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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #66983 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66983)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular
-Literature, Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 106, Vol. III, January
-9, 1886, 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. 106, Vol. III, January 9, 1886
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: December 21, 2021 [eBook #66983]
-
-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. 106, VOL. III, JANUARY
-9, 1886 ***
-
-
-
-
-
-[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. 106.—VOL. III. SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 1886. PRICE 1½_d._]
-
-
-
-
-TWO EVENINGS WITH BISMARCK.
-
-
-IN TWO PARTS.—PART I.
-
-The surprises that await the deputies and representatives of the North
-German League, when, after a hard day’s work and a late supper, they
-return, wearied in body and mind, to their Berlin penates, are not,
-as a rule, of a very cheering description. They generally consist of
-large unwieldy packets of printed matter, which contain the orders
-for the next day’s imperial Diet, and a mass of amendments on the
-coming motions, &c. Letters also, especially home ones, form no small
-portion of the evening’s recreation. One may judge, therefore, of the
-general surprise, when, amongst the pile of evening correspondence, a
-short note appears from Prince Bismarck to the effect that he would be
-‘greatly obliged if Deputy or Privy-councillor So-and-so will give him
-the pleasure of his company every Saturday evening at nine o’clock,
-commencing from the 24th April, as long as the session of the imperial
-Diet lasts.’
-
-What more natural than that the Chancellor should wish to assemble at
-his own familiar hearth, all those representatives of the nation who
-for the most part gladly accompany and support him on the rough and
-stony paths of German politics that he is treading, and to want to
-spend a few hours with them in pleasant social intercourse, after the
-many weary hours of heavy parliamentary work?
-
-This same need was equally felt by most of the deputies and councillors
-and other members of the imperial Diet, who all equally looked forward
-to the coming evening.
-
-As everything connected with the Diet is carried out with military
-precision, so here, also, the hour of nine had hardly finished
-striking, ere the guests began to arrive at the well-known modest
-two-storied building in the Wilhelmstrasse, which the Prussian
-government assigns to its Minister for Foreign Affairs as his official
-residence, and which Prince Bismarck inhabited in his threefold
-capacity of Minister for Lauenburg, Prussian President Minister, and
-Chancellor of the North German League. Here, on the ground-floor
-of the long unadorned building, are the workrooms of the Prussian
-ministerial officials. On the first floor are the work and reception
-rooms of Bismarck, as well as his private family apartments. At the
-back of the house, where the noise and turmoil of the great busy
-city never penetrate, lies one of those beautiful shady old timbered
-parks, such as the royal crown of Prussia possesses, between the
-Wilhelmstrasse and the Königstrasse, and also between the latter and
-the Leipzigerstrasse—in all about a hundred acres.
-
-At the entrance are the inevitable constables, saluting the guests
-as they arrive. Numerous lackeys in black and white livery hand the
-visitor up the broad flight of stairs into an elegantly furnished
-anteroom, where those who wait to see the Chancellor on business can,
-while in the midst of the most harmonious surroundings of rich carpets,
-silken hangings, and luxurious seats, speculate as to what possible
-connection the stuffed hare, standing so prominently forward on the
-sideboard, can have with the family of Bismarck.
-
-A more interesting sight, however, now greeted us. The Chancellor’s
-wife, a tall aristocratic-looking woman, with decided but pleasing
-features, and in an elegant though simple toilet, received each guest
-as he arrived with gracious affability. Standing close beside the open
-portières, past which the eye glanced into the family living-rooms,
-she was a true type of the position she holds both in home and public
-life. A noble wife and mother, she has faithfully stood by her
-husband’s side from the very commencement of his political career. A
-Chicago paper declares that Bismarck’s wife is her husband’s private
-secretary! How far this statement is true, we do not pretend to say;
-but an old friend of the family has repeatedly told us that during the
-saddest time that Germany has witnessed for the last fifty years, when
-Bismarck, disheartened and dispirited, retired to his small property of
-Schönhausen, there to vegetate as a small Prussian landowner, while
-brooding moodily over all his grand political schemes, his wife never
-for a moment lost heart, but was able to inspire her husband with ever
-fresh courage and hope.
-
-A number of old friends and acquaintances quickly surrounded the
-noble hostess, while the remainder of the guests streamed on towards
-the billiard-room to the right, the windows of which look out on the
-street. In front of one of the sofas lies a handsome bearskin—the
-animal was slain by Bismarck’s own hand; and on a bracket stands the
-magnificent vase, with the king’s portrait and a view of his castle,
-which King William presented to the Prince after the wars of 1866.
-The crowd and the heat increased every moment. The Prince, we were
-told, was in the big saloon. Hurrying thither, we saw our noble
-host, standing just inside the door, in animated converse with some
-earlier arrivals, yet, notwithstanding, quite ready to greet every
-new-comer—sometimes even stretching out both hands to right and left
-with hearty welcome. How well and bright he looked! That was always
-the first thing that struck one on seeing this man. His face, from his
-long country sojourn at Varzin, has regained its healthy colouring; the
-eyes are no longer so deeply shadowed by the overhanging brows or the
-furrowed forehead of last year; his hair is of that light Saxon hue
-which defies both Time and impertinent curiosity; and the figure is as
-firm and upright as the youngest man there present. On this evening he
-also wore his favourite and most comfortable dress—that is, uniform,
-but _not_ in strict accordance with Regulation.
-
-Moltke’s fine thin lips are curved with an amused smile, as he observes
-the Prince’s unmilitary get-up. The short smart tunic is worn open,
-innocent of either sword or sword-belt, displaying an ordinary black
-cloth evening waistcoat underneath. Only the most necessary orders are
-worn; among them, some of those of the smaller states peep coquettishly
-forth. Are these meant to fascinate the hearts of the minor invited
-deputies?
-
-Those who have only seen Bismarck in pictures or heard him speak in the
-Diet, or even met him in his walks, only know him from his official
-side, and as the great statesman and dignitary. But here, inside his
-own four walls, with ample leisure, and surrounded by celebrated and
-patriotic men, who all, more or less, have helped to advise, combat, or
-further his work, one learns to know and recognise in the Prince the
-real man and intelligent companion whose mighty intellect wields the
-affairs of nations. We have often heard visitors who were present at
-the sittings of the Diet declare that nothing surprised them so much
-as the intonation and pathos of Bismarck’s voice when speaking. His
-height, his brows, his forehead, his chest, his speeches, were all far
-greater and more powerful than they had imagined; but his voice, either
-when giving utterance to the driest details, or when startling his
-audience by some passionate appeal, had something marvellously soft and
-winning in it. And they are not far wrong. One can always tell from the
-Prince’s words, by the sound of his voice, what his feelings are at the
-time, no matter how moderate his speech may be; and never was this more
-distinct and vivid than on these Saturday evenings.
-
-Now he approaches our circle. ‘I wished much to see you here,
-gentlemen. It is so much easier to talk and understand one another
-here, than in the Diet House!’—and he shook hands all round. ‘Besides,
-now, if you want to interpellate me, or one of the deputies or
-privy-councillors, you can do so quietly and at your ease in a corner,
-and settle the whole affair in a few minutes.’
-
-The Prince was right. Never before had the necessity of familiar and
-friendly intercourse been more apparent than during this session. From
-various untoward causes, the most crying discords had arisen between
-the deputies and the Diet, chiefly owing to neither party thoroughly
-understanding the other.
-
-From amid the rows of deputies and councillors, emerged the portly
-form of the brave ‘Red Becker,’ red in hair as well as in opinion, a
-living proof that even an inborn democrat and agitator can attain a
-very comfortable rotundity. Becker had surpassed himself that morning
-in the Diet. He, as the permanent reporter of the Chamber of Deputies
-and the Diet, on all postal, telegraphic, and railway matters, had
-drastically described the frightful misuse, on the part of the princely
-houses of Germany, of their right to free carriage and telegraph. He
-had shown how the whole of the royal bill of fare had been telegraphed
-free of charge; how endless telegraphic milliners’ and dressmakers’
-orders had been sent free between the German courts and Paris; while
-the citizen’s despatch, on which probably hangs both life and property,
-must wait till the royal cook has ordered a dollar’s worth of parsley
-by telegraph; how, after that, all these huge parcels have to be sent
-carriage free to their destination; and finally, he had proved, to the
-great amusement of the House, by the genealogical almanac, that in
-Lippe alone, no fewer than sixty princes and princesses had this inborn
-right to postal freedom.
-
-He now placed himself directly in front of the Chancellor, in his
-favourite attitude, with his hands behind his back, and looked up at
-him with an expression which seemed to say: ‘Now, had you any idea
-that this royal prerogative of free post and telegraph had been so
-shamefully abused?’
-
-But Bismarck only laughed heartily, saying: ‘My dear Becker, believe
-me, I know of far worse things.’
-
-‘Indeed! Pray, then, tell us some, Your Excellency!’ said ‘Red Becker’
-with great animation.
-
-‘Nay; that I cannot do,’ replied Bismarck. ‘My information comes from
-the Postmaster-general at Phillipsborn; and he knows far worse things
-than _I_ do.’
-
-A group of people had now come in between us and the speakers.
-
-A servant handed round tea; but, strange to say, there was no rum, so
-little has Bismarck imbibed of Russian habits and tastes, in spite of
-his long sojourn at St Petersburg.
-
-Here, again, in front of one of the couches, lay the head and skin of
-a splendid elk, another trophy of Bismarck’s prowess as a sportsman.
-The walls of this room were hung with yellow Gobelins of ‘Chinese
-patterns,’ and furniture to correspond. By degrees, all the guests had
-gradually congregated in this room—deputies, councillors, ministers,
-admirals, secretaries, all mingled together. There was none of that
-reserve and strict etiquette with which ministers usually love to
-surround themselves, like a wall of division between them and the
-people’s representatives, none of that exclusiveness and national
-party spirit which, as a rule, is always present in the Diet. Very
-few uniforms were visible among the guests. The nooks and corners, in
-which, according to Bismarck’s own words, the great affairs of the
-state could be settled and arranged in five minutes, were now all
-filled with eager talkative groups of deputies and councillors, or the
-leaders of the different parties. The conversation in our neighbourhood
-was carried on in a pretty loud and easy tone and without any reserve;
-for there did not lurk here, as there does behind every door and in
-every retiring-room of the imperial parliament, some insidious reporter
-for the press.
-
-‘Who is that stout gentleman yonder, with the very elaborate
-shirt-front, blue coat with brass buttons, and a huge and perfectly new
-order of the Eagle of the third class? He tries in vain to disguise his
-eastern origin.’
-
-‘Is it possible you do not know him?—this man, whom Bismarck’s son in
-his last pamphlet described as the greatest man of his century!—this
-father of millions of—railway shares! Do you really mean to say you
-do not know him? Well, then, my dear sir, you see before you Dr
-Strousberg, formerly Baruch Hirsch Strousberg, of the firm of Dr Ujest,
-Strousberg & Company!—Shall I introduce you?’
-
-But the subject of this discourse had already joined that
-arch-satirist, Von Unruh Magdeburgh, the President of the
-Constitutional Prussian National Assembly. Beside him appeared the
-venerable head of Simson, the perpetual President of the German
-parliament.
-
-‘Do you know the best way of enforcing respect into our noisy
-neighbours, the French?’ asked my _vis-à-vis_.—I thought of our
-millions of soldiers; but he continued: ‘You need only tell them that
-our three Presidents, Simson, Ujest, and Benningson, have twenty-seven
-children between them—nine each.’
-
-Meanwhile, the servants again came round with refreshments for the
-guests; this time it was _Maitrank_,[1] in long Venetian glasses, and
-magnificent silver tankards filled with sparkling ale.
-
-But the heat still continued to increase, and became almost unbearable.
-Lasker was the first to move an amendment, to dispense with kid gloves;
-and like most of Lasker’s motions, this proposition found plenty of
-support among the deputies, and in this instance, even among the
-councillors.
-
-And now the intimate friends and relations of the Chancellor invite the
-guests to adjourn to the dining saloon, which is the last of the long
-row of apartments we had up till now passed through. This saloon, an
-oblong square, joins the apartment last described, at the right-hand
-corner; only its narrow side faces the street. The decorations and
-fittings-up of this dining saloon differ entirely from all the rest
-of the suite. It has been kept exactly the same as when Bismarck took
-it over from his predecessor; in fact, for fifty years this apartment
-has remained unchanged. There still hangs the same massive chandelier
-with its forty-eight candles; the same white panels with golden borders
-still cover the walls; the same shell-shaped mirrors, the same yellow
-marble mantel-pieces that were there under Hardenberg, Mannteuffel, and
-Schleichnitz, all remain unchanged.
-
-‘The last time I was here I was under Mannteuffel,’ says old Count
-Schwerin, the head of the Liberal party, to me, standing in his
-favourite position with both his hands in his trousers’ pockets.
-
-The first feeling of shyness having worn away, the various dainties, in
-the shape of cold game, saddle of venison, mayonnaises, Italian salads,
-&c., with which the long centre table was laden, were speedily done
-justice to. Even the modest Saxon privy-councillor, who three minutes
-before had retreated from the table and refused the invitation with a
-polite wave of the hand and a, ‘No, no; thank you!’ now followed in the
-war-path of the pioneers for food. There was no time or space to think
-of sitting down; each one helped himself to a plate from the piles,
-placed in readiness on the table, together with the necessary table
-requisites, and hastened to partake of the delicacies that had been
-prepared for his delectation. A party of Saxon and Rhenish gentlemen
-had succeeded in getting possession of a side-table, and there, seated
-at their ease, they intrenched themselves against the annexation
-tendencies of the North German League appetites; getting all their
-provisions through the proper constitutional channel of the Bismarckian
-domestics.
-
-Meanwhile, as I have so often observed before, a saddle of venison is a
-most fruitful source for starting hunting adventures, and so it proved
-in this case. My old friend, worthy Dr Neubronner from Nassau, whom no
-one would have accused of being a bloodthirsty huntsman by nature, was
-no sooner presented to Bismarck, than he reminded the minister how, in
-former days, when he, Bismarck, was representative at Frankfort, they
-had hunted together in the neighbourhood of that town.
-
-‘Of course I remember it; and very pleasant days they were,’ replied
-Bismarck; and he forthwith proceeded to describe, greatly to the
-amusement of the _present_ deputies of the annexed province of Nassau,
-the celebrities and oddities of the Nassau and Frankfort of _that_
-day, with so much life and humour, that the merriment of this South
-German group attracted general attention. The account of ‘_dicke_
-(portly) Daumer’s’ intense fear of death, or anything connected
-therewith, specially amused the sons of the now Prussianised district
-of Wiesbaden. Bismarck continued: ‘One fine autumn morning, I was out
-hunting with “dicke Daumer” in the neighbourhood of Frankfort. After
-a long and tiring climb among the mountains, we sat down to rest on
-the edge of the forest, when, to my horror, I found I had brought no
-luncheon with me. “Dicke Daumer,” however, drew forth a mighty sausage,
-and, in the most noble and magnanimous manner, offered me half of it.
-Now, gentlemen, I frankly confess to having a very good appetite,
-which this morning excursion in the keen mountain air had by no means
-lessened. The whole sausage would barely have sufficed to satisfy
-my hunger. Our meal commenced; I saw the end of my piece of sausage
-approaching; I was getting desperate! Then suddenly turning to “dicke
-Daumer,” I ask in the most innocent manner possible: “Can you tell me,
-Herr Daumer, what that white thing down there among the plum-trees is?”
-
-“Good gracious, Your Excellency, you quite take away one’s appetite!”
-said Daumer, who so dreaded his latter end. “Why, that is the
-churchyard!”
-
-“Is it really, now? Why, Herr Daumer, it looks so pretty! let us
-go down and choose out some nice secluded shady nook! How calm and
-peaceful it must be to rest in so sweet a spot!”
-
-“Oh, Your Excellency!—there—there,” and he put down the sausage: “I
-cannot touch another mouthful!”
-
-‘And old Daumer remained firm in this. So you see, gentlemen, I had a
-good luncheon after all.’
-
-Universal laughter greeted this anecdote.
-
-‘How is it one never sees you now in the House?’ I ask a young
-Thuringian who has made a name for himself both as a government lawyer
-and a wit.
-
-‘Oh, I am busy all day now in the European “Lint Congress,”’ he replied.
-
-‘And pray, what may that be?’ I ask.
-
-‘Why, my dear sir, did you not know that is the name the Berliner wits
-have given to the International Association for the care and nursing of
-wounded soldiers?’
-
-Two of the greatest lawyers in the world stand close beside me deep in
-conversation. Every ten minutes, a fresh word is added to a paragraph
-for the future North German penal code. Braun-Wiesbaden approaches and
-joins the conclave, which is just discussing that much vexed question,
-the abolition of capital punishment.
-
-‘You may make your minds easy, gentlemen, and settle to abolish capital
-punishment,’ he said.
-
-‘Indeed! Have you, then, found a surrogate?’
-
-‘I have.’
-
-‘Well?’ ask the expectant lawyers with unbelieving curiosity.
-
-‘Why, you have only to send the delinquents to the “North German
-Commission for the better Regulation of Trade”—that will settle them!’
-
-But I hear Bismarck’s voice again close behind me. ‘Let us drink to
-the welfare of the old blue red and gold colours of the Hannovera of
-Göttingen!’ he called out to his old fellow-student, the Burgomaster
-Fromme of Lüneburg. And the two ‘old collegians,’ while emptying their
-glasses of sparkling Rhine wine, chat over the pleasant days of their
-youth.
-
-Even as far back as that time, whenever Bismarck was asked what
-he was studying, his answer invariably was: ‘Diplomacy.’ He was
-then a very slight overgrown young student, with a fair sprouting
-moustache—known everywhere by his magnificent Newfoundland dog, and
-much feared on account of his skill with the sword, having, while still
-an undergraduate, come off victor in several duels with members of
-opposition corps; though the scar on his left cheek bears testimony to
-the uncertainty attending the fate of even the most skilful of fencers.
-The antagonist who inflicted this ‘quart’ now enjoys the confidence of
-a great part of the North German population, so much so, that he was
-elected representative for the Diet.
-
-When he was first presented to Bismarck, the latter, pointing to the
-scar, asked: ‘Are you _the_ one?’
-
-‘Yes, Your Excellency.’
-
-‘Well, you certainly _did_ give it me rather hot.’
-
-‘Yes, Your Excellency—that was what you said at the time; but the
-“duel-book” did not concur in it, and decided you gave as good as you
-got.’
-
-But those diplomatic studies at Göttingen have borne visible fruits. It
-is only a pity that the multifarious duties of his threefold office of
-minister, Chancellor, and brandy-distiller—for he has been a distiller
-for over twenty years—prevent the Prince from coming forward as the
-advocate of practical diplomacy. Many a professor’s chair would be open
-to him.
-
-The theme of the Prince’s diplomatic lecture this evening was ‘the
-blue-books,’ a subject he had already ventilated the day before in the
-Diet, urged thereto by Lasker.
-
-‘Well, gentlemen, if you absolutely wish to have a “blue-book,” I will
-endeavour next year to provide one that will at least be harmless,’ he
-had said amid the laughter of the House.
-
-Now he gave us an example of the doubtful value of these collective
-despatches. ‘Say, for example, Lord Augustus Loftus comes to me and
-asks me whether I am disposed to hear a private letter from his
-minister, Lord Clarendon. He then reads me a short epistle in the noble
-lord’s own handwriting, and we talk the matter over quietly for about
-an hour. Five days after, he is again announced. This time he comes
-armed with a huge official despatch from the English Foreign Office. He
-commences to read. “I beg your pardon, Your Excellency!” I interrupt
-him, “but you told me all that last Monday.”
-
-“Yes, so I did; but now the despatch has to go into the blue-book.”
-
-“Then I suppose I must now repeat my answer all over again, for the
-benefit of your blue-book?”
-
-“Certainly, if Your Excellency sees no reason against it—that is what
-is required.”
-
-“Well, I suppose I must let you have it;” and so I have to give up
-another hour to him just for the sake of the blue-book, and have in
-addition constantly to explain to the English ambassador: “_This_
-sentence is _not_ meant for your blue-book,” as, for instance, that
-I look upon the blue-book as an essentially wordy and superfluous
-institution.’
-
-But it is past eleven. Gradually the numerous guests take their leave
-of the Chancellor. He bids them all ‘Adieu, au revoir.’ Then passing
-through the apartment where his wife and daughters were seated,
-surrounded by a large circle of friends, we salute our noble hostess;
-and a quarter of an hour later sees us back at the _Petersburger Hof_,
-comfortably ensconced in the saloon of our hotel, and discussing the
-events of the evening under the soothing influence of the peaceful pipe.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] A cool summer drink or cup, made of Rhine wine, in which the herb
-_Waldmeister_ plays a prominent part.
-
-
-
-
-IN ALL SHADES.
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-‘O Marian, do you know, I’ve met Mr Hawthorn; and what a delightful man
-he is! I quite fell in love with him myself, I assure you! Wasn’t it
-absurd? He came down the other morning to the boatrace; and he and a
-friend of his positively jumped over the wall, without an invitation,
-into old Colonel Boddington’s front garden.’
-
-Marian took Nora’s hand warmly. ‘I’m so glad you like Edward,’ she
-said, kissing her cheek and smoothing her forehead. ‘I was sure you’d
-like him. I’ve been longing for you to come to town ever since we got
-engaged, so that you might manage to see him.—Well, dear, and do you
-think him handsome?’
-
-‘Handsome! O Marian, awfully handsome; and so nice, too. Such a sweet
-voice and manner, so grave and cultivated, somehow. I always do like
-Oxford and Cambridge men—ever so much better than army men, Marian.’
-
-‘Who had he with him at the boatrace?’ Marian asked.
-
-‘Oh, my dear, such a funny man—a Mr Noel, whom I met last week down
-at the Buckleburies. Colonel Boddington says his father’s one of the
-greatest swells in all Lincolnshire—a Sir Somebody Noel, or something.
-And do you know, Marian, he simply jumped over the wall, without
-knowing the Boddingtons one bit, just because he saw me there—wasn’t it
-dreadful of him, after only meeting me once, too?—and then apologised
-to the old colonel, who was looking daggers. But the moment Mr Noel
-said something or other incidentally about his father Sir Somebody,
-the colonel became as mild as a lamb, and asked him to lunch at once,
-and tried to put him sitting right between Minnie and Adela. And Mr
-Noel managed to shuffle out of it somehow, and got on one side of me,
-with Mr Hawthorn on the other side; and he talked so that he kept me
-laughing right through the whole of lunch-time.’
-
-‘He’s awfully amusing,’ Marian said with a slight smile.—‘And I suppose
-you rather liked Mr Noel, too, didn’t you, Nora?’
-
-Nora shook her head energetically. ‘No, my dear; not my sort of man at
-all, really. I certainly wasn’t in the least taken with him.’
-
-‘Not a little bit even, Nora?’
-
-‘Not even a little bit, dear,’ she answered decidedly. ‘He isn’t at
-all the sort of man I should ever care for. Too dark for me, by several
-shades, for one thing, Marian. You know, we West Indians never can
-endure these very dark people.’
-
-‘But I’m dark, Nora, and you like me, you know, don’t you?’
-
-‘Oh, you. Yes; that’s quite another thing, Marian. That’s nothing, to
-be dark as you are. Your hair and eyes and complexion are just perfect,
-darling. But Mr Noel—well, he’s a shade or two too dark for me, anyhow;
-and I don’t mind saying so to you candidly.—Mr Hawthorn’s a great deal
-more my ideal of what a handsome man ought to be. I think his eyes, his
-hair, and his moustache are just simply lovely, Marian.’
-
-‘Why, of course, you and he ought to be friends,’ Marian said, a
-natural thought flashing suddenly across her. ‘He comes from Trinidad,
-just the same as you do. How funny that the two people I’ve liked best
-in all the world should both come from the very same little bit of an
-island. I daresay you used to know some of his people.’
-
-‘That’s the very funniest part of it all, Marian. I can’t recollect
-anything at all about his family; I don’t even remember ever to have
-heard of them from any Trinidad people.’
-
-Marian looked up quickly from the needlework on which she was employed,
-and said simply: ‘I daresay they didn’t happen to know your family.’
-
-‘Well, that’s just what’s odd about it, dear,’ Nora continued, pulling
-out her crochet. ‘Everybody in Trinidad knows my family. And Mr
-Hawthorn’s father’s in the Legislative Council, too, just like papa;
-and Mr Hawthorn has been to Cambridge, you know, and is a barrister,
-and knows Arabic, and is unusually clever, Mr Noel tells me. I can’t
-imagine how on earth it is I’ve never even heard of him before.’
-
-‘Well, at anyrate, I’m so awfully glad you really like him, now that
-you’ve actually seen him, Nora. One’s always so afraid that all one’s
-friends won’t like one’s future husband.’
-
-‘Like him, dear; how on earth could one help liking him? Why, I
-think he’s simply delightful And that’s so surprising, too, because
-generally, you know, one’s friends _will_ go and marry such regular
-horrid sticks of men. I think he’s the nicest man I’ve ever met
-anywhere, almost.’
-
-‘And the exception is——?’
-
-‘Put in for propriety’s sake, dear, for fear you should think I was
-quite too enthusiastic. And do you know, he tells me he’s going in
-for a judgeship in Trinidad; and won’t it be splendid, Marian, if he
-happens to get it, and you both go out there with me, darling? I shall
-be just too delighted.’
-
-Marian gave a little sigh. ‘I shall be very glad if he gets it in
-one way,’ she said, ‘because then, of course, Edward and I will be
-able to marry immediately; and papa’s so very much opposed to a long
-engagement.’
-
-‘Besides which,’ Nora put in frankly, ‘you’d naturally yourself, too,
-be glad to get married as soon as possible.’
-
-‘But then, on the other hand,’ Marian went on, smiling quietly, ‘it
-would be a dreadful thing going so far away from all one’s friends and
-relations and so forth. Though, of course, with Edward to take care of
-me, I wouldn’t be afraid to go anywhere.’
-
-‘Of course not,’ said Nora confidently. ‘And I shall be there, too,
-Marian; and we shall have such lovely times together. People have
-no end of fun in the West Indies, you know. Everybody says it’s the
-most delightful place in the world in the cool season. The floors
-are kept polished all the year round, without any carpets, just like
-the continent, and so you can have a dance at any moment, whenever
-people enough happen to drop in together accidentally of an evening.
-Mamma used to say there was no end of gaiety; and that she never could
-endure the stiffness and unsociability of English society, after the
-hospitable habits of dear old Trinidad.’
-
-‘I hope we shall like it,’ Marian said, ‘if Edward really succeeds in
-getting this appointment. It’ll be a great alleviation to the pain of
-parting with one’s friends here, if you’re going to be there too, Nora.’
-
-‘Yes, my dear, you must get married at once, and we must arrange
-somehow to go out to Trinidad together in the same steamer. I mean to
-have no end of fun going out. And when you get there, of course papa’ll
-be able to introduce you and Mr Hawthorn to all the society in the
-island. I call it just delightful.’
-
-At that moment, the servant entered and announced Mr Hawthorn.
-
-Marian rose from her seat and went forward to meet him. Edward had a
-long official envelope in his hands, with a large broken seal in red
-sealing-wax on the back, and the important words, ‘On Her Majesty’s
-Service,’ printed in very big letters at the lower left-hand corner.
-Marian trembled a little with excitement, not unmixed with fear, as
-soon as she saw it.
-
-‘Well, my darling,’ cried Edward joyously, in spite of Nora’s presence,
-‘it’s all right; I’ve got the judgeship. And now, Marian, we shall be
-able to get married immediately.’
-
-A woman always succeeds in doing the most incomprehensible and
-unexpected thing under all circumstances; and Marian, hearing now for
-the first time that their hearts’ desire was at last in a fair way
-to be accomplished, did not exhibit those emotions Edward might have
-imagined she would do, but fell back upon the sofa, half faint, and
-burst out suddenly crying.
-
-Edward looked at her tenderly with a mingled look of surprise and
-sorrow. ‘Why, Marian,’ he said, a little reproachfully, ‘I thought you
-would be so delighted and rejoiced to hear the news, that I almost ran
-the whole way to tell you.’
-
-‘So I am, Edward,’ answered Marian, sobbing; ‘but it’s so sudden, so
-very sudden.’
-
-‘She’ll be all right in a minute or two, Mr Hawthorn,’ Nora said,
-looking up at him with an arch smile as she held Marian’s hand in hers
-and bent over her to kiss her forehead. ‘She’s only taken aback a
-little at the suddenness of the surprise.—And now, Marian, we shall all
-be able actually to go out to Trinidad together in the same steamer.’
-
-Edward’s heart smote him rather at the strange way Marian had received
-the news that so greatly delighted him. It was very natural, after all,
-no doubt. Every girl feels the wrench of having to leave her father’s
-house and her mother and her familiar surroundings. But still, he
-somehow felt vaguely within himself that it seemed like an evil omen
-for their future happiness in the Trinidad judgeship; and it dashed his
-joy not a little at the moment when his dearest hopes appeared just
-about to be so happily and successfully realised.
-
-
-
-
-A WHALE-HUNT IN THE VARANGER FJORD.
-
-BY A NORWEGIAN.
-
-
-There seems, indeed, to be no limit to the part science is destined to
-play in the pursuits of man of late; but that it should lend a hand
-in killing the leviathans of the sea, would hardly have been credited
-a few years ago. This is, however, now a fact. Along the shores of
-Arctic Norway, in latitudes seventy to seventy-one degrees north,
-whale-hunting takes place annually by means of steamers and a cleverly
-contrived piece of ordnance. The steamers are seventy or eighty feet
-long, with very powerful engines, the number of vessels at present
-engaged in this pursuit being about thirty, most of which belong to
-the indefatigable hunter, Sven Foyn, of Tönsberg, the inventor of the
-gun, and originator of this important industry. The gun, which plays
-the leading part in the pursuit, is mounted on a platform in the prow
-of the vessel, so as to have an all-round range. A shaft is passed
-into the muzzle, leaving a small portion outside the nozzle, carrying
-four movable hooks pointing to the gun, and placed crosswise, each of
-the hooks being about eight inches long. In front of these, a large
-iron ball, or shell, with a steel point, is affixed, filled with an
-explosive substance. On the shaft runs an iron ring, to which a cable
-is attached about the thickness of a man’s arm, which, when the shaft
-is inserted in the gun, is run up to the nozzle, and secured by a
-cord. When this terrible projectile is launched into the animal, the
-jerk of the rope is diminished by the cord holding the ring breaking,
-which latter thereby runs up to the top of the shaft. As soon as the
-animal feels the wound, it makes a sudden bound, whereby the hooks on
-the shaft spring into a horizontal position; by which action, again,
-through an ingenious piece of mechanism, the explosive in the shell is
-fired, and the latter bursts with such a force that death is almost
-instantaneous. This is Foyn’s invention, on which he has spent large
-sums of money and many years of his life. It need hardly be said that
-the gun was, when first invented, not so perfect as at present; but
-Sven Foyn has gradually improved it.
-
-The kinds of whales hunted in Finmarken belong to the family of
-‘fin’-whales, the largest of them all being the ‘blue’-whale. The
-colour is bluish gray, lighter on the under side, with long white
-furrows or folds, the use of which to the animal, zoologists have not
-yet discovered. This whale lives, as far as we know, solely on ‘krill,’
-a tiny crustacean, which also serves as food for the cod. It comes
-inshore in Finmarken towards the end of May, and again goes to sea in
-the latter half of August, whence it is also called ‘summer’-whale.
-It is generally this kind of whale which is seen by travellers to the
-North Cape. The next variety is the common fin-whale, which attains
-a length of sixty to seventy feet, is more slender in build than the
-other, black on the back, and light below. It moves very swiftly, and
-is probably found off the Norwegian coast all the year round. Its food
-is tiny fish and ‘krill.’ There are, besides these, two other varieties
-in the same seas, of which the largest is caught. Finally, there is
-the ‘trold’-whale or ‘humpback,’ forty to fifty feet in length. It is
-exceedingly lively, and, when hotly pursued, _shrieks_ and lashes the
-sea to froth with its tail. It is, however, not very common on the
-Norwegian coast.
-
-It is generally believed that the whale, in spite of its enormous size,
-is timid and easily put to flight; but that this is not always the
-case, will be seen from some stories I was told of its stupidity or
-viciousness by the fishermen last summer. Several boats, they stated,
-have been struck or run down by whales, sometimes resulting in loss
-of life, in consequence of which they are not loved by these toilers
-of the deep. On one occasion, in May last, a whale was shot from one
-of the steamers, which, by taking refuge right under the stern of the
-vessel, succeeded in breaking the rope, as the captain was afraid of
-losing his screw, if moving. The whale, feeling free, took a few turns
-round the vessel, and then ran full tilt at the stern, with such a
-force, that the keel was bent for several yards, and screw and rudder
-carried away. Having thus satisfied its revenge, it made leisurely for
-the ocean.
-
-With these preliminary observations, I will proceed to describe a
-whale-hunt on the shores of the Land of the Midnight Sun, according to
-my own experiences of this summer.
-
-It is a lovely sunlit evening at the end of July, when we steam out
-from one of the pretty little fjords in the South Varanger. The air
-is clear and balmy, and the sea lies before us transparent as a
-mirror, dark green in colour. The mountains in the south stand out as
-though carved on the dark background, while their shapely cones are
-reflected in the mirror at their foot. Not a patch of snow or ice is
-seen anywhere. By degrees, the copse-covered hills and birch groves
-at the bottom of the fjord are lost in the distance, and through
-its mouth we behold the broad mighty Varanger fjord, the greatest
-in Northern Norway. To the north, the view is arrested by lofty
-mountains, enveloped in an azure veil; the sun is still high in the
-sky, though it is past eight o’clock; and to the west we look down
-into the Varanger fjord, where giant chains of sombre cones stand out
-in picturesque contrast to the view before us. To the east, there is
-but one view—sky and sea. We are on the confines of the great Arctic
-Ocean. Under these promising auspices, we anticipated a good and quick
-catch, as the whale has that feeling in common with man, that he loves
-sunshine and a calm sea. In such weather he comes inshore, gamboling
-in the sun’s rays, whilst from time to time leisurely disposing of a
-few bushels of ‘krill’ for supper, before proceeding to sea for the
-night. (By-the-bye, when travelling for pleasure in Arctic Norway, the
-period July-August should be chosen. True, one runs the risk of not
-seeing the midnight sun, which disappears in the latter half of July;
-but by way of recompense, there is no time of the year when nature in
-these regions stands forth in such colours as just then.) However,
-just now the Varanger seems rather out of temper; the weather thickens
-a little, and it begins to blow. No whale is in sight. A little while
-ago, there were a few ‘puffs’ down in the eastern horizon; but they are
-gone now; perhaps the supper has not been dainty or plentiful enough
-about us; there is neither whale nor bait to be seen. From time to
-time, a solitary seabird flits rapidly by, towards shore; he has been
-fetching his supper. Night slowly casts her veil over the ocean. We are
-soon far enough out; so the engines are ordered ‘slow,’ and everybody
-turns in who is not on the watch. We (officers and the writer) go aft
-to the captain’s cabin, where we make ourselves as comfortable as
-circumstances will permit, in order to snatch a few moments of rest, in
-which we soon succeed, lulled to sleep by the gentle rippling of the
-icy arctic waves as they lick the sides of the vessel.
-
-At first streak of dawn in the east we are called. There are whales
-about. The boilers are fired under; we turn out, and see at a great
-distance some ‘puffs;’ but the captain remarks that they are only
-a few making for the fjord. They are soon out of sight; it is no
-use attempting to follow them. We again lie down to rest, but in
-vain—sleep has fled. We dress, and breakfast is served. The steward
-appears with a steaming pot of coffee and fresh bread—a true luxury.
-On this occasion, there being a guest on board, we are also treated
-to real cream; but otherwise a substitute of preserved milk and
-sugar, of home manufacture, is served. The demands of the body being
-satisfied, the mind also craves sustenance, and a pipe soon makes it
-contented. The captain offers, indeed, a cigar; but a pipe is far
-preferable, and looks more ‘ship-shape’ too. Towards noon we are off
-Rybatschi-Polostrow (the fisherman’s peninsula). The peninsula is
-very low and sandy; inland, we see a ridge of mountains; around us,
-thousands of seabirds whirl with plaintive cries; but no whale is seen.
-They are, however, generally plentiful here; at times, there are even
-enormous shoals of them, particularly when the fishing draws eastwards,
-as the bait is then found here, which is what the whale likes. But
-now, during the summer months, they are more scattered. It is already
-past the mid-day meal, and still we have seen nothing. We go below a
-little disappointed, whilst the steamer’s course is shaped for Vardö.
-Since last night there has been blowing a stiff breeze, and the sea is
-in foam in some places. The waves increase in size, and the steamer
-begins to roll. The smoke and the rest below are of short duration,
-so we go again on deck to look for ‘puffs.’ Now and then, the ship
-heels over; a hogshead or two of water comes swishing over the port
-bow, but does no harm, as we are dressed in sailor’s boots, a thick
-coat, and sou’-wester. I stare till I am tired at the green sea and
-the foam-crested waves, as they come rolling towards the vessel. My
-face becomes coated with a layer of salt, which settles there, when
-the foam of the waves is swept on board, as the ship plunges into the
-trough of the sea. If not accustomed to the arctic sea-air, one soon
-gets frightfully tired, and is obliged to rest, so, after being on the
-watch for a while, I went below and lay down. Soon sleep irresistibly
-overpowers me, thoughts become dreams, while the rolling of the ship
-feels like the gentle swing in a hammock; in fact, I am fast asleep,
-when a voice thunders down the companion: ‘Turn out—whales in sight!’ I
-jump up with a start, unable at first to remember where I am; but soon
-the consciousness of being on a whale-hunt becomes clear, and I rush on
-deck, fearing to lose any part of the grand spectacle.
-
-What a change! Now, every wave has a snow-white cap; they tower high on
-all sides, and the vessel is tossed to and fro like a toy. Gulls and
-teistes sweep rapidly along the furrows between the waves, rise nearly
-perpendicularly as the wave breaks, and, just clearing the comb, dive
-into the next watery valley. ‘Look, look, what a tremendous puff!’
-‘That’s a big one.’ ‘Look, look—puff, puff!’ ‘There are a good many
-here.’
-
-We are in the middle of a flock of the giants of the sea. The enormous
-brown and blue bodies rise out of the sea; the back is bent upwards—it
-looks like the bottom of a capsized ship; it disappears; but the sea
-becomes almost calm where the whale went down, and several minutes
-elapse before the waves are able to conquer the calm. From time to
-time, deep dull snorts are heard, thundering and trembling, as if
-the deepest strings of a dozen double-basses were being played down
-below; and at others, a sharp swishing sound like an enormous fountain
-suddenly set to play, and a column of crystal spray ascends some
-thirty feet into the air. The gigantic, glistening body appears on the
-surface; the back is bent upwards a second, and it again disappears.
-It looks as if the whale was warm and comfortable enough; the
-sea-water, to us looking so cold, plays pleasantly around it; hot steam
-issues from its dilated nostrils, and it seems like a man enjoying a
-refreshing morning dip.
-
-During the last quarter of an hour we have seen some forty whales;
-but none has come within range. The gun has no certainty much beyond
-thirty yards, so that the whale must be nearly under the ship’s bow
-when firing. As we stand looking at this magnificent spectacle, the
-water close round the ship suddenly becomes light green in colour and
-somewhat calm. Then a deep heavy thunder; the ship trembles from stem
-to stern; a great column of dampness is shot into the air, drenching us
-all, a dull snort, and an enormous blue-whale rises out of the sea a
-few yards on our starboard side. Now the captain will fire, we think,
-involuntarily holding on to the wire-rigging; but Foyn stands by his
-gun without making the least movement, and the next second the whale
-again descends into its watery home. The range was probably not a good
-one. A few minutes after, the same thunder, the same sensation, the
-same column, and the same snort—another whale appears close on the port
-side. The captain turns the gun, whilst we watch with beating hearts
-the movements of the animal as well as his own. Every second seems
-an eternity. He raises the gun, aims. Alas! a heavy sea strikes the
-vessel, heels her over; the gun is lowered, but the whale is gone. They
-seem all to have disappeared now, not a puff to be seen. We stand and
-talk about the incident, and somebody suggests to go aft and ‘have a
-smoke;’ when suddenly two whales are seen some distance off, now going
-side by side, now behind each other. The helm is turned, and we follow
-them in hot haste through wind and waves. A complete silence reigns on
-board during the pursuit, only now and then broken by the captain’s
-short words of command, who stands calmly watching the animals. Now the
-vessel heels over—the whales are within range. ‘Stop,’ sounds in the
-engine-room. But the speed was too great, and we shoot past them. ‘Full
-speed ahead,’ sounds again. ‘Two men at the helm!’ The vessel turns
-swiftly, and we separate the couple. The whales disappear. We follow
-the direction they are taking, and look!—a little before us the sea
-becomes emerald green. ‘Slow,’ again. The vessel moves slowly forward,
-and the whale reappears twenty yards off. ‘Stop,’ shouts the captain.
-The gun is turned, raised, and again lowered—not a sound is heard on
-board—the whale has puffed—the back is bending; the captain aims—and a
-thundering report rends the air, and makes the vessel tremble in every
-section. We have watched all this with every nerve strained, and hardly
-feel the icy foam of the sea which bedews the cheek and benumbs the
-hands.
-
-‘Did you hit him?’ we shout to the captain.
-
-‘Don’t know,’ is the laconic answer. ‘Almost absurd to attempt it in
-such a sea; one risks losing the gear and frightening the whale.’
-
-In the meantime all the crew are busy clearing the line of the harpoon,
-and we are still in doubt whether we have hit him; but the suspense
-does not last long, as immediately a ‘Look out!’ is shouted by the
-captain, and the line runs out with terrific speed and a great noise.
-‘Full speed ahead,’ is shouted below; but the ship is running double
-her highest speed, such is the strength of the whale which has her in
-tow. The animal is fleeing at the top of its speed, and we follow right
-through the breaking seas. Ten minutes pass by—they seem ten hours—when
-suddenly a blood-streaked column of water is seen on the horizon.
-It is our whale! Another moment, and a clear one is seen. It is his
-companion, which follows her wounded mate. Both go down; the line does
-not run out so fast; the wounded whale appears once or twice more, when
-he sinks. The whale is dead. After a while, the hauling-in begins very
-carefully, and finally the great body rises to the surface, the ship
-heeling over. After a few hours’ hard work in securing the monster to
-the vessel with chains and ropes, the course is shaped for home.
-
-‘What do you think of it, captain?’ I ask.
-
-‘Not bad,’ he answers simply.—‘Steward, give the crew a drink all
-round! And let us have something to eat.’
-
-The whale measured more than eighty feet in length.
-
-Once more his widowed mate takes a turn round the ship, when she
-stands out to sea; whilst we, with our noble spoil in tow, slowly make
-for the whale-station in South Varanger.
-
-
-
-
-A GOLDEN ARGOSY.
-
-_A NOVELETTE._
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-Mr Carver of Bedford Row, in the county of Middlesex, was exercised
-in his mind; and the most annoying part of it was that he was so
-exercised at his own trouble and expense; that is to say, he was not
-elucidating some knotty legal point at the charge of a client, but he
-was speculating over one of the most extraordinary events that had
-ever happened to him in the whole course of his long and honourable
-career. The matter stood briefly thus: His client, Charles Morton, of
-Eastwood, Somersetshire, died on the 9th of April in the year of grace
-1882. On the 1st of May 1880, Mr Carver had made the gentleman’s will,
-which left all his possessions, to the amount of some forty thousand
-pounds, to his niece, Eleanor Attewood. Six months later, Mr Morton’s
-half-sister, Miss Wakefield, took up her residence at Eastwood, and
-from that time everything had changed. Eleanor had married the son
-of a clergyman in the neighbourhood, and at the instigation of his
-half-sister, Mr Morton had disinherited his niece; and one year before
-he died, had made a fresh will, leaving everything to Miss Wakefield.
-Mr Carver, be it remarked, strongly objected to this injustice, seeing
-the baleful influence which had brought it about; and had he been able
-to find Eleanor, he hoped to alter the unjust state of things. But she
-disappeared with her husband, and left no trace behind her; so the
-obnoxious will was proved.
-
-Then came the most extraordinary part of the affair. With the exception
-of a few hundreds in the bank at Eastwood, for household purposes, not
-a single penny of Mr Morton’s money could be found. All his property
-was mortgaged to a high amount; all his securities were disposed of,
-and not one penny could be traced. The mortgages on the property were
-properly drawn up by a highly respectable solicitor at Eastwood,
-the money advanced by a man of undoubted probity; and further, the
-money had been paid over to Mr Morton one day early in the year 1883.
-Advertisements were inserted in the papers, in fact everything was done
-to trace the missing money, but in vain. All Miss Wakefield had for
-her pains and trouble was a poor sum of about eleven hundred pounds,
-so she had to retire again to her genteel poverty in a cheap London
-boarding-house.
-
-This melancholy fact did not give Mr Carver any particular sorrow;
-he disliked that lady, and was especially glad that her deep cunning
-and underhand ways had frustrated themselves. In all probability, he
-thought, Mr Morton had in a fit of suspicion got hold of all his ready
-cash and securities, for the purpose of balking the fair lady whom he
-had made his heiress; but nevertheless the affair was puzzling, and Mr
-Carver hated to be puzzled.
-
-Mr Carver stood in his office in Bedford Row, drumming his fingers on
-the grimy window-panes and softly whistling. Nothing was heard in the
-office but the scratch of the confidential clerk’s quill pen as he
-scribbled out a draft for his employer’s inspection.
-
-‘This is a very queer case, Bates, very queer,’ said Mr Carver,
-addressing his clerk.
-
-‘Yes, sir,’ replied Mr Bates, continuing the scratching. That gentleman
-possessed the instinct of always being able to divine what his chief
-was thinking of. Therefore, when Mr Bates said ‘Yes, sir,’ he knew that
-the Eastwood mystery had been alluded to.
-
-‘I’d most cheerfully give—let me see, what would I give? Well, I
-wouldn’t mind paying down my cheque for’——
-
-‘One thousand pounds, sir. No, sir; I don’t think you would.’
-
-‘You’re a wonderful fellow, Bates,’ said his admiring master. ‘’Pon my
-honour, Bates, that’s the exact sum I was going to mention.’
-
-‘It _is_ strange, sir,’ said the imperturbable Bates, ‘that you and I
-always think the same things. I suppose it is being with you so long.
-Now, if I was to _think_ you would give me a partnership, perhaps you
-would think the same thing too.’
-
-‘Bates,’ said Mr Carver earnestly, never smiling, as was his wont, at
-his clerk’s quiet badinage, ‘if we unravel this mystery, as I hope we
-may, I’ll tell you what, Bates, don’t be surprised if I give you a
-partnership.’
-
-‘Ah, sir, if we unravel it. Now, if we could only find’——
-
-‘Miss Eleanor. Just what I was thinking.’
-
-At this moment a grimy clerk put his head in at the door.
-
-‘Please, sir, a young person of the name of Seaton.’
-
-‘It is Miss Eleanor, by Jove!’ said Bates, actually excited.
-
-‘Wonderful!’ said Mr Carver.
-
-In a few seconds the lady was ushered into the presence of Mr Carver.
-She was tall and fair, with a style of beauty uncommon to the people
-of to-day. Clad from head to foot in plain black, hat, jacket, and
-dress cut with a simplicity almost severe, and relieved only by a
-white collar at the throat, there was something in her air and bearing
-which spoke of a culture and breeding not easily defined in words, but
-nevertheless unmistakable. It was a face and figure that men would look
-at and turn again to watch, even in the busy street. Her complexion
-was almost painfully perfect in its clear pallid whiteness, and the
-large dark lustrous eyes shone out from the marble face with dazzling
-brightness. She had a perfect abundance of real golden hair, looped up
-in a great knot behind; but the rebellious straying tresses fell over
-her broad low forehead like an aureole round the head of a saint.
-
-For a few moments she regarded Mr Carver with a faint, wavering,
-unsteady smile. That gentleman tried to speak, and then blew his nose
-with unnecessary and ostentatious violence.
-
-‘Don’t you know me, Mr Carver?’ she said at length.
-
-‘My dear Eleanor, my dear Eleanor, do sit down!’ This was the person
-whom he had been longing for two years to see, and Mr Carver, cool as
-he was, was rather knocked off his balance for a moment.
-
-‘Poor child! Why, why didn’t you come and see me before?’
-
-‘Pride, Mr Carver—pride,’ she replied, with a painful air of assumed
-playfulness.
-
-‘But surely pride did not prevent your coming to see your old friend?’
-
-‘Indeed, it did, Mr Carver. You would not have me part with one of my
-few possessions?’
-
-‘Nonsense, nonsense!’ said the lawyer, with assumed severity. ‘Now,
-sit down there, and tell me everything you have done for the last two
-years.’
-
-‘It is soon told. When my uncle—poor deluded man—turned me, as he
-did, out of his house on account of my marriage, something had to be
-done; so we came to London. For two years my husband has been trying
-to earn a living by literature. Far better had he stayed in the
-country and taken to breaking stones or working in the fields. It is
-a bitter life, Mr Carver. The man who wants to achieve fortune that
-way must have a stout heart; he must be devoid of pride and callous to
-failure. If I had all the eloquence of a Dickens at my tongue’s end, I
-could not sum up two years’ degradation and bitter miserable poverty
-and disappointment better than in the few words, “Trying to live by
-literature.”—However, it is useless to struggle against it any longer.
-Mr Carver, sorely against my inclination, I have come to you to help
-us.’
-
-‘My dear child, you hurt me,’ said Mr Carver huskily, ‘you hurt me; you
-do indeed. For two years I have been searching for you everywhere. You
-have only to ask me, and you know anything I can I will do.’
-
-‘God bless you,’ replied Eleanor, with the gathering tears thick in her
-eyes. ‘I know you will. I knew that when I came here. How can I thank
-you?’
-
-‘Don’t do anything of the sort; I don’t want any thanks. But before you
-go, I will do something for you. Now, listen to me. Before your uncle
-died’——
-
-‘Died! Is he dead?’
-
-‘How stupid of me. I didn’t know’——
-
-Mr Carver stopped abruptly, and paused till the natural emotions called
-forth in the young lady’s mind had had time to expend themselves. She
-then asked when the event had happened.
-
-‘Two years ago,’ said Mr Carver. ‘And now, tell me—since you last saw
-him, had you any word or communication from him in any shape or form?
-Any letter or message?’
-
-Eleanor shook her head, half sadly, half scornfully.
-
-‘You don’t seem to know Miss Wakefield,’ she said. ‘No message was
-likely to reach me, while _she_ remained at Eastwood.’
-
-‘No; I suppose not. So you have heard nothing? Very good. Now, a most
-wonderful thing has happened. When your uncle died and his will came to
-be read, he had left everything to Miss Wakefield. No reason to tell
-you that, I suppose? Now comes the strangest part of the story. With
-the exception of a few hundreds in the local bank, not a penny can be
-found. All the property has been mortgaged to the uttermost farthing;
-all the stock is sold out; and, in fact, nothing is left but Eastwood,
-which, as you know, is a small place, and not worth much. We have been
-searching for two years, and not a trace can we find.’
-
-‘Perhaps Miss Wakefield is hiding the plunder away,’ Eleanor suggested
-with some indifference.
-
-‘Impossible,’ eagerly exclaimed Mr Carver—‘impossible. What object
-could she have in doing so? The money was clearly left to her; and it
-is not likely that a woman so fond of show would deliberately choose to
-spend her life in a dingy lodging-house.’
-
-‘And Eastwood?’
-
-‘Is empty. It will not let, neither can we sell it.’
-
-‘So Miss Wakefield is no better off than she was four years ago!’
-Eleanor said calmly. ‘Come, Mr Carver, that is good news, at anyrate.
-It almost reconciles me to my position.’
-
-‘Nelly, I wish you would not speak so,’ said Mr Carver seriously. ‘It
-hurts me. You were not so hard at one time.’
-
-‘Forgive me, my dear old friend,’ she replied simply. ‘Only consider
-what a life we have been leading for the past two years, and you will
-understand.’
-
-‘And your husband?’
-
-‘Killing himself,’ she said; ‘wearing out body and soul in one long
-struggle for existence. It hurts me to see him. Always hoping, and
-always working, always smiling and cheerful before me; and ever the
-best of men and husbands. Dear friend, if you knew what he is to me,
-and saw him as I do day after day, literally wearing out, you would
-consider my seeming hardness pardonable. I am rebellious, you know.’
-
-‘No, no,’ said Mr Carver, a suspicious gleam behind his spectacles;
-‘I can understand it. The only thing I blame you for is that you did
-not come to me before. You know what a lonely old bachelor I am, and
-how—how rich I am. It would have been a positive kindness of you to
-come and see me.—Now, listen. On Sunday, you and your husband must come
-and dine with me. You know the old Russell Square address?’
-
-‘God bless you for a true friend!’ said Eleanor, her tears flowing
-freely now. ‘We will come; and I may bring my little girl with me?’
-
-‘Eh, what?’ replied the lawyer—‘little girl? Of course, of course! Then
-we will talk over old times, and see what can be done to make those
-cheeks look a little like they used to do.—So you have got a little
-girl, have you? Dear, dear, how the time goes!—Now, tell me candidly,
-do you want any assistance—any, ah—that is—a little—in short, money?’
-
-Eleanor coloured to the roots of her hair, and was about to reply
-hastily, but said nothing.
-
-‘Yes, yes,’ said Mr Carver rapidly.—‘I think, Bates’——
-
-But Mr Bates already had his hand on the cheque-book, and commenced to
-fill in the date. Mr Carver gave him a look of approbation, and flashed
-him a sign with his fingers signifying the amount.
-
-‘I suppose you have some friends?’ he continued hastily, to cover
-Eleanor’s confusion. ‘It’s a poor world that won’t stand one good
-friend.’
-
-‘Yes, we have one,’ replied Eleanor, her face lighting up with a tender
-glow—‘a good friend. You have heard of Jasper Felix the author? He is
-far the best friend we have.’
-
-‘Heard of Felix! I should think I have. Read every one of his books. I
-am glad to hear of his befriending you. I knew the man who writes as he
-does must have a noble heart.’
-
-‘He has. What we should have done without his assistance, I shudder to
-contemplate. I honestly believe that not one of my husband’s literary
-efforts would have been accepted, had it not been for him.’
-
-‘I can’t help thinking, Nelly, that there is a providence in these
-things, and I feel that better days are in store for you. Anyway, it
-won’t be my fault if it is not so. I have a presentiment that things
-will come out all right in the end, and I fancy that your uncle’s
-fortune is hidden away somewhere; and if it is hidden away, it must be,
-I cannot help thinking, for your benefit.’
-
-‘Don’t count upon it, Mr Carver,’ said Eleanor calmly. ‘I look upon the
-money as gone.’
-
-‘Nonsense!’ said that gentleman cheerfully; ‘while there is life
-there is hope. I begin to feel that I am playing a leading character
-in a romance; I do, indeed! Firstly, your uncle dies, and his
-fortune is lost; secondly, you disappear; and at the very moment
-I am longing—literally longing—to see you, you turn up. Now, all
-that remains is to find the hidden treasure, and to be happy ever
-afterwards, like the people in a fairy tale.’
-
-‘Always enthusiastic,’ laughed Eleanor. ‘All we have to do is to
-discover a mystic clue to a buried chest of diamonds, only we lack the
-clue.’
-
-‘’Pon my word, my dear, do you know I really think you have hit it?’
-replied Mr Carver with great solemnity. ‘Now, at the time you left
-Eastwood, your companion Margaret was in the house; and after your
-uncle’s death, she disappeared. From a little hint Miss Wakefield
-dropped to me, your old friend was in the sickroom alone with your
-uncle the day he died.’
-
-‘Alone? and then disappeared,’ said Eleanor, all trace of apathy gone,
-and her eyes shining with interest.
-
-‘Alone. Now, if we could only find Margaret Boulton’——
-
-Eleanor rose from her seat, and approached Mr Carver slowly. Then she
-said calmly: ‘There is no difficulty about that; she is at my house
-now. I found her only last night on Waterloo Bridge—in fact, I saved
-her.’
-
-‘Saved her? Didn’t I say there was a providence in it? Saved her?’
-
-‘From suicide!’
-
- * * * * *
-
-A quarter of an hour later, Eleanor was standing outside Mr Carver’s
-office, evidently seeking a companion. From the bright flush on her
-face and the sparkle in her eyes, hope—and a strong hope—had revived.
-She stood there, quite unconscious of the admiration of passers-by,
-sweeping the street in search of her quest. Presently the object
-she was seeking came in view. He was a tall man, of slight figure,
-with blue eyes deeply sunk in a face far from handsome, but full of
-intellectual power and great character; a heavy, carelessly trimmed
-moustache hid a sensitive mouth, but did not disguise a bright smile.
-That face and figure was a famous one in London, and people there
-turned in the busy street to watch Jasper Felix, and admire his rugged
-powerful face and gaunt figure. He came swinging down the street now
-with firm elastic step, and treated Eleanor to one of his brightest
-smiles.
-
-‘Did you think I had forgotten you?’ he said. ‘I have been prowling
-about Gray’s Inn Road, for, sooth to say, the air of Bedford Row does
-not agree with me.’
-
-‘I hope I have not detained you,’ said Eleanor timidly; ‘I know how
-valuable your time is to you.’
-
-‘My dear child, don’t mention it,’ replied the great novelist lightly;
-‘my time has been well occupied. First, I have been watching a fight
-between two paviors. Do you know it is quite extraordinary how those
-powerful men can knock each other about without doing much harm. Then
-I have been having a long chat with an intellectual chimney-sweep—a
-clever man, but a great Radical. I have spent quite an enjoyable
-half-hour.’
-
-‘A half-hour! Have I been so long? Mr Felix, I am quite horrified at
-having taken up so much of your time.’
-
-‘Awful, isn’t it,’ he laughed lightly. ‘Well, you won’t detain me much
-longer, for here you are close at home.—Now, I will just run into Fleet
-Street on my own business, and try and sell this little paper of your
-husband’s at the same time. I’ll call in this afternoon; only, mind,
-you must look as happy as you do now.’
-
-Jasper Felix made his way through a court into Holborn, and along
-that busy thoroughfare till he turned down Chancery Lane. Crossing
-the street by the famous _Griffin_, he disappeared in one of the
-interminable courts leading out of Samuel Johnson’s favourite
-promenade, Fleet Street. The object of his journey was here. On the
-door-plate was the inscription, ‘The _Midas Magazine_,’ and beneath the
-legend, ‘First Floor.’ Ascending the dingy stair, he stopped opposite
-a door on which, in white letters, was written the word ‘Editor.’ At
-this door he knocked. It was not the timid rap of a literary aspirant,
-but the important tap of a man who knew that he was welcome. Without
-pausing for a reply, he pushed open the door.
-
-‘How de do, Simpson?’ said Mr Felix, with a look of amusement in his
-blue eyes.
-
-‘Glad to see you, Felix,’ said the editor of the _Midas_ cordially. ‘I
-thought you had forgotten us. I hope you have something for our journal
-in your pocket.’
-
-‘I _have_ something in my pocket to show you,’ answered Felix, ‘and I
-think you will appreciate it.’
-
-‘Is it something of your own?’ queried the man of letters.
-
-‘No, it is not; and, what is more, I doubt if I could write anything so
-good myself. I know when you have seen it, you will accept it.’
-
-‘Um! I don’t know,’ replied the editor dubiously. ‘You see, I am simply
-inundated with amateur efforts. Of course, sometimes I get something
-good; but usually—— Now, if the matter in discussion was a manuscript
-of your own’——
-
-‘Now, seriously, Simpson, what do you care for me or anything of mine?
-It is the name you want, not the work. You know well enough what sells
-magazines of the _Midas_ type. It is not so much the literary matter as
-the name. The announcement that the next month’s _Midas_ will contain
-the opening chapters of a new serial by some one with a name, is quite
-sufficient to increase your circulation by hundreds.’
-
-‘’Pon my honour, you’re very candid,’ rejoined Mr Simpson. ‘But what is
-this wonderful production you have?’
-
-‘Well, I’ll leave it with you. You need not trouble to read it,
-because, if you don’t take it, I know who will.’
-
-‘What do you want for this triumph of genius?’
-
-‘Well, in a word, ten pounds. Take it or leave it.’
-
-‘If you say it is worth it, I suppose I must oblige you.’
-
-‘That is a good way of putting it; and it will oblige me. But mark
-me—this man will some day confer favours by writing for you, instead
-of, as you regard it at present, favouring him.’
-
-The proprietor of the _Midas_ sighed gently. The idea of paying over
-ten pounds to an unknown contributor was not nice, but the fact of
-offending Felix was worse.
-
-‘If,’ said he, harping on the old string, and shaking his head with a
-gentle deprecating motion—‘if it was one of yours now’——
-
-‘What confounded nonsense you talk!’ exclaimed Felix impatiently.
-
-‘Don’t get wild, Felix,’ replied Mr Simpson soothingly. ‘I will take
-your protégé’s offering, to oblige you.’
-
-‘But I don’t want you to oblige me. I want you to accept—and pay for—an
-article good enough for anything. It is a fair transaction; and if
-there is any favour about it, then it certainly is not on your side.’
-
-Mr Simpson showed his white teeth in a dazzling smile. ‘Well, Felix, I
-do admire your assurance,’ he said loftily. ‘I never heard the matter
-put in that light before. My contributors, as a rule, don’t point their
-manuscript at my head metaphorically, and demand speedy insertion and
-prompt pay.—Do you want a cheque for this manuscript now?’
-
-‘Yes, you may as well give me the cash now.’
-
-Mr Simpson drew a cheque for the desired amount, and passed it over to
-Felix, who folded the pink slip and placed it in his pocket; whereupon
-the conversation drifted into other channels.
-
-
-
-
-REVOLUTION BELOW-STAIRS.
-
-
-The relations of employer and employed in private life and in public
-are in a state of transition. The foundations of society itself are
-undergoing drastic modifications, which will either sap or enhance
-its strength. The air is charged with reform in every department of
-social life. The very conditions of existence are more or less in
-the crucible. The connection between man and man, between woman and
-man, between man and the State, or woman and the State, are every one
-of them passing through an ordeal of stringent examination. In no
-direction is the old order of things vanishing more rapidly than in
-the household. The relations of mistress and maid are not to-day what
-they were yesterday, or what they will be to-morrow. A hundred years
-ago, servants were more part and parcel of the establishment than they
-are now. They entered a family, in the majority of cases, whilst they
-were young, and marriage or death was the only cause of separation
-in general. It never occurred to the domestic of the past to ‘give
-notice,’ any more than it occurred to the mistress to dismiss her
-servants, on the slightest provocation.
-
-We need not travel far to ascertain what are the agencies which have
-wrought the change. The same influences which are every day giving
-the working classes increased power have affected in at least an
-equally pronounced degree the domestic employee. In 1886, the footman
-or the housemaid, the butler or the cook, is perhaps as well educated
-as were many heads of households in 1786. If the upper classes are
-now more cultured than they were in the olden days, so are the lower
-classes. Advertising mediums, cheapness and ease of locomotion, and the
-ever-spreading education of the masses, were boons undreamed of by the
-‘Jeames’ whom Thackeray portrayed. Before these results of our progress
-were realised, the sphere within which the energies of servants found
-play was exceedingly limited. Beyond the locality in which they lived
-and the immediate circle of their master’s acquaintances, the world was
-to them little more than a blank and a mystery. To-day, they are nearly
-as familiar with the world as are their masters.
-
-The sooner this is understood and appreciated, the better for the
-peace and stability of households. It is an invariable rule that the
-most contented homes are those in which the servant is treated with
-the greatest respect. Servants must be servants. No one but a lunatic
-would suggest that they had any right to enter the drawing-room or
-the dining-room on a footing of equality with its owner. But not less
-idiotic is it to imagine that they will much longer consent to be
-regarded as only one degree removed from the beast of burden. Their
-opportunities for acquiring knowledge are so manifold that it would
-be wonderful if this were not the case. Ladies and gentlemen sitting
-round their table are apt to forget that the man or maid waiting upon
-them has ears, and that their comments on life and the way the world is
-wagging, cannot fail to excite attention on the part of the domestic.
-Topics thrashed out in the dining-room or drawing-room are frequently
-carried below-stairs, and there subjected to a similar process, though
-it may be on very different lines. The result, equally with that of
-love as defined by Kenelm Chillingly, must inevitably be ‘a disturbance
-of the mental equilibrium.’
-
-The unrest which characterises society itself characterises every
-section of the community. To ‘better’ themselves is the lifelong
-aim of servants in the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Good
-servants are already at a premium. The complaint is constantly made
-that whilst domestics are more independent than of yore, their work
-is less carefully attended to. Those who understand the forces at work
-in our midst have no difficulty in recognising that, as time goes on,
-first-class servants will become rarer still. Preposterous as it may
-seem, this phenomenon is only another phase of the ‘social status’
-question. There is, quite without reason, attaching to service a
-certain disposition on the part of many of our domestics to resent the
-washing-up of dishes or the cleaning of a floor.
-
-The rule is not, of course, absolute, and there are many really good
-servants who enter a family and stay in it a number of years. But
-the tendency of the period is nomadic. In some quarters, there is a
-disposition to account for the perpetual changing of servants on the
-ground that servants love change. This is not altogether accurate.
-Many dislike nothing so much as fresh faces and fresh work, and
-are by no means eager to enter upon the duties of their new home.
-Others, however, leave one situation with the express hope that
-they may never enter another, and if employment of a different kind
-offers, eagerly avail themselves of it, albeit generally to their own
-disadvantage. Thousands of young men and women in every way qualified
-for service are swamping many callings. Milliners, dressmakers, clerks,
-shop-assistants—what a host might be found in the ranks of these who
-would constitute first-class recruits for private service! It is a
-fact, that whilst their numbers are on the increase, the numbers of
-domestics are almost stationary. During the decade 1871 to 1881, the
-census proved that indoor servants had increased by only one per cent.,
-and consequently, proportionately to the increase of population, were
-scarcer in 1881 than ten years before. On the other hand, clerks
-had doubled; milliners had increased by nearly nineteen per cent.;
-dressmakers, by nearly eight per cent.; and seamstresses, by over five
-per cent.
-
-These figures afford food for reflection. A large proportion of the
-young men and women to whom they refer are earning barely enough
-to keep body and soul together. In most cases they are a load upon
-the shoulders of their friends. For some months of the year the
-majority are without work. When they are in work, their money will
-never more than cover immediate wants. Would they not be better off
-beneath the gentleman’s roof with regular food and regular money? No
-one who knows anything at all about them will hesitate for a moment
-to reply in the affirmative. ‘Why, then,’ it will be, and often is
-asked, ‘do they not go into service?’ It would be found that if they
-applied for a situation in the household to-morrow, they would want to
-become ladies’-maids or valets. This disposition is to be explained
-on two grounds. First, exceptional privileges attach to the personal
-attendant; secondly, the lower grades of the domestic calling are still
-regarded with the feelings to which George Eliot gave expression in her
-dissertation on servants’ logic. The ordinary servant is too frequently
-and often unjustly branded with the mark of servility and ignorance not
-only among the upper classes, but to some extent among the industrial
-classes. To be ‘only a servant’ is, in the society in which the artisan
-or the clerk moves, to be entitled to less consideration than is given
-to those who follow a more independent calling. Just as it is the
-genius of the stage who alone is recognised in the best society, so it
-is only a few servants who have the power of impressing those with whom
-they come in contact with their worth, who secure friends outside the
-domestic circle.
-
-The growing antipathy to service is a sign of the times which has to
-be reckoned with. Nor is this wonderful. No class of the community
-are kept to so perpetual a round of labour as the domestic servant.
-With the exception of an occasional afternoon or evening—often it is
-not more than once in a fortnight—those who live below-stairs rarely
-have an hour which they can call entirely their own. They may perhaps
-frequently have an opportunity of getting through their work early
-in the day, but they must not leave the house till they have asked
-permission. Again, they may stay in the same family for many years. But
-what do they gain by it? There is in England no such recognition of
-long and faithful service as exists in Germany. Seven years ago, the
-Empress of the Fatherland instituted a Long Service Order, and since
-that time many hundreds of domestic servants who have lived with the
-same master and mistress for forty years, have received from royalty
-diplomas and golden crosses.
-
-Is such an Order impossible in Great Britain? Could we not modify and
-adapt it to ourselves? If a person is to work well for any length of
-time, some motive must be found. Why should not a system of rewards be
-adopted? No one can doubt that if a lady, when engaging a domestic,
-said, ‘Supposing you stay with me and perform your duties to the best
-of your ability for ten years, I will, in consideration thereof,
-present you at the termination of your engagement with twenty-five
-pounds,’ the effect would be beneficial. On condition of being assured
-that the money was safe, many servants, for the sake of the bonus,
-would consent to accept lesser wages than they receive at present. Even
-though the plan now suggested cost a few pounds more than would be
-spent under existing circumstances, would not the freedom from worry
-and anxiety be ample compensation? The outlay, however, would probably
-amount to little more than is now expended in advertising, in paying
-fares to and from the house for the purpose of interviews, and in
-various other ways incidental to the constantly recurring necessity of
-engaging servants.
-
-Further, there can be no reason why mistresses should not agree to let
-each of their servants have a certain number of hours during the week
-which they may consider their own. The one drawback to service, in the
-eyes of many who would be better off in service than they are now,
-is, that they cannot have the evenings which at present are at their
-disposal. If the housewife gives the matter a little thought, she will
-see that this is an enigma the solution of which is not impracticable.
-The future must be pregnant with reform in the relations between the
-occupants of the drawing-room and of the servants’ hall. If masters
-and mistresses are wise, they will rob the revolutionary spirit of
-the age of any force it may have, by anticipating in a generous and
-liberal-handed manner claims which, if ignored, may result in a
-condition of things as undesirable as that which to-day obtains in
-Australia, where servants, at least as they are known in the old
-country, are non-existent.
-
-
-
-
-A SUBAQUEOUS EXCURSION.
-
-
-Our good-fortune in obtaining permission to descend a caisson of the
-gigantic Forth Bridge—which when completed will be one of the most
-stupendous railway viaducts in the world—obtained additional zest
-from the fact that comparatively few structures are founded on what
-is termed the pneumatic principle in this country—the employment of
-compressed air being more in vogue on the continent—and still fewer
-are open to the passing visitor, uninfluenced alike by professional or
-scientific ardour.
-
-Arrived at North Queensferry, on the Fife side of the Firth of Forth,
-we embark for the island in mid-channel, and rounding the easternmost
-promontory of the rock, see before us a huge iron cylinder, which, but
-for the incongruity of its position, we should take for a gasometer,
-and not a caisson. We land, and are forthwith marshalled to the
-dressing-room. Leathern caps and garments of a sombre blue hue are
-donned, and we are ready to descend. Before, however, proceeding, a
-brief outline of the working of a caisson, the end in view, and the
-means adopted in the attainment of that end, may be given, which will
-enable the reader to follow our movements.
-
-Over the site of the proposed pier, a large circular cylinder is
-sunk, which rests on the rock-bottom, and has its upper edge slightly
-above high water. A horizontal floor divides the cylinder into two
-chambers. The lower chamber, seven feet in height, is charged with
-compressed air by machinery situated on shore, and connected with it
-by flexible hose. The air under pressure excludes the water, enabling
-workmen to descend into the lower chamber—which is, in fact, a large
-diving-bell—and to excavate the rock on which the caisson rests. The
-excavated material is drawn up in buckets or ‘skips’ and thrown over,
-whilst the caisson gradually descends by its own weight until a level
-bed is formed. The upper and lower chambers of the caisson are then
-filled with concrete, and this circular monolithic foundation carries
-the granite pier on which rests the steel superstructure. A tube,
-connecting the air-chamber below with an air-lock on the upper platform
-of the caisson, gives access to the working beneath. In principle, the
-air-lock of a caisson in no way differs from the well-known lock on
-a canal. The air-lock is formed by a tube of larger diameter, which
-surrounds the upper end of the vertical tube leading to the air-chamber.
-
-Having entered this outer chamber, the door is closed behind us, and
-our connection with the outer world severed. A cock is turned, and
-with a steady hiss, the compressed air enters, a fact of which we
-soon become painfully conscious by the pressure that is brought to
-bear upon the drum of the ear. We follow the directions previously
-given us, and by copiously swallowing the compressed air and forcing
-it into the ears, with closed nostrils, we equalise the pressure on
-both sides of the drums, and succeed in accommodating ourselves to the
-novel atmospheric conditions. The inrush of compressed air at length
-ceases; and the pressure being now equal in the outer chamber—in which
-we are—and the internal tube, the door between them opens without
-difficulty. We enter, and descending a vertical ladder some ninety
-feet, we find ourselves in the air-chamber, and standing on the solid
-rock-bed of the Firth of Forth fifty feet below water-level. The scene
-is as striking as it is novel. A circular iron chamber, seventy feet
-in diameter and seven feet high, brilliantly illuminated by arc-lights
-suspended from the roof. Groups of foreign workmen—enlisted for this
-service, owing to continental experience in this class of work—are
-busily engaged in levelling the surface of the rock. The majority
-of these men wield pick and bar; whilst others fill the iron tubs
-or ‘skips’ with the fragments of rock, which are then drawn to the
-surface, passing through a lock similar in principle, though differing
-slightly in design from that we have ourselves traversed; and having
-discharged their contents over the edge of the caisson, return for
-another load.
-
-We would fain linger amid a scene so weird and wonderful; but time
-fails, and we must return to ‘bank.’ We take a last look at the
-air-chamber with its busy occupants, and ascending the ladder, not
-without exertion, for a vertical ladder at all times calls muscle into
-play, and the pressure we are under by no means lightens our labours,
-we find ourselves again in the air-lock. The reverse process now takes
-place. The inner door is closed, the compressed air is allowed to
-escape from the outer chamber in which we now are, and causes a thick
-mist, cold and chilly. Before long, the pressure ceases; the outer
-door opens, and we again tread terra firma. The pressure-gauge records
-thirty pounds per square inch.
-
-We now discard our exploring garments, and having enjoyed a not
-unneedful wash, we quit the works, and returning homewards,
-congratulate each other on having trodden the very foundations of the
-wonderful Forth Bridge, and ponder how little the future traveller, as
-he lightly skims the estuary at sixty miles an hour, will think of the
-practical ingenuity and patient labour that wrought, deep down beneath
-the waters of the Forth, the foundations on which repose the huge
-structures through which the flying express is whirling him.
-
-
-
-
-OCCASIONAL NOTES.
-
-
-BORAX.
-
-We learn from a contemporary a good deal that is interesting about the
-history and preparation for the market of the borax of commerce. In
-1874 Mr A. Robottom, prospecting for commercial purposes some of the
-vast tracts of unoccupied land in Southern California, came across a
-long deep valley, about fifteen by eight miles, which was apparently
-the basin, or series of basins, of once active volcanoes. This valley
-was covered with crude borates, combined with earthy impurities. The
-heat was oppressive, one hundred and nineteen degrees in the shade; and
-the atmosphere so dry, that even breathing was difficult. At this time,
-the explorer’s attention was drawn to a dark object lying upon the
-ground, upon which he seated himself, and found it was a dead horse. He
-was naturally surprised that no smell emanated from the carcase, and
-taking out his knife, he cut to the bones, only to find that the flesh
-was quite sweet. The explanation of this was that the boron from the
-boracic land had saturated it thoroughly. He learned afterwards that
-the carcase of this horse had lain there for seven months, having been
-left by a party of emigrants. The remarkable antiseptic powers of boron
-in its crude state having thus been proved to him, he took over this
-Boron Valley for the State of California, and arranged with a Company
-in England to make it available for commercial purposes.
-
-As it reaches this country, Californian borax, after being freed from
-its earthy elements at the Borax Lake, is put up in small bags, and
-consists of pure white crystals, which are crushed into a fine, white,
-almost inpalpable powder in the factories. After undergoing various
-processes, it comes out eventually to the outside world as borax
-extract of soap, borax dry soap, washing-powders, &c. In one factory,
-over thirty-seven million of packets are turned out annually. This
-prepared Californian borax is used in the laundry, for washing cattle,
-for helping to heal wounds, and many other household purposes. Its
-virtues in preventing decomposition in hams and salted meats are also
-well known. Water containing one per cent. of borax will keep pure and
-sweet for years, and remain safe for drinking.
-
-The soap prepared with borax, however, has been thought by some to have
-a more corrosive influence on fibres than common soap. In Belgium,
-powdered borax is used for washing purposes, with a view to economise
-soap; while in Sweden, meat and milk are largely preserved by means of
-boracic acid, its use in no way rendering these viands less wholesome.
-It is also valuable for hard soldering, and is in use for pottery
-glazes and enamels.
-
-In addition to the natural supply of crude borax already mentioned,
-this substance is largely made from boracic or boric acid, found
-among the matters ejected around the craters of volcanoes. Works for
-utilising and preparing it exist in the Maremma of Tuscany, where the
-acid is condensed from the boiling springs and heated gases issuing
-from fissures in the rocks. It is also found in Central Asia, Canada,
-Peru, and in Nevada, United States.
-
-
-AMERICANISMS.
-
-The _Globe_, in an article by an ‘American Journalist,’ says: ‘The
-opportunity may here be taken to gently suggest that the word Yankee
-is very often misapplied on this side of the Atlantic. It is a genuine
-American word, but it only applies to the inhabitants of a certain
-part of the big Republic. A stranger in the States describing an
-inhabitant of Cincinnati, or St Louis, or Richmond, Virginia, as a
-Yankee, would stand a good chance of a broken head, or even worse.
-As a matter of fact, the Yankees are the people who inhabit the New
-England States, and the title is considered a term of reproach, not
-to say insult, by all others. This, however, is all by the way. There
-are three terms very often quoted as American “slang,” which possess
-certain peculiarities of locality. These are “guess,” “calculate,” and
-“reckon.” One may travel through what are known as the Southern States
-for five years and never once hear either of the first two words,
-unless spoken by a Northerner or a man from the West. The Southerners
-“reckon” everything, except, perhaps, consequences, and they are left
-to take care of themselves. “Guess” is more or less universal in the
-States, and “calculate” is common only to the North and extreme East.
-“Straanger” is frequently erroneously used by English writers and
-speakers as an ordinary colloquialism of all Americans. It is the
-property of the South and South-west only, and even there is rapidly
-becoming obsolete. But to these expressions it is hardly fair to append
-the stigma of “slang.” Now there are plenty of slang words and phrases
-in vogue in America which probably are meaningless to English minds.
-A lady has purchased an article for considerably more than its value;
-she shows it to her husband, proclaiming its beauty and cheapness.
-He, seeing that she has been overcharged, endeavours to persuade her
-that such is the case, vainly, for she is quite satisfied with her
-bargain. “All right,” says he; “it’s not my funeral.” This is slang,
-pure and simple, but it has a derivation. It is an unintentional
-protest against the elaborate obsequial ceremonies indulged in by all
-classes in the United States, and it is a grim reference to one of
-those not unfrequent “shindies” that take place in Western bar-rooms,
-from which the men who escape with whole skins have reason to thank
-their stars that “it is not their funeral.” Many are the political
-and party expressions which may well come under the head of slang
-terms, such as “log-rolling,” “the bloody shirt”—a reference to the
-late civil war—“mugwumps”—a name given in ridicule to independent
-voters—“the ticket,” meaning the list of candidates recommended for
-election by either party, and so on. The speculative nature of nearly
-all Americans has originated the expression “you bet,” which is the
-basis of many phrases, as, “you bet your life,” “bet your sweet life,”
-“bet your bottom dollar,” “bet your boots,” “stake your pile,” “go the
-lot on that.” Favourite games of cards have caused such expressions
-as “euchred!” to signify that one is exposed or thwarted; “I pass,”
-meaning that one declines further conjecture or speculation; “let’s
-make a Jack-pot,” a proceeding in the game of poker similar to making
-a pool; “pooling the issues,” denoting an intention or proposal to
-put all the results of some action together and “divvy up” or divide
-equally among the partners. To “catch on” means to understand or
-comprehend quickly, and has its parallel on this side of the Atlantic
-in “do you catch my meaning?” It is usual in the States to call
-railways “railroads,” railway lines “tracks,” carriages “cars,” and
-stations “depots.” Tramway carriages are referred to as “street” or
-“horse” cars, in contradistinction to “steam-cars” or railway trains.
-A railway engine is known as a “locomotive,” in opposition to a
-stationary engine. The guards are all “conductors;” and there is no
-luggage, but all “baggage,” and hence porters are called opprobriously
-“baggage-smashers,” from their anything but gentle handling of the
-baggage. The speed of the trains has given rise to the phrase “to
-railroad a thing through,” meaning to get a thing done quickly; and the
-huge lamp which flashes along the line from the front of the engine
-has given its name to a special lamp-oil called “headlight oil.” Very
-nearly every State has its special provincialisms, and they are as
-numerous as the words peculiar to the counties of England. Climate has
-had a great deal to do with many of these peculiarities, the languid
-heat of the Southern States having induced a soft drawling accent and a
-habit of slurring over certain letters, syllables, and sounds.’
-
-
-A NATURAL SALMON-TRAP.
-
-The salmon, the cousin of the trout, is famous for its method of going
-up-stream; it darts at falls ten or twelve feet high, leaps into
-the air, and rushes up the falling water in a marvellous manner. So
-determined are the salmon to attain the high and safe waters, that
-in some localities nets are placed beneath the falls, into which
-the fish tumble in their repeated attempts to clear the hill of
-water. Other than human hunters, moreover, profit by these scrambles
-up-hill. Travellers report that on the banks of the Upper St John
-River, in Canada, there was once a rock in which a large circular
-well, or pot-hole, had been worn by the action of the water. At the
-salmon-season, this rock proved a favourite resort for bears; and for a
-good reason. Having an especial taste for salmon, the bears would watch
-at the pot-hole, and as the salmon, dashing up the fall, were thrown
-by its force into the rocky basin, the bears would quickly scrape them
-out of the pot-hole, and the poor salmon would be eaten before they had
-time to wonder at this unlooked-for reception. The Dominion government
-finally authorised a party of hunters to destroy the pot-hole, and thus
-break up the bears’ fishing-ground.
-
-
-‘POOR JACK.’
-
-A correspondent sends us the following. He says:
-
-Reading the interesting article entitled ‘Poor Jack’ in the _Journal_
-of the 7th November, I venture to send you a few notes, thinking that
-an excerpt from them may possibly be of interest to your readers. As
-the writer states, Jack is, thanks to the Board of Trade, much better
-off than he used to be. At all ports where there is not a separate
-Mercantile Marine Office, the custom-house is used as one, and the
-customs officials discharge the necessary duties. It is only at large
-ports that sailors are enabled to proceed home at once, if they _do_
-reside—as is generally the case—at a seaport town. They receive a
-document from the Board of Trade officer, which they present to the
-officer at the port where they live; and he, being advised through
-post by the officer at the arrival port, pays the amount of wages due.
-Here Jack is protected thoroughly from all temptations, and usually
-arrives at home sober, with his hard-earned wages safe in his pocket.
-This beneficial system, however, is not extended to the middle-class
-and small ports, and at these places Jack too often falls a ready
-prey to the land-sharks. Usually, when a foreign-going ship arrives
-in port, some hours—or perhaps a day or two—elapse before Jack is
-paid off. In the meantime he has his liberty, and it is then that the
-land-sharks are on the lookout for him. They entice him to their houses
-and give him drink, and so manage matters that, when the ship is paid
-off and he receives his wages, he is already considerably indebted to
-them, and perhaps is in such a muddled condition as to be incapable of
-taking care of his money. Seamen’s Money Orders are of great service in
-rescuing Jack’s wages from the clutches of these plunderers. They are
-obtained free of charge and for any amount at the time the ship is paid
-off, and steady seamen generally make use of them. They can be drawn on
-any Mercantile Marine Office; and as the seaman can make them payable
-to himself if he is not married, they enable him to get a good portion
-of his wages home in safety without any expense or risk. What is wanted
-in many places is that some one concerned in the mission-work amongst
-sailors should be on the lookout when a ship arrives in port with a
-crew to pay off, and see the men lodged in respectable boarding-houses
-or sailors’ homes, so that they can send their wages home by means of
-the Money Orders; and also to see them safely to the railway station.
-It is grievous to think that the wages of many of our sailors, who
-have perhaps been out on a voyage of many months’ duration, should be
-dissipated in a few days, and most of it fall into the hands of the
-worthless creatures who live by this species of plunder.
-
-
-
-
-A DESERTED GARDEN.
-
-
- Tangled ivy creeps and twines
- Where once bloomed my Lady’s flowers;
- And the twisting wild woodbines
- Weave o’er all their clustering bowers;
- And the fruit-trees from the wall
- Droop forgotten and forlorn,
- And the rose-trees, thick and tall,
- From their trellis-work are torn.
- Dewy paths—once velvet-smooth
- For the dainty steps of youth—
- Weedy now, and overgrown
- With the rank grass all unmown.
-
- Here and there, amid confusion,
- Gleams a berry scarlet-hued,
- And pale bindweed in profusion
- (By the summer breezes wooed),
- Creeps, where once verbenas grew,
- Or the myrtle flowered so fair
- In the warm and scented air;
- And the speedwell—deepest blue—
- Shakes its frail flowers everywhere.
-
- So, amid these paths—all haunted
- By the memory of old flowers—
- Grow these wild-wood blooms undaunted,
- Through the glowing autumn hours.
- Ah! how long ago it seems
- Since bright faces glowed and smiled
- In this garden of our dreams.
- Now so desolate and wild!
- They will come again no more,
- And no time shall e’er restore
- Golden days and fairy flowers
- To these wearied hearts of ours.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Printed and Published by W. & R. CHAMBERS, 47 Paternoster Row, LONDON,
-and 339 High Street, EDINBURGH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_All Rights Reserved._
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 106, VOL. III, JANUARY
-9, 1886 ***
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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. 106, Vol. III, January 9, 1886, 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. 106, Vol. III, January 9, 1886</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: December 21, 2021 [eBook #66983]</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. 106, VOL. III, JANUARY 9, 1886 ***</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">{17}</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="#TWO_EVENINGS_WITH_BISMARCK">TWO EVENINGS WITH BISMARCK.</a><br />
-<a href="#IN_ALL_SHADES">IN ALL SHADES.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_WHALE-HUNT_IN_THE_VARANGER">A WHALE-HUNT IN THE VARANGER FJORD.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_GOLDEN_ARGOSY">A GOLDEN ARGOSY.</a><br />
-<a href="#REVOLUTION_BELOW-STAIRS">REVOLUTION BELOW-STAIRS.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_SUBAQUEOUS_EXCURSION">A SUBAQUEOUS EXCURSION.</a><br />
-<a href="#OCCASIONAL_NOTES">OCCASIONAL NOTES.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_DESERTED_GARDEN">A DESERTED GARDEN.</a><br />
-
-<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
-
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" id="header" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <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. 106.—Vol. III.</span></p>
-<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<em>d.</em></p>
-<p class="floatc">SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 1886.</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="TWO_EVENINGS_WITH_BISMARCK">TWO EVENINGS WITH BISMARCK.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3 title="PART I.">IN TWO PARTS.—PART I.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> surprises that await the deputies and representatives
-of the North German League, when,
-after a hard day’s work and a late supper, they
-return, wearied in body and mind, to their
-Berlin penates, are not, as a rule, of a very
-cheering description. They generally consist of
-large unwieldy packets of printed matter, which
-contain the orders for the next day’s imperial
-Diet, and a mass of amendments on the coming
-motions, &amp;c. Letters also, especially home ones,
-form no small portion of the evening’s recreation.
-One may judge, therefore, of the general
-surprise, when, amongst the pile of evening
-correspondence, a short note appears from Prince
-Bismarck to the effect that he would be ‘greatly
-obliged if Deputy or Privy-councillor So-and-so
-will give him the pleasure of his company every
-Saturday evening at nine o’clock, commencing
-from the 24th April, as long as the session of the
-imperial Diet lasts.’</p>
-
-<p>What more natural than that the Chancellor
-should wish to assemble at his own familiar
-hearth, all those representatives of the nation
-who for the most part gladly accompany and support
-him on the rough and stony paths of German
-politics that he is treading, and to want to spend
-a few hours with them in pleasant social intercourse,
-after the many weary hours of heavy
-parliamentary work?</p>
-
-<p>This same need was equally felt by most of the
-deputies and councillors and other members of
-the imperial Diet, who all equally looked forward
-to the coming evening.</p>
-
-<p>As everything connected with the Diet is carried
-out with military precision, so here, also, the
-hour of nine had hardly finished striking, ere the
-guests began to arrive at the well-known modest
-two-storied building in the Wilhelmstrasse, which
-the Prussian government assigns to its Minister
-for Foreign Affairs as his official residence, and
-which Prince Bismarck inhabited in his threefold
-capacity of Minister for Lauenburg, Prussian
-President Minister, and Chancellor of the North
-German League. Here, on the ground-floor of the
-long unadorned building, are the workrooms of the
-Prussian ministerial officials. On the first floor
-are the work and reception rooms of Bismarck, as
-well as his private family apartments. At the
-back of the house, where the noise and turmoil
-of the great busy city never penetrate, lies one
-of those beautiful shady old timbered parks, such
-as the royal crown of Prussia possesses, between
-the Wilhelmstrasse and the Königstrasse, and
-also between the latter and the Leipzigerstrasse—in
-all about a hundred acres.</p>
-
-<p>At the entrance are the inevitable constables,
-saluting the guests as they arrive. Numerous
-lackeys in black and white livery hand the visitor
-up the broad flight of stairs into an elegantly
-furnished anteroom, where those who wait to see
-the Chancellor on business can, while in the
-midst of the most harmonious surroundings of
-rich carpets, silken hangings, and luxurious seats,
-speculate as to what possible connection the stuffed
-hare, standing so prominently forward on the sideboard,
-can have with the family of Bismarck.</p>
-
-<p>A more interesting sight, however, now greeted
-us. The Chancellor’s wife, a tall aristocratic-looking
-woman, with decided but pleasing features,
-and in an elegant though simple toilet, received
-each guest as he arrived with gracious affability.
-Standing close beside the open portières, past
-which the eye glanced into the family living-rooms,
-she was a true type of the position she
-holds both in home and public life. A noble
-wife and mother, she has faithfully stood by her
-husband’s side from the very commencement of
-his political career. A Chicago paper declares
-that Bismarck’s wife is her husband’s private
-secretary! How far this statement is true, we
-do not pretend to say; but an old friend of the
-family has repeatedly told us that during the
-saddest time that Germany has witnessed for
-the last fifty years, when Bismarck, disheartened
-and dispirited, retired to his small property of
-Schönhausen, there to vegetate as a small Prussian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">{18}</span>
-landowner, while brooding moodily over all his
-grand political schemes, his wife never for a
-moment lost heart, but was able to inspire her
-husband with ever fresh courage and hope.</p>
-
-<p>A number of old friends and acquaintances
-quickly surrounded the noble hostess, while the
-remainder of the guests streamed on towards
-the billiard-room to the right, the windows of
-which look out on the street. In front of one
-of the sofas lies a handsome bearskin—the animal
-was slain by Bismarck’s own hand; and on a
-bracket stands the magnificent vase, with the
-king’s portrait and a view of his castle, which
-King William presented to the Prince after the
-wars of 1866. The crowd and the heat increased
-every moment. The Prince, we were told, was
-in the big saloon. Hurrying thither, we saw
-our noble host, standing just inside the door,
-in animated converse with some earlier arrivals,
-yet, notwithstanding, quite ready to greet every
-new-comer—sometimes even stretching out both
-hands to right and left with hearty welcome.
-How well and bright he looked! That was
-always the first thing that struck one on seeing
-this man. His face, from his long country
-sojourn at Varzin, has regained its healthy
-colouring; the eyes are no longer so deeply
-shadowed by the overhanging brows or the
-furrowed forehead of last year; his hair is of
-that light Saxon hue which defies both Time and
-impertinent curiosity; and the figure is as firm
-and upright as the youngest man there present.
-On this evening he also wore his favourite and
-most comfortable dress—that is, uniform, but
-<i>not</i> in strict accordance with Regulation.</p>
-
-<p>Moltke’s fine thin lips are curved with an
-amused smile, as he observes the Prince’s unmilitary
-get-up. The short smart tunic is worn
-open, innocent of either sword or sword-belt,
-displaying an ordinary black cloth evening waistcoat
-underneath. Only the most necessary orders
-are worn; among them, some of those of the
-smaller states peep coquettishly forth. Are these
-meant to fascinate the hearts of the minor invited
-deputies?</p>
-
-<p>Those who have only seen Bismarck in pictures
-or heard him speak in the Diet, or even met
-him in his walks, only know him from his official
-side, and as the great statesman and dignitary.
-But here, inside his own four walls, with ample
-leisure, and surrounded by celebrated and patriotic
-men, who all, more or less, have helped to
-advise, combat, or further his work, one learns
-to know and recognise in the Prince the real man
-and intelligent companion whose mighty intellect
-wields the affairs of nations. We have often
-heard visitors who were present at the sittings
-of the Diet declare that nothing surprised them
-so much as the intonation and pathos of Bismarck’s
-voice when speaking. His height, his
-brows, his forehead, his chest, his speeches, were
-all far greater and more powerful than they had
-imagined; but his voice, either when giving
-utterance to the driest details, or when startling
-his audience by some passionate appeal, had
-something marvellously soft and winning in it.
-And they are not far wrong. One can always
-tell from the Prince’s words, by the sound of his
-voice, what his feelings are at the time, no matter
-how moderate his speech may be; and never
-was this more distinct and vivid than on these
-Saturday evenings.</p>
-
-<p>Now he approaches our circle. ‘I wished much
-to see you here, gentlemen. It is so much easier
-to talk and understand one another here, than
-in the Diet House!’—and he shook hands all
-round. ‘Besides, now, if you want to interpellate
-me, or one of the deputies or privy-councillors,
-you can do so quietly and at your ease
-in a corner, and settle the whole affair in a few
-minutes.’</p>
-
-<p>The Prince was right. Never before had the
-necessity of familiar and friendly intercourse been
-more apparent than during this session. From
-various untoward causes, the most crying discords
-had arisen between the deputies and the Diet,
-chiefly owing to neither party thoroughly understanding
-the other.</p>
-
-<p>From amid the rows of deputies and councillors,
-emerged the portly form of the brave
-‘Red Becker,’ red in hair as well as in opinion,
-a living proof that even an inborn democrat and
-agitator can attain a very comfortable rotundity.
-Becker had surpassed himself that morning in
-the Diet. He, as the permanent reporter of the
-Chamber of Deputies and the Diet, on all postal,
-telegraphic, and railway matters, had drastically
-described the frightful misuse, on the part of the
-princely houses of Germany, of their right to
-free carriage and telegraph. He had shown how
-the whole of the royal bill of fare had been
-telegraphed free of charge; how endless telegraphic
-milliners’ and dressmakers’ orders had
-been sent free between the German courts and
-Paris; while the citizen’s despatch, on which
-probably hangs both life and property, must wait
-till the royal cook has ordered a dollar’s worth
-of parsley by telegraph; how, after that, all
-these huge parcels have to be sent carriage free
-to their destination; and finally, he had proved,
-to the great amusement of the House, by the
-genealogical almanac, that in Lippe alone, no
-fewer than sixty princes and princesses had this
-inborn right to postal freedom.</p>
-
-<p>He now placed himself directly in front of
-the Chancellor, in his favourite attitude, with
-his hands behind his back, and looked up at
-him with an expression which seemed to say:
-‘Now, had you any idea that this royal prerogative
-of free post and telegraph had been
-so shamefully abused?’</p>
-
-<p>But Bismarck only laughed heartily, saying:
-‘My dear Becker, believe me, I know of far
-worse things.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Indeed! Pray, then, tell us some, Your Excellency!’
-said ‘Red Becker’ with great animation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">{19}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Nay; that I cannot do,’ replied Bismarck.
-‘My information comes from the Postmaster-general
-at Phillipsborn; and he knows far worse
-things than <i>I</i> do.’</p>
-
-<p>A group of people had now come in between
-us and the speakers.</p>
-
-<p>A servant handed round tea; but, strange to
-say, there was no rum, so little has Bismarck
-imbibed of Russian habits and tastes, in spite of
-his long sojourn at St Petersburg.</p>
-
-<p>Here, again, in front of one of the couches,
-lay the head and skin of a splendid elk, another
-trophy of Bismarck’s prowess as a sportsman.
-The walls of this room were hung with yellow
-Gobelins of ‘Chinese patterns,’ and furniture to
-correspond. By degrees, all the guests had gradually
-congregated in this room—deputies, councillors,
-ministers, admirals, secretaries, all mingled
-together. There was none of that reserve and
-strict etiquette with which ministers usually love
-to surround themselves, like a wall of division
-between them and the people’s representatives,
-none of that exclusiveness and national party
-spirit which, as a rule, is always present in the
-Diet. Very few uniforms were visible among
-the guests. The nooks and corners, in which,
-according to Bismarck’s own words, the great
-affairs of the state could be settled and arranged
-in five minutes, were now all filled with eager
-talkative groups of deputies and councillors, or
-the leaders of the different parties. The conversation
-in our neighbourhood was carried on
-in a pretty loud and easy tone and without
-any reserve; for there did not lurk here, as there
-does behind every door and in every retiring-room
-of the imperial parliament, some insidious
-reporter for the press.</p>
-
-<p>‘Who is that stout gentleman yonder, with
-the very elaborate shirt-front, blue coat with brass
-buttons, and a huge and perfectly new order of
-the Eagle of the third class? He tries in vain
-to disguise his eastern origin.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Is it possible you do not know him?—this
-man, whom Bismarck’s son in his last pamphlet
-described as the greatest man of his century!—this
-father of millions of—railway shares! Do
-you really mean to say you do not know him?
-Well, then, my dear sir, you see before you Dr
-Strousberg, formerly Baruch Hirsch Strousberg,
-of the firm of Dr Ujest, Strousberg &amp; Company!—Shall
-I introduce you?’</p>
-
-<p>But the subject of this discourse had already
-joined that arch-satirist, Von Unruh Magdeburgh,
-the President of the Constitutional Prussian
-National Assembly. Beside him appeared the
-venerable head of Simson, the perpetual President
-of the German parliament.</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you know the best way of enforcing
-respect into our noisy neighbours, the French?’
-asked my <i>vis-à-vis</i>.—I thought of our millions
-of soldiers; but he continued: ‘You need only
-tell them that our three Presidents, Simson,
-Ujest, and Benningson, have twenty-seven children
-between them—nine each.’</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the servants again came round with
-refreshments for the guests; this time it was
-<i>Maitrank</i>,<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> in long Venetian glasses, and magnificent
-silver tankards filled with sparkling ale.</p>
-
-<p>But the heat still continued to increase, and
-became almost unbearable. Lasker was the first
-to move an amendment, to dispense with kid
-gloves; and like most of Lasker’s motions, this
-proposition found plenty of support among the
-deputies, and in this instance, even among the
-councillors.</p>
-
-<p>And now the intimate friends and relations of
-the Chancellor invite the guests to adjourn to
-the dining saloon, which is the last of the long
-row of apartments we had up till now passed
-through. This saloon, an oblong square, joins the
-apartment last described, at the right-hand corner;
-only its narrow side faces the street. The decorations
-and fittings-up of this dining saloon differ
-entirely from all the rest of the suite. It has
-been kept exactly the same as when Bismarck
-took it over from his predecessor; in fact,
-for fifty years this apartment has remained
-unchanged. There still hangs the same massive
-chandelier with its forty-eight candles; the same
-white panels with golden borders still cover the
-walls; the same shell-shaped mirrors, the same
-yellow marble mantel-pieces that were there
-under Hardenberg, Mannteuffel, and Schleichnitz,
-all remain unchanged.</p>
-
-<p>‘The last time I was here I was under
-Mannteuffel,’ says old Count Schwerin, the head
-of the Liberal party, to me, standing in his
-favourite position with both his hands in his
-trousers’ pockets.</p>
-
-<p>The first feeling of shyness having worn away,
-the various dainties, in the shape of cold game,
-saddle of venison, mayonnaises, Italian salads,
-&amp;c., with which the long centre table was laden,
-were speedily done justice to. Even the modest
-Saxon privy-councillor, who three minutes before
-had retreated from the table and refused the
-invitation with a polite wave of the hand and
-a, ‘No, no; thank you!’ now followed in the
-war-path of the pioneers for food. There was
-no time or space to think of sitting down; each
-one helped himself to a plate from the piles,
-placed in readiness on the table, together with
-the necessary table requisites, and hastened to
-partake of the delicacies that had been prepared
-for his delectation. A party of Saxon and
-Rhenish gentlemen had succeeded in getting
-possession of a side-table, and there, seated at
-their ease, they intrenched themselves against
-the annexation tendencies of the North German
-League appetites; getting all their provisions
-through the proper constitutional channel of the
-Bismarckian domestics.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, as I have so often observed before,
-a saddle of venison is a most fruitful source for
-starting hunting adventures, and so it proved in
-this case. My old friend, worthy Dr Neubronner
-from Nassau, whom no one would have accused
-of being a bloodthirsty huntsman by nature,
-was no sooner presented to Bismarck, than he
-reminded the minister how, in former days,
-when he, Bismarck, was representative at Frankfort,
-they had hunted together in the neighbourhood
-of that town.</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course I remember it; and very pleasant
-days they were,’ replied Bismarck; and he forthwith
-proceeded to describe, greatly to the amusement
-of the <i>present</i> deputies of the annexed
-province of Nassau, the celebrities and oddities
-of the Nassau and Frankfort of <i>that</i> day, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">{20}</span>
-so much life and humour, that the merriment of
-this South German group attracted general attention.
-The account of ‘<i>dicke</i> (portly) Daumer’s’
-intense fear of death, or anything connected
-therewith, specially amused the sons of the now
-Prussianised district of Wiesbaden. Bismarck
-continued: ‘One fine autumn morning, I was
-out hunting with “dicke Daumer” in the
-neighbourhood of Frankfort. After a long and
-tiring climb among the mountains, we sat down
-to rest on the edge of the forest, when, to
-my horror, I found I had brought no luncheon
-with me. “Dicke Daumer,” however, drew forth
-a mighty sausage, and, in the most noble and
-magnanimous manner, offered me half of it.
-Now, gentlemen, I frankly confess to having
-a very good appetite, which this morning
-excursion in the keen mountain air had by
-no means lessened. The whole sausage would
-barely have sufficed to satisfy my hunger. Our
-meal commenced; I saw the end of my piece
-of sausage approaching; I was getting desperate!
-Then suddenly turning to “dicke Daumer,” I
-ask in the most innocent manner possible: “Can
-you tell me, Herr Daumer, what that white
-thing down there among the plum-trees is?”</p>
-
-<p>“Good gracious, Your Excellency, you quite
-take away one’s appetite!” said Daumer, who so
-dreaded his latter end. “Why, that is the
-churchyard!”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it really, now? Why, Herr Daumer, it
-looks so pretty! let us go down and choose out
-some nice secluded shady nook! How calm and
-peaceful it must be to rest in so sweet a
-spot!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Your Excellency!—there—there,” and he
-put down the sausage: “I cannot touch another
-mouthful!”</p>
-
-<p>‘And old Daumer remained firm in this.
-So you see, gentlemen, I had a good luncheon
-after all.’</p>
-
-<p>Universal laughter greeted this anecdote.</p>
-
-<p>‘How is it one never sees you now in the
-House?’ I ask a young Thuringian who has
-made a name for himself both as a government
-lawyer and a wit.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, I am busy all day now in the European
-“Lint Congress,”’ he replied.</p>
-
-<p>‘And pray, what may that be?’ I ask.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, my dear sir, did you not know that
-is the name the Berliner wits have given to the
-International Association for the care and nursing
-of wounded soldiers?’</p>
-
-<p>Two of the greatest lawyers in the world stand
-close beside me deep in conversation. Every
-ten minutes, a fresh word is added to a paragraph
-for the future North German penal code.
-Braun-Wiesbaden approaches and joins the conclave,
-which is just discussing that much vexed
-question, the abolition of capital punishment.</p>
-
-<p>‘You may make your minds easy, gentlemen,
-and settle to abolish capital punishment,’ he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>‘Indeed! Have you, then, found a surrogate?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I have.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well?’ ask the expectant lawyers with unbelieving
-curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, you have only to send the delinquents
-to the “North German Commission for the better
-Regulation of Trade”—that will settle them!’</p>
-
-<p>But I hear Bismarck’s voice again close behind
-me. ‘Let us drink to the welfare of the old blue
-red and gold colours of the Hannovera of Göttingen!’
-he called out to his old fellow-student,
-the Burgomaster Fromme of Lüneburg. And
-the two ‘old collegians,’ while emptying their
-glasses of sparkling Rhine wine, chat over the
-pleasant days of their youth.</p>
-
-<p>Even as far back as that time, whenever Bismarck
-was asked what he was studying, his answer
-invariably was: ‘Diplomacy.’ He was then a
-very slight overgrown young student, with a fair
-sprouting moustache—known everywhere by his
-magnificent Newfoundland dog, and much feared
-on account of his skill with the sword, having,
-while still an undergraduate, come off victor in
-several duels with members of opposition corps;
-though the scar on his left cheek bears testimony
-to the uncertainty attending the fate of even the
-most skilful of fencers. The antagonist who
-inflicted this ‘quart’ now enjoys the confidence
-of a great part of the North German population,
-so much so, that he was elected representative for
-the Diet.</p>
-
-<p>When he was first presented to Bismarck, the
-latter, pointing to the scar, asked: ‘Are you <i>the</i>
-one?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, Your Excellency.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, you certainly <i>did</i> give it me rather
-hot.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, Your Excellency—that was what you said
-at the time; but the “duel-book” did not concur
-in it, and decided you gave as good as you got.’</p>
-
-<p>But those diplomatic studies at Göttingen have
-borne visible fruits. It is only a pity that the
-multifarious duties of his threefold office of
-minister, Chancellor, and brandy-distiller—for he
-has been a distiller for over twenty years—prevent
-the Prince from coming forward as the advocate
-of practical diplomacy. Many a professor’s
-chair would be open to him.</p>
-
-<p>The theme of the Prince’s diplomatic lecture
-this evening was ‘the blue-books,’ a subject he
-had already ventilated the day before in the Diet,
-urged thereto by Lasker.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, gentlemen, if you absolutely wish to have
-a “blue-book,” I will endeavour next year to provide
-one that will at least be harmless,’ he had
-said amid the laughter of the House.</p>
-
-<p>Now he gave us an example of the doubtful
-value of these collective despatches. ‘Say, for
-example, Lord Augustus Loftus comes to me and
-asks me whether I am disposed to hear a private
-letter from his minister, Lord Clarendon. He
-then reads me a short epistle in the noble lord’s
-own handwriting, and we talk the matter over
-quietly for about an hour. Five days after, he
-is again announced. This time he comes armed
-with a huge official despatch from the English
-Foreign Office. He commences to read. “I beg
-your pardon, Your Excellency!” I interrupt him,
-“but you told me all that last Monday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, so I did; but now the despatch has to go
-into the blue-book.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I suppose I must now repeat my answer
-all over again, for the benefit of your blue-book?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, if Your Excellency sees no reason
-against it—that is what is required.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I suppose I must let you have it;” and
-so I have to give up another hour to him just for
-the sake of the blue-book, and have in addition<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">{21}</span>
-constantly to explain to the English ambassador:
-“<i>This</i> sentence is <i>not</i> meant for your blue-book,”
-as, for instance, that I look upon the blue-book
-as an essentially wordy and superfluous institution.’</p>
-
-<p>But it is past eleven. Gradually the numerous
-guests take their leave of the Chancellor. He
-bids them all ‘Adieu, au revoir.’ Then passing
-through the apartment where his wife and
-daughters were seated, surrounded by a large
-circle of friends, we salute our noble hostess; and
-a quarter of an hour later sees us back at the
-<i>Petersburger Hof</i>, comfortably ensconced in the
-saloon of our hotel, and discussing the events of
-the evening under the soothing influence of the
-peaceful pipe.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IN_ALL_SHADES">IN ALL SHADES.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">O Marian</span>, do you know, I’ve met Mr Hawthorn;
-and what a delightful man he is! I
-quite fell in love with him myself, I assure
-you! Wasn’t it absurd? He came down the
-other morning to the boatrace; and he and a
-friend of his positively jumped over the wall,
-without an invitation, into old Colonel Boddington’s
-front garden.’</p>
-
-<p>Marian took Nora’s hand warmly. ‘I’m so
-glad you like Edward,’ she said, kissing her
-cheek and smoothing her forehead. ‘I was
-sure you’d like him. I’ve been longing for
-you to come to town ever since we got engaged,
-so that you might manage to see him.—Well,
-dear, and do you think him handsome?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Handsome! O Marian, awfully handsome;
-and so nice, too. Such a sweet voice and
-manner, so grave and cultivated, somehow. I
-always do like Oxford and Cambridge men—ever
-so much better than army men, Marian.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Who had he with him at the boatrace?’
-Marian asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, my dear, such a funny man—a Mr Noel,
-whom I met last week down at the Buckleburies.
-Colonel Boddington says his father’s one
-of the greatest swells in all Lincolnshire—a
-Sir Somebody Noel, or something. And do you
-know, Marian, he simply jumped over the wall,
-without knowing the Boddingtons one bit, just
-because he saw me there—wasn’t it dreadful of
-him, after only meeting me once, too?—and
-then apologised to the old colonel, who was
-looking daggers. But the moment Mr Noel said
-something or other incidentally about his father
-Sir Somebody, the colonel became as mild as
-a lamb, and asked him to lunch at once, and
-tried to put him sitting right between Minnie
-and Adela. And Mr Noel managed to shuffle
-out of it somehow, and got on one side of me,
-with Mr Hawthorn on the other side; and he
-talked so that he kept me laughing right through
-the whole of lunch-time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s awfully amusing,’ Marian said with a
-slight smile.—‘And I suppose you rather liked
-Mr Noel, too, didn’t you, Nora?’</p>
-
-<p>Nora shook her head energetically. ‘No, my
-dear; not my sort of man at all, really. I
-certainly wasn’t in the least taken with him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not a little bit even, Nora?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not even a little bit, dear,’ she answered
-decidedly. ‘He isn’t at all the sort of man
-I should ever care for. Too dark for me, by
-several shades, for one thing, Marian. You
-know, we West Indians never can endure these
-very dark people.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But I’m dark, Nora, and you like me, you
-know, don’t you?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, you. Yes; that’s quite another thing,
-Marian. That’s nothing, to be dark as you are.
-Your hair and eyes and complexion are just
-perfect, darling. But Mr Noel—well, he’s a
-shade or two too dark for me, anyhow; and
-I don’t mind saying so to you candidly.—Mr
-Hawthorn’s a great deal more my ideal of what
-a handsome man ought to be. I think his eyes,
-his hair, and his moustache are just simply lovely,
-Marian.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, of course, you and he ought to be
-friends,’ Marian said, a natural thought flashing
-suddenly across her. ‘He comes from Trinidad,
-just the same as you do. How funny that the
-two people I’ve liked best in all the world
-should both come from the very same little bit
-of an island. I daresay you used to know some
-of his people.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s the very funniest part of it all, Marian.
-I can’t recollect anything at all about his family;
-I don’t even remember ever to have heard of
-them from any Trinidad people.’</p>
-
-<p>Marian looked up quickly from the needlework
-on which she was employed, and said
-simply: ‘I daresay they didn’t happen to know
-your family.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, that’s just what’s odd about it, dear,’
-Nora continued, pulling out her crochet. ‘Everybody
-in Trinidad knows my family. And Mr
-Hawthorn’s father’s in the Legislative Council,
-too, just like papa; and Mr Hawthorn has been
-to Cambridge, you know, and is a barrister,
-and knows Arabic, and is unusually clever, Mr
-Noel tells me. I can’t imagine how on earth
-it is I’ve never even heard of him before.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, at anyrate, I’m so awfully glad you
-really like him, now that you’ve actually seen
-him, Nora. One’s always so afraid that all one’s
-friends won’t like one’s future husband.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Like him, dear; how on earth could one help
-liking him? Why, I think he’s simply delightful
-And that’s so surprising, too, because generally,
-you know, one’s friends <i>will</i> go and marry
-such regular horrid sticks of men. I think
-he’s the nicest man I’ve ever met anywhere,
-almost.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And the exception is——?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Put in for propriety’s sake, dear, for fear
-you should think I was quite too enthusiastic.
-And do you know, he tells me he’s going in
-for a judgeship in Trinidad; and won’t it be
-splendid, Marian, if he happens to get it, and
-you both go out there with me, darling? I shall
-be just too delighted.’</p>
-
-<p>Marian gave a little sigh. ‘I shall be very
-glad if he gets it in one way,’ she said, ‘because
-then, of course, Edward and I will be able to
-marry immediately; and papa’s so very much
-opposed to a long engagement.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Besides which,’ Nora put in frankly, ‘you’d
-naturally yourself, too, be glad to get married
-as soon as possible.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But then, on the other hand,’ Marian went
-on, smiling quietly, ‘it would be a dreadful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">{22}</span>
-thing going so far away from all one’s friends
-and relations and so forth. Though, of course,
-with Edward to take care of me, I wouldn’t
-be afraid to go anywhere.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course not,’ said Nora confidently. ‘And
-I shall be there, too, Marian; and we shall have
-such lovely times together. People have no end
-of fun in the West Indies, you know. Everybody
-says it’s the most delightful place in the
-world in the cool season. The floors are
-kept polished all the year round, without any
-carpets, just like the continent, and so you
-can have a dance at any moment, whenever
-people enough happen to drop in together accidentally
-of an evening. Mamma used to say
-there was no end of gaiety; and that she never
-could endure the stiffness and unsociability of
-English society, after the hospitable habits of
-dear old Trinidad.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope we shall like it,’ Marian said, ‘if
-Edward really succeeds in getting this appointment.
-It’ll be a great alleviation to the pain
-of parting with one’s friends here, if you’re going
-to be there too, Nora.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, my dear, you must get married at once,
-and we must arrange somehow to go out to
-Trinidad together in the same steamer. I mean
-to have no end of fun going out. And when
-you get there, of course papa’ll be able to introduce
-you and Mr Hawthorn to all the society
-in the island. I call it just delightful.’</p>
-
-<p>At that moment, the servant entered and
-announced Mr Hawthorn.</p>
-
-<p>Marian rose from her seat and went forward
-to meet him. Edward had a long official envelope
-in his hands, with a large broken seal in
-red sealing-wax on the back, and the important
-words, ‘On Her Majesty’s Service,’ printed in
-very big letters at the lower left-hand corner.
-Marian trembled a little with excitement, not
-unmixed with fear, as soon as she saw it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, my darling,’ cried Edward joyously, in
-spite of Nora’s presence, ‘it’s all right; I’ve
-got the judgeship. And now, Marian, we shall
-be able to get married immediately.’</p>
-
-<p>A woman always succeeds in doing the most
-incomprehensible and unexpected thing under
-all circumstances; and Marian, hearing now for
-the first time that their hearts’ desire was at last
-in a fair way to be accomplished, did not
-exhibit those emotions Edward might have
-imagined she would do, but fell back upon
-the sofa, half faint, and burst out suddenly
-crying.</p>
-
-<p>Edward looked at her tenderly with a mingled
-look of surprise and sorrow. ‘Why, Marian,’
-he said, a little reproachfully, ‘I thought you
-would be so delighted and rejoiced to hear the
-news, that I almost ran the whole way to tell
-you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So I am, Edward,’ answered Marian, sobbing;
-‘but it’s so sudden, so very sudden.’</p>
-
-<p>‘She’ll be all right in a minute or two, Mr
-Hawthorn,’ Nora said, looking up at him with
-an arch smile as she held Marian’s hand in hers
-and bent over her to kiss her forehead. ‘She’s
-only taken aback a little at the suddenness of
-the surprise.—And now, Marian, we shall all be
-able actually to go out to Trinidad together in
-the same steamer.’</p>
-
-<p>Edward’s heart smote him rather at the strange
-way Marian had received the news that so greatly
-delighted him. It was very natural, after all,
-no doubt. Every girl feels the wrench of having
-to leave her father’s house and her mother and
-her familiar surroundings. But still, he somehow
-felt vaguely within himself that it seemed like
-an evil omen for their future happiness in the
-Trinidad judgeship; and it dashed his joy not
-a little at the moment when his dearest hopes
-appeared just about to be so happily and successfully
-realised.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_WHALE-HUNT_IN_THE_VARANGER">A WHALE-HUNT IN THE VARANGER
-FJORD.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3">BY A NORWEGIAN.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> seems, indeed, to be no limit to the part
-science is destined to play in the pursuits of man
-of late; but that it should lend a hand in killing
-the leviathans of the sea, would hardly have been
-credited a few years ago. This is, however, now
-a fact. Along the shores of Arctic Norway, in
-latitudes seventy to seventy-one degrees north,
-whale-hunting takes place annually by means
-of steamers and a cleverly contrived piece of
-ordnance. The steamers are seventy or eighty
-feet long, with very powerful engines, the number
-of vessels at present engaged in this pursuit being
-about thirty, most of which belong to the indefatigable
-hunter, Sven Foyn, of Tönsberg, the inventor
-of the gun, and originator of this important
-industry. The gun, which plays the leading
-part in the pursuit, is mounted on a platform in
-the prow of the vessel, so as to have an all-round
-range. A shaft is passed into the muzzle, leaving
-a small portion outside the nozzle, carrying four
-movable hooks pointing to the gun, and placed
-crosswise, each of the hooks being about eight
-inches long. In front of these, a large iron ball,
-or shell, with a steel point, is affixed, filled with
-an explosive substance. On the shaft runs an
-iron ring, to which a cable is attached about the
-thickness of a man’s arm, which, when the shaft
-is inserted in the gun, is run up to the nozzle,
-and secured by a cord. When this terrible projectile
-is launched into the animal, the jerk of
-the rope is diminished by the cord holding the
-ring breaking, which latter thereby runs up to
-the top of the shaft. As soon as the animal feels
-the wound, it makes a sudden bound, whereby
-the hooks on the shaft spring into a horizontal
-position; by which action, again, through an ingenious
-piece of mechanism, the explosive in
-the shell is fired, and the latter bursts with such
-a force that death is almost instantaneous. This
-is Foyn’s invention, on which he has spent large
-sums of money and many years of his life. It
-need hardly be said that the gun was, when first
-invented, not so perfect as at present; but Sven
-Foyn has gradually improved it.</p>
-
-<p>The kinds of whales hunted in Finmarken
-belong to the family of ‘fin’-whales, the largest
-of them all being the ‘blue’-whale. The colour
-is bluish gray, lighter on the under side, with
-long white furrows or folds, the use of which to
-the animal, zoologists have not yet discovered.
-This whale lives, as far as we know, solely on
-‘krill,’ a tiny crustacean, which also serves as food
-for the cod. It comes inshore in Finmarken
-towards the end of May, and again goes to sea<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">{23}</span>
-in the latter half of August, whence it is also
-called ‘summer’-whale. It is generally this kind
-of whale which is seen by travellers to the North
-Cape. The next variety is the common fin-whale,
-which attains a length of sixty to seventy feet,
-is more slender in build than the other, black
-on the back, and light below. It moves very
-swiftly, and is probably found off the Norwegian
-coast all the year round. Its food is tiny fish
-and ‘krill.’ There are, besides these, two other
-varieties in the same seas, of which the largest
-is caught. Finally, there is the ‘trold’-whale
-or ‘humpback,’ forty to fifty feet in length. It
-is exceedingly lively, and, when hotly pursued,
-<i>shrieks</i> and lashes the sea to froth with its tail.
-It is, however, not very common on the Norwegian
-coast.</p>
-
-<p>It is generally believed that the whale, in
-spite of its enormous size, is timid and easily
-put to flight; but that this is not always the
-case, will be seen from some stories I was told
-of its stupidity or viciousness by the fishermen
-last summer. Several boats, they stated,
-have been struck or run down by whales, sometimes
-resulting in loss of life, in consequence of
-which they are not loved by these toilers of the
-deep. On one occasion, in May last, a whale was
-shot from one of the steamers, which, by taking
-refuge right under the stern of the vessel, succeeded
-in breaking the rope, as the captain was
-afraid of losing his screw, if moving. The whale,
-feeling free, took a few turns round the vessel,
-and then ran full tilt at the stern, with such a
-force, that the keel was bent for several yards,
-and screw and rudder carried away. Having
-thus satisfied its revenge, it made leisurely for
-the ocean.</p>
-
-<p>With these preliminary observations, I will
-proceed to describe a whale-hunt on the shores
-of the Land of the Midnight Sun, according to
-my own experiences of this summer.</p>
-
-<p>It is a lovely sunlit evening at the end of July,
-when we steam out from one of the pretty little
-fjords in the South Varanger. The air is clear
-and balmy, and the sea lies before us transparent
-as a mirror, dark green in colour. The mountains
-in the south stand out as though carved
-on the dark background, while their shapely
-cones are reflected in the mirror at their foot.
-Not a patch of snow or ice is seen anywhere.
-By degrees, the copse-covered hills and birch
-groves at the bottom of the fjord are lost in the
-distance, and through its mouth we behold the
-broad mighty Varanger fjord, the greatest in
-Northern Norway. To the north, the view is
-arrested by lofty mountains, enveloped in an
-azure veil; the sun is still high in the sky,
-though it is past eight o’clock; and to the west
-we look down into the Varanger fjord, where giant
-chains of sombre cones stand out in picturesque
-contrast to the view before us. To the east, there
-is but one view—sky and sea. We are on the
-confines of the great Arctic Ocean. Under these
-promising auspices, we anticipated a good and
-quick catch, as the whale has that feeling in
-common with man, that he loves sunshine and
-a calm sea. In such weather he comes inshore,
-gamboling in the sun’s rays, whilst from time
-to time leisurely disposing of a few bushels
-of ‘krill’ for supper, before proceeding to sea
-for the night. (By-the-bye, when travelling for
-pleasure in Arctic Norway, the period July-August
-should be chosen. True, one runs the
-risk of not seeing the midnight sun, which disappears
-in the latter half of July; but by way
-of recompense, there is no time of the year
-when nature in these regions stands forth in
-such colours as just then.) However, just now
-the Varanger seems rather out of temper; the
-weather thickens a little, and it begins to blow.
-No whale is in sight. A little while ago,
-there were a few ‘puffs’ down in the eastern
-horizon; but they are gone now; perhaps the
-supper has not been dainty or plentiful enough
-about us; there is neither whale nor bait to be
-seen. From time to time, a solitary seabird flits
-rapidly by, towards shore; he has been fetching
-his supper. Night slowly casts her veil over the
-ocean. We are soon far enough out; so the
-engines are ordered ‘slow,’ and everybody turns
-in who is not on the watch. We (officers and
-the writer) go aft to the captain’s cabin, where
-we make ourselves as comfortable as circumstances
-will permit, in order to snatch a few
-moments of rest, in which we soon succeed,
-lulled to sleep by the gentle rippling of the
-icy arctic waves as they lick the sides of the
-vessel.</p>
-
-<p>At first streak of dawn in the east we are
-called. There are whales about. The boilers
-are fired under; we turn out, and see at a great
-distance some ‘puffs;’ but the captain remarks
-that they are only a few making for the fjord.
-They are soon out of sight; it is no use attempting
-to follow them. We again lie down to rest,
-but in vain—sleep has fled. We dress, and
-breakfast is served. The steward appears with
-a steaming pot of coffee and fresh bread—a true
-luxury. On this occasion, there being a guest
-on board, we are also treated to real cream; but
-otherwise a substitute of preserved milk and sugar,
-of home manufacture, is served. The demands
-of the body being satisfied, the mind also craves
-sustenance, and a pipe soon makes it contented.
-The captain offers, indeed, a cigar; but a pipe is
-far preferable, and looks more ‘ship-shape’ too.
-Towards noon we are off Rybatschi-Polostrow
-(the fisherman’s peninsula). The peninsula is
-very low and sandy; inland, we see a ridge of
-mountains; around us, thousands of seabirds
-whirl with plaintive cries; but no whale is seen.
-They are, however, generally plentiful here; at
-times, there are even enormous shoals of them,
-particularly when the fishing draws eastwards,
-as the bait is then found here, which is what
-the whale likes. But now, during the summer
-months, they are more scattered. It is already
-past the mid-day meal, and still we have seen
-nothing. We go below a little disappointed,
-whilst the steamer’s course is shaped for Vardö.
-Since last night there has been blowing a
-stiff breeze, and the sea is in foam in some
-places. The waves increase in size, and the
-steamer begins to roll. The smoke and the
-rest below are of short duration, so we go again
-on deck to look for ‘puffs.’ Now and then, the
-ship heels over; a hogshead or two of water
-comes swishing over the port bow, but does
-no harm, as we are dressed in sailor’s boots, a
-thick coat, and sou’-wester. I stare till I am tired
-at the green sea and the foam-crested waves,
-as they come rolling towards the vessel. My<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">{24}</span>
-face becomes coated with a layer of salt, which
-settles there, when the foam of the waves is
-swept on board, as the ship plunges into the
-trough of the sea. If not accustomed to the
-arctic sea-air, one soon gets frightfully tired, and
-is obliged to rest, so, after being on the watch
-for a while, I went below and lay down. Soon
-sleep irresistibly overpowers me, thoughts become
-dreams, while the rolling of the ship feels like
-the gentle swing in a hammock; in fact, I am
-fast asleep, when a voice thunders down the
-companion: ‘Turn out—whales in sight!’ I
-jump up with a start, unable at first to remember
-where I am; but soon the consciousness of being
-on a whale-hunt becomes clear, and I rush on
-deck, fearing to lose any part of the grand spectacle.</p>
-
-<p>What a change! Now, every wave has a
-snow-white cap; they tower high on all sides,
-and the vessel is tossed to and fro like a toy.
-Gulls and teistes sweep rapidly along the furrows
-between the waves, rise nearly perpendicularly
-as the wave breaks, and, just clearing the comb,
-dive into the next watery valley. ‘Look, look,
-what a tremendous puff!’ ‘That’s a big one.’
-‘Look, look—puff, puff!’ ‘There are a good
-many here.’</p>
-
-<p>We are in the middle of a flock of the giants
-of the sea. The enormous brown and blue
-bodies rise out of the sea; the back is bent
-upwards—it looks like the bottom of a capsized
-ship; it disappears; but the sea becomes almost
-calm where the whale went down, and several
-minutes elapse before the waves are able to
-conquer the calm. From time to time, deep
-dull snorts are heard, thundering and trembling,
-as if the deepest strings of a dozen double-basses
-were being played down below; and at others,
-a sharp swishing sound like an enormous fountain
-suddenly set to play, and a column of crystal
-spray ascends some thirty feet into the air. The
-gigantic, glistening body appears on the surface;
-the back is bent upwards a second, and it again
-disappears. It looks as if the whale was warm
-and comfortable enough; the sea-water, to us
-looking so cold, plays pleasantly around it; hot
-steam issues from its dilated nostrils, and it
-seems like a man enjoying a refreshing morning
-dip.</p>
-
-<p>During the last quarter of an hour we have
-seen some forty whales; but none has come
-within range. The gun has no certainty much
-beyond thirty yards, so that the whale must be
-nearly under the ship’s bow when firing. As
-we stand looking at this magnificent spectacle,
-the water close round the ship suddenly becomes
-light green in colour and somewhat calm. Then
-a deep heavy thunder; the ship trembles from
-stem to stern; a great column of dampness is shot
-into the air, drenching us all, a dull snort, and
-an enormous blue-whale rises out of the sea a
-few yards on our starboard side. Now the captain
-will fire, we think, involuntarily holding on to
-the wire-rigging; but Foyn stands by his gun
-without making the least movement, and the
-next second the whale again descends into its
-watery home. The range was probably not a
-good one. A few minutes after, the same
-thunder, the same sensation, the same column,
-and the same snort—another whale appears close
-on the port side. The captain turns the gun,
-whilst we watch with beating hearts the movements
-of the animal as well as his own. Every
-second seems an eternity. He raises the gun,
-aims. Alas! a heavy sea strikes the vessel, heels
-her over; the gun is lowered, but the whale is
-gone. They seem all to have disappeared now,
-not a puff to be seen. We stand and talk about
-the incident, and somebody suggests to go aft
-and ‘have a smoke;’ when suddenly two whales
-are seen some distance off, now going side by
-side, now behind each other. The helm is turned,
-and we follow them in hot haste through wind
-and waves. A complete silence reigns on board
-during the pursuit, only now and then broken
-by the captain’s short words of command, who
-stands calmly watching the animals. Now the
-vessel heels over—the whales are within range.
-‘Stop,’ sounds in the engine-room. But the
-speed was too great, and we shoot past them.
-‘Full speed ahead,’ sounds again. ‘Two men
-at the helm!’ The vessel turns swiftly, and
-we separate the couple. The whales disappear.
-We follow the direction they are taking, and
-look!—a little before us the sea becomes emerald
-green. ‘Slow,’ again. The vessel moves slowly
-forward, and the whale reappears twenty yards
-off. ‘Stop,’ shouts the captain. The gun is
-turned, raised, and again lowered—not a sound
-is heard on board—the whale has puffed—the
-back is bending; the captain aims—and a
-thundering report rends the air, and makes the
-vessel tremble in every section. We have watched
-all this with every nerve strained, and hardly
-feel the icy foam of the sea which bedews the
-cheek and benumbs the hands.</p>
-
-<p>‘Did you hit him?’ we shout to the captain.</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t know,’ is the laconic answer. ‘Almost
-absurd to attempt it in such a sea; one risks
-losing the gear and frightening the whale.’</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime all the crew are busy clearing
-the line of the harpoon, and we are still in
-doubt whether we have hit him; but the suspense
-does not last long, as immediately a ‘Look out!’
-is shouted by the captain, and the line runs
-out with terrific speed and a great noise. ‘Full
-speed ahead,’ is shouted below; but the ship is
-running double her highest speed, such is the
-strength of the whale which has her in tow.
-The animal is fleeing at the top of its speed,
-and we follow right through the breaking seas.
-Ten minutes pass by—they seem ten hours—when
-suddenly a blood-streaked column of water
-is seen on the horizon. It is our whale!
-Another moment, and a clear one is seen. It
-is his companion, which follows her wounded
-mate. Both go down; the line does not run
-out so fast; the wounded whale appears once or
-twice more, when he sinks. The whale is dead.
-After a while, the hauling-in begins very carefully,
-and finally the great body rises to the
-surface, the ship heeling over. After a few
-hours’ hard work in securing the monster to
-the vessel with chains and ropes, the course is
-shaped for home.</p>
-
-<p>‘What do you think of it, captain?’ I ask.</p>
-
-<p>‘Not bad,’ he answers simply.—‘Steward, give
-the crew a drink all round! And let us have
-something to eat.’</p>
-
-<p>The whale measured more than eighty feet
-in length.</p>
-
-<p>Once more his widowed mate takes a turn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">{25}</span>
-round the ship, when she stands out to sea;
-whilst we, with our noble spoil in tow, slowly
-make for the whale-station in South Varanger.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_GOLDEN_ARGOSY">A GOLDEN ARGOSY.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3"><i>A NOVELETTE.</i></p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr Carver</span> of Bedford Row, in the county of
-Middlesex, was exercised in his mind; and the
-most annoying part of it was that he was so
-exercised at his own trouble and expense; that
-is to say, he was not elucidating some knotty
-legal point at the charge of a client, but he was
-speculating over one of the most extraordinary
-events that had ever happened to him in the
-whole course of his long and honourable career.
-The matter stood briefly thus: His client, Charles
-Morton, of Eastwood, Somersetshire, died on the
-9th of April in the year of grace 1882. On
-the 1st of May 1880, Mr Carver had made the
-gentleman’s will, which left all his possessions,
-to the amount of some forty thousand pounds,
-to his niece, Eleanor Attewood. Six months
-later, Mr Morton’s half-sister, Miss Wakefield,
-took up her residence at Eastwood, and from
-that time everything had changed. Eleanor had
-married the son of a clergyman in the neighbourhood,
-and at the instigation of his half-sister,
-Mr Morton had disinherited his niece; and one
-year before he died, had made a fresh will, leaving
-everything to Miss Wakefield. Mr Carver, be
-it remarked, strongly objected to this injustice,
-seeing the baleful influence which had brought
-it about; and had he been able to find Eleanor,
-he hoped to alter the unjust state of things.
-But she disappeared with her husband, and left
-no trace behind her; so the obnoxious will was
-proved.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the most extraordinary part of the
-affair. With the exception of a few hundreds in
-the bank at Eastwood, for household purposes,
-not a single penny of Mr Morton’s money could
-be found. All his property was mortgaged to a
-high amount; all his securities were disposed of,
-and not one penny could be traced. The mortgages
-on the property were properly drawn up
-by a highly respectable solicitor at Eastwood,
-the money advanced by a man of undoubted
-probity; and further, the money had been
-paid over to Mr Morton one day early in the
-year 1883. Advertisements were inserted in the
-papers, in fact everything was done to trace the
-missing money, but in vain. All Miss Wakefield
-had for her pains and trouble was a poor sum
-of about eleven hundred pounds, so she had to
-retire again to her genteel poverty in a cheap
-London boarding-house.</p>
-
-<p>This melancholy fact did not give Mr Carver
-any particular sorrow; he disliked that lady, and
-was especially glad that her deep cunning and
-underhand ways had frustrated themselves. In
-all probability, he thought, Mr Morton had in
-a fit of suspicion got hold of all his ready cash
-and securities, for the purpose of balking the
-fair lady whom he had made his heiress; but
-nevertheless the affair was puzzling, and Mr
-Carver hated to be puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Carver stood in his office in Bedford Row,
-drumming his fingers on the grimy window-panes
-and softly whistling. Nothing was heard in the
-office but the scratch of the confidential clerk’s
-quill pen as he scribbled out a draft for his
-employer’s inspection.</p>
-
-<p>‘This is a very queer case, Bates, very queer,’
-said Mr Carver, addressing his clerk.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, sir,’ replied Mr Bates, continuing the
-scratching. That gentleman possessed the instinct
-of always being able to divine what his chief
-was thinking of. Therefore, when Mr Bates said
-‘Yes, sir,’ he knew that the Eastwood mystery
-had been alluded to.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’d most cheerfully give—let me see, what
-would I give? Well, I wouldn’t mind paying
-down my cheque for’——</p>
-
-<p>‘One thousand pounds, sir. No, sir; I don’t
-think you would.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You’re a wonderful fellow, Bates,’ said his
-admiring master. ‘’Pon my honour, Bates, that’s
-the exact sum I was going to mention.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It <i>is</i> strange, sir,’ said the imperturbable Bates,
-‘that you and I always think the same things.
-I suppose it is being with you so long. Now, if
-I was to <i>think</i> you would give me a partnership,
-perhaps you would think the same thing too.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Bates,’ said Mr Carver earnestly, never smiling,
-as was his wont, at his clerk’s quiet badinage,
-‘if we unravel this mystery, as I hope we may,
-I’ll tell you what, Bates, don’t be surprised if I
-give you a partnership.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah, sir, if we unravel it. Now, if we could
-only find’——</p>
-
-<p>‘Miss Eleanor. Just what I was thinking.’</p>
-
-<p>At this moment a grimy clerk put his head
-in at the door.</p>
-
-<p>‘Please, sir, a young person of the name of
-Seaton.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It is Miss Eleanor, by Jove!’ said Bates,
-actually excited.</p>
-
-<p>‘Wonderful!’ said Mr Carver.</p>
-
-<p>In a few seconds the lady was ushered
-into the presence of Mr Carver. She was tall
-and fair, with a style of beauty uncommon to
-the people of to-day. Clad from head to foot
-in plain black, hat, jacket, and dress cut with a
-simplicity almost severe, and relieved only by a
-white collar at the throat, there was something
-in her air and bearing which spoke of a culture
-and breeding not easily defined in words, but
-nevertheless unmistakable. It was a face and
-figure that men would look at and turn again
-to watch, even in the busy street. Her complexion
-was almost painfully perfect in its
-clear pallid whiteness, and the large dark
-lustrous eyes shone out from the marble face
-with dazzling brightness. She had a perfect
-abundance of real golden hair, looped up in a
-great knot behind; but the rebellious straying
-tresses fell over her broad low forehead like an
-aureole round the head of a saint.</p>
-
-<p>For a few moments she regarded Mr Carver
-with a faint, wavering, unsteady smile. That
-gentleman tried to speak, and then blew his
-nose with unnecessary and ostentatious violence.</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t you know me, Mr Carver?’ she said
-at length.</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear Eleanor, my dear Eleanor, do sit
-down!’ This was the person whom he had
-been longing for two years to see, and Mr Carver,
-cool as he was, was rather knocked off his
-balance for a moment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">{26}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Poor child! Why, why didn’t you come and
-see me before?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pride, Mr Carver—pride,’ she replied, with a
-painful air of assumed playfulness.</p>
-
-<p>‘But surely pride did not prevent your coming
-to see your old friend?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Indeed, it did, Mr Carver. You would not
-have me part with one of my few possessions?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Nonsense, nonsense!’ said the lawyer, with
-assumed severity. ‘Now, sit down there, and
-tell me everything you have done for the last
-two years.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It is soon told. When my uncle—poor
-deluded man—turned me, as he did, out of
-his house on account of my marriage, something
-had to be done; so we came to London. For
-two years my husband has been trying to earn
-a living by literature. Far better had he stayed
-in the country and taken to breaking stones or
-working in the fields. It is a bitter life, Mr
-Carver. The man who wants to achieve fortune
-that way must have a stout heart; he must be
-devoid of pride and callous to failure. If I had
-all the eloquence of a Dickens at my tongue’s
-end, I could not sum up two years’ degradation
-and bitter miserable poverty and disappointment
-better than in the few words, “Trying to live
-by literature.”—However, it is useless to struggle
-against it any longer. Mr Carver, sorely against
-my inclination, I have come to you to help
-us.’</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear child, you hurt me,’ said Mr Carver
-huskily, ‘you hurt me; you do indeed. For two
-years I have been searching for you everywhere.
-You have only to ask me, and you know anything
-I can I will do.’</p>
-
-<p>‘God bless you,’ replied Eleanor, with the
-gathering tears thick in her eyes. ‘I know
-you will. I knew that when I came here. How
-can I thank you?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t do anything of the sort; I don’t want
-any thanks. But before you go, I will do something
-for you. Now, listen to me. Before your
-uncle died’——</p>
-
-<p>‘Died! Is he dead?’</p>
-
-<p>‘How stupid of me. I didn’t know’——</p>
-
-<p>Mr Carver stopped abruptly, and paused till
-the natural emotions called forth in the young
-lady’s mind had had time to expend themselves.
-She then asked when the event had happened.</p>
-
-<p>‘Two years ago,’ said Mr Carver. ‘And now,
-tell me—since you last saw him, had you any
-word or communication from him in any shape
-or form? Any letter or message?’</p>
-
-<p>Eleanor shook her head, half sadly, half scornfully.</p>
-
-<p>‘You don’t seem to know Miss Wakefield,’ she
-said. ‘No message was likely to reach me, while
-<i>she</i> remained at Eastwood.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No; I suppose not. So you have heard nothing?
-Very good. Now, a most wonderful thing
-has happened. When your uncle died and his
-will came to be read, he had left everything to
-Miss Wakefield. No reason to tell you that,
-I suppose? Now comes the strangest part of
-the story. With the exception of a few hundreds
-in the local bank, not a penny can be
-found. All the property has been mortgaged
-to the uttermost farthing; all the stock is sold
-out; and, in fact, nothing is left but Eastwood,
-which, as you know, is a small place, and not
-worth much. We have been searching for two
-years, and not a trace can we find.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps Miss Wakefield is hiding the plunder
-away,’ Eleanor suggested with some indifference.</p>
-
-<p>‘Impossible,’ eagerly exclaimed Mr Carver—‘impossible.
-What object could she have in
-doing so? The money was clearly left to her;
-and it is not likely that a woman so fond of show
-would deliberately choose to spend her life in a
-dingy lodging-house.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And Eastwood?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Is empty. It will not let, neither can we
-sell it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So Miss Wakefield is no better off than she
-was four years ago!’ Eleanor said calmly. ‘Come,
-Mr Carver, that is good news, at anyrate. It
-almost reconciles me to my position.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Nelly, I wish you would not speak so,’ said
-Mr Carver seriously. ‘It hurts me. You were
-not so hard at one time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Forgive me, my dear old friend,’ she replied
-simply. ‘Only consider what a life we have
-been leading for the past two years, and you
-will understand.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And your husband?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Killing himself,’ she said; ‘wearing out body
-and soul in one long struggle for existence. It
-hurts me to see him. Always hoping, and always
-working, always smiling and cheerful before me;
-and ever the best of men and husbands. Dear
-friend, if you knew what he is to me, and saw
-him as I do day after day, literally wearing out,
-you would consider my seeming hardness pardonable.
-I am rebellious, you know.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no,’ said Mr Carver, a suspicious gleam
-behind his spectacles; ‘I can understand it. The
-only thing I blame you for is that you did not
-come to me before. You know what a lonely
-old bachelor I am, and how—how rich I am.
-It would have been a positive kindness of you
-to come and see me.—Now, listen. On Sunday,
-you and your husband must come and dine
-with me. You know the old Russell Square
-address?’</p>
-
-<p>‘God bless you for a true friend!’ said Eleanor,
-her tears flowing freely now. ‘We will come;
-and I may bring my little girl with me?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Eh, what?’ replied the lawyer—‘little girl?
-Of course, of course! Then we will talk over
-old times, and see what can be done to make
-those cheeks look a little like they used to do.—So
-you have got a little girl, have you? Dear,
-dear, how the time goes!—Now, tell me candidly,
-do you want any assistance—any, ah—that is—a
-little—in short, money?’</p>
-
-<p>Eleanor coloured to the roots of her hair, and
-was about to reply hastily, but said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, yes,’ said Mr Carver rapidly.—‘I think,
-Bates’——</p>
-
-<p>But Mr Bates already had his hand on the
-cheque-book, and commenced to fill in the date.
-Mr Carver gave him a look of approbation, and
-flashed him a sign with his fingers signifying
-the amount.</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose you have some friends?’ he continued
-hastily, to cover Eleanor’s confusion.
-‘It’s a poor world that won’t stand one good
-friend.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, we have one,’ replied Eleanor, her face
-lighting up with a tender glow—‘a good friend.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">{27}</span>
-You have heard of Jasper Felix the author? He
-is far the best friend we have.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Heard of Felix! I should think I have.
-Read every one of his books. I am glad to
-hear of his befriending you. I knew the man
-who writes as he does must have a noble
-heart.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He has. What we should have done without
-his assistance, I shudder to contemplate. I
-honestly believe that not one of my husband’s
-literary efforts would have been accepted, had
-it not been for him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I can’t help thinking, Nelly, that there is
-a providence in these things, and I feel that
-better days are in store for you. Anyway, it
-won’t be my fault if it is not so. I have a
-presentiment that things will come out all right
-in the end, and I fancy that your uncle’s fortune
-is hidden away somewhere; and if it is hidden
-away, it must be, I cannot help thinking, for
-your benefit.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t count upon it, Mr Carver,’ said Eleanor
-calmly. ‘I look upon the money as gone.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Nonsense!’ said that gentleman cheerfully;
-‘while there is life there is hope. I begin to
-feel that I am playing a leading character in
-a romance; I do, indeed! Firstly, your uncle
-dies, and his fortune is lost; secondly, you disappear;
-and at the very moment I am longing—literally
-longing—to see you, you turn up.
-Now, all that remains is to find the hidden
-treasure, and to be happy ever afterwards, like
-the people in a fairy tale.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Always enthusiastic,’ laughed Eleanor. ‘All
-we have to do is to discover a mystic clue to
-a buried chest of diamonds, only we lack the clue.’</p>
-
-<p>‘’Pon my word, my dear, do you know I really
-think you have hit it?’ replied Mr Carver with
-great solemnity. ‘Now, at the time you left
-Eastwood, your companion Margaret was in the
-house; and after your uncle’s death, she disappeared.
-From a little hint Miss Wakefield
-dropped to me, your old friend was in the sickroom
-alone with your uncle the day he died.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Alone? and then disappeared,’ said Eleanor,
-all trace of apathy gone, and her eyes shining
-with interest.</p>
-
-<p>‘Alone. Now, if we could only find Margaret
-Boulton’——</p>
-
-<p>Eleanor rose from her seat, and approached
-Mr Carver slowly. Then she said calmly: ‘There
-is no difficulty about that; she is at my house
-now. I found her only last night on Waterloo
-Bridge—in fact, I saved her.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Saved her? Didn’t I say there was a providence
-in it? Saved her?’</p>
-
-<p>‘From suicide!’</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A quarter of an hour later, Eleanor was standing
-outside Mr Carver’s office, evidently seeking
-a companion. From the bright flush on her
-face and the sparkle in her eyes, hope—and
-a strong hope—had revived. She stood there,
-quite unconscious of the admiration of passers-by,
-sweeping the street in search of her quest. Presently
-the object she was seeking came in view.
-He was a tall man, of slight figure, with blue
-eyes deeply sunk in a face far from handsome,
-but full of intellectual power and great character;
-a heavy, carelessly trimmed moustache hid
-a sensitive mouth, but did not disguise a bright
-smile. That face and figure was a famous one
-in London, and people there turned in the busy
-street to watch Jasper Felix, and admire his
-rugged powerful face and gaunt figure. He came
-swinging down the street now with firm elastic
-step, and treated Eleanor to one of his brightest
-smiles.</p>
-
-<p>‘Did you think I had forgotten you?’ he said.
-‘I have been prowling about Gray’s Inn Road,
-for, sooth to say, the air of Bedford Row does
-not agree with me.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope I have not detained you,’ said Eleanor
-timidly; ‘I know how valuable your time is to
-you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear child, don’t mention it,’ replied the
-great novelist lightly; ‘my time has been well
-occupied. First, I have been watching a fight
-between two paviors. Do you know it is quite
-extraordinary how those powerful men can knock
-each other about without doing much harm.
-Then I have been having a long chat with an
-intellectual chimney-sweep—a clever man, but
-a great Radical. I have spent quite an enjoyable
-half-hour.’</p>
-
-<p>‘A half-hour! Have I been so long? Mr
-Felix, I am quite horrified at having taken up
-so much of your time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Awful, isn’t it,’ he laughed lightly. ‘Well,
-you won’t detain me much longer, for here you
-are close at home.—Now, I will just run into
-Fleet Street on my own business, and try and
-sell this little paper of your husband’s at the
-same time. I’ll call in this afternoon; only,
-mind, you must look as happy as you do
-now.’</p>
-
-<p>Jasper Felix made his way through a court
-into Holborn, and along that busy thoroughfare
-till he turned down Chancery Lane. Crossing
-the street by the famous <i>Griffin</i>, he disappeared
-in one of the interminable courts leading out
-of Samuel Johnson’s favourite promenade, Fleet
-Street. The object of his journey was here.
-On the door-plate was the inscription, ‘The <i>Midas
-Magazine</i>,’ and beneath the legend, ‘First Floor.’
-Ascending the dingy stair, he stopped opposite a
-door on which, in white letters, was written the
-word ‘Editor.’ At this door he knocked. It
-was not the timid rap of a literary aspirant, but
-the important tap of a man who knew that he
-was welcome. Without pausing for a reply, he
-pushed open the door.</p>
-
-<p>‘How de do, Simpson?’ said Mr Felix, with
-a look of amusement in his blue eyes.</p>
-
-<p>‘Glad to see you, Felix,’ said the editor of the
-<i>Midas</i> cordially. ‘I thought you had forgotten
-us. I hope you have something for our journal
-in your pocket.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I <i>have</i> something in my pocket to show you,’
-answered Felix, ‘and I think you will appreciate
-it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Is it something of your own?’ queried the
-man of letters.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, it is not; and, what is more, I doubt if I
-could write anything so good myself. I know
-when you have seen it, you will accept it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Um! I don’t know,’ replied the editor dubiously.
-‘You see, I am simply inundated with
-amateur efforts. Of course, sometimes I get
-something good; but usually—— Now, if the
-matter in discussion was a manuscript of your
-own’——</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">{28}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Now, seriously, Simpson, what do you care
-for me or anything of mine? It is the name
-you want, not the work. You know well enough
-what sells magazines of the <i>Midas</i> type. It is
-not so much the literary matter as the name.
-The announcement that the next month’s <i>Midas</i>
-will contain the opening chapters of a new serial
-by some one with a name, is quite sufficient to
-increase your circulation by hundreds.’</p>
-
-<p>‘’Pon my honour, you’re very candid,’ rejoined
-Mr Simpson. ‘But what is this wonderful production
-you have?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I’ll leave it with you. You need not
-trouble to read it, because, if you don’t take it, I
-know who will.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What do you want for this triumph of genius?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, in a word, ten pounds. Take it or
-leave it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘If you say it is worth it, I suppose I must
-oblige you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That is a good way of putting it; and it will
-oblige me. But mark me—this man will some
-day confer favours by writing for you, instead
-of, as you regard it at present, favouring him.’</p>
-
-<p>The proprietor of the <i>Midas</i> sighed gently. The
-idea of paying over ten pounds to an unknown
-contributor was not nice, but the fact of offending
-Felix was worse.</p>
-
-<p>‘If,’ said he, harping on the old string, and
-shaking his head with a gentle deprecating
-motion—‘if it was one of yours now’——</p>
-
-<p>‘What confounded nonsense you talk!’ exclaimed
-Felix impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t get wild, Felix,’ replied Mr Simpson
-soothingly. ‘I will take your protégé’s offering,
-to oblige you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But I don’t want you to oblige me. I want
-you to accept—and pay for—an article good
-enough for anything. It is a fair transaction;
-and if there is any favour about it, then it
-certainly is not on your side.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Simpson showed his white teeth in a
-dazzling smile. ‘Well, Felix, I do admire your
-assurance,’ he said loftily. ‘I never heard the
-matter put in that light before. My contributors,
-as a rule, don’t point their manuscript
-at my head metaphorically, and demand speedy
-insertion and prompt pay.—Do you want a
-cheque for this manuscript now?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, you may as well give me the cash now.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Simpson drew a cheque for the desired
-amount, and passed it over to Felix, who folded
-the pink slip and placed it in his pocket;
-whereupon the conversation drifted into other
-channels.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="REVOLUTION_BELOW-STAIRS">REVOLUTION BELOW-STAIRS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> relations of employer and employed in
-private life and in public are in a state of
-transition. The foundations of society itself
-are undergoing drastic modifications, which will
-either sap or enhance its strength. The air is
-charged with reform in every department of
-social life. The very conditions of existence are
-more or less in the crucible. The connection
-between man and man, between woman and man,
-between man and the State, or woman and the
-State, are every one of them passing through an
-ordeal of stringent examination. In no direction
-is the old order of things vanishing more rapidly
-than in the household. The relations of mistress
-and maid are not to-day what they were yesterday,
-or what they will be to-morrow. A hundred
-years ago, servants were more part and
-parcel of the establishment than they are now.
-They entered a family, in the majority of cases,
-whilst they were young, and marriage or death
-was the only cause of separation in general. It
-never occurred to the domestic of the past to
-‘give notice,’ any more than it occurred to the
-mistress to dismiss her servants, on the slightest
-provocation.</p>
-
-<p>We need not travel far to ascertain what are the
-agencies which have wrought the change. The
-same influences which are every day giving the
-working classes increased power have affected in
-at least an equally pronounced degree the domestic
-employee. In 1886, the footman or the
-housemaid, the butler or the cook, is perhaps
-as well educated as were many heads of households
-in 1786. If the upper classes are now
-more cultured than they were in the olden days,
-so are the lower classes. Advertising mediums,
-cheapness and ease of locomotion, and the ever-spreading
-education of the masses, were boons
-undreamed of by the ‘Jeames’ whom Thackeray
-portrayed. Before these results of our progress
-were realised, the sphere within which the
-energies of servants found play was exceedingly
-limited. Beyond the locality in which they
-lived and the immediate circle of their master’s
-acquaintances, the world was to them little more
-than a blank and a mystery. To-day, they are
-nearly as familiar with the world as are their
-masters.</p>
-
-<p>The sooner this is understood and appreciated,
-the better for the peace and stability of households.
-It is an invariable rule that the most contented
-homes are those in which the servant is
-treated with the greatest respect. Servants must
-be servants. No one but a lunatic would suggest
-that they had any right to enter the drawing-room
-or the dining-room on a footing of equality with
-its owner. But not less idiotic is it to imagine
-that they will much longer consent to be regarded
-as only one degree removed from the beast of
-burden. Their opportunities for acquiring knowledge
-are so manifold that it would be wonderful
-if this were not the case. Ladies and gentlemen
-sitting round their table are apt to forget that
-the man or maid waiting upon them has ears,
-and that their comments on life and the way
-the world is wagging, cannot fail to excite
-attention on the part of the domestic. Topics
-thrashed out in the dining-room or drawing-room
-are frequently carried below-stairs, and
-there subjected to a similar process, though it
-may be on very different lines. The result,
-equally with that of love as defined by Kenelm
-Chillingly, must inevitably be ‘a disturbance
-of the mental equilibrium.’</p>
-
-<p>The unrest which characterises society itself
-characterises every section of the community.
-To ‘better’ themselves is the lifelong aim of servants
-in the last quarter of the nineteenth century.
-Good servants are already at a premium. The
-complaint is constantly made that whilst domestics
-are more independent than of yore, their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">{29}</span>
-work is less carefully attended to. Those who
-understand the forces at work in our midst have
-no difficulty in recognising that, as time goes on,
-first-class servants will become rarer still. Preposterous
-as it may seem, this phenomenon is only
-another phase of the ‘social status’ question.
-There is, quite without reason, attaching to service
-a certain disposition on the part of many of
-our domestics to resent the washing-up of dishes
-or the cleaning of a floor.</p>
-
-<p>The rule is not, of course, absolute, and there
-are many really good servants who enter a family
-and stay in it a number of years. But the tendency
-of the period is nomadic. In some quarters,
-there is a disposition to account for the perpetual
-changing of servants on the ground that
-servants love change. This is not altogether
-accurate. Many dislike nothing so much as fresh
-faces and fresh work, and are by no means eager
-to enter upon the duties of their new home.
-Others, however, leave one situation with the
-express hope that they may never enter another,
-and if employment of a different kind offers,
-eagerly avail themselves of it, albeit generally to
-their own disadvantage. Thousands of young
-men and women in every way qualified for
-service are swamping many callings. Milliners,
-dressmakers, clerks, shop-assistants—what a host
-might be found in the ranks of these who
-would constitute first-class recruits for private
-service! It is a fact, that whilst their numbers
-are on the increase, the numbers of domestics
-are almost stationary. During the decade 1871
-to 1881, the census proved that indoor servants
-had increased by only one per cent., and consequently,
-proportionately to the increase of
-population, were scarcer in 1881 than ten years
-before. On the other hand, clerks had doubled;
-milliners had increased by nearly nineteen per
-cent.; dressmakers, by nearly eight per cent.;
-and seamstresses, by over five per cent.</p>
-
-<p>These figures afford food for reflection. A large
-proportion of the young men and women to
-whom they refer are earning barely enough to
-keep body and soul together. In most cases they
-are a load upon the shoulders of their friends.
-For some months of the year the majority are
-without work. When they are in work, their
-money will never more than cover immediate
-wants. Would they not be better off beneath
-the gentleman’s roof with regular food and
-regular money? No one who knows anything
-at all about them will hesitate for a moment to
-reply in the affirmative. ‘Why, then,’ it will be,
-and often is asked, ‘do they not go into service?’
-It would be found that if they applied for a
-situation in the household to-morrow, they would
-want to become ladies’-maids or valets. This disposition
-is to be explained on two grounds.
-First, exceptional privileges attach to the personal
-attendant; secondly, the lower grades of the
-domestic calling are still regarded with the feelings
-to which George Eliot gave expression in
-her dissertation on servants’ logic. The ordinary
-servant is too frequently and often unjustly
-branded with the mark of servility and ignorance
-not only among the upper classes, but to
-some extent among the industrial classes. To
-be ‘only a servant’ is, in the society in which
-the artisan or the clerk moves, to be entitled to
-less consideration than is given to those who
-follow a more independent calling. Just as it
-is the genius of the stage who alone is recognised
-in the best society, so it is only a few
-servants who have the power of impressing
-those with whom they come in contact with
-their worth, who secure friends outside the
-domestic circle.</p>
-
-<p>The growing antipathy to service is a sign
-of the times which has to be reckoned with.
-Nor is this wonderful. No class of the community
-are kept to so perpetual a round of
-labour as the domestic servant. With the exception
-of an occasional afternoon or evening—often
-it is not more than once in a fortnight—those
-who live below-stairs rarely have an hour which
-they can call entirely their own. They may
-perhaps frequently have an opportunity of getting
-through their work early in the day, but they
-must not leave the house till they have asked
-permission. Again, they may stay in the same
-family for many years. But what do they gain
-by it? There is in England no such recognition
-of long and faithful service as exists in Germany.
-Seven years ago, the Empress of the Fatherland
-instituted a Long Service Order, and since that
-time many hundreds of domestic servants who
-have lived with the same master and mistress
-for forty years, have received from royalty
-diplomas and golden crosses.</p>
-
-<p>Is such an Order impossible in Great Britain?
-Could we not modify and adapt it to ourselves?
-If a person is to work well for any length of
-time, some motive must be found. Why should
-not a system of rewards be adopted? No one
-can doubt that if a lady, when engaging a
-domestic, said, ‘Supposing you stay with me
-and perform your duties to the best of your
-ability for ten years, I will, in consideration
-thereof, present you at the termination of your
-engagement with twenty-five pounds,’ the effect
-would be beneficial. On condition of being
-assured that the money was safe, many servants,
-for the sake of the bonus, would consent to
-accept lesser wages than they receive at present.
-Even though the plan now suggested cost a few
-pounds more than would be spent under existing
-circumstances, would not the freedom from worry
-and anxiety be ample compensation? The outlay,
-however, would probably amount to little more
-than is now expended in advertising, in paying
-fares to and from the house for the purpose of
-interviews, and in various other ways incidental
-to the constantly recurring necessity of engaging
-servants.</p>
-
-<p>Further, there can be no reason why mistresses
-should not agree to let each of their servants
-have a certain number of hours during the
-week which they may consider their own. The
-one drawback to service, in the eyes of many
-who would be better off in service than they
-are now, is, that they cannot have the evenings
-which at present are at their disposal. If the
-housewife gives the matter a little thought, she
-will see that this is an enigma the solution
-of which is not impracticable. The future
-must be pregnant with reform in the relations
-between the occupants of the drawing-room and
-of the servants’ hall. If masters and mistresses
-are wise, they will rob the revolutionary spirit
-of the age of any force it may have, by anticipating
-in a generous and liberal-handed manner<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">{30}</span>
-claims which, if ignored, may result in a condition
-of things as undesirable as that which
-to-day obtains in Australia, where servants, at
-least as they are known in the old country,
-are non-existent.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_SUBAQUEOUS_EXCURSION">A SUBAQUEOUS EXCURSION.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Our</span> good-fortune in obtaining permission to
-descend a caisson of the gigantic Forth Bridge—which
-when completed will be one of the
-most stupendous railway viaducts in the world—obtained
-additional zest from the fact that comparatively
-few structures are founded on what
-is termed the pneumatic principle in this country—the
-employment of compressed air being more
-in vogue on the continent—and still fewer are
-open to the passing visitor, uninfluenced alike
-by professional or scientific ardour.</p>
-
-<p>Arrived at North Queensferry, on the Fife
-side of the Firth of Forth, we embark for
-the island in mid-channel, and rounding the
-easternmost promontory of the rock, see before
-us a huge iron cylinder, which, but for the
-incongruity of its position, we should take for
-a gasometer, and not a caisson. We land, and
-are forthwith marshalled to the dressing-room.
-Leathern caps and garments of a sombre blue
-hue are donned, and we are ready to descend.
-Before, however, proceeding, a brief outline of
-the working of a caisson, the end in view, and
-the means adopted in the attainment of that
-end, may be given, which will enable the reader
-to follow our movements.</p>
-
-<p>Over the site of the proposed pier, a large
-circular cylinder is sunk, which rests on the
-rock-bottom, and has its upper edge slightly
-above high water. A horizontal floor divides the
-cylinder into two chambers. The lower chamber,
-seven feet in height, is charged with compressed
-air by machinery situated on shore, and connected
-with it by flexible hose. The air under
-pressure excludes the water, enabling workmen
-to descend into the lower chamber—which is,
-in fact, a large diving-bell—and to excavate the
-rock on which the caisson rests. The excavated
-material is drawn up in buckets or ‘skips’ and
-thrown over, whilst the caisson gradually descends
-by its own weight until a level bed is formed.
-The upper and lower chambers of the caisson
-are then filled with concrete, and this circular
-monolithic foundation carries the granite pier on
-which rests the steel superstructure. A tube,
-connecting the air-chamber below with an air-lock
-on the upper platform of the caisson, gives
-access to the working beneath. In principle,
-the air-lock of a caisson in no way differs from
-the well-known lock on a canal. The air-lock
-is formed by a tube of larger diameter, which
-surrounds the upper end of the vertical tube
-leading to the air-chamber.</p>
-
-<p>Having entered this outer chamber, the door is
-closed behind us, and our connection with the
-outer world severed. A cock is turned, and with
-a steady hiss, the compressed air enters, a fact of
-which we soon become painfully conscious by the
-pressure that is brought to bear upon the drum
-of the ear. We follow the directions previously
-given us, and by copiously swallowing the compressed
-air and forcing it into the ears, with
-closed nostrils, we equalise the pressure on both
-sides of the drums, and succeed in accommodating
-ourselves to the novel atmospheric conditions.
-The inrush of compressed air at length ceases;
-and the pressure being now equal in the outer
-chamber—in which we are—and the internal
-tube, the door between them opens without difficulty.
-We enter, and descending a vertical ladder
-some ninety feet, we find ourselves in the air-chamber,
-and standing on the solid rock-bed of
-the Firth of Forth fifty feet below water-level.
-The scene is as striking as it is novel. A circular
-iron chamber, seventy feet in diameter and seven
-feet high, brilliantly illuminated by arc-lights
-suspended from the roof. Groups of foreign
-workmen—enlisted for this service, owing to
-continental experience in this class of work—are
-busily engaged in levelling the surface of the rock.
-The majority of these men wield pick and bar;
-whilst others fill the iron tubs or ‘skips’ with
-the fragments of rock, which are then drawn to
-the surface, passing through a lock similar in
-principle, though differing slightly in design from
-that we have ourselves traversed; and having
-discharged their contents over the edge of the
-caisson, return for another load.</p>
-
-<p>We would fain linger amid a scene so weird
-and wonderful; but time fails, and we must
-return to ‘bank.’ We take a last look at the
-air-chamber with its busy occupants, and ascending
-the ladder, not without exertion, for a vertical
-ladder at all times calls muscle into play, and the
-pressure we are under by no means lightens our
-labours, we find ourselves again in the air-lock.
-The reverse process now takes place. The inner
-door is closed, the compressed air is allowed to
-escape from the outer chamber in which we now
-are, and causes a thick mist, cold and chilly.
-Before long, the pressure ceases; the outer door
-opens, and we again tread terra firma. The
-pressure-gauge records thirty pounds per square
-inch.</p>
-
-<p>We now discard our exploring garments, and
-having enjoyed a not unneedful wash, we quit
-the works, and returning homewards, congratulate
-each other on having trodden the very foundations
-of the wonderful Forth Bridge, and ponder
-how little the future traveller, as he lightly skims
-the estuary at sixty miles an hour, will think of
-the practical ingenuity and patient labour that
-wrought, deep down beneath the waters of the
-Forth, the foundations on which repose the huge
-structures through which the flying express is
-whirling him.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="OCCASIONAL_NOTES">OCCASIONAL NOTES.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>BORAX.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> learn from a contemporary a good deal that
-is interesting about the history and preparation
-for the market of the borax of commerce. In
-1874 Mr A. Robottom, prospecting for commercial
-purposes some of the vast tracts of unoccupied
-land in Southern California, came across a long
-deep valley, about fifteen by eight miles, which
-was apparently the basin, or series of basins, of
-once active volcanoes. This valley was covered
-with crude borates, combined with earthy impurities.
-The heat was oppressive, one hundred
-and nineteen degrees in the shade; and the
-atmosphere so dry, that even breathing was
-difficult. At this time, the explorer’s attention<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">{31}</span>
-was drawn to a dark object lying upon the ground,
-upon which he seated himself, and found it was
-a dead horse. He was naturally surprised that no
-smell emanated from the carcase, and taking out
-his knife, he cut to the bones, only to find that
-the flesh was quite sweet. The explanation of
-this was that the boron from the boracic land had
-saturated it thoroughly. He learned afterwards
-that the carcase of this horse had lain there for
-seven months, having been left by a party of
-emigrants. The remarkable antiseptic powers of
-boron in its crude state having thus been proved
-to him, he took over this Boron Valley for the
-State of California, and arranged with a Company
-in England to make it available for commercial
-purposes.</p>
-
-<p>As it reaches this country, Californian borax,
-after being freed from its earthy elements at the
-Borax Lake, is put up in small bags, and consists
-of pure white crystals, which are crushed into a
-fine, white, almost inpalpable powder in the
-factories. After undergoing various processes, it
-comes out eventually to the outside world as
-borax extract of soap, borax dry soap, washing-powders,
-&amp;c. In one factory, over thirty-seven
-million of packets are turned out annually. This
-prepared Californian borax is used in the laundry,
-for washing cattle, for helping to heal wounds,
-and many other household purposes. Its virtues
-in preventing decomposition in hams and salted
-meats are also well known. Water containing one
-per cent. of borax will keep pure and sweet for
-years, and remain safe for drinking.</p>
-
-<p>The soap prepared with borax, however, has
-been thought by some to have a more corrosive
-influence on fibres than common soap. In Belgium,
-powdered borax is used for washing purposes,
-with a view to economise soap; while in
-Sweden, meat and milk are largely preserved by
-means of boracic acid, its use in no way rendering
-these viands less wholesome. It is also valuable
-for hard soldering, and is in use for pottery
-glazes and enamels.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the natural supply of crude
-borax already mentioned, this substance is largely
-made from boracic or boric acid, found among the
-matters ejected around the craters of volcanoes.
-Works for utilising and preparing it exist in the
-Maremma of Tuscany, where the acid is condensed
-from the boiling springs and heated gases issuing
-from fissures in the rocks. It is also found in
-Central Asia, Canada, Peru, and in Nevada,
-United States.</p>
-
-
-<h3>AMERICANISMS.</h3>
-
-<p>The <i>Globe</i>, in an article by an ‘American
-Journalist,’ says: ‘The opportunity may here
-be taken to gently suggest that the word Yankee
-is very often misapplied on this side of the
-Atlantic. It is a genuine American word, but
-it only applies to the inhabitants of a certain
-part of the big Republic. A stranger in the
-States describing an inhabitant of Cincinnati, or
-St Louis, or Richmond, Virginia, as a Yankee,
-would stand a good chance of a broken head,
-or even worse. As a matter of fact, the Yankees
-are the people who inhabit the New England
-States, and the title is considered a term of
-reproach, not to say insult, by all others. This,
-however, is all by the way. There are three
-terms very often quoted as American “slang,”
-which possess certain peculiarities of locality.
-These are “guess,” “calculate,” and “reckon.”
-One may travel through what are known as the
-Southern States for five years and never once
-hear either of the first two words, unless spoken
-by a Northerner or a man from the West. The
-Southerners “reckon” everything, except, perhaps,
-consequences, and they are left to take
-care of themselves. “Guess” is more or less universal
-in the States, and “calculate” is common
-only to the North and extreme East. “Straanger”
-is frequently erroneously used by English writers
-and speakers as an ordinary colloquialism of all
-Americans. It is the property of the South
-and South-west only, and even there is rapidly
-becoming obsolete. But to these expressions it
-is hardly fair to append the stigma of “slang.”
-Now there are plenty of slang words and phrases
-in vogue in America which probably are meaningless
-to English minds. A lady has purchased
-an article for considerably more than its value;
-she shows it to her husband, proclaiming its
-beauty and cheapness. He, seeing that she has
-been overcharged, endeavours to persuade her that
-such is the case, vainly, for she is quite satisfied
-with her bargain. “All right,” says he; “it’s not
-my funeral.” This is slang, pure and simple, but
-it has a derivation. It is an unintentional protest
-against the elaborate obsequial ceremonies
-indulged in by all classes in the United States, and
-it is a grim reference to one of those not unfrequent
-“shindies” that take place in Western bar-rooms,
-from which the men who escape with
-whole skins have reason to thank their stars that
-“it is not their funeral.” Many are the political
-and party expressions which may well come under
-the head of slang terms, such as “log-rolling,”
-“the bloody shirt”—a reference to the late civil
-war—“mugwumps”—a name given in ridicule to
-independent voters—“the ticket,” meaning the list
-of candidates recommended for election by either
-party, and so on. The speculative nature of nearly
-all Americans has originated the expression “you
-bet,” which is the basis of many phrases, as, “you
-bet your life,” “bet your sweet life,” “bet your
-bottom dollar,” “bet your boots,” “stake your
-pile,” “go the lot on that.” Favourite games of
-cards have caused such expressions as “euchred!”
-to signify that one is exposed or thwarted; “I
-pass,” meaning that one declines further conjecture
-or speculation; “let’s make a Jack-pot,”
-a proceeding in the game of poker similar to
-making a pool; “pooling the issues,” denoting
-an intention or proposal to put all the results
-of some action together and “divvy up” or
-divide equally among the partners. To “catch
-on” means to understand or comprehend quickly,
-and has its parallel on this side of the
-Atlantic in “do you catch my meaning?” It
-is usual in the States to call railways “railroads,”
-railway lines “tracks,” carriages “cars,”
-and stations “depots.” Tramway carriages are
-referred to as “street” or “horse” cars, in contradistinction
-to “steam-cars” or railway trains.
-A railway engine is known as a “locomotive,”
-in opposition to a stationary engine. The guards
-are all “conductors;” and there is no luggage,
-but all “baggage,” and hence porters are called
-opprobriously “baggage-smashers,” from their
-anything but gentle handling of the baggage.
-The speed of the trains has given rise to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">{32}</span>
-phrase “to railroad a thing through,” meaning
-to get a thing done quickly; and the huge lamp
-which flashes along the line from the front of
-the engine has given its name to a special lamp-oil
-called “headlight oil.” Very nearly every
-State has its special provincialisms, and they are
-as numerous as the words peculiar to the counties
-of England. Climate has had a great deal to
-do with many of these peculiarities, the languid
-heat of the Southern States having induced a
-soft drawling accent and a habit of slurring over
-certain letters, syllables, and sounds.’</p>
-
-
-<h3>A NATURAL SALMON-TRAP.</h3>
-
-<p>The salmon, the cousin of the trout, is famous
-for its method of going up-stream; it darts at falls
-ten or twelve feet high, leaps into the air, and
-rushes up the falling water in a marvellous
-manner. So determined are the salmon to attain
-the high and safe waters, that in some localities
-nets are placed beneath the falls, into which the
-fish tumble in their repeated attempts to clear
-the hill of water. Other than human hunters,
-moreover, profit by these scrambles up-hill. Travellers
-report that on the banks of the Upper
-St John River, in Canada, there was once a rock
-in which a large circular well, or pot-hole, had
-been worn by the action of the water. At the
-salmon-season, this rock proved a favourite resort
-for bears; and for a good reason. Having an
-especial taste for salmon, the bears would watch
-at the pot-hole, and as the salmon, dashing up
-the fall, were thrown by its force into the rocky
-basin, the bears would quickly scrape them out
-of the pot-hole, and the poor salmon would be
-eaten before they had time to wonder at this
-unlooked-for reception. The Dominion government
-finally authorised a party of hunters to
-destroy the pot-hole, and thus break up the bears’
-fishing-ground.</p>
-
-
-<h3>‘POOR JACK.’</h3>
-
-<p>A correspondent sends us the following. He
-says:</p>
-
-<p>Reading the interesting article entitled ‘Poor
-Jack’ in the <i>Journal</i> of the 7th November, I
-venture to send you a few notes, thinking that an
-excerpt from them may possibly be of interest to
-your readers. As the writer states, Jack is,
-thanks to the Board of Trade, much better off
-than he used to be. At all ports where there is
-not a separate Mercantile Marine Office, the
-custom-house is used as one, and the customs
-officials discharge the necessary duties. It is
-only at large ports that sailors are enabled to
-proceed home at once, if they <i>do</i> reside—as is
-generally the case—at a seaport town. They
-receive a document from the Board of Trade
-officer, which they present to the officer at the
-port where they live; and he, being advised
-through post by the officer at the arrival port,
-pays the amount of wages due. Here Jack is
-protected thoroughly from all temptations, and
-usually arrives at home sober, with his hard-earned
-wages safe in his pocket. This beneficial
-system, however, is not extended to the middle-class
-and small ports, and at these places Jack
-too often falls a ready prey to the land-sharks.
-Usually, when a foreign-going ship arrives in
-port, some hours—or perhaps a day or two—elapse
-before Jack is paid off. In the meantime he has
-his liberty, and it is then that the land-sharks are
-on the lookout for him. They entice him to
-their houses and give him drink, and so manage
-matters that, when the ship is paid off and he
-receives his wages, he is already considerably
-indebted to them, and perhaps is in such a
-muddled condition as to be incapable of taking
-care of his money. Seamen’s Money Orders are
-of great service in rescuing Jack’s wages from the
-clutches of these plunderers. They are obtained
-free of charge and for any amount at the time the
-ship is paid off, and steady seamen generally make
-use of them. They can be drawn on any Mercantile
-Marine Office; and as the seaman can make
-them payable to himself if he is not married, they
-enable him to get a good portion of his wages
-home in safety without any expense or risk.
-What is wanted in many places is that some one
-concerned in the mission-work amongst sailors
-should be on the lookout when a ship arrives in
-port with a crew to pay off, and see the men
-lodged in respectable boarding-houses or sailors’
-homes, so that they can send their wages home
-by means of the Money Orders; and also to see
-them safely to the railway station. It is grievous
-to think that the wages of many of our sailors,
-who have perhaps been out on a voyage of many
-months’ duration, should be dissipated in a few
-days, and most of it fall into the hands of the
-worthless creatures who live by this species of
-plunder.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_DESERTED_GARDEN">A DESERTED GARDEN.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">Tangled</span> ivy creeps and twines</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Where once bloomed my Lady’s flowers;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the twisting wild woodbines</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Weave o’er all their clustering bowers;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the fruit-trees from the wall</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Droop forgotten and forlorn,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the rose-trees, thick and tall,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">From their trellis-work are torn.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Dewy paths—once velvet-smooth</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For the dainty steps of youth—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Weedy now, and overgrown</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With the rank grass all unmown.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Here and there, amid confusion,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Gleams a berry scarlet-hued,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And pale bindweed in profusion</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">(By the summer breezes wooed),</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Creeps, where once verbenas grew,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Or the myrtle flowered so fair</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In the warm and scented air;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the speedwell—deepest blue—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Shakes its frail flowers everywhere.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">So, amid these paths—all haunted</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">By the memory of old flowers—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Grow these wild-wood blooms undaunted,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Through the glowing autumn hours.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ah! how long ago it seems</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Since bright faces glowed and smiled</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In this garden of our dreams.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Now so desolate and wild!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They will come again no more,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And no time shall e’er restore</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Golden days and fairy flowers</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To these wearied hearts of ours.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">Printed and Published by <span class="smcap">W. &amp; R. Chambers</span>, 47 Paternoster
-Row, <span class="smcap">London</span>, and 339 High Street, <span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center"><i>All rights reserved.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><p class="ph3">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> A cool summer drink or cup, made of Rhine wine,
-in which the herb <i>Waldmeister</i> plays a prominent part.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 106, VOL. III, JANUARY 9, 1886 ***</div>
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