of this deep depression there
-rises ‘like a gigantic club’ a remarkable column of rock of an area
-not more than thirty-three square feet, which projects sixteen feet
-above the surface of the sea. The southern part is all that is now left
-of the island of Krakatoa, and this fragment on its north side is now
-bounded by a magnificent precipitous cliff more than two thousand five
-hundred feet high. It has been thought by some, however, that the first
-portion of the island was blown away on the evening of August 26th, and
-that on the following morning the larger mass, answering to Calmeyer
-Island, was shot out by an effort still more titanic.
-
-The shock of the explosion was felt at a distance of four thousand
-miles, being equal to an area of one-sixth of the earth’s surface—that
-is, at Burmah, Ceylon and the Andaman Islands to the north-west, in
-some parts of India, at Saigon and Manila to the north, at Dorey in
-the Geelvink Bay (New Guinea) to the east, and throughout Northern
-Australia to the south-west. Lloyd’s agents at Batavia, in Java, stated
-that on the eve of this vast explosion, the detonations ‘grew louder,
-till in the early morning the reports and concussions were simply
-deafening, not to say alarming.’ So violent were the air-waves, due to
-this cause, that walls were rent by them at a distance of five hundred
-miles, and so great the volume of smoke and ashes, that Batavia, eighty
-miles off, was shrouded in complete darkness for two hours. Nearly four
-months after the eruption, masses of floating pumice, each several
-acres in extent, were seen in the Straits of Sunda.
-
-Paradoxical as it appears, the sound was sometimes better heard in
-distant places than in those nearer the seat of disturbance. This
-singular effect has been thus explained—assuming, for example, the
-presence of a thick cloud of ashes between Krakatoa and Anjer, this
-would act on the sound-waves like a thick soft cushion; along and above
-such an ash-cloud the sound would be very easily propelled to more
-remote places, for instance, Batavia; whereas at Anjer, close behind
-the ash-cloud, no sounds, or only faint ones, would be heard. Other
-explanations seem to be less probable, though not impossible.
-
-Dr Verbeek states that within a circle of nine and a-half miles’
-radius (fifteen kilomètres) from the mountain, the layers of volcanic
-ash cover the ground to a depth of from sixty-five to one hundred
-and thirty feet, and at the back of the island the thickness of the
-ash-mountains is in some places even from one hundred and ninety-five
-to two hundred and sixty feet, and that the matter so projected
-extends over a known area of seven hundred and fifty thousand square
-kilomètres (285,170 square miles), or a space larger than the German
-Empire with the Netherlands and Belgium, including Denmark and Iceland,
-or nearly twenty-one times the size of the Netherlands. Moreover, he
-calculates that the quantity of solid substance ejected by the volcano
-was eighteen cubic kilomètres, or 4.14 _cubic miles_. To give some
-idea of the enormous volume this represents, we may take the following
-illustration: the largest of the Egyptian pyramids has upwards of
-eighty-two millions of cubic feet of masonry; it would therefore take
-about _seven thousand three hundred and sixty of such structures_ to
-equal the bulk of matter thrown out by this eruption. Some of this
-matter was found to contain smooth round balls from five-eighths to two
-and a-quarter inches in diameter, and composed of fifty-five per cent.
-of carbonate of lime.
-
-As may well be imagined, the final outburst by its awful energy gave
-rise to a succession of air-waves. These we now know went round the
-earth more than once, and recorded themselves on the registering
-barometers or barograms at the Mauritius, Berlin, Rome, St Petersburg,
-Valencia, Coimbra (Portugal), and other far-distant places. At
-some points, as many as seven such disturbances were noted; other
-instruments not so sensitive gave evidence of five, by which time the
-wave had pretty well spent itself.
-
-Having collected the observations made at all the chief meteorological
-stations, General Strachey recently read a paper before the Royal
-Society which, in his opinion, conclusively shows that an immense
-air-wave started from Krakatoa at about thirty minutes past nine A.M.
-on August 27th. Spreading from this common centre, the wave went three
-and a-quarter times round the globe, and those parts of it which had
-travelled in opposite directions passed through one another ‘somewhere
-in the antipodes of Java.’ The velocity of the aërial undulations
-which travelled from east to west was calculated at six hundred and
-seventy-four miles per hour, those moving in the reverse direction at
-seven hundred and six miles per hour, or nearly the velocity of sound.
-
-But another effect of the eruption was a series of ‘tidal waves,’
-so called—although the term is objected to because not strictly
-scientific—which, like the air-wave, passed round the world. Whether
-this was synchronous with the final explosion, it is not possible to
-say. The highest of these seismic sea-waves, which was over one hundred
-feet high, swept the shores on either side of the Straits, and wrought
-terrible destruction to life and property. More than thirty-five
-thousand persons perished through it; the greater part of the district
-of North Bantam was destroyed, the towns of Anjer, Merak, Tjeringin,
-and others being overwhelmed.
-
-The initial movement of this destructive agent was undoubtedly of the
-nature of a negative wave; but the best testimony to this is lost,
-since those who witnessed it were its victims. The sudden subsidence
-of so large an area of the sea-bottom in the Straits caused the sea to
-recede from the neighbouring shores. This negative wave was, however,
-seen by Captain Ferrat from his vessel, as she lay at anchor at Port
-Louis. He states that towards two P.M. he saw the water in the harbour
-roll back and suddenly fall four or five feet; and that, a quarter of
-an hour afterwards, the sea returned with great violence to its former
-level, causing his own and other vessels to roll terribly. The best
-witness of this remarkable phenomenon, however, is Captain Watson, of
-the British ship _Charles Ball_. His vessel was actually within the
-Straits, and he states that he and his helmsman ‘saw a wave rush right
-on to Button Island, apparently sweeping right over the south part, and
-rising half-way up to the north and east sides fifty or sixty feet,
-and then continuing on to the Java shore. This was evidently a wave of
-translation and not of progression, for it was not felt at the ship.’
-This latter movement, beyond question, must have coincided with the
-great ‘tidal wave’ above mentioned, and which was felt at Aden, on the
-Ceylon coast, Port Blair, Nagapatam, Port Elizabeth, Kurrachee, Bombay,
-and half-way up to Calcutta on the Hooghly, the north-west coast of
-Australia, Honolulu, Kadiall in Alaska, San Celeto near San Francisco,
-and the east coast of New Zealand.
-
-In this as in most other cases of volcanic disturbance, electrical
-phenomena were observed. One vessel in particular, while passing
-through the Sunda Straits, exhibited ‘balls of fire’ at her masthead
-and at the extremities of her yardarms. Further, it was noticed at
-the Oriental Telephone Station, Singapore, a place five hundred miles
-from Krakatoa, that on raising the receiving instrument to the ears, a
-perfect roar as of a waterfall was heard; and by shouting at the top
-of one’s voice, the clerk at the other end of the wire was able just
-to hear something like articulation, but not a single sentence could
-be understood. On the line to Ishore, which includes a submarine cable
-about a mile long, reports like pistol-shots were heard. These noises
-were considered due to a disturbance of the earth’s magnetic field,
-caused by the explosion, and reacting on the wires of the telephone.
-
-We have now to refer to what has been a much debated question. From
-about September to the beginning of the present year, remarkable
-coronal appearances and sunglows were noticed in different parts of
-the world, and especially the somewhat rare phenomena of red, green,
-and blue suns. Observers such as Norman Lockyer, Dr Meldrum, and
-Helmholtz maintained that the phenomena were due to volcanic dust at
-a great altitude; others, and notably meteorologists, rejected this
-hypothesis, and urged that the coloured suns were due to unusually
-favourable atmospheric conditions, such colours being probably due
-to the refraction and reflection of light by watery vapours. But the
-theory that volcanic dust caused these appearances is fast gaining
-ground, if it be not already an incontrovertible fact. The spectroscope
-has shown that dust of almost microscopic fineness floating in the air
-caused the sun to appear red. Such dust has already fallen, and the
-microscope reveals the existence in it of salt particles. This, then,
-is fairly conclusive evidence of the volcanic origin of such dust. That
-ash particles were actually carried very far in the upper air-currents,
-has already appeared from snow which fell in Spain and rain in Holland,
-in which the _same components_ were found as in the Krakatoa ashes.
-Dr Verbeek estimates that the height to which this fine matter was
-projected ‘may very well have reached’ forty-five to sixty thousand
-feet.
-
-In a letter addressed to the _Midland Naturalist_ by Mr Clement Wragge,
-of Torrens Observatory, Adelaide, South Australia, and dated July 17,
-1884, the writer remarks that recently, when there were magnificent
-sunsets, he obtained ‘a perfectly sharp, clean spectrum without a trace
-of vapour-bands.’ And further, he is strongly of opinion that the
-Krakatoa eruption is the primary cause of these wondrous pictures in
-the Kosmos.
-
-There can now be little doubt but that the green and blue suns and
-exceptional sunsets observed in Europe, India, Africa, North and South
-America, Japan, and Australia, were due to the Krakatoa eruption. The
-enormous volume of volcanic dust and steam shot up into the higher
-atmospheric zones by this convulsion are adequate to furnish the
-chromatic effects above mentioned.
-
-But we have better evidence still: these peculiar solar effects
-followed a tolerably straight course to one which was in fact chiefly
-confined to a narrow belt near the equator; the data now collected show
-that on the second day after the eruption they appeared on the east
-coast of Africa, on the third day on the Gold Coast, at Trinidad on the
-sixth, and at Honolulu the ninth day. Finally, in a paper read by Dr
-Douglas Archibald at the late British Association meeting at Montreal,
-it was stated that ‘observations showed that the dates of the sunglows
-began _earlier_ in Java, then apparently spread gradually away, the
-dust being so high as to be in the upper currents, of which we know
-little. These sunset glows were not seen before the eruption.... The
-dust appeared to have travelled at a uniform rate, over two thousand
-miles daily.’ ‘The topic,’ says Mr S. E. Bishop, writing from
-Honolulu, ‘is an endless one. Many ask what is the cause of frequent
-revivals of the red glows, such as the very fine one of August 19. It
-seems merely to show an irregular distribution of the vast clouds of
-thin Krakatoa haze still lingering in the upper atmosphere. They drift
-about, giving us sometimes more, sometimes less, of their presence.
-It is also not unlikely that in varying hygrometric conditions the
-minute dust-particles become nuclei for ice crystals of varying size.
-This would greatly vary their reflecting power, and accords with some
-observations of Mr C. J. Lyons, showing that the amount of red glow
-varies according to the prevalence of certain winds.’ Further facts are
-coming to hand respecting this great natural convulsion.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] The eruption of May was noticed in a previous article (Nov. 24,
-1883).
-
-
-
-
-BY MEAD AND STREAM.
-
-
-CHAPTER LV.—SWEET ARE THE USES OF ADVERSITY.
-
-Soon after reading Mr Shield’s letter, Madge walked to Ringsford with
-Pansy. There had been a thaw during the night, and the meadows and the
-ploughed lands were transformed into sheets of dirty gray, dirty blue,
-and reddish slush, according to the character of the soil, dotted with
-patches of snow like the ghosts of islets in a lake of puddle. But the
-red sun had a frosty veil on his face; by-and-by this puddle would be
-glazed with ice, and the heavy drops of melting snow which were falling
-slowly from the trees would become glittering crystal pendants to their
-branches.
-
-The two girls, their cheeks tingling with the bite of the east
-wind, tramped bravely through the slush, with no greater sense of
-inconvenience than was caused by the fact that they would be obliged to
-perform the journey by the road instead of taking the short-cut through
-the Forest.
-
-They spoke little, for each was occupied with her own troublous
-thoughts; Pansy did not know much of the sources of her friend’s
-anxieties, and Madge had already exhausted the consolation she could
-offer to her companion. On arriving at Ringsford they found Sam Culver
-attending to his plants and greenhouses as methodically as if the
-mansion stood as sound as ever it had done and the daily supply of
-fruit and flowers would be required as usual.
-
-Madge left Pansy with her father, and went on to the cottage. In the
-kitchen she found Miss Hadleigh fast asleep in the gardener’s big
-armchair. She would have left the room without disturbing her, but at
-that moment Miss Hadleigh yawned and awakened.
-
-‘Don’t go away; I am not sleeping.—Oh, it’s you, Madge. Isn’t this a
-dreadful state of things? I haven’t had a wink of sleep for two nights,
-and feel as if I should drop on the floor in hysterics or go off into a
-fever.’
-
-Miss Hadleigh had been relieved by a good many ‘winks’ during the
-period specified, although, like many other nurses, she was convinced
-that she had not closed her eyes all the time. Madge accepted the
-assertion literally, and was instantly all eagerness to relieve her.
-
-‘You must get away to Willowmere at once, and take a proper rest. You
-are not to refuse, for I will take your place here and do whatever may
-be required. You are looking so ill, Beatrice, that I am sure Philip
-and—somebody else would consider me an unfeeling creature if I allowed
-you to stay any longer.’
-
-‘But it is my duty to stay, dear,’ said Miss Hadleigh a little faintly,
-for she did not like to hear that she was looking ill.
-
-‘And it is my duty to relieve you. Besides, Dr Joy has given us some
-hope that it may be safe to remove your father to our house to-day; and
-then you will be there, refreshed and ready to receive him.’
-
-‘I suppose you are right—I am not fit for much at present,’ said Miss
-Hadleigh languidly; ‘and you can do everything for him a great deal
-better than I can. But I must wait till Philip comes—he promised to be
-here early.’
-
-‘You have heard from him, then?’
-
-‘Heard from him!—he was here last night as soon as he could get away
-from that nasty business he has been swindled into by our nice Uncle
-Shield. He ought to have taken poor papa’s advice at the beginning, and
-have had nothing to do with him.’
-
-This was uttered so spitefully, that it seemed as if there were an
-undercurrent of satisfaction in the young lady’s mind at finding that
-the rich uncle who would only acknowledge one member of the family, had
-turned out a deceiver.
-
-Madge was astonished and chagrined by the information that Philip had
-been out on the previous evening and had made no sign to her; but in
-the prospect of seeing him soon, she put the chagrin aside, remembering
-how harassed he was at this juncture in his affairs. There should
-be no silly lovers’ quarrel between them, if she could help it. She
-would take the plain, commonplace view of the position, and make every
-allowance for any eccentricity he might display. She would help him in
-spite of himself, by showing that no alteration of circumstances could
-alter her love, and that she was ready to wait for him all her life if
-she could not serve him in any other way. To be sure, he had said the
-engagement was at an end; and Uncle Dick had not yet said that it was
-to stand good. But she loved Philip: her life was his, and misfortune
-ought to draw them nearer to one another than all the glories of
-success—than all the riches in the world.
-
-When he came, there was no sign of astonishment at her presence in the
-temporary refuge of his father: he seemed to accept it as a matter of
-course that she should be there. Neither was there any sign that he
-remembered the manner in which they had last parted. To her anxious
-eyes he seemed to have grown suddenly very old. The frank joyous voice
-was hushed into a low grave whisper; the cheeks and eyes were sunken;
-and there was in his manner a cold self-possession that chilled her.
-Yet something in the touch of his hand reassured her: love was still
-in his heart, although the careless youth, full of bright dreams and
-fancies, was changed into the man, who, through loss and suffering, had
-come to realise the stern realities of life.
-
-They were for a time prevented from speaking together in private
-because the doctors had arrived only a few minutes before Philip, and
-he waited to hear their report. Dr Joy came out of the invalid’s room
-with an expression which was serious but confident.
-
-‘Our patient goes on admirably,’ he said. ‘You need have no fear of
-any immediate danger; and in six months there will be only a few scars
-to show the danger he has passed through. I am to stay here for a
-couple of hours, and then I shall know whether or not we can move him
-to Willowmere. By that time, too, I expect the ambulance we wrote for
-last night will be here.—And you, Miss Hadleigh, you really must take
-rest. I insist upon it. You will not make your father better by making
-yourself ill. Go and get to bed. Philip and Miss Heathcote will do
-everything that is necessary, and I shall be their overseer.’
-
-Philip went to the stables to tell Toomey to bring the carriage
-round for his sister. As he was crossing the little green on his way
-back to the cottage, Madge met him. Although he had not observed her
-approaching, his head being bowed and eyes fixed on the ground, he
-took the outstretched hands without any sign of surprise, without any
-indication that he understood the cruel significance of the ‘good-bye’
-which had caused them both so much pain. Whatever hesitation she might
-have felt as to the course she was to pursue was removed by his first
-words.
-
-‘You want to speak to me, Madge,’ he said in a tone of gentle gravity;
-and then with a faint smile: ‘I am better than when you saw me last,
-for I am free from suspense. My position is clear to me now, and I
-feel that a man is more at ease when the final blow falls and strikes
-him down, than he can be whilst he is struggling vainly for the goal
-he has not strength enough to reach. It is a great relief to know that
-we are beaten and to be able to own it. Then there is a possibility of
-plodding on to the end without much pain.’
-
-She was as much alarmed by this absolute surrender to adversity as she
-had been by the strange humour which had prompted him to say that she
-was free.
-
-‘Yes, Philip, I want to speak to you,’ she said tenderly, and a
-spasmodic movement of the hand which grasped hers, signified that the
-electric current of affection was not yet broken. She went on the more
-earnestly: ‘I am not going to think about the foolish things you have
-said to me: I am going to ask you to give me your confidence—to tell me
-everything that has happened during the last two days. Tell it to me,
-if you like, as to your friend.’
-
-‘Always my friend,’ he muttered, bending forward as if to kiss her
-brow, and then drawing slowly back, like one who checks himself in the
-commission of some error.
-
-‘Always your friend,’ she echoed with emphasis, ‘and therefore you
-should be able to speak freely.’
-
-‘There is not much to tell you. The ruin is more complete than even I
-imagined it to be, and the fault is mine. Your friend—I ought to say
-our friend—Mr Beecham has made a generous offer for the business, and,
-with certain modifications, will allow it to be carried on under my
-management. This relieves us from immediate difficulties; and in a
-short time Mr Shield expects to have recovered sufficiently from his
-recent losses to be able to assist me in redeeming all that has been
-lost.’
-
-‘What gladder news could there be than this?’ she exclaimed with cheeks
-aglow and brightening eyes; ‘and yet you tell it as if it gave you no
-pleasure. Philip, Philip! this is not like you—it is not right to be so
-melancholy when the future is so bright.’
-
-‘Is it so bright? Are you forgetting how long it must be before I can
-repay Mr Shield? before’——
-
-He was going to say, ‘before I can ask you to risk your future in mine,
-and what changes may take place meanwhile!’
-
-The earnest tender eyes were fixed upon him, and they were reading his
-thoughts, whilst she appeared to be waiting for him to complete the
-interrupted sentence. She saw the colour slowly rising on his brow, and
-knew that he was feeling ashamed of the doubt implied in his thought.
-
-‘I want to tell you something,’ she said in her quiet brave way, ‘and
-I hope—no, I _believe_ that it will take one disagreeable fancy out of
-your head. I know that you did not mean what you said to me on that
-dreadful evening.’
-
-‘What else could a ruined man say?’ (This huskily and turning his face
-aside.)
-
-‘He could say that he trusted his friends. Even Uncle Dick is angry
-with you for imagining that your misfortune could make any difference
-in his feelings towards you. And for me, you _ought_ to say ... but
-there, I am not going to speak about what you ought to say to me; I am
-only going to tell you what I shall do.’
-
-He looked quickly at her, and the eager inquiry on his pale face
-rendered the words ‘What is that?’ superfluous.
-
-‘I shall wait until you come for me; and when you come, I shall be
-ready to go with you where you will, whether you are poor or rich. No
-matter what anybody says—no matter what _you_ say, I shall wait.’
-
-‘O Madge!’
-
-He could say nothing more; the man’s soul was in that whisper. Their
-hands were clasped: they were looking into each other’s eyes: the world
-seemed to sink away from them; and the woman’s devotion changed the
-winter into summer, changed the man’s ruin into success.
-
-He drew her arm within his; and they walked past the blackened walls of
-the Manor, and along the paths where they had spent so many pleasant
-hours during his recovery from the accident with the horse, to the
-place where he had thrown off the doctor’s control and got out of the
-wheel-chair.
-
-‘I am not so sorry now for what has happened,’ were his first words.
-‘It is worth losing everything to gain so much.’
-
-‘But you have not lost everything, Philip.’
-
-‘No; I should say that I have won everything. I am glad to have saved
-Wrentham from penal servitude, for his frauds have enabled me to
-realise the greatest of all blessings—the knowledge that come what may
-you can make me happy.’
-
-‘And I am happy too,’ she said softly, their arms tightening as they
-walked on again in silence.
-
-By-and-by he lifted his head, and seemed to shake the frost from his
-hair.
-
-‘The doctor said I ought to have rest. I have got it from you, Madge.
-I can look straight again at the whole botheration—thank you, my
-darling.’ (A gentle pressure on his arm was the answer, and he went
-on.) ‘The arrangement offered by Beecham is a very good and kind one,
-which will enable me in course of time to clear myself whilst carrying
-out my scheme; we can take a small house; Mr Shield will live with us,
-and we must try to make him comfortable. Then we need not wait for the
-end of next harvest, unless you still insist’——
-
-‘No, Philip; when you bid me come to you, I am ready.’
-
-
-
-
-CIGARS.
-
-
-It has been abundantly shown by various writers that the Indians of
-North America as well as elsewhere looked upon tobacco as having a
-divine origin, as being a peculiar and special gift designed by the
-‘Good Spirit’ for their delectation, and that it held a prominent place
-in their visions of a future life in the ‘happy hunting-grounds.’ In
-the present day, there seems to be an ever increasing dependence on—we
-might almost say slavery to—the plant, whose soothing influences are
-called in quest to counteract the effects of this high-pressure age.
-There are not a few of its devotees who are quite at one with Salvation
-Yeo in _Westward Ho_, who, when speaking of tobacco, says: ‘For when
-all things were made, none was made better than this; to be a lone
-man’s companion, a bachelor’s friend, a hungry man’s food, a sad man’s
-cordial, a wakeful man’s sleep, and a chilly man’s fire. There’s no
-herb like unto it under the canopy of heaven.’ We do not, however,
-propose to discuss the opposing views held by the smoker and the
-anti-smoker, but intend to restrict ourselves to some remarks on the
-manufacture of cigars, which have been suggested by a recent visit to
-the West Indies.
-
-Of the endless varieties of cigars which are met with in various
-tropical localities, the majority are used for local consumption, and
-only find their way into England in very small quantities. The bulk of
-our cigars are either Havana or Manila, European or British, and of
-these it has been computed that considerably over two hundred million
-are consumed annually in the United Kingdom. It is evident, therefore,
-that the manufacture of this luxury is a business of great magnitude,
-irrespective of the other forms of tobacco used; and if we remember
-that the duty obtained from tobacco of all kinds puts nearly nine
-millions per annum into the national exchequer, it becomes possible to
-realise how much the comfort and happiness of a large number of Her
-Majesty’s subjects depend on the products of the tobacco crop.
-
-An Havana cigar of a good brand is deservedly looked upon as the _crême
-de la crême_ of cigars; but, unfortunately, the number of good makers
-as well as the possible production of first-class cigars is necessarily
-limited. Thus the manufacture of the ‘Villar y Villar’ brand is stated
-to be never more than twenty-five thousand daily; while that of ‘Henry
-Clays’ is fully three times as many. For some time back there has
-been a deterioration in Havanas, which has been variously accounted
-for. It is asserted that, from the exhaustive nature of the crop,
-guano or other artificial stimulants are largely used, and that the
-flavour of the leaf has suffered in consequence. Besides, owing to the
-increasing demand, tobacco has been grown on poor land unsuitable for
-the production of the finest leaf, and even has been largely imported
-into Cuba for the manufacture of ‘genuine’ Havanas. To those, however,
-who cannot afford to buy the best brands, it is satisfactory to know
-that a new source of supply is being opened up with great energy. The
-climate and soil of some parts of Jamaica very closely resemble those
-of Havana, and are well suited for the growth of the finest leaf. As
-the Jamaica planters open up their virgin soil, it is safe to predict
-that with growing experience they will improve in their manufactures,
-while already they produce a cigar which compares favourably with any
-but the best of Cuban make.
-
-British cigars, like all other varieties, may be good, bad, or
-indifferent. By British we mean cigars manufactured in this country
-from the imported leaf; and as English capital can command the markets,
-there is no reason why the best tobacco should not be obtainable for
-importation. Using the same quality of leaf, a cigar can be produced
-in this country at a much lower cost than if imported ready made.
-We venture to think, notwithstanding popular prejudice, that a good
-British cigar is preferable to an inferior foreign make. Pay a fair
-price, and you will get a good article—home made, in spite of the
-Spanish labels, which are always used either from affectation or in
-order to deceive the ignorant. Much is heard about adulteration by
-means of cabbage-leaves, &c.; but we believe that it is almost unknown
-in this country. The fact that inferior tobaccos are so very cheap
-makes fraud both unlikely and unnecessary. Adulteration, however, is
-not unknown on the continent, where cigars can be obtained six and ten
-for a penny; but the duty of five shillings per pound is fortunately a
-bar to their importation into Great Britain. It is needless to say more
-about continental cigars than we do about all cheap cigars, and that is
-to recommend smokers to avoid them.
-
-The manufacture of the finished article requires highly skilled
-labour, and long practice gives the workman an amount of accuracy and
-dexterity in producing cigar after cigar, alike in shape and size,
-with a rapidity that is truly wonderful. After the leaves have been
-properly cured, they are sorted according to size and colour. The
-centre rib is then extracted, an operation requiring great care. Each
-workman is seated before a flat board, and is supplied with a bunch
-of perfect leaves and a pile of broken tobacco. With his fingers, he
-quickly rolls up some broken pieces, inclosing them in one of the less
-perfect leaves, forming what is called ‘the bunch.’ This he proceeds to
-cover with the wrapper or perfect leaf, which he has already cut with
-his knife to the required size. The most difficult part of the process
-has now to be completed, namely, closing in the point. This he does by
-modelling it with his fingers, quickly twisting the wrapper round it,
-and fixing the end with a drop of gum. With one sweep of his knife—his
-only implement—he trims the broad end, and the cigar is ready to be
-carried to the drying-room, afterwards to be sorted and packed in boxes.
-
-It is easier to know a good cigar when you smoke one than to describe
-the points by which a good cigar may be selected. A good cigar,
-however, should have a good wrapper or exterior; it should have a faint
-gloss, not amounting to greasiness, due to the essential oil contained
-in it; and it should have a fine hairy ‘down’ on its surface. In
-addition to this, it should be firmly rolled, and yet not be hard, or
-it will not draw well. When lighted it should burn evenly, and not to
-one side; it should carry a two-inch ash without endangering your coat,
-and if laid aside for three or four minutes, should still be alight
-when taken up again. It is worth remembering the golden rule known to
-the lovers of the fragrant weed, namely, when holding a lighted cigar,
-always to keep the burning end turned upwards, so that the smoke may
-escape into the air—never downwards, as that causes the smoke to pass
-through the body of the cigar.
-
-In concluding these brief remarks, it may not be amiss to say a word
-or two about the markings which will be found on the boxes, and about
-which a good deal of ignorance exists. On most boxes there are four
-distinct markings, which have each their own significance. First comes
-the brand proper, which consists either of the maker’s name or of some
-fancy name adopted by the firm; such, for example, as Partagas, Villar
-y Villar, Intimidads, Henry Clays, &c. The quality of the tobacco is
-next indicated by Flor Fina, first quality; Flor, second quality, &c.
-Various names, such as Infantes, Reinas, Imperiales, &c., are used to
-represent the size or shape of the cigar. The fourth mark gives us an
-idea of the strength or colour of the tobacco contained in the box; and
-for this purpose the following terms are used—Claro, Colorado claro,
-Maduro, &c. To attempt to give any advice to our readers as to the best
-brands to buy would be beyond the scope of this paper. Experience will
-soon teach them what to accept and what to avoid; what suits their
-tastes and their pockets, and what does not.
-
-
-
-
-ONE WOMAN’S HISTORY.
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-‘Phew! There’s not a breath of air in this valley. One had need be a
-salamander to appreciate a morning like this. But what a lovely nook it
-is—eh, Mac? Quite worth coming half-a-dozen miles to see.’
-
-‘That it’s very pretty, I’ll not attempt to deny; but still’——
-
-‘By no means equal to what you could show us t’other side of the
-Border,’ said the vicar with a twinkle. ‘That’s understood, of course.’
-
-The time was the forenoon of the day following the evening on which
-Madame De Vigne had been so startled by the sudden appearance of one
-whom she had every reason to believe had died long years before.
-
-The scene was a small but romantic glen. Over the summit of a cliff, at
-the upper end of a rocky ravine, a stream, which took its rise among
-the stern hills that shut in the background, leapt in a cascade of
-feathery foam. After a fall of some fifteen or twenty feet, it reached
-a broad, shallow basin, in which it spread itself out, as if to gather
-breath for its second leap, which, however, was not quite so formidable
-as its first one. After this, still babbling its own liquid music, it
-fretted its way among the boulders with which its channel was thickly
-strewn, and so, after a time, left the valley behind it; and then, less
-noisily, and lingering lovingly by many a quiet pool, it gradually
-crept onward to the lake, in the deep bosom of whose dark waters lay
-the peace for which it seemed to have been craving so long.
-
-A steep and somewhat rugged pathway wound up either side of the glen to
-the tableland at the summit, overhung with trees and shrubs of various
-kinds, with a rustic seat planted here and there at some specially
-romantic point of view. Ferns, mosses, flowers, and grasses innumerable
-clothed the rocky sides of the ravine down almost to the water’s
-edge. At the foot of the glen the stream was spanned by a quaint old
-bridge, on which the vicar and Dr M‘Murdo were now standing. It was
-the day of the picnic of which Madame De Vigne had made mention to
-Colonel Woodruffe, and the party from the _Palatine_ had driven over
-in a couple of wagonettes, which, together with the hampers containing
-luncheon, were stationed in a shady spot a quarter of a mile lower down
-the valley.
-
-‘Look, Mac, look!’ exclaimed the vicar, ‘at those two speckled darlings
-lurking there in the shadow of the bridge. I must come and try my luck
-here one of these days.’
-
-‘You look just a bit feckless this morning without your rod and basket.’
-
-‘Where was the use of bringing them? No trout worth calling a trout
-would rise on a morning like this, when there’s not a cloud in the
-sky as big as one’s hand, and not breeze enough to raise a ripple on
-the water. I’ve brought my hammer instead, so that I shan’t want for
-amusement. Ah, Mac, what a pity it is that you care nothing either for
-angling or geology!’
-
-‘I could not be fashed, as we used to say in the North. Every man to
-his likes. I’ve got a treatise in my pocket on _The Diaphragm and its
-Functions_, just down from London, with diagrams and plates. Now, if I
-can only find a shady nook somewhere, I’ve no doubt that I shall enjoy
-myself with my book for the next two or three hours quite as much as
-you with your rod or hammer.’
-
-‘So that’s your idea of a picnic, is it?’ The question came from Miss
-Gaisford, who had come unperceived upon the two friends as they were
-leaning over the parapet of the bridge. ‘To bury yourself among the
-trees, eh,’ she went on, ‘and gloat over some dreadful pictures that
-nobody but a doctor could look at without shuddering? Allow me to tell
-you that you will be permitted to do nothing of the kind. You will just
-put your treatise in your pocket, and try for once to make yourself
-sociable. Perhaps, if you try very hard, you may even succeed in making
-yourself agreeable.’
-
-‘My poor Mac!’ murmured the vicar as he settled his spectacles more
-firmly on his nose.
-
-The doctor said nothing, but his eyes twinkled, and he pursed up his
-lips.
-
-‘I have arranged my plans for both of you,’ said Miss Pen with emphasis.
-
-‘For both of us!’ they exclaimed simultaneously.
-
-‘Yes. Lady Renshaw’——
-
-‘O-h!’ It was a double groan.
-
-‘Don’t interrupt. Lady Renshaw will be here presently. As soon as she
-appears on the scene, you will take charge of her. I have special
-reasons for asking you to do this, which I cannot now explain. You
-will amuse her, interest her, keep her out of the way, and prevent her
-generally from making a nuisance of herself to any one but yourselves,
-till luncheon-time.’
-
-‘My dear Pen,’ began the vicar.
-
-‘My dear Miss Gaisford,’ pleaded the doctor.
-
-‘You will do as you are told, and do it without grumbling,’ was the
-little woman’s reply as she shook a finger in both their faces. ‘I’ve
-arranged my plans for the day, and I can’t have them interfered with.’
-
-‘My dear Pen,’ again persisted the vicar, in his mildest tones, ‘that
-your plan is a perfectly admirable one, I do not for one moment doubt,
-only, as you know very well, I am not and never have been a ladies’
-man, and that in the company of your charming sex I’m just as shy
-at fifty-five as I was at eighteen. But with Mac here the case is
-altogether different. All doctors know how to please and flatter the
-sex—it’s part of their stock-in-trade, so that Mac would be quite at
-home with her ladyship; whereas I—well, the fact is I had made up my
-mind to walk as far as’——
-
-‘Blackstone Hollow,’ interrupted his sister, ‘in order that you might
-have another look at that big trout about which you dream every night,
-but which you will never succeed in catching as long as you live.’
-
-‘The traitor! eh, Miss Penelope?’ cried the doctor. ‘This is neither
-more nor less than prevarication—yes, sir, prevarication—there’s no
-other word for it—and you the vicar of a parish, whose example ought to
-be a shining light to all men! Septimus Gaisford, I’m ashamed of you!
-As for Lady Renshaw’—— He ended with a snap of his fingers.
-
-‘Neither of you is afraid of her. Of course not,’ remarked Miss
-Penelope. ‘You would scorn to acknowledge that you are afraid of any
-woman. But why run any risk in the matter? Why allow her ladyship to
-attack you separately, when, by keeping together and combining your
-forces, you would render your position impregnable?’
-
-‘Impregnable!’ both the gentlemen gasped out.
-
-Miss Gaisford’s merry laugh ran up the glen. ‘What a pair of delicious,
-elderly nincompoops you are!’ she cried. ‘Septimus, you dear old
-simpleton, haven’t you discovered that this woman would like nothing
-better than to bring you to your knees with an offer of marriage?’
-
-‘Good gracious, Pen!’ cried the vicar with a start that nearly shook
-the spectacles off his nose.
-
-‘Doctor, did you not see enough of her ladyship’s tactics last evening
-to understand that her plan with you is to induce you to believe that
-she has fallen in love with you? and when one of your sex gets the
-idea into his head that one of our sex is in love with him, why, then,
-a little reciprocity of sentiment is the almost inevitable result.’
-
-‘The hussy!’ exclaimed Mac. ‘I should like her to be laid up for a
-fortnight and let me have the physicking of her!’
-
-‘I noticed that she did press my arm rather more than seemed needful,
-when we were walking last evening by the lake,’ remarked the vicar.
-
-‘And I remember now that she squeezed my hand in a way that seemed to
-me quite unnecessary, when she bade me good-night on the steps of the
-hotel.’
-
-‘Gentlemen, let there be no jealousy between you, I beg,’ said Miss Pen
-with mock-solemnity. ‘If you decline to combine your forces, then make
-up your minds which of you is to have her ladyship, and let the other
-one go and bewail his sorrows to the moon.’
-
-‘By the way, who _is_ Lady Renshaw?’ asked the vicar. ‘I never had the
-pleasure of hearing her name till yesterday.’
-
-‘Her ladyship is the widow of an alderman and ex-sheriff of London,
-who was knighted on the occasion of some great event in the City. Her
-husband, who was much older than herself, left her very well off when
-he died. That pretty girl, her niece, who travels about with her, has
-no fortune of her own, and one of her ladyship’s chief objects in life
-would seem to be to find a rich husband for her. At the same time, from
-what I have already seen of her, it appears to me that Lady Renshaw
-herself would by no means object to enter the matrimonial state again,
-could she only find a husband to suit her views.’
-
-‘A dangerous woman evidently. We must beware of her, Mac,’ said the
-vicar.
-
-The doctor shook his head. ‘My dear friend, your caution doesn’t apply
-to me,’ he said. ‘Lady Renshaw is just one of those women that I would
-not think of making my wife, if she was worth her weight in gold.’
-
-They had begun to stroll slowly forward during the last minute or two,
-and leaving the bridge behind them, were now presently lost to view
-down one of the many wooded paths which intersected the valley in every
-direction.
-
-But a few minutes had passed, when Lady Renshaw and Miss Wynter
-appeared, advancing slowly in the opposite direction. They halted on
-the bridge as the others had done before them.
-
-‘What a sweetly pretty place!’ exclaimed Miss Wynter. ‘I had no idea it
-would be half so lovely. I could wander about here for a week,’ adding
-under her breath, ‘especially if I had Dick to keep me company.’
-
-‘Pooh! my dear; you will have had quite enough of it by luncheon-time,’
-responded her aunt, who had seated herself on the low coping of the
-bridge with her back to the view up the glen.
-
-‘I always thought you were an admirer of pretty scenery, aunt.’
-
-‘So I am—when in society. But now that we are alone, there’s no need
-to go into ecstasies about it. On a broiling day like this, I would
-exchange all the scenery of the Lakes for an easy-chair in the veranda,
-a nice novel, and the music of a band in the distance.’ Then, as if
-suddenly remembering something, she gazed around and said: ‘By-the-bye,
-what has become of Mr Golightly?’
-
-‘I saw him strolling in this direction a few minutes ago,’ was the
-innocent answer. ‘I have no doubt that he is somewhere about.’
-
-‘Now that Archie Ridsdale has been called away, you will be able to
-give him the whole of your attention. There seem plenty of quiet nooks
-about where you will be able to get him for a time all to yourself. He
-certainly seems excessively infatuated, considering how short a time he
-has known you, and I should not be a bit surprised if that waterfall
-were to lead him on to make violent love to you before you are six
-hours older.’
-
-‘Aunt!’
-
-‘Oh, my dear, I’ve known stranger things than that happen. When a
-susceptible young man and a pretty girl sit and watch a waterfall
-together, he is almost sure before long to begin squeezing her hand,
-and then what follows is simply a question of diplomacy on her part.’
-
-‘If—if—in the course of a few days—Mr Golightly were to propose?’——
-
-‘He may do it this very day for aught one can tell. He seems
-infatuated enough for any thing. When he does propose, you will accept
-him—conditionally. You will take care to let him see that you care for
-him—a little. You have known him for so short a time that really you
-scarcely know your own feelings—&c., &c. Of course, before finally
-making up your mind, we must have some more definite information as to
-the position and prospects of the young man, and what his father the
-bishop has in view as regards his future. Besides, Mr Archie Ridsdale
-may possibly be back in the course of a day or two.’
-
-‘But in what way can Archie’s return affect me?’
-
-‘You stupid girl! have I not already told you that Sir William is
-nearly sure to refuse his consent, and that Archie’s engagement with
-this Miss Loraine may be broken off at any moment. Then will come your
-opportunity. Archie seemed very fond of you at one time, and there’s no
-reason why he should not become fond of you again. Young men’s fancies
-are as changeable as the wind, as you ought to know quite well by this
-time.’
-
-Bella only shrugged her shoulders and sauntered slowly over the bridge.
-
-The expression of Lady Renshaw’s face changed the moment she found
-herself alone, and her thoughts reverted to a topic over which they had
-busied themselves earlier in the day.
-
-‘So this high and mighty Madame De Vigne—this person whom nobody
-seems to know anything about—could not condescend to come in the same
-wagonette with us poor mortals! She and her sister must follow in a
-carriage by themselves, forsooth! Last evening, when we got back from
-the lake, she had retired for the night; this morning, she breakfasted
-in her own room. I feel more convinced than ever that there’s some
-mystery about her. If I could but find out what it is! Of course, in
-such a case it would become my duty at once to communicate with Sir
-William.’
-
-Miss Wynter came back over the bridge, but much more quickly than she
-had gone. ‘Oh, look, aunt!’ she exclaimed; ‘I declare there’s D—— I
-mean Mr Golightly, standing yonder, gazing at the water, and all alone.’
-
-Lady Renshaw took a survey of the young man through her glasses.
-Feeling safe in his disguise, Richard had now discarded some portions
-of the clerical-looking costume he had worn yesterday, and was attired
-this morning more after the style of an ordinary tourist.
-
-‘You had better stroll gently along in the same direction,’ remarked
-her ladyship. ‘Poor young man, he looks very lonely!’
-
-‘But I can’t leave you alone, aunt.’
-
-‘Never mind about me. Besides, I see that dear vicar and Dr M‘Murdo
-coming this way.’
-
-Lady Renshaw turned to greet Miss Gaisford and the two gentlemen, who
-were still a little distance off.
-
-‘Here they come. To which of my two admirers shall I devote myself
-to-day?’ she simpered. ‘Why not endeavour to play one off against the
-other, and so excite a little jealousy? It is so nice to make the men
-jealous. Poor dear Sir Timothy never would be jealous; but then he was
-so very stupid!’
-
-Miss Gaisford was the first to speak. ‘We were just wondering what had
-become of you, Lady Renshaw.’
-
-‘I lingered here to drink in this fairy scene. It is indeed too, too
-exquisitely beautiful.’
-
-‘If they would only turn on a little more water at the top of the cliff
-it would be an improvement,’ answered Miss Pen.—‘Septimus, you might
-inquire whether they can’t arrange it specially for us to-day.’
-
-‘My dear!’ protested the vicar with mild-eyed amazement.
-
-‘Maybe, like myself,’ remarked the doctor, ‘your ladyship is a
-worshipper of beautiful scenery?’
-
-‘O yes. I dote on it—I revel in it. After I lost poor dear Sir Timothy,
-I went to Switzerland, in the hope of being able to distract my mind by
-travel. Those darling Alps, I shall always feel grateful to them!’
-
-‘What did the Alps do for you, Lady Renshaw?’ queried Miss Pen with the
-utmost gravity.
-
-‘They gave me back my peace of mind; they poured consolation into my
-lacerated heart.’
-
-‘Very kind of them—very kind indeed,’ answered Miss Pen drily.
-
-Lady Renshaw threw a quick, suspicious glance at her. ‘What a very
-strange person!’ she murmured. The vicar’s sister was a puzzle to her.
-It could not be that she was covertly making fun of her, Lady Renshaw!
-No; the idea was too preposterous.
-
-Dr Mac had not gone about for fifty years with his eyes shut. He
-had discovered that many persons, both male and female, who plume
-themselves on their knowledge of the world and their shrewdness in
-dealing with the common affairs of life, are yet as susceptible to
-flattery, even of the most fulsome kind, and just as liable to be
-led away by it into the regions of foolishness, as their far less
-sophisticated fellow-mortals. What if this woman, with all her
-worldly-mindedness and calculating selfishness, were one of those
-individuals who may be dexterously led by the nose and persuaded to
-dance to any tune so long as their ears are judiciously tickled? A
-peculiar gleam came into the doctor’s eyes as these thoughts passed
-through his mind. He cleared his voice and turned to her ladyship.
-
-‘It appears to me, Lady Renshaw,’ he began, ‘speaking from a
-professional point of view, that you are gifted with one of those
-highly-strung, super-sensitive, and poetical organisations which
-render those who possess them peculiarly susceptible to all beautiful
-influences whether of nature or of art. Hem.’
-
-‘How thoroughly you understand me, Dr M‘Murdo!’ responded her ladyship,
-beaming on him with one of her broadest smiles.
-
-The vicar took off his spectacles and proceeded to rub them vigorously
-with his handkerchief. ‘Mac, you are nothing better than a barefaced
-humbug,’ he whispered to himself.
-
-‘It would seem only natural, my dear madam,’ resumed the unblushing
-doctor, ‘that a temperament such as yours, which throbs responsive to
-beauty in all its thousand varied forms as readily as an Æolian harp
-responds to the faintest sigh of the summer breeze, should—should find
-an outlet for itself in one form or other. Have you never, may I ask,
-attempted to pour out your thick crowding fancies in verse? Have you
-never, while gazing on some such scene as this, felt as if you could
-float away on—on the wings of Poesy? Have you never, in brief, felt as
-if you could only find relief by rushing into song? Hem.’
-
-The poor vicar fairly gasped for breath.
-
-‘Yes, yes; that is exactly how I have felt a thousand times,’ gushed
-her ladyship. ‘At such moments I seem to exhale poetry.’
-
-‘Dear me! rather a remarkable phenomenon,’ murmured Miss Pen.
-
-‘I long to be a dryad—or a nymph—or one of Dian’s huntresses in some
-Arcadian grove of old.’
-
-‘A nymph! Hum,’ remarked the vicar softly to himself.
-
-‘But I have never yet ventured to—to’——
-
-‘Gush into song,’ suggested Miss Pen.
-
-‘To attempt to clothe my thoughts in rhythmic measures,’ went on
-her ladyship with a little wave of the hand, as though deprecating
-interruption, ‘although I have often felt an inward voice which
-impelled me to do so.’
-
-‘Let me advise you to try, my dear madam,’ resumed the doctor with his
-gravest professional air. ‘If I may be allowed to say so, you have the
-eye of a poet—dreamy, imaginative, with a sort of far-away gaze in it,
-as though you were looking at something a long way off which nobody but
-yourself could see.’
-
-‘Ought I to listen to these things in silence?’ asked the vicar of
-himself with a sudden qualm of conscience.
-
-‘You are a great, naughty flatterer, Dr M‘Murdo,’ said the widow,
-shaking a podgy finger archly at him.
-
-‘Madam, that is one of the points on which my education has been
-shamefully neglected.’
-
-She turned with a smile. ‘I trust that our dear vicar is also a
-worshipper of the beautiful?’
-
-‘With Lady Renshaw before my eyes, it would be rank heresy to doubt
-it,’ stammered the dear old boy with a blush that would have become a
-lad of eighteen.
-
-‘Pass up one, Septimus,’ whispered his sister in his ear.
-
-‘If you talk to me in that strain, I shall begin to think you a very,
-very dangerous man,’ simpered her ladyship.
-
-‘There’s a charming view of the lake from an opening in the trees a
-little farther on,’ remarked Dr Mac. ‘Would not your ladyship like to
-walk as far?’
-
-‘By all means, though I am loath to tear myself from this exquisite
-spot.’
-
-‘We shall find our way back to it later on.’
-
-‘With your permission, I will leave you good people for a little
-while,’ remarked Miss Pen. ‘I’ve other fish to fry.’
-
-Her ladyship stared. ‘What an excessively vulgar remark!’ was her
-unspoken thought.
-
-Miss Gaisford turned to her. ‘Lady Renshaw, I must intrust these two
-young sparks into your hands for a time.’
-
-‘You could not leave us in more charming captivity,’ remarked the
-gallant doctor.
-
-The vicar, as he fingered the hammer in his pocket, looked imploringly
-at his sister, but she pretended not to see.
-
-‘Au revoir, then, dear Miss Gaisford,’ said her ladyship in her most
-affable tones.
-
-‘Au revoir, au revoir.’
-
-As the three went sauntering away, the vicar lagging a little behind
-the others, Miss Pen heard the doctor say: ‘You know the song, Lady
-Renshaw, _When I view those Scenes so charming_,’ after which nothing
-but a murmur reached her ears.
-
-She turned away with a little laugh. ‘The doctor will fool her to
-the top of her bent. Who would have thought that high-dried piece of
-buckram had so much quiet fun in him?—And now to look after my hampers.
-If I trust to the servants, by luncheon-time the ice, like Niobe, will
-have wept itself away, the corkscrew will have taken a ramble on its
-own account, the vinegar and salt will have gone into housekeeping
-together, and the mustard will be making love to the blanc-mange. My
-reputation is at stake.’
-
-
-
-
-AMERICAN NEWSPAPERS ON THEMSELVES.
-
-
-It has been fairly proved in previous numbers of this _Journal_ that
-so long as advertising continues, a newspaper can rarely be altogether
-dull, for the curiosities of the advertisement columns often exhibit
-strange freaks and fancies of human nature, which may afford amusement
-when the news columns are at their grimmest and dreariest. But the
-place of all others which may be regarded as the headquarters of the
-advertising genius is the land across the Atlantic, and the papers
-which are the medium of the greatest enterprise in this line are the
-_Tribunes_ and _Suns_ of the United States; and most entertaining of
-all are the announcements by which the American journals draw attention
-to their own brilliant pages. An English newspaper directory is not
-very attractive, except to the business portion of the community;
-but an American publication of the kind is of a much more amusing
-character; and in two bulky and comprehensive volumes, an indomitable
-transatlantic publisher has issued a universal gazetteer, wherein the
-newspapers of every part of the globe may be studied.
-
-In the first place, it is enough for an English paper, as a rule, to
-state the town and county it represents; but young America must do
-more than this, if readers outside her various regions are to estimate
-the value of her press. Jacksonville or Euteroga must be set forth as
-indisputably the most thriving city in the richest district of the
-most prosperous State. Magnolia, advertisers are ‘notified,’ is a
-‘flourishing town with more than twenty-five business-houses;’ Augusta
-‘is growing and has a bright future;’ Westfield is ‘a thriving town
-of above a thousand inhabitants,’ clearly affording scope for a large
-circulation.
-
-Manchester (United States), we learn, in a sentence racy of the soil,
-‘is a large, live, and growing city, makes one hundred and seventy-nine
-miles of cloth per day, can build fifteen locomotives a month, and
-fifty steam fire-engines a year, and an endless variety of other
-products of skill and industry.’ Another rising spot has ‘fourteen
-grocery, three hardware, and five dry goods stores, four tailor-shops,
-six butcher-shops, two banks, four hotels, three grist-mills, two
-stave-factories, foundry, planing-mills, &c., and six churches, one of
-which cost about sixteen thousand dollars, and has a spire one hundred
-and forty-eight feet high.’ But this edifice is outdone in a third town
-which ‘points with just pride to its magnificent iron bridge, costing
-over forty thousand dollars, and other evidences of public enterprise.’
-Middle Loup Valley is, we are told, ‘one of the largest and most
-productive valleys in the State, which is from its picturesque scenery
-and fertility of soil poetically called the “Rhine of America.”’
-Another touch of poetry is come across unexpectedly: ‘A belt of fire
-from thousands of coke ovens surrounds Mount Pleasant, the centre of
-the great Connellsville Coke County, and the place where the _Times and
-Mining Journal_ is published;’ and there is a rhythmical swing about
-the remark that the _Honey Grove Independent_ ‘is published in the land
-where cotton grows rank and tall, and where cattle grow fat in the
-wild prairies.’ But Honey Grove with its cattle is nothing to Hancock
-County, where ‘the people have become so corpulent, that the druggists
-are all becoming independently rich from the sale of Allen’s Anti-Fat;’
-and the Blue Grass Valley of Kentucky ‘is famous all over the world for
-its handsome women, thoroughbred horses, rich soil, and fine climate.’
-
-To be worthy of a land like this, the newspapers also possess rare
-attractions for readers and advertisers, the latter especially. They
-are ‘alive and growing’ ‘newsy! pithy! spicy!’ one is a ‘paper for all
-mankind,’ another ‘overflows with local gossip,’ and a third ‘discusses
-public questions with lively respectability, and feeds its readers with
-no less than four and often five columns of spicy local matter each
-week;’ a fourth has ‘everything first-class;’ you can get ‘a bright and
-newsy wide-awake local paper,’ or ‘a live thirty-two column weekly;’
-and the _Eaton Rapids Journal_ will be found, appropriately to its
-name, ‘a live paper in a live town.’ Yet more richly descriptive is the
-account of the ‘red-hot local paper that feeds twenty thousand people
-every week and makes them fat; advertisements can reach millions of
-hungry minds through this medium.’ Again, we learn that ‘Life on the
-ocean wave is nothing compared with reading the _Plymouth Pantograph_.’
-The _Sacramento Bee_ is ‘the spiciest, ablest, most brilliant, and
-most independent journal published on the Pacific coast;’ while for
-‘talking large,’ honourable mention should also be accorded to one
-of Cincinnati’s lights, which is ‘the best paper ever published. All
-its news is first-hand from upwards of fifteen hundred reporters and
-correspondents in every part of the United States and Europe.’
-
-But these are mere outward characteristics and generalisations.
-Politics denote more distinctly the paper’s line of action, whether
-‘stalwart Republican,’ ‘sound Democratic,’ or ‘Independent in all
-things, neutral in nothing.’ Independence is the cry of many; they are
-‘bold and fearless,’ express a hatred of party, rings and ringsters.
-‘Now in its third volume,’ exults one banner of freedom, ‘and has
-never halted by the way nor wearied of the fight. Always ready to take
-up the cause of the poor and oppressed, and never ready to surrender
-its independence to party, clique, or ring.’ ‘Has no axe to grind
-other than the advancement of every social reform,’ a second patriot
-proclaims. ‘Therefore it hits a head whenever that head is seen in
-opposition to true advancement.’ For the extremes of party violence we
-must go to a Southern journal, which does not, it may well be hoped,
-‘speak as the masses of our people feel and talk;’ if it does, so much
-the worse for the people. ‘If the Yankees,’ this rodomontade begins,
-‘want to know the real sentiments of our people; if they want to have a
-realising sense of the utter madness of trying to govern the grand old
-sovereign States of the Confederacy, they will close their ears to the
-lying professions of our policy-bumming politicians and subscribe to
-the _Bartlett News_.’ Perhaps some such rant as that of the _Bartlett
-News_ a certain _Labor Standard_ had in view while stating itself to be
-‘not a blowing, blustering, black-mail sheet which has to be read in
-private because its contents are unfit to be seen in the family,’ but
-‘a clean live weekly paper, devoted entirely to the interests of the
-working-classes.’
-
-A Texan organ ‘will seek to be a photograph of all the resources
-and needs of Texas; a mirror of her markets; a barometer of pure
-principles, sound public faith, and private honour. Democratic, but
-conservative, independent and outspoken in the exalted interests
-of just criticism—no panderer to partisan men or measures, whether
-right or wrong!’ This is independence with a vengeance, ahead even of
-the gazette which ‘favours immigration, morality, and the Christian
-religion; and unflinchingly opposes shams, rings, rogues, and enemies
-to the people. It exposes villainy and crime wherever found, and hence
-is read by the more intelligent classes of people in the field where it
-circulates.’
-
-The conjunction of immigration and the Christian religion reminds one
-of the much bemourned lady who ‘painted in water-colours and of such
-is the kingdom of heaven.’ But there is a still more frank linking
-together of things temporal and spiritual in the ‘only Democratic
-out-and-out paper in Western Iowa,’ which sails under the motto, more
-Yankee than reverent, ‘Fear God, tell the truth, and make money;’
-the editor further announcing that if he ‘is allowed to live under a
-Republican administration another year, he will carry your advertising
-at five cents per line, fifty dollars per column, or furnish his paper
-for one dollar fifty cents per year.’
-
-The _Horseheads Journal and Chemung Co. Greenback_ ‘exposes
-rascality everywhere, and aims to give something to interest and
-instruct everybody every week,’ from which it may be surmised that
-the _Horseheads Journal and Chemung Co. Greenback_ is happier in
-its object than in its title. Many of these ‘wide-awake and spicy’
-representatives of Western culture are not remarkable for the elegance
-of their names, the admixture of Indian and American resulting in
-some curious compounds, such as the _Petrolea Topic_, the _Klickitat
-Sentinel_, the _Katahdin Kalendar_, the _Waxahachie Enterprise_, and
-the _Coshocton Age_. Yankee, pure and simple, reigns in the _Weekly
-Blade_, _Jacksonian_, _Biggsville Clipper_, _People’s Telephone_, and
-_New Haven Palladium_; but there is a charm of euphony about the _Xenia
-Sunlight_ and _Golden Globe_, and the brevity which may be the soul of
-wit in the _Call_, _Item_, _Plaindealer_, and _Editor’s Eye_.
-
-The editors, as is well known, come much more to the front than is
-the case in England; they do not remain the invisible and mysterious
-‘we’ of the editorial sanctum; their names are frequently advertised
-with those of the publishers, occasionally, indeed, accompanied by
-a portrait or other additional recommendation; one paper ‘is edited
-by two of the ablest newspaper men in the State, and it will be hard
-to find a better team in the editorial harness.’ ‘The most important
-feature,’ we learn, ‘of the _Free Press_ is its funny squibs by the
-editor, “Driftings from Dreamland,” which are original and spicy;’ and
-as appropriately named, surely, is ‘a humorous department, “Tea and
-Toast,”’ to be found in another print. A Texas editor offers ‘upon
-justifiable encouragement to visit any county or city in Texas or
-Mexico and make a statistical “write-up” of their every interest and
-advantage,’ indicative of lively and reliable information for intending
-immigrants; and a _Highland Recorder_, with an affection for the Land
-o’ Cakes one can but sympathise with, says that ‘every page breathes of
-Clan-Alpine freshness.’
-
-Great stress is laid upon the home-printing of the small journals—‘no
-patent outside or inside;’ ‘almost every sentence is of home
-manufacture, little clipping is done;’ ‘the only paper that does
-all its work at home,’ &c. A further noticeable feature is the
-frequent use of certificates and testimonials as to circulation from
-public and private individuals or from contemporary prints, or of
-self-recommendations such as that of the paper which ‘has a very fine
-list of country subscribers,’ or of the journal ‘published by a genuine
-Jayhawker,’ which ‘goes to every post-office in the northern part of
-the State.’
-
-It is when we come to the direct announcements to advertisers,
-however, that we get perhaps the queerest hints from our American
-cousins. ‘Advertising rates cheerfully furnished’ appears frequently;
-‘Advertisers love it’ is a short and sweet statement regarding one
-paper; ‘Should be patronised by every live advertiser;’ ‘Advertisers,
-do you want some return for your money? Read our inducements,’
-say others. Then, ‘The modesty of the publishers deters them from
-mentioning the peculiar merits of the _Courier_ as an advertising
-medium’—a modesty rivalled by the remark, ‘Rates of advertising so
-low that we are almost ashamed to announce them,’ which differs from
-the standpoint of a third, ‘Advertising rates held high enough to
-make a living for the publisher;’ and the latter appears upon the
-whole to be the more general sentiment, as may be testified by ‘Don’t
-send offers under price,’ ‘We only advertise _for money_.’ The last
-sentence alludes to a species of exchange evidently less popular among
-the publishers than with their clients. ‘No advertising solicited,’
-says the _Westfield Pantograph_, ‘except for cash, or what may be as
-good. No space to give away or let at half-price.’ More decisive is the
-_Calhoun Pilot_, which ‘is choice in the admission of advertisements
-in its columns, and those it does admit, “due bills” of no character
-will settle for them. Must be in hard cash quarterly in advance, unless
-good references are given. Save your paper and postage, ye advertisers
-who have nothing to offer us for our space than your wares and due
-bills. We don’t want ’em. We have a good article to retail, and nothing
-but the almighty dollar will buy it. But,’ adds the _Pilot_ more
-amiably, ‘while this is strictly our rule, our rates are low, and we
-give value received for all the lucre you place in our possession.’
-Still more downright is the declaration, ‘No three-cornered patent
-pills, second-hand clothing, skunk-hunting machines, or hand-organs
-taken in payment for advertising.’ ‘The _News_ publishes no dead
-ads., and gives no puffs;’ ‘No half-cash advertisements accepted, no
-swindling or bogus patrons wanted.’ ‘Dead-beat, swindling advertisers,’
-sarcastically announces the _Troy Free Press_, ‘can have their matter
-chucked carefully into the stove by sending them to our office. Our
-space is for sale, and must be paid for at living rates.’ But there
-is encouragement for honest advertisers given by a _Clipper-Herald_
-through whose columns announcements ‘go to that class of people who
-are honest and intelligent and who pay for what they get;’ and in an
-equally straightforward assertion elsewhere, the _mens conscia recti_
-of the editor rises superior to grammar into the realms of wit: ‘Has a
-good circulation among a prompt-paying class of people—these be facts!’
-
-Facts or not, there is a distinctive character about Jonathan’s
-advertisements equal to some of the fiction with which he has supplied
-us.
-
-
-
-
-THE MISSING CLUE.
-
-
-CHAPTER III.—THE EVENTS OF A NIGHT.
-
-Down-stairs in the public room, the faithful Derrick is engaged in a
-seemingly interesting conversation with mine host Hobb Dipping and two
-or three other jolly good fellows, who are all drinking at his expense.
-No sign yet had the attendant discovered that had served to arouse his
-suspicions. No word had been spoken which in any way showed that the
-natives of this desolate place were anxious to know more about his
-master or himself. A suspicion of danger often arouses our fears and
-doubts when there is perhaps the smallest occasion for either. The
-honest countrymen troubled themselves much less about the matter than
-even the worthy host, who was happily indifferent to everything but the
-fact that Mr Morton and his servant were rare and profitable customers.
-The lumbering knot of labourers at length departs, and mine host locks
-and bars the door; while Derrick, not a little fatigued with the
-harassing events of the day, is left standing alone, surveying a row of
-empty benches which the retiring fenmen have just quitted. Burly Hobb
-comes back puffing and blowing, his red face glowing like the setting
-sun, and his bald skull spotted with perspiration through the exertion
-he has undergone in securing the strongly built outer door.
-
-‘Landlord, I’m going to bed,’ says Derrick, who has suddenly returned
-to his original gruffness.
-
-‘Very good, sir,’ is the reply of the host, who forthwith trims and
-lights an atom of a lamp which he fishes out of a cupboard by the
-fireplace. ‘I hope you will sleep well, sir.’
-
-Derrick’s eyes are watching the innkeeper from under his beetling
-brows, and he answers gruffly: ‘I hope so.’
-
-‘I’ve heard it said,’ goes on the loquacious host, ‘that a good sleep
-is worth a fortune to an over-tired man. I see nothing to prevent you
-sleeping well here, sir.’
-
-‘Not much likelihood of being roused in the night, eh?’ remarks the
-attendant.
-
-‘Why, no, sir,’ answers Dipping, wondering what motive his guest could
-have in asking such a question. ‘There’s no one to disturb you here,
-unless, indeed, it be your master himself.’
-
-‘Many visitors here?’ inquired Derrick, as old Hobb leads the way up
-the dusky, creaking staircase with the flickering lamp in his hand.
-
-‘None at all, sir,’ replied the landlord in a melancholy tone. ‘There
-never is any one here—leastways, very, very seldom. I haven’t had a
-visitor stopping in this house for a matter of—I can’t rightly say
-how long; but I know it’s a mortal long while, for since my poor wife
-died’——
-
-‘Is this my room?’ interrupts Derrick, as the innkeeper halts before a
-solid-looking black door at the head of the staircase.
-
-‘It is,’ answers old Dipping. ‘You are pretty close to your master,
-sir.’
-
-‘I know,’ is all that the attendant deigns to say, as he pushes open
-the door and enters with the light, leaving the landlord to stumble
-down-stairs in the dark as best he may. Having carefully fastened the
-door, Derrick sets down the light, and approaches the window with the
-intention of getting a breath of fresh air. The casement is somewhat
-hard to unfasten, and when at length he succeeds in opening it, the
-lamp which he has brought is blown out under the sudden influence of
-a gust of air which is admitted. No matter; he does not want it. The
-night-breeze is cool and refreshing, a favourable contrast to the hot
-stifling room below, and Derrick, as he leans upon the window-ledge,
-begins to appear more contented and at ease. All afterglow of the
-twilight has long disappeared, and the moon is shining with a sickly
-light upon a low layer of mist which covers the marshy flats. Above
-the thin watery fog which has arisen from the sluggish stream and
-enshrouded the village as in a winding-sheet, the great shattered
-tower of the monastery rises ghostlike and dim, while the silence of
-the vast solitude is unbroken by a single sound. Even Derrick is not
-insensible to the peculiar beauty and stillness of the scene, and he
-lounges there, humming a tune, and watching the silvery trickle upon
-the watery marsh long after mine host has retired to rest. At length he
-closes the casement and divests himself of his heavy boots. Tired as
-he is, he does not attempt to remove his clothes. The man had seen a
-deal of sharp service, and experience had taught him long ago that in
-cases where he might be wanted at any moment, it were better to sleep
-in them. He merely places his pistols within reach, and then throwing
-himself upon the bed, endeavours to sleep.
-
-Every one knows what it is to arrive at that dreamy state of
-semi-unconsciousness when the weary senses, failing at once to engage
-the attentions of the drowsy god, find a sort of relief in a long train
-of most disconnected thought. It was thus with Derrick. The fatigues
-of the day had proved too much for even that hardy individual, so
-that, instead of falling at once into a sound refreshing sleep, he
-was drowsily conning over the different events which had occurred,
-his rambling imagination colouring them with a variety of indistinct
-pictures and incidents. These weird fancies at length grew fainter
-and fainter, and the attendant was fast sinking into slumber, when
-suddenly, and as it seemed without a cause, he awoke. Through the
-casement the moon was staring down upon him like a pale still face,
-and the greater part of his recumbent person lay bathed in its cold
-light. All was still; there seemed not the slightest reason why he
-should be thus aroused. The silence was profound, and the very beating
-of Derrick’s heart sounded like a hammer thumping time in his head.
-Scarcely knowing what he does, he sits up on the edge of his bed and
-listens. Yes; he was not mistaken, there seemed to be a faint noise
-approaching the old inn—a low measured tramp. The hammer-like beating
-grows louder as Derrick, with every nerve strained to the utmost
-pitch, silently rises and once more opens the casement. There can be
-no mistake now; some persons are approaching; and in that low tramp,
-distant as it is, he recognises the marching of a body of soldiers.
-He closes the window softly, and taking his heavy riding-boots in his
-hand, unfastens the door, and glides softly along the gallery towards
-his master’s apartment. Owing to the pitchy darkness in which the
-gallery is enveloped, he experiences some difficulty in groping his
-way without stumbling; but reaching the further end at last, he feels
-his way to his master’s door and gives the required signal. It is
-answered with unexpected suddenness, the door being instantly thrown
-open, and Sir Carnaby appearing on the threshold. He is fully dressed,
-like Derrick; he has not even removed his outer clothing, and in his
-hand is a short broad-bladed knife. The saddle-bags lie upon the table,
-and a portion of their contents, discernible by a dim night-light, is
-scattered about; but the black box is gone.
-
-In a very few words, the trusty henchman explains what is the reason
-of his coming, and urges his master to hold himself in readiness to
-escape, should it be necessary. Sir Carnaby looks at him while he
-speaks as if he does not quite understand his hurried explanation;
-but when the attendant has finished, he looks around the room with an
-anxious air, and then says: ‘If it be so, Derrick, we must get off
-somehow as quickly as we can. This window, I think, looks towards the
-back of the house. Can you not manage to descend into the courtyard and
-get out our horses? Lead them down the bank of the stream towards that
-tall beacon by the dike. You must remember the place; we remarked it as
-we passed the mill on our journey here.’
-
-‘I remember the place, Sir Carnaby; but I am not going to make off
-there, and leave you alone here.’
-
-‘I shall be safe enough, I tell you, Derrick,’ said the baronet as he
-hastily motioned to the attendant to go. ‘I cannot come yet; I cannot;
-it is impossible.’
-
-‘I will wait below, then,’ is the stubborn reply of his servant, who is
-already half out of the window.
-
-‘Derrick,’ says Sir Carnaby, laying his hand upon the attendant’s
-shoulder, ‘do what I tell you. I cannot come now; and if you wait below
-for me, as you say, we shall both be discovered. More lives than our
-own depend upon your obeying me at this moment. Go, as I tell you, and
-wait for me by the beacon; and I will join you as soon as I possibly
-can.’
-
-The man clasps his master’s hand, and, with something like tears in
-his eyes, makes his way to the ground. The fugitive baronet has no
-emotion expressed on his countenance, for he fears not for himself; his
-thoughts are centred upon that black box which has now so strangely
-disappeared. With the broad-bladed knife still in his hand, he goes
-towards a corner of the room, kneels down, and appears to busy himself
-with the planking of the floor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Fortunately for himself, Derrick had found his way to the shed where
-the horses had been stabled; and his efforts to saddle and bring them
-out had proved successful. The great gates leading out of the courtyard
-of the old inn were fastened; but this did not deter the attendant’s
-movements for an instant. Leading the horses through a gap in the fence
-at the back of the _Saxonford Arms_, he crossed a small cultivated
-inclosure, and emerged from the cover of a hedge upon the open highway.
-Stopping for a moment to listen, he plainly distinguished the measured
-tramp of soldiers approaching the inn, mingled with the low peculiar
-clank of arms and accoutrements. One circumstance which particularly
-alarmed Derrick was that the sound plainly came from the direction
-in which he had to go. There was no time for thought, however; the
-warning tramp which broke the stillness of the night came nearer and
-nearer, and over the old timber bridge which crossed the stream came
-a dim file of figures—eleven of them. Derrick could easily count the
-number as they passed over the bridge and came straight towards the old
-_Saxonford Arms_, their fixed bayonets flashing and glittering in the
-moonlight.
-
-There was but one course he could take; he must move forward and pass
-them. No opportunity for making a detour, for the military were not
-one hundred yards from the house, and the attendant knew that he had
-been seen. Muttering a prayer for his master’s safety, Derrick put the
-horses to a slow trot, and advanced towards the soldiers with a feeling
-of fear at his heart which he had never before experienced. He had not
-covered half the distance before a sharp word of command came from the
-front, and a line was drawn up across the road, evidently with the
-intention of disputing his further progress. A dash for it now; delay
-meant capture both for himself and his master. Digging spurs into his
-horse’s sides, the attendant laid the flat of his broad blade over the
-flanks of Sir Carnaby’s charger which he led, and tore down the road
-like a whirlwind. It was all over in a minute. A sheet of flame shot
-forth as the bold horseman broke through the line, and then, without
-a check, he found himself ascending the steep bank close against the
-bridge. The soldiers, however, who had taken the initiative, had
-no intention of letting their suspected quarry escape. Before Sir
-Carnaby’s servant could head the bank, he was surrounded, and a hoarse
-cry to stop and surrender came from his pursuers. In this they had
-mistaken their man. Derrick entertained no such idea. He indeed hoped
-that the firing would alarm his master, and allow him time to make his
-retreat in safety; but not a thought had he of yielding. Once more
-clapping spurs to his horse, and striking right and left with his drawn
-blade, the attendant partially succeeded in clearing himself from the
-press.
-
-At this moment, a random shot from one of the military dropped his
-master’s horse, which he had been leading. Derrick had scarcely time to
-disengage his arm from the bridle before the poor animal went crashing
-down, breaking the worm-eaten railing of the bridge like matchwood, and
-throwing one of his assailants headlong into the stream below. In the
-confusion, Derrick received a bayonet-wound in the left arm, and he was
-nearly pulled from his saddle; but shaking himself free with almost
-superhuman strength, he applied his spurs, and galloped across the old
-bridge for dear life.
-
-Although there appeared to be no attempt at pursuit, Derrick did not
-judge it prudent to ride straight for the spot where he hoped to meet
-his master. After making a considerable circuit, the trusty henchman,
-faithful to the last, reined in his reeking steed, and gazed across the
-flat misty space in the direction of the _Saxonford Arms_. The silence,
-however, was as complete as when he had sat at that open window looking
-over the fen. Not a soul was anywhere near him. Putting his horse once
-more in motion, the man rode slowly along the bank until he reached
-the place of rendezvous. It was as he both feared and suspected. Sir
-Carnaby was not there. He must wait. The clear night clouded, and the
-hours passed by, but yet his master came not. Derrick might wait until
-the crack of doom, but he never would meet his master again on earth.
-The devoted courage of the servant was useless now, for, pierced by a
-musket bullet, Sir Carnaby Vincent lay lifeless across the stairs of
-the old _Saxonford Arms_.
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.—AFTER FIFTEEN YEARS.
-
-It wanted but a few days to Christmas 1760—a seasonable Christmas,
-and in keeping with that festive season of the year. Snow and sharp
-north-east winds had been plentiful for nearly a week past. The flat
-country all around the time-honoured cathedral city of Fridswold had
-been covered with a vast sheet of drifted snow, which had found its
-way into every nook and crevice, filling up all the ditches and dikes
-until they were level with the surrounding country. The minster tower
-was embellished with an innumerable number of white patches, and the
-minster roofs were hidden under a thick covering of frozen snow. It was
-evident that King Christmas had things to his liking this time, and
-was bent upon enjoying his own particular time in his own particular
-way. Meanwhile the wind roared on, roared and whistled, and whisked
-the sharp frozen snowflakes round and round, dashing them, as if in
-impotent rage, against the sturdy walls of the minster. The air was so
-thick that, although the hour was not late, darkness had set in with
-a density that obscured every object from view, while the tolling of
-the great vespers-bell was drowned by the distracting uproar of the
-elements.
-
-It was during one of the uncertain lulls which occurred from time to
-time, that a figure emerged from the protecting shelter of one of the
-cathedral buttresses, and wrapping himself in the folds of a horseman’s
-cloak, strode hastily forward, evidently intending to take advantage
-of the brief calm and reach some haven of shelter. Scarcely a single
-person was to be seen in the deserted streets, through which the blast
-tore with such mad fury that the buffeted wayfarer staggered again.
-Visions of glowing fires, dry clothes, and comfortable shelter rose
-before his imagination as he passed a brightly lighted window. But
-there was no stopping for him; he must on and fight this tough battle
-with the pitiless wind as best he may. His destination is at length
-reached. The weather-beaten traveller descends a couple of steps,
-passes through an open doorway, and emerges from the outer darkness
-into a warm, cosy-looking bar—his clothes half-frozen, and crusted
-with patches of snow. He is apparently known here, for he is instantly
-relieved of his cloak and hat by a neat-looking damsel, who up to the
-present moment has been engaged in a light and refreshing flirtation
-with a large, hot-visaged man lounging before the fire.
-
-‘Sharp weather this, sir,’ remarked that worthy, slightly moving from
-his place.
-
-‘Sharp indeed!’ returned the other in a deep voice, as he shook some
-loose particles of snow from his person.
-
-‘Ah, this’ll be a bad time for many people,’ was the next remark the
-large man ventured upon.
-
-A muttered exclamation dropped from the lips of the last comer, but was
-too indistinct to be heard.
-
-‘There’ll be many a person remember this night,’ continued he of the
-fiery countenance, with an insane notion that he was getting along
-capitally.
-
-The individual addressed turned sharply round, fixing a pair of dark
-eyes upon the other’s face, but he did not speak.
-
-Somewhat discouraged, the large man paused for a minute ere he spoke
-again. The person he seemed so wishful to converse with was a tall,
-handsome, young fellow, dressed in a sort of half-military costume, and
-with a bold dashing look, sufficient in itself to attract notice. By
-his side was a silver-hilted rapier, the ordinary weapon of a gentleman
-of the day; and the martial look of the wearer was sufficient proof
-that he would be prompt to use it in any emergency. Seemingly not
-satisfied with the long inspection he had thought fit to take, our
-red-faced friend once more endeavoured to enter into conversation; but
-the gentleman, after giving the maid some orders, quitted the room.
-
-‘Is that gentleman staying in the house, Peggy, my dear?’ asked the
-red-faced one of the waiting-maid.
-
-‘Yes; he came here last night,’ replied the girl, who was perfectly
-ready to resume the aforesaid flirtation, which had been interrupted by
-the entrance of the visitor.
-
-But the man with the fiery face now seemed to be persistently
-interested in the stranger. ‘What may his name be, Peg?’ he asked in a
-tone of affected carelessness.
-
-‘That’s no business of yours, Mr Goff,’ retorted the damsel a trifle
-tartly, for the swain’s indifference somewhat nettled her.
-
-‘Now, Peggy, my chuck, don’t get crusty,’ said the big man in wheedling
-accents. ‘What’s that you’ve got in your pretty hand?’
-
-‘It’s the gentleman’s hat,’ replied the fair maid, somewhat relaxing.
-‘I’m going to dry it by the fire with his cloak. They’re sopping wet,
-now the snow’s melted on them.’
-
-‘He’s not likely to lose his headpiece, whoever he may be,’ remarked
-Mr Goff. ‘I can see “R. Ainslie” on the lining quite plain, as you’re
-holding it now.’
-
-‘You seem to take a deal of interest in the gentleman,’ laughed Peggy
-as she turned the hat away.
-
-‘It’s mighty little interest I take in any one except you, my beauty,’
-returned Mr Goff. ‘I only thought the young fellow looked wonderful
-weary and tired like.’
-
-‘He looked that yesterday,’ said Peggy, warming to the subject. ‘I felt
-quite sorry for him when he rode up. It wasn’t fit weather to turn a
-dog out in.’
-
-‘And he’s been out again to-day?’ hazarded the big man.
-
-‘Yes,’ replied Peggy, depositing the hat and cloak in front of the
-roaring blaze. ‘He went out early on foot, leaving his horse in the
-stable, and we saw nothing more of him till two o’clock. He came back
-then, and ordered something to eat; but, as I’m a living creature, I
-think he scarcely touched it. After that, he went out again, and did
-not return till just now.’
-
-‘It seems wonderful curious,’ said Mr Goff slowly, as he buttoned up
-his coat and prepared to go—‘seems wonderful curious that a young gent
-should go on in that fashion. When I see ’em a-doing so, I always have
-a sort of notion that they’ve got something on their minds, and are
-going to act rash.’
-
-‘That’s your experience, is it?’ said the girl with a laugh. ‘I don’t
-think much of it.’
-
-‘Possibly not,’ returned the other. ‘Good-night.’
-
-
-
-
-A SOLITARY ISLAND.
-
-
-The government of Iceland have commissioned Mr Thoroddsen to undertake
-systematic explorations of that island, with a view to investigating
-its physical features and describing its natural history. While on a
-visit to Grimsey, a small island twenty-two miles due north of Iceland,
-he found it inhabited by eighty-eight human beings, debarred from all
-communication with the mainland, excepting once or twice every year,
-when, at great risk, the natives contrived to visit the mainland in
-their small open boats.
-
-After describing the flora and meteorology of this secluded islet,
-Mr Thoroddsen informs us that the ‘pastor of the island, M. Pjetur
-Gudmundsson, has for many years been engaged in exceedingly careful
-meteorological observations on behalf of the Meteorological Institute
-of Copenhagen. This most worthy gentleman, living here in conspicuous
-poverty, like a hermit divorced from the world, though he has the
-comfort of a good wife to be thankful for, is not only regarded as
-a father by his primitive congregation, but enjoys, moreover, the
-reputation of being in the front rank among sacred poets in modern
-Iceland.
-
-‘The inhabitants derive their livelihood for the most part from
-bird-catching, nest-robbing, and deep-sea fisheries. The precipices
-that form the eastern face of the island are crowded with myriads of
-various kinds of sea-fowl. On every ledge the birds are seen thickly
-packed together; the rocks are white with guano, or green-tufted with
-scurvy-grass; here everything is in ceaseless movement, stir, and
-flutter, accompanied by a myriad-voiced concert from screamers on the
-wing, from chatterers on domestic affairs in the rock-ledges, and
-from brawlers at the parliament of love out at sea, the surface of
-which beneath the rocks is literally thatched at this time of the year
-with the wooing multitudes of this happy commonwealth. If the peace
-is broken by a stone rolled over the precipice or by the report of
-a gunshot, the air is suddenly darkened by the rising clouds of the
-disturbed birds, which, viewed from the rocks, resemble what might be
-taken for gigantic swarms of bees or midges.
-
-‘The method adopted for collecting eggs is the following: Provided with
-a strong rope, some nine or ten stalwart men go to the precipice, where
-it is some three hundred feet high, and one of the number volunteers
-or is singled out by the rest for the perilous _sig_, that is, “sink”
-or “drop,” over the edge of the rocks. Round his thighs and waist,
-thickly padded generally with bags stuffed with feathers or hay, the
-_sigamadr_, “sinkman” or “dropman,” adjusts the rope in such a manner
-that he may hang, when dropped, in a sitting posture. He is also
-dressed in a wide smock or sack of coarse calico, open at the breast,
-and tied round the waist with a belt, into the ample folds of which
-he slips the eggs he gathers, the capacity of the smock affording
-accommodation to from one hundred to one hundred and fifty eggs at a
-time. In one hand the sinkman holds a pole, sixteen feet long, with a
-ladle tied to one end, and by this means scoops the eggs out of nests
-which are beyond the reach of his own hands. When the purpose of this
-“breath-fetching” sink is accomplished, on a given sign the dropman is
-hauled up again by his comrades. This, as may readily be imagined, is
-a most dangerous undertaking, and many a life has been lost over it in
-Grimsey from accidents occurring to the rope.
-
-‘For the pursuit of the fishery, the island possesses fourteen small
-open boats, in which the men will venture out as far as four to six
-miles cod-fishing; but this is a most hazardous industry, owing both
-to the sudden manner in which the sea will rise, sometimes even a
-long time in advance of travelling storms, and to the difficulty of
-effecting a landing on the harbourless island.
-
-‘Now and then the monotony of the life of the inhabitants is broken by
-visits from foreigners, mostly Icelandic shark-fishers, or English or
-French fishermen.
-
-‘Of domestic animals the islanders now possess only a few sheep.
-Formerly there were five cows in the island; but the hard winter
-of 1860 necessitated their extermination, and since that time, for
-twenty-four years, the people have had to do without a cow! Of horses
-there are only two at present (1884) in the island! Strange to say, the
-health of the people seems on the whole to bear a fair comparison with
-more favoured localities. Scurvy, which formerly was very prevalent,
-has now almost disappeared, as has also a disease peculiar to children,
-which, in the form of spasm or convulsive fit, used to be very fatal to
-infant life in former years.
-
-‘Inexpressibly solitary must be the life of these people in winter,
-shut out from all communication with the outer world, and having
-in view, as far as the eye can reach, nothing but arctic ice. The
-existence of generation after generation here seems to be spent in
-one continuous and unavailing arctic expedition. The only diversion
-afforded by nature consists in the shifting colours of the flickering
-aurora borealis, in the twinkling of the stars in the heavens, and
-the fantastic forms of wandering icebergs. No wonder that such
-surroundings should serve to produce a quiet, serious, devout, and
-down-hearted race, in which respect the Grimsey men may perhaps be
-said to constitute a typical group among their compatriots. However,
-to dispel the heavy tedium of the long winter days, they seek their
-amusements in the reading of the Sagas, in chess-playing, and in such
-mild dissipations at mutual entertainments at Christmas-time as their
-splendid poverty will allow.’
-
-
-
-
-FORESTRY AND FARMING.
-
-
-At one of the evening lectures in connection with the late Edinburgh
-Forestry Exhibition, Mr J. Meldrum spoke of the ‘Johore Forests’ which
-are situated in the Malayan Peninsula between the British settlements
-of Singapore and Malacca. The greater part of the interior, he said,
-consisted of a virgin forest, and abounded in timber trees of a large
-size, no fewer than three hundred and fifty specimens of which were to
-be seen in the Forestry Exhibition. About three hundred kinds awaited
-the advent of the papermaker, who would be able to convert them into
-useful wood-pulp at a very low cost. Railways were required to make
-this wealth of timber available for commercial purposes.
-
-Another lecture by Mr Cracknell at the model of the Manitoba Farm
-embodied some interesting information regarding the Canadian
-north-west. The Bell Farm in Qu’appelle he described as the largest
-farm in the world. There were eight thousand acres under crop, five
-thousand under wheat, and a portion of the remainder under flax. From
-this farm, ten thousand bushels of wheat had been exported at a good
-price last year; and this year’s crop was estimated to be forty per
-cent. better. The estimated wheat acreage this year in Manitoba is
-three hundred and fifty thousand; and in the north-west territories
-sixty-five thousand, with an estimated yield of twenty-three bushels
-an acre. There was thus a total of four hundred and fifteen thousand
-acres, and nine million five hundred and forty-five thousand bushels;
-but deducting two million seven hundred and sixty thousand bushels for
-home consumption and seed, there remained a surplus of six million
-seven hundred and eighty-five thousand bushels. There is little
-consolation here for the British farmer, who finds wheat-growing at the
-present low prices positively unremunerative.
-
-
-
-
-A LOVE-THOUGHT.
-
-
- If thou wert only, love, a tiny flower,
- And I a butterfly with gaudy wings,
- Flitting to changing scenes each changing hour,
- Careless of aught save that which pleasure brings—
- Not even I could leave the lowliest glade
- That held thy loveliness within its shade.
-
- If thou wert but a streamlet in the vale,
- And I a sailor on a stormy sea,
- Flying through whirling foam beneath the gale,
- Chartless in all that wild immensity—
- Thy murmuring voice would echo in my soul
- Through howling storm or crashing thunder-roll.
-
- If, darling, thou wert but a far-off star,
- And I a weary wanderer o’er the plain,
- Unwitting of celestial worlds afar,
- And knowing naught of all the shining train—
- My glance would single out thy ray serene,
- Though blazing suns and planets rolled between.
-
- Yet, dear one, thou art these to me, and more:
- My flower, whose radiance passeth all decay;
- My streamlet of sweet thoughts in endless store;
- My star, to guide my steps to perfect day;
- My hope in earth’s dark dungeon of despair;
- My refuge ’mid life’s weary noonday glare.
-
- H. ERNEST NICHOL.
-
- * * * * *
-
-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. 45, Vol. I, November 8, 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. 45, Vol. I, November 8, 1884</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Various</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 20, 2021 [eBook #66575]</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. 45, VOL. I, NOVEMBER 8, 1884 ***</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_705">{705}</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="#THE_STORY_OF_A_VAST_EXPLOSION">THE STORY OF A VAST EXPLOSION.</a><br />
-<a href="#BY_MEAD_AND_STREAM">BY MEAD AND STREAM.</a><br />
-<a href="#CIGARS">CIGARS.</a><br />
-<a href="#ONE_WOMANS_HISTORY">ONE WOMAN’S HISTORY.</a><br />
-<a href="#AMERICAN_NEWSPAPERS_ON_THEMSELVES">AMERICAN NEWSPAPERS ON THEMSELVES.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_MISSING_CLUE">THE MISSING CLUE.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_SOLITARY_ISLAND">A SOLITARY ISLAND.</a><br />
-<a href="#FORESTRY_AND_FARMING">FORESTRY AND FARMING.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_LOVE-THOUGHT">A LOVE-THOUGHT.</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. 45.—Vol. I.</span></p>
-<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<em>d.</em></p>
-<p class="floatc">SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1884.</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_STORY_OF_A_VAST_EXPLOSION">THE STORY OF A VAST EXPLOSION.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> greatest physical convulsion of recent times
-occurred on the morning of the 27th of August
-last year, the scene of the catastrophe being a
-small island in the Sunda Straits, which separate
-Sumatra and Java. It is a region which there is
-much reason to regard as one of the intensest foci
-of volcanic activity on the earth’s surface. The
-main facts connected with this event, although
-slow in coming to hand, are now fairly within
-the records of science. Krakatoa, the volcanic
-island which a year or two ago was seven miles
-long by five broad, is about thirty miles from
-the Java coast. When surveyed in 1868-69, the
-island was found to be clothed from base to
-summit with a luxuriant growth of forest and
-tropical vegetation, but uninhabited. A few
-weeks prior to the eruption, the volcano, which
-had been dormant for two centuries, gave
-signs of an awakening. On the 20th of May
-several shocks, accompanied by loud explosions
-and hollow reverberations, startled the inhabitants
-of the towns of Batavia and Buitenzorg,
-about ninety miles distant.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> These disturbances
-continued for the next three months with more
-or less activity. On the 11th and 18th of August
-the energy of the volcano increased, and there
-were symptoms of a crisis. On the 26th and
-the night following, several eruptions took place,
-until the climax was reached on the following
-morning. The submarine base of the mountain
-then seems, according to all available evidence,
-to have literally ‘caved in.’ This was apparently
-accompanied by an influx of the sea into the
-molten interior, the instantaneous development
-of superheated steam, and then an explosion
-which, for its colossal energy, is unparalleled in
-the annals of volcanic outbreaks.</p>
-
-<p>The enormous power of this eruption can only
-be adequately understood by its effects; these
-we now briefly summarise. The explosion itself,
-according to Dr Verbeek, one of the Dutch
-Commission appointed to investigate the nature
-and results of this catastrophe, caused the
-north part of the island to be blown away, and
-to fall eight miles to the north, forming
-what is now named Steer’s Island. Moreover,
-the north-east portion of the island of
-Krakatoa was also hurled into the air, passed
-over Lang Island, and fell at a distance of seven
-miles, forming what is now known as Calmeyer
-Island. In proof of this, we have the fact
-elicited by the newly made marine survey of
-the Straits, that ‘<i>the bottom surrounding these new
-islands has not risen</i>.’ This would have been
-the case had they been upheaved in the usual
-way. Not only so, but the bottom round these
-new islands shows a slightly <i>increased depth</i> in
-the direction of the submarine pit, nearly one
-thousand feet deep, which now marks the place
-the peak of Krakatoa occupied prior to the convulsion.
-But out of the midst of this deep depression
-there rises ‘like a gigantic club’ a remarkable
-column of rock of an area not more than
-thirty-three square feet, which projects sixteen feet
-above the surface of the sea. The southern part
-is all that is now left of the island of Krakatoa,
-and this fragment on its north side is now
-bounded by a magnificent precipitous cliff more
-than two thousand five hundred feet high. It
-has been thought by some, however, that the
-first portion of the island was blown away on
-the evening of August 26th, and that on the
-following morning the larger mass, answering to
-Calmeyer Island, was shot out by an effort still
-more titanic.</p>
-
-<p>The shock of the explosion was felt at a
-distance of four thousand miles, being equal to
-an area of one-sixth of the earth’s surface—that
-is, at Burmah, Ceylon and the Andaman Islands
-to the north-west, in some parts of India, at
-Saigon and Manila to the north, at Dorey in
-the Geelvink Bay (New Guinea) to the east, and
-throughout Northern Australia to the south-west.
-Lloyd’s agents at Batavia, in Java, stated that on
-the eve of this vast explosion, the detonations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_706">{706}</span>
-‘grew louder, till in the early morning the
-reports and concussions were simply deafening,
-not to say alarming.’ So violent were the air-waves,
-due to this cause, that walls were rent
-by them at a distance of five hundred miles,
-and so great the volume of smoke and ashes,
-that Batavia, eighty miles off, was shrouded in
-complete darkness for two hours. Nearly four
-months after the eruption, masses of floating
-pumice, each several acres in extent, were seen
-in the Straits of Sunda.</p>
-
-<p>Paradoxical as it appears, the sound was sometimes
-better heard in distant places than in those
-nearer the seat of disturbance. This singular
-effect has been thus explained—assuming, for
-example, the presence of a thick cloud of ashes
-between Krakatoa and Anjer, this would act on
-the sound-waves like a thick soft cushion; along
-and above such an ash-cloud the sound would
-be very easily propelled to more remote places,
-for instance, Batavia; whereas at Anjer, close
-behind the ash-cloud, no sounds, or only faint
-ones, would be heard. Other explanations seem
-to be less probable, though not impossible.</p>
-
-<p>Dr Verbeek states that within a circle of nine
-and a-half miles’ radius (fifteen kilomètres) from
-the mountain, the layers of volcanic ash cover
-the ground to a depth of from sixty-five to
-one hundred and thirty feet, and at the back
-of the island the thickness of the ash-mountains
-is in some places even from one hundred and
-ninety-five to two hundred and sixty feet, and
-that the matter so projected extends over a known
-area of seven hundred and fifty thousand square
-kilomètres (285,170 square miles), or a space
-larger than the German Empire with the Netherlands
-and Belgium, including Denmark and Iceland,
-or nearly twenty-one times the size of the
-Netherlands. Moreover, he calculates that the
-quantity of solid substance ejected by the volcano
-was eighteen cubic kilomètres, or 4.14 <i>cubic
-miles</i>. To give some idea of the enormous volume
-this represents, we may take the following illustration:
-the largest of the Egyptian pyramids
-has upwards of eighty-two millions of cubic feet
-of masonry; it would therefore take about <i>seven
-thousand three hundred and sixty of such structures</i>
-to equal the bulk of matter thrown out by
-this eruption. Some of this matter was found
-to contain smooth round balls from five-eighths
-to two and a-quarter inches in diameter, and composed
-of fifty-five per cent. of carbonate of lime.</p>
-
-<p>As may well be imagined, the final outburst
-by its awful energy gave rise to a succession of
-air-waves. These we now know went round the
-earth more than once, and recorded themselves
-on the registering barometers or barograms at
-the Mauritius, Berlin, Rome, St Petersburg,
-Valencia, Coimbra (Portugal), and other far-distant
-places. At some points, as many as seven
-such disturbances were noted; other instruments
-not so sensitive gave evidence of five, by
-which time the wave had pretty well spent itself.</p>
-
-<p>Having collected the observations made at all
-the chief meteorological stations, General Strachey
-recently read a paper before the Royal Society
-which, in his opinion, conclusively shows that an
-immense air-wave started from Krakatoa at about
-thirty minutes past nine <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> on August 27th.
-Spreading from this common centre, the wave
-went three and a-quarter times round the globe,
-and those parts of it which had travelled in
-opposite directions passed through one another
-‘somewhere in the antipodes of Java.’ The
-velocity of the aërial undulations which travelled
-from east to west was calculated at six hundred
-and seventy-four miles per hour, those moving in
-the reverse direction at seven hundred and six
-miles per hour, or nearly the velocity of sound.</p>
-
-<p>But another effect of the eruption was a
-series of ‘tidal waves,’ so called—although the
-term is objected to because not strictly scientific—which,
-like the air-wave, passed round
-the world. Whether this was synchronous with
-the final explosion, it is not possible to say.
-The highest of these seismic sea-waves, which
-was over one hundred feet high, swept the shores
-on either side of the Straits, and wrought terrible
-destruction to life and property. More than
-thirty-five thousand persons perished through it;
-the greater part of the district of North Bantam
-was destroyed, the towns of Anjer, Merak, Tjeringin,
-and others being overwhelmed.</p>
-
-<p>The initial movement of this destructive agent
-was undoubtedly of the nature of a negative wave;
-but the best testimony to this is lost, since those
-who witnessed it were its victims. The sudden
-subsidence of so large an area of the sea-bottom
-in the Straits caused the sea to recede from the
-neighbouring shores. This negative wave was,
-however, seen by Captain Ferrat from his vessel,
-as she lay at anchor at Port Louis. He states
-that towards two <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> he saw the water in the
-harbour roll back and suddenly fall four or five
-feet; and that, a quarter of an hour afterwards,
-the sea returned with great violence to its former
-level, causing his own and other vessels to roll
-terribly. The best witness of this remarkable
-phenomenon, however, is Captain Watson, of the
-British ship <i>Charles Ball</i>. His vessel was actually
-within the Straits, and he states that he and his
-helmsman ‘saw a wave rush right on to Button
-Island, apparently sweeping right over the south
-part, and rising half-way up to the north and
-east sides fifty or sixty feet, and then continuing
-on to the Java shore. This was evidently a
-wave of translation and not of progression, for
-it was not felt at the ship.’ This latter movement,
-beyond question, must have coincided with
-the great ‘tidal wave’ above mentioned, and
-which was felt at Aden, on the Ceylon coast,
-Port Blair, Nagapatam, Port Elizabeth, Kurrachee,
-Bombay, and half-way up to Calcutta on
-the Hooghly, the north-west coast of Australia,
-Honolulu, Kadiall in Alaska, San Celeto near San
-Francisco, and the east coast of New Zealand.</p>
-
-<p>In this as in most other cases of volcanic
-disturbance, electrical phenomena were observed.
-One vessel in particular, while passing through
-the Sunda Straits, exhibited ‘balls of fire’ at her
-masthead and at the extremities of her yardarms.
-Further, it was noticed at the Oriental Telephone
-Station, Singapore, a place five hundred miles
-from Krakatoa, that on raising the receiving
-instrument to the ears, a perfect roar as of a
-waterfall was heard; and by shouting at the top
-of one’s voice, the clerk at the other end of the
-wire was able just to hear something like articulation,
-but not a single sentence could be understood.
-On the line to Ishore, which includes
-a submarine cable about a mile long, reports
-like pistol-shots were heard. These noises were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_707">{707}</span>
-considered due to a disturbance of the earth’s
-magnetic field, caused by the explosion, and
-reacting on the wires of the telephone.</p>
-
-<p>We have now to refer to what has been a
-much debated question. From about September
-to the beginning of the present year, remarkable
-coronal appearances and sunglows were noticed
-in different parts of the world, and especially
-the somewhat rare phenomena of red, green, and
-blue suns. Observers such as Norman Lockyer,
-Dr Meldrum, and Helmholtz maintained that
-the phenomena were due to volcanic dust at a
-great altitude; others, and notably meteorologists,
-rejected this hypothesis, and urged that
-the coloured suns were due to unusually favourable
-atmospheric conditions, such colours being
-probably due to the refraction and reflection of
-light by watery vapours. But the theory that
-volcanic dust caused these appearances is fast
-gaining ground, if it be not already an incontrovertible
-fact. The spectroscope has shown
-that dust of almost microscopic fineness floating
-in the air caused the sun to appear red. Such
-dust has already fallen, and the microscope
-reveals the existence in it of salt particles.
-This, then, is fairly conclusive evidence of the
-volcanic origin of such dust. That ash particles
-were actually carried very far in the upper
-air-currents, has already appeared from snow
-which fell in Spain and rain in Holland, in
-which the <i>same components</i> were found as in the
-Krakatoa ashes. Dr Verbeek estimates that the
-height to which this fine matter was projected
-‘may very well have reached’ forty-five to sixty
-thousand feet.</p>
-
-<p>In a letter addressed to the <i>Midland Naturalist</i>
-by Mr Clement Wragge, of Torrens Observatory,
-Adelaide, South Australia, and dated July 17,
-1884, the writer remarks that recently, when
-there were magnificent sunsets, he obtained ‘a
-perfectly sharp, clean spectrum without a trace
-of vapour-bands.’ And further, he is strongly of
-opinion that the Krakatoa eruption is the primary
-cause of these wondrous pictures in the Kosmos.</p>
-
-<p>There can now be little doubt but that the
-green and blue suns and exceptional sunsets
-observed in Europe, India, Africa, North and
-South America, Japan, and Australia, were due
-to the Krakatoa eruption. The enormous volume
-of volcanic dust and steam shot up into the
-higher atmospheric zones by this convulsion are
-adequate to furnish the chromatic effects above
-mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>But we have better evidence still: these
-peculiar solar effects followed a tolerably straight
-course to one which was in fact chiefly confined
-to a narrow belt near the equator; the data
-now collected show that on the second day after
-the eruption they appeared on the east coast of
-Africa, on the third day on the Gold Coast, at
-Trinidad on the sixth, and at Honolulu the
-ninth day. Finally, in a paper read by Dr
-Douglas Archibald at the late British Association
-meeting at Montreal, it was stated that ‘observations
-showed that the dates of the sunglows began
-<i>earlier</i> in Java, then apparently spread gradually
-away, the dust being so high as to be in the
-upper currents, of which we know little. These
-sunset glows were not seen before the eruption.... The
-dust appeared to have travelled at a
-uniform rate, over two thousand miles daily.’
-‘The topic,’ says Mr S. E. Bishop, writing from
-Honolulu, ‘is an endless one. Many ask what is
-the cause of frequent revivals of the red glows,
-such as the very fine one of August 19. It seems
-merely to show an irregular distribution of the
-vast clouds of thin Krakatoa haze still lingering
-in the upper atmosphere. They drift about,
-giving us sometimes more, sometimes less, of their
-presence. It is also not unlikely that in varying
-hygrometric conditions the minute dust-particles
-become nuclei for ice crystals of varying size.
-This would greatly vary their reflecting power,
-and accords with some observations of Mr C. J.
-Lyons, showing that the amount of red glow
-varies according to the prevalence of certain
-winds.’ Further facts are coming to hand respecting
-this great natural convulsion.</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 LV.—SWEET ARE THE USES OF ADVERSITY.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Soon</span> after reading Mr Shield’s letter, Madge
-walked to Ringsford with Pansy. There had
-been a thaw during the night, and the meadows
-and the ploughed lands were transformed into
-sheets of dirty gray, dirty blue, and reddish slush,
-according to the character of the soil, dotted
-with patches of snow like the ghosts of islets
-in a lake of puddle. But the red sun had a
-frosty veil on his face; by-and-by this puddle
-would be glazed with ice, and the heavy drops
-of melting snow which were falling slowly from
-the trees would become glittering crystal pendants
-to their branches.</p>
-
-<p>The two girls, their cheeks tingling with the
-bite of the east wind, tramped bravely through
-the slush, with no greater sense of inconvenience
-than was caused by the fact that they would
-be obliged to perform the journey by the road
-instead of taking the short-cut through the
-Forest.</p>
-
-<p>They spoke little, for each was occupied with
-her own troublous thoughts; Pansy did not know
-much of the sources of her friend’s anxieties,
-and Madge had already exhausted the consolation
-she could offer to her companion. On arriving
-at Ringsford they found Sam Culver attending
-to his plants and greenhouses as methodically
-as if the mansion stood as sound as ever it had
-done and the daily supply of fruit and flowers
-would be required as usual.</p>
-
-<p>Madge left Pansy with her father, and went
-on to the cottage. In the kitchen she found
-Miss Hadleigh fast asleep in the gardener’s big
-armchair. She would have left the room without
-disturbing her, but at that moment Miss
-Hadleigh yawned and awakened.</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t go away; I am not sleeping.—Oh,
-it’s you, Madge. Isn’t this a dreadful
-state of things? I haven’t had a wink of
-sleep for two nights, and feel as if I should
-drop on the floor in hysterics or go off into
-a fever.’</p>
-
-<p>Miss Hadleigh had been relieved by a good
-many ‘winks’ during the period specified,
-although, like many other nurses, she was convinced
-that she had not closed her eyes all the
-time. Madge accepted the assertion literally, and
-was instantly all eagerness to relieve her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_708">{708}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘You must get away to Willowmere at once,
-and take a proper rest. You are not to refuse,
-for I will take your place here and do whatever
-may be required. You are looking so ill,
-Beatrice, that I am sure Philip and—somebody
-else would consider me an unfeeling creature if
-I allowed you to stay any longer.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But it is my duty to stay, dear,’ said Miss
-Hadleigh a little faintly, for she did not like
-to hear that she was looking ill.</p>
-
-<p>‘And it is my duty to relieve you. Besides,
-Dr Joy has given us some hope that it may
-be safe to remove your father to our house
-to-day; and then you will be there, refreshed
-and ready to receive him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose you are right—I am not fit for
-much at present,’ said Miss Hadleigh languidly;
-‘and you can do everything for him a great
-deal better than I can. But I must wait till
-Philip comes—he promised to be here early.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You have heard from him, then?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Heard from him!—he was here last night
-as soon as he could get away from that nasty
-business he has been swindled into by our nice
-Uncle Shield. He ought to have taken poor
-papa’s advice at the beginning, and have had
-nothing to do with him.’</p>
-
-<p>This was uttered so spitefully, that it seemed
-as if there were an undercurrent of satisfaction
-in the young lady’s mind at finding that the
-rich uncle who would only acknowledge one
-member of the family, had turned out a
-deceiver.</p>
-
-<p>Madge was astonished and chagrined by the
-information that Philip had been out on the
-previous evening and had made no sign to her;
-but in the prospect of seeing him soon, she put
-the chagrin aside, remembering how harassed he
-was at this juncture in his affairs. There should
-be no silly lovers’ quarrel between them, if she
-could help it. She would take the plain, commonplace
-view of the position, and make every
-allowance for any eccentricity he might display.
-She would help him in spite of himself, by
-showing that no alteration of circumstances could
-alter her love, and that she was ready to wait
-for him all her life if she could not serve him in
-any other way. To be sure, he had said the
-engagement was at an end; and Uncle Dick
-had not yet said that it was to stand good.
-But she loved Philip: her life was his, and
-misfortune ought to draw them nearer to one
-another than all the glories of success—than
-all the riches in the world.</p>
-
-<p>When he came, there was no sign of astonishment
-at her presence in the temporary refuge
-of his father: he seemed to accept it as a matter
-of course that she should be there. Neither was
-there any sign that he remembered the manner
-in which they had last parted. To her anxious
-eyes he seemed to have grown suddenly very
-old. The frank joyous voice was hushed into a
-low grave whisper; the cheeks and eyes were
-sunken; and there was in his manner a cold
-self-possession that chilled her. Yet something in
-the touch of his hand reassured her: love was
-still in his heart, although the careless youth,
-full of bright dreams and fancies, was changed
-into the man, who, through loss and suffering,
-had come to realise the stern realities of life.</p>
-
-<p>They were for a time prevented from speaking
-together in private because the doctors had
-arrived only a few minutes before Philip, and he
-waited to hear their report. Dr Joy came out
-of the invalid’s room with an expression which
-was serious but confident.</p>
-
-<p>‘Our patient goes on admirably,’ he said. ‘You
-need have no fear of any immediate danger;
-and in six months there will be only a few scars
-to show the danger he has passed through. I
-am to stay here for a couple of hours, and then
-I shall know whether or not we can move him
-to Willowmere. By that time, too, I expect the
-ambulance we wrote for last night will be here.—And
-you, Miss Hadleigh, you really must take
-rest. I insist upon it. You will not make your
-father better by making yourself ill. Go and
-get to bed. Philip and Miss Heathcote will do
-everything that is necessary, and I shall be their
-overseer.’</p>
-
-<p>Philip went to the stables to tell Toomey to
-bring the carriage round for his sister. As he
-was crossing the little green on his way back
-to the cottage, Madge met him. Although he
-had not observed her approaching, his head being
-bowed and eyes fixed on the ground, he took the
-outstretched hands without any sign of surprise,
-without any indication that he understood the
-cruel significance of the ‘good-bye’ which had
-caused them both so much pain. Whatever hesitation
-she might have felt as to the course she
-was to pursue was removed by his first words.</p>
-
-<p>‘You want to speak to me, Madge,’ he said in
-a tone of gentle gravity; and then with a faint
-smile: ‘I am better than when you saw me last,
-for I am free from suspense. My position is clear
-to me now, and I feel that a man is more at ease
-when the final blow falls and strikes him down,
-than he can be whilst he is struggling vainly for
-the goal he has not strength enough to reach.
-It is a great relief to know that we are beaten
-and to be able to own it. Then there is a possibility
-of plodding on to the end without much
-pain.’</p>
-
-<p>She was as much alarmed by this absolute
-surrender to adversity as she had been by the
-strange humour which had prompted him to say
-that she was free.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, Philip, I want to speak to you,’ she said
-tenderly, and a spasmodic movement of the hand
-which grasped hers, signified that the electric
-current of affection was not yet broken. She
-went on the more earnestly: ‘I am not going
-to think about the foolish things you have said
-to me: I am going to ask you to give me your
-confidence—to tell me everything that has happened
-during the last two days. Tell it to me,
-if you like, as to your friend.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Always my friend,’ he muttered, bending forward
-as if to kiss her brow, and then drawing
-slowly back, like one who checks himself in the
-commission of some error.</p>
-
-<p>‘Always your friend,’ she echoed with emphasis,
-‘and therefore you should be able to speak
-freely.’</p>
-
-<p>‘There is not much to tell you. The ruin is
-more complete than even I imagined it to be,
-and the fault is mine. Your friend—I ought to
-say our friend—Mr Beecham has made a generous
-offer for the business, and, with certain modifications,
-will allow it to be carried on under my
-management. This relieves us from immediate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_709">{709}</span>
-difficulties; and in a short time Mr Shield expects
-to have recovered sufficiently from his recent
-losses to be able to assist me in redeeming all
-that has been lost.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What gladder news could there be than this?’
-she exclaimed with cheeks aglow and brightening
-eyes; ‘and yet you tell it as if it gave you no
-pleasure. Philip, Philip! this is not like you—it
-is not right to be so melancholy when the
-future is so bright.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Is it so bright? Are you forgetting how
-long it must be before I can repay Mr Shield?
-before’——</p>
-
-<p>He was going to say, ‘before I can ask you to
-risk your future in mine, and what changes may
-take place meanwhile!’</p>
-
-<p>The earnest tender eyes were fixed upon him,
-and they were reading his thoughts, whilst she
-appeared to be waiting for him to complete the
-interrupted sentence. She saw the colour slowly
-rising on his brow, and knew that he was feeling
-ashamed of the doubt implied in his thought.</p>
-
-<p>‘I want to tell you something,’ she said in her
-quiet brave way, ‘and I hope—no, I <i>believe</i> that it
-will take one disagreeable fancy out of your head.
-I know that you did not mean what you said
-to me on that dreadful evening.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What else could a ruined man say?’ (This
-huskily and turning his face aside.)</p>
-
-<p>‘He could say that he trusted his friends. Even
-Uncle Dick is angry with you for imagining that
-your misfortune could make any difference in his
-feelings towards you. And for me, you <i>ought</i>
-to say ... but there, I am not going to speak
-about what you ought to say to me; I am only
-going to tell you what I shall do.’</p>
-
-<p>He looked quickly at her, and the eager inquiry
-on his pale face rendered the words ‘What is
-that?’ superfluous.</p>
-
-<p>‘I shall wait until you come for me; and when
-you come, I shall be ready to go with you where
-you will, whether you are poor or rich. No
-matter what anybody says—no matter what <i>you</i>
-say, I shall wait.’</p>
-
-<p>‘O Madge!’</p>
-
-<p>He could say nothing more; the man’s soul
-was in that whisper. Their hands were clasped:
-they were looking into each other’s eyes: the
-world seemed to sink away from them; and the
-woman’s devotion changed the winter into summer,
-changed the man’s ruin into success.</p>
-
-<p>He drew her arm within his; and they walked
-past the blackened walls of the Manor, and along
-the paths where they had spent so many pleasant
-hours during his recovery from the accident with
-the horse, to the place where he had thrown off
-the doctor’s control and got out of the wheel-chair.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am not so sorry now for what has happened,’
-were his first words. ‘It is worth losing everything
-to gain so much.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But you have not lost everything, Philip.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No; I should say that I have won everything.
-I am glad to have saved Wrentham from penal
-servitude, for his frauds have enabled me to realise
-the greatest of all blessings—the knowledge that
-come what may you can make me happy.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And I am happy too,’ she said softly, their
-arms tightening as they walked on again in
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>By-and-by he lifted his head, and seemed to
-shake the frost from his hair.</p>
-
-<p>‘The doctor said I ought to have rest. I have
-got it from you, Madge. I can look straight again
-at the whole botheration—thank you, my darling.’
-(A gentle pressure on his arm was the answer,
-and he went on.) ‘The arrangement offered by
-Beecham is a very good and kind one, which will
-enable me in course of time to clear myself whilst
-carrying out my scheme; we can take a small
-house; Mr Shield will live with us, and we must
-try to make him comfortable. Then we need
-not wait for the end of next harvest, unless you
-still insist’——</p>
-
-<p>‘No, Philip; when you bid me come to you,
-I am ready.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CIGARS">CIGARS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> has been abundantly shown by various writers
-that the Indians of North America as well as
-elsewhere looked upon tobacco as having a divine
-origin, as being a peculiar and special gift
-designed by the ‘Good Spirit’ for their delectation,
-and that it held a prominent place in their
-visions of a future life in the ‘happy hunting-grounds.’
-In the present day, there seems to
-be an ever increasing dependence on—we might
-almost say slavery to—the plant, whose soothing
-influences are called in quest to counteract the
-effects of this high-pressure age. There are not
-a few of its devotees who are quite at one with
-Salvation Yeo in <i>Westward Ho</i>, who, when
-speaking of tobacco, says: ‘For when all things
-were made, none was made better than this; to
-be a lone man’s companion, a bachelor’s friend,
-a hungry man’s food, a sad man’s cordial, a
-wakeful man’s sleep, and a chilly man’s fire.
-There’s no herb like unto it under the canopy
-of heaven.’ We do not, however, propose to
-discuss the opposing views held by the smoker
-and the anti-smoker, but intend to restrict ourselves
-to some remarks on the manufacture of
-cigars, which have been suggested by a recent
-visit to the West Indies.</p>
-
-<p>Of the endless varieties of cigars which are
-met with in various tropical localities, the majority
-are used for local consumption, and only find
-their way into England in very small quantities.
-The bulk of our cigars are either Havana or
-Manila, European or British, and of these it
-has been computed that considerably over two
-hundred million are consumed annually in the
-United Kingdom. It is evident, therefore, that
-the manufacture of this luxury is a business of
-great magnitude, irrespective of the other forms
-of tobacco used; and if we remember that the
-duty obtained from tobacco of all kinds puts
-nearly nine millions per annum into the national
-exchequer, it becomes possible to realise how
-much the comfort and happiness of a large
-number of Her Majesty’s subjects depend on the
-products of the tobacco crop.</p>
-
-<p>An Havana cigar of a good brand is deservedly
-looked upon as the <i>crême de la crême</i> of cigars;
-but, unfortunately, the number of good makers
-as well as the possible production of first-class
-cigars is necessarily limited. Thus the manufacture
-of the ‘Villar y Villar’ brand is stated
-to be never more than twenty-five thousand
-daily; while that of ‘Henry Clays’ is fully three
-times as many. For some time back there
-has been a deterioration in Havanas, which has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_710">{710}</span>
-been variously accounted for. It is asserted that,
-from the exhaustive nature of the crop, guano
-or other artificial stimulants are largely used,
-and that the flavour of the leaf has suffered in
-consequence. Besides, owing to the increasing
-demand, tobacco has been grown on poor land
-unsuitable for the production of the finest leaf,
-and even has been largely imported into Cuba
-for the manufacture of ‘genuine’ Havanas. To
-those, however, who cannot afford to buy the
-best brands, it is satisfactory to know that a new
-source of supply is being opened up with great
-energy. The climate and soil of some parts of
-Jamaica very closely resemble those of Havana,
-and are well suited for the growth of the finest
-leaf. As the Jamaica planters open up their
-virgin soil, it is safe to predict that with growing
-experience they will improve in their manufactures,
-while already they produce a cigar which
-compares favourably with any but the best of
-Cuban make.</p>
-
-<p>British cigars, like all other varieties, may be
-good, bad, or indifferent. By British we mean
-cigars manufactured in this country from the
-imported leaf; and as English capital can command
-the markets, there is no reason why the
-best tobacco should not be obtainable for importation.
-Using the same quality of leaf, a cigar
-can be produced in this country at a much lower
-cost than if imported ready made. We venture
-to think, notwithstanding popular prejudice, that
-a good British cigar is preferable to an inferior
-foreign make. Pay a fair price, and you will get a
-good article—home made, in spite of the Spanish
-labels, which are always used either from affectation
-or in order to deceive the ignorant. Much
-is heard about adulteration by means of cabbage-leaves,
-&amp;c.; but we believe that it is almost
-unknown in this country. The fact that inferior
-tobaccos are so very cheap makes fraud both
-unlikely and unnecessary. Adulteration, however,
-is not unknown on the continent, where
-cigars can be obtained six and ten for a penny;
-but the duty of five shillings per pound is
-fortunately a bar to their importation into Great
-Britain. It is needless to say more about continental
-cigars than we do about all cheap
-cigars, and that is to recommend smokers to avoid
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The manufacture of the finished article requires
-highly skilled labour, and long practice gives the
-workman an amount of accuracy and dexterity
-in producing cigar after cigar, alike in shape and
-size, with a rapidity that is truly wonderful.
-After the leaves have been properly cured, they
-are sorted according to size and colour. The
-centre rib is then extracted, an operation requiring
-great care. Each workman is seated before
-a flat board, and is supplied with a bunch of
-perfect leaves and a pile of broken tobacco. With
-his fingers, he quickly rolls up some broken pieces,
-inclosing them in one of the less perfect leaves,
-forming what is called ‘the bunch.’ This he
-proceeds to cover with the wrapper or perfect
-leaf, which he has already cut with his knife to
-the required size. The most difficult part of the
-process has now to be completed, namely, closing
-in the point. This he does by modelling it with
-his fingers, quickly twisting the wrapper round
-it, and fixing the end with a drop of gum. With
-one sweep of his knife—his only implement—he
-trims the broad end, and the cigar is ready to
-be carried to the drying-room, afterwards to be
-sorted and packed in boxes.</p>
-
-<p>It is easier to know a good cigar when you
-smoke one than to describe the points by which
-a good cigar may be selected. A good cigar,
-however, should have a good wrapper or exterior;
-it should have a faint gloss, not amounting to
-greasiness, due to the essential oil contained in
-it; and it should have a fine hairy ‘down’ on
-its surface. In addition to this, it should be
-firmly rolled, and yet not be hard, or it will
-not draw well. When lighted it should burn
-evenly, and not to one side; it should carry a
-two-inch ash without endangering your coat, and
-if laid aside for three or four minutes, should
-still be alight when taken up again. It is worth
-remembering the golden rule known to the lovers
-of the fragrant weed, namely, when holding a
-lighted cigar, always to keep the burning end
-turned upwards, so that the smoke may escape
-into the air—never downwards, as that causes
-the smoke to pass through the body of the cigar.</p>
-
-<p>In concluding these brief remarks, it may not
-be amiss to say a word or two about the markings
-which will be found on the boxes, and about
-which a good deal of ignorance exists. On
-most boxes there are four distinct markings,
-which have each their own significance. First
-comes the brand proper, which consists either
-of the maker’s name or of some fancy name
-adopted by the firm; such, for example, as
-Partagas, Villar y Villar, Intimidads, Henry
-Clays, &amp;c. The quality of the tobacco is next
-indicated by Flor Fina, first quality; Flor,
-second quality, &amp;c. Various names, such as
-Infantes, Reinas, Imperiales, &amp;c., are used to
-represent the size or shape of the cigar. The
-fourth mark gives us an idea of the strength
-or colour of the tobacco contained in the box;
-and for this purpose the following terms are
-used—Claro, Colorado claro, Maduro, &amp;c. To
-attempt to give any advice to our readers as to
-the best brands to buy would be beyond the
-scope of this paper. Experience will soon teach
-them what to accept and what to avoid; what
-suits their tastes and their pockets, and what
-does not.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ONE_WOMANS_HISTORY">ONE WOMAN’S HISTORY.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Phew</span>! There’s not a breath of air in this
-valley. One had need be a salamander to appreciate
-a morning like this. But what a lovely
-nook it is—eh, Mac? Quite worth coming half-a-dozen
-miles to see.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That it’s very pretty, I’ll not attempt to deny;
-but still’——</p>
-
-<p>‘By no means equal to what you could show
-us t’other side of the Border,’ said the vicar with
-a twinkle. ‘That’s understood, of course.’</p>
-
-<p>The time was the forenoon of the day following
-the evening on which Madame De Vigne had
-been so startled by the sudden appearance of one
-whom she had every reason to believe had died
-long years before.</p>
-
-<p>The scene was a small but romantic glen.
-Over the summit of a cliff, at the upper end of a
-rocky ravine, a stream, which took its rise among<span class="pagenum" id="Page_711">{711}</span>
-the stern hills that shut in the background, leapt
-in a cascade of feathery foam. After a fall of
-some fifteen or twenty feet, it reached a broad,
-shallow basin, in which it spread itself out, as
-if to gather breath for its second leap, which,
-however, was not quite so formidable as its first
-one. After this, still babbling its own liquid
-music, it fretted its way among the boulders with
-which its channel was thickly strewn, and so, after
-a time, left the valley behind it; and then, less
-noisily, and lingering lovingly by many a quiet
-pool, it gradually crept onward to the lake, in
-the deep bosom of whose dark waters lay the
-peace for which it seemed to have been craving
-so long.</p>
-
-<p>A steep and somewhat rugged pathway wound
-up either side of the glen to the tableland at the
-summit, overhung with trees and shrubs of various
-kinds, with a rustic seat planted here and there
-at some specially romantic point of view. Ferns,
-mosses, flowers, and grasses innumerable clothed
-the rocky sides of the ravine down almost to the
-water’s edge. At the foot of the glen the stream
-was spanned by a quaint old bridge, on which
-the vicar and Dr M‘Murdo were now standing.
-It was the day of the picnic of which Madame
-De Vigne had made mention to Colonel Woodruffe,
-and the party from the <i>Palatine</i> had driven
-over in a couple of wagonettes, which, together
-with the hampers containing luncheon, were
-stationed in a shady spot a quarter of a mile
-lower down the valley.</p>
-
-<p>‘Look, Mac, look!’ exclaimed the vicar, ‘at
-those two speckled darlings lurking there in the
-shadow of the bridge. I must come and try my
-luck here one of these days.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You look just a bit feckless this morning
-without your rod and basket.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Where was the use of bringing them? No
-trout worth calling a trout would rise on a
-morning like this, when there’s not a cloud in
-the sky as big as one’s hand, and not breeze
-enough to raise a ripple on the water. I’ve
-brought my hammer instead, so that I shan’t
-want for amusement. Ah, Mac, what a pity it
-is that you care nothing either for angling or
-geology!’</p>
-
-<p>‘I could not be fashed, as we used to say
-in the North. Every man to his likes. I’ve
-got a treatise in my pocket on <i>The Diaphragm
-and its Functions</i>, just down from London, with
-diagrams and plates. Now, if I can only find a
-shady nook somewhere, I’ve no doubt that I
-shall enjoy myself with my book for the next
-two or three hours quite as much as you with
-your rod or hammer.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So that’s your idea of a picnic, is it?’ The
-question came from Miss Gaisford, who had
-come unperceived upon the two friends as they
-were leaning over the parapet of the bridge.
-‘To bury yourself among the trees, eh,’ she
-went on, ‘and gloat over some dreadful pictures
-that nobody but a doctor could look at without
-shuddering? Allow me to tell you that you will
-be permitted to do nothing of the kind. You will
-just put your treatise in your pocket, and try
-for once to make yourself sociable. Perhaps, if
-you try very hard, you may even succeed in
-making yourself agreeable.’</p>
-
-<p>‘My poor Mac!’ murmured the vicar as he
-settled his spectacles more firmly on his nose.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor said nothing, but his eyes twinkled,
-and he pursed up his lips.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have arranged my plans for both of you,’
-said Miss Pen with emphasis.</p>
-
-<p>‘For both of us!’ they exclaimed simultaneously.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes. Lady Renshaw’——</p>
-
-<p>‘O-h!’ It was a double groan.</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t interrupt. Lady Renshaw will be here
-presently. As soon as she appears on the scene,
-you will take charge of her. I have special
-reasons for asking you to do this, which I cannot
-now explain. You will amuse her, interest her,
-keep her out of the way, and prevent her generally
-from making a nuisance of herself to any
-one but yourselves, till luncheon-time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear Pen,’ began the vicar.</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear Miss Gaisford,’ pleaded the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>‘You will do as you are told, and do it without
-grumbling,’ was the little woman’s reply as
-she shook a finger in both their faces. ‘I’ve
-arranged my plans for the day, and I can’t have
-them interfered with.’</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear Pen,’ again persisted the vicar, in
-his mildest tones, ‘that your plan is a perfectly
-admirable one, I do not for one moment doubt,
-only, as you know very well, I am not and never
-have been a ladies’ man, and that in the company
-of your charming sex I’m just as shy at fifty-five
-as I was at eighteen. But with Mac here
-the case is altogether different. All doctors know
-how to please and flatter the sex—it’s part of
-their stock-in-trade, so that Mac would be quite
-at home with her ladyship; whereas I—well,
-the fact is I had made up my mind to walk
-as far as’——</p>
-
-<p>‘Blackstone Hollow,’ interrupted his sister,
-‘in order that you might have another look at
-that big trout about which you dream every
-night, but which you will never succeed in
-catching as long as you live.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The traitor! eh, Miss Penelope?’ cried the
-doctor. ‘This is neither more nor less than
-prevarication—yes, sir, prevarication—there’s no
-other word for it—and you the vicar of a parish,
-whose example ought to be a shining light to
-all men! Septimus Gaisford, I’m ashamed of
-you! As for Lady Renshaw’—— He ended
-with a snap of his fingers.</p>
-
-<p>‘Neither of you is afraid of her. Of course
-not,’ remarked Miss Penelope. ‘You would scorn
-to acknowledge that you are afraid of any woman.
-But why run any risk in the matter? Why
-allow her ladyship to attack you separately, when,
-by keeping together and combining your forces,
-you would render your position impregnable?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Impregnable!’ both the gentlemen gasped
-out.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Gaisford’s merry laugh ran up the glen.
-‘What a pair of delicious, elderly nincompoops
-you are!’ she cried. ‘Septimus, you dear old
-simpleton, haven’t you discovered that this woman
-would like nothing better than to bring you to
-your knees with an offer of marriage?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Good gracious, Pen!’ cried the vicar with
-a start that nearly shook the spectacles off his
-nose.</p>
-
-<p>‘Doctor, did you not see enough of her ladyship’s
-tactics last evening to understand that her
-plan with you is to induce you to believe that
-she has fallen in love with you? and when one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_712">{712}</span>
-of your sex gets the idea into his head that one
-of our sex is in love with him, why, then,
-a little reciprocity of sentiment is the almost
-inevitable result.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The hussy!’ exclaimed Mac. ‘I should like
-her to be laid up for a fortnight and let me
-have the physicking of her!’</p>
-
-<p>‘I noticed that she did press my arm rather
-more than seemed needful, when we were walking
-last evening by the lake,’ remarked the
-vicar.</p>
-
-<p>‘And I remember now that she squeezed my
-hand in a way that seemed to me quite unnecessary,
-when she bade me good-night on the steps
-of the hotel.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Gentlemen, let there be no jealousy between
-you, I beg,’ said Miss Pen with mock-solemnity.
-‘If you decline to combine your forces, then
-make up your minds which of you is to have
-her ladyship, and let the other one go and
-bewail his sorrows to the moon.’</p>
-
-<p>‘By the way, who <i>is</i> Lady Renshaw?’ asked
-the vicar. ‘I never had the pleasure of hearing
-her name till yesterday.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Her ladyship is the widow of an alderman
-and ex-sheriff of London, who was knighted on
-the occasion of some great event in the City.
-Her husband, who was much older than herself,
-left her very well off when he died. That pretty
-girl, her niece, who travels about with her, has
-no fortune of her own, and one of her ladyship’s
-chief objects in life would seem to be to find a
-rich husband for her. At the same time, from
-what I have already seen of her, it appears to
-me that Lady Renshaw herself would by no
-means object to enter the matrimonial state again,
-could she only find a husband to suit her
-views.’</p>
-
-<p>‘A dangerous woman evidently. We must
-beware of her, Mac,’ said the vicar.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor shook his head. ‘My dear friend,
-your caution doesn’t apply to me,’ he said. ‘Lady
-Renshaw is just one of those women that I would
-not think of making my wife, if she was worth
-her weight in gold.’</p>
-
-<p>They had begun to stroll slowly forward during
-the last minute or two, and leaving the bridge
-behind them, were now presently lost to view
-down one of the many wooded paths which
-intersected the valley in every direction.</p>
-
-<p>But a few minutes had passed, when Lady
-Renshaw and Miss Wynter appeared, advancing
-slowly in the opposite direction. They halted
-on the bridge as the others had done before them.</p>
-
-<p>‘What a sweetly pretty place!’ exclaimed Miss
-Wynter. ‘I had no idea it would be half so
-lovely. I could wander about here for a week,’
-adding under her breath, ‘especially if I had
-Dick to keep me company.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pooh! my dear; you will have had quite
-enough of it by luncheon-time,’ responded her
-aunt, who had seated herself on the low coping
-of the bridge with her back to the view up the
-glen.</p>
-
-<p>‘I always thought you were an admirer of
-pretty scenery, aunt.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So I am—when in society. But now that
-we are alone, there’s no need to go into ecstasies
-about it. On a broiling day like this, I would
-exchange all the scenery of the Lakes for an
-easy-chair in the veranda, a nice novel, and
-the music of a band in the distance.’ Then, as
-if suddenly remembering something, she gazed
-around and said: ‘By-the-bye, what has become
-of Mr Golightly?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I saw him strolling in this direction a few
-minutes ago,’ was the innocent answer. ‘I have
-no doubt that he is somewhere about.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Now that Archie Ridsdale has been called
-away, you will be able to give him the whole
-of your attention. There seem plenty of quiet
-nooks about where you will be able to get him
-for a time all to yourself. He certainly seems
-excessively infatuated, considering how short a
-time he has known you, and I should not be a
-bit surprised if that waterfall were to lead him
-on to make violent love to you before you are
-six hours older.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Aunt!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, my dear, I’ve known stranger things
-than that happen. When a susceptible young
-man and a pretty girl sit and watch a waterfall
-together, he is almost sure before long to begin
-squeezing her hand, and then what follows is
-simply a question of diplomacy on her part.’</p>
-
-<p>‘If—if—in the course of a few days—Mr
-Golightly were to propose?’——</p>
-
-<p>‘He may do it this very day for aught one
-can tell. He seems infatuated enough for any
-thing. When he does propose, you will accept
-him—conditionally. You will take care to let
-him see that you care for him—a little. You
-have known him for so short a time that really
-you scarcely know your own feelings—&amp;c., &amp;c.
-Of course, before finally making up your mind,
-we must have some more definite information
-as to the position and prospects of the young
-man, and what his father the bishop has in view
-as regards his future. Besides, Mr Archie Ridsdale
-may possibly be back in the course of a day
-or two.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But in what way can Archie’s return affect
-me?’</p>
-
-<p>‘You stupid girl! have I not already told you
-that Sir William is nearly sure to refuse his
-consent, and that Archie’s engagement with this
-Miss Loraine may be broken off at any moment.
-Then will come your opportunity. Archie
-seemed very fond of you at one time, and there’s
-no reason why he should not become fond of
-you again. Young men’s fancies are as changeable
-as the wind, as you ought to know quite
-well by this time.’</p>
-
-<p>Bella only shrugged her shoulders and sauntered
-slowly over the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>The expression of Lady Renshaw’s face changed
-the moment she found herself alone, and her
-thoughts reverted to a topic over which they
-had busied themselves earlier in the day.</p>
-
-<p>‘So this high and mighty Madame De Vigne—this
-person whom nobody seems to know anything
-about—could not condescend to come in
-the same wagonette with us poor mortals! She
-and her sister must follow in a carriage by themselves,
-forsooth! Last evening, when we got
-back from the lake, she had retired for the
-night; this morning, she breakfasted in her own
-room. I feel more convinced than ever that
-there’s some mystery about her. If I could
-but find out what it is! Of course, in such a
-case it would become my duty at once to communicate
-with Sir William.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_713">{713}</span></p>
-
-<p>Miss Wynter came back over the bridge, but
-much more quickly than she had gone. ‘Oh,
-look, aunt!’ she exclaimed; ‘I declare there’s
-D—— I mean Mr Golightly, standing yonder,
-gazing at the water, and all alone.’</p>
-
-<p>Lady Renshaw took a survey of the young
-man through her glasses. Feeling safe in his
-disguise, Richard had now discarded some portions
-of the clerical-looking costume he had worn
-yesterday, and was attired this morning more
-after the style of an ordinary tourist.</p>
-
-<p>‘You had better stroll gently along in the
-same direction,’ remarked her ladyship. ‘Poor
-young man, he looks very lonely!’</p>
-
-<p>‘But I can’t leave you alone, aunt.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Never mind about me. Besides, I see that
-dear vicar and Dr M‘Murdo coming this way.’</p>
-
-<p>Lady Renshaw turned to greet Miss Gaisford
-and the two gentlemen, who were still a little
-distance off.</p>
-
-<p>‘Here they come. To which of my two
-admirers shall I devote myself to-day?’ she
-simpered. ‘Why not endeavour to play one off
-against the other, and so excite a little jealousy?
-It is so nice to make the men jealous. Poor
-dear Sir Timothy never would be jealous; but
-then he was so very stupid!’</p>
-
-<p>Miss Gaisford was the first to speak. ‘We
-were just wondering what had become of you,
-Lady Renshaw.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I lingered here to drink in this fairy scene.
-It is indeed too, too exquisitely beautiful.’</p>
-
-<p>‘If they would only turn on a little more
-water at the top of the cliff it would be an
-improvement,’ answered Miss Pen.—‘Septimus,
-you might inquire whether they can’t arrange it
-specially for us to-day.’</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear!’ protested the vicar with mild-eyed
-amazement.</p>
-
-<p>‘Maybe, like myself,’ remarked the doctor,
-‘your ladyship is a worshipper of beautiful
-scenery?’</p>
-
-<p>‘O yes. I dote on it—I revel in it. After I
-lost poor dear Sir Timothy, I went to Switzerland,
-in the hope of being able to distract my mind
-by travel. Those darling Alps, I shall always
-feel grateful to them!’</p>
-
-<p>‘What did the Alps do for you, Lady Renshaw?’
-queried Miss Pen with the utmost gravity.</p>
-
-<p>‘They gave me back my peace of mind; they
-poured consolation into my lacerated heart.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very kind of them—very kind indeed,’
-answered Miss Pen drily.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Renshaw threw a quick, suspicious glance
-at her. ‘What a very strange person!’ she
-murmured. The vicar’s sister was a puzzle to
-her. It could not be that she was covertly
-making fun of her, Lady Renshaw! No; the
-idea was too preposterous.</p>
-
-<p>Dr Mac had not gone about for fifty years
-with his eyes shut. He had discovered that
-many persons, both male and female, who plume
-themselves on their knowledge of the world and
-their shrewdness in dealing with the common
-affairs of life, are yet as susceptible to flattery,
-even of the most fulsome kind, and just as liable
-to be led away by it into the regions of foolishness,
-as their far less sophisticated fellow-mortals.
-What if this woman, with all her worldly-mindedness
-and calculating selfishness, were one
-of those individuals who may be dexterously led
-by the nose and persuaded to dance to any tune
-so long as their ears are judiciously tickled?
-A peculiar gleam came into the doctor’s eyes
-as these thoughts passed through his mind. He
-cleared his voice and turned to her ladyship.</p>
-
-<p>‘It appears to me, Lady Renshaw,’ he began,
-‘speaking from a professional point of view, that
-you are gifted with one of those highly-strung,
-super-sensitive, and poetical organisations which
-render those who possess them peculiarly susceptible
-to all beautiful influences whether of
-nature or of art. Hem.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How thoroughly you understand me, Dr
-M‘Murdo!’ responded her ladyship, beaming on
-him with one of her broadest smiles.</p>
-
-<p>The vicar took off his spectacles and proceeded
-to rub them vigorously with his handkerchief.
-‘Mac, you are nothing better than a barefaced
-humbug,’ he whispered to himself.</p>
-
-<p>‘It would seem only natural, my dear madam,’
-resumed the unblushing doctor, ‘that a temperament
-such as yours, which throbs responsive to
-beauty in all its thousand varied forms as readily
-as an Æolian harp responds to the faintest sigh
-of the summer breeze, should—should find an
-outlet for itself in one form or other. Have
-you never, may I ask, attempted to pour out
-your thick crowding fancies in verse? Have you
-never, while gazing on some such scene as this,
-felt as if you could float away on—on the wings
-of Poesy? Have you never, in brief, felt as if
-you could only find relief by rushing into song?
-Hem.’</p>
-
-<p>The poor vicar fairly gasped for breath.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, yes; that is exactly how I have felt a
-thousand times,’ gushed her ladyship. ‘At such
-moments I seem to exhale poetry.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Dear me! rather a remarkable phenomenon,’
-murmured Miss Pen.</p>
-
-<p>‘I long to be a dryad—or a nymph—or one of
-Dian’s huntresses in some Arcadian grove of old.’</p>
-
-<p>‘A nymph! Hum,’ remarked the vicar softly
-to himself.</p>
-
-<p>‘But I have never yet ventured to—to’——</p>
-
-<p>‘Gush into song,’ suggested Miss Pen.</p>
-
-<p>‘To attempt to clothe my thoughts in rhythmic
-measures,’ went on her ladyship with a little
-wave of the hand, as though deprecating interruption,
-‘although I have often felt an inward voice
-which impelled me to do so.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Let me advise you to try, my dear madam,’
-resumed the doctor with his gravest professional
-air. ‘If I may be allowed to say so, you have
-the eye of a poet—dreamy, imaginative, with
-a sort of far-away gaze in it, as though you
-were looking at something a long way off which
-nobody but yourself could see.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ought I to listen to these things in silence?’
-asked the vicar of himself with a sudden qualm
-of conscience.</p>
-
-<p>‘You are a great, naughty flatterer, Dr
-M‘Murdo,’ said the widow, shaking a podgy finger
-archly at him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Madam, that is one of the points on which
-my education has been shamefully neglected.’</p>
-
-<p>She turned with a smile. ‘I trust that our
-dear vicar is also a worshipper of the beautiful?’</p>
-
-<p>‘With Lady Renshaw before my eyes, it would
-be rank heresy to doubt it,’ stammered the dear
-old boy with a blush that would have become
-a lad of eighteen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_714">{714}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Pass up one, Septimus,’ whispered his sister
-in his ear.</p>
-
-<p>‘If you talk to me in that strain, I shall begin
-to think you a very, very dangerous man,’ simpered
-her ladyship.</p>
-
-<p>‘There’s a charming view of the lake from an
-opening in the trees a little farther on,’ remarked
-Dr Mac. ‘Would not your ladyship like to walk
-as far?’</p>
-
-<p>‘By all means, though I am loath to tear
-myself from this exquisite spot.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We shall find our way back to it later on.’</p>
-
-<p>‘With your permission, I will leave you good
-people for a little while,’ remarked Miss Pen.
-‘I’ve other fish to fry.’</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship stared. ‘What an excessively
-vulgar remark!’ was her unspoken thought.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Gaisford turned to her. ‘Lady Renshaw,
-I must intrust these two young sparks into your
-hands for a time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You could not leave us in more charming
-captivity,’ remarked the gallant doctor.</p>
-
-<p>The vicar, as he fingered the hammer in his
-pocket, looked imploringly at his sister, but she
-pretended not to see.</p>
-
-<p>‘Au revoir, then, dear Miss Gaisford,’ said her
-ladyship in her most affable tones.</p>
-
-<p>‘Au revoir, au revoir.’</p>
-
-<p>As the three went sauntering away, the vicar
-lagging a little behind the others, Miss Pen
-heard the doctor say: ‘You know the song,
-Lady Renshaw, <i>When I view those Scenes so
-charming</i>,’ after which nothing but a murmur
-reached her ears.</p>
-
-<p>She turned away with a little laugh. ‘The
-doctor will fool her to the top of her bent. Who
-would have thought that high-dried piece of
-buckram had so much quiet fun in him?—And
-now to look after my hampers. If I trust to
-the servants, by luncheon-time the ice, like
-Niobe, will have wept itself away, the corkscrew
-will have taken a ramble on its own account,
-the vinegar and salt will have gone into housekeeping
-together, and the mustard will be
-making love to the blanc-mange. My reputation
-is at stake.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="AMERICAN_NEWSPAPERS_ON_THEMSELVES">AMERICAN NEWSPAPERS ON THEMSELVES.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> has been fairly proved in previous numbers
-of this <i>Journal</i> that so long as advertising continues,
-a newspaper can rarely be altogether dull,
-for the curiosities of the advertisement columns
-often exhibit strange freaks and fancies of human
-nature, which may afford amusement when the
-news columns are at their grimmest and dreariest.
-But the place of all others which may be regarded
-as the headquarters of the advertising genius
-is the land across the Atlantic, and the papers
-which are the medium of the greatest enterprise
-in this line are the <i>Tribunes</i> and <i>Suns</i>
-of the United States; and most entertaining
-of all are the announcements by which the
-American journals draw attention to their own
-brilliant pages. An English newspaper directory
-is not very attractive, except to the business
-portion of the community; but an American
-publication of the kind is of a much more
-amusing character; and in two bulky and comprehensive
-volumes, an indomitable transatlantic
-publisher has issued a universal gazetteer, wherein
-the newspapers of every part of the globe may
-be studied.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, it is enough for an English
-paper, as a rule, to state the town and county
-it represents; but young America must do
-more than this, if readers outside her various
-regions are to estimate the value of her press.
-Jacksonville or Euteroga must be set forth
-as indisputably the most thriving city in the
-richest district of the most prosperous State.
-Magnolia, advertisers are ‘notified,’ is a ‘flourishing
-town with more than twenty-five business-houses;’
-Augusta ‘is growing and has a bright
-future;’ Westfield is ‘a thriving town of above
-a thousand inhabitants,’ clearly affording scope for
-a large circulation.</p>
-
-<p>Manchester (United States), we learn, in a
-sentence racy of the soil, ‘is a large, live, and
-growing city, makes one hundred and seventy-nine
-miles of cloth per day, can build fifteen
-locomotives a month, and fifty steam fire-engines
-a year, and an endless variety of other products
-of skill and industry.’ Another rising spot has
-‘fourteen grocery, three hardware, and five dry
-goods stores, four tailor-shops, six butcher-shops,
-two banks, four hotels, three grist-mills, two
-stave-factories, foundry, planing-mills, &amp;c., and
-six churches, one of which cost about sixteen
-thousand dollars, and has a spire one hundred
-and forty-eight feet high.’ But this edifice is
-outdone in a third town which ‘points with
-just pride to its magnificent iron bridge, costing
-over forty thousand dollars, and other evidences
-of public enterprise.’ Middle Loup Valley is,
-we are told, ‘one of the largest and most productive
-valleys in the State, which is from its
-picturesque scenery and fertility of soil poetically
-called the “Rhine of America.”’ Another touch
-of poetry is come across unexpectedly: ‘A belt
-of fire from thousands of coke ovens surrounds
-Mount Pleasant, the centre of the great Connellsville
-Coke County, and the place where the
-<i>Times and Mining Journal</i> is published;’ and
-there is a rhythmical swing about the remark
-that the <i>Honey Grove Independent</i> ‘is published
-in the land where cotton grows rank and tall,
-and where cattle grow fat in the wild prairies.’
-But Honey Grove with its cattle is nothing to
-Hancock County, where ‘the people have become
-so corpulent, that the druggists are all becoming
-independently rich from the sale of Allen’s Anti-Fat;’
-and the Blue Grass Valley of Kentucky
-‘is famous all over the world for its handsome
-women, thoroughbred horses, rich soil, and fine
-climate.’</p>
-
-<p>To be worthy of a land like this, the newspapers
-also possess rare attractions for readers
-and advertisers, the latter especially. They are
-‘alive and growing’ ‘newsy! pithy! spicy!’
-one is a ‘paper for all mankind,’ another ‘overflows
-with local gossip,’ and a third ‘discusses
-public questions with lively respectability, and
-feeds its readers with no less than four and often
-five columns of spicy local matter each week;’
-a fourth has ‘everything first-class;’ you can get
-‘a bright and newsy wide-awake local paper,’ or
-‘a live thirty-two column weekly;’ and the
-<i>Eaton Rapids Journal</i> will be found, appropriately
-to its name, ‘a live paper in a live town.’ Yet
-more richly descriptive is the account of the ‘red-hot
-local paper that feeds twenty thousand people<span class="pagenum" id="Page_715">{715}</span>
-every week and makes them fat; advertisements
-can reach millions of hungry minds through this
-medium.’ Again, we learn that ‘Life on the
-ocean wave is nothing compared with reading
-the <i>Plymouth Pantograph</i>.’ The <i>Sacramento Bee</i>
-is ‘the spiciest, ablest, most brilliant, and most
-independent journal published on the Pacific
-coast;’ while for ‘talking large,’ honourable
-mention should also be accorded to one of Cincinnati’s
-lights, which is ‘the best paper ever
-published. All its news is first-hand from upwards
-of fifteen hundred reporters and correspondents
-in every part of the United States
-and Europe.’</p>
-
-<p>But these are mere outward characteristics and
-generalisations. Politics denote more distinctly
-the paper’s line of action, whether ‘stalwart
-Republican,’ ‘sound Democratic,’ or ‘Independent
-in all things, neutral in nothing.’ Independence
-is the cry of many; they are ‘bold and fearless,’
-express a hatred of party, rings and ringsters.
-‘Now in its third volume,’ exults one banner of
-freedom, ‘and has never halted by the way nor
-wearied of the fight. Always ready to take up
-the cause of the poor and oppressed, and never
-ready to surrender its independence to party,
-clique, or ring.’ ‘Has no axe to grind other than
-the advancement of every social reform,’ a second
-patriot proclaims. ‘Therefore it hits a head
-whenever that head is seen in opposition to true
-advancement.’ For the extremes of party violence
-we must go to a Southern journal, which does
-not, it may well be hoped, ‘speak as the masses
-of our people feel and talk;’ if it does, so much
-the worse for the people. ‘If the Yankees,’ this
-rodomontade begins, ‘want to know the real
-sentiments of our people; if they want to have
-a realising sense of the utter madness of trying
-to govern the grand old sovereign States of the
-Confederacy, they will close their ears to the
-lying professions of our policy-bumming politicians
-and subscribe to the <i>Bartlett News</i>.’ Perhaps
-some such rant as that of the <i>Bartlett News</i>
-a certain <i>Labor Standard</i> had in view while
-stating itself to be ‘not a blowing, blustering,
-black-mail sheet which has to be read in private
-because its contents are unfit to be seen in the
-family,’ but ‘a clean live weekly paper, devoted
-entirely to the interests of the working-classes.’</p>
-
-<p>A Texan organ ‘will seek to be a photograph
-of all the resources and needs of Texas; a
-mirror of her markets; a barometer of pure
-principles, sound public faith, and private honour.
-Democratic, but conservative, independent and
-outspoken in the exalted interests of just criticism—no
-panderer to partisan men or measures,
-whether right or wrong!’ This is independence
-with a vengeance, ahead even of the
-gazette which ‘favours immigration, morality,
-and the Christian religion; and unflinchingly
-opposes shams, rings, rogues, and enemies to the
-people. It exposes villainy and crime wherever
-found, and hence is read by the more intelligent
-classes of people in the field where it
-circulates.’</p>
-
-<p>The conjunction of immigration and the Christian
-religion reminds one of the much bemourned
-lady who ‘painted in water-colours and of such
-is the kingdom of heaven.’ But there is a still
-more frank linking together of things temporal
-and spiritual in the ‘only Democratic out-and-out
-paper in Western Iowa,’ which sails under the
-motto, more Yankee than reverent, ‘Fear God,
-tell the truth, and make money;’ the editor
-further announcing that if he ‘is allowed to live
-under a Republican administration another year,
-he will carry your advertising at five cents per
-line, fifty dollars per column, or furnish his paper
-for one dollar fifty cents per year.’</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Horseheads Journal and Chemung Co.
-Greenback</i> ‘exposes rascality everywhere, and
-aims to give something to interest and instruct
-everybody every week,’ from which it may be
-surmised that the <i>Horseheads Journal and Chemung
-Co. Greenback</i> is happier in its object than
-in its title. Many of these ‘wide-awake and
-spicy’ representatives of Western culture are not
-remarkable for the elegance of their names, the
-admixture of Indian and American resulting in
-some curious compounds, such as the <i>Petrolea
-Topic</i>, the <i>Klickitat Sentinel</i>, the <i>Katahdin Kalendar</i>,
-the <i>Waxahachie Enterprise</i>, and the <i>Coshocton Age</i>.
-Yankee, pure and simple, reigns in the <i>Weekly
-Blade</i>, <i>Jacksonian</i>, <i>Biggsville Clipper</i>, <i>People’s Telephone</i>,
-and <i>New Haven Palladium</i>; but there is
-a charm of euphony about the <i>Xenia Sunlight</i>
-and <i>Golden Globe</i>, and the brevity which may
-be the soul of wit in the <i>Call</i>, <i>Item</i>, <i>Plaindealer</i>,
-and <i>Editor’s Eye</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The editors, as is well known, come much
-more to the front than is the case in England;
-they do not remain the invisible and mysterious
-‘we’ of the editorial sanctum; their names
-are frequently advertised with those of the publishers,
-occasionally, indeed, accompanied by a
-portrait or other additional recommendation;
-one paper ‘is edited by two of the ablest newspaper
-men in the State, and it will be hard
-to find a better team in the editorial harness.’
-‘The most important feature,’ we learn, ‘of the
-<i>Free Press</i> is its funny squibs by the editor,
-“Driftings from Dreamland,” which are original
-and spicy;’ and as appropriately named, surely,
-is ‘a humorous department, “Tea and Toast,”’
-to be found in another print. A Texas editor
-offers ‘upon justifiable encouragement to visit
-any county or city in Texas or Mexico and make
-a statistical “write-up” of their every interest
-and advantage,’ indicative of lively and reliable
-information for intending immigrants; and a
-<i>Highland Recorder</i>, with an affection for the Land
-o’ Cakes one can but sympathise with, says that
-‘every page breathes of Clan-Alpine freshness.’</p>
-
-<p>Great stress is laid upon the home-printing
-of the small journals—‘no patent outside or
-inside;’ ‘almost every sentence is of home manufacture,
-little clipping is done;’ ‘the only paper
-that does all its work at home,’ &amp;c. A further
-noticeable feature is the frequent use of certificates
-and testimonials as to circulation from
-public and private individuals or from contemporary
-prints, or of self-recommendations such as
-that of the paper which ‘has a very fine list of
-country subscribers,’ or of the journal ‘published
-by a genuine Jayhawker,’ which ‘goes to every
-post-office in the northern part of the State.’</p>
-
-<p>It is when we come to the direct announcements
-to advertisers, however, that we get perhaps
-the queerest hints from our American cousins.
-‘Advertising rates cheerfully furnished’ appears
-frequently; ‘Advertisers love it’ is a short and
-sweet statement regarding one paper; ‘Should be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_716">{716}</span>
-patronised by every live advertiser;’ ‘Advertisers,
-do you want some return for your money? Read
-our inducements,’ say others. Then, ‘The modesty
-of the publishers deters them from mentioning
-the peculiar merits of the <i>Courier</i> as an advertising
-medium’—a modesty rivalled by the
-remark, ‘Rates of advertising so low that we
-are almost ashamed to announce them,’ which
-differs from the standpoint of a third, ‘Advertising
-rates held high enough to make a living
-for the publisher;’ and the latter appears upon
-the whole to be the more general sentiment, as
-may be testified by ‘Don’t send offers under price,’
-‘We only advertise <i>for money</i>.’ The last sentence
-alludes to a species of exchange evidently less
-popular among the publishers than with their
-clients. ‘No advertising solicited,’ says the
-<i>Westfield Pantograph</i>, ‘except for cash, or what
-may be as good. No space to give away or let
-at half-price.’ More decisive is the <i>Calhoun Pilot</i>,
-which ‘is choice in the admission of advertisements
-in its columns, and those it does admit,
-“due bills” of no character will settle for them.
-Must be in hard cash quarterly in advance, unless
-good references are given. Save your paper and
-postage, ye advertisers who have nothing to offer
-us for our space than your wares and due bills.
-We don’t want ’em. We have a good article to
-retail, and nothing but the almighty dollar will
-buy it. But,’ adds the <i>Pilot</i> more amiably, ‘while
-this is strictly our rule, our rates are low, and
-we give value received for all the lucre you
-place in our possession.’ Still more downright
-is the declaration, ‘No three-cornered patent
-pills, second-hand clothing, skunk-hunting machines,
-or hand-organs taken in payment for
-advertising.’ ‘The <i>News</i> publishes no dead ads.,
-and gives no puffs;’ ‘No half-cash advertisements
-accepted, no swindling or bogus patrons wanted.’
-‘Dead-beat, swindling advertisers,’ sarcastically
-announces the <i>Troy Free Press</i>, ‘can have their
-matter chucked carefully into the stove by sending
-them to our office. Our space is for sale,
-and must be paid for at living rates.’ But there
-is encouragement for honest advertisers given
-by a <i>Clipper-Herald</i> through whose columns
-announcements ‘go to that class of people who
-are honest and intelligent and who pay for what
-they get;’ and in an equally straightforward
-assertion elsewhere, the <i>mens conscia recti</i> of the
-editor rises superior to grammar into the realms
-of wit: ‘Has a good circulation among a prompt-paying
-class of people—these be facts!’</p>
-
-<p>Facts or not, there is a distinctive character
-about Jonathan’s advertisements equal to some
-of the fiction with which he has supplied us.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_MISSING_CLUE">THE MISSING CLUE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER III.—THE EVENTS OF A NIGHT.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Down-stairs</span> in the public room, the faithful
-Derrick is engaged in a seemingly interesting
-conversation with mine host Hobb Dipping and
-two or three other jolly good fellows, who are
-all drinking at his expense. No sign yet had
-the attendant discovered that had served to
-arouse his suspicions. No word had been spoken
-which in any way showed that the natives of
-this desolate place were anxious to know more
-about his master or himself. A suspicion of
-danger often arouses our fears and doubts
-when there is perhaps the smallest occasion for
-either. The honest countrymen troubled themselves
-much less about the matter than even the
-worthy host, who was happily indifferent to
-everything but the fact that Mr Morton and
-his servant were rare and profitable customers.
-The lumbering knot of labourers at length departs,
-and mine host locks and bars the door; while
-Derrick, not a little fatigued with the harassing
-events of the day, is left standing alone,
-surveying a row of empty benches which the
-retiring fenmen have just quitted. Burly Hobb
-comes back puffing and blowing, his red face
-glowing like the setting sun, and his bald
-skull spotted with perspiration through the
-exertion he has undergone in securing the
-strongly built outer door.</p>
-
-<p>‘Landlord, I’m going to bed,’ says Derrick,
-who has suddenly returned to his original
-gruffness.</p>
-
-<p>‘Very good, sir,’ is the reply of the host, who
-forthwith trims and lights an atom of a lamp
-which he fishes out of a cupboard by the fireplace.
-‘I hope you will sleep well, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>Derrick’s eyes are watching the innkeeper
-from under his beetling brows, and he answers
-gruffly: ‘I hope so.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ve heard it said,’ goes on the loquacious
-host, ‘that a good sleep is worth a fortune to an
-over-tired man. I see nothing to prevent you
-sleeping well here, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not much likelihood of being roused in the
-night, eh?’ remarks the attendant.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, no, sir,’ answers Dipping, wondering
-what motive his guest could have in asking such
-a question. ‘There’s no one to disturb you
-here, unless, indeed, it be your master himself.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Many visitors here?’ inquired Derrick, as old
-Hobb leads the way up the dusky, creaking
-staircase with the flickering lamp in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>‘None at all, sir,’ replied the landlord in a
-melancholy tone. ‘There never is any one here—leastways,
-very, very seldom. I haven’t had
-a visitor stopping in this house for a matter
-of—I can’t rightly say how long; but I know
-it’s a mortal long while, for since my poor
-wife died’——</p>
-
-<p>‘Is this my room?’ interrupts Derrick, as
-the innkeeper halts before a solid-looking black
-door at the head of the staircase.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is,’ answers old Dipping. ‘You are pretty
-close to your master, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I know,’ is all that the attendant deigns to
-say, as he pushes open the door and enters
-with the light, leaving the landlord to stumble
-down-stairs in the dark as best he may. Having
-carefully fastened the door, Derrick sets down
-the light, and approaches the window with the
-intention of getting a breath of fresh air. The
-casement is somewhat hard to unfasten, and when
-at length he succeeds in opening it, the lamp
-which he has brought is blown out under the
-sudden influence of a gust of air which is
-admitted. No matter; he does not want it. The
-night-breeze is cool and refreshing, a favourable
-contrast to the hot stifling room below, and
-Derrick, as he leans upon the window-ledge,
-begins to appear more contented and at ease.
-All afterglow of the twilight has long disappeared,
-and the moon is shining with a
-sickly light upon a low layer of mist which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_717">{717}</span>
-covers the marshy flats. Above the thin watery
-fog which has arisen from the sluggish stream
-and enshrouded the village as in a winding-sheet,
-the great shattered tower of the monastery
-rises ghostlike and dim, while the silence of
-the vast solitude is unbroken by a single sound.
-Even Derrick is not insensible to the peculiar
-beauty and stillness of the scene, and he lounges
-there, humming a tune, and watching the
-silvery trickle upon the watery marsh long
-after mine host has retired to rest. At length
-he closes the casement and divests himself
-of his heavy boots. Tired as he is, he does
-not attempt to remove his clothes. The man
-had seen a deal of sharp service, and experience
-had taught him long ago that in cases
-where he might be wanted at any moment, it
-were better to sleep in them. He merely places
-his pistols within reach, and then throwing
-himself upon the bed, endeavours to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Every one knows what it is to arrive at that
-dreamy state of semi-unconsciousness when the
-weary senses, failing at once to engage the attentions
-of the drowsy god, find a sort of relief in
-a long train of most disconnected thought. It
-was thus with Derrick. The fatigues of the
-day had proved too much for even that hardy
-individual, so that, instead of falling at once
-into a sound refreshing sleep, he was drowsily
-conning over the different events which had
-occurred, his rambling imagination colouring
-them with a variety of indistinct pictures and
-incidents. These weird fancies at length grew
-fainter and fainter, and the attendant was fast
-sinking into slumber, when suddenly, and as it
-seemed without a cause, he awoke. Through
-the casement the moon was staring down upon
-him like a pale still face, and the greater part
-of his recumbent person lay bathed in its cold
-light. All was still; there seemed not the
-slightest reason why he should be thus aroused.
-The silence was profound, and the very beating
-of Derrick’s heart sounded like a hammer thumping
-time in his head. Scarcely knowing what
-he does, he sits up on the edge of his bed and
-listens. Yes; he was not mistaken, there seemed
-to be a faint noise approaching the old inn—a
-low measured tramp. The hammer-like beating
-grows louder as Derrick, with every nerve
-strained to the utmost pitch, silently rises and
-once more opens the casement. There can be no
-mistake now; some persons are approaching; and
-in that low tramp, distant as it is, he recognises
-the marching of a body of soldiers. He closes the
-window softly, and taking his heavy riding-boots
-in his hand, unfastens the door, and glides softly
-along the gallery towards his master’s apartment.
-Owing to the pitchy darkness in which the
-gallery is enveloped, he experiences some difficulty
-in groping his way without stumbling;
-but reaching the further end at last, he feels
-his way to his master’s door and gives the
-required signal. It is answered with unexpected
-suddenness, the door being instantly thrown open,
-and Sir Carnaby appearing on the threshold.
-He is fully dressed, like Derrick; he has not
-even removed his outer clothing, and in his hand
-is a short broad-bladed knife. The saddle-bags
-lie upon the table, and a portion of their contents,
-discernible by a dim night-light, is scattered
-about; but the black box is gone.</p>
-
-<p>In a very few words, the trusty henchman
-explains what is the reason of his coming, and
-urges his master to hold himself in readiness to
-escape, should it be necessary. Sir Carnaby looks
-at him while he speaks as if he does not quite
-understand his hurried explanation; but when
-the attendant has finished, he looks around the
-room with an anxious air, and then says:
-‘If it be so, Derrick, we must get off somehow
-as quickly as we can. This window, I think,
-looks towards the back of the house. Can you
-not manage to descend into the courtyard and
-get out our horses? Lead them down the bank
-of the stream towards that tall beacon by the
-dike. You must remember the place; we
-remarked it as we passed the mill on our journey
-here.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I remember the place, Sir Carnaby; but I
-am not going to make off there, and leave you
-alone here.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I shall be safe enough, I tell you, Derrick,’
-said the baronet as he hastily motioned to the
-attendant to go. ‘I cannot come yet; I cannot;
-it is impossible.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I will wait below, then,’ is the stubborn reply
-of his servant, who is already half out of the
-window.</p>
-
-<p>‘Derrick,’ says Sir Carnaby, laying his hand
-upon the attendant’s shoulder, ‘do what I tell
-you. I cannot come now; and if you wait
-below for me, as you say, we shall both be
-discovered. More lives than our own depend
-upon your obeying me at this moment. Go, as
-I tell you, and wait for me by the beacon; and I
-will join you as soon as I possibly can.’</p>
-
-<p>The man clasps his master’s hand, and, with
-something like tears in his eyes, makes his way
-to the ground. The fugitive baronet has no
-emotion expressed on his countenance, for he
-fears not for himself; his thoughts are centred
-upon that black box which has now so strangely
-disappeared. With the broad-bladed knife still
-in his hand, he goes towards a corner of the
-room, kneels down, and appears to busy himself
-with the planking of the floor.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Fortunately for himself, Derrick had found
-his way to the shed where the horses had
-been stabled; and his efforts to saddle and
-bring them out had proved successful. The
-great gates leading out of the courtyard of the
-old inn were fastened; but this did not deter
-the attendant’s movements for an instant. Leading
-the horses through a gap in the fence at
-the back of the <i>Saxonford Arms</i>, he crossed
-a small cultivated inclosure, and emerged from
-the cover of a hedge upon the open highway.
-Stopping for a moment to listen, he plainly
-distinguished the measured tramp of soldiers
-approaching the inn, mingled with the low
-peculiar clank of arms and accoutrements. One
-circumstance which particularly alarmed Derrick
-was that the sound plainly came from the direction
-in which he had to go. There was no time
-for thought, however; the warning tramp which
-broke the stillness of the night came nearer
-and nearer, and over the old timber bridge
-which crossed the stream came a dim file of
-figures—eleven of them. Derrick could easily
-count the number as they passed over the bridge
-and came straight towards the old <i>Saxonford<span class="pagenum" id="Page_718">{718}</span>
-Arms</i>, their fixed bayonets flashing and glittering
-in the moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>There was but one course he could take;
-he must move forward and pass them. No
-opportunity for making a detour, for the military
-were not one hundred yards from the house,
-and the attendant knew that he had been
-seen. Muttering a prayer for his master’s safety,
-Derrick put the horses to a slow trot, and
-advanced towards the soldiers with a feeling
-of fear at his heart which he had never before
-experienced. He had not covered half the distance
-before a sharp word of command came
-from the front, and a line was drawn up across
-the road, evidently with the intention of disputing
-his further progress. A dash for it now;
-delay meant capture both for himself and his
-master. Digging spurs into his horse’s sides,
-the attendant laid the flat of his broad blade
-over the flanks of Sir Carnaby’s charger which
-he led, and tore down the road like a whirlwind.
-It was all over in a minute. A sheet of
-flame shot forth as the bold horseman broke
-through the line, and then, without a check, he
-found himself ascending the steep bank close
-against the bridge. The soldiers, however, who
-had taken the initiative, had no intention of
-letting their suspected quarry escape. Before Sir
-Carnaby’s servant could head the bank, he was
-surrounded, and a hoarse cry to stop and surrender
-came from his pursuers. In this they had mistaken
-their man. Derrick entertained no such
-idea. He indeed hoped that the firing would
-alarm his master, and allow him time to make
-his retreat in safety; but not a thought had he
-of yielding. Once more clapping spurs to his
-horse, and striking right and left with his drawn
-blade, the attendant partially succeeded in clearing
-himself from the press.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment, a random shot from one of
-the military dropped his master’s horse, which
-he had been leading. Derrick had scarcely time
-to disengage his arm from the bridle before the
-poor animal went crashing down, breaking the
-worm-eaten railing of the bridge like matchwood,
-and throwing one of his assailants headlong into
-the stream below. In the confusion, Derrick
-received a bayonet-wound in the left arm, and
-he was nearly pulled from his saddle; but
-shaking himself free with almost superhuman
-strength, he applied his spurs, and galloped
-across the old bridge for dear life.</p>
-
-<p>Although there appeared to be no attempt
-at pursuit, Derrick did not judge it prudent
-to ride straight for the spot where he hoped
-to meet his master. After making a considerable
-circuit, the trusty henchman, faithful to the
-last, reined in his reeking steed, and gazed
-across the flat misty space in the direction of
-the <i>Saxonford Arms</i>. The silence, however, was
-as complete as when he had sat at that open
-window looking over the fen. Not a soul was
-anywhere near him. Putting his horse once
-more in motion, the man rode slowly along the
-bank until he reached the place of rendezvous.
-It was as he both feared and suspected. Sir
-Carnaby was not there. He must wait. The
-clear night clouded, and the hours passed by,
-but yet his master came not. Derrick might wait
-until the crack of doom, but he never would meet
-his master again on earth. The devoted courage
-of the servant was useless now, for, pierced by a
-musket bullet, Sir Carnaby Vincent lay lifeless
-across the stairs of the old <i>Saxonford Arms</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER IV.—AFTER FIFTEEN YEARS.</h3>
-
-<p>It wanted but a few days to Christmas 1760—a
-seasonable Christmas, and in keeping with that
-festive season of the year. Snow and sharp
-north-east winds had been plentiful for nearly
-a week past. The flat country all around the
-time-honoured cathedral city of Fridswold had
-been covered with a vast sheet of drifted snow,
-which had found its way into every nook and
-crevice, filling up all the ditches and dikes
-until they were level with the surrounding
-country. The minster tower was embellished
-with an innumerable number of white patches,
-and the minster roofs were hidden under a
-thick covering of frozen snow. It was evident
-that King Christmas had things to his liking
-this time, and was bent upon enjoying his
-own particular time in his own particular way.
-Meanwhile the wind roared on, roared and
-whistled, and whisked the sharp frozen snowflakes
-round and round, dashing them, as if in
-impotent rage, against the sturdy walls of the
-minster. The air was so thick that, although
-the hour was not late, darkness had set in with
-a density that obscured every object from view,
-while the tolling of the great vespers-bell was
-drowned by the distracting uproar of the elements.</p>
-
-<p>It was during one of the uncertain lulls
-which occurred from time to time, that a figure
-emerged from the protecting shelter of one of
-the cathedral buttresses, and wrapping himself
-in the folds of a horseman’s cloak, strode hastily
-forward, evidently intending to take advantage
-of the brief calm and reach some haven
-of shelter. Scarcely a single person was to be
-seen in the deserted streets, through which the
-blast tore with such mad fury that the buffeted
-wayfarer staggered again. Visions of glowing
-fires, dry clothes, and comfortable shelter rose
-before his imagination as he passed a brightly
-lighted window. But there was no stopping for
-him; he must on and fight this tough battle
-with the pitiless wind as best he may. His
-destination is at length reached. The weather-beaten
-traveller descends a couple of steps,
-passes through an open doorway, and emerges
-from the outer darkness into a warm, cosy-looking
-bar—his clothes half-frozen, and crusted with
-patches of snow. He is apparently known here,
-for he is instantly relieved of his cloak and hat
-by a neat-looking damsel, who up to the present
-moment has been engaged in a light and refreshing
-flirtation with a large, hot-visaged man
-lounging before the fire.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sharp weather this, sir,’ remarked that worthy,
-slightly moving from his place.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sharp indeed!’ returned the other in a deep
-voice, as he shook some loose particles of snow
-from his person.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah, this’ll be a bad time for many people,’
-was the next remark the large man ventured
-upon.</p>
-
-<p>A muttered exclamation dropped from the lips
-of the last comer, but was too indistinct to be
-heard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_719">{719}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘There’ll be many a person remember this
-night,’ continued he of the fiery countenance,
-with an insane notion that he was getting along
-capitally.</p>
-
-<p>The individual addressed turned sharply round,
-fixing a pair of dark eyes upon the other’s face,
-but he did not speak.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhat discouraged, the large man paused
-for a minute ere he spoke again. The person
-he seemed so wishful to converse with was a
-tall, handsome, young fellow, dressed in a sort
-of half-military costume, and with a bold dashing
-look, sufficient in itself to attract notice. By
-his side was a silver-hilted rapier, the ordinary
-weapon of a gentleman of the day; and the martial
-look of the wearer was sufficient proof that
-he would be prompt to use it in any emergency.
-Seemingly not satisfied with the long inspection
-he had thought fit to take, our red-faced friend
-once more endeavoured to enter into conversation;
-but the gentleman, after giving the maid
-some orders, quitted the room.</p>
-
-<p>‘Is that gentleman staying in the house,
-Peggy, my dear?’ asked the red-faced one of the
-waiting-maid.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes; he came here last night,’ replied the
-girl, who was perfectly ready to resume the aforesaid
-flirtation, which had been interrupted by
-the entrance of the visitor.</p>
-
-<p>But the man with the fiery face now seemed
-to be persistently interested in the stranger.
-‘What may his name be, Peg?’ he asked in a
-tone of affected carelessness.</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s no business of yours, Mr Goff,’ retorted
-the damsel a trifle tartly, for the swain’s indifference
-somewhat nettled her.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, Peggy, my chuck, don’t get crusty,’ said
-the big man in wheedling accents. ‘What’s that
-you’ve got in your pretty hand?’</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s the gentleman’s hat,’ replied the fair maid,
-somewhat relaxing. ‘I’m going to dry it by
-the fire with his cloak. They’re sopping wet,
-now the snow’s melted on them.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s not likely to lose his headpiece, whoever
-he may be,’ remarked Mr Goff. ‘I can see
-“R. Ainslie” on the lining quite plain, as you’re
-holding it now.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You seem to take a deal of interest in the
-gentleman,’ laughed Peggy as she turned the hat
-away.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s mighty little interest I take in any one
-except you, my beauty,’ returned Mr Goff. ‘I
-only thought the young fellow looked wonderful
-weary and tired like.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He looked that yesterday,’ said Peggy, warming
-to the subject. ‘I felt quite sorry for him
-when he rode up. It wasn’t fit weather to turn
-a dog out in.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And he’s been out again to-day?’ hazarded
-the big man.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes,’ replied Peggy, depositing the hat and
-cloak in front of the roaring blaze. ‘He went
-out early on foot, leaving his horse in the stable,
-and we saw nothing more of him till two o’clock.
-He came back then, and ordered something to
-eat; but, as I’m a living creature, I think he
-scarcely touched it. After that, he went out
-again, and did not return till just now.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It seems wonderful curious,’ said Mr Goff
-slowly, as he buttoned up his coat and prepared
-to go—‘seems wonderful curious that a young
-gent should go on in that fashion. When I see
-’em a-doing so, I always have a sort of notion
-that they’ve got something on their minds, and
-are going to act rash.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s your experience, is it?’ said the girl
-with a laugh. ‘I don’t think much of it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Possibly not,’ returned the other. ‘Good-night.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_SOLITARY_ISLAND">A SOLITARY ISLAND.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> government of Iceland have commissioned
-Mr Thoroddsen to undertake systematic explorations
-of that island, with a view to investigating
-its physical features and describing its natural
-history. While on a visit to Grimsey, a small
-island twenty-two miles due north of Iceland, he
-found it inhabited by eighty-eight human beings,
-debarred from all communication with the mainland,
-excepting once or twice every year, when,
-at great risk, the natives contrived to visit the
-mainland in their small open boats.</p>
-
-<p>After describing the flora and meteorology of
-this secluded islet, Mr Thoroddsen informs us
-that the ‘pastor of the island, M. Pjetur Gudmundsson,
-has for many years been engaged in
-exceedingly careful meteorological observations
-on behalf of the Meteorological Institute of
-Copenhagen. This most worthy gentleman,
-living here in conspicuous poverty, like a hermit
-divorced from the world, though he has the
-comfort of a good wife to be thankful for, is not
-only regarded as a father by his primitive congregation,
-but enjoys, moreover, the reputation of
-being in the front rank among sacred poets in
-modern Iceland.</p>
-
-<p>‘The inhabitants derive their livelihood for
-the most part from bird-catching, nest-robbing,
-and deep-sea fisheries. The precipices that form
-the eastern face of the island are crowded with
-myriads of various kinds of sea-fowl. On every
-ledge the birds are seen thickly packed together;
-the rocks are white with guano, or green-tufted
-with scurvy-grass; here everything is in ceaseless
-movement, stir, and flutter, accompanied by a
-myriad-voiced concert from screamers on the
-wing, from chatterers on domestic affairs in the
-rock-ledges, and from brawlers at the parliament
-of love out at sea, the surface of which beneath
-the rocks is literally thatched at this time of the
-year with the wooing multitudes of this happy
-commonwealth. If the peace is broken by a
-stone rolled over the precipice or by the report
-of a gunshot, the air is suddenly darkened by
-the rising clouds of the disturbed birds, which,
-viewed from the rocks, resemble what might be
-taken for gigantic swarms of bees or midges.</p>
-
-<p>‘The method adopted for collecting eggs is the
-following: Provided with a strong rope, some
-nine or ten stalwart men go to the precipice,
-where it is some three hundred feet high, and
-one of the number volunteers or is singled out
-by the rest for the perilous <i>sig</i>, that is, “sink” or
-“drop,” over the edge of the rocks. Round his
-thighs and waist, thickly padded generally with
-bags stuffed with feathers or hay, the <i>sigamadr</i>,
-“sinkman” or “dropman,” adjusts the rope in
-such a manner that he may hang, when dropped,
-in a sitting posture. He is also dressed in a
-wide smock or sack of coarse calico, open at the
-breast, and tied round the waist with a belt,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_720">{720}</span>
-into the ample folds of which he slips the eggs
-he gathers, the capacity of the smock affording
-accommodation to from one hundred to one
-hundred and fifty eggs at a time. In one
-hand the sinkman holds a pole, sixteen feet long,
-with a ladle tied to one end, and by this means
-scoops the eggs out of nests which are beyond
-the reach of his own hands. When the purpose
-of this “breath-fetching” sink is accomplished,
-on a given sign the dropman is hauled up again
-by his comrades. This, as may readily be
-imagined, is a most dangerous undertaking, and
-many a life has been lost over it in Grimsey from
-accidents occurring to the rope.</p>
-
-<p>‘For the pursuit of the fishery, the island
-possesses fourteen small open boats, in which
-the men will venture out as far as four to six
-miles cod-fishing; but this is a most hazardous
-industry, owing both to the sudden manner in
-which the sea will rise, sometimes even a long
-time in advance of travelling storms, and to the
-difficulty of effecting a landing on the harbourless
-island.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now and then the monotony of the life of
-the inhabitants is broken by visits from foreigners,
-mostly Icelandic shark-fishers, or English or
-French fishermen.</p>
-
-<p>‘Of domestic animals the islanders now possess
-only a few sheep. Formerly there were five cows
-in the island; but the hard winter of 1860 necessitated
-their extermination, and since that time,
-for twenty-four years, the people have had to
-do without a cow! Of horses there are only
-two at present (1884) in the island! Strange to
-say, the health of the people seems on the whole
-to bear a fair comparison with more favoured
-localities. Scurvy, which formerly was very
-prevalent, has now almost disappeared, as has
-also a disease peculiar to children, which, in
-the form of spasm or convulsive fit, used to be
-very fatal to infant life in former years.</p>
-
-<p>‘Inexpressibly solitary must be the life of these
-people in winter, shut out from all communication
-with the outer world, and having in view, as far
-as the eye can reach, nothing but arctic ice.
-The existence of generation after generation here
-seems to be spent in one continuous and unavailing
-arctic expedition. The only diversion afforded
-by nature consists in the shifting colours of the
-flickering aurora borealis, in the twinkling of
-the stars in the heavens, and the fantastic forms
-of wandering icebergs. No wonder that such
-surroundings should serve to produce a quiet,
-serious, devout, and down-hearted race, in which
-respect the Grimsey men may perhaps be said
-to constitute a typical group among their compatriots.
-However, to dispel the heavy tedium
-of the long winter days, they seek their amusements
-in the reading of the Sagas, in chess-playing,
-and in such mild dissipations at mutual
-entertainments at Christmas-time as their splendid
-poverty will allow.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="FORESTRY_AND_FARMING">FORESTRY AND FARMING.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>At one of the evening lectures in connection
-with the late Edinburgh Forestry Exhibition, Mr
-J. Meldrum spoke of the ‘Johore Forests’ which
-are situated in the Malayan Peninsula between
-the British settlements of Singapore and Malacca.
-The greater part of the interior, he said, consisted
-of a virgin forest, and abounded in timber trees
-of a large size, no fewer than three hundred and
-fifty specimens of which were to be seen in the
-Forestry Exhibition. About three hundred kinds
-awaited the advent of the papermaker, who would
-be able to convert them into useful wood-pulp
-at a very low cost. Railways were required to
-make this wealth of timber available for commercial
-purposes.</p>
-
-<p>Another lecture by Mr Cracknell at the model
-of the Manitoba Farm embodied some interesting
-information regarding the Canadian north-west.
-The Bell Farm in Qu’appelle he described as the
-largest farm in the world. There were eight
-thousand acres under crop, five thousand under
-wheat, and a portion of the remainder under
-flax. From this farm, ten thousand bushels of
-wheat had been exported at a good price last
-year; and this year’s crop was estimated to be
-forty per cent. better. The estimated wheat acreage
-this year in Manitoba is three hundred and
-fifty thousand; and in the north-west territories
-sixty-five thousand, with an estimated yield of
-twenty-three bushels an acre. There was thus a
-total of four hundred and fifteen thousand acres,
-and nine million five hundred and forty-five thousand
-bushels; but deducting two million seven
-hundred and sixty thousand bushels for home consumption
-and seed, there remained a surplus of
-six million seven hundred and eighty-five thousand
-bushels. There is little consolation here for
-the British farmer, who finds wheat-growing at the
-present low prices positively unremunerative.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_LOVE-THOUGHT">A LOVE-THOUGHT.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">If</span> thou wert only, love, a tiny flower,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And I a butterfly with gaudy wings,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Flitting to changing scenes each changing hour,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Careless of aught save that which pleasure brings—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Not even I could leave the lowliest glade</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That held thy loveliness within its shade.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">If thou wert but a streamlet in the vale,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And I a sailor on a stormy sea,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Flying through whirling foam beneath the gale,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Chartless in all that wild immensity—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thy murmuring voice would echo in my soul</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Through howling storm or crashing thunder-roll.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">If, darling, thou wert but a far-off star,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And I a weary wanderer o’er the plain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Unwitting of celestial worlds afar,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And knowing naught of all the shining train—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My glance would single out thy ray serene,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Though blazing suns and planets rolled between.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Yet, dear one, thou art these to me, and more:</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">My flower, whose radiance passeth all decay;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My streamlet of sweet thoughts in endless store;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">My star, to guide my steps to perfect day;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My hope in earth’s dark dungeon of despair;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My refuge ’mid life’s weary noonday glare.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">H. Ernest Nichol.</span></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>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="footnotes"><p class="ph3">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> The eruption of May was noticed in a previous
-article (Nov. 24, 1883).</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 45, VOL. I, NOVEMBER 8, 1884 ***</div>
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