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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 #66748 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66748)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular
-Literature, Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 52, Vol. I, December 27,
-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. 52, Vol. I, December 27, 1884
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: November 16, 2021 [eBook #66748]
-
-Language: English
-
-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. 52, VOL. I, DECEMBER 27,
-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. 52.—VOL. I. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1884. PRICE 1½_d._]
-
-
-
-
-THE STORY OF ABE.
-
-
-Those who profess to know all about slavery will tell you that
-the negro was a thousand times happier as a slave than he is as a
-freeman. This may be true of some of the race; we do not enter into
-the question. The field-hand was in general an entirely irresponsible
-creature. He belonged to his master as thoroughly as the dogs and
-horses did, and he was of infinitely less importance. He had his
-daily task and his daily rations; he had also, if owned by a kind
-master, his little amusements, chief of which were the dance and the
-camp-meeting. Such a life would naturally not inspire one with any very
-high ambition. Give the plantation negro his hoe-cake and his bit of
-fat pork, his banjo, and the privilege of telling his experience to
-an unlimited chorus of ‘Halleluiahs!’ and ‘Bress de Lords!’ and you
-gave him perfect bliss. If the white man was his oppressor, he seldom
-knew it. ‘De family’ were, except in rare cases, admired and revered.
-And these poor creatures who did not own themselves, assumed and felt
-an air of proud proprietorship when speaking of the glories of their
-master’s state, and specially of each ‘young mas’r’ and ‘lily miss.’
-‘Young mas’r’ was at once their tyrant and their darling. I have heard
-a wedding ceremony wound up with, ‘Hark, from de tombs a doleful
-sound!’ with all its concomitant tears and groans, because ‘Marse
-Harry’ had so ordered.
-
-This state of things by no means came to an end with the civil war.
-Long after the slaves were freemen, and the broad acres had changed
-owners, and ‘old mas’r’ had fallen in battle or died broken-hearted,
-all that were left of the proud old name were still ‘de family’ to
-those loving hearts. While the writer lived in one of the border towns
-of Virginia, the mother of one of her maids appeared one day to ask for
-largess. ‘We’se done goin’ to hab a party, Miss Anne,’ said she; ‘an’
-some ob de ladies dey gibs me flour; an’ some, eggs; an’ some, sugar;
-an’ ole missis she would a’ gib me a whole great big cake, but I up an’
-tole her I had one.—It was a lie,’ she explained earnestly, fearing
-I would think further gifts unnecessary; ‘but some o’ dem pore white
-trash say de missis hain’t got nuff to eat.’ And Chloe fairly sobbed.
-
-I ventured to ask the occasion of the festivity.
-
-‘Well, ye see, Miss Anne,’ said Chloe, brightening, ‘us cullud pussons
-is gettin’ married now just like white folks; an’ as my ole mammy ’ll
-be eighty the day after to-morrow, Marse George said I had oughter gib
-her an’ father a weddin’.’
-
-Better late than never, thought I, as I added something to Chloe’s
-basket.
-
-In addition to the plantation negroes and the often petted and spoiled
-household servants, there was among the coloured population of the
-South a certain proportion of skilled mechanics. These were not only,
-from their superior intelligence, more alive than the rest of their
-race to the hardship of slavery, but, from their greater value,
-more apt to suffer from it. Why, for instance, should Jim, a good
-blacksmith, trifle his time away on the plantation, where there was
-little or nothing for him to do, when Smith in the adjacent town will
-give Jim’s master, always in need of money, handsome payment for the
-slave’s services? The master is perhaps a kind man, and Smith known to
-be just the reverse, but hiring is not like selling. And so Jim goes,
-and toils in the sweat of his brow till Smith’s payment to the master
-is wrung out from him a thousandfold.
-
-It is of one of these mechanics I am going to tell you, and, excepting
-that the names of the persons connected with the story have been
-changed, every word of Abe’s story is true.
-
-In the heart of West Virginia, on the picturesque banks of the
-Great Kanawha River, there is a large tract of land once owned by
-Washington. Besides the niece who afterwards became Mrs Parke Custis,
-Washington had another in whom he was greatly interested, the daughter
-of his brother Lawrence. This lady, much against the wishes of her
-distinguished uncle, became the wife of Major Parks of Baltimore;
-and when this gallant officer, fulfilling Washington’s predictions,
-had spent all he could lay his hands upon and a great deal more, the
-couple, for his sins, were banished to what was then the wilderness
-of Western Virginia. Their daughter in course of time married Mr
-Prescott, a rich young planter from the east, whose money, laid out
-on the Washington acres, produced a flourishing plantation; while on
-one of the most romantic sites on the Kanawha arose a noble mansion
-known as Prescott Place. Here Mrs Prescott exercised for years a lavish
-hospitality; and here were preserved, until fire consumed them and
-the mansion together, sundry relics of Washington, chief of which was
-a characteristic letter to his niece, written before her marriage,
-warning her that as she made her bed, so she should lie upon it.
-
-When young Laura Prescott married gay Dick Randolph, Abe, the son
-of Mr Prescott’s body-servant, was one of numerous presents of like
-kind. Abe was an excellent carpenter; and when dark days came to the
-Prescotts and Randolphs, it was Abe himself who persuaded ‘Marse Dick’
-to sell him to a man from the north named Hartley, who from being a
-slave-driver had risen to be a slave-owner, and who had the reputation
-of being a very demon. Again and again Hartley offered a tempting
-price, and again and again Dick Randolph refused it; nor would he have
-yielded at last, hard pressed as he was, had he not felt that Abe,
-being about to be hired to a builder in the neighbourhood, would be
-really out of Hartley’s power. And when, some months after the sale,
-Abe walked over to Prescott Place to tell that his new master was going
-to allow him to purchase his freedom by working over-hours, Mr Randolph
-felt quite at ease about the faithful fellow. A price being set by
-Hartley, Abe set himself cheerfully to earn it—for years commencing his
-day’s work with the dawn, and carrying it far into the night.
-
-But the general opinion of Hartley had not, it was soon seen, done him
-injustice. Twice, thrice, was the price of Abe’s freedom raised just as
-he seemed on the eve of gaining it; and after the third disappointment,
-the slave became utterly hopeless, and, abandoning all extra labour,
-spent his spare hours in the darkest corner of his wretched cabin,
-brooding over his wrongs. This was by no means what Hartley intended;
-so, to encourage Abe, he was led to promise, in the presence of Mr
-Randolph, that he would abide by the sum last named. In law, of course,
-the promise was good for nothing; but the _ci-devant_ slave-driver was
-supposed to have some regard for public opinion. In vain Mr Randolph
-offered a higher price than was demanded for the slave himself. Abe
-should buy himself, Hartley said, or he should not be bought at all.
-
-Three years had passed, when Abe, getting a half-holiday from the
-builder who hired him, set off for Hartley’s with the stipulated sum.
-On his way there he stopped at Prescott Place to tell the good news.
-This was just at the beginning of the war; and Mr Randolph, being about
-to join the army, had promised to take Abe with him as his servant.
-
-Next morning, while breakfast was being served at Prescott Place, a
-loud scuffle was heard at the dining-room door, and Hartley, using his
-whip freely on the servant who tried to stop him, strode into the room
-livid with passion, and flourishing his whip in Mr Randolph’s face,
-yelled, with an oath: ‘Where is that nigger?’
-
-Dick Randolph’s blood was up in a moment, but he was first of all a
-gentleman. ‘Do you see my wife?’ he asked sternly.
-
-A coarse response from Hartley was all the reply, and in a moment the
-ruffian had measured his length on the floor; nor did he remember more
-till he found himself struggling in a pool of not very clean water
-by the highway. The negroes had received orders to take him off the
-plantation, and the precise spot where they were to deposit him not
-having been mentioned, they had selected one in accordance with his
-deserts.
-
-Hartley thought it prudent to disappear for a time. Whether he was
-simply a coward, or feared that some ugly facts connected with the case
-might leak out, was never known. Abe himself was not seen or heard of;
-and his story, except by a few, was soon, in these eventful times,
-forgotten.
-
-But the facts of the case were these: on the evening referred to, Abe
-had found his master pleasant, and even jocular, wishing he had not
-given the promise, offering to buy Abe back again, and so on. At last
-he turned to business. The money was produced and counted.
-
-‘Well?’ said Hartley, inquiringly.
-
-Abe did not understand. Hartley seemed waiting for something. At last
-he spoke plainly. ‘Where is the rest of the money?’
-
-The scoundrel had made up his mind to deny having received the previous
-payments, to deny all knowledge even of sums he had meanly borrowed
-from his slave, and to hand him back to helpless, hopeless slavery.
-
-That night Abe appeared at the cabin of his wife, a slave on a distant
-plantation. There he briefly told the story of his wrongs, adding: ‘I
-am going to-night. It may be long before you see me; but if it is fifty
-years, I will come back for you, if you are faithful.’
-
-Phyllis promised to be true; and kept her promise as slaves do; that
-is, she married—they called it marrying—the first man who asked her.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The five years of the war had come and gone, and ten years more. Major
-Randolph, past middle age, and utterly ruined, was trying, in a small
-Virginian town, to take up the profession of law, which, in happier
-days, he had studied, but had not cared to practise; and the widow of
-Hartley, who had meantime died bankrupt, was keeping a boarding-house
-in the same place; when, on a certain forenoon, there was shown into
-the Randolphs’ parlour a tall, portly, middle-aged man, gentlemanly in
-appearance, and thoroughly well dressed, but perfectly black. The Irish
-maid-of-all-work had forgiven his colour for the sake of his clothes.
-
-Mr Randolph happened to be at home, and it was to him the stranger
-eagerly turned. ‘Marse Dick!’ he cried.
-
-‘Abe!’
-
-And Abe it was. And there were tears in at least three pairs of eyes
-as the master and slave of former days shook hands.
-
-Well, Abe might have been a long-lost brother, Major Randolph was so
-glad to see him. He made him tell his adventures from the time he left
-Hartley until he appeared in the Randolphs’ parlour; he showed him his
-sons and his daughters, and rattled on about old days. But never a word
-did he say about wounds and losses and disappointments; though it could
-hardly have escaped Abe’s affectionate eyes that, while his own outer
-man bore such marks of prosperity, his old master’s had grown actually
-shabby.
-
-By ways and means generally forthcoming to border negroes who had
-the courage and prudence to avail themselves of them, Abe had gone
-northward first, returning to Virginia, however, the moment the
-emancipation proclamation was issued. Hearing of Major Randolph’s
-absence and his own wife’s unfaithfulness, he had wandered farther
-and farther from his old home, and had settled at last in a far
-south-western state. There he had worked steadily; at first on shares,
-then for himself; till at the time of his visit to Virginia, he was the
-manager and largest shareholder of the celebrated Hot Springs of A——.
-
-Need I say how earnestly ‘Marse Dick’ was besought to try the springs
-for his rheumatism, to bring ‘Miss Laura’ and the family, to enjoy
-horses and carriages, to fish and hunt, and generally to enter into
-possession?
-
-Old Mrs Prescott, who still lived, shared with her son and daughter the
-pleasure of Abe’s return, and the young Randolphs listened with delight
-to such an interesting romance. And yet—truth compels me to confess
-that the eldest daughter gave more than one uneasy glance into the
-street, and was literally sitting on thorns. What if a morning caller
-should find a negro in the Randolph parlour? Even kind Mrs Randolph
-had a feeling of uneasiness as the early dinner-hour approached. But
-the master guessed at no such embarrassments. The hour came; the bell
-rang, and as easily and cordially Major Randolph said: ‘You will come
-to dinner with us, Abe.’
-
-‘After you and the family, Marse Dick.’
-
-‘_With_ me and the family,’ replied Major Randolph.
-
-And though Abe earnestly begged to be allowed to wait, into the
-dining-room he went. And I may add, that had the most curious or
-mischievous eyes been on the watch for solecisms of any kind, they
-would have been disappointed.
-
-‘What would you have had me do?’ said Major Randolph afterwards. ‘There
-was Abe, dying to lavish on his old master all he possessed. Was I to
-be outdone in hospitality by my own old slave?’
-
-‘And Abe had just as much delicacy as papa,’ owned Miss Randolph, who
-felt she could afford to praise when the critical period was safely
-over—a merciful providence having kept away visitors. ‘He spoke just as
-good English as we do. But did you notice that, though he spoke of Mr
-Hartley and Mr everybody else, he always called papa “Marse Dick?”’
-
-Before Abe left town, he had put a little bit of business in Mr
-Randolph’s hands—no other than the settlement of a mortgage that
-threatened to ruin Mrs Hartley and her children. ‘O Marse Dick!’ he
-said, ‘I have been keeping away till I was rich enough to buy that
-man up; and then I meant to meet him face to face and ask him what he
-thought of himself. I doubt if I could have kept my hands off him; and
-now he is gone. I hope the good Lord will forgive me!’
-
-Were I writing a romance, I might tell how Abe made his old master’s
-fortune. But I have given you a poor idea of Major Randolph if I
-have led you to imagine he would allow himself to profit by his old
-servant’s prosperity in the smallest degree. If Abe told him of a good
-investment, he had no money. If a loan was modestly and hesitatingly
-offered, on the plea that Abe wished to place money at interest, and
-that there were so few whom he could trust, it was kindly but decidedly
-refused. And so Abe grows richer, and Major Randolph poorer than ever.
-The old-time slaves, with many misty ideas on the subject of religion,
-had one article of belief which they understood clearly, and for which
-they would have suffered martyrdom—namely, that in the next world it
-would be their turn to sit at table and eat the good things, while
-the proud white folks should ‘grease de griddle and turn de cakes.’
-The doctrine is founded on the principle of compensation, but the
-compensation in some cases begins here.
-
-
-
-
-ONE WOMAN’S HISTORY.
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-‘I have something of serious import to say to you,’ were Mora’s first
-words as he went forward a few steps and then halted. ‘Hector Laroche,
-do you know that you are in imminent danger of your life?’
-
-He gave a little start and looked at her fixedly for a moment or two.
-‘No; I am not aware of anything of the kind,’ he answered with a sneer.
-‘Madame, you are oracular!’
-
-‘Oh, hush! This is no time for levity. Will you not believe me when
-I tell you that your life is in danger? The assassins have tracked
-you—they have followed you here—they have sworn to take your life!’
-
-‘The assassins! What assassins?’ he shrieked as he bounded to his feet.
-
-‘Can you not guess? Think, Laroche, think! Oh, how like you it was to
-turn traitor to the cause to which you had bound yourself by oath, and
-to betray your comrades! But your treachery has been discovered. The
-penalty you cannot be ignorant of.’
-
-He had turned livid with terror while Mora was speaking. A glassy film
-had overspread his eyes, which looked dilated to twice their ordinary
-size. His gaze wandered from corner to corner of the room with a sort
-of stealthy fright, as if dreading that an assassin might spring upon
-him at any moment. A cold perspiration bathed him from head to foot;
-he trembled in every limb, and would have fallen had he not supported
-himself with his back and hands against the bureau.
-
-‘How am I to know that what you have just told me has any truth in
-it?’ he asked at length, with a strange hoarseness in his voice.
-‘What should you, Mora De Vigne, know of secret societies, plots, and
-conspiracies? Who should speak to you of these things, the secrets of
-which are known to the initiated alone? No; it is a lie—a lie! Some
-wretched fool has imposed upon you, or else you have concocted this
-story yourself in order to frighten me away.’
-
-Looking straight at him, Mora said slowly: ‘_The right hand of the Czar
-is frozen._’
-
-A low cry burst from the wretched man’s lips; he buried his face in his
-hands and fell on his knees; he knew that his doom was sealed.
-
-A pang of compassion shot through Mora’s heart. She made a step or two
-forward and then drew back with a shudder. All her womanly instincts
-revolted against the man. Not even at that supreme moment could she
-bring herself to go near him. ‘You must go away at once—to-night,’ she
-said. ‘To-morrow may be too late.’ She found herself repeating the very
-words of Jules.
-
-‘Go away—where?’ he asked with a groan, turning his haggard face full
-upon her. ‘All places are alike. There is no escape—none!’ He rose to
-his feet and staggered across the room to the ottoman, on which he
-sank, and buried his face in the cushions.
-
-‘Will you allow me to send for Colonel Woodruffe? He will be able to
-counsel you far better than I as to what had best be done for your
-safety.’
-
-As Laroche neither assented nor dissented, Nanette was at once
-despatched in quest of the colonel, who was still with Sir William. He
-followed close on Nanette’s heels. A few words aside from Mora put him
-in possession of the facts of the case.
-
-‘Laroche, this is a bad business—a very bad business,’ he said as he
-crossed to the ottoman and laid a hand on the Frenchman’s shoulder.
-‘But sit up, and let us look the situation in the face. Whining is of
-no use—never is. We have to act. While there’s life there’s hope, and
-I for one don’t despair of dragging you out of this dilemma, however
-awkward it may look just now.’
-
-‘No, monsieur; there is no hope—none,’ cried Laroche. ‘They have
-tracked me here—they will track me everywhere, till one day their
-opportunity will arrive. I know—I know!’ His nervous agitation was
-still so extreme that the words seemed as if they could scarcely form
-themselves on his lips.
-
-‘Here—drink this,’ said the colonel, handing him a glass containing
-brandy, which Mora had brought at his request.
-
-Laroche swallowed the spirit greedily. It helped to steady his nerves
-for the time being, if it did him no other good.
-
-‘What Madame De Vigne says is quite true,’ resumed the colonel. ‘You
-must get away from this place without an hour’s delay. I have thought
-of a plan which will at least insure your safety for a little while
-to come; after that, you will have to shift for yourself. I knew this
-part of the country well when a boy. There is a farmhouse kept by an
-old acquaintance of mine in a lonely valley about two miles from the
-opposite shore of the lake. I will take you there to-night, and you can
-stay there till you have decided what your future plans shall be.’
-
-‘O monsieur, you are too good! I have not deserved this,’ cried the
-abject wretch.
-
-‘You speak the truth, Laroche; you have not deserved it,’ answered the
-other gravely. ‘How soon can you be ready to start?’
-
-‘In ten minutes, monsieur.’
-
-‘Good.’
-
-‘But I shall need money, monsieur.’
-
-‘It shall be found you. Have you any idea as to what your plans will be
-after you leave the farmhouse?’
-
-‘I shall endeavour to make my way to London—it is the best hiding-place
-in the world for those who know it. There I shall lie quiet for a
-little while. After that’—— He ended with an expressive lifting of his
-shoulders.
-
-‘If you will get ready, then,’ said the colonel. ‘I too have a few
-arrangements to make.’
-
-Laroche nodded; then he went to the door, opened it, and gazed
-furtively up and down the corridor. Not a creature was in sight. He
-darted away and sped up the thickly carpeted staircase as noiselessly
-as a shadow.
-
-The colonel sent Nanette in search of Archie Ridsdale. He came at once,
-and as soon as the situation of affairs had been partially explained
-to him, he was despatched with a message to the boathouse. Then the
-colonel in his turn left the room. He was only absent three or four
-minutes, and when he came back he was carrying a small roll of notes in
-his hand.
-
-Mora had subsided into an easy-chair from the moment Colonel Woodruffe
-had taken charge of the situation, and there she was still sitting. Who
-could have analysed her thoughts during the last painful quarter of an
-hour, or have adequately described the varied phases of emotion which
-ebbed and flowed through her heart!
-
-Immediately following on the return of the colonel, came Archie
-Ridsdale. Each of them was muffled in his ulster, for although the
-storm had not yet broken over the valley, it might do so at any moment.
-
-A minute later the door opened and Laroche stole in. For a moment
-or two none of them recognised him. His black beard and moustache
-had vanished; a grizzled wig with long lanky tufts of hair, which
-fell on his coat-collar behind, covered his head; his eyebrows had
-been manipulated to match the wig; while a pair of heavy horn-rimmed
-spectacles served to disguise him still further. There was no longer
-the slightest trace of a Parisian dandy in his appearance; his clothes
-were homely, and of the fashion of some years previously. He looked
-like a small provincial shopkeeper who might have come over to England
-for a holiday. But no disguise could hide the pallor of his face, the
-nervous twitching of his thin lips, or the abject terror that lurked in
-his eyes.
-
-Archie and the colonel stood up. The moment of departure had come.
-Laroche turned to his wife, who had also risen. Placing both his hands
-over his heart and bending low in front of her, he said in a husky
-whisper: ‘Mora, pardon, pardon! We shall never meet again.’
-
-For a moment or two she hesitated; all the woman within her was
-profoundly moved; then she went up to him. ‘Hector, with my whole heart
-I forgive you!’ she said.
-
-That was their farewell. A moment later Mora heard the door close
-behind the three men.
-
-She turned down the lamp and drew back one of the curtains. It was
-pitch-dark outside; not a star was visible. She opened the window a
-little way, in order that she might watch as well as listen. Presently
-she heard a faint noise of footsteps on the gravel below. The three men
-had left the hotel by way of the French-window in the sitting-room on
-the ground floor.
-
-Mora stood with straining eyes and ears. Suddenly the darkness was
-shivered by a quivering flash of lightning, and in that instant she saw
-the figures of the three men crossing the slope of the hill on their
-way to the lake. At the same time, she imagined she saw the stealthy
-form of Santelle disappear behind a clump of laurel, as if he were
-watching the retreating figures.—Will he have known Laroche in spite of
-his disguise?
-
-The thought sent a cold tremor through her heart—half of horror, half
-of regret. But darkness had come again in the twinkling of an eye, and
-she saw nothing more. With a heavy sigh, she let the curtain drop into
-its place just as the door opened and Clarice entered the room.
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.—CONCLUSION.
-
-Three weeks had passed since the flight of Hector Laroche, when
-one wet forenoon Colonel Woodruffe, in company with a constable in
-plain clothes, found himself at the door of a low lodging-house in
-a frowsy-looking street in close proximity to one of the docks.
-The landlord of the house admitted the visitors, and ushering them
-up-stairs, unlocked the door of a small bedroom. There, on a ragged
-straw mattress, lay the dead body of Hector Laroche. A paragraph in the
-morning’s paper had aroused the suspicions of Colonel Woodruffe, who
-happened to be in London at the time, and he at once ordered a cab and
-set his face eastward.
-
-The statement of the landlord of the lodging-house was to the effect
-that Laroche had lodged with him for little more than a week at the
-time of his death; that he was exceedingly quiet and well behaved; that
-he lay in bed nearly the whole day, reading the newspapers and French
-novels, and having a bottle of brandy at his elbow; and that he rarely
-went out of doors till after nightfall, and then only for a short time.
-On the Tuesday, contrary to his custom, he had gone out about noon,
-and on returning a little before dusk, had remarked to the landlord
-that he should only require his bed for one night more, as he had just
-secured a berth on board a steamer which was to sail the following day.
-At that time, he appeared to be somewhat the worse for drink. He went
-up-stairs soon afterwards, and nothing more was seen or heard of him.
-As he was in the habit of not rising till late, no comment was made on
-his non-appearance next morning; and it was not till two o’clock in the
-afternoon that the landlord knocked at his door. There being no reply
-to his summons, he opened the door and went in. There he found Laroche,
-lying on his bed as if asleep, and dressed, except for his coat and
-waistcoat. But over his face was spread a fine cambric handkerchief,
-which medical evidence afterwards proved to have been saturated with
-chloroform. On the table by his side were a novel, a half-emptied
-bottle of cognac, a phial, uncorked, containing chloroform, and the
-dead man’s watch and chain. In one of his pockets was found a purse
-containing a considerable sum in notes and gold.
-
-At the inquest, the tendency of the evidence pointed strongly to the
-probability of the deceased having committed suicide while under the
-temporary influence of strong drink. There was only one piece of
-evidence forthcoming which served in some measure to invalidate that
-assumption. The landlord of the house deposed to the fact of the lock
-of the bedroom door having been secretly tampered with, so that while
-the door was to all appearance fastened on the inside, it could be
-opened without difficulty from without. As, however, there was no
-evidence forthcoming to implicate any one in particular with the act in
-question, and as the property of the dead man had apparently not been
-touched, the jury had no option but to bring in an open verdict. The
-evidence tendered by Colonel Woodruffe was confined entirely to the
-question of identity.
-
-Two days later he attended Laroche’s funeral—the solitary ‘mourner’
-there. This he did out of respect for Mora.
-
-Whether Laroche’s death was the result of his own rash act, or whether
-it was due to certain other agencies of which mention has previously
-been made, is one of those mysteries respecting which the world will
-probably never be any wiser than it is now.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Lady Renshaw was as good as her word when she stated that she had
-discarded her niece for ever. But it is possible that she might not
-have proved quite so obdurate had she not at the same time found
-herself so thoroughly checkmated in other directions. Her surprise at
-finding Mr Etheridge transformed into Sir William Ridsdale, and the
-knowledge that all her scheming to secure the rich baronet’s son for
-Miss Wynter had not only proved futile, but had evidently been seen
-through from the first by the keen-eyed Sir William, combined with
-her chagrin that Madame De Vigne, instead of being regarded in the
-light of an adventuress, was looked upon as a person whose friendship
-any one might feel proud to claim, following so close upon Bella’s
-‘heartless duplicity,’ proved more than she had the courage to face.
-And when, in addition, a horrid suspicion began to shape itself in her
-mind that Dr M‘Murdo—no doubt instigated thereto by that odious Miss
-Gaisford—instead of having fallen in love with her, as she so fondly
-dreamed, had been merely trying to make her look ridiculous, and amuse
-himself at the same time—it was no wonder she made up her mind that the
-sooner she left the _Palatine_ and its inmates behind her the better.
-
-Thus it fell out next morning that when Bella, intent on forgiveness
-and reconciliation, knocked at her aunt’s door, there came no response;
-after which a very brief inquiry sufficed to establish the fact that
-Lady Renshaw had risen at some abnormally early hour, and, accompanied
-by her maid, had started southward by the first train. She had left
-behind her no word or message of any kind for the dismayed girl, who
-found herself thus cruelly deserted in the huge hotel.
-
-But Miss Pen came to the rescue almost before Bella in her bewilderment
-had time fully to realise the fact of her aunt’s desertion. The little
-circle of which Miss Pen formed a component part welcomed her as
-one of themselves, now that the incubus of Lady Renshaw’s presence
-was removed; and Bella quickly found that what she had lost in one
-direction was far more than made up to her in others. When, two days
-later, the party at the _Palatine_ broke up, Miss Wynter accompanied
-the Rev. Septimus and his sister to their home in the Midlands, there
-to remain till Mr Dulcimer was prepared to claim her as his wife. And
-there, some three months later, a quiet wedding took place, our good
-vicar tying the knot, Sir William himself giving away the bride, who
-had not failed to become a great favourite with him, Archie acting as
-best-man, and Miss Loraine as bridesmaid-in-chief. Miss Pen played a
-voluntary on the organ, and there was a mist of tears in her eyes as
-she did so. Some vague dream of the past, never to be realised in this
-world, may perchance have been busy in her mind at the time.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When spring came round again, the worthy vicar was called upon to tie
-two more nuptial knots. Mora and her sister were married on the same
-day. Archie and his wife went abroad for a year’s travel; and now that
-they are back, Clarice, who has far greater faith in her husband’s
-abilities than he has himself, has made up her mind that Archie must go
-into parliament. She firmly believes that if he will only do so, there
-is a brilliant future before him. Time will prove.
-
-Sir William has ventured to spend the last two winters in England, and,
-somewhat to his surprise, has found himself none the worse in health
-for doing so. He divides his time pretty equally between his son’s
-house and that of Colonel Woodruffe. He did not forget our friend Mr
-Dulcimer when an opportunity presented itself. Through his influence,
-Dick was appointed to the secretaryship of a large public Company, the
-salary of which just doubled his previous income. Meanwhile, his wife
-had not found existence even in a small suburban villa by any means so
-unendurable as she at one time professed to fear it would be. In truth,
-her high spirits and good temper are enough to brighten any home. She
-has all the appearance of being one of the happiest women in England.
-
-Lastly, what is there left to record of her who has been the central
-figure of our little history? Happily, not much. Are not the happiest
-lives those of which there is nothing to relate? With Mora the days
-of storm and stress are over; the past with all its wretchedness and
-misery seems little more than a hideous dream. She is happy in the
-present, and, so far as human fallibility can judge, there seems every
-prospect of her continuing so in time to come. Dr Mac came all the way
-from Aberdeen to attend her marriage. As he shook hands with her after
-the ceremony, he said: ‘What a pity, my dear madame, what a great pity
-it is that Providence did not bless you with a twin-sister!’
-
-‘Why so, doctor?’
-
-‘Because, in that case, there is just a possibility that another poor
-mortal in addition to my friend the colonel might have been made a
-happy man to-day.’
-
- _Note._—All dramatic rights in the foregoing story are reserved
- by the author.
-
-
-
-
-STUDIES IN ANIMAL LIFE.
-
-HONESTY.
-
-
-It is to be hoped that the animal scale of morality is not so low that
-when a brute acts honestly it does so only because honesty is the best
-policy. There are many instances known of animals acting honestly, when
-the slightest promptings of instinct would have shown that it was more
-politic to act otherwise. Self-denial and self-sacrifice have been
-frequently needed of animals, and in the hour of temptation they have
-not succumbed. Neither fear, nor pain, nor the cravings of hunger have
-sufficed to deter many noble members of the brute world from their
-sense of duty. Quite recently the Canadian papers reported an anecdote
-of canine fidelity which, had it been told of a Roman soldier or a
-Hindu nurse, would have been bruited throughout the civilised world as
-an instance of humanity’s supremest devotion to duty. The story as told
-to us is, that when nearing Montreal, the engine-driver of a train saw
-a great dog standing on the track and barking furiously. The driver
-blew his whistle; yet the hound did not budge, but crouching low, was
-struck by the locomotive and killed. Some pieces of white muslin on
-the engine attracted the driver’s notice; he stopped the train and
-went back. Beside the dead dog was a dead child which, it is supposed,
-had wandered on to the track and had gone to sleep. The poor watchful
-guardian had given its signal for the train to stop; but unheeded, had
-died at its post, a victim to duty.
-
-This is no solitary specimen of canine integrity. The author of _Salad
-for the Social_ tells of a dog whose master deposited a bag in one
-of the narrow streets of Southampton, and left his dog to guard it,
-with strict injunctions not to leave it. The faithful creature was so
-staunch in the fulfilment of duty, that rather than forsake its trust,
-it actually allowed a heavy cart to drive over it and crush it to death.
-
-It is not merely momentary impulse, nor ignorance of the effects of
-this steadfastness—as some may imagine—that prompts animals to act thus
-faithfully; there are numerous cases on record to prove that they will
-sustain hunger, endure pain and fatigue, and withstand temptation, at
-the dictates of duty, as gallantly as any human being. Youatt is the
-authority for the following remarkable instance of canine integrity.
-An officer returning from a day’s shooting deposited his spoil in a
-certain room, in the custody of his dogs. Mechanically he locked the
-door, put the key in his pocket, and departed. Soon afterwards, he was
-called away upon urgent business, and during his absence of several
-days, forgot all about his game and the dogs. When he returned home,
-he hastened to the room, and there found both dogs dead of hunger. Not
-only had they refrained from touching the game, but they had also kept
-quiet, having neither barked nor cried, evidently fearing to betray the
-trust they deemed their master had confided to them.
-
-It is related by Professor Bell that when a friend of his was
-travelling abroad, he one morning took out his purse to see if it
-contained sufficient change for a day’s jaunt he proposed making. He
-departed from his lodgings, leaving a trusted dog behind. When he
-dined, he took out his purse to pay, and found that he had lost a gold
-coin from it. On returning home in the evening, his servant informed
-him that the dog seemed to be very ill, as they could not induce it to
-eat anything. He went at once to look at his favourite; and as soon as
-he entered the room, the faithful creature ran to him, deposited the
-missing gold coin at his feet, and then devoured the food placed for
-it with great eagerness. The truth was that this gentleman had dropped
-the coin in the morning; the dog had picked it up, and kept it in its
-mouth, fearing even to eat, lest it should lose its master’s property
-before an opportunity offered to restore it.
-
-Professor Bell also tells of a Newfoundland dog kept at an inn in
-Dorset, which was accustomed, every morning as the clock struck eight,
-to take in its mouth a basket placed for the purpose and containing
-some pence, and go with it to the baker’s. The man took out the money,
-replacing it by a certain number of rolls, which Neptune returned home
-with. He never touched the eatables; but on one occasion when another
-dog attempted to despoil the basket, master Nep put down his burden
-and gave the intruder a thrashing; that accomplished, he regained his
-charge, and carried it home in triumph.
-
-In his interesting African Travels, Le Vaillant details how he missed
-his favourite setter. After a fruitless search, and the repeated firing
-of his gun to guide the animal, he sent an attendant back by the way
-they had travelled to try and discover the lost favourite. About two
-leagues back on the route the dog was found keeping guard over a chair
-and basket which had been dropped unperceived from the wagon. But for
-this fortunate discovery of the honest dog, it must speedily have
-perished by hunger or from the beasts of prey.
-
-In Taylor’s _General Character of the Dog_ is given an account of
-one of these faithful animals which daily carried to a labourer in
-Portsmouth dockyard his dinner. Trusty, as the dog was rightly named,
-had to take the basket containing his master’s mid-day meal upwards of
-a mile, so that he had frequently to rest on the journey. He was very
-careful as to where he deposited his load, and would not allow any one
-to come near it. When he reached the dock-gates, he often had to wait
-until they were opened for the admission or egress of any one; but the
-instant he could effect an entrance, he ran in with his charge and
-carried it to his master, who, after he had partaken of his dinner,
-re-delivered the empty basket to his faithful servitor to carry home
-again.
-
-In his _Essay on Instinct_, Hancock tells of a dog belonging to a
-Glasgow taproom keeper that was accustomed to carry its master’s
-breakfast to him in a tin can between its teeth. When the family
-removed, the dog changed his route, and never went wrong. It could
-not be induced to accept a favour when on its master’s errands, and
-carefully avoided any of its own species. This incorruptible servant,
-which by the way understood Gaelic as well as English, often carried
-home meat to the weight of half a stone, but never attempted to touch
-it. Dogs, indeed, rarely attempt to touch food belonging to their
-owners. One very remarkable instance is recorded by Jesse of a dog that
-accompanied its mistress when returning from market with a basket of
-provisions. They were overwhelmed by a snowstorm, and not discovered
-for three days; the woman was found to be dead; but the dog, which was
-lying by her side, was alive. The honest creature, however, had not
-touched the eatables in his mistress’s basket, but, as neighbouring
-villagers remembered when too late, had been endeavouring, on the
-evening of the storm, by whinings and sighs they could not comprehend,
-to induce them to follow it to where its mistress was.
-
-In his _Anecdotes of Dogs_, Captain Brown speaks of a mastiff that was
-locked up by mistake an entire day in a pantry where milk, butter,
-and meat were within reach. The hungry dog did not touch any of these
-things, although it ate voraciously as soon as food was given to it.
-
-Colonel Hamilton Smith is our authority for the anecdote of a dog that
-followed its owner, who was on horseback, and who contrived to drop
-some cakes from his basket as he cantered home. On his arrival, he
-found that his trusty follower had gathered up some of the lost cakes
-and carried them home and had gone for the remainder, which it duly
-returned with untasted.
-
-‘Dogs,’ says Colonel Smith, ‘have an instinctive comprehension of the
-nature of property;’ and it is really most remarkable, considering that
-they have not human speech, how frequently, and how well, they make
-us understand their views on this point. The colonel alludes to the
-case of a lady at Bath who was somewhat alarmed by the behaviour of a
-strange mastiff that seemed anxious to prevent her going on. Finding
-she had lost her veil, she turned back, the dog going before her until
-she came to the missing article and picked it up. As soon as the dog
-saw she had regained her property, it scampered off to its master.
-
-Anecdotes of this character are innumerable, as are also those of
-dogs reclaiming property belonging, or which has belonged, to their
-owners. Sir Patrick Walker furnishes a most valuable instance of this
-propensity in our canine cousins. A farmer having sold a flock of
-sheep to a dealer, lent him his dog to drive them home, a distance of
-thirty miles, desiring him to give the dog a meal at the journey’s end
-and tell it to go home. The drover found the dog so useful, that he
-resolved to steal it, and instead of sending it back, locked it up. The
-collie grew sulky, and at last effected its escape. Evidently deeming
-the drover had no more right to detain the sheep than he had to detain
-itself, the honest creature went into the field, collected all the
-sheep that had belonged to its master, and, to that person’s intense
-astonishment, drove the whole flock home again!
-
-Dogs are not only honest in themselves, but will not permit others to
-be dishonest. The late Grantley Berkeley was wont to tell of his two
-deerhounds ‘Smoker’ and Smoker’s son ‘Shark,’ a curiously suggestive
-instance of parental discipline. The two dogs were left alone in a room
-where luncheon was laid out. Smoker’s integrity was invincible; but his
-son had not yet learned to resist temptation. Through the window, Mr
-Berkeley noticed Shark, anxiously watched by its father, steal a cold
-tongue and drag it to the floor. ‘No sooner had he done so,’ says his
-master, ‘than the offended sire rushed upon him, rolled over him, beat
-him, and took away the tongue;’ after which Smoker retired gravely to
-the fireside.
-
-Mr Blaine, among many similar records, tells of a spaniel he had which
-protected the dinner-table, during its master’s absence, from the
-attempts of a cat which sought to make too intimate an acquaintance
-with the leg of mutton. Both the animals belonged to Mr Blaine, and
-were on friendly terms with each other; but one was honest, and the
-other was not.
-
-Hitherto, specimens of canine integrity have alone been cited; but
-it must not be supposed that dogs are the only animals which exhibit
-honest traits. Captain Gordon Stables, in his book on _Cats_, proves
-by several tales of real life that pussy is often as trustworthy as
-any dog. His own cat ‘Muffie’ is allowed her place on the table at
-meals, and never attempts to touch the viands, even when left alone,
-nor, what is more suggestive, never allows any one else to touch them.
-The present writer’s family had a white cat which for nearly twenty
-years was trusted with anything, until one luckless day, in its old
-age, its appetite overcame its reason; it broke the eighth commandment,
-and stole a piece of steak. The distress and shamefacedness of the
-poor animal after the crime were quite pathetic; she hid herself in
-dark corners; turned her back on observers, and for several days was
-so ashamed of herself, that she could not look any one in the face,
-although, poor old favourite, not a person reproached her for her first
-known offence against the laws of property.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK GOSSIP.
-
-
-More than two years ago we had the pleasure of noticing, with
-favourable comment, a new book, _Bits from Blinkbonny_, by ‘John
-Strathesk.’ It was a clever and entertaining book, presenting
-successive pictures of Scottish village life drawn with so much truth
-and character as at once to stamp them genuine portraitures.
-
-The author, encouraged no doubt by the well-merited success of the
-above volume, has issued a second, entitled _More Bits from Blinkbonny_
-(Edinburgh: Oliphant, Anderson, and Ferrier). ‘Continuations’ are
-proverbially risky, and we fear we cannot congratulate the author on
-having escaped the risk unscathed. The title will perhaps help the
-book temporarily—from a publisher’s point of view; but it would have
-fared better in the long-run had it been issued as an independent
-work on village life in Scotland, leaving the former volume to stand
-by itself. As it is, however, it is only when compared with its
-predecessor that this volume may be said to indicate any falling-off
-on the part of the author. It is full of bright and truthful sketches
-of the habits of life and modes of thought prevalent in the Scottish
-Lowlands, and can scarcely fail to be read with interest by those to
-whom such sketches appeal. Here is a story told by a barber regarding
-one of his customers. The customer referred to was a man who got his
-hair cut only twice a year, and when he came for this purpose it was
-always completely matted. The barber recommended him to ‘redd’ (that
-is, comb) his hair every day. ‘No very likely,’ was the reply; ‘it’s
-only redd every six months, and then it’s like to rive a’ the hair out
-o’ my head; if I was reddin’t every day, I wadna hae a hair left at the
-month’s end.’
-
-The volume, we may add, is tastefully printed and bound, while the
-pictorial illustrations give force to its local characterisations.
-
-⁂
-
-In _Photography for Amateurs_ (London: Cassell & Co.), Mr T. C.
-Hepworth, lecturer to the late Polytechnic Institution, gives excellent
-hints and instructions for beginners in this art. For those who
-have taken up photography as a pleasant occupation of their leisure
-hours, this book can be especially recommended. Most travellers in
-Central Africa, or in any little known part of our world, now find
-the photographic camera a necessary adjunct of their equipment, as,
-by its aid, rapid and correct pictures can be made of striking and
-picturesque scenes. This is equally true of a pedestrian at home, and
-Mr Hepworth looks back with delight to a walking tour in the Highlands,
-when he found so many lovely little nooks in the Trosachs and elsewhere
-admirably suited to his art. The effective delineation of objects by
-photography demands both care and experience; but there are now many
-amateurs of both sexes who can turn out very satisfactory pictures.
-Landscape photography is one thing, and portraiture is another and
-more difficult undertaking, for the inexperienced; but with the help
-of such a manual as this, which describes the necessary apparatus,
-negative-printing, fixing and washing the prints, &c., the way must be
-greatly smoothed for beginners in the art. The Introduction presents a
-concise history of the art up to the time when the use of gelatine dry
-plates made the practice of photography more convenient and possible
-for amateurs.
-
-⁂
-
-Lately we noticed in these pages the publication of a volume of
-music entitled _The Athole Collection of Dance Music of Scotland_,
-edited by Mr James Stewart Robertson (Edradynate). To this we have
-now to add by the same publishers, _The Killin Collection of Gaelic
-Songs_, with music and translations, by Mr Charles Stewart (Edinburgh,
-Maclachlan and Stewart). In selecting and arranging the melodies in
-this collection, the editor has borne in mind (1) Those that have
-already established themselves as favourites; (2) Those that have not
-been published until now, but which, in his opinion, are deserving of
-publication; (3) Some ancient chants to which the Fingalic poetry was
-sung; and (4) A few hymn tunes—one of them old, and the others on the
-lines of old Gaelic melody, in the hope of showing how admirably that
-melody is fitted for sacred song. Mr Stewart has been assisted by Mr
-Merryleas in arranging the harmonies and accompaniments; and in the
-supplying of English words for the Gaelic originals he has had the
-efficient help of such well-known pens as those of Principal Shairp,
-Professor Blackie, Dr Norman Macleod, and others. This collection of
-Gaelic music ought to have a hearty reception, not only from those who
-are familiar with Celtic surroundings, but also from students of music
-generally, as an important contribution to the history and archæology
-of the art.
-
-⁂
-
-The International Forestry Exhibition of 1884 gave a new impetus to
-the study of forestry. The importance of that science is now coming
-to be generally recognised, and private individuals, as well as those
-mysterious beings ‘the authorities,’ are bestowing some attention upon
-the practical application of its principles. Dr J. C. Brown has, more
-than any other living writer, identified himself with this important
-subject, and it is worthy of notice that all the works which have been
-produced by his prolific pen during the last few years are remarkable
-for their wide learning, profound and practical acquaintance with the
-science as practised all over the world, and happy style of expression.
-His _Introduction to the Study of Modern Forest Economy_ (Edinburgh:
-Oliver & Boyd) is no exception to this rule. Within very moderate
-limits, he has contrived to convey much information relative to the
-present state of forest-science.
-
-The facts relating to the time when the greater part of Europe was
-covered with forests are of great interest, and also the account
-here given of the consequences of their disappearance. And it may be
-observed that in addition to such generally admitted evils as the
-scarcity of timber and droughts—as to the latter of which Dr Brown
-gives us many graphic illustrations, collected during his residence
-at the Cape of Good Hope—it is alleged that many of those devastating
-inundations which occur with such alarming frequency in some countries
-are due to this cause. It is certainly worthy of notice that floods
-seldom originate in densely wooded lands, and have been largely
-prevented in France by artificial _reboisement_; while in Northern
-Germany, the same process has been very successfully followed in fixing
-down and utilising drift-sand.
-
-⁂
-
-To judge by the examples of stuffed pets which are to be seen in
-many private houses, there certainly seems to be room for a handbook
-on the art of stuffing fish, flesh, and fowl. This has at anyrate
-been supplied in _Practical Taxidermy_, by Montague Brown, F.Z.S.
-(London: L. Upcott Gill). As a ‘manual of instruction to the amateur in
-collecting, preserving, and setting up natural history specimens of all
-kinds,’ the volume leaves little to be desired. Not only has Mr Brown
-betrayed many of the secrets with which professional taxidermists have
-sought to surround their art, but he has particularised with minuteness
-and patience the whole _technique_ of skinning and preserving birds,
-mammals, fishes, and reptiles. Moreover, his book justifies its title,
-for it is above all things practical. Besides being a guide to the
-taxidermist’s art, the book gives a chapter on ‘dressing and softening
-skins and furs as leather.’
-
-⁂
-
-The study of the diseases of plants offers a very wide field to the
-inquirer, and it is only of recent years that investigations in this
-direction have come to be regarded as of economic importance. In spite
-of the strong prejudices of agriculturists of the old school, it is
-believed that vegetable pathology will prove to be of the greatest
-practical value, and that the time is approaching when the best means
-of preventing the attacks of disease will be a recognised branch of
-practical agriculture. This eventuality is certainly indicated by the
-appearance of _Diseases of Field and Garden Crops, chiefly such as are
-caused by Fungi_, by Worthington G. Smith (London: Macmillan & Co.).
-Originally delivered as addresses at the request of the officers of the
-Institute of Agriculture at the British Museum, South Kensington, these
-notes are very full and elaborate, while the admirable illustrations
-with which they are accompanied give them an additional value. Although
-necessarily technical, the definition of all the phenomena of the
-diseases has been given in familiar words, and all botanical terms
-have been explained. To illustrate the thoroughness with which the
-work has been done, having regard to the limits of the volume, we find
-under ‘Potatoes’ the new disease (_Peziza postuma_) which has made its
-appearance within the last few years, the dreaded disease produced by
-the parasitic fungus of the murrain, the smut, scab, and the old potato
-disease in its active and passive state. Then mildew and blight are
-treated of as affecting respectively onions, straw, turnips, cabbages,
-grass, corn, borage, barberries, parsnips, peas, and lettuces. There
-are also valuable notes upon the new diseases which are making such
-havoc with grass, wheat, barley, ryegrass, and onions; and their
-fungoid character is conclusively established. The book, like those on
-cognate subjects by Miss Ormerod, which have been already noticed in
-these pages, will amply repay careful study.
-
-
-
-
-THE MONTH:
-
-SCIENCE AND ARTS.
-
-
-The Society of Arts, London, has just commenced the one hundred and
-thirty-first session of its useful career. Professor Abel, the chairman
-of its Council, presided at the opening meeting, and his speech was a
-resumé of the progress of scientific research in various directions,
-in which a large number of persons are just now much interested. Being
-an electrician, he naturally devoted some time to the progress of
-electrical illumination, and pointed to the wonderful display at the
-recent International Health Exhibition as an illustration of the grand
-results now possible. He also expressed himself satisfied with the
-recent advances made in the direction of electric railways and other
-means of locomotion to which the comparatively new power has been
-experimentally applied, not omitting a very favourable reference to the
-telpherage system of Professor Fleeming Jenkin.
-
-The present position of the science of aërial navigation does not
-commend itself to Professor Abel as holding out much hope of future
-success. The recent experiments in France, during which an electrically
-propelled balloon was made to take more than one short excursion in
-a predetermined direction, merely prove that electricity can, under
-exceptionally favourable circumstances, be employed in this new
-service. But much has been done in making balloons serviceable for
-purposes of reconnaissance in warfare, the various details, such as
-making and transporting hydrogen gas in a compressed state to the field
-of action, having been successfully provided for.
-
-Attention was also called in Professor Abel’s address to compressed
-carbonic acid gas as a convenient source of power. Messrs Krupp, the
-great cannon-founders, at their extensive works at Essen are using
-this power for maintaining steel castings under pressure during the
-solidification of the metal. The earthen mould is closed directly it
-is filled with metal, after which the compressed gas is admitted to it
-from a reservoir of liquid carbonic acid, and in this way the space
-above the molten metal is filled with gas under very high pressure.
-A tendency to the formation of flaws and cavities, which nearly all
-metals are subject to—meaning, in the case of railway plant, broken
-bridges and fractured crank axles—is in this way completely avoided. It
-is believed that the employment of this gas under pressure—compressed,
-that is, to the liquid state and stored in iron bottles—has a very wide
-future before it in many other useful applications.
-
-Lastly, the important question of a pure water-supply engaged the
-professor’s attention, and his opinion on this point will be best given
-in his own words. ‘I venture,’ he says, ‘to think that our hope for
-a radical improvement in the water-supply of this great metropolis
-lies rather in the application of a simple, expeditious, cheap, and
-effective mode of chemical treatment to supplies from sources now in
-use, previous to their filtration, than in a complete change of our
-source of supply.’ It now, therefore, remains for future experimenters
-to devise some means by which water can be freed from those germs
-which, under various names, are now said to be responsible for the ills
-of mankind, and at the same time be left uncontaminated by any foreign
-matter. The problem seems to be a hard one to solve, but not harder
-than many which have been successfully conquered by modern science.
-
-Whilst our never-ending difficulties in the Soudan and South Africa
-are giving us costly information regarding those parts of the huge
-continent, Mr Joseph Thomson comes back from his hazardous journey in
-Eastern Africa to tell us about a tract of country with regard to which
-hardly anything before was known. If we refer to a map of Africa, we
-shall be readily able to note the position of Lake Victoria Nyanza,
-with which Mr H. M. Stanley’s name is identified. Between this lake
-and the coast lies the theatre of Mr Thomson’s wanderings. With an
-inadequate number of followers, the great majority of whom he describes
-as the very offscourings of Zanzibar villainy, this intrepid explorer
-prosecuted his work in the face of almost inconceivable perils. His
-contributions to geographical knowledge are of great importance, and
-his sole reward is the hearty reception accorded to him the other
-evening, when he gave a graphic account of his adventures to the Royal
-Geographical Society.
-
-At the recent Exhibition at Philadelphia, attention was directed in
-a rather comical but effective manner to the Edison electric lamp.
-A powerful lamp of this description was fastened to the head of a
-black man, concealed wires being carried down his body from it and
-connected with copper discs on the heels of his boots. This coloured
-gentleman—the term ‘darkie’ is here obviously inadmissible—could become
-luminous at will by simply placing his heels upon certain copper
-conductors laid along the floor, which were in circuit with the general
-system for lighting the building.
-
-A still more startling novelty in electric illumination was organised
-in New York a few weeks ago, an illustration of which is given in
-the _Scientific American_, published in that city. This consisted of
-an electric torchlight procession, which traversed several of the
-streets; and its object was, we presume, to advertise the Edison system
-of electric illumination. The procession may be best described as a
-hollow square formed by about three hundred men, each wearing a helmet,
-surmounted by a powerful electric lamp, and each holding the protected
-rope which carried the current from one to the other. In the centre of
-the square travelled a steam-engine and dynamo-machine—on trucks drawn
-by horses—followed by coal and water carts to supply the engine with
-its necessary food. Both horses and trucks were decorated with lamps,
-and the leader of the brilliant throng carried a staff tipped with
-radiance of two hundred candle-power.
-
-Our readers will learn with interest that Mr Clement Wragge, the
-pioneer of the meteorological station on the summit of Ben Nevis, is
-initiating a work of similar character in Australia. He has placed
-self-registering instruments on the top of Mount Lofty in connection
-with the Observatory at Sydney, and has appealed to the public to help
-in promoting scientific research by leaving them untouched.
-
-An explosion last July at a gunpowder factory in Lancashire, by which
-four men lost their lives, was caused by lightning. This disaster
-once more calls attention to the grave necessity which exists for
-buildings, and such buildings especially, to be protected by efficient
-lightning-conductors. From Colonel Ford’s Report upon the matter, which
-as Inspector of Explosives he has just presented to the Secretary of
-State, it appears that a conductor was fitted to the doomed building,
-but that it was a defective one. He states that there is no authentic
-case on record where a properly constructed lightning-conductor
-failed to do its duty; and recommends that these safeguards should be
-periodically examined and tested.
-
-From time to time, we have given in these pages the results of
-different experiments with the new method of preserving fodder, known
-as ensilage, and have expressed the hope that our farmers may find
-in it some compensation for recent bad times. We now learn from the
-agricultural returns for 1884 how widespread have been the experiments
-in this direction. These returns state that no fewer than six hundred
-and ten silos have been built in this country, of which five hundred
-and fourteen are to be found in England, sixty in Scotland, and
-thirty-six in Wales. Of the English counties, Norfolk heads the list
-with fifty-nine silos. In Scotland, Argyll has twelve, and is followed
-by Lanark and Renfrew, which counties have each half that number. The
-largest silo noted in the returns is in the county of Argyll. We may
-gather from these figures that the principle of ensilage as adapted to
-British farming has now entirely passed the experimental stage. (This
-important subject is further noticed in one of our Occasional Notes.
-See p. 829.)
-
-The novel proposal has lately been made by Mr W. O. Chambers, the
-Secretary of the National Fish-culture Association, that fishponds
-should be established on lands which are unavailable for ordinary
-crops, and that unprofitable agri-culture should give place to
-profitable aqua-culture. The fish which it is said can be made to
-accomplish this desirable result is the carp, and the German carp in
-particular. According to Mr Chambers, this fish attains in three years
-a weight of four pounds, and its fecundity is so great that it will
-yield an average of half a million eggs. He states that one acre of
-water will produce, with little or no expense for food or maintenance,
-five thousand fish per annum. In a word, we are recommended to do as
-did the monks of old when monastic buildings were dotted over the
-land. The remains of fish stews or ponds left to us by the monks can
-be pointed to in plenty, and the question arises, if fresh-water
-fish-culture is really so profitable, why were these ponds suffered to
-fall into disuse? Another consideration arises as to whether, supposing
-the scheme to be possible, modern taste, not compelled to eat fish on
-certain days, would find the fresh-water variety palatable?
-
-The British Rainfall Association is one of those unobtrusive societies
-which is doing quietly a work of great good. Begun some years back
-by Mr Symons, who set up a rain-gauge in his garden in London, and
-put himself in communication with a few friends in other parts of the
-country who did the same, the Association now numbers two thousand
-observers, spread over the United Kingdom. Mr Symons has lately
-published a curious diagram showing approximately the amount of rain
-which has fallen each year in Britain for two centuries. Of course
-such a record cannot pretend to be infallible, especially in the case
-of the earlier period which it covers, but it opens out more than one
-extremely interesting subject for inquiry.
-
-The year 1884, with its genial spring, its splendid summer, and its
-gorgeous autumn, has been one in which the rainfall has been somewhat
-below the average; and in some districts there have been positive
-symptoms of a water-famine. But if we look back to the last century,
-we find a period of drought between the years 1738 and 1750, which,
-if it recurred in the present day would, in Mr Symons’s opinion, dry
-up the water-supply of nearly every town in the kingdom. Another
-curious observation is this: an unusually wet year seems to occur at
-intervals of ten years, the years ending with the figure four being the
-favoured ones. Thus, 1854, ’64, ’74, and so on, were wet years. But at
-the same time another twelve-year cycle of dry years also occurs—the
-years 1824, ’36, ’48, and so on, having been particularly limited in
-their rainfall. In this year of grace 1884, the two cycles terminate
-together, as they must do every now and then. So we have a year of
-doubt, and know not until its close which influence has proved the
-stronger.
-
-Notwithstanding the rapid advance that has been made during the past
-few years in the beautiful art of photography, and the various new
-applications of it in different arts and sciences, in one particular
-it has stood still. A negative picture upon glass can, as every one
-knows, be produced in a fraction of a second. But the after-process
-of producing so-called positive prints on paper from that negative is
-a tedious business, depending in great measure upon the brilliancy
-of the weather. Messrs Marion of London have endeavoured to obviate
-these inconveniences by the manufacture of a special kind of paper,
-the nature of which they at present keep secret, and which they now
-offer to the photographic world. By this paper a negative can be made
-to yield a positive image in a few seconds, quite independently of
-daylight, for a gas jet or paraffin lamp is sufficient to affect its
-extreme sensitiveness. This invention will enable a photographer to
-send his patron a dozen or more copies of a portrait that has been
-taken the same day.
-
-The Bread Reform League is a useful society which has been formed to
-counteract the modern tendency to make what is properly called ‘the
-staff of life’ in such a way that many of its most useful ingredients
-are discarded. This society has, under the organisation of its
-energetic honorary secretary, Miss Yates, opened an Exhibition in
-London, where different samples of bread stuffs, treated in various
-ways, are shown. The profits of this Exhibition are to go to a ‘Penny
-Dinner and Breakfast Fund’ for the benefit of needy children attending
-the Board Schools. Hitherto, only food for the mind has been provided
-at these establishments, and the fact has recently leaked out that
-forty per cent. of the children arrive at some of them without any
-breakfast, and that at other schools twenty-eight per cent. often are
-dinnerless. It is a terribly sad story, and one very difficult to
-reconcile with the oft repeated boast that London is the richest city
-in the world.
-
-The _Graphic_ makes a very sensible suggestion with reference to
-those gloomy places called railway waiting-rooms. In similar places in
-France, the walls are often adorned with well-executed maps in relief,
-showing the country through which the line passes. Why should not this
-system be adopted in Britain? Constant travellers know to their cost
-that there are many railway stations in the kingdom where waiting-rooms
-are only too necessary. The cry of ‘All change here!’ often means that
-all will be compelled to wait here for an indefinite period. Now,
-if waiting-rooms were furnished with maps and framed notices giving
-some account of the history of the surrounding neighbourhood, its
-antiquities, natural beauties, &c., the dreary time might in many cases
-be turned into a pleasant visit, and would most infallibly do good as
-an advertisement to the railway itself.
-
-At a recent sale of art treasures at Cologne, there were put up to
-auction two curiosities which had been bought by their late possessor
-at some obscure town in Switzerland twenty-four years ago for the sum
-of twenty-three francs. One was a fifteenth-century cup of Venetian
-glass, and the other was a bundle of tapestry. At the last sale,
-these articles formed two distinct lots, and they realised more than
-thirty-six thousand francs—that is, fifteen hundred pounds sterling.
-
-The question of ‘musical pitch’ has for many years troubled musicians,
-each country adopting a note giving a different number of vibrations
-per second as its standard. In Britain, we have the Philharmonic
-pitch, and when any one talks of having his piano tuned up to concert
-pitch, the Philharmonic standard is the one indicated. For some
-reason, the modern pitch is made higher than that recognised in past
-days, and consequently the compositions of some of the best composers
-are now heard in a key higher than that intended by their authors.
-We understand that a conference upon the subject is shortly to be
-organised. In the meantime, the Italian War Minister has sought the
-opinions of living composers with reference to the best pitch for
-military bands. We need only refer to the reply of one of these, Verdi,
-whose name is as familiar in Britain as in the country of his birth.
-He writes in reference to the modern high pitch: ‘The lowering of
-the diapason will by no means impair the sonorousness and brilliancy
-of execution; it will, on the contrary, give something noble, full,
-majestic to the tone, which the strident effects of the higher pitch do
-not possess.’ He goes on to say that one pitch should be common to all
-nations. ‘The musical language is universal; why, therefore, should the
-note which is called A in Paris or Milan become B♭ in Rome?’
-
-A German paper gives some interesting statistics relative to ear
-disease, which have been collected from different aural surgeons.
-From these, we gather that males are more subject to ear disease than
-females. Out of every three middle-aged persons, there is found one who
-does not hear so well with one ear as with the other. The liability
-to disease increases from birth to the age of forty, after which it
-decreases as old age is reached. Of six thousand children examined,
-twenty-three per cent. show symptoms of ear disease, and thirty-two
-per cent. a deficiency of hearing power. With regard to the results
-of surgical treatment, we learn that of the total number of cases of
-all kinds, fifty-three per cent. are cured, and thirty per cent. are
-benefited. We fancy that these figures are rather more favourable than
-surgeons in this country can show, it being well known that aural cases
-are among the most uncertain and unsatisfactory to deal with.
-
-The steamship _Ionic_, which lately left this country for New Zealand,
-took out with her a large number of passengers of a description not
-usually met with on shipboard. They consisted of one hundred and
-fifty-eight stoats and weasels, whose mission in New Zealand will be to
-prey upon the rabbits which are fast overrunning that country. This is
-the third consignment which has left our shores. The little animals are
-accommodated in zinc-lined boxes, and during the forty days’ journey
-are calculated to require for their food more than two thousand live
-pigeons, which accompany them. The poor pigeons also require food, and
-therefore sixteen quarters of Indian corn were taken out for their
-consumption. Altogether, the expense to the colonial government must be
-something considerable, but will not be grudged if the required result
-is achieved.
-
-
-
-
-STOCK EXCHANGE MORALITY.
-
-
-Perhaps there are few institutions possessing attributes more
-diametrically opposed to one another than the Stock Exchange.
-Undoubtedly useful in its way, it nevertheless abounds in gross abuse.
-It is a necessity to the _bonâ fide_ investor, as indicating the
-locality where he can on the instant purchase or find a market for
-almost any stock in the world; yet it becomes a very hotbed of vice
-in the hands of the professional speculator. We apply this term to
-the man who fraudulently buys without the intention of paying, and
-worse still, sells what he does not possess. The method of so doing
-was fully explained in an article on ‘Corners’ in No. 19 of this
-_Journal_. Take a quite recent illustration of the two evils. Only a
-short time ago, a letter purporting to come from Mr Gladstone’s private
-secretary, addressed to the Secretary of the Exchange, was received
-by him, and posted up in the House. It stated that certain unexpected
-interests would be paid to the Peruvian bondholders. The price went
-up over thirty per cent. in a few moments, so that any one having
-bought ten thousand pounds-worth the day before, could have then sold
-them for nearly fourteen thousand pounds. It is more than probable
-that the writer of the forged letter had previously purchased without
-any intention of paying or ‘taking them off,’ and on the imposition
-taking effect, at once sold out not only those he possessed, but also
-more that he did not possess. Within half an hour, the forgery was
-discovered, when the price immediately fell the thirty per cent. it
-had just risen. Thus this impudent adventurer would not only secure an
-enormous profit by the rise, but by buying back on the fall the extra
-quantity he had sold on the rise, reap an additional profit.
-
-Now, it is this class of gambling, particularly the selling of what
-one does not possess, for the purpose of depressing the value of a
-certain stock to the prejudice of real holders, that constitutes the
-most unwholesome element of our Stock Exchange. Every conceivable
-artifice, the most consummate cunning, the most unblushing lies, are
-employed to depreciate a security which has either risen to a high
-figure on its merits, or else been puffed up artificially beforehand.
-Syndicates, as they are called—combinations of unprincipled men
-usually—are formed for the purpose, and there are indeed very few
-stocks existing at the present day that are not honoured by their
-especial syndicate. On any unfavourable rumour, more often concocted
-than otherwise, these eagle-eyed monsters swoop down upon their
-unsuspecting and inoffensive prey, attacking with the ferociousness of
-a bear, until, in sheer desperation, one victim after another succumbs,
-and sells out to the ‘bear’ at an enormous sacrifice, in order to save
-the remnant of his dwindled inheritance. If, as they were uttered in
-it, the falsehoods of a single day could but glue themselves to and
-stick on the walls of that building, it would be a feat impossible of
-achievement for a fly to crawl unscathed between them! Monte Carlo is
-bad; but an institution where more fortunes are dishonestly lost and
-won in a day than at that notorious gambling-place in a week, must be
-at least no better, if not infinitely worse.
-
-That there are men of integrity on ’Change, men of known principle,
-gentlemen in every sense of the word, admits of no doubt; and it is
-they who would first appreciate any effort, legislative or otherwise,
-for the suppression of the practices alluded to here. An act called
-‘Leeman’s Act’ was passed some years ago for the special protection
-of shareholders in banking establishments, which made it illegal to
-sell shares of any bank without first proving yourself to be a _bonâ
-fide_ holder of its shares, giving their respective numbers, &c. The
-same protection should be afforded to every shareholder, no matter of
-what stock; and the time has now arrived for the legislature to take
-the matter seriously in hand. The blessings conferred thereby would be
-inestimable.
-
-
-
-
-OCCASIONAL NOTES.
-
-
-MECHANICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF LIGHTNING STROKES.
-
-At the first monthly meeting for the session of the Royal
-Meteorological Society, a paper was read by Colonel the Honourable
-Arthur Parnell on ‘The Mechanical Characteristics of Lightning
-Strokes.’ The main objects of this paper were—first, to attempt to
-show that lightning is not a sort of electric fluid that descends
-from the clouds, injures buildings and persons in its course, and
-dissipates itself in the earth; but that it is a luminous manifestation
-of the explosion, caused by two equal forces springing towards each
-other simultaneously from the earth and the under surface of the
-inducing cloud, and coalescing or flying out nearly midway between the
-two plates of the electrical condenser formed by the earth and the
-cloud; secondly, to demonstrate that of these two forces, it is the
-earth-spring or upward force alone that injures buildings, persons, or
-other objects on the earth’s surface, and that constitutes tangibly
-what is rightly known as a lightning stroke. The author gave the
-details of two hundred and seventy-eight instances, the records of
-which were intended to demonstrate with more or less precision the
-existence of an upward direction in the force of the stroke. The theory
-of the descent of the electric fluid was suggested a few years ago by
-M. Colladon, a French Professor, and a notice of it will be found in
-_Chambers’s Journal_ for October 16, 1880.
-
-
-PERSONS KILLED BY WILD ANIMALS IN INDIA.
-
-A return published in the governmental _Gazette_ shows that the number
-of persons killed by wild animals and snakes in 1883 was 22,905, as
-against 22,125 in the previous year. Of these, 20,067 deaths were due
-to snake-bites, 985 to tigers, and 504 to other carnivora. The loss
-of cattle from the same cause amounted to 47,478 animals, being an
-increase of 771 on the figures for the previous year. It is somewhat
-remarkable that while the great majority of human deaths is set down
-to snakes, only 1644 cattle are said to have perished from that
-cause. Nearly three-fourths of the deaths occurred in Bengal and the
-North-west Provinces. The number of dangerous animals killed during
-the year was 19,890, and more than fifteen thousand pounds was paid in
-rewards. In regard to the fearful mortality from snake-bites, it might
-be suggested that the government should increase the rewards paid for
-bringing in the dead bodies of these reptiles, or otherwise take more
-active measures for their destruction.
-
-
-ENSILAGE.
-
-Mr Edward S. Blunt, Blaby Hill, Leicester, writing to the newspapers on
-the subject of Ensilage, says that he has recently opened two of his
-silos, and both have proved very satisfactory. He adds:
-
-‘Two years since I tried pits sunk in the ground without any building;
-last year I tried bricks cemented on the inside; this year I have tried
-wood, and am so pleased with the result that I certainly shall stick
-to it for the future. Notwithstanding its perishable nature, I believe
-it will compare most favourably as regards expense with anything else.
-I have used one-inch red deal boards, grooved and tongued, and these I
-find quite sufficient to resist what little lateral pressure there is.
-I have built my silos, four in number, partly in the ground and partly
-out. This may be considered merely as a matter of convenience, as I
-find the ensilage just as good in one part as in the other. I construct
-them in such a manner that they are easily put up and taken down again;
-thus at a very trifling cost they can be removed from one place to
-another. My first silo, a round one, only six feet in diameter, was
-filled in May with rough grass cut from the hedge-sides and from under
-some trees; neither cattle nor horses would eat this before it went
-into the silo, but both will eat it readily enough now that it is made
-into ensilage. My second silo, only eight feet in diameter, was first
-filled with pea-straw after the main crop had been gathered for market,
-and then refilled with the second cutting of clover; this is all very
-good quite up to the boards at the sides.
-
-‘I am weighting my silos this year with a press I have invented and
-patented. I obtain my weight by means of levers: two levers, each
-twenty feet long, with four hundredweight at the end, will give eight
-tons weight upon the silo, and being thoroughly continuous in its
-action, I am able to dispense with the labour and cost of moving so
-large a quantity of dead-weight.’ There is to be a model of the silo
-and press exhibited at the Smithfield Show, Islington.
-
-Mr Blunt further explains his method of filling the silo. He says:
-‘In nearly every instance I placed the grass or clover in the silo the
-day after it was cut, and as it was put in, it was well trampled. In
-three or four days the silage sank from twelve feet to eight, and as it
-sank I put in more. In about ten days from the time when the silo was
-first filled I put on the weight. The silage at this time had attained
-a temperature of from one hundred and forty to one hundred and fifty
-degrees. After the weight was applied, the temperature never rose any
-higher; but, at the end of a fortnight, had fallen to one hundred and
-thirty degrees, and then continued to fall. When the silage had sunk
-sufficiently low in the silo, I took off the weights and boards and
-filled up to the top again; this I repeated three or four times.’
-
-
-A HANDY GAS COOKING-STOVE.
-
-To his already extensive list of gas cooking apparatus, Mr Fletcher,
-Warrington, has just added what he calls his ‘Large Cottage Cooker,’
-which is simply a Gas cooking-stove in the cheapest and simplest
-form to be effective. For two pounds may be had a good roasting, and
-a fairly good pastry and bread oven, with a reversible boiler and
-grillers on the top. The body of the stove is made of galvanised iron,
-and the shelves are wrought iron. The height of the whole is thirty
-inches; space inside the oven twelve by twelve by sixteen inches.
-
-When we consider their convenience to housekeepers and the time which
-they save, we do not wonder that the use of such stoves is rapidly
-extending. The equable nature of the heat insures good cookery; a
-pot or kettle may be boiled on the burner in a few minutes, and the
-housewife may be kept quite easy as to the state of her kitchen fire
-for cooking purposes. In fact, in summer the kitchen fire may be
-dispensed with altogether. There is no smoke or ashes; pans and kettles
-are easier kept clean, and all this is done at but a trifling expense
-for gas—say one penny per hour for a medium stove. A potato steamer
-will be found a useful adjunct to the stove. By its aid, the potatoes,
-after being boiled, are finished off with steam in the upper part of
-the same vessel; and will be found drier and mealier than if cooked in
-an ordinary pot in the old way.
-
-
-RAILWAY PASSENGERS.
-
-A curious return has just been issued, showing the number of railway
-passengers who have travelled on all the railways in the United Kingdom
-during the half-year ending 30th June last, by which it will be seen
-that railway shareholders continue to be mainly indebted for their
-dividends to third-class traffic. During the above period the number
-of passengers who travelled were as follows, omitting fractions: First
-class, sixteen million one hundred thousand; second class, twenty-five
-million eight hundred thousand; third class, two hundred and forty-one
-million seven hundred thousand—the number of third-class passengers
-being more than five hundred per cent. in excess of first and second
-class combined; and the relative amount of receipts is in equal
-proportion. This remarkable difference applies to all the lines in
-common, the third-class passengers being in excess all throughout the
-kingdom. But the North London line is especially striking in regard
-to receipts, inasmuch as the receipts from the third-class passengers
-amounted to about eight hundred per cent. more than from the first
-and second combined! Within the same period, the Metropolitan and
-District Railways, and the North London Railway, carried over fifty
-million passengers; to which enormous return must be added, as showing
-the prodigious traffic within the area of the metropolis, that of
-the Great Eastern; London, Chatham, and Dover; London and Brighton;
-South-western; and South-eastern—a large portion of whose traffic is
-purely metropolitan.
-
-
-THE NEW ALBO-CARBON LIGHT.
-
-An experiment has been tried on a grand scale with this new and
-beautiful light, which as an illuminating medium will most certainly
-take a front place, whether the question is gas or electricity. The
-immense church belonging to the Oratory of St Philip Neri at Brompton
-has lately been illuminated by the employment of eight twelve-light,
-two six-light, and two four-light clusters constructed on this
-principle; and these have been found so effective, that the interior
-of this vast and very lofty building is filled with a brilliant, yet
-soft and subdued, light, which covers the area of the great church.
-The authorities of the Oratory have expressed their satisfaction at
-the favourable results of the experiment; and the capability of the
-Albo-carbon Light has been demonstrated as to bringing out clearly
-the architectural features of our churches, which, as a general rule,
-are not celebrated for the excellence of their various systems of
-gas-lighting. Therefore, any clear and brilliant light which will
-do this, and at the same time not add too much to the heat of the
-interior, should be hailed as an inestimable boon, and be one of the
-chief recommendations of this new and beautiful system.
-
-
-THE LAST OF OLD SION COLLEGE.
-
-One by one the old City landmarks are disappearing before the ruthless
-hand of the modern speculative builder. Many of the City churches
-have already been taken down and their sites covered with shops or
-warehouses; Charter House and St Paul’s School are both going; and
-Sion College is gone—to be opened in a new building on the Thames
-Embankment, into which the ancient stone front is to be transferred
-from London Wall. The College, of which all the City vicars and rectors
-are Fellows, was originally incorporated in 1630, but burnt down in the
-great fire of London, to be rebuilt shortly afterwards. The site is let
-for building, but the ancient wooden fittings of the Hall and Library
-have been sold. The fine library of books will be removed to the new
-building when complete.
-
-
-IRISH FEMALE EMIGRATION.
-
-Mr Vere Foster, of Belfast, has issued another appeal on behalf of
-his Irish Female Emigration Fund, which has already been the means of
-granting assisted passages to twenty thousand two hundred and fifty
-girls from the west of Ireland to the United States and colonies, at
-an expenditure of about thirty thousand pounds. This scheme has the
-support—as it should have—of the clergy of all denominations, and there
-is little doubt that if carefully gone about, it will prove a benefit
-both to Ireland and the colonies. Mr Foster, who has exhausted what he
-can spare of his own means and the funds placed at his disposal, has
-also given assistance by loan to four hundred girls, who have promised
-to repay him. We trust they may do so, as the good fortune of four
-hundred more hangs on this contingency.
-
-The purpose of the fund is the relief of present poverty in the densely
-peopled districts of the west of Ireland, by assisting the emigration
-of young women of good character of the farm and domestic-servant
-class. To such it gives a chance of well-doing impossible at home,
-where, if they marry and rear families, there is but a prospect of
-poverty for themselves and all concerned. The scheme is a resumption of
-that adopted with gratifying results immediately after the great famine
-of 1846-7.
-
-The plan which Mr Foster has had in operation for helping these young
-women for the past five years is a very simple one. Blank forms of
-application are issued to inquirers, when, if returned and approved of,
-vouchers to a certain value are issued in their favour. These vouchers
-are available within three months of issue for embarkation from
-Liverpool or from any port in Ireland where the necessary arrangements
-have been made. The promoter of this scheme does not approve of
-shipping young girls in large companies, but leaves them the utmost
-freedom in their choice of ship and port and time of embarkation. This
-enables them to take a passage when perhaps they can have the company
-of friends and neighbours. The young women thus assisted were between
-eighteen and thirty years of age; and it is satisfactory to know that
-most of them are going on well, and that many of them have sent home
-money to their friends more than once.
-
-One of the most satisfactory forms of good doing is to help people to
-help themselves. This is the object of the Irish Female Emigration Fund.
-
-
-EXPLORATION IN THE CHILIAN ARGENTINE ANDES.
-
-It would appear, from the proceedings of the Berlin Academy of
-Sciences, that Dr Güssfeldt’s explorations in the central Chilian
-Argentine Andes extended from November 1882 to March 1883, in the wild
-and lofty mountain region containing Aconcagua, the most elevated
-known point of the American continent, which lies between thirty-two
-and thirty-five degrees south latitude, and is bounded on the east by
-the Argentine Pampas, and on the west by the Pacific. Much of this
-journey being through new country, Dr Güssfeldt daily observed the
-great orographical and landscape features, the glacial conditions
-above the snow, the character of the vegetation, and the phenomena
-of rock-weathering. He also undertook the special duty of fixing
-positions astronomically and taking altitudes; for which purpose he
-was provided with nineteen instruments. The central Chilian Argentine
-Andes are sketched by the traveller as two parallel chains, having on
-the Pacific an outlying coast-range. The western chain is the true
-water-parting of the Atlantic and Pacific; and the eastern is in many
-places broken through by the waters rising in the great trough between
-the two chains, which has no well-defined valley formation, indications
-of a longitudinal depression being only found at intervals, constantly
-interrupted by cross ridges. This trough or basin, one hundred and
-eighty-five miles in length, is very difficult of exploration, and only
-three months of the year are available for the purpose. The doctor
-crossed the divide at four points, and obtained altitudes from nine
-thousand four hundred and ninety-four feet to twenty-two thousand
-eight hundred and sixty-seven feet, which was reached near the great
-volcano Aconcagua, not far from the commencement of Valle Hermoso.
-A most interesting question of the effect of rarefied air at great
-elevations upon the human frame is dwelt upon by the doctor. He states
-that he and his assistant attained twenty-one thousand and thirty feet
-on Aconcagua, and were able to work their scientific instruments at
-that height, though not in good condition, through anxiety and want of
-sleep. Their lungs were physically exhausted by the effort of speaking;
-but there was no flow of blood from nose or ears. He says that the
-so-called _puna_ can be resisted by mental effort and confidence,
-the only effect upon a properly trained individual being increased
-lung-action, and that any one who could work as he did at twenty-one
-thousand and thirty feet, could reach the top of Aconcagua, where the
-proportion of oxygen is only 6.2-3 per cent. less than at the former
-elevation.
-
-
-NATIVE TREATMENT OF DISEASES IN INDIA.
-
-A correspondent thus writes: Regarding the native treatment of
-diseases, one of the most curious things I ever witnessed was a
-half-clad native shouting through the streets of a country town:
-‘Does any one want back his sight?—one rupee only!’ as if he were
-hawking fruits or sweetmeats; and, to my astonishment, a patient soon
-presented himself to be operated on for cataract. There and then
-standing in the bazaar, the itinerant oculist took out his penknife
-and performed the operation in a few minutes, bound up the man’s
-eyes, and telling him to keep in the dark for a fortnight, received
-his fee of one rupee, and shouted his war-cry for more patients. The
-operation was almost unvaryingly successful; one instance among my
-servants being a woman of eighty, who had charge of my fowl-house, and
-had for many a day been sightless, except to distinguish light from
-darkness, and who in this way was successfully operated upon. Besides
-this operator are bone-setters, and medical rubbers male and female,
-especially represented by the hereditary low-caste _accoucheuse_ of
-each village, whose skill in shampooing is such an aid in her lowly
-calling—as the natives regard it—as to supplant much of the useless
-medicine and enforced rest of more civilised countries, and save
-endless mischief and suffering to her sex. What skill they have is of
-course almost purely traditional. None of the science of the world
-or British usage has yet altered in the slightest degree either the
-customs of the native or his horror at the idea of male physicians for
-women—especially in certain ailments—and their wonder at our obtuseness
-and disregard of propriety on so delicate a point. To supply a vacancy
-so long unfilled, lady-doctors have now appeared on the scene, who, it
-is hoped by reaching the zenanas, may reach the real source through
-which a higher enlightenment in India is possible. An immense field
-is open to them along with every encouragement; and were but some of
-the many young ladies at home who are straining health for a future
-pittance in one or other of the spheres of teaching, to turn their
-attention in this direction, they would find an opening of wider
-and greater utility before them, and a prospect of large and rapid
-emolument.
-
-
-
-
-LONG AGO.
-
-
- We wandered in a garden fair,
- When summer sun was shining,
- And laden was the balmy air
- With scent of roses rich and rare
- Around us intertwining.
- There trilled the thrush his glorious song;
- There thrilled the echoes all night long
- The warbling nightingale.
- You taught me all each songster said,
- And in each floweret’s heart you read
- Some hidden tale;
- You said their message I should know:
- ’Twas simple as an easy rhyme—
- But that was once upon a time
- Long ago!
-
- We parted in a woodland glade
- When autumn winds were sighing,
- In gold and russet bright arrayed
- A glowing canopy displayed
- The summer leaves a-dying;
- And but the wind, no other sound
- Than a leaf that fluttered to the ground,
- And a far-off robin singing,
- We heard. You guessed my thoughts, and said:
- ‘In spring, the swallows who have fled
- Will back be winging;
- The trees a brighter emerald show,
- The rose a richer crimson glow,
- Than any gleamed in this year’s prime’—
- All this was once upon a time
- Long ago!
-
- ‘What though a while we part,’ you cried;
- ‘What though the wind is sighing;
- The spring will autumn’s frost deride,
- The summer laugh at winter-tide,
- Long power to grief denying.
- We part, but never say farewell;
- Nor let the dead leaves to us tell
- A tale of changeless sorrow;
- Fair Spring comes sparkling down the dell,
- And in that morrow,
- If still upon this world below,
- We’ll meet ’neath yonder spreading lime’—
- You said so once upon a time
- Long ago!
-
- Perchance you have forgot all this;
- ’Twas long ago;
- Perchance you sneer at words like bliss
- And lovers’ woe.
- Or else you are amused—as I—
- To think we once swore we should die,
- If fate us parted;
- To think we vowed so soon to meet,
- And said in spring-time we would greet,
- Or else be broken-hearted.
- Strange—is it not?—to have fancied so.
- You smile, no doubt, such things to know;
- Or do you count it as a crime
- To think of once upon a time
- Long ago?
-
- LINDA GARDINER.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Volume I. of the Fifth Series of CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL is now completed,
-price Nine Shillings._
-
- * * * * *
-
-_A Title-page and Index, price One Penny, have been prepared, and may
-be ordered through any bookseller._
-
- * * * * *
-
-_An elegant cloth case for binding the whole of the numbers for 1884 is
-also ready._
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Back numbers to complete sets may at all times be had._
-
- * * * * *
-
-In our next Part will be given the opening chapters of an original
-Novel, entitled:
-
-A HOUSE DIVIDED AGAINST ITSELF.
-
-BY MRS OLIPHANT.
-
- * * * * *
-
-END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
-
-
-Printed and Published by W. and 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
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 52, VOL. I, DECEMBER 27,
-1884 ***
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-<p 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. 52, Vol. I, December 27, 1884, by Various</p>
-<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. 52, Vol. I, December 27, 1884</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Various</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: November 16, 2021 [eBook #66748]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>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)</p>
-<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. 52, VOL. I, DECEMBER 27, 1884 ***</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_817">{817}</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_ABE">THE STORY OF ABE.</a><br />
-<a href="#ONE_WOMANS_HISTORY">ONE WOMAN’S HISTORY.</a><br />
-<a href="#STUDIES_IN_ANIMAL_LIFE">STUDIES IN ANIMAL LIFE.</a><br />
-<a href="#BOOK_GOSSIP">BOOK GOSSIP.</a><br />
-<a href="#THE_MONTH">THE MONTH: SCIENCE AND ARTS.</a><br />
-<a href="#STOCK_EXCHANGE_MORALITY">STOCK EXCHANGE MORALITY.</a><br />
-<a href="#OCCASIONAL_NOTES">OCCASIONAL NOTES.</a><br />
-<a href="#LONG_AGO">LONG AGO.</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. 52.—Vol. I.</span></p>
-<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<em>d.</em></p>
-<p class="floatc">SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1884.</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_STORY_OF_ABE">THE STORY OF ABE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Those</span> who profess to know all about slavery
-will tell you that the negro was a thousand times
-happier as a slave than he is as a freeman. This
-may be true of some of the race; we do not
-enter into the question. The field-hand was
-in general an entirely irresponsible creature.
-He belonged to his master as thoroughly as the
-dogs and horses did, and he was of infinitely
-less importance. He had his daily task and his
-daily rations; he had also, if owned by a kind
-master, his little amusements, chief of which
-were the dance and the camp-meeting. Such a
-life would naturally not inspire one with any
-very high ambition. Give the plantation negro
-his hoe-cake and his bit of fat pork, his banjo,
-and the privilege of telling his experience to an
-unlimited chorus of ‘Halleluiahs!’ and ‘Bress
-de Lords!’ and you gave him perfect bliss. If
-the white man was his oppressor, he seldom
-knew it. ‘De family’ were, except in rare cases,
-admired and revered. And these poor creatures
-who did not own themselves, assumed and felt
-an air of proud proprietorship when speaking of
-the glories of their master’s state, and specially
-of each ‘young mas’r’ and ‘lily miss.’ ‘Young
-mas’r’ was at once their tyrant and their darling.
-I have heard a wedding ceremony wound up with,
-‘Hark, from de tombs a doleful sound!’ with
-all its concomitant tears and groans, because
-‘Marse Harry’ had so ordered.</p>
-
-<p>This state of things by no means came to an
-end with the civil war. Long after the slaves
-were freemen, and the broad acres had changed
-owners, and ‘old mas’r’ had fallen in battle or
-died broken-hearted, all that were left of the
-proud old name were still ‘de family’ to those
-loving hearts. While the writer lived in one of
-the border towns of Virginia, the mother of one
-of her maids appeared one day to ask for largess.
-‘We’se done goin’ to hab a party, Miss Anne,’
-said she; ‘an’ some ob de ladies dey gibs me
-flour; an’ some, eggs; an’ some, sugar; an’ ole
-missis she would a’ gib me a whole great big
-cake, but I up an’ tole her I had one.&mdash;It was
-a lie,’ she explained earnestly, fearing I would
-think further gifts unnecessary; ‘but some o’
-dem pore white trash say de missis hain’t got
-nuff to eat.’ And Chloe fairly sobbed.</p>
-
-<p>I ventured to ask the occasion of the festivity.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, ye see, Miss Anne,’ said Chloe, brightening,
-‘us cullud pussons is gettin’ married now
-just like white folks; an’ as my ole mammy
-’ll be eighty the day after to-morrow, Marse
-George said I had oughter gib her an’ father a
-weddin’.’</p>
-
-<p>Better late than never, thought I, as I added
-something to Chloe’s basket.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the plantation negroes and the
-often petted and spoiled household servants,
-there was among the coloured population of the
-South a certain proportion of skilled mechanics.
-These were not only, from their superior intelligence,
-more alive than the rest of their race to
-the hardship of slavery, but, from their greater
-value, more apt to suffer from it. Why, for
-instance, should Jim, a good blacksmith, trifle
-his time away on the plantation, where there
-was little or nothing for him to do, when Smith
-in the adjacent town will give Jim’s master,
-always in need of money, handsome payment
-for the slave’s services? The master is perhaps
-a kind man, and Smith known to be just the
-reverse, but hiring is not like selling. And so
-Jim goes, and toils in the sweat of his brow
-till Smith’s payment to the master is wrung out
-from him a thousandfold.</p>
-
-<p>It is of one of these mechanics I am going to
-tell you, and, excepting that the names of the
-persons connected with the story have been
-changed, every word of Abe’s story is true.</p>
-
-<p>In the heart of West Virginia, on the picturesque
-banks of the Great Kanawha River,
-there is a large tract of land once owned by
-Washington. Besides the niece who afterwards
-became Mrs Parke Custis, Washington had
-another in whom he was greatly interested, the
-daughter of his brother Lawrence. This lady,
-much against the wishes of her distinguished<span class="pagenum" id="Page_818">{818}</span>
-uncle, became the wife of Major Parks of Baltimore;
-and when this gallant officer, fulfilling
-Washington’s predictions, had spent all he could
-lay his hands upon and a great deal more, the
-couple, for his sins, were banished to what was
-then the wilderness of Western Virginia. Their
-daughter in course of time married Mr Prescott,
-a rich young planter from the east, whose money,
-laid out on the Washington acres, produced a
-flourishing plantation; while on one of the most
-romantic sites on the Kanawha arose a noble
-mansion known as Prescott Place. Here Mrs
-Prescott exercised for years a lavish hospitality;
-and here were preserved, until fire consumed
-them and the mansion together, sundry relics of
-Washington, chief of which was a characteristic
-letter to his niece, written before her marriage,
-warning her that as she made her bed, so she
-should lie upon it.</p>
-
-<p>When young Laura Prescott married gay Dick
-Randolph, Abe, the son of Mr Prescott’s body-servant,
-was one of numerous presents of like
-kind. Abe was an excellent carpenter; and when
-dark days came to the Prescotts and Randolphs,
-it was Abe himself who persuaded ‘Marse Dick’
-to sell him to a man from the north named
-Hartley, who from being a slave-driver had risen
-to be a slave-owner, and who had the reputation
-of being a very demon. Again and again Hartley
-offered a tempting price, and again and again Dick
-Randolph refused it; nor would he have yielded
-at last, hard pressed as he was, had he not felt
-that Abe, being about to be hired to a builder
-in the neighbourhood, would be really out of
-Hartley’s power. And when, some months after
-the sale, Abe walked over to Prescott Place to tell
-that his new master was going to allow him
-to purchase his freedom by working over-hours,
-Mr Randolph felt quite at ease about the faithful
-fellow. A price being set by Hartley, Abe set
-himself cheerfully to earn it&mdash;for years commencing
-his day’s work with the dawn, and
-carrying it far into the night.</p>
-
-<p>But the general opinion of Hartley had not,
-it was soon seen, done him injustice. Twice,
-thrice, was the price of Abe’s freedom raised just
-as he seemed on the eve of gaining it; and after
-the third disappointment, the slave became utterly
-hopeless, and, abandoning all extra labour, spent
-his spare hours in the darkest corner of his
-wretched cabin, brooding over his wrongs. This
-was by no means what Hartley intended; so,
-to encourage Abe, he was led to promise, in the
-presence of Mr Randolph, that he would abide by
-the sum last named. In law, of course, the promise
-was good for nothing; but the <i>ci-devant</i>
-slave-driver was supposed to have some regard
-for public opinion. In vain Mr Randolph offered
-a higher price than was demanded for the slave
-himself. Abe should buy himself, Hartley said,
-or he should not be bought at all.</p>
-
-<p>Three years had passed, when Abe, getting a
-half-holiday from the builder who hired him, set
-off for Hartley’s with the stipulated sum. On
-his way there he stopped at Prescott Place to tell
-the good news. This was just at the beginning
-of the war; and Mr Randolph, being about to
-join the army, had promised to take Abe with
-him as his servant.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning, while breakfast was being
-served at Prescott Place, a loud scuffle was heard
-at the dining-room door, and Hartley, using his
-whip freely on the servant who tried to stop
-him, strode into the room livid with passion,
-and flourishing his whip in Mr Randolph’s face,
-yelled, with an oath: ‘Where is that nigger?’</p>
-
-<p>Dick Randolph’s blood was up in a moment,
-but he was first of all a gentleman. ‘Do you
-see my wife?’ he asked sternly.</p>
-
-<p>A coarse response from Hartley was all the
-reply, and in a moment the ruffian had measured
-his length on the floor; nor did he remember
-more till he found himself struggling in a pool
-of not very clean water by the highway. The
-negroes had received orders to take him off the
-plantation, and the precise spot where they were
-to deposit him not having been mentioned, they
-had selected one in accordance with his deserts.</p>
-
-<p>Hartley thought it prudent to disappear for
-a time. Whether he was simply a coward, or
-feared that some ugly facts connected with the
-case might leak out, was never known. Abe
-himself was not seen or heard of; and his story,
-except by a few, was soon, in these eventful
-times, forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>But the facts of the case were these: on the
-evening referred to, Abe had found his master
-pleasant, and even jocular, wishing he had not
-given the promise, offering to buy Abe back
-again, and so on. At last he turned to business.
-The money was produced and counted.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well?’ said Hartley, inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p>Abe did not understand. Hartley seemed waiting
-for something. At last he spoke plainly.
-‘Where is the rest of the money?’</p>
-
-<p>The scoundrel had made up his mind to deny
-having received the previous payments, to deny
-all knowledge even of sums he had meanly
-borrowed from his slave, and to hand him back
-to helpless, hopeless slavery.</p>
-
-<p>That night Abe appeared at the cabin of his
-wife, a slave on a distant plantation. There he
-briefly told the story of his wrongs, adding:
-‘I am going to-night. It may be long before
-you see me; but if it is fifty years, I will
-come back for you, if you are faithful.’</p>
-
-<p>Phyllis promised to be true; and kept her
-promise as slaves do; that is, she married&mdash;they
-called it marrying&mdash;the first man who asked
-her.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The five years of the war had come and gone,
-and ten years more. Major Randolph, past
-middle age, and utterly ruined, was trying, in
-a small Virginian town, to take up the profession
-of law, which, in happier days, he had studied,
-but had not cared to practise; and the widow
-of Hartley, who had meantime died bankrupt,
-was keeping a boarding-house in the same
-place; when, on a certain forenoon, there was
-shown into the Randolphs’ parlour a tall, portly,
-middle-aged man, gentlemanly in appearance, and
-thoroughly well dressed, but perfectly black. The
-Irish maid-of-all-work had forgiven his colour for
-the sake of his clothes.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Randolph happened to be at home, and it
-was to him the stranger eagerly turned. ‘Marse
-Dick!’ he cried.</p>
-
-<p>‘Abe!’</p>
-
-<p>And Abe it was. And there were tears in at
-least three pairs of eyes as the master and slave
-of former days shook hands.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_819">{819}</span></p>
-
-<p>Well, Abe might have been a long-lost brother,
-Major Randolph was so glad to see him. He
-made him tell his adventures from the time he
-left Hartley until he appeared in the Randolphs’
-parlour; he showed him his sons and his
-daughters, and rattled on about old days. But
-never a word did he say about wounds and losses
-and disappointments; though it could hardly
-have escaped Abe’s affectionate eyes that, while
-his own outer man bore such marks of prosperity,
-his old master’s had grown actually shabby.</p>
-
-<p>By ways and means generally forthcoming to
-border negroes who had the courage and prudence
-to avail themselves of them, Abe had gone northward
-first, returning to Virginia, however, the
-moment the emancipation proclamation was issued.
-Hearing of Major Randolph’s absence and his
-own wife’s unfaithfulness, he had wandered
-farther and farther from his old home, and had
-settled at last in a far south-western state. There
-he had worked steadily; at first on shares, then
-for himself; till at the time of his visit to
-Virginia, he was the manager and largest shareholder
-of the celebrated Hot Springs of A&mdash;&mdash;.</p>
-
-<p>Need I say how earnestly ‘Marse Dick’ was
-besought to try the springs for his rheumatism,
-to bring ‘Miss Laura’ and the family, to enjoy
-horses and carriages, to fish and hunt, and generally
-to enter into possession?</p>
-
-<p>Old Mrs Prescott, who still lived, shared with
-her son and daughter the pleasure of Abe’s return,
-and the young Randolphs listened with delight
-to such an interesting romance. And yet&mdash;truth
-compels me to confess that the eldest daughter
-gave more than one uneasy glance into the street,
-and was literally sitting on thorns. What if
-a morning caller should find a negro in the
-Randolph parlour? Even kind Mrs Randolph
-had a feeling of uneasiness as the early dinner-hour
-approached. But the master guessed at
-no such embarrassments. The hour came; the
-bell rang, and as easily and cordially Major
-Randolph said: ‘You will come to dinner with
-us, Abe.’</p>
-
-<p>‘After you and the family, Marse Dick.’</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>With</i> me and the family,’ replied Major
-Randolph.</p>
-
-<p>And though Abe earnestly begged to be allowed
-to wait, into the dining-room he went. And I
-may add, that had the most curious or mischievous
-eyes been on the watch for solecisms of any kind,
-they would have been disappointed.</p>
-
-<p>‘What would you have had me do?’ said
-Major Randolph afterwards. ‘There was Abe,
-dying to lavish on his old master all he possessed.
-Was I to be outdone in hospitality by
-my own old slave?’</p>
-
-<p>‘And Abe had just as much delicacy as papa,’
-owned Miss Randolph, who felt she could afford
-to praise when the critical period was safely over&mdash;a
-merciful providence having kept away visitors.
-‘He spoke just as good English as we do. But
-did you notice that, though he spoke of Mr
-Hartley and Mr everybody else, he always called
-papa “Marse Dick?”’</p>
-
-<p>Before Abe left town, he had put a little bit
-of business in Mr Randolph’s hands&mdash;no other
-than the settlement of a mortgage that threatened
-to ruin Mrs Hartley and her children. ‘O Marse
-Dick!’ he said, ‘I have been keeping away till
-I was rich enough to buy that man up; and then
-I meant to meet him face to face and ask him
-what he thought of himself. I doubt if I could
-have kept my hands off him; and now he is gone.
-I hope the good Lord will forgive me!’</p>
-
-<p>Were I writing a romance, I might tell how
-Abe made his old master’s fortune. But I have
-given you a poor idea of Major Randolph if I
-have led you to imagine he would allow himself
-to profit by his old servant’s prosperity in the
-smallest degree. If Abe told him of a good investment,
-he had no money. If a loan was modestly
-and hesitatingly offered, on the plea that Abe
-wished to place money at interest, and that there
-were so few whom he could trust, it was kindly
-but decidedly refused. And so Abe grows richer,
-and Major Randolph poorer than ever. The old-time
-slaves, with many misty ideas on the subject
-of religion, had one article of belief which they
-understood clearly, and for which they would
-have suffered martyrdom&mdash;namely, that in the
-next world it would be their turn to sit at
-table and eat the good things, while the proud
-white folks should ‘grease de griddle and turn
-de cakes.’ The doctrine is founded on the principle
-of compensation, but the compensation in
-some cases begins here.</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 XVI.</h3>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">I have</span> something of serious import to say to
-you,’ were Mora’s first words as he went forward
-a few steps and then halted. ‘Hector Laroche, do
-you know that you are in imminent danger of
-your life?’</p>
-
-<p>He gave a little start and looked at her fixedly
-for a moment or two. ‘No; I am not aware of
-anything of the kind,’ he answered with a sneer.
-‘Madame, you are oracular!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, hush! This is no time for levity. Will
-you not believe me when I tell you that your
-life is in danger? The assassins have tracked
-you&mdash;they have followed you here&mdash;they have
-sworn to take your life!’</p>
-
-<p>‘The assassins! What assassins?’ he shrieked
-as he bounded to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>‘Can you not guess? Think, Laroche, think!
-Oh, how like you it was to turn traitor to the
-cause to which you had bound yourself by oath,
-and to betray your comrades! But your treachery
-has been discovered. The penalty you cannot be
-ignorant of.’</p>
-
-<p>He had turned livid with terror while Mora was
-speaking. A glassy film had overspread his eyes,
-which looked dilated to twice their ordinary size.
-His gaze wandered from corner to corner of the
-room with a sort of stealthy fright, as if dreading
-that an assassin might spring upon him at any
-moment. A cold perspiration bathed him from
-head to foot; he trembled in every limb, and
-would have fallen had he not supported himself
-with his back and hands against the bureau.</p>
-
-<p>‘How am I to know that what you have just
-told me has any truth in it?’ he asked at length,
-with a strange hoarseness in his voice. ‘What
-should you, Mora De Vigne, know of secret<span class="pagenum" id="Page_820">{820}</span>
-societies, plots, and conspiracies? Who should
-speak to you of these things, the secrets of which
-are known to the initiated alone? No; it is a
-lie&mdash;a lie! Some wretched fool has imposed
-upon you, or else you have concocted this story
-yourself in order to frighten me away.’</p>
-
-<p>Looking straight at him, Mora said slowly:
-‘<i>The right hand of the Czar is frozen.</i>’</p>
-
-<p>A low cry burst from the wretched man’s lips;
-he buried his face in his hands and fell on his
-knees; he knew that his doom was sealed.</p>
-
-<p>A pang of compassion shot through Mora’s
-heart. She made a step or two forward and
-then drew back with a shudder. All her
-womanly instincts revolted against the man.
-Not even at that supreme moment could she
-bring herself to go near him. ‘You must go
-away at once&mdash;to-night,’ she said. ‘To-morrow
-may be too late.’ She found herself repeating
-the very words of Jules.</p>
-
-<p>‘Go away&mdash;where?’ he asked with a groan,
-turning his haggard face full upon her. ‘All
-places are alike. There is no escape&mdash;none!’ He
-rose to his feet and staggered across the room to
-the ottoman, on which he sank, and buried his
-face in the cushions.</p>
-
-<p>‘Will you allow me to send for Colonel Woodruffe?
-He will be able to counsel you far better
-than I as to what had best be done for your
-safety.’</p>
-
-<p>As Laroche neither assented nor dissented,
-Nanette was at once despatched in quest of the
-colonel, who was still with Sir William. He
-followed close on Nanette’s heels. A few words
-aside from Mora put him in possession of the
-facts of the case.</p>
-
-<p>‘Laroche, this is a bad business&mdash;a very bad
-business,’ he said as he crossed to the ottoman
-and laid a hand on the Frenchman’s shoulder.
-‘But sit up, and let us look the situation in the
-face. Whining is of no use&mdash;never is. We have
-to act. While there’s life there’s hope, and I
-for one don’t despair of dragging you out of this
-dilemma, however awkward it may look just
-now.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, monsieur; there is no hope&mdash;none,’
-cried Laroche. ‘They have tracked me here&mdash;they
-will track me everywhere, till one day their
-opportunity will arrive. I know&mdash;I know!’ His
-nervous agitation was still so extreme that the
-words seemed as if they could scarcely form
-themselves on his lips.</p>
-
-<p>‘Here&mdash;drink this,’ said the colonel, handing
-him a glass containing brandy, which Mora had
-brought at his request.</p>
-
-<p>Laroche swallowed the spirit greedily. It
-helped to steady his nerves for the time being, if
-it did him no other good.</p>
-
-<p>‘What Madame De Vigne says is quite true,’
-resumed the colonel. ‘You must get away from
-this place without an hour’s delay. I have
-thought of a plan which will at least insure your
-safety for a little while to come; after that, you
-will have to shift for yourself. I knew this part
-of the country well when a boy. There is a
-farmhouse kept by an old acquaintance of mine
-in a lonely valley about two miles from the
-opposite shore of the lake. I will take you there
-to-night, and you can stay there till you have
-decided what your future plans shall be.’</p>
-
-<p>‘O monsieur, you are too good! I have not
-deserved this,’ cried the abject wretch.</p>
-
-<p>‘You speak the truth, Laroche; you have not
-deserved it,’ answered the other gravely. ‘How
-soon can you be ready to start?’</p>
-
-<p>‘In ten minutes, monsieur.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Good.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But I shall need money, monsieur.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It shall be found you. Have you any idea
-as to what your plans will be after you leave the
-farmhouse?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I shall endeavour to make my way to London&mdash;it
-is the best hiding-place in the world for those
-who know it. There I shall lie quiet for a
-little while. After that’&mdash;&mdash; He ended with an
-expressive lifting of his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>‘If you will get ready, then,’ said the colonel.
-‘I too have a few arrangements to make.’</p>
-
-<p>Laroche nodded; then he went to the door,
-opened it, and gazed furtively up and down the
-corridor. Not a creature was in sight. He darted
-away and sped up the thickly carpeted staircase
-as noiselessly as a shadow.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel sent Nanette in search of Archie
-Ridsdale. He came at once, and as soon as the
-situation of affairs had been partially explained
-to him, he was despatched with a message to
-the boathouse. Then the colonel in his turn
-left the room. He was only absent three or four
-minutes, and when he came back he was carrying
-a small roll of notes in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Mora had subsided into an easy-chair from the
-moment Colonel Woodruffe had taken charge of
-the situation, and there she was still sitting.
-Who could have analysed her thoughts during
-the last painful quarter of an hour, or have
-adequately described the varied phases of emotion
-which ebbed and flowed through her heart!</p>
-
-<p>Immediately following on the return of the
-colonel, came Archie Ridsdale. Each of them
-was muffled in his ulster, for although the storm
-had not yet broken over the valley, it might
-do so at any moment.</p>
-
-<p>A minute later the door opened and Laroche
-stole in. For a moment or two none of them
-recognised him. His black beard and moustache
-had vanished; a grizzled wig with long lanky
-tufts of hair, which fell on his coat-collar behind,
-covered his head; his eyebrows had been manipulated
-to match the wig; while a pair of heavy
-horn-rimmed spectacles served to disguise him
-still further. There was no longer the slightest
-trace of a Parisian dandy in his appearance; his
-clothes were homely, and of the fashion of some
-years previously. He looked like a small provincial
-shopkeeper who might have come over to
-England for a holiday. But no disguise could
-hide the pallor of his face, the nervous twitching
-of his thin lips, or the abject terror that lurked
-in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Archie and the colonel stood up. The moment
-of departure had come. Laroche turned to his
-wife, who had also risen. Placing both his hands
-over his heart and bending low in front of her,
-he said in a husky whisper: ‘Mora, pardon,
-pardon! We shall never meet again.’</p>
-
-<p>For a moment or two she hesitated; all the
-woman within her was profoundly moved; then<span class="pagenum" id="Page_821">{821}</span>
-she went up to him. ‘Hector, with my whole
-heart I forgive you!’ she said.</p>
-
-<p>That was their farewell. A moment later Mora
-heard the door close behind the three men.</p>
-
-<p>She turned down the lamp and drew back one
-of the curtains. It was pitch-dark outside; not
-a star was visible. She opened the window a
-little way, in order that she might watch as well
-as listen. Presently she heard a faint noise of
-footsteps on the gravel below. The three men
-had left the hotel by way of the French-window
-in the sitting-room on the ground floor.</p>
-
-<p>Mora stood with straining eyes and ears. Suddenly
-the darkness was shivered by a quivering
-flash of lightning, and in that instant she saw
-the figures of the three men crossing the slope
-of the hill on their way to the lake. At the
-same time, she imagined she saw the stealthy
-form of Santelle disappear behind a clump of
-laurel, as if he were watching the retreating
-figures.&mdash;Will he have known Laroche in spite
-of his disguise?</p>
-
-<p>The thought sent a cold tremor through her
-heart&mdash;half of horror, half of regret. But darkness
-had come again in the twinkling of an eye,
-and she saw nothing more. With a heavy sigh,
-she let the curtain drop into its place just as the
-door opened and Clarice entered the room.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XVII.&mdash;CONCLUSION.</h3>
-
-<p>Three weeks had passed since the flight of
-Hector Laroche, when one wet forenoon Colonel
-Woodruffe, in company with a constable in plain
-clothes, found himself at the door of a low
-lodging-house in a frowsy-looking street in close
-proximity to one of the docks. The landlord of
-the house admitted the visitors, and ushering
-them up-stairs, unlocked the door of a small
-bedroom. There, on a ragged straw mattress,
-lay the dead body of Hector Laroche. A paragraph
-in the morning’s paper had aroused the
-suspicions of Colonel Woodruffe, who happened
-to be in London at the time, and he at once
-ordered a cab and set his face eastward.</p>
-
-<p>The statement of the landlord of the lodging-house
-was to the effect that Laroche had lodged
-with him for little more than a week at the
-time of his death; that he was exceedingly quiet
-and well behaved; that he lay in bed nearly
-the whole day, reading the newspapers and
-French novels, and having a bottle of brandy at
-his elbow; and that he rarely went out of doors
-till after nightfall, and then only for a short time.
-On the Tuesday, contrary to his custom, he had
-gone out about noon, and on returning a little
-before dusk, had remarked to the landlord that
-he should only require his bed for one night
-more, as he had just secured a berth on board
-a steamer which was to sail the following day.
-At that time, he appeared to be somewhat the
-worse for drink. He went up-stairs soon afterwards,
-and nothing more was seen or heard of
-him. As he was in the habit of not rising till
-late, no comment was made on his non-appearance
-next morning; and it was not till two o’clock
-in the afternoon that the landlord knocked at
-his door. There being no reply to his summons,
-he opened the door and went in. There he found
-Laroche, lying on his bed as if asleep, and dressed,
-except for his coat and waistcoat. But over his
-face was spread a fine cambric handkerchief, which
-medical evidence afterwards proved to have been
-saturated with chloroform. On the table by his
-side were a novel, a half-emptied bottle of cognac,
-a phial, uncorked, containing chloroform, and the
-dead man’s watch and chain. In one of his
-pockets was found a purse containing a considerable
-sum in notes and gold.</p>
-
-<p>At the inquest, the tendency of the evidence
-pointed strongly to the probability of the deceased
-having committed suicide while under the temporary
-influence of strong drink. There was only
-one piece of evidence forthcoming which served
-in some measure to invalidate that assumption.
-The landlord of the house deposed to the fact
-of the lock of the bedroom door having been
-secretly tampered with, so that while the door
-was to all appearance fastened on the inside,
-it could be opened without difficulty from without.
-As, however, there was no evidence forthcoming
-to implicate any one in particular with
-the act in question, and as the property of the
-dead man had apparently not been touched, the
-jury had no option but to bring in an open
-verdict. The evidence tendered by Colonel
-Woodruffe was confined entirely to the question
-of identity.</p>
-
-<p>Two days later he attended Laroche’s funeral&mdash;the
-solitary ‘mourner’ there. This he did out
-of respect for Mora.</p>
-
-<p>Whether Laroche’s death was the result of his
-own rash act, or whether it was due to certain
-other agencies of which mention has previously
-been made, is one of those mysteries respecting
-which the world will probably never be any
-wiser than it is now.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Lady Renshaw was as good as her word when
-she stated that she had discarded her niece for
-ever. But it is possible that she might not have
-proved quite so obdurate had she not at the
-same time found herself so thoroughly checkmated
-in other directions. Her surprise at finding Mr
-Etheridge transformed into Sir William Ridsdale,
-and the knowledge that all her scheming to secure
-the rich baronet’s son for Miss Wynter had not
-only proved futile, but had evidently been seen
-through from the first by the keen-eyed Sir
-William, combined with her chagrin that Madame
-De Vigne, instead of being regarded in the light
-of an adventuress, was looked upon as a person
-whose friendship any one might feel proud to
-claim, following so close upon Bella’s ‘heartless
-duplicity,’ proved more than she had the courage
-to face. And when, in addition, a horrid suspicion
-began to shape itself in her mind that
-Dr M‘Murdo&mdash;no doubt instigated thereto by
-that odious Miss Gaisford&mdash;instead of having
-fallen in love with her, as she so fondly dreamed,
-had been merely trying to make her look ridiculous,
-and amuse himself at the same time&mdash;it
-was no wonder she made up her mind that the
-sooner she left the <i>Palatine</i> and its inmates behind
-her the better.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it fell out next morning that when Bella,
-intent on forgiveness and reconciliation, knocked
-at her aunt’s door, there came no response; after
-which a very brief inquiry sufficed to establish
-the fact that Lady Renshaw had risen at some
-abnormally early hour, and, accompanied by her
-maid, had started southward by the first train.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_822">{822}</span>
-She had left behind her no word or message
-of any kind for the dismayed girl, who found
-herself thus cruelly deserted in the huge hotel.</p>
-
-<p>But Miss Pen came to the rescue almost before
-Bella in her bewilderment had time fully to
-realise the fact of her aunt’s desertion. The little
-circle of which Miss Pen formed a component
-part welcomed her as one of themselves, now
-that the incubus of Lady Renshaw’s presence was
-removed; and Bella quickly found that what she
-had lost in one direction was far more than
-made up to her in others. When, two days later,
-the party at the <i>Palatine</i> broke up, Miss Wynter
-accompanied the Rev. Septimus and his sister
-to their home in the Midlands, there to remain
-till Mr Dulcimer was prepared to claim her as
-his wife. And there, some three months later,
-a quiet wedding took place, our good vicar tying
-the knot, Sir William himself giving away the
-bride, who had not failed to become a great
-favourite with him, Archie acting as best-man,
-and Miss Loraine as bridesmaid-in-chief. Miss
-Pen played a voluntary on the organ, and there
-was a mist of tears in her eyes as she did so.
-Some vague dream of the past, never to be realised
-in this world, may perchance have been busy in
-her mind at the time.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When spring came round again, the worthy
-vicar was called upon to tie two more nuptial
-knots. Mora and her sister were married
-on the same day. Archie and his wife went
-abroad for a year’s travel; and now that they are
-back, Clarice, who has far greater faith in her
-husband’s abilities than he has himself, has made
-up her mind that Archie must go into parliament.
-She firmly believes that if he will only do so,
-there is a brilliant future before him. Time
-will prove.</p>
-
-<p>Sir William has ventured to spend the last
-two winters in England, and, somewhat to his
-surprise, has found himself none the worse in
-health for doing so. He divides his time pretty
-equally between his son’s house and that of
-Colonel Woodruffe. He did not forget our friend
-Mr Dulcimer when an opportunity presented
-itself. Through his influence, Dick was appointed
-to the secretaryship of a large public Company,
-the salary of which just doubled his previous
-income. Meanwhile, his wife had not found
-existence even in a small suburban villa by any
-means so unendurable as she at one time professed
-to fear it would be. In truth, her high
-spirits and good temper are enough to brighten
-any home. She has all the appearance of being
-one of the happiest women in England.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, what is there left to record of her who
-has been the central figure of our little history?
-Happily, not much. Are not the happiest lives
-those of which there is nothing to relate? With
-Mora the days of storm and stress are over;
-the past with all its wretchedness and misery
-seems little more than a hideous dream. She is
-happy in the present, and, so far as human
-fallibility can judge, there seems every prospect
-of her continuing so in time to come. Dr Mac
-came all the way from Aberdeen to attend her
-marriage. As he shook hands with her after
-the ceremony, he said: ‘What a pity, my dear
-madame, what a great pity it is that Providence
-did not bless you with a twin-sister!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why so, doctor?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Because, in that case, there is just a possibility
-that another poor mortal in addition to my
-friend the colonel might have been made a happy
-man to-day.’</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Note.</i>&mdash;All dramatic rights in the foregoing story are
-reserved by the author.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="STUDIES_IN_ANIMAL_LIFE">STUDIES IN ANIMAL LIFE.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3">HONESTY.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is to be hoped that the animal scale of
-morality is not so low that when a brute acts
-honestly it does so only because honesty is the
-best policy. There are many instances known
-of animals acting honestly, when the slightest
-promptings of instinct would have shown that
-it was more politic to act otherwise. Self-denial
-and self-sacrifice have been frequently
-needed of animals, and in the hour of temptation
-they have not succumbed. Neither fear,
-nor pain, nor the cravings of hunger have sufficed
-to deter many noble members of the
-brute world from their sense of duty. Quite
-recently the Canadian papers reported an anecdote
-of canine fidelity which, had it been told
-of a Roman soldier or a Hindu nurse, would
-have been bruited throughout the civilised world
-as an instance of humanity’s supremest devotion
-to duty. The story as told to us is, that when
-nearing Montreal, the engine-driver of a train
-saw a great dog standing on the track and
-barking furiously. The driver blew his whistle;
-yet the hound did not budge, but crouching low,
-was struck by the locomotive and killed. Some
-pieces of white muslin on the engine attracted
-the driver’s notice; he stopped the train and
-went back. Beside the dead dog was a dead
-child which, it is supposed, had wandered on to
-the track and had gone to sleep. The poor
-watchful guardian had given its signal for the
-train to stop; but unheeded, had died at its post,
-a victim to duty.</p>
-
-<p>This is no solitary specimen of canine integrity.
-The author of <i>Salad for the Social</i> tells
-of a dog whose master deposited a bag in one of
-the narrow streets of Southampton, and left his
-dog to guard it, with strict injunctions not to
-leave it. The faithful creature was so staunch
-in the fulfilment of duty, that rather than forsake
-its trust, it actually allowed a heavy cart to
-drive over it and crush it to death.</p>
-
-<p>It is not merely momentary impulse, nor
-ignorance of the effects of this steadfastness&mdash;as
-some may imagine&mdash;that prompts animals to
-act thus faithfully; there are numerous cases on
-record to prove that they will sustain hunger,
-endure pain and fatigue, and withstand temptation,
-at the dictates of duty, as gallantly as
-any human being. Youatt is the authority for
-the following remarkable instance of canine integrity.
-An officer returning from a day’s shooting
-deposited his spoil in a certain room, in the
-custody of his dogs. Mechanically he locked the
-door, put the key in his pocket, and departed.
-Soon afterwards, he was called away upon urgent
-business, and during his absence of several
-days, forgot all about his game and the dogs.
-When he returned home, he hastened to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_823">{823}</span>
-room, and there found both dogs dead of
-hunger. Not only had they refrained from
-touching the game, but they had also kept
-quiet, having neither barked nor cried, evidently
-fearing to betray the trust they deemed their
-master had confided to them.</p>
-
-<p>It is related by Professor Bell that when a
-friend of his was travelling abroad, he one morning
-took out his purse to see if it contained sufficient
-change for a day’s jaunt he proposed making.
-He departed from his lodgings, leaving a trusted
-dog behind. When he dined, he took out his
-purse to pay, and found that he had lost a gold
-coin from it. On returning home in the evening,
-his servant informed him that the dog seemed
-to be very ill, as they could not induce it to
-eat anything. He went at once to look at his
-favourite; and as soon as he entered the room,
-the faithful creature ran to him, deposited the
-missing gold coin at his feet, and then devoured
-the food placed for it with great eagerness. The
-truth was that this gentleman had dropped the
-coin in the morning; the dog had picked it up,
-and kept it in its mouth, fearing even to eat, lest
-it should lose its master’s property before an
-opportunity offered to restore it.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Bell also tells of a Newfoundland dog
-kept at an inn in Dorset, which was accustomed,
-every morning as the clock struck eight, to take
-in its mouth a basket placed for the purpose and
-containing some pence, and go with it to the
-baker’s. The man took out the money, replacing
-it by a certain number of rolls, which Neptune
-returned home with. He never touched the
-eatables; but on one occasion when another dog
-attempted to despoil the basket, master Nep put
-down his burden and gave the intruder a thrashing;
-that accomplished, he regained his charge,
-and carried it home in triumph.</p>
-
-<p>In his interesting African Travels, Le Vaillant
-details how he missed his favourite setter. After
-a fruitless search, and the repeated firing of his
-gun to guide the animal, he sent an attendant
-back by the way they had travelled to try and
-discover the lost favourite. About two leagues
-back on the route the dog was found keeping
-guard over a chair and basket which had been
-dropped unperceived from the wagon. But for
-this fortunate discovery of the honest dog, it must
-speedily have perished by hunger or from the
-beasts of prey.</p>
-
-<p>In Taylor’s <i>General Character of the Dog</i> is
-given an account of one of these faithful animals
-which daily carried to a labourer in Portsmouth
-dockyard his dinner. Trusty, as the dog was
-rightly named, had to take the basket containing
-his master’s mid-day meal upwards of a mile,
-so that he had frequently to rest on the journey.
-He was very careful as to where he deposited
-his load, and would not allow any one to come
-near it. When he reached the dock-gates, he often
-had to wait until they were opened for the
-admission or egress of any one; but the instant
-he could effect an entrance, he ran in with
-his charge and carried it to his master, who, after
-he had partaken of his dinner, re-delivered the
-empty basket to his faithful servitor to carry
-home again.</p>
-
-<p>In his <i>Essay on Instinct</i>, Hancock tells of a dog
-belonging to a Glasgow taproom keeper that was
-accustomed to carry its master’s breakfast to him
-in a tin can between its teeth. When the family
-removed, the dog changed his route, and never
-went wrong. It could not be induced to accept
-a favour when on its master’s errands, and
-carefully avoided any of its own species. This
-incorruptible servant, which by the way understood
-Gaelic as well as English, often carried
-home meat to the weight of half a stone, but
-never attempted to touch it. Dogs, indeed,
-rarely attempt to touch food belonging to
-their owners. One very remarkable instance is
-recorded by Jesse of a dog that accompanied
-its mistress when returning from market with a
-basket of provisions. They were overwhelmed by
-a snowstorm, and not discovered for three days;
-the woman was found to be dead; but the dog,
-which was lying by her side, was alive. The
-honest creature, however, had not touched the
-eatables in his mistress’s basket, but, as neighbouring
-villagers remembered when too late, had
-been endeavouring, on the evening of the storm,
-by whinings and sighs they could not comprehend,
-to induce them to follow it to where its
-mistress was.</p>
-
-<p>In his <i>Anecdotes of Dogs</i>, Captain Brown speaks
-of a mastiff that was locked up by mistake an
-entire day in a pantry where milk, butter, and
-meat were within reach. The hungry dog did
-not touch any of these things, although it ate
-voraciously as soon as food was given to it.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Hamilton Smith is our authority for
-the anecdote of a dog that followed its owner,
-who was on horseback, and who contrived to
-drop some cakes from his basket as he cantered
-home. On his arrival, he found that his trusty
-follower had gathered up some of the lost cakes
-and carried them home and had gone for the
-remainder, which it duly returned with untasted.</p>
-
-<p>‘Dogs,’ says Colonel Smith, ‘have an instinctive
-comprehension of the nature of property;’ and
-it is really most remarkable, considering that
-they have not human speech, how frequently,
-and how well, they make us understand their
-views on this point. The colonel alludes to the
-case of a lady at Bath who was somewhat alarmed
-by the behaviour of a strange mastiff that seemed
-anxious to prevent her going on. Finding she
-had lost her veil, she turned back, the dog going
-before her until she came to the missing article
-and picked it up. As soon as the dog saw she
-had regained her property, it scampered off to
-its master.</p>
-
-<p>Anecdotes of this character are innumerable,
-as are also those of dogs reclaiming property
-belonging, or which has belonged, to their owners.
-Sir Patrick Walker furnishes a most valuable
-instance of this propensity in our canine cousins.
-A farmer having sold a flock of sheep to a dealer,
-lent him his dog to drive them home, a distance
-of thirty miles, desiring him to give the dog a
-meal at the journey’s end and tell it to go
-home. The drover found the dog so useful, that
-he resolved to steal it, and instead of sending it
-back, locked it up. The collie grew sulky, and
-at last effected its escape. Evidently deeming the
-drover had no more right to detain the sheep
-than he had to detain itself, the honest creature
-went into the field, collected all the sheep that
-had belonged to its master, and, to that person’s
-intense astonishment, drove the whole flock home
-again!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_824">{824}</span></p>
-
-<p>Dogs are not only honest in themselves, but
-will not permit others to be dishonest. The late
-Grantley Berkeley was wont to tell of his two
-deerhounds ‘Smoker’ and Smoker’s son ‘Shark,’
-a curiously suggestive instance of parental discipline.
-The two dogs were left alone in a room
-where luncheon was laid out. Smoker’s integrity
-was invincible; but his son had not yet learned
-to resist temptation. Through the window, Mr
-Berkeley noticed Shark, anxiously watched by
-its father, steal a cold tongue and drag it to the
-floor. ‘No sooner had he done so,’ says his
-master, ‘than the offended sire rushed upon him,
-rolled over him, beat him, and took away the
-tongue;’ after which Smoker retired gravely to
-the fireside.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Blaine, among many similar records, tells
-of a spaniel he had which protected the dinner-table,
-during its master’s absence, from the
-attempts of a cat which sought to make too
-intimate an acquaintance with the leg of mutton.
-Both the animals belonged to Mr Blaine, and
-were on friendly terms with each other; but one
-was honest, and the other was not.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto, specimens of canine integrity have
-alone been cited; but it must not be supposed
-that dogs are the only animals which exhibit
-honest traits. Captain Gordon Stables, in his
-book on <i>Cats</i>, proves by several tales of real life
-that pussy is often as trustworthy as any dog.
-His own cat ‘Muffie’ is allowed her place on
-the table at meals, and never attempts to touch
-the viands, even when left alone, nor, what is
-more suggestive, never allows any one else to
-touch them. The present writer’s family had a
-white cat which for nearly twenty years was
-trusted with anything, until one luckless day, in
-its old age, its appetite overcame its reason; it
-broke the eighth commandment, and stole a piece
-of steak. The distress and shamefacedness of the
-poor animal after the crime were quite pathetic;
-she hid herself in dark corners; turned her back
-on observers, and for several days was so ashamed
-of herself, that she could not look any one in the
-face, although, poor old favourite, not a person
-reproached her for her first known offence against
-the laws of property.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_GOSSIP">BOOK GOSSIP.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">More</span> than two years ago we had the pleasure
-of noticing, with favourable comment, a new book,
-<i>Bits from Blinkbonny</i>, by ‘John Strathesk.’ It
-was a clever and entertaining book, presenting
-successive pictures of Scottish village life drawn
-with so much truth and character as at once to
-stamp them genuine portraitures.</p>
-
-<p>The author, encouraged no doubt by the well-merited
-success of the above volume, has issued
-a second, entitled <i>More Bits from Blinkbonny</i>
-(Edinburgh: Oliphant, Anderson, and Ferrier).
-‘Continuations’ are proverbially risky, and we
-fear we cannot congratulate the author on having
-escaped the risk unscathed. The title will perhaps
-help the book temporarily&mdash;from a publisher’s
-point of view; but it would have fared
-better in the long-run had it been issued as an
-independent work on village life in Scotland,
-leaving the former volume to stand by itself. As
-it is, however, it is only when compared with
-its predecessor that this volume may be said to
-indicate any falling-off on the part of the author.
-It is full of bright and truthful sketches of the
-habits of life and modes of thought prevalent in
-the Scottish Lowlands, and can scarcely fail to
-be read with interest by those to whom such
-sketches appeal. Here is a story told by a barber
-regarding one of his customers. The customer
-referred to was a man who got his hair cut only
-twice a year, and when he came for this purpose
-it was always completely matted. The barber
-recommended him to ‘redd’ (that is, comb) his
-hair every day. ‘No very likely,’ was the reply;
-‘it’s only redd every six months, and then it’s
-like to rive a’ the hair out o’ my head; if I
-was reddin’t every day, I wadna hae a hair left
-at the month’s end.’</p>
-
-<p>The volume, we may add, is tastefully printed
-and bound, while the pictorial illustrations give
-force to its local characterisations.</p>
-
-<p class="center">⁂</p>
-
-<p>In <i>Photography for Amateurs</i> (London: Cassell &amp;
-Co.), Mr T. C. Hepworth, lecturer to the late
-Polytechnic Institution, gives excellent hints and
-instructions for beginners in this art. For those
-who have taken up photography as a pleasant
-occupation of their leisure hours, this book can
-be especially recommended. Most travellers in
-Central Africa, or in any little known part of
-our world, now find the photographic camera a
-necessary adjunct of their equipment, as, by its aid,
-rapid and correct pictures can be made of striking
-and picturesque scenes. This is equally true of a
-pedestrian at home, and Mr Hepworth looks back
-with delight to a walking tour in the Highlands,
-when he found so many lovely little nooks in the
-Trosachs and elsewhere admirably suited to his
-art. The effective delineation of objects by
-photography demands both care and experience;
-but there are now many amateurs of both sexes
-who can turn out very satisfactory pictures.
-Landscape photography is one thing, and portraiture
-is another and more difficult undertaking,
-for the inexperienced; but with the help
-of such a manual as this, which describes
-the necessary apparatus, negative-printing, fixing
-and washing the prints, &amp;c., the way must be
-greatly smoothed for beginners in the art. The
-Introduction presents a concise history of the
-art up to the time when the use of gelatine
-dry plates made the practice of photography
-more convenient and possible for amateurs.</p>
-
-<p class="center">⁂</p>
-
-<p>Lately we noticed in these pages the publication
-of a volume of music entitled <i>The Athole
-Collection of Dance Music of Scotland</i>, edited by
-Mr James Stewart Robertson (Edradynate). To
-this we have now to add by the same publishers,
-<i>The Killin Collection of Gaelic Songs</i>, with
-music and translations, by Mr Charles Stewart
-(Edinburgh, Maclachlan and Stewart). In selecting
-and arranging the melodies in this collection,
-the editor has borne in mind (1) Those that have
-already established themselves as favourites; (2)
-Those that have not been published until now,
-but which, in his opinion, are deserving of publication;
-(3) Some ancient chants to which the
-Fingalic poetry was sung; and (4) A few hymn
-tunes&mdash;one of them old, and the others on the
-lines of old Gaelic melody, in the hope of showing
-how admirably that melody is fitted for sacred<span class="pagenum" id="Page_825">{825}</span>
-song. Mr Stewart has been assisted by Mr
-Merryleas in arranging the harmonies and accompaniments;
-and in the supplying of English
-words for the Gaelic originals he has had the
-efficient help of such well-known pens as those
-of Principal Shairp, Professor Blackie, Dr Norman
-Macleod, and others. This collection of Gaelic
-music ought to have a hearty reception, not
-only from those who are familiar with Celtic
-surroundings, but also from students of music
-generally, as an important contribution to the
-history and archæology of the art.</p>
-
-<p class="center">⁂</p>
-
-<p>The International Forestry Exhibition of 1884
-gave a new impetus to the study of forestry. The
-importance of that science is now coming to be
-generally recognised, and private individuals, as
-well as those mysterious beings ‘the authorities,’
-are bestowing some attention upon the practical
-application of its principles. Dr J. C. Brown
-has, more than any other living writer, identified
-himself with this important subject, and it is
-worthy of notice that all the works which have
-been produced by his prolific pen during the last
-few years are remarkable for their wide learning,
-profound and practical acquaintance with the
-science as practised all over the world, and happy
-style of expression. His <i>Introduction to the Study
-of Modern Forest Economy</i> (Edinburgh: Oliver
-&amp; Boyd) is no exception to this rule. Within
-very moderate limits, he has contrived to convey
-much information relative to the present state
-of forest-science.</p>
-
-<p>The facts relating to the time when the greater
-part of Europe was covered with forests are of
-great interest, and also the account here given
-of the consequences of their disappearance. And
-it may be observed that in addition to such
-generally admitted evils as the scarcity of timber
-and droughts&mdash;as to the latter of which Dr Brown
-gives us many graphic illustrations, collected
-during his residence at the Cape of Good Hope&mdash;it
-is alleged that many of those devastating inundations
-which occur with such alarming frequency
-in some countries are due to this cause.
-It is certainly worthy of notice that floods seldom
-originate in densely wooded lands, and have been
-largely prevented in France by artificial <i>reboisement</i>;
-while in Northern Germany, the same
-process has been very successfully followed in
-fixing down and utilising drift-sand.</p>
-
-<p class="center">⁂</p>
-
-<p>To judge by the examples of stuffed pets which
-are to be seen in many private houses, there certainly
-seems to be room for a handbook on the
-art of stuffing fish, flesh, and fowl. This has
-at anyrate been supplied in <i>Practical Taxidermy</i>,
-by Montague Brown, F.Z.S. (London: L. Upcott
-Gill). As a ‘manual of instruction to the amateur
-in collecting, preserving, and setting up natural
-history specimens of all kinds,’ the volume leaves
-little to be desired. Not only has Mr Brown
-betrayed many of the secrets with which professional
-taxidermists have sought to surround
-their art, but he has particularised with minuteness
-and patience the whole <i>technique</i> of skinning
-and preserving birds, mammals, fishes, and reptiles.
-Moreover, his book justifies its title, for it
-is above all things practical. Besides being a
-guide to the taxidermist’s art, the book gives a
-chapter on ‘dressing and softening skins and furs
-as leather.’</p>
-
-<p class="center">⁂</p>
-
-<p>The study of the diseases of plants offers a
-very wide field to the inquirer, and it is only
-of recent years that investigations in this direction
-have come to be regarded as of economic
-importance. In spite of the strong prejudices of
-agriculturists of the old school, it is believed
-that vegetable pathology will prove to be of the
-greatest practical value, and that the time is
-approaching when the best means of preventing
-the attacks of disease will be a recognised branch
-of practical agriculture. This eventuality is certainly
-indicated by the appearance of <i>Diseases of
-Field and Garden Crops, chiefly such as are caused
-by Fungi</i>, by Worthington G. Smith (London:
-Macmillan &amp; Co.). Originally delivered as addresses
-at the request of the officers of the Institute
-of Agriculture at the British Museum, South
-Kensington, these notes are very full and elaborate,
-while the admirable illustrations with which
-they are accompanied give them an additional
-value. Although necessarily technical, the definition
-of all the phenomena of the diseases has been
-given in familiar words, and all botanical terms
-have been explained. To illustrate the thoroughness
-with which the work has been done, having
-regard to the limits of the volume, we find under
-‘Potatoes’ the new disease (<i>Peziza postuma</i>) which
-has made its appearance within the last few years,
-the dreaded disease produced by the parasitic
-fungus of the murrain, the smut, scab, and the
-old potato disease in its active and passive state.
-Then mildew and blight are treated of as affecting
-respectively onions, straw, turnips, cabbages,
-grass, corn, borage, barberries, parsnips, peas, and
-lettuces. There are also valuable notes upon the
-new diseases which are making such havoc with
-grass, wheat, barley, ryegrass, and onions; and
-their fungoid character is conclusively established.
-The book, like those on cognate subjects by Miss
-Ormerod, which have been already noticed in
-these pages, will amply repay careful study.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_MONTH">THE MONTH:
-<br />
-SCIENCE AND ARTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Society of Arts, London, has just commenced
-the one hundred and thirty-first session
-of its useful career. Professor Abel, the chairman
-of its Council, presided at the opening meeting,
-and his speech was a resumé of the progress of
-scientific research in various directions, in which
-a large number of persons are just now much
-interested. Being an electrician, he naturally
-devoted some time to the progress of electrical
-illumination, and pointed to the wonderful display
-at the recent International Health Exhibition
-as an illustration of the grand results now
-possible. He also expressed himself satisfied with
-the recent advances made in the direction of
-electric railways and other means of locomotion
-to which the comparatively new power has been
-experimentally applied, not omitting a very
-favourable reference to the telpherage system of
-Professor Fleeming Jenkin.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_826">{826}</span></p>
-
-<p>The present position of the science of aërial
-navigation does not commend itself to Professor
-Abel as holding out much hope of future success.
-The recent experiments in France, during which
-an electrically propelled balloon was made to
-take more than one short excursion in a predetermined
-direction, merely prove that electricity
-can, under exceptionally favourable circumstances,
-be employed in this new service. But much
-has been done in making balloons serviceable for
-purposes of reconnaissance in warfare, the various
-details, such as making and transporting hydrogen
-gas in a compressed state to the field of action,
-having been successfully provided for.</p>
-
-<p>Attention was also called in Professor Abel’s
-address to compressed carbonic acid gas as a
-convenient source of power. Messrs Krupp, the
-great cannon-founders, at their extensive works
-at Essen are using this power for maintaining steel
-castings under pressure during the solidification of
-the metal. The earthen mould is closed directly
-it is filled with metal, after which the compressed
-gas is admitted to it from a reservoir of liquid
-carbonic acid, and in this way the space above
-the molten metal is filled with gas under very
-high pressure. A tendency to the formation of
-flaws and cavities, which nearly all metals are
-subject to&mdash;meaning, in the case of railway plant,
-broken bridges and fractured crank axles&mdash;is in
-this way completely avoided. It is believed that
-the employment of this gas under pressure&mdash;compressed,
-that is, to the liquid state and stored
-in iron bottles&mdash;has a very wide future before
-it in many other useful applications.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, the important question of a pure water-supply
-engaged the professor’s attention, and his
-opinion on this point will be best given in his
-own words. ‘I venture,’ he says, ‘to think that
-our hope for a radical improvement in the water-supply
-of this great metropolis lies rather in the
-application of a simple, expeditious, cheap, and
-effective mode of chemical treatment to supplies
-from sources now in use, previous to their filtration,
-than in a complete change of our source of
-supply.’ It now, therefore, remains for future
-experimenters to devise some means by which
-water can be freed from those germs which, under
-various names, are now said to be responsible for
-the ills of mankind, and at the same time be left
-uncontaminated by any foreign matter. The problem
-seems to be a hard one to solve, but not
-harder than many which have been successfully
-conquered by modern science.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst our never-ending difficulties in the
-Soudan and South Africa are giving us costly
-information regarding those parts of the huge
-continent, Mr Joseph Thomson comes back from
-his hazardous journey in Eastern Africa to tell us
-about a tract of country with regard to which
-hardly anything before was known. If we refer
-to a map of Africa, we shall be readily able to
-note the position of Lake Victoria Nyanza, with
-which Mr H. M. Stanley’s name is identified.
-Between this lake and the coast lies the theatre
-of Mr Thomson’s wanderings. With an inadequate
-number of followers, the great majority of
-whom he describes as the very offscourings of
-Zanzibar villainy, this intrepid explorer prosecuted
-his work in the face of almost inconceivable
-perils. His contributions to geographical
-knowledge are of great importance, and his sole
-reward is the hearty reception accorded to him
-the other evening, when he gave a graphic
-account of his adventures to the Royal Geographical
-Society.</p>
-
-<p>At the recent Exhibition at Philadelphia, attention
-was directed in a rather comical but effective
-manner to the Edison electric lamp. A powerful
-lamp of this description was fastened to the head
-of a black man, concealed wires being carried
-down his body from it and connected with copper
-discs on the heels of his boots. This coloured
-gentleman&mdash;the term ‘darkie’ is here obviously
-inadmissible&mdash;could become luminous at will by
-simply placing his heels upon certain copper
-conductors laid along the floor, which were in
-circuit with the general system for lighting the
-building.</p>
-
-<p>A still more startling novelty in electric illumination
-was organised in New York a few weeks
-ago, an illustration of which is given in the <i>Scientific
-American</i>, published in that city. This consisted
-of an electric torchlight procession, which
-traversed several of the streets; and its object was,
-we presume, to advertise the Edison system of
-electric illumination. The procession may be best
-described as a hollow square formed by about
-three hundred men, each wearing a helmet, surmounted
-by a powerful electric lamp, and each
-holding the protected rope which carried the current
-from one to the other. In the centre of the
-square travelled a steam-engine and dynamo-machine&mdash;on
-trucks drawn by horses&mdash;followed by
-coal and water carts to supply the engine with
-its necessary food. Both horses and trucks were
-decorated with lamps, and the leader of the brilliant
-throng carried a staff tipped with radiance
-of two hundred candle-power.</p>
-
-<p>Our readers will learn with interest that Mr
-Clement Wragge, the pioneer of the meteorological
-station on the summit of Ben Nevis, is
-initiating a work of similar character in Australia.
-He has placed self-registering instruments on the
-top of Mount Lofty in connection with the
-Observatory at Sydney, and has appealed to the
-public to help in promoting scientific research by
-leaving them untouched.</p>
-
-<p>An explosion last July at a gunpowder factory
-in Lancashire, by which four men lost their lives,
-was caused by lightning. This disaster once more
-calls attention to the grave necessity which exists
-for buildings, and such buildings especially, to
-be protected by efficient lightning-conductors.
-From Colonel Ford’s Report upon the matter,
-which as Inspector of Explosives he has just
-presented to the Secretary of State, it appears
-that a conductor was fitted to the doomed building,
-but that it was a defective one. He states
-that there is no authentic case on record where
-a properly constructed lightning-conductor failed
-to do its duty; and recommends that these
-safeguards should be periodically examined and
-tested.</p>
-
-<p>From time to time, we have given in these
-pages the results of different experiments with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_827">{827}</span>
-the new method of preserving fodder, known as
-ensilage, and have expressed the hope that our
-farmers may find in it some compensation for
-recent bad times. We now learn from the
-agricultural returns for 1884 how widespread
-have been the experiments in this direction.
-These returns state that no fewer than six hundred
-and ten silos have been built in this country,
-of which five hundred and fourteen are to be
-found in England, sixty in Scotland, and thirty-six
-in Wales. Of the English counties, Norfolk
-heads the list with fifty-nine silos. In
-Scotland, Argyll has twelve, and is followed
-by Lanark and Renfrew, which counties have
-each half that number. The largest silo noted
-in the returns is in the county of Argyll. We
-may gather from these figures that the principle
-of ensilage as adapted to British farming has
-now entirely passed the experimental stage. (This
-important subject is further noticed in one of our
-Occasional Notes. See <a href="#Page_829">p. 829</a>.)</p>
-
-<p>The novel proposal has lately been made by
-Mr W. O. Chambers, the Secretary of the National
-Fish-culture Association, that fishponds should
-be established on lands which are unavailable for
-ordinary crops, and that unprofitable agri-culture
-should give place to profitable aqua-culture. The
-fish which it is said can be made to accomplish
-this desirable result is the carp, and the German
-carp in particular. According to Mr Chambers,
-this fish attains in three years a weight of four
-pounds, and its fecundity is so great that it
-will yield an average of half a million eggs.
-He states that one acre of water will produce,
-with little or no expense for food or maintenance,
-five thousand fish per annum. In a word, we
-are recommended to do as did the monks of old
-when monastic buildings were dotted over the
-land. The remains of fish stews or ponds left
-to us by the monks can be pointed to in plenty,
-and the question arises, if fresh-water fish-culture
-is really so profitable, why were these
-ponds suffered to fall into disuse? Another consideration
-arises as to whether, supposing the
-scheme to be possible, modern taste, not compelled
-to eat fish on certain days, would find the
-fresh-water variety palatable?</p>
-
-<p>The British Rainfall Association is one of those
-unobtrusive societies which is doing quietly a
-work of great good. Begun some years back
-by Mr Symons, who set up a rain-gauge in his
-garden in London, and put himself in communication
-with a few friends in other parts of the
-country who did the same, the Association now
-numbers two thousand observers, spread over
-the United Kingdom. Mr Symons has lately
-published a curious diagram showing approximately
-the amount of rain which has fallen each
-year in Britain for two centuries. Of course
-such a record cannot pretend to be infallible,
-especially in the case of the earlier period which
-it covers, but it opens out more than one extremely
-interesting subject for inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>The year 1884, with its genial spring, its
-splendid summer, and its gorgeous autumn, has
-been one in which the rainfall has been somewhat
-below the average; and in some districts
-there have been positive symptoms of a water-famine.
-But if we look back to the last century,
-we find a period of drought between the years
-1738 and 1750, which, if it recurred in the present
-day would, in Mr Symons’s opinion, dry up
-the water-supply of nearly every town in the
-kingdom. Another curious observation is this:
-an unusually wet year seems to occur at intervals
-of ten years, the years ending with the figure
-four being the favoured ones. Thus, 1854, ’64,
-’74, and so on, were wet years. But at the same
-time another twelve-year cycle of dry years also
-occurs&mdash;the years 1824, ’36, ’48, and so on, having
-been particularly limited in their rainfall. In
-this year of grace 1884, the two cycles terminate
-together, as they must do every now and then.
-So we have a year of doubt, and know not
-until its close which influence has proved the
-stronger.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding the rapid advance that has
-been made during the past few years in the beautiful
-art of photography, and the various new
-applications of it in different arts and sciences,
-in one particular it has stood still. A negative
-picture upon glass can, as every one knows, be
-produced in a fraction of a second. But the after-process
-of producing so-called positive prints on
-paper from that negative is a tedious business,
-depending in great measure upon the brilliancy
-of the weather. Messrs Marion of London have
-endeavoured to obviate these inconveniences by
-the manufacture of a special kind of paper, the
-nature of which they at present keep secret, and
-which they now offer to the photographic world.
-By this paper a negative can be made to yield a
-positive image in a few seconds, quite independently
-of daylight, for a gas jet or paraffin lamp is
-sufficient to affect its extreme sensitiveness. This
-invention will enable a photographer to send his
-patron a dozen or more copies of a portrait that
-has been taken the same day.</p>
-
-<p>The Bread Reform League is a useful society
-which has been formed to counteract the modern
-tendency to make what is properly called ‘the
-staff of life’ in such a way that many of its
-most useful ingredients are discarded. This
-society has, under the organisation of its energetic
-honorary secretary, Miss Yates, opened an Exhibition
-in London, where different samples of
-bread stuffs, treated in various ways, are shown.
-The profits of this Exhibition are to go to a
-‘Penny Dinner and Breakfast Fund’ for the
-benefit of needy children attending the Board
-Schools. Hitherto, only food for the mind has
-been provided at these establishments, and the
-fact has recently leaked out that forty per
-cent. of the children arrive at some of them
-without any breakfast, and that at other schools
-twenty-eight per cent. often are dinnerless. It
-is a terribly sad story, and one very difficult to
-reconcile with the oft repeated boast that London
-is the richest city in the world.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Graphic</i> makes a very sensible suggestion
-with reference to those gloomy places called
-railway waiting-rooms. In similar places in
-France, the walls are often adorned with well-executed
-maps in relief, showing the country
-through which the line passes. Why should
-not this system be adopted in Britain? Constant
-travellers know to their cost that there are many
-railway stations in the kingdom where waiting-rooms
-are only too necessary. The cry of ‘All
-change here!’ often means that all will be
-compelled to wait here for an indefinite period.
-Now, if waiting-rooms were furnished with maps<span class="pagenum" id="Page_828">{828}</span>
-and framed notices giving some account of the
-history of the surrounding neighbourhood, its
-antiquities, natural beauties, &amp;c., the dreary time
-might in many cases be turned into a pleasant
-visit, and would most infallibly do good as an
-advertisement to the railway itself.</p>
-
-<p>At a recent sale of art treasures at Cologne,
-there were put up to auction two curiosities
-which had been bought by their late possessor
-at some obscure town in Switzerland twenty-four
-years ago for the sum of twenty-three francs.
-One was a fifteenth-century cup of Venetian glass,
-and the other was a bundle of tapestry. At the
-last sale, these articles formed two distinct lots,
-and they realised more than thirty-six thousand
-francs&mdash;that is, fifteen hundred pounds sterling.</p>
-
-<p>The question of ‘musical pitch’ has for many
-years troubled musicians, each country adopting
-a note giving a different number of vibrations per
-second as its standard. In Britain, we have the
-Philharmonic pitch, and when any one talks of
-having his piano tuned up to concert pitch, the
-Philharmonic standard is the one indicated. For
-some reason, the modern pitch is made higher
-than that recognised in past days, and consequently
-the compositions of some of the best
-composers are now heard in a key higher than
-that intended by their authors. We understand
-that a conference upon the subject is shortly to
-be organised. In the meantime, the Italian War
-Minister has sought the opinions of living composers
-with reference to the best pitch for military
-bands. We need only refer to the reply of one
-of these, Verdi, whose name is as familiar in
-Britain as in the country of his birth. He writes
-in reference to the modern high pitch: ‘The
-lowering of the diapason will by no means impair
-the sonorousness and brilliancy of execution;
-it will, on the contrary, give something noble,
-full, majestic to the tone, which the strident
-effects of the higher pitch do not possess.’ He
-goes on to say that one pitch should be common
-to all nations. ‘The musical language is universal;
-why, therefore, should the note which is
-called A in Paris or Milan become B♭ in Rome?’</p>
-
-<p>A German paper gives some interesting statistics
-relative to ear disease, which have been collected
-from different aural surgeons. From these, we
-gather that males are more subject to ear disease
-than females. Out of every three middle-aged
-persons, there is found one who does not hear
-so well with one ear as with the other. The
-liability to disease increases from birth to the
-age of forty, after which it decreases as old age
-is reached. Of six thousand children examined,
-twenty-three per cent. show symptoms of ear
-disease, and thirty-two per cent. a deficiency of
-hearing power. With regard to the results of
-surgical treatment, we learn that of the total
-number of cases of all kinds, fifty-three per cent.
-are cured, and thirty per cent. are benefited. We
-fancy that these figures are rather more favourable
-than surgeons in this country can show, it
-being well known that aural cases are among the
-most uncertain and unsatisfactory to deal with.</p>
-
-<p>The steamship <i>Ionic</i>, which lately left this
-country for New Zealand, took out with her a
-large number of passengers of a description not
-usually met with on shipboard. They consisted
-of one hundred and fifty-eight stoats and weasels,
-whose mission in New Zealand will be to prey
-upon the rabbits which are fast overrunning that
-country. This is the third consignment which
-has left our shores. The little animals are
-accommodated in zinc-lined boxes, and during the
-forty days’ journey are calculated to require for
-their food more than two thousand live pigeons,
-which accompany them. The poor pigeons also
-require food, and therefore sixteen quarters of
-Indian corn were taken out for their consumption.
-Altogether, the expense to the colonial government
-must be something considerable, but will
-not be grudged if the required result is achieved.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="STOCK_EXCHANGE_MORALITY">STOCK EXCHANGE MORALITY.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Perhaps</span> there are few institutions possessing
-attributes more diametrically opposed to one
-another than the Stock Exchange. Undoubtedly
-useful in its way, it nevertheless abounds in gross
-abuse. It is a necessity to the <i>bonâ fide</i> investor,
-as indicating the locality where he can on the
-instant purchase or find a market for almost
-any stock in the world; yet it becomes a very
-hotbed of vice in the hands of the professional
-speculator. We apply this term to the man
-who fraudulently buys without the intention of
-paying, and worse still, sells what he does not
-possess. The method of so doing was fully
-explained in an article on ‘Corners’ in <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/65598/65598-h/65598-h.htm#CORNERS">No. 19</a> of
-this <i>Journal</i>. Take a quite recent illustration of
-the two evils. Only a short time ago, a letter
-purporting to come from Mr Gladstone’s private
-secretary, addressed to the Secretary of the
-Exchange, was received by him, and posted up
-in the House. It stated that certain unexpected
-interests would be paid to the Peruvian bondholders.
-The price went up over thirty per
-cent. in a few moments, so that any one having
-bought ten thousand pounds-worth the day
-before, could have then sold them for nearly
-fourteen thousand pounds. It is more than
-probable that the writer of the forged letter had
-previously purchased without any intention of
-paying or ‘taking them off,’ and on the imposition
-taking effect, at once sold out not only
-those he possessed, but also more that he did
-not possess. Within half an hour, the forgery
-was discovered, when the price immediately fell
-the thirty per cent. it had just risen. Thus this
-impudent adventurer would not only secure an
-enormous profit by the rise, but by buying back
-on the fall the extra quantity he had sold on the
-rise, reap an additional profit.</p>
-
-<p>Now, it is this class of gambling, particularly
-the selling of what one does not possess, for the
-purpose of depressing the value of a certain stock
-to the prejudice of real holders, that constitutes
-the most unwholesome element of our Stock
-Exchange. Every conceivable artifice, the most
-consummate cunning, the most unblushing lies,
-are employed to depreciate a security which has
-either risen to a high figure on its merits, or
-else been puffed up artificially beforehand. Syndicates,
-as they are called&mdash;combinations of unprincipled
-men usually&mdash;are formed for the
-purpose, and there are indeed very few stocks
-existing at the present day that are not honoured
-by their especial syndicate. On any unfavourable
-rumour, more often concocted than otherwise,
-these eagle-eyed monsters swoop down
-upon their unsuspecting and inoffensive prey,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_829">{829}</span>
-attacking with the ferociousness of a bear, until,
-in sheer desperation, one victim after another
-succumbs, and sells out to the ‘bear’ at an
-enormous sacrifice, in order to save the remnant
-of his dwindled inheritance. If, as they were
-uttered in it, the falsehoods of a single day could
-but glue themselves to and stick on the walls
-of that building, it would be a feat impossible
-of achievement for a fly to crawl unscathed
-between them! Monte Carlo is bad; but an
-institution where more fortunes are dishonestly
-lost and won in a day than at that notorious
-gambling-place in a week, must be at least no
-better, if not infinitely worse.</p>
-
-<p>That there are men of integrity on ’Change,
-men of known principle, gentlemen in every sense
-of the word, admits of no doubt; and it is they
-who would first appreciate any effort, legislative
-or otherwise, for the suppression of the practices
-alluded to here. An act called ‘Leeman’s Act’
-was passed some years ago for the special protection
-of shareholders in banking establishments,
-which made it illegal to sell shares of any bank
-without first proving yourself to be a <i>bonâ fide</i>
-holder of its shares, giving their respective numbers,
-&amp;c. The same protection should be afforded
-to every shareholder, no matter of what stock;
-and the time has now arrived for the legislature
-to take the matter seriously in hand. The blessings
-conferred thereby would be inestimable.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="OCCASIONAL_NOTES">OCCASIONAL NOTES.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>MECHANICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF LIGHTNING STROKES.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">At</span> the first monthly meeting for the session of
-the Royal Meteorological Society, a paper was
-read by Colonel the Honourable Arthur Parnell
-on ‘The Mechanical Characteristics of Lightning
-Strokes.’ The main objects of this paper were&mdash;first,
-to attempt to show that lightning is not a
-sort of electric fluid that descends from the clouds,
-injures buildings and persons in its course, and
-dissipates itself in the earth; but that it is a
-luminous manifestation of the explosion, caused
-by two equal forces springing towards each other
-simultaneously from the earth and the under
-surface of the inducing cloud, and coalescing or
-flying out nearly midway between the two plates
-of the electrical condenser formed by the earth
-and the cloud; secondly, to demonstrate that of
-these two forces, it is the earth-spring or upward
-force alone that injures buildings, persons, or
-other objects on the earth’s surface, and that
-constitutes tangibly what is rightly known as a
-lightning stroke. The author gave the details
-of two hundred and seventy-eight instances, the
-records of which were intended to demonstrate
-with more or less precision the existence of an
-upward direction in the force of the stroke. The
-theory of the descent of the electric fluid was suggested
-a few years ago by M. Colladon, a French
-Professor, and a notice of it will be found in
-<i>Chambers’s Journal</i> for October 16, 1880.</p>
-
-
-<h3>PERSONS KILLED BY WILD ANIMALS IN INDIA.</h3>
-
-<p>A return published in the governmental <i>Gazette</i>
-shows that the number of persons killed by wild
-animals and snakes in 1883 was 22,905, as against
-22,125 in the previous year. Of these, 20,067
-deaths were due to snake-bites, 985 to tigers,
-and 504 to other carnivora. The loss of cattle
-from the same cause amounted to 47,478 animals,
-being an increase of 771 on the figures for
-the previous year. It is somewhat remarkable
-that while the great majority of human deaths
-is set down to snakes, only 1644 cattle are said
-to have perished from that cause. Nearly three-fourths
-of the deaths occurred in Bengal and the
-North-west Provinces. The number of dangerous
-animals killed during the year was 19,890, and
-more than fifteen thousand pounds was paid in
-rewards. In regard to the fearful mortality from
-snake-bites, it might be suggested that the government
-should increase the rewards paid for bringing
-in the dead bodies of these reptiles, or otherwise
-take more active measures for their destruction.</p>
-
-
-<h3>ENSILAGE.</h3>
-
-<p>Mr Edward S. Blunt, Blaby Hill, Leicester,
-writing to the newspapers on the subject of
-Ensilage, says that he has recently opened two
-of his silos, and both have proved very satisfactory.
-He adds:</p>
-
-<p>‘Two years since I tried pits sunk in the
-ground without any building; last year I tried
-bricks cemented on the inside; this year I have
-tried wood, and am so pleased with the result
-that I certainly shall stick to it for the future.
-Notwithstanding its perishable nature, I believe
-it will compare most favourably as regards
-expense with anything else. I have used one-inch
-red deal boards, grooved and tongued, and
-these I find quite sufficient to resist what little
-lateral pressure there is. I have built my silos,
-four in number, partly in the ground and partly
-out. This may be considered merely as a matter
-of convenience, as I find the ensilage just as good
-in one part as in the other. I construct them
-in such a manner that they are easily put up
-and taken down again; thus at a very trifling
-cost they can be removed from one place to
-another. My first silo, a round one, only six
-feet in diameter, was filled in May with rough
-grass cut from the hedge-sides and from under
-some trees; neither cattle nor horses would eat
-this before it went into the silo, but both will
-eat it readily enough now that it is made into
-ensilage. My second silo, only eight feet in
-diameter, was first filled with pea-straw after
-the main crop had been gathered for market,
-and then refilled with the second cutting of
-clover; this is all very good quite up to the
-boards at the sides.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am weighting my silos this year with a
-press I have invented and patented. I obtain
-my weight by means of levers: two levers, each
-twenty feet long, with four hundredweight at the
-end, will give eight tons weight upon the silo,
-and being thoroughly continuous in its action,
-I am able to dispense with the labour and cost
-of moving so large a quantity of dead-weight.’
-There is to be a model of the silo and press
-exhibited at the Smithfield Show, Islington.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Blunt further explains his method of filling
-the silo. He says: ‘In nearly every instance I
-placed the grass or clover in the silo the day
-after it was cut, and as it was put in, it was well
-trampled. In three or four days the silage sank
-from twelve feet to eight, and as it sank I put<span class="pagenum" id="Page_830">{830}</span>
-in more. In about ten days from the time when
-the silo was first filled I put on the weight.
-The silage at this time had attained a temperature
-of from one hundred and forty to one hundred
-and fifty degrees. After the weight was applied,
-the temperature never rose any higher; but, at
-the end of a fortnight, had fallen to one hundred
-and thirty degrees, and then continued to fall.
-When the silage had sunk sufficiently low in the
-silo, I took off the weights and boards and filled
-up to the top again; this I repeated three or
-four times.’</p>
-
-
-<h3>A HANDY GAS COOKING-STOVE.</h3>
-
-<p>To his already extensive list of gas cooking
-apparatus, Mr Fletcher, Warrington, has just added
-what he calls his ‘Large Cottage Cooker,’ which
-is simply a Gas cooking-stove in the cheapest and
-simplest form to be effective. For two pounds
-may be had a good roasting, and a fairly good
-pastry and bread oven, with a reversible boiler
-and grillers on the top. The body of the stove
-is made of galvanised iron, and the shelves are
-wrought iron. The height of the whole is thirty
-inches; space inside the oven twelve by twelve by
-sixteen inches.</p>
-
-<p>When we consider their convenience to housekeepers
-and the time which they save, we do
-not wonder that the use of such stoves is rapidly
-extending. The equable nature of the heat insures
-good cookery; a pot or kettle may be boiled on
-the burner in a few minutes, and the housewife
-may be kept quite easy as to the state of her
-kitchen fire for cooking purposes. In fact, in
-summer the kitchen fire may be dispensed with
-altogether. There is no smoke or ashes; pans
-and kettles are easier kept clean, and all this is
-done at but a trifling expense for gas&mdash;say one
-penny per hour for a medium stove. A potato
-steamer will be found a useful adjunct to the
-stove. By its aid, the potatoes, after being boiled,
-are finished off with steam in the upper part of the
-same vessel; and will be found drier and mealier
-than if cooked in an ordinary pot in the old way.</p>
-
-
-<h3>RAILWAY PASSENGERS.</h3>
-
-<p>A curious return has just been issued, showing
-the number of railway passengers who have
-travelled on all the railways in the United
-Kingdom during the half-year ending 30th June
-last, by which it will be seen that railway shareholders
-continue to be mainly indebted for their
-dividends to third-class traffic. During the above
-period the number of passengers who travelled
-were as follows, omitting fractions: First class,
-sixteen million one hundred thousand; second
-class, twenty-five million eight hundred thousand;
-third class, two hundred and forty-one
-million seven hundred thousand&mdash;the number
-of third-class passengers being more than five
-hundred per cent. in excess of first and second
-class combined; and the relative amount of
-receipts is in equal proportion. This remarkable
-difference applies to all the lines in common,
-the third-class passengers being in excess all
-throughout the kingdom. But the North London
-line is especially striking in regard to receipts,
-inasmuch as the receipts from the third-class
-passengers amounted to about eight hundred
-per cent. more than from the first and second
-combined! Within the same period, the Metropolitan
-and District Railways, and the North
-London Railway, carried over fifty million passengers;
-to which enormous return must be
-added, as showing the prodigious traffic within
-the area of the metropolis, that of the Great
-Eastern; London, Chatham, and Dover; London
-and Brighton; South-western; and South-eastern&mdash;a
-large portion of whose traffic is purely metropolitan.</p>
-
-
-<h3>THE NEW ALBO-CARBON LIGHT.</h3>
-
-<p>An experiment has been tried on a grand
-scale with this new and beautiful light, which
-as an illuminating medium will most certainly
-take a front place, whether the question is gas
-or electricity. The immense church belonging
-to the Oratory of St Philip Neri at Brompton
-has lately been illuminated by the employment
-of eight twelve-light, two six-light, and two four-light
-clusters constructed on this principle; and
-these have been found so effective, that the
-interior of this vast and very lofty building is
-filled with a brilliant, yet soft and subdued,
-light, which covers the area of the great church.
-The authorities of the Oratory have expressed
-their satisfaction at the favourable results of the
-experiment; and the capability of the Albo-carbon
-Light has been demonstrated as to bringing
-out clearly the architectural features of our
-churches, which, as a general rule, are not celebrated
-for the excellence of their various systems
-of gas-lighting. Therefore, any clear and brilliant
-light which will do this, and at the same time
-not add too much to the heat of the interior,
-should be hailed as an inestimable boon, and
-be one of the chief recommendations of this new
-and beautiful system.</p>
-
-
-<h3>THE LAST OF OLD SION COLLEGE.</h3>
-
-<p>One by one the old City landmarks are disappearing
-before the ruthless hand of the modern
-speculative builder. Many of the City churches
-have already been taken down and their sites
-covered with shops or warehouses; Charter House
-and St Paul’s School are both going; and Sion
-College is gone&mdash;to be opened in a new building
-on the Thames Embankment, into which the
-ancient stone front is to be transferred from
-London Wall. The College, of which all the
-City vicars and rectors are Fellows, was originally
-incorporated in 1630, but burnt down in
-the great fire of London, to be rebuilt shortly
-afterwards. The site is let for building, but
-the ancient wooden fittings of the Hall and
-Library have been sold. The fine library of
-books will be removed to the new building when
-complete.</p>
-
-
-<h3>IRISH FEMALE EMIGRATION.</h3>
-
-<p>Mr Vere Foster, of Belfast, has issued another
-appeal on behalf of his Irish Female Emigration
-Fund, which has already been the means of
-granting assisted passages to twenty thousand two
-hundred and fifty girls from the west of Ireland
-to the United States and colonies, at an expenditure
-of about thirty thousand pounds. This
-scheme has the support&mdash;as it should have&mdash;of the
-clergy of all denominations, and there is little
-doubt that if carefully gone about, it will prove<span class="pagenum" id="Page_831">{831}</span>
-a benefit both to Ireland and the colonies. Mr
-Foster, who has exhausted what he can spare of
-his own means and the funds placed at his disposal,
-has also given assistance by loan to four
-hundred girls, who have promised to repay him.
-We trust they may do so, as the good fortune
-of four hundred more hangs on this contingency.</p>
-
-<p>The purpose of the fund is the relief of present
-poverty in the densely peopled districts of the
-west of Ireland, by assisting the emigration of
-young women of good character of the farm and
-domestic-servant class. To such it gives a chance
-of well-doing impossible at home, where, if they
-marry and rear families, there is but a prospect of
-poverty for themselves and all concerned. The
-scheme is a resumption of that adopted with
-gratifying results immediately after the great
-famine of 1846-7.</p>
-
-<p>The plan which Mr Foster has had in operation
-for helping these young women for the past
-five years is a very simple one. Blank forms
-of application are issued to inquirers, when, if
-returned and approved of, vouchers to a certain
-value are issued in their favour. These vouchers
-are available within three months of issue for
-embarkation from Liverpool or from any port
-in Ireland where the necessary arrangements have
-been made. The promoter of this scheme does
-not approve of shipping young girls in large
-companies, but leaves them the utmost freedom
-in their choice of ship and port and time of
-embarkation. This enables them to take a passage
-when perhaps they can have the company
-of friends and neighbours. The young
-women thus assisted were between eighteen and
-thirty years of age; and it is satisfactory to know
-that most of them are going on well, and that
-many of them have sent home money to their
-friends more than once.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most satisfactory forms of good
-doing is to help people to help themselves. This
-is the object of the Irish Female Emigration
-Fund.</p>
-
-
-<h3>EXPLORATION IN THE CHILIAN ARGENTINE ANDES.</h3>
-
-<p>It would appear, from the proceedings of the
-Berlin Academy of Sciences, that Dr Güssfeldt’s
-explorations in the central Chilian Argentine
-Andes extended from November 1882 to March
-1883, in the wild and lofty mountain region
-containing Aconcagua, the most elevated known
-point of the American continent, which lies
-between thirty-two and thirty-five degrees south
-latitude, and is bounded on the east by the
-Argentine Pampas, and on the west by the
-Pacific. Much of this journey being through
-new country, Dr Güssfeldt daily observed the
-great orographical and landscape features, the
-glacial conditions above the snow, the character
-of the vegetation, and the phenomena of rock-weathering.
-He also undertook the special duty
-of fixing positions astronomically and taking
-altitudes; for which purpose he was provided
-with nineteen instruments. The central Chilian
-Argentine Andes are sketched by the traveller
-as two parallel chains, having on the Pacific
-an outlying coast-range. The western chain is
-the true water-parting of the Atlantic and Pacific;
-and the eastern is in many places broken through
-by the waters rising in the great trough between
-the two chains, which has no well-defined valley
-formation, indications of a longitudinal depression
-being only found at intervals, constantly
-interrupted by cross ridges. This trough or basin,
-one hundred and eighty-five miles in length,
-is very difficult of exploration, and only three
-months of the year are available for the purpose.
-The doctor crossed the divide at four points, and
-obtained altitudes from nine thousand four hundred
-and ninety-four feet to twenty-two thousand
-eight hundred and sixty-seven feet, which was
-reached near the great volcano Aconcagua, not far
-from the commencement of Valle Hermoso. A
-most interesting question of the effect of rarefied air
-at great elevations upon the human frame is dwelt
-upon by the doctor. He states that he and his
-assistant attained twenty-one thousand and thirty
-feet on Aconcagua, and were able to work their
-scientific instruments at that height, though not
-in good condition, through anxiety and want of
-sleep. Their lungs were physically exhausted by
-the effort of speaking; but there was no flow
-of blood from nose or ears. He says that the
-so-called <i>puna</i> can be resisted by mental effort
-and confidence, the only effect upon a properly
-trained individual being increased lung-action,
-and that any one who could work as he did at
-twenty-one thousand and thirty feet, could reach
-the top of Aconcagua, where the proportion of
-oxygen is only 6.2-3 per cent. less than at the
-former elevation.</p>
-
-
-<h3>NATIVE TREATMENT OF DISEASES IN INDIA.</h3>
-
-<p>A correspondent thus writes: Regarding the
-native treatment of diseases, one of the most
-curious things I ever witnessed was a half-clad
-native shouting through the streets of a
-country town: ‘Does any one want back his
-sight?&mdash;one rupee only!’ as if he were hawking
-fruits or sweetmeats; and, to my astonishment,
-a patient soon presented himself to be operated
-on for cataract. There and then standing in the
-bazaar, the itinerant oculist took out his penknife
-and performed the operation in a few minutes,
-bound up the man’s eyes, and telling him to keep
-in the dark for a fortnight, received his fee of
-one rupee, and shouted his war-cry for more
-patients. The operation was almost unvaryingly
-successful; one instance among my servants being
-a woman of eighty, who had charge of my fowl-house,
-and had for many a day been sightless,
-except to distinguish light from darkness, and
-who in this way was successfully operated upon.
-Besides this operator are bone-setters, and medical
-rubbers male and female, especially represented
-by the hereditary low-caste <i>accoucheuse</i> of each
-village, whose skill in shampooing is such an aid
-in her lowly calling&mdash;as the natives regard it&mdash;as
-to supplant much of the useless medicine and
-enforced rest of more civilised countries, and save
-endless mischief and suffering to her sex. What
-skill they have is of course almost purely traditional.
-None of the science of the world or
-British usage has yet altered in the slightest
-degree either the customs of the native or his
-horror at the idea of male physicians for women&mdash;especially
-in certain ailments&mdash;and their wonder
-at our obtuseness and disregard of propriety on
-so delicate a point. To supply a vacancy so
-long unfilled, lady-doctors have now appeared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_832">{832}</span>
-on the scene, who, it is hoped by reaching the
-zenanas, may reach the real source through which
-a higher enlightenment in India is possible. An
-immense field is open to them along with every
-encouragement; and were but some of the many
-young ladies at home who are straining health
-for a future pittance in one or other of the spheres
-of teaching, to turn their attention in this direction,
-they would find an opening of wider and
-greater utility before them, and a prospect of large
-and rapid emolument.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LONG_AGO">LONG AGO.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">We</span> wandered in a garden fair,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">When summer sun was shining,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And laden was the balmy air</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With scent of roses rich and rare</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Around us intertwining.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">There trilled the thrush his glorious song;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">There thrilled the echoes all night long</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The warbling nightingale.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You taught me all each songster said,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And in each floweret’s heart you read</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Some hidden tale;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You said their message I should know:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’Twas simple as an easy rhyme&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But that was once upon a time</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Long ago!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">We parted in a woodland glade</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">When autumn winds were sighing,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In gold and russet bright arrayed</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A glowing canopy displayed</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The summer leaves a-dying;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And but the wind, no other sound</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Than a leaf that fluttered to the ground,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And a far-off robin singing,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We heard. You guessed my thoughts, and said:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘In spring, the swallows who have fled</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Will back be winging;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The trees a brighter emerald show,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The rose a richer crimson glow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Than any gleamed in this year’s prime’&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">All this was once upon a time</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Long ago!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘What though a while we part,’ you cried;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">‘What though the wind is sighing;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The spring will autumn’s frost deride,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The summer laugh at winter-tide,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Long power to grief denying.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We part, but never say farewell;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor let the dead leaves to us tell</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">A tale of changeless sorrow;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Fair Spring comes sparkling down the dell,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And in that morrow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">If still upon this world below,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We’ll meet ’neath yonder spreading lime’&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You said so once upon a time</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Long ago!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Perchance you have forgot all this;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">’Twas long ago;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Perchance you sneer at words like bliss</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And lovers’ woe.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or else you are amused&mdash;as I&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To think we once swore we should die,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">If fate us parted;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To think we vowed so soon to meet,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And said in spring-time we would greet,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Or else be broken-hearted.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Strange&mdash;is it not?&mdash;to have fancied so.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You smile, no doubt, such things to know;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or do you count it as a crime</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To think of once upon a time</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Long ago?</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Linda Gardiner.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p><i>Volume I. of the Fifth Series of <span class="smcap">Chambers’s
-Journal</span> is now completed, price Nine Shillings.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>A Title-page and Index, price One Penny, have been
-prepared, and may be ordered through any bookseller.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>An elegant cloth case for binding the whole of the
-numbers for 1884 is also ready.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Back numbers to complete sets may at all times be
-had.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">In our next Part will be given the opening chapters of an original Novel,
-entitled:<br />
-<br />
-<span class="largetext">A HOUSE DIVIDED AGAINST ITSELF.</span><br />
-
-BY MRS OLIPHANT.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center p2">END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p2">
-Printed and Published by W. and R. Chambers,<br />
-47 Paternoster Row, London, and 339 High Street, Edinburgh.<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center"><i>All rights reserved.</i></p>
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-<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. 52, VOL. I, DECEMBER 27, 1884 ***</div>
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