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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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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67008 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67008)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular
-Literature, Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 108, Vol. III, January
-23, 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. 108, Vol. III, January 23, 1886
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: December 25, 2021 [eBook #67008]
-
-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. 108, VOL. III, JANUARY
-23, 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. 108.—VOL. III. SATURDAY, JANUARY 23, 1886. PRICE 1½_d._]
-
-
-
-
-AN ANGLER’S IDYLL.
-
-
-I am once more at the water’s edge. It is the Tweed, silver-voiced,
-musical, its ripples breaking into liquid crystals as the rushing
-stream leaps into the breast of the softly-circling pool. Here, in its
-upper reaches, amid the pastoral hills of Peeblesshire, its volume of
-fair water is untainted by pollution. It has miles and miles yet to
-run ere it comes up with the floating scum and dismal discoloration of
-‘mill-races’ and the refuse of the dye-house. And, there!—is not that
-Drummelzier Castle on the opposite bank above, its gray walls powdered
-with the yellows and browns of spreading lichens, and its shattered
-bastions waving here and there a crest of summer’s greenest grass? The
-fierce old chieftains who wrangled Border-fashion in its halls are
-silent to-day; the wild Tweedies and Hays and Veitches have had their
-rough voices smothered in the churchyard dust. From the shady angle of
-the old tower steps out a great brindled bull, leading his following
-of milky dames to where the pasture is juicy in the haughs below. I
-am thankful the broad deep stream is between us, for as he lifts his
-head and sees me where I stand, he announces his displeasure in a short
-angry snort and a sudden lashing of his ponderous tail. Perhaps it is
-only the flies tormenting him. In any case, it is well to be beyond his
-reach.
-
-Above me and around are the great brown hills of Tweed-dale. They have
-this morning a dreamy look. The soft west wind plays about them, and
-the sunlight weaves a web of mingled glory and gloom over their broad
-summits and down their furrowed sides. The trees wave green branches
-in the soft warm air; but I hear them not—only the swish and tinkle of
-the waters. The sheep that feed upon the long gray slopes move about
-in a kind of spectral stillness; I almost fancy I hear them bleat, but
-may be mistaken, so far-off and dream-like is the sound. A distant shot
-is heard, and a flock of white pigeons rise with swift wing from the
-summit of the battered old keep, and wheel quick circles round the
-tower, then settle down as still and unseen as before. And something
-else is moving on the farther side. It is a milkmaid, tripping down the
-bank towards the river, her pitchers creaking as she goes. She pauses
-ere dipping them in the stream, and looks with level hand above her
-eyes across the meadows now aflame with the morning sun. Perhaps she
-expects to see some gallant Patie returning from the ‘wauking o’ the
-fauld,’ or some bashful Roger hiding mouse-like behind the willows.
-Her light hair has been bleached to a still lighter hue by the suns
-and showers of many a summer day, but these, though they have bronzed
-her broad brow and shapely neck, have left undimmed the rosy lustre
-of her cheek. Light-handed, red-cheeked Peggy, go thy way in sweet
-expectation! When the westering sun flings purple shadows over the
-hills, he whose rustic image stirs thy glowing pulses shall steal to
-meet thee here.
-
-And I?—what have I to do? There is the tempting stream; the pliant rod,
-with its gossamer line and daintily busked lures, is ready to hand.
-Deft fingers have mounted it for me without ostentation or display.
-There has been no struggling with hanked line or tangled cast; I have
-been served like a prince among anglers, and am ready-equipped to step
-into the stream. And yet at the moment I am all alone; for round me
-only are the silent hills, and beneath me the broadly-flowing Tweed.
-
-I have never fished so before. I feel as light as if the normal fifteen
-pounds to the square inch of atmospheric pressure no longer existed
-for me. Ah, with what delight I feel the cool water lapping round my
-limbs, as I fling the light line far across the rippling stream, and
-watch the ‘flies’ as they drop and float downwards with the current.
-The broad brown hills, the dewy woods, the gray tower, are forgotten
-now. The brindled bull and his milky following have gone, with the
-rosy milkmaid, out of sight and out of mind. The pigeons high on the
-shattered keep may wheel fleet circles as they choose, and spread white
-wings in the orient sun, but they cannot draw my eyes from the charmed
-spot. Down there, in the haugh beneath, near to where Powsail Burn
-joins the Tweed, the thorn-tree is shading the wizard’s grave; but gray
-Merlin, sleeping or waking, living or dead, is nothing to me. Yonder,
-up the river, is Mossfennan Yett, and the Scottish king, for all I
-know, may once more be riding round the Merecleugh-head, ‘booted and
-spurred, as we a’ did see,’ to alight him down, as in days of old, and
-‘dine wi’ the lass o’ the Logan Lea;’ but to me that old royal lover is
-at this moment a thing of nought. Border story and Border song, tale
-of love and deed of valour—what are they now to me, with the soft wind
-sighing round my head and the swift river rushing at my feet?
-
-A splendid stream, indeed! For a hundred yards it sweeps with broken
-and jagged surface, from the broad shallow above to the deep dark pool
-below. In the strong rush of its current, it is not easy keeping your
-feet. The bottom is of small pebbles, smooth and round, gleaming yellow
-and brown through the clear water, and they have an awkward knack of
-slipping cleverly from beneath your feet, giving you every now and
-then a queer sensation of standing upon nothing. But this is only for
-a moment, or ever so much less than a moment. For if it were longer
-than the quickest thought, it might bring you a bad five minutes. To
-lose your footing in this swift-hurrying stream, might be to have a
-fleet passage into the great pool that hugs its black waters beneath
-the shadow of yonder gloomy rock over which the pine-trees wave their
-sunless boughs. But really, after all, one has no fear of that. Usage
-gives security. The railway train in which you sit quietly reading the
-morning paper, might at any moment leave the rails, or break an axle,
-or collide with the stone bridge ahead; but you do not think of that,
-or anticipate it—or, if you did, life would not be worth living. So is
-it here in the broad Tweed. With the faculties engrossed in the work of
-the moment, foot and hand are equally and instinctively alert. Slowly
-and securely you move over the shining pebbles, making cast after
-cast—wondering if ever you are to have a rise.
-
-I must work here with cautious hand and shortened line. For a belt
-of trees borders the river on the farther side, and a long-armed ash
-is pushing his boughs far out over the stream, as if seeking to dip
-his leaf-tips in the cool-flowing water. To hank one’s line on these
-quivering boughs would lead to a loss of time and probably of temper,
-and this morning everything is too beautiful and bright for any angry
-mood. As yet I have no success. Not a fin is on the rise; not a single
-silvery scale has glittered. Still, what beauties I know to be lurking
-there. You see that point, where the ground juts out a little into
-the stream, and a ragged alder hangs with loosened roots from the
-crumbling bank? It is being slowly undermined by the stream, and one
-day will slip down and be carried away. But as yet, it affords a rare
-sheltering-place for the finny tritons. It was but last season I hooked
-one at that very spot, and after a long and stubborn fight got my net
-beneath him, and went victor home.
-
-And I know that others are there still, as brave and as beautiful as
-he. In fancy’s eye I can see them even now, lying with head up-stream,
-and motionless but for now and then a quick jerk of the tail sideways,
-their yellow flanks gleaming in speckled radiance when a sunbeam
-reaches them through the fret-work of the overhanging leaves. That
-sharp jerk of the tail sideways means that they are keeping their
-weather-eye open. Being, among other things, insectivorous, they know
-if they would secure their prey they must be quick about it, hence they
-are ever on the alert. And yet, the flies which I am offering must have
-passed close by them a dozen times, but still they have stirred not,
-except in that knowing way which indicates they are not to be taken
-in. They have learned a thing or two, these Tweed trout, since the
-time of the Cæsars. Speak about animals not having reasoning powers?
-Let any one who deludes himself with this vain fallacy, purchase the
-best angling apparatus going, and then try his hand upon Tweed trout.
-Three hours afterwards he will not feel quite so satisfied as to the
-immeasurable superiority of man over the lower creatures. He may even
-have some half-defined suspicion that it is himself, and not the other
-party, that has been taken in. And not without cause. These Tweed trout
-can pick you out an artificial fly as skilfully as a tackle-maker.
-
-The thought disheartens me for a moment, as I stand here, lashing away,
-middle-deep in the stream. But it is only for a moment. The wind is
-soft; the air is bright, but not too bright, with sunshine; a luminous
-haze is gathering between me and the distant mountains, and the skies
-have now more of gray than of blue in their airy texture. Everything is
-beautiful, from the soft contour of the rounded hills to the glitter
-and sparkle of the silvery stream.—But, there! My reel is whirring off
-with a sound that seals the senses against everything else. He is _on_!
-I saw him rise, and as he turned to descend I struck—and there he is!
-It was all quicker than thought. He has rushed up-stream a dozen yards,
-but is turning now. As I reel in, I begin mentally to calculate the
-ratio of his weight to his strength of pull. This is a useful thing to
-do; because if you should happen to lose your fish, you are then in
-a position to assure your friend Jones, who is higher up the water,
-and very likely has done nothing, that you had one ‘on’ which was two
-pounds if it was an ounce. Jones will of course believe it, and condole
-with you upon your loss—perhaps with a secret chuckle.
-
-But this is digressive. I have other work than to talk about Jones at
-present. Master Fario is not taking kindly to the bridle which I have
-put in his mouth, and is having another run for it. There he goes,
-swish out of the water a couple of feet. What an exhilarating moment!
-Another leap and whirl, and off he goes careering towards the pool
-below in a way you never saw. But the line is running out after him,
-and still he is fast. The fight is keen, but he is worth fighting for.
-With the point of the rod well up, and a considerable strain upon the
-line, he must soon either yield—or break off. The alternative is
-dreadful to contemplate. So I renew my caution, and play him gently.
-By-and-by I feel he is yielding. Reeling in once more, I soon draw him
-within range of eyesight. What a beauty he is! Plump and fat, the very
-pink of trouts! Moving uneasily from side to side—boring occasionally
-as if he would make his way down to catch hold of something, but
-with a swinging and swaying motion about him indicative of failing
-power—he comes nearer and nearer to me where I stand, breathless with
-excitement, dreading lest, even at this last stage of the struggle,
-I may yet lose him. The supreme moment is at hand! He is almost
-at my feet. I hold the rod with one hand, and with the other undo
-the landing-net. He circles round me at as great a distance as the
-shortened line will allow, and though I have tried once or twice to
-pass the net beneath him, he has hitherto managed to baffle me. But
-now, at last, the net is under him—and, there——
-
- * * * * *
-
-Tap, tap!—‘Come in!’—And enter two or three little ones to hid papa
-good-night. Ah, little sweethearts, what a vision you have undone! The
-flowing stream, the overhanging trees, the old gray tower, the silent
-hills, have all, at the touch of your tiny fingers, vanished!
-
-I was not dreaming—no, nor yet asleep. My hook lies turned face down
-on my knee, and my pipe, extinguished, is still between my lips. It
-is towards the end of December; the Christmas bells have already rung
-out their message, and the New Year is waiting, in a few days to be
-ushered in. Outside, the wind is blowing in loud noisy gusts through
-the darkness, scattering the snow-flakes before it in a level drift.
-Here, in my bookroom, as I sat with foot on fender, watching the
-glowing embers in the grate, thoughts of summer days had stolen over
-me. I was once more by silvery Tweed, under sunny skies, plying ‘the
-well-dissembled fly’—the storm and the snow-drift without, being as
-if they were not. To you, reader, I have uttered aloud the reverie of
-those brief five minutes of swift fancy; to you, brother anglers, may
-that phantasmal expedition be the harbinger of coming sport; and with
-each and all of you I now will part, bidding you reverently, as I bid
-my little ones, Good-night!
-
-
-
-
-IN ALL SHADES.
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-The letter from Edward that had so greatly perturbed old Mr Hawthorn
-had been written, of course, some twenty days before he received
-it, for the mail takes about that time, as a rule, in going from
-Southampton across the Atlantic to the port of Trinidad. Edward had
-already told his father of his long-standing engagement to Marian; but
-the announcement and acceptance of the district judgeship had been so
-hurried, and the date fixed for his departure was so extremely early,
-that he had only just had time by the first mail to let his father
-know of his approaching marriage, and his determination to proceed at
-once to the West Indies by the succeeding steamer. Three weeks was all
-the interval allowed him by the inexorable red-tape department of the
-Colonial Office for completing his hasty preparations for his marriage,
-and setting sail to undertake his newly acquired judicial functions.
-
-‘Three weeks, my dear,’ Nora cried in despair to Marian; ‘why, you
-know, it can’t possibly be done! It’s simply impracticable. Do those
-horrid government-office people really imagine a girl can get together
-a trousseau, and have all the bridesmaids’ dresses made, and see about
-the house and the breakfast and all that sort of thing, and get herself
-comfortably married, all within a single fortnight? They’re just like
-all men; they think you can do things in less than no time. It’s
-absolutely preposterous.’
-
-‘Perhaps,’ Marian answered, ‘the government-office people would say
-they engaged Edward to take a district judgeship, and didn’t stipulate
-anything about his getting married before he went out to Trinidad to
-take it.’
-
-‘Oh, well, you know, if you choose to look at it in that way, of course
-one can’t reasonably grumble at them for their absurd hurrying. But
-still the horrid creatures ought to have a little consideration for a
-girl’s convenience. Why, we shall have to make up our minds at once,
-without the least proper deliberation, what the bridesmaids’ dresses
-are to be, and begin having them cut out and the trimmings settled this
-very morning. A wedding at a fortnight’s notice! I never in my life
-heard of such a thing. I wonder, for my part, your mamma consents to
-it.—Well, well, I shall have you to take charge of me going out, that’s
-one comfort; and I shall have my bridesmaid’s dress made so that I can
-wear it a little altered, and cut square in the bodice, when I get
-to Trinidad, for a best dinner dress. But it’s really awfully horrid
-having to make all one’s preparations for the wedding and for going
-out in such a terrible unexpected hurry.’ However, in spite of Nora,
-the preparations for the wedding were duly made within the appointed
-fortnight, even that important item of the bridesmaids’ dresses being
-quickly settled to everybody’s satisfaction.
-
-Strange that when two human beings propose entering into a solemn
-contract together for the future governance of their entire joint
-existence, the thoughts of one of them, and that the one to whom the
-change is most infinitely important, should be largely taken up for
-some weeks beforehand with the particular clothes she is to wear on the
-morning when the contract is publicly ratified! Fancy the ambassador
-who signs the treaty being mainly occupied for the ten days of the
-preliminary negotiations with deciding what sort of uniform and
-how many orders he shall put on upon the eventful day of the final
-signature!
-
-At the end of that short hurry-scurrying fortnight, the wedding
-actually took place; and an advertisement in the _Times_ next morning
-duly announced among the list of marriages, ‘At Holy Trinity, Brompton,
-by the Venerable Archdeacon Ord, uncle of the bride, assisted by
-the Rev. Augustus Savile, B.D., EDWARD BERESFORD HAWTHORN, M.A.,
-Barrister-at-law, of the Inner Temple, late Fellow of St Catherine’s
-College, Cambridge, and District Judge of the Westmoreland District,
-Trinidad, to MARIAN ARBUTHNOT, only daughter of General C. S. Ord,
-C.I.E., formerly of the Bengal Infantry.’ ‘The bride’s toilet,’ said
-the newspapers, ‘consisted of white broché satin de Lyon, draped with
-deep lace flounces, caught up with orange blossoms. The veil was
-of tulle, secured to the hair with a pearl crescent and stars. The
-bouquet was composed of rare exotics.’ In fact, to the coarse and
-undiscriminating male intelligence, the whole attire, on which so much
-pains and thought had been hurriedly bestowed, does not appear to have
-differed in any respect whatsoever from that of all the other brides
-one has ever looked at during the entire course of a reasonably long
-and varied lifetime.
-
-After the wedding, however, Marian and Edward could only afford a
-single week by way of a honeymoon, in that most overrun by brides and
-bridegrooms of all English districts, the Isle of Wight, as being
-nearest within call of Southampton, whence they had to start on their
-long ocean voyage. The aunt in charge was to send down Nora to meet
-them at the hotel the day before the steamer sailed; and the general
-and Mrs Ord were to see them off, and say a long good-bye to them on
-the morning of sailing.
-
-Harry Noel, too, who had been best-man at the wedding, for some reason
-most fully known to himself, professed a vast desire to ‘see the last
-of poor Hawthorn,’ before he left for parts unknown in the Caribbean;
-and with that intent, duly presented himself at a Southampton hotel on
-the day before their final departure. It was not purely by accident,
-however, either on his own part or on Marian Hawthorn’s, that when
-they took a quiet walk that evening in some fields behind the battery,
-he found himself a little in front with Nora Dupuy, while the newly
-married pair, as was only proper, brought up the rear in a conjugal
-tête-à-tête.
-
-‘Miss Dupuy,’ Harry said suddenly, as they reached an open space in the
-fields, with a clear view uninterrupted before them, ‘there’s something
-I wish to say to you before you leave to-morrow for Trinidad—something
-a little premature, perhaps, but under the circumstances—as you’re
-leaving so soon—I can’t delay it. I’ve seen very little of you, as yet,
-Miss Dupuy, and you’ve seen very little of me, so I daresay I owe you
-some apology for this strange precipitancy; but—— Well, you’re going
-away at once from England; and I may not see you again for—for some
-months; and if I allow you to go without having spoken to you, why’——
-
-Nora’s heart throbbed violently. She didn’t care very much for Harry
-Noel at first sight, to be sure; but still, she had never till now had
-a regular offer of marriage made to her; and every woman’s heart beats
-naturally—I believe—when she finds herself within measurable distance
-of her first offer. Besides, Harry was the heir to a baronetcy, and
-a great catch, as most girls counted; and even if you don’t want to
-marry a baronet, it’s something at least to be able to say to yourself
-in future, ‘I refused an offer to be Lady Noel.’ Mind you, as women
-go, the heir to an old baronetcy and twelve thousand a year is not
-to be despised, though you may not care a single pin about his mere
-personal attractions. A great many girls who would refuse, the man
-upon his own merits, would willingly say ‘Yes’ at once to the title and
-the income. So Nora Dupuy, who was, after all, quite as human as most
-other girls—if not rather more so—merely held her breath hard and tried
-her best to still the beating of her wayward heart, as she answered
-back with childish innocence: ‘Well, Mr Noel; in that case, what would
-happen?’
-
-‘In that case, Miss Dupuy,’ Harry replied, looking at her pretty little
-pursed-up guileless mouth with a hungry desire to kiss it incontinently
-then and there—‘why, in that case, I’m afraid some other man—some
-handsome young Trinidad planter or other—might carry off the prize on
-his own account before I had ventured to put in my humble claim for
-it.—Miss Dupuy, what’s the use of beating about the bush, when I see
-by your eyes you know what I mean! From the moment I first saw you,
-I said to myself: “She’s the one woman I have ever seen whom I feel
-instinctively I could worship for a lifetime.” Answer me yes. I’m no
-speaker. But I love you. Will you take me?’
-
-Nora twisted the tassel of her parasol nervously between her finger
-and thumb for a few seconds; then she looked back at him full in the
-face with her pretty girlish open eyes, and answered with charming
-naïveté—just as if he had merely asked her whether she would take
-another cup of tea:—‘Thank you, no, Mr Noel; I don’t think so.’
-
-Harry Noel smiled with amusement—in spite of this curt and simple
-rejection—at the oddity of such a reply to such a question. ‘Of
-course,’ he said, glancing down at her pretty little feet to hide his
-confusion, ‘I didn’t expect you to answer me _Yes_ at once on so very
-short an acquaintance as ours has been. I acknowledge it’s dreadfully
-presumptuous in me to have dared to put you a question like that, when
-I know you can have seen so very little in me to make me worth the
-honour you’d be bestowing upon me.’
-
-‘Quite so,’ Nora murmured mischievously, in a parenthetical undertone.
-It wasn’t kind; I daresay it wasn’t even lady-like; but then you see
-she was really, after all, only a school-girl.
-
-Harry paused, half abashed for a second at this very literal acceptance
-of his conventional expression of self-depreciation. He hardly knew
-whether it was worth while continuing his suit in the face of such
-exceedingly outspoken discouragement. Still, he had something to say,
-and he determined to say it. He was really very much in love with Nora,
-and he wasn’t going to lose his chance outright just for the sake of
-what might be nothing more than a pretty girl’s provoking coyness.
-
-‘Yes,’ he went on quietly, without seeming to notice her little
-interruption, ‘though you haven’t yet seen anything in me to
-care for, I’m going to ask you, not whether you’ll give me any
-definite promise—it was foolish of me to expect one on so brief an
-acquaintance—but whether you’ll kindly bear in mind that I’ve told you
-I love you—yes, I said love you’—for Nora had clashed her little hand
-aside impatiently at the word. ‘And remember, I shall still hope, until
-I see you again, you may yet in future reconsider the question.—Don’t
-make me any promise, Miss Dupuy; and don’t repeat the answer you’ve
-already given me; but when you go to Trinidad, and are admired and
-courted as you needs must be, don’t wholly forget that some one in
-England once told you he loved you—loved you passionately.’
-
-‘I’m not likely to forget it, Mr Noel,’ Nora answered with malicious
-calmness; ‘because nobody ever proposed to me before, you know; and
-one’s sure not to forget one’s first offer.’
-
-‘Miss Dupuy, you are making game of me! It isn’t right of you—it isn’t
-generous.’
-
-Nora paused and looked at him again. He was dark, but very handsome. He
-looked handsomer still when he bridled up a little. It was a very nice
-thing to look forward to being Lady Noel. How all the other girls at
-school would have just jumped at it! But no; he was too dark by half
-to meet her fancy. She couldn’t give him the slightest encouragement.
-‘Mr Noel,’ she said, far more seriously this time, with a little sigh
-of impatience, ‘believe me, I didn’t really mean to offend you. I—I
-like you very much; and I’m sure I’m very much flattered indeed by what
-you’ve just been kind enough to say to me. I know it’s a great honour
-for you to ask me to—to ask me what you have asked me. But—you know, I
-don’t think of you in that light, exactly. You will understand what I
-mean when I say I can’t even leave the question open. I—I have nothing
-to reconsider.’
-
-Harry waited a moment in internal reflection. He liked her all the
-better because she said _no_ to him. He was man of the world enough to
-know that ninety-nine girls out of a hundred would have jumped at once
-at such an eligible offer. ‘In a few months,’ he said quietly, in an
-abstracted fashion, ‘I shall be paying a visit out in Trinidad.’
-
-‘Oh, don’t, pray, don’t,’ Nora cried hastily. ‘It’ll be no use, Mr
-Noel, no use in any way. I’ve quite made up my mind; and I never change
-it. Don’t come out to Trinidad, I beg of you.’
-
-‘I see,’ Harry said, smiling a little bitterly. ‘Some one else has
-been beforehand with me already. No wonder. I’m not at all surprised
-at him. How could he possibly see you and help it?’ And he looked with
-unmistakable admiration at Nora’s face, all the prettier now for its
-deep blushes.
-
-‘No, Mr Noel,’ Nora answered simply. ‘There you are mistaken. There’s
-nobody—absolutely nobody. I’ve only just left school, you know, and
-I’ve seen no one so far that I care for in any way.’
-
-‘In that case,’ Harry Noel said, in his decided manner, ‘the quest will
-still be worth pursuing. No matter what you say, Miss Dupuy, we shall
-meet again—before long—in Trinidad. A young lady who has just left
-school has plenty of time still to reconsider her determinations.’
-
-‘Mr Noel! Please, don’t! It’ll be quite useless.’
-
-‘I must, Miss Dupuy; I can’t help myself. You will draw me after you,
-even if I tried to prevent it. I believe I have had one real passion in
-my life, and that passion will act upon me like a magnet on a needle
-for ever after. I shall go to Trinidad.’
-
-‘At anyrate, then, you’ll remember that I gave you no encouragement,
-and that for me, at least, my answer is final.’
-
-‘I _will_ remember, Miss Dupuy—and I won’t believe it.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-That evening, as Marian kissed Nora good-night in her own bedroom at
-the Southampton hotel, she asked archly: ‘Well, Nora, what did you
-answer him?’
-
-‘Answer who? what?’ Nora repeated hastily, trying to look as if she
-didn’t understand the suppressed antecedent of the personal pronoun.
-
-‘My dear girl, it isn’t the least use your pretending you don’t know
-what I mean by it. I saw in your face, Nora, when Edward and I caught
-you up, what it was Mr Noel had been saying to you. And how did you
-answer him? Tell me, Nora!’
-
-‘I told him _no_, Marian, quite positively.’
-
-‘O Nora!’
-
-‘Yes, I did. And he said he’d follow me out to Trinidad; and I told him
-he really needn’t take the trouble, because in any case I could never
-care for him.’
-
-‘O dear, I _am_ so sorry. You wicked girl! And, Nora, he’s such a nice
-fellow too! and so dreadfully in love with you! You ought to have taken
-him.’
-
-‘My dear Marian! He’s so awfully black, you know. I really believe he
-must positively be—be _coloured_.’
-
-
-
-
-OUR DOMESTICATED OTTER.
-
-
-One fine day in early autumn, while straying along the banks of one
-of the sparkling little trout streams which appear to be at once the
-cause and the purpose of those lovely winding valleys so numerous in
-Northern Devon, our attention was drawn, by a faint distressed chirping
-sound, to a small dark object stirring in the grass at some distance
-from the stream. We hurried to the spot, and there saw, to our great
-surprise, wet, muddy, and uneasily squirming at our feet, a baby otter!
-Poor infant! how came it there? By what concatenation of untoward
-circumstances did the helpless innocent find itself in a position so
-foreign to the habits of its kind? Its appearance under conditions so
-utterly at variance with our experience of the customs and manners of
-otter society, was so amazing, that we could scarcely believe our eyes.
-However, there the little creature undoubtedly was; and congratulating
-ourselves on this unlooked-for and valuable addition to our home
-menagerie—for these animals are rare in Devon, and to light upon a
-young scion of the race in evident need of a home and education was
-quite a piece of good luck—the forlorn bantling was promptly deposited
-in a coat-pocket and proudly borne homewards.
-
-Introduced to the family circle, ‘Tim’—as he was afterwards duly
-christened—became at once the centre of domestic interest and unceasing
-care. To feed him was necessarily our first consideration. A feline
-or canine mother deprived of her young was suggested as a suitable
-foster-mother; but, unfortunately, no such animal was at hand, and
-meantime the creature must be fed. We therefore procured an ordinary
-infant’s feeding-bottle, and filling it with lukewarm cow’s milk,
-essayed thus to make good the absence of mamma-otter. At first the
-little stranger absolutely declined even to consider this arrangement,
-and in consequence pined somewhat; but in the end the pangs of hunger
-wrought a change in his feelings, and after several energetic though
-unscientific attempts, he overcame the difficulties of his new feeding
-apparatus, and was soon vigorously sucking. For a time, all went well.
-Tim, with commendable regularity, alternately filled himself with milk
-and slept peacefully in his basket of sweet hay. But at the close of
-the second day, a change came over our interesting charge; he was
-restless and uneasy during the night, and in the morning, refused to
-feed, and appeared to be suffering pain. Finally, his respiration
-became laboured and difficult, and for a whole day and night our hopes
-of rearing him were at the lowest ebb. But at the end of that time, to
-our great satisfaction, the distressing symptoms began to abate, and in
-a few hours had disappeared, and the convalescent returned _con amore_
-to his bottle. Believing his attack was attributable to over-feeding,
-we henceforth diluted the cow’s milk with warm water, and removed his
-bottle at the first sign of approaching satiety, nor did we again
-administer it until his demands for sustenance became vociferous and
-imperative. On this system we were successful in rearing him in the
-face of many prophecies of failure.
-
-At this early stage of his existence, being exhibited to admiring
-friends, he crawled laboriously and flatly about on the carpet, with
-a decided preference for backward motion; but if he encountered
-a perpendicular surface, such as the sides of his hamper or a
-trouser-leg, he would, with the aid of his claws, climb up it with
-considerable agility. He distinctly showed a love of warmth, and gave
-us to understand that he appreciated caresses, by nestling down in
-feminine laps, and ceasing his plaintive cry while our hands were about
-him. On awakening from sleep, he would begin, as do ducklings and
-chickens, with a gentle reminder of his existence and requirements.
-If no notice were taken of this, the note—which was something between
-the magnified chirp of a chicken and the very earliest bark of a
-puppy—would steadily increase in power and insistence, until it became
-an absolute clamour. When his bottle was given to him, he would seize
-on the leather teat and tug at it, and plunge about with a violence and
-impatience which defeated its own end, and woe to the unwary or awkward
-fingers which came in the way of the tiny fine white teeth at this
-moment!
-
-Obstacles overcome and success attained, Tim settled down to steady
-sober enjoyment; the webbed paws were alternately spread and closed
-like a cat’s when thoroughly content, and the tail curled and uncurled
-and wagged to and fro, as does a lamb’s when happily feeding. After the
-lapse of a few days, our new pet showed decided signs of intelligence
-and a sense of fun: he would run round after one’s finger in a
-clumsy-lively way, and a jocular poke in the ribs would rouse him to an
-awkwardly playful attempt to seize the offending digit. In less than
-three weeks he knew his name, and scuttled across the room when called,
-followed us about the garden, and endeavoured to establish friendly
-relations with a pet wild rabbit, which was furiously jealous of the
-new favourite, and administered sly scratches, and ‘hustled’ him on
-every possible occasion.
-
-About this time, he also acquired a charming habit of beginning, the
-moment the sun rose, a clamour which deprived half the household of
-further sleep, and which was only to be quieted by his being taken
-into some one’s bed, where he would at once ‘snuggle’ down and lie
-motionless for hours. At first we resisted this importunity on the
-part of Tim, partly because an otter is not exactly the animal one
-would select as a bedfellow, and partly because we could not think it
-a desirable or wholesome habit for the creature itself. But Master Tim
-was too much for us. ‘If you won’t let me sleep with you, you shan’t
-sleep at all!’ he declared in unmistakable language, and by dint of
-sticking to his point he carried it.
-
-At the end of the first month of his civilised life, some one gave him
-a scrap of raw meat; and after that, though he ate bread and milk very
-contentedly between times, he made us understand that his constitution
-required the support of animal food, and was never satisfied without
-his daily ration of uncooked flesh. Fish, strange to say, he seemed to
-prefer cooked. When we were seated at meals, a hand held down would
-bring Tim quickly to one’s side with an eager look in the small yellow
-eyes; his cold nose sniffed at one’s fingers with rapid closing and
-unclosing of the curiously formed nostrils; the softly furred head
-would be thrust into the palm in search of the expected dainty morsel.
-If none were to be found, his temper would be sadly ruffled, sometimes
-to the extent of inflicting with his teeth a sharp reminder that not
-even an otter’s feelings should be trifled with!
-
-As he grew older, he developed an amount of intelligence scarcely to
-be expected from the small brain contained in the flat and somewhat
-snake-like head; he showed decided preferences for some members of
-the family over others; if permitted, he would follow everywhere at
-our heels like a dog, and played with the children after the manner
-of one, but with awkward springs and jumps that put us in mind of a
-particularly ungraceful lamb. He occasionally made quite energetic
-assaults on the ankles of some of the ladies of the family; and if he
-perceived that the owner of unprotected ankles went in fear of him,
-showed a malicious pleasure in renewing the attack at every favourable
-opportunity.
-
-When the children went for a country ramble, Tim frequently accompanied
-them, taking the greatest delight in these excursions. He would be
-carried until beyond danger from wandering dogs, and then being set at
-liberty, the fun would begin. Master Tim, all eagerness, trotting on
-before in search of interesting facts, the children take advantage of a
-moment when all his faculties are engaged with some novelty attractive
-to the otter mind, to vanish through a neighbouring gate or behind a
-haystack. The unusual quiet soon arouses Tim’s suspicions; he looks
-round, and finds himself alone. The situation, from its strangeness,
-is appalling to him; he utters a shriek of despair, and scurries back
-as fast as his legs can take him, squeaking loudly all the time. If
-he should chance, in his fright, to pass by the hiding-place of his
-young protectors without discovering them, great is their delight.
-One little face after another peers out and watches, with mischievous
-glee, poor Tim’s plump and anxious form trundling along as fast as is
-possible to it in the wrong direction! But very soon the humour of the
-situation is too much for some young spirit, and a smothered laugh or
-a half-suppressed giggle reaches the tiny sharp ears, and Tim quickly
-turns, and with another shriek of mingled satisfaction and indignation,
-gives chase to his playful tormentors. Once arrived in the open
-meadows, where this novel game of hide-and-seek is not possible, it is
-Tim’s turn. Still, he follows obediently enough, frisking and gamboling
-in the fresh soft grass, until one of the innumerable small streams is
-approached. As soon as he catches sight of the water, he is off. At a
-rapid trot he hurries to the brink, and with swift and noiseless dart,
-in a flash he has disappeared in the current, and in another reappeared
-some yards away. Rolling over, turning, twisting, diving, he revels
-in his cold bath, and it is sometimes a matter of no small difficulty
-to get him out of the water. A cordon of children is formed—the two
-biggest with bare feet and legs, to cut off his retreat up and down
-stream—which, gradually closing in on him, seizes him at last; and
-reluctantly he is compelled to dry himself in the grass preparatory to
-returning to the forms and ceremonies of civilised life.
-
-
-
-
-A GOLDEN ARGOSY.
-
-_A NOVELETTE._
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-‘How do you feel now, Margaret?’
-
-‘Nearly over, Miss Nelly. I shall die with the morning.’
-
-A week later, and the patient had got gradually worse. The constant
-exposure, the hard life, and the weeks of semi-starvation, had told
-its tale on the weak womanly frame. The exposure in the rain and cold
-on that eventful night had hastened on the consumption which had long
-settled in the delicate chest. All signs of mental exhaustion had
-passed away, and the calm hopeful waiting frame of mind had succeeded.
-She was waiting for death; not with any feeling of terror, but with
-hopefulness and expectation.
-
-Up to the present, Eleanor had not the heart to ask for any memento
-or remembrance of the old life; but had nursed her patient with an
-unceasing watchful care, which only a true woman is capable of. All
-that day she had sat beside the bed, never moving, but noting, as hour
-after hour passed steadily away, the gradual change from feverish
-restlessness to quiet content, never speaking, or causing her patient
-to speak, though she was longing for some word or sign.
-
-‘You have been very good to me, Miss Nelly. Had it not been for you,
-where should I have been now!’
-
-‘Hush, Margaret; don’t speak like that. Remember, everything is
-forgiven now. Where there is great temptation, there is much
-forgiveness.’
-
-‘I hope so, miss—I hope so. Some day, we shall all know.’
-
-‘Don’t try to talk too much.’
-
-For a while she lay back, her face, with its bright hectic flush,
-marked out in painful contrast to the white pillow. Eleanor watched her
-with a look of infinite pity and tenderness. The distant hum of busy
-Holborn came with dull force into the room, and the heavy rain beat
-upon the windows like a mournful dirge. The little American clock on
-the mantel-shelf was the only sound, save the dry painful cough, which
-ever and anon proceeded from the dying woman’s lips. The night sped on;
-the sullen roar of the distant traffic grew less and less; the wind
-dropped, and the girl’s hard breathing could be heard painfully and
-distinctly. Presently, a change came over her face—a kind of bright,
-almost unearthly intelligence.
-
-‘Are you in any pain, Madge?’ Eleanor asked with pitying air.
-
-‘How much lighter it is!’ said the dying girl. ‘My head is quite clear
-now, miss, and all the pain has gone.—Miss Nelly, I have been dreaming
-of the old home. Do you remember how we used to sit by the old fountain
-under the weeping-ash, and wonder what our fortunes would be? I little
-thought it would come to this.—Tell me, miss, are you in—in want?’
-
-‘Not exactly, Madge; but the struggle is hard sometimes.’
-
-‘I thought so,’ the dying girl continued. ‘I would have helped you
-after _she_ came; but you know the power she had over your poor uncle,
-a power that increased daily. She used to frighten me. I tremble now
-when I think of her.’
-
-‘Don’t think of her,’ said Eleanor soothingly. ‘Try and rest a little,
-and not talk. It cannot be good for you.’
-
-The sufferer smiled painfully, and a terrible fit of coughing shook her
-frame. When she recovered, she continued: ‘It is no use, Miss Nelly:
-all the rest and all your kind nursing cannot save me now. I used to
-wonder, when you left Eastwood so suddenly, why you did not take me;
-but now I know it is all for the best. Until the very last, I stayed in
-the house.’
-
-‘And did not my uncle give you any message, any letter for me?’ asked
-Eleanor, with an eagerness she could not conceal.
-
-‘I am coming to that. The day he died, I was in his room, for she was
-away, and he asked me if I ever heard from you. I knew you had written
-letters to him which he never got; and so I told him. Then he gave
-me a paper for you, which he made me swear to deliver to you by my
-own hand; and I promised to find you. You know how I found you,’ she
-continued brokenly, burying her face in her hands.
-
-‘Don’t think of that now, Margaret,’ said Eleanor, taking one wasted
-hand in her own. ‘That is past and forgiven.’
-
-‘I hope so, miss. Please, bring me that dress, and I will discharge my
-trust before it is too late. Take a pair of scissors and unpick the
-seams inside the bosom on the left side.’
-
-The speaker watched Eleanor with feverish impatience, whilst, with
-trembling fingers, she followed the instructions. Not until she had
-drawn out a flat parcel, wrapped securely in oiled paper, did the look
-of impatience transform to an air of relief.
-
-‘Yes, that is it,’ said Margaret, as Eleanor tore off the covering. ‘I
-have seen the letter, and have a strange feeling that it contains some
-secret, it is so vague and rambling, and those dotted lines across it
-are so strange. Your uncle was so terribly in earnest, that I cannot
-but think the paper has some hidden meaning. Please, read it to me.
-Perhaps I can make something of it.’
-
-‘It certainly does appear strange,’ observed Eleanor, with suppressed
-excitement.
-
-Turning towards the light, Eleanor read as follows:
-
-[Illustration: _Darling, we must now be friends. Remember, Nelly, in
-the garden you promised to obey my wishes. Under the care of Miss
-Wakefield I hoped you would improve but now I see it was not to be, and
-as prudence teaches us that all is for the best I must be content. Ask
-Edgar to forgive me the wrong I have done you both in the past, and
-this I feel his generous heart will not withhold from me. Now that it
-is too late I see how blind I have been, and could I live my life over
-again how different things would be. Times are changed, yet the memory
-of past days lingers within me, and like Niobe, I mourn you. When I am
-gone you will find my blessing a gift that is better than money._]
-
-The paper was half a sheet of ordinary foolscap, and the words
-were written without a single break or margin. It was divided
-perpendicularly by five dotted lines, and by four lines horizontally,
-and displayed nothing to the casual eye but an ordinary letter in a
-feeble handwriting.
-
-The tiny threads of fate had begun to gather. All yet was dark and
-misty; but in the gloom, faint and transient, was one small ray of
-light.
-
-Eleanor gazed at the paper abstractedly for a few moments, vaguely
-trying to find some hidden clue to the mystery.
-
-‘You must take care of that paper, Miss Nelly. Something tells me it
-contains a secret.’
-
-‘And have you been searching for me two long years, for the sole
-purpose of giving me this?’ Eleanor asked.
-
-‘Yes, miss,’ the sufferer replied simply. ‘I promised, you know.
-Indeed, I could not look at your uncle and break a vow like mine.’
-
-‘And you came to London on purpose?’
-
-‘Yes. No one knew where I was gone. I have no friends that I remember,
-and so I came to London. It is an old tale, miss. Trying day by day
-to get employment, and as regularly failing. I have tried many things
-the last two bitter years. I have existed—I cannot call it living—in
-the vilest parts of London, and tried to keep myself by my needle; but
-that only means dying by inches. God alone knows the struggle it is for
-a friendless woman here to keep honest and virtuous. The temptation
-is awful; and as I have been so sorely tried, I hope it will count in
-my favour hereafter. I have seen sights that the wealthy world knows
-nothing of. I have lived where a well-dressed man or woman dare not
-set foot. Oh, the wealth and the misery of this place they call London!’
-
-‘And you have suffered like this for me?’ Eleanor said, the tears now
-streaming down her face. ‘You have gone through all this simply for my
-sake? Do you know, Madge, what a thoroughly good woman you really are?’
-
-‘_I_, miss?’ the dying girl exclaimed in surprise. ‘How can I possibly
-be that, when you know what you do of me! O no; I am a miserable sinner
-by the side of you. Do you think, Miss Nelly, I shall be forgiven?’
-
-‘I do not doubt it,’ said Eleanor softly; ‘I cannot doubt it. How many
-in your situation could have withstood your temptation?’
-
-‘I am so glad you think so, miss; it is comfort to me to hear you say
-that. You were always so good to me,’ she continued gratefully. ‘Do you
-know, Miss Nelly dear, whenever I thought of death, I always pictured
-you as being by my side?’
-
-‘Do you feel any pain or restlessness now, Margaret?’
-
-‘No, miss; thank you. I feel quite peaceful and contented. I have done
-my task, though it has been a hard one at times. I don’t think I could
-have rested in my grave if I had not seen you.—Lift me up a little
-higher, please, and come a little closer. I can scarcely see you now.
-My eyes are quite misty. I wonder if all dying people think about their
-younger days, Miss Nelly? _I_ do. I can see it all distinctly: the old
-broken fountain under the tree, where we used to sit and talk about the
-days to come; and how happy we all were there before she came. Your
-uncle was a different man then, when he sat with us and listened to
-your singing hymns. Sing me one of the old hymns now, please.’
-
-In a subdued key, Eleanor sang _Abide with me_, the listener moving her
-pallid lips to the words. Presently, the singer finished, and the dying
-girl lay quiet for a moment.
-
-‘Abide with me. How sweet it sounds! “Swift to its close ebbs out
-life’s little day.” I am glad you chose my favourite hymn, Miss Nelly.
-I shall die repeating these words: “The darkness deepens; Lord, with me
-abide.” Now it is darker still; but I can feel your hand in mine, and I
-am safe. I did not think death was so blessed and peaceful as this. I
-am going, going—floating away.’
-
-‘Margaret, speak to me!’
-
-‘Just one word more. How light it is getting! Is it morning? I can see.
-I think I am forgiven. I feel better, better! quite forgiven. Light,
-light, light! everywhere. I can see at last.’
-
-It was all over. The weary aching heart was at rest. Only a woman, done
-to death in the flower of youth by starvation and exposure; but not
-before her task was done, her work accomplished. No lofty ambition to
-stir her pulses, no great goal to point to for its end. Only a woman,
-who had given her life to carry out a dying trust; only a woman, who
-had preserved virtue and honesty amid the direst temptation. What an
-epitaph for a gravestone! A eulogy that needs no glittering marble to
-point the way up to the Great White Throne.
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-Mr Carver sat in his private office a few days later, with Margaret’s
-legacy before him. A hundred times he had turned the paper over. He
-had held it to the light; he had looked at it upside down, and he
-had looked at it sideways and longways; in fact, every way that his
-ingenuity could devise. He had even held it to the fire, in faint hopes
-of sympathetic ink; but his labour had met with no reward. The secret
-was not discovered.
-
-The astute legal gentleman consulted his diary, where he had carefully
-noted down all the facts of the extraordinary case; and the more he
-studied the matter, the more convinced he became that there was a
-mystery concealed somewhere; and, moreover, that the key was in his
-hands, only, unfortunately, the key was a complicated one. Indeed, to
-such absurd lengths had he gone in the matter, that Edgar Allan Poe’s
-romances of _The Gold Bug_ and _The Purloined Letter_ lay before him,
-and his study of those ingenious narratives had permeated his brain
-to such an extent lately, that he had begun to discover mystery in
-everything. The tales of the American genius convinced him that the
-solution was a simple one—provokingly simple, only, like all simple
-things, the hardest of attainment. He was quite aware of the methodical
-habits of his late client, Mr Morton, and felt that such a man could
-not have written such a letter, even on his dying bed, unless he had a
-powerful motive in so doing. Despite the uneasy consciousness that the
-affair was a ludicrous one to engage the attention of a sober business
-man like himself, he could not shake off the fascination which held him.
-
-‘Pretty sort of thing this for a man at my time of life to get mixed
-up in,’ he muttered to himself. ‘What would the profession say if
-they knew Richard Carver had taken to read detective romances in
-business hours? I shall find myself writing poetry some day, if I
-don’t take care, and coming to the office in a billy-cock hat and
-turn-down collar. I feel like the heavy father in the transpontine
-drama; but when I look in that girl’s eyes, I feel fit for any lunacy.
-Pshaw!—Bates!’
-
-Mr Bates entered the apartment at his superior’s bidding. ‘Well, sir?’
-he said. The estimable Bates was a man of few words.
-
-‘I can _not_ make this thing out,’ exclaimed Mr Carver, rubbing his
-head in irritating perplexity. ‘The more I look at it the worse it
-seems. Yet I am convinced’——
-
-‘That there is some mystery about it!’
-
-‘Precisely what I was going to remark. Now, Bates, we must—we really
-must—unravel this complication. I feel convinced that there is
-something hidden here. You must lend me your aid in the matter. There
-is a lot at stake. For instance, if’——
-
-‘We get it out properly, I get my partnership; if not, I shall have
-to—whistle for it, sir!’
-
-‘You are a very wonderful fellow, Bates—very. That is precisely what I
-was going to say,’ Mr Carver exclaimed admiringly. ‘Now, I have been
-reading a book—a standard work, I may say.’
-
-‘Williams’s Executors, sir, or——?’
-
-‘No,’ said Mr Carver shortly, and not without some confusion; ‘it is
-not that admirable volume—it is, in fact, a—a romance.’
-
-Mr Bates coughed dryly, but respectfully, behind his hand. ‘I beg
-your pardon, sir; I don’t quite understand. Do you mean you have been
-reading a—novel?’
-
-‘Well, not exactly,’ replied Mr Carver blushing faintly. ‘It is, as I
-have said, a romance—a romance,’ he continued with an emphasis upon the
-substantive, to mark the difference between that and an ordinary work
-of fiction. ‘It is a book treating upon hidden things, and explaining,
-in a light and pleasant way, the method of logically working out a
-problem by common-sense. Now, for instance, in the passage I have
-marked, an allusion is made, by way of example.—Did you ever—ha, ha!
-play at marbles, Bates?’
-
-‘Well, sir, many years ago, I might have indulged in that little
-amusement,’ Mr Bates admitted with professional caution; ‘but really,
-sir, it is such a long time ago, that I hardly remember.’
-
-‘Very good, Bates. Now, in the course of your experience upon the
-subject of marbles, do you ever remember playing a game called “Odd and
-Even?”’
-
-Bates looked at his principal in utter amazement, and Mr Carver,
-catching the expression of his face, burst into a hearty laugh, faintly
-echoed by the bewildered clerk. The notion of two gray-headed men
-solemnly discussing a game of marbles in business hours, suddenly
-struck him as being particularly ludicrous.
-
-‘Well, sir,’ Bates said with a look of relief, ‘I don’t remember the
-fascinating amusement you speak of, and I was wondering what it could
-possibly have to do with the case in point.’
-
-‘Well, I won’t go into it now; but if you should like to read it for
-yourself, there it is,’ said Mr Carver, pushing over the yellow-bound
-volume to his subordinate.
-
-Mr Bates eyed the volume suspiciously, and touched it gingerly with
-his forefinger. ‘As a matter of professional duty, sir, if you desire
-it, I will read the matter you refer to; but if it is a question of
-recreation, then, sir, with your permission, I would rather not.’
-
-‘That is a hint for me, I suppose, Bates,’ said Mr Carver with much
-good-humour, ‘not to occupy my time with frivolous literature.’
-
-‘Well, sir, I do not consider these the sort of books for a place on a
-solicitor’s table; but I suppose you know best.’
-
-‘I don’t think such a thing has happened before, Bates,’ Mr Carver
-answered with humility. ‘You see, this is an exceptional case, and I
-take great interest in the parties.’
-
-‘Well, there is something in that,’ said Mr Bates severely, ‘so I
-suppose we must admit it on this occasion.—But don’t you think,
-sir, there is some way of getting to the bottom of this affair,
-without wasting valuable time on such stuff as that?’ and he pointed
-contemptuously at the book before him.
-
-‘Perhaps so, Bates—perhaps so. I think the best thing we can do is to
-consult an expert. Not a man who is versed in writings, but one of
-those clever gentlemen who make a study of ciphers. For all we know,
-there may be a common form of cipher in this paper.’
-
-‘That is my opinion, sir. Depend upon it, marbles have nothing to do
-with this mystery.’
-
-‘Mr Seaton wishes to see you, sir,’ said a clerk at this moment.
-
-‘Indeed! Ask him to come in.—Good-morning, my dear sir,’ as Seaton
-entered. ‘We have just been discussing your little affair, Bates and I;
-but we can make nothing of it—positively nothing.’
-
-‘No; I suppose not,’ Edgar replied lightly. ‘I, for my part, cannot
-understand your making so much of a common scrap of paper. Depend upon
-it, the precious document is only an ordinary valedictory letter after
-all. Take my advice—throw it in the fire, and think no more about it.’
-
-‘Certainly not, sir,’ Mr Carver replied indignantly. ‘I don’t for one
-moment believe it to be anything but an important cipher.—What are you
-smiling at?’
-
-Edgar had caught sight of the yellow volume on the table, and could not
-repress a smile. ‘Have you read those tales?’ he said.
-
-‘Yes, I have; and they are particularly interesting.’
-
-‘Then I won’t say any more,’ Edgar replied. ‘When a man is fresh from
-these romances, he is incapable of regarding ordinary life for a time.
-But the disease cures itself. In the course of a month or so, you will
-begin to forget these complications, and probably burn that fatal
-paper.’
-
-‘I intend to do nothing of the sort; I am going to submit it to an
-expert this afternoon, and get his opinion.’
-
-‘Yes. And he will keep it for a fortnight, after reading it over once,
-and then you will get an elaborate report, covering some sheets of
-paper, stating that it is an ordinary letter. Who was the enemy who
-lent you Poe’s works?’
-
-‘I read those books before you were born, young man; and I may tell
-you—apart from them—that I am fully convinced that there is a mystery
-somewhere. ’Pon my word, you take the matter very coolly, considering
-all things. But let us put aside the mystery for a time, and tell me
-something of yourself.’
-
-‘I am looking up now, thanks to you and Felix,’ Edgar replied
-gratefully. ‘I have an appointment at last.’
-
-‘I am sure I am heartily glad to hear it. What is it?’
-
-‘It was the doing of Felix, of course. The editor of _Mayfair_ was
-rather taken by my descriptive style in a paper which Felix showed him,
-and made me an offer of doing the principal continental gambling-houses
-in London.’
-
-‘Um,’ said Mr Carver doubtfully. ‘And the pay?’
-
-‘Is particularly good, besides which, I have the entrée of these
-places—the golden key, you know.’
-
-‘Have you told your wife about it?’
-
-‘Well, not altogether; she might imagine it was dangerous for me. She
-knows partly what I am doing; but I must not frighten her. I have had
-two nights of it, and apart from the excitement and the heat, it is
-certainly not dangerous.’
-
-‘I am glad of that,’ said Mr Carver; ‘and am heartily pleased to hear
-of your success—providing it lasts.’
-
-‘Oh, it is sure to last, for I have hundreds of places to go to.
-To-night I am going to a foreign place in Leicester Square. I go about
-midnight, and think I may generally be able to get home about two. I
-have to go alone always.’
-
-‘Well, I hope now you have started, you will continue as well,’ Mr
-Carver said heartily; ‘at anyrate, you can continue until I unravel the
-mystery, and place you in possession of your fortune. Until then, it
-will do very well.’
-
-‘I am not going to count on that,’ Edgar replied; ‘and if it is a
-failure, I shall not be so disappointed as you, I fancy.’
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-It wanted a few minutes to eleven o’clock, the same night when Seaton
-turned into Long Acre on his peculiar business. A sharp walk soon
-brought him to the Alhambra, whence the people were pouring out into
-the square. Turning down —— Street, he soon reached his destination—a
-long narrow house, in total darkness—a sombre contrast to the
-neighbouring buildings, which were mostly a blaze of light, and busy
-with the occupations of life. A quiet double rap for some time produced
-no impression; and just as he had stood upon the doorstep long enough
-to acquire considerable impatience, a sliding panel in the door was
-pushed back, and a face, in the dim gas-light, was obtruded. A short
-but somewhat enigmatical conversation ensued, at the end of which the
-door was grudgingly opened, and Edgar found himself in black darkness.
-The truculent attendant having barricaded the exit, gave a peculiar
-whistle, and immediately the light in the hall was turned up. It was
-a perfectly bare place; but the carpet underfoot was of the heaviest
-texture, and apparently—as an extra precaution—had been covered with
-india-rubber matting, so that the footsteps were perfectly deadened;
-indeed, not the slightest footfall could be heard. Following his guide
-in the direction of the rear of the house, and ascending a short
-flight of steps, Edgar was thrust unceremoniously into a dark room,
-the door of which was immediately closed behind him and locked. For a
-few seconds, Edgar stood quite at a loss to understand his position,
-till the peculiar whistle was again repeated, and immediately, as if
-by magic, the room was brilliantly lighted. When Edgar recovered from
-the glare, he looked curiously around. It was a large room, without
-windows, save a long skylight, and furnished with an evident aim at
-culture; but though the furniture was handsome, it was too gaudy to
-please a tasteful eye. The principal component parts consisted of glass
-gilt and crimson velvet; quite the sort of apartment that the boy-hero
-discovers, when he is led with dauntless mien and defiant eye into the
-presence of the Pirate king; and indeed some of the faces of the men
-seated around the green board would have done perfectly well for that
-bloodthirsty favourite of our juvenile fiction.
-
-There were some thirty men in the room, two-thirds of them playing
-rouge-et-noir; nor did they cease their rapt attention to the game for
-one moment to survey the new-comer, that office being perfectly filled
-by the Argus-eyed proprietor, who was moving unceasingly about the
-room. ‘Will you play, sare?’ he said insinuatingly to Edgar, who was
-leisurely surveying the group and making little mental notes for his
-guidance.
-
-‘Thanks! Presently, when I have finished my cigar,’ he replied.
-
-‘Ver good, sare, ver good. Will not m’sieu take some refreshment—a
-leetle champein or eau-de-vie?’
-
-‘Anything,’ Edgar replied carelessly, as the polite proprietor
-proceeded to get the desired refreshment.
-
-For a few minutes, Edgar sat watching his incongruous companions, as
-he drank sparingly of the champagne before him. The gathering was
-of the usual run of such places, mostly foreigners, as befitted the
-neighbourhood, and not particularly desirable foreigners at that. On
-the green table the stakes were apparently small, for Edgar could see
-nothing but silver, with here and there a piece of gold. At a smaller
-table four men were playing the game called poker for small stakes;
-but what particularly interested Edgar was a young man deep in the
-fascination of écarté with a man who to him was evidently a stranger.
-The younger man—quite a boy, in fact—was losing heavily, and the money
-on the table here was gold alone, with some bank-notes. Directly Edgar
-saw the older man, who was winning steadily, he knew him at once; only
-two nights before he had seen him in a gambling-house at the West End
-playing the same game, with the same result. Standing behind the winner
-was a sinister-looking scoundrel, backing the winner’s luck with the
-unfortunate youngster, and occasionally winning a half-crown from a
-tall raw-looking American, who was apparently simple enough to risk his
-money on the loser. Attracted by some impulse he could not understand,
-Edgar quitted his seat and took his stand alongside the stranger, who
-was losing his money with such simple good-nature.
-
-‘Stranger, you have all the luck, and that’s a fact. There goes another
-piece of my family plate. Your business is better’n gold-mining, and
-I want you to believe it,’ drawled the American, passing another
-half-crown across the table.
-
-‘You are a bit unlucky,’ replied the stranger, with a flash of his
-white teeth; ‘but your turn will come, particularly as the young
-gentleman is really the better player. I should back him myself, only I
-believe in a man’s luck.’
-
-‘Wall, now, I shouldn’t wonder if the younker is the best player,’ the
-American replied, with an emphasis on the last word. ‘So I fancy I
-shall give him another trial. He’s a bit like a young hoss, he is—but
-he’s honest.’
-
-‘You don’t mean to insinuate we’re not on the square, eh?’ said the
-lucky player sullenly; ‘because, if that is so’——
-
-‘Now, don’t you get riled, don’t,’ said the American soothingly. ‘I’m a
-peaceable individual, and apt to get easily frightened. I’m a-goin’ to
-back the young un again.’
-
-The game proceeded: the younger man lost. Another game followed, the
-American backing him again, and gradually, in his excitement, bending
-further and further over the table. The players, deep in his movements,
-scarcely noticed him.
-
-‘My game!’ said the elder man triumphantly. ‘Did you ever see such luck
-in your life? Here is the king again.’
-
-The American, quick as thought, picked up the pack of cards and turned
-them leisurely over in his hand. ‘Wall, now, stranger,’ he said, with
-great distinctness, ‘I don’t know much about cards, and that’s a fact.
-I’ve seen some strange things in my time, but I never—no, never—seed a
-pack of cards before with two kings of the same suit.’
-
-‘It must be a mistake,’ exclaimed the stranger, jumping to his feet
-with an oath. ‘Perhaps the cards have got mixed.’
-
-‘Wall, it’s not a nice mistake, I reckon. Out to Frisco, I seed a
-gentleman of your persuasion dance at his own funeral for a mistake
-like that. He didn’t dance long, and the exertion killed him; at least
-that’s what the crowner’s jury said.’
-
-‘Do you mean to insinuate that I’m a swindler, sir? Do you mean to
-infer that I cheated this gentleman?’ blustered the detected sharper,
-approaching the speaker with a menacing air.
-
-‘That _is_ about the longitude of it,’ replied the American cheerfully.
-
-Without another word and without the slightest warning, the swindler
-rushed at the American; but he had evidently reckoned without his host,
-for he was met by a crashing blow full in the face, which sent him
-reeling across the room. His colleague deeming discretion the better
-part of valour, and warned by a menacing glance from Edgar, desisted
-from his evident intention of aiding in the attack.
-
-By this time the sinister proprietor and the players from the other
-tables had gathered round, evidently, from the expression of their
-eyes, ripe for any sort of mischief and plunder. Clearly, the little
-group were in a desperate strait.
-
-‘Have it out,’ whispered Edgar eagerly to his gaunt companion. ‘I’m
-quite with you. They certainly mean mischief.’
-
-‘All right, Britisher,’ replied the American coolly. ‘I’ll pull through
-it somehow. Keep your back to mine.’
-
-The proprietor was the first to speak. ‘I understand, sare, you accuse
-one of my customer of the cheat. Cheat yourself—pah!’ he said, snapping
-his fingers in the American’s face. ‘Who are you, sare, that comes here
-to accuse of the cheat?’
-
-‘Look here,’ said the American grimly. ‘My name is Æneas B. Slimm,
-generally known as Long Ben. I don’t easily rile, you grinning little
-monkey; but when I do rile, I rile hard, and that’s a fact. I ain’t
-been in the mines for ten years without knowing a scoundrel when I meet
-him, and I never had the privilege of seein’ such a fine sample as I
-see around me to-night. Now you open that door right away; you hear me
-say it.’
-
-The Frenchman clenched his teeth determinedly, but did not speak, and
-the crowd gathered more closely around the trio.
-
-‘Stand back!’ shouted Mr Slimm—‘stand back, or some of ye will suffer.
-Will you open that door?’
-
-The only answer was a rush by some one in the crowd, a movement which
-that some one bitterly repented, for the iron-clamped toe of the
-American’s boot struck him prone to the floor, sick and faint with the
-pain. At this moment the peculiar whistle was heard, and the room was
-instantly in darkness. Before the crowd could collect themselves for a
-rush, Mr Slimm passed his hand beneath his long coat-tails and produced
-a flat lantern, which was fastened round his waist like a policeman’s,
-and which gave sufficient light to guard against any attack; certainly
-enough light to show the hungry swindlers the cold gleam of a revolver
-barrel covering the assembly. The American passed a second weapon to
-Edgar, and stood calmly waiting for the next move.
-
-‘Now,’ he said, sullenly and distinctly, ‘I think we are quits. We air
-going to leave this pleasant company right away, but first we propose
-to do justice. Where is the artist who plays cards with two kings of
-one suit? He’d better come forward, because this weapon has a bad way
-of going off. He need not fancy I can’t see him, because I can. He is
-skulking behind the brigand with the earrings.’
-
-The detected swindler came forward sullenly.
-
-‘Young man,’ said Mr Slimm, turning towards the boy who had been losing
-so heavily, ‘how much have you lost?’
-
-The youngster thought a moment, and said about twenty pounds.
-
-‘Twenty pounds. Very good.—Now, my friend, I’m going to trouble you for
-the loan of twenty pounds. I don’t expect to be in a position to pay
-you back just at present; but until I do, you can console yourself by
-remembering that virtue is its own reward. Come, no sulking; shell out
-that money, or’——
-
-With great reluctance, the sharper produced the money and handed it
-over to the youth. The American watched the transaction with grave
-satisfaction, and then turned to the landlord. ‘Mr Frenchman, we wish
-you a very good-night. We have not been very profitable customers, nor
-have we trespassed upon your hospitality. If you want payment badly,
-you can get it out of the thief who won my half-crowns.—Good-night,
-gentlemen; we may meet again. If we do, and I am on the jury, I’ll give
-you the benefit of the doubt.’
-
-A moment later, they were in the street, and walking away at a brisk
-pace, the ungrateful youth disappearing with all speed.
-
-‘I am much obliged to you,’ Edgar said admiringly; ‘I would give
-something to have your pluck and coolness.’
-
-‘Practice,’ replied the American dryly. ‘That isn’t what I call a
-scrape—that’s only a little amusement. But I was rather glad you were
-with me. I like the look of your face; there’s plenty of character
-there. As to that pesky young snip, if I’d known he was going to slip
-off like that, do you think I should have bothered about his money for
-him? No, sir.’
-
-‘I fancy he was too frightened to say or do much.’
-
-‘Perhaps so.—Have a cigar?—I daresay he’s some worn-out roué of
-eighteen, all his nerves destroyed by late hours and dissipation, at a
-time when he ought to be still at his books.’
-
-‘Do you always get over a thing as calmly as this affair?’ asked Edgar,
-at the same time manipulating one of his companion’s huge cigars. ‘I
-don’t think dissipation has had much effect on _your_ nerves.’
-
-‘Well, it don’t, and that’s a fact,’ Mr Slimm admitted candidly; ‘and
-I’ve had my fling too.—I tell you what it is, Mr—Mr’——
-
-‘Seaton—Edgar Seaton is my name.’
-
-‘Well, Mr Seaton, I’ve looked death in the face too often to be put
-out by a little thing like that. When a man has slept, as I have, in
-the mines with a matter of one thousand ounces of gold in his tent for
-six weeks, among the most awful blackguards in the world, and plucky
-blackguards too, his nerves are fit for most anything afterwards.
-That’s what I done, ay, and had to fight for it more than once.’
-
-‘But that does not seem so bad as some dangers.’
-
-‘Isn’t it?’ replied the American with a shudder. ‘When you wake up and
-find yourself in bed with a rattlesnake, you’ve got a chance then;
-when you are on the ground with a panther over you, there is just a
-squeak then; but to go to sleep expecting to wake up with a knife in
-your ribs, is quite another apple.—Well, I must say good-night. Here is
-Covent Garden. I am staying at the _Bedford_. Come and breakfast with
-me to-morrow, and don’t forget to ask for Æneas Slimm.’
-
-‘I will come,’ said Edgar, with a hearty handshake.—‘Good-night.’
-
-
-
-
-SNOW-BLOSSOM.
-
-
-Under the above title, Professor Wittrock, in _Nordenskjöld’s Studies
-and Researches in the Far North_, has given us a wonderful and
-exhaustive account of the lowest order of plants—those which have their
-existence on the surface of the snow and ice, and colour the monotonous
-white or dirty gray of the everlasting snowfields with the warmest and
-most lovely rosy red and crimson, vivid green, and soft brown, until it
-almost appears as if these frigid zones have also their time of spring
-and blossom.
-
-Late researches go to show that the snow and ice flora is far greater
-and richer than was at one time supposed. Formerly, people had only
-heard of ‘red snow’—which Agardh poetically calls ‘snow-blossoms’—and
-‘green snow,’ first discovered by the botanist Unger—specimens of which
-were brought from Spitzbergen by Dr Kjellmann, and from Greenland
-by Dr Berlin. But a closer examination has discovered in the ‘green
-snow’ about a dozen different kinds of plants, and these not merely
-comprising the _lowest_ order, but also including some mosses. The
-latter, however, were only in their germinating state, looking like the
-green threads of algæ, and therefore showing a much inferior degree
-of development to that which they would have if growing on a warmer
-substratum. The flora of the loose snow, too, is generally far richer
-than that of the solid ice; already forty different varieties of plants
-having been found, which number will no doubt be greatly increased by
-every fresh expedition to the arctic zone. On the solid ice, only ten
-different kinds have been observed.
-
-There is a great difference between the real ice and snow plants
-which grow exclusively on the snow-line and those hardened children
-of the sun which only grow on the snow. The latter all belong to the
-one-celled microscopic algæ of the lowest order, which increase by
-partition, possessing no generic character, and generally appearing
-in large horizontal masses of vegetable matter. They are also
-distinguished by seldom having the pure green chlorophyll colour of
-other plants, but instead display shades of red, brown, and sap green,
-whence they have been named coloured algæ.
-
-Some botanists suppose that the chief and most numerous of all the
-algæ, the red snow, only represents a lower state of a higher class
-of algæ which has never attained to full development in the region of
-perpetual snow; and this supposition is the more remarkable, as the
-brilliant red granules of this species—about the four-thousandth part
-of an inch in diameter—probably surpass in reproductive powers every
-other plant. They cover enormous tracts of snow in such dense masses
-that it sometimes appears as if the snow was coloured blood-red to the
-depth of several feet. Ever since it was first found, red snow has
-greatly exercised the minds of the learned. It is often mentioned in
-old writings, though whether the red snow referred to took its colour
-from the red algæ or from the meteor-dust which contains iron, is not
-certain. But there is no doubt that it was the real red-snow algæ
-which De Saussure found in his Alpine expeditions. He mentions this
-phenomenon several times in 1760, and states that he had found the
-most beautiful species on Mont St Bernard, but had thought it must be
-pollen, wafted thither by the wind, although he knew of no plant that
-had that kind of red pollen.
-
-The knowledge that the red snow of the polar regions and mountains owes
-its colour to a living plant, only dates from the year 1818, when Ross
-and Parry made their celebrated polar expedition, and Ross discovered
-the ‘crimson cliffs’ of the coast of Greenland, six hundred feet above
-the level of the sea. Here the red snow coloured the rocky walls of
-Baffin’s Bay a rich glowing crimson, reaching in some parts to a depth
-of nine or ten feet, and close to Cape York extending over a distance
-of eight nautical miles. Various were the surmises and conjectures as
-to the origin and nature of the phenomenon. Bauer was the first to
-examine it under a microscope, and he fancied the organic red granules
-represented a species of fungus. The same year, Charpentier, the great
-Alpine explorer, started the idea that the red appearance was caused
-by some meteoric matter, which, falling from the sky, spread over the
-immense tracts of snow. Hooker was the first who recognised the true
-nature of this new plant, and compared it to the red slime algæ which
-are found floating in blood-red masses in water or damp places; while
-Wrangel declared the granules had apparently no organic substratum, and
-they must therefore be of the lichen tribe, suggesting also that the
-germs were generated by the electricity in the air, for he had once
-seen a rock split in two by lightning, the sides of which were thickly
-covered with a red dust similar in nature to the ‘red snow.’ Two more
-botanists agreed that the red granules were ‘red powder that had become
-organic matter in the oxidised snow;’ the stern hard rock as it decayed
-had defied death, and come to life again in a new form. It remained for
-Agardh to put an end to these various fancies by proving the undoubted
-algal nature of the plant, and to give it, besides, its poetical name
-of ‘snow-blossom,’ the scientific one of crimson primitive snow-germ
-(_Protococcus Kermesina nivalis_). In 1838, Ehrenberg watched the
-development of this new species by sowing some specimens he had brought
-with him from the Swiss Alps, on snow, and noting how they developed
-first into green and then into red granules, joined together like a
-chain; he called it snow granulæ (_Sphærella nivalis_), which name it
-still bears.
-
-Even now, the wild theories about the red snow were not yet ended.
-Seeing that the young spores of the algæ moved incessantly backwards
-and forwards in the water, the idea arose that they were animalcula,
-and ‘red snow’ only the lowest form of animal life. By degrees,
-however, it came to be an accepted fact that this voluntary motion
-does not belong exclusively to animal life, and that the young spores
-of the lower plants, although they move freely about in the water, and
-are plentifully provided with fine hair-like threads like the real
-infusoria, still remain plants, and never turn into animals. And thus
-the plant-nature of the ‘snow-blossom’ was finally settled.
-
-The red-snow alga found on the Alps, Pyrenees, and Carpathians, and
-also on the summits of the North American mountains as far down as
-California, is not, however, such a determined enemy to heat as its
-having its home in the ice-region would imply. In the arctic circle,
-as well as on our own mountains of perpetual snow, especially on
-Monte Rosa, the red snow is seen in summer like a light rose-coloured
-film, which gradually deepens in colour, particularly in the track
-of human footsteps, till at length it turns almost black. In this
-state, however, it is not a rotten mass, but consists principally of
-carefully capsuled ‘quiescent spores,’ in which state these microscopic
-atoms pass the winter, bearing in this form the greatest extremes
-of temperature. Some have been exposed to a dry heat of a hundred
-degrees, and were found still to retain life-bearing properties; while
-others, again, were exposed with impunity to the greatest cold known in
-science. This proves that the reproductive organs in a capsuled state
-can hear vast extremes of temperature without injury; a significant
-fact, in which lies the secret of the indestructibility of those germs
-which are recognised as promoters of so many diseases.
-
-Time, too, that great destroyer of most things, seems to pass
-harmlessly over this capsuled life. If the spores find no favourable
-outlet for their development, they do not die, no matter how long
-a time they may remain thus; and so the dried remains of red snow
-brought home from various polar expeditions have, even after the
-lapse of several years, fructified. During the uninterrupted light
-of the arctic summers, the ‘snow-blossom’ develops itself so rapidly,
-that at last it covers vast and endless tracts of snow. Although the
-sun does not rise very high above the horizon even at midsummer,
-yet, owing to the great clearness and dryness of the atmosphere in
-those high regions, it has a considerable degree of warmth at noon,
-and Nordenskjöld observed that one day in July, at mid-day, the
-temperature just above the snow was between twenty-five and thirty
-degrees centigrade. But it must not be supposed that the red alga
-vegetates in the pure snow; this would not be possible, as, according
-to chemical analysis, its body contains numerous mineral substances.
-The outer skin or membrane, particularly, in which the granulæ are
-stored seems to hold a quantity of silicon; but chalk, iron, and other
-mineral substances peculiar to the vegetable world, are also not found
-wanting in the ashes of the red snow. In fact, the upper surface of the
-snow and ice always shows, whenever it has lain long enough, a thin
-coating of inorganic dust, which brings to the snow alga the mineral
-constituent parts it requires.
-
-Nordenskjöld gives some very interesting details about this dust,
-from observations made during his various expeditions. At one time
-it was supposed to be a slimy mass carried down from the hills which
-pierce the snow, and lodged on the lower stretches of its upper
-surface; but Nordenskjöld found this same dust in like quantity on the
-interior ice-fields of Greenland, where for miles around there were
-no mountains near, and also on ice-hummocks that quite surmounted the
-ice-plains, as well as on the nearest hills. During their long sojourn
-in the land of ice, they searched very carefully for any traces of
-small stones even as large as a pin’s head; but they could find none;
-while many square miles were covered by this fine dust, gray in its
-dry state, and becoming black when moist. It was therefore at last
-decided that this dark-coloured matter must be a precipitate from the
-atmosphere, and that the summer sun melting the snows, had allowed
-numerous dust-showers to accumulate thus, one on the top of the other.
-Nordenskjöld further thinks that it is not exclusively earth-dust
-wafted thither by currents of air, but that it contains a number of
-metallic particles, that can be extracted by a magnet, consisting, like
-the metallic meteor-stones, of iron, nickel, and cobalt. This metallic
-cosmic dust, which has been noticed previously in our pages, and which
-is spread over the whole world, is best observed and gathered on these
-vast snow and ice fields, and as it also bears a similitude to our
-ordinary earth-dust, Nordenskjöld has given it the name of Kyrokonit,
-or ice-dust.
-
-At first, the alga of the red snow was looked upon as the sole
-inhabitant of the ice-lands of the polar regions; but in 1870, Dr
-Berggren, botanist of Nordenskjöld’s expedition, discovered a second
-or reddish-brown alga. It is allied to the ‘snow-blossom,’ but has
-this peculiarity, that it is never found on _snow_, but combined with
-the kyrokonit, it covers enormous tracts of _ice_, giving to them
-a beautiful purple brown tint, which greatly adds to their beauty.
-Besides growing on the surface of the ice, this red-brown alga was also
-found in holes one or two feet deep, and three or four feet across,
-in some parts so numerous and close together that there was scarcely
-standing-room between them. A closer examination showed that this very
-alga was the cause of these holes, as wherever it spreads itself, it
-favours the melting of the ice. The dark-brown body absorbs more heat
-than either the gray dust or the snow, therefore it sinks ever deeper
-into the hollows, until the slanting rays of the sun can no longer
-reach it.
-
-Thus these microscopic algæ play the same part on the ice-fields of
-Greenland that small stones do on European glaciers. By creating holes,
-they give the warm summer air a larger surface to take hold of, and
-thus materially assist the melting of the ice. Perhaps it is to these
-microscopic atoms that we owe some of the vast changes that our globe
-has experienced; it may be by their agency that the vast wastes of snow
-that in the glacial period covered great tracts both of the European
-and American continents for some distance from the poles, have melted
-gradually away and given place to shady woods and fields of grain. It
-is indeed a remarkable instance of the power and importance of even the
-smallest thing in nature; all the more interesting in this case, that
-the sun creates for itself in these tiny dark atoms, the instruments
-for boring through the ice.
-
-One important fact we must not forget to mention in conclusion,
-namely, that these microscopic plants have tempted many insects—to
-which they serve as food—into these inhospitable regions. A small
-black glacier flea lives principally on the red snow; and even in the
-arctic regions we find many tiny insects subsisting entirely on the
-red and green algæ. These insects, too, possess the same property
-as the algæ, of shutting themselves up in capsules during the long
-winter, and like them too, remain alive even when in a dried condition.
-When Professor Wittrock, in the winter of 1880 to 1881, placed the
-dried spores of the red snow in water to germinate, a number of tiny
-colourless worms appeared, still living. Thus even the stern, rigid
-north pole cannot prevent the universal spread of life; and if those
-cosmological prophets are right who declare that the whole surface
-of the earth will one day be covered with snow and ice, then these
-minute insects will have an ample store of food in the red, green, and
-brown algæ, and as the last of living beings, will be able to mock
-at the general stagnation; ay, perhaps even become the foundation of
-a fresh development of life on our earth, should any cosmical cause
-sufficiently increase the temperature.
-
-
-
-
-OCCASIONAL NOTES.
-
-
-EXTENDED USE OF GAS COOKING-STOVES.
-
-We have repeatedly called attention to the practical utility and
-convenience of gas-stoves for cooking purposes, and facts to hand
-seem to show that these are being largely taken advantage of by the
-public. Many gas Companies now lend them out at a cheap rate, and they
-may be had for purchase at a price to suit most buyers. Since the
-Corporation Gas Company of Glasgow introduced the system of hiring out
-these stoves, about three thousand five hundred had been lent out in
-six months, and the demand continues unabated. In hotels, restaurants,
-and many a private home, they are found doing their work with economy,
-ease, and a great saving of labour.
-
-Dr Stevenson Macadam, speaking of gas-cooking in its sanitary aspects,
-says: ‘The wholesomeness of the meat cooked in the gas-stoves must be
-regarded as beyond doubt; gas-cooked meat will be found to be more
-juicy and palatable, and yet free from those alkaloidal bodies produced
-during the confined cooking of meat, which are more or less hurtful,
-and even poisonous.’ A joint cooked in a gas-oven weighs heavier than
-the same joint cooked in a coal-oven, from the fact, that in the case
-of the gas-cooked joint the juices are more perfectly preserved.
-
-At the East London Hospital, where the entire cooking for an enormous
-number of patients is done by gas, the managers calculate that
-fully six hundred pounds is saved yearly since the introduction of
-gas-cooking.
-
-For the extended use of gas-stoves in Scotland, the public is greatly
-indebted to R. and A. Main, Glasgow, who are ever ready to adopt
-everything new in gas-apparatus. Gas is also now largely used in
-connection with washing by means of steam. When we noticed Morton’s
-Steam-washer, probably not more than half a dozen had adopted this easy
-and economical method of washing, in Scotland, and now those who do so
-may be counted by the hundred.
-
-
-AUTOMATIC RAILWAY COUPLING.
-
-For several months past, some of the goods-wagons working the traffic
-on the South Dock Railway lines of the East and West India Dock Company
-have (says the _Times_) been fitted with a new form of coupling, which
-possesses several important advantages over the ordinary coupling. Not
-the least of these are simplicity in construction and automaticity,
-combined with certainty in action. The coupling is the invention of Mr
-J. H. Betteley, of 42 Old Broad Street, London, and consists of a long
-shackle which is attached to the drawbar, and stands out at a slight
-angle of depression from the carriage or wagon. Connected with this
-shackle is a hook of special shape, which is attached to a bar running
-across the carriage front, and having a short lever fixed on either end
-just outside the buffers. To couple the vehicles, they are run together
-in the usual way, and, on meeting, the shackle on one carriage runs up
-the shackle on the other and instantly engages with the hook. Thus the
-shunter has no dangerous work whatever to perform. To uncouple, he has
-simply to depress the lever, which action raises the hook and releases
-the shackle. The hook is so formed that no matter how much bumping of
-the carriages there may be, it cannot be freed from the shackle without
-the intervention of the lever, and the combination therefore forms a
-perfectly safe and reliable coupling. In fact, the whole train could
-be coupled up automatically, and the engaged hook and shackle then
-constitute a locking apparatus which prevents the carriages becoming
-accidentally detached. The coupling can, moreover, be used on any kind
-of railway vehicle, and it is of no moment if the couplings are not all
-on the same level, as the higher shackle will always travel up the
-lower one and engage with the hook of the latter. The apparatus has
-been examined and the trucks fitted with it have been severely tested
-by General Hutchinson and Major Marindin, of the Board of Trade, who
-have given it their united approval. It certainly appears to be well
-fitted to supersede the ordinary coupling, which has cost so many lives.
-
-
-CHARLES DICKENS AT WORK.
-
-An unpretentious volume entitled _Charles Dickens_ has been issued in
-the ‘World’s Workers’ series (Cassell & Co.), written by the eldest
-daughter of the great novelist. It is simply and pleasantly compiled,
-and though it may be read through at a sitting, it gives a good idea
-as to what manner of man Dickens was, and how he lived, talked, wrote,
-and spoke. As Forster’s Life of Dickens is beyond the reach of many,
-this book, which has been specially written for the young, will form
-a good introduction to his writings, of which there is a complete
-summary at the end of the volume. It forms an affectionate tribute from
-a daughter to a father, and, as was to be expected, exhibits the more
-human side of his character. A sketch of his demeanour in his study,
-as witnessed by one of his daughters, who had been taken there after
-an illness, will have the charm of novelty to many people. ‘For a long
-time there was no sound but the rapid moving of his pen on the paper;
-then suddenly he jumped up, looked at himself in the glass, rushed
-back to his desk, then to the glass again, when presently he turned
-round and faced his daughter, staring at her, but not seeing her, and
-talking rapidly to himself, then once more back to his desk, where he
-remained writing until luncheon-time.... It was wonderful to see how
-completely he threw himself into the character his own imagination had
-made, his face, indeed his whole body, changing, and he himself being
-lost entirely in working out his own ideas. Small wonder that his works
-took so much out of him, for he did literally _live_ in his books while
-writing them, turning his own creations into living realities, with
-whom he wept, and with whom he rejoiced.’
-
-
-PLASTERING MADE EASY.
-
-Architects and those interested in the erection of new houses have
-frequently looked upon the application of plaster as one of the
-greatest drawbacks of modern building, showing, besides, a marked
-deterioration from old plaster-work, such as that found on walls of
-ancient buildings, some of which, of a highly decorative character,
-may still be found almost as sound as when first executed. In
-Hardwick Old Hall, Derbyshire, though roof and floor are gone, the
-decorative friezes still remain in wonderful preservation. Many ancient
-manor-houses and farm-buildings show specimens of fine and enduring
-plaster-work.
-
-A new cement has been invented, and patented, which appears to have
-the qualities of both cement and plaster, and greatly simplifies the
-process. The patentees are Joseph Robinson & Co., of the Knothill
-Cement and Plaster Works, near Carlisle, who have been engaged in the
-manufacture of plaster for the past sixty years. From the almost
-inexhaustible products of their alabaster quarries in Inglewood Forest,
-this new cement is made. It is claimed for it that, while being equal
-to the Keene’s and Parian cements now in use, it is cheap enough to be
-used as they are, and also as a substitute for ordinary plastering.
-
-In the erection of new buildings, the plasterer’s pit takes up much
-room, and is often looked upon as a necessary evil. In putting on the
-common three coats of plaster, the second and third can only be laid on
-when that before it is sufficiently dry. Owing to the unequal shrinkage
-of the different materials, it is often an uncertain method of doing
-good work. When using the cement we speak of, the plasterers can be
-put into a room with the requisite quantities of sand and cement, and
-work straight away. There is no delay required for drying, for as fast
-as one coat is done, the finishing coat can be run on and the whole
-completed. It has the merit, also, of neither shrinking nor expanding,
-is impervious to absorption and infection, and its hard surface affords
-facilities for washing or taking on paint.
-
-As to its fire-resisting qualities, Captain Shaw, of the Metropolitan
-Fire Brigade, is of opinion that it ‘would be much more effectual in
-preventing the spread of fire than any other of the common plasters or
-cements generally used in this country.’
-
-
-
-
-AT WAKING.
-
-
- I bore dead Love unto his grave,
- Beneath a willow, in winter’s rain,
- Where he might feel the branches wave,
- And hear me, if he woke again.
-
- One withered rose-tree on his tomb
- I planted, so that, by-and-by,
- If he should wake, the rose might bloom,
- And I should know, and hear him cry.
-
- I decked his breast with rosemary,
- Laid on his lips one violet,
- That once he kissed; I think if he
- Should wake, he will not quite forget.
-
- I set a crown about his brow,
- The crown affection weaves and wears;
- At waking, he will hardly know,
- I fear, whose diadem he shares.
-
- I placed a lily in his hand—
- Sceptre of his dead sovereignty;
- At waking, will he understand
- _Who_ placed it there, to bloom or die?
-
- I laid my heart, that for his sake
- Remembers now no old sweet strain,
- Close to his ear; he, if he wake,
- Perchance may tune its strings again.
-
- If he should wake! Till death be dead,
- Till life begin, and sleep be past,
- Till on his breast he lay thy head,
- And flowers begin to bloom at last—
-
- O soul, remember! lest by thee
- That unknown sweetness be forgot
- Which now thou lookest for, and he
- Bid thee ‘Depart! I know thee not.’
-
- SIDNEY R. THOMPSON.
-
- * * * * *
-
-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. 108, VOL. III, JANUARY
-23, 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. 108, Vol. III, January 23, 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. 108, Vol. III, January 23, 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 25, 2021 [eBook #67008]</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. 108, VOL. III, JANUARY 23, 1886 ***</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">{49}</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="#AN_ANGLERS_IDYLL">AN ANGLER’S IDYLL.</a><br />
-<a href="#IN_ALL_SHADES">IN ALL SHADES.</a><br />
-<a href="#OUR_DOMESTICATED_OTTER">OUR DOMESTICATED OTTER.</a><br />
-<a href="#A_GOLDEN_ARGOSY">A GOLDEN ARGOSY.</a><br />
-<a href="#SNOW-BLOSSOM">SNOW-BLOSSOM.</a><br />
-<a href="#OCCASIONAL_NOTES">OCCASIONAL NOTES.</a><br />
-<a href="#AT_WAKING">AT WAKING.</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. 108.—Vol. III.</span></p>
-<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<em>d.</em></p>
-<p class="floatc">SATURDAY, JANUARY 23, 1886.</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="AN_ANGLERS_IDYLL">AN ANGLER’S IDYLL.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I am</span> once more at the water’s edge. It is the
-Tweed, silver-voiced, musical, its ripples breaking
-into liquid crystals as the rushing stream
-leaps into the breast of the softly-circling pool.
-Here, in its upper reaches, amid the pastoral
-hills of Peeblesshire, its volume of fair water is
-untainted by pollution. It has miles and miles
-yet to run ere it comes up with the floating
-scum and dismal discoloration of ‘mill-races’
-and the refuse of the dye-house. And, there!—is
-not that Drummelzier Castle on the opposite
-bank above, its gray walls powdered with
-the yellows and browns of spreading lichens,
-and its shattered bastions waving here and there
-a crest of summer’s greenest grass? The fierce
-old chieftains who wrangled Border-fashion in
-its halls are silent to-day; the wild Tweedies
-and Hays and Veitches have had their rough
-voices smothered in the churchyard dust. From
-the shady angle of the old tower steps out a great
-brindled bull, leading his following of milky
-dames to where the pasture is juicy in the
-haughs below. I am thankful the broad deep
-stream is between us, for as he lifts his head
-and sees me where I stand, he announces his
-displeasure in a short angry snort and a sudden
-lashing of his ponderous tail. Perhaps it is
-only the flies tormenting him. In any case, it
-is well to be beyond his reach.</p>
-
-<p>Above me and around are the great brown hills
-of Tweed-dale. They have this morning a dreamy
-look. The soft west wind plays about them, and
-the sunlight weaves a web of mingled glory and
-gloom over their broad summits and down their
-furrowed sides. The trees wave green branches
-in the soft warm air; but I hear them not—only
-the swish and tinkle of the waters. The
-sheep that feed upon the long gray slopes
-move about in a kind of spectral stillness;
-I almost fancy I hear them bleat, but may
-be mistaken, so far-off and dream-like is the
-sound. A distant shot is heard, and a flock of
-white pigeons rise with swift wing from the
-summit of the battered old keep, and wheel
-quick circles round the tower, then settle down
-as still and unseen as before. And something
-else is moving on the farther side. It is a milkmaid,
-tripping down the bank towards the river,
-her pitchers creaking as she goes. She pauses
-ere dipping them in the stream, and looks with
-level hand above her eyes across the meadows
-now aflame with the morning sun. Perhaps she
-expects to see some gallant Patie returning from
-the ‘wauking o’ the fauld,’ or some bashful Roger
-hiding mouse-like behind the willows. Her light
-hair has been bleached to a still lighter hue by
-the suns and showers of many a summer day,
-but these, though they have bronzed her broad
-brow and shapely neck, have left undimmed the
-rosy lustre of her cheek. Light-handed, red-cheeked
-Peggy, go thy way in sweet expectation!
-When the westering sun flings purple
-shadows over the hills, he whose rustic image
-stirs thy glowing pulses shall steal to meet thee
-here.</p>
-
-<p>And I?—what have I to do? There is the
-tempting stream; the pliant rod, with its gossamer
-line and daintily busked lures, is ready to
-hand. Deft fingers have mounted it for me without
-ostentation or display. There has been no
-struggling with hanked line or tangled cast; I
-have been served like a prince among anglers,
-and am ready-equipped to step into the stream.
-And yet at the moment I am all alone; for round
-me only are the silent hills, and beneath me the
-broadly-flowing Tweed.</p>
-
-<p>I have never fished so before. I feel as light
-as if the normal fifteen pounds to the square
-inch of atmospheric pressure no longer existed
-for me. Ah, with what delight I feel the cool
-water lapping round my limbs, as I fling the
-light line far across the rippling stream, and
-watch the ‘flies’ as they drop and float downwards
-with the current. The broad brown
-hills, the dewy woods, the gray tower, are forgotten
-now. The brindled bull and his milky
-following have gone, with the rosy milkmaid,
-out of sight and out of mind. The pigeons<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">{50}</span>
-high on the shattered keep may wheel fleet
-circles as they choose, and spread white wings in
-the orient sun, but they cannot draw my eyes
-from the charmed spot. Down there, in the
-haugh beneath, near to where Powsail Burn joins
-the Tweed, the thorn-tree is shading the wizard’s
-grave; but gray Merlin, sleeping or waking,
-living or dead, is nothing to me. Yonder,
-up the river, is Mossfennan Yett, and the
-Scottish king, for all I know, may once more
-be riding round the Merecleugh-head, ‘booted
-and spurred, as we a’ did see,’ to alight him
-down, as in days of old, and ‘dine wi’ the
-lass o’ the Logan Lea;’ but to me that old
-royal lover is at this moment a thing of nought.
-Border story and Border song, tale of love and
-deed of valour—what are they now to me,
-with the soft wind sighing round my head and
-the swift river rushing at my feet?</p>
-
-<p>A splendid stream, indeed! For a hundred
-yards it sweeps with broken and jagged surface,
-from the broad shallow above to the deep dark
-pool below. In the strong rush of its current,
-it is not easy keeping your feet. The bottom is
-of small pebbles, smooth and round, gleaming
-yellow and brown through the clear water, and
-they have an awkward knack of slipping cleverly
-from beneath your feet, giving you every now
-and then a queer sensation of standing upon
-nothing. But this is only for a moment, or ever
-so much less than a moment. For if it were
-longer than the quickest thought, it might bring
-you a bad five minutes. To lose your footing
-in this swift-hurrying stream, might be to
-have a fleet passage into the great pool that
-hugs its black waters beneath the shadow of
-yonder gloomy rock over which the pine-trees
-wave their sunless boughs. But really, after all,
-one has no fear of that. Usage gives security.
-The railway train in which you sit quietly
-reading the morning paper, might at any moment
-leave the rails, or break an axle, or collide with
-the stone bridge ahead; but you do not think
-of that, or anticipate it—or, if you did, life would
-not be worth living. So is it here in the broad
-Tweed. With the faculties engrossed in the
-work of the moment, foot and hand are equally
-and instinctively alert. Slowly and securely
-you move over the shining pebbles, making cast
-after cast—wondering if ever you are to have a
-rise.</p>
-
-<p>I must work here with cautious hand and
-shortened line. For a belt of trees borders
-the river on the farther side, and a long-armed
-ash is pushing his boughs far out over the
-stream, as if seeking to dip his leaf-tips in the
-cool-flowing water. To hank one’s line on these
-quivering boughs would lead to a loss of time
-and probably of temper, and this morning everything
-is too beautiful and bright for any angry
-mood. As yet I have no success. Not a fin
-is on the rise; not a single silvery scale has
-glittered. Still, what beauties I know to be
-lurking there. You see that point, where the
-ground juts out a little into the stream, and a
-ragged alder hangs with loosened roots from the
-crumbling bank? It is being slowly undermined
-by the stream, and one day will slip down and be
-carried away. But as yet, it affords a rare sheltering-place
-for the finny tritons. It was but last
-season I hooked one at that very spot, and after
-a long and stubborn fight got my net beneath
-him, and went victor home.</p>
-
-<p>And I know that others are there still, as
-brave and as beautiful as he. In fancy’s eye I
-can see them even now, lying with head up-stream,
-and motionless but for now and then a quick jerk
-of the tail sideways, their yellow flanks gleaming
-in speckled radiance when a sunbeam reaches
-them through the fret-work of the overhanging
-leaves. That sharp jerk of the tail sideways
-means that they are keeping their weather-eye
-open. Being, among other things, insectivorous,
-they know if they would secure their prey
-they must be quick about it, hence they are
-ever on the alert. And yet, the flies which I
-am offering must have passed close by them a
-dozen times, but still they have stirred not, except
-in that knowing way which indicates they are
-not to be taken in. They have learned a thing
-or two, these Tweed trout, since the time of the
-Cæsars. Speak about animals not having reasoning
-powers? Let any one who deludes himself
-with this vain fallacy, purchase the best angling
-apparatus going, and then try his hand upon
-Tweed trout. Three hours afterwards he will
-not feel quite so satisfied as to the immeasurable
-superiority of man over the lower creatures.
-He may even have some half-defined suspicion
-that it is himself, and not the other party, that
-has been taken in. And not without cause.
-These Tweed trout can pick you out an artificial
-fly as skilfully as a tackle-maker.</p>
-
-<p>The thought disheartens me for a moment, as
-I stand here, lashing away, middle-deep in the
-stream. But it is only for a moment. The
-wind is soft; the air is bright, but not too
-bright, with sunshine; a luminous haze is
-gathering between me and the distant mountains,
-and the skies have now more of gray than
-of blue in their airy texture. Everything is
-beautiful, from the soft contour of the rounded
-hills to the glitter and sparkle of the silvery
-stream.—But, there! My reel is whirring off
-with a sound that seals the senses against everything
-else. He is <i>on</i>! I saw him rise, and as
-he turned to descend I struck—and there he is!
-It was all quicker than thought. He has rushed
-up-stream a dozen yards, but is turning now.
-As I reel in, I begin mentally to calculate the
-ratio of his weight to his strength of pull. This
-is a useful thing to do; because if you should
-happen to lose your fish, you are then in a
-position to assure your friend Jones, who is
-higher up the water, and very likely has done
-nothing, that you had one ‘on’ which was two
-pounds if it was an ounce. Jones will of
-course believe it, and condole with you upon
-your loss—perhaps with a secret chuckle.</p>
-
-<p>But this is digressive. I have other work
-than to talk about Jones at present. Master
-Fario is not taking kindly to the bridle which I
-have put in his mouth, and is having another run
-for it. There he goes, swish out of the water a
-couple of feet. What an exhilarating moment!
-Another leap and whirl, and off he goes careering
-towards the pool below in a way you never saw.
-But the line is running out after him, and still
-he is fast. The fight is keen, but he is worth
-fighting for. With the point of the rod well
-up, and a considerable strain upon the line, he
-must soon either yield—or break off. The alternative<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">{51}</span>
-is dreadful to contemplate. So I renew
-my caution, and play him gently. By-and-by
-I feel he is yielding. Reeling in once more, I
-soon draw him within range of eyesight. What
-a beauty he is! Plump and fat, the very pink
-of trouts! Moving uneasily from side to side—boring
-occasionally as if he would make
-his way down to catch hold of something, but
-with a swinging and swaying motion about him
-indicative of failing power—he comes nearer and
-nearer to me where I stand, breathless with
-excitement, dreading lest, even at this last stage of
-the struggle, I may yet lose him. The supreme
-moment is at hand! He is almost at my feet.
-I hold the rod with one hand, and with the other
-undo the landing-net. He circles round me at
-as great a distance as the shortened line will
-allow, and though I have tried once or twice to
-pass the net beneath him, he has hitherto managed
-to baffle me. But now, at last, the net is
-under him—and, there——</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Tap, tap!—‘Come in!’—And enter two or
-three little ones to hid papa good-night. Ah,
-little sweethearts, what a vision you have undone!
-The flowing stream, the overhanging
-trees, the old gray tower, the silent hills, have
-all, at the touch of your tiny fingers, vanished!</p>
-
-<p>I was not dreaming—no, nor yet asleep. My
-hook lies turned face down on my knee, and
-my pipe, extinguished, is still between my lips.
-It is towards the end of December; the Christmas
-bells have already rung out their message,
-and the New Year is waiting, in a few days to
-be ushered in. Outside, the wind is blowing in
-loud noisy gusts through the darkness, scattering
-the snow-flakes before it in a level drift. Here,
-in my bookroom, as I sat with foot on fender,
-watching the glowing embers in the grate, thoughts
-of summer days had stolen over me. I was once
-more by silvery Tweed, under sunny skies, plying
-‘the well-dissembled fly’—the storm and the
-snow-drift without, being as if they were not. To
-you, reader, I have uttered aloud the reverie of
-those brief five minutes of swift fancy; to you,
-brother anglers, may that phantasmal expedition
-be the harbinger of coming sport; and with each
-and all of you I now will part, bidding you
-reverently, as I bid my little ones, Good-night!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IN_ALL_SHADES">IN ALL SHADES.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER V.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> letter from Edward that had so greatly perturbed
-old Mr Hawthorn had been written, of
-course, some twenty days before he received it,
-for the mail takes about that time, as a rule,
-in going from Southampton across the Atlantic
-to the port of Trinidad. Edward had already
-told his father of his long-standing engagement
-to Marian; but the announcement and acceptance
-of the district judgeship had been so
-hurried, and the date fixed for his departure
-was so extremely early, that he had only just
-had time by the first mail to let his father
-know of his approaching marriage, and his determination
-to proceed at once to the West Indies
-by the succeeding steamer. Three weeks was
-all the interval allowed him by the inexorable
-red-tape department of the Colonial Office for
-completing his hasty preparations for his marriage,
-and setting sail to undertake his newly
-acquired judicial functions.</p>
-
-<p>‘Three weeks, my dear,’ Nora cried in despair
-to Marian; ‘why, you know, it can’t possibly
-be done! It’s simply impracticable. Do
-those horrid government-office people really
-imagine a girl can get together a trousseau, and
-have all the bridesmaids’ dresses made, and see
-about the house and the breakfast and all that
-sort of thing, and get herself comfortably married,
-all within a single fortnight? They’re just like
-all men; they think you can do things in less
-than no time. It’s absolutely preposterous.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps,’ Marian answered, ‘the government-office
-people would say they engaged Edward
-to take a district judgeship, and didn’t stipulate
-anything about his getting married before
-he went out to Trinidad to take it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, well, you know, if you choose to look
-at it in that way, of course one can’t reasonably
-grumble at them for their absurd hurrying.
-But still the horrid creatures ought to have a
-little consideration for a girl’s convenience. Why,
-we shall have to make up our minds at once,
-without the least proper deliberation, what the
-bridesmaids’ dresses are to be, and begin having
-them cut out and the trimmings settled this
-very morning. A wedding at a fortnight’s notice!
-I never in my life heard of such a thing. I
-wonder, for my part, your mamma consents to
-it.—Well, well, I shall have you to take charge
-of me going out, that’s one comfort; and I
-shall have my bridesmaid’s dress made so that
-I can wear it a little altered, and cut square
-in the bodice, when I get to Trinidad, for a
-best dinner dress. But it’s really awfully horrid
-having to make all one’s preparations for the
-wedding and for going out in such a terrible
-unexpected hurry.’ However, in spite of Nora,
-the preparations for the wedding were duly
-made within the appointed fortnight, even that
-important item of the bridesmaids’ dresses being
-quickly settled to everybody’s satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>Strange that when two human beings propose
-entering into a solemn contract together for
-the future governance of their entire joint existence,
-the thoughts of one of them, and that
-the one to whom the change is most infinitely
-important, should be largely taken up for some
-weeks beforehand with the particular clothes
-she is to wear on the morning when the contract
-is publicly ratified! Fancy the ambassador
-who signs the treaty being mainly occupied for
-the ten days of the preliminary negotiations
-with deciding what sort of uniform and how
-many orders he shall put on upon the eventful
-day of the final signature!</p>
-
-<p>At the end of that short hurry-scurrying fortnight,
-the wedding actually took place; and an
-advertisement in the <i>Times</i> next morning duly
-announced among the list of marriages, ‘At Holy
-Trinity, Brompton, by the Venerable Archdeacon
-Ord, uncle of the bride, assisted by the Rev.
-Augustus Savile, B.D., <span class="smcap">Edward Beresford
-Hawthorn</span>, M.A., Barrister-at-law, of the Inner
-Temple, late Fellow of St Catherine’s College,
-Cambridge, and District Judge of the Westmoreland
-District, Trinidad, to <span class="smcap">Marian Arbuthnot</span>,
-only daughter of General C. S. Ord, C.I.E.,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">{52}</span>
-formerly of the Bengal Infantry.’ ‘The bride’s
-toilet,’ said the newspapers, ‘consisted of white
-broché satin de Lyon, draped with deep lace
-flounces, caught up with orange blossoms.
-The veil was of tulle, secured to the hair with
-a pearl crescent and stars. The bouquet was
-composed of rare exotics.’ In fact, to the coarse
-and undiscriminating male intelligence, the whole
-attire, on which so much pains and thought
-had been hurriedly bestowed, does not appear
-to have differed in any respect whatsoever from
-that of all the other brides one has ever looked
-at during the entire course of a reasonably long
-and varied lifetime.</p>
-
-<p>After the wedding, however, Marian and Edward
-could only afford a single week by way of a
-honeymoon, in that most overrun by brides and
-bridegrooms of all English districts, the Isle of
-Wight, as being nearest within call of Southampton,
-whence they had to start on their
-long ocean voyage. The aunt in charge was
-to send down Nora to meet them at the hotel
-the day before the steamer sailed; and the
-general and Mrs Ord were to see them off, and
-say a long good-bye to them on the morning
-of sailing.</p>
-
-<p>Harry Noel, too, who had been best-man at
-the wedding, for some reason most fully known
-to himself, professed a vast desire to ‘see the
-last of poor Hawthorn,’ before he left for parts
-unknown in the Caribbean; and with that intent,
-duly presented himself at a Southampton hotel
-on the day before their final departure. It was
-not purely by accident, however, either on his
-own part or on Marian Hawthorn’s, that when
-they took a quiet walk that evening in some
-fields behind the battery, he found himself a
-little in front with Nora Dupuy, while the
-newly married pair, as was only proper, brought
-up the rear in a conjugal tête-à-tête.</p>
-
-<p>‘Miss Dupuy,’ Harry said suddenly, as they
-reached an open space in the fields, with a clear
-view uninterrupted before them, ‘there’s something
-I wish to say to you before you leave
-to-morrow for Trinidad—something a little premature,
-perhaps, but under the circumstances—as
-you’re leaving so soon—I can’t delay it. I’ve
-seen very little of you, as yet, Miss Dupuy, and
-you’ve seen very little of me, so I daresay I
-owe you some apology for this strange precipitancy;
-but—— Well, you’re going away at
-once from England; and I may not see you
-again for—for some months; and if I allow
-you to go without having spoken to you,
-why’——</p>
-
-<p>Nora’s heart throbbed violently. She didn’t
-care very much for Harry Noel at first sight,
-to be sure; but still, she had never till now had
-a regular offer of marriage made to her; and
-every woman’s heart beats naturally—I believe—when
-she finds herself within measurable distance
-of her first offer. Besides, Harry was the
-heir to a baronetcy, and a great catch, as most
-girls counted; and even if you don’t want to
-marry a baronet, it’s something at least to be
-able to say to yourself in future, ‘I refused an
-offer to be Lady Noel.’ Mind you, as women
-go, the heir to an old baronetcy and twelve thousand
-a year is not to be despised, though you
-may not care a single pin about his mere personal
-attractions. A great many girls who would refuse,
-the man upon his own merits, would willingly
-say ‘Yes’ at once to the title and the income.
-So Nora Dupuy, who was, after all, quite as
-human as most other girls—if not rather more so—merely
-held her breath hard and tried her
-best to still the beating of her wayward heart,
-as she answered back with childish innocence:
-‘Well, Mr Noel; in that case, what would
-happen?’</p>
-
-<p>‘In that case, Miss Dupuy,’ Harry replied,
-looking at her pretty little pursed-up guileless
-mouth with a hungry desire to kiss it incontinently
-then and there—‘why, in that case, I’m
-afraid some other man—some handsome young
-Trinidad planter or other—might carry off the
-prize on his own account before I had ventured
-to put in my humble claim for it.—Miss Dupuy,
-what’s the use of beating about the bush, when
-I see by your eyes you know what I mean!
-From the moment I first saw you, I said to
-myself: “She’s the one woman I have ever seen
-whom I feel instinctively I could worship for
-a lifetime.” Answer me yes. I’m no speaker.
-But I love you. Will you take me?’</p>
-
-<p>Nora twisted the tassel of her parasol nervously
-between her finger and thumb for a few seconds;
-then she looked back at him full in the face with
-her pretty girlish open eyes, and answered with
-charming naïveté—just as if he had merely asked
-her whether she would take another cup of tea:—‘Thank
-you, no, Mr Noel; I don’t think
-so.’</p>
-
-<p>Harry Noel smiled with amusement—in spite
-of this curt and simple rejection—at the oddity
-of such a reply to such a question. ‘Of course,’
-he said, glancing down at her pretty little feet
-to hide his confusion, ‘I didn’t expect you to
-answer me <i>Yes</i> at once on so very short an
-acquaintance as ours has been. I acknowledge
-it’s dreadfully presumptuous in me to have
-dared to put you a question like that, when I
-know you can have seen so very little in me
-to make me worth the honour you’d be bestowing
-upon me.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Quite so,’ Nora murmured mischievously, in
-a parenthetical undertone. It wasn’t kind; I
-daresay it wasn’t even lady-like; but then you
-see she was really, after all, only a school-girl.</p>
-
-<p>Harry paused, half abashed for a second at this
-very literal acceptance of his conventional expression
-of self-depreciation. He hardly knew whether
-it was worth while continuing his suit in the
-face of such exceedingly outspoken discouragement.
-Still, he had something to say, and he
-determined to say it. He was really very much
-in love with Nora, and he wasn’t going to lose
-his chance outright just for the sake of what
-might be nothing more than a pretty girl’s provoking
-coyness.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes,’ he went on quietly, without seeming
-to notice her little interruption, ‘though you
-haven’t yet seen anything in me to care for,
-I’m going to ask you, not whether you’ll give
-me any definite promise—it was foolish of me
-to expect one on so brief an acquaintance—but
-whether you’ll kindly bear in mind that I’ve
-told you I love you—yes, I said love you’—for
-Nora had clashed her little hand aside impatiently
-at the word. ‘And remember, I shall still hope,
-until I see you again, you may yet in future<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">{53}</span>
-reconsider the question.—Don’t make me any
-promise, Miss Dupuy; and don’t repeat the
-answer you’ve already given me; but when you
-go to Trinidad, and are admired and courted as
-you needs must be, don’t wholly forget that some
-one in England once told you he loved you—loved
-you passionately.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m not likely to forget it, Mr Noel,’ Nora
-answered with malicious calmness; ‘because nobody
-ever proposed to me before, you know;
-and one’s sure not to forget one’s first offer.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Miss Dupuy, you are making game of me!
-It isn’t right of you—it isn’t generous.’</p>
-
-<p>Nora paused and looked at him again. He
-was dark, but very handsome. He looked handsomer
-still when he bridled up a little. It was
-a very nice thing to look forward to being Lady
-Noel. How all the other girls at school would
-have just jumped at it! But no; he was too
-dark by half to meet her fancy. She couldn’t
-give him the slightest encouragement. ‘Mr Noel,’
-she said, far more seriously this time, with a little
-sigh of impatience, ‘believe me, I didn’t really
-mean to offend you. I—I like you very much;
-and I’m sure I’m very much flattered indeed
-by what you’ve just been kind enough to say to
-me. I know it’s a great honour for you to ask
-me to—to ask me what you have asked me. But—you
-know, I don’t think of you in that light,
-exactly. You will understand what I mean when
-I say I can’t even leave the question open. I—I
-have nothing to reconsider.’</p>
-
-<p>Harry waited a moment in internal reflection.
-He liked her all the better because she said <i>no</i>
-to him. He was man of the world enough to
-know that ninety-nine girls out of a hundred
-would have jumped at once at such an eligible
-offer. ‘In a few months,’ he said quietly, in an
-abstracted fashion, ‘I shall be paying a visit out
-in Trinidad.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, don’t, pray, don’t,’ Nora cried hastily.
-‘It’ll be no use, Mr Noel, no use in any way.
-I’ve quite made up my mind; and I never
-change it. Don’t come out to Trinidad, I beg
-of you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I see,’ Harry said, smiling a little bitterly.
-‘Some one else has been beforehand with me
-already. No wonder. I’m not at all surprised
-at him. How could he possibly see you and
-help it?’ And he looked with unmistakable
-admiration at Nora’s face, all the prettier now
-for its deep blushes.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, Mr Noel,’ Nora answered simply. ‘There
-you are mistaken. There’s nobody—absolutely
-nobody. I’ve only just left school, you know,
-and I’ve seen no one so far that I care for in
-any way.’</p>
-
-<p>‘In that case,’ Harry Noel said, in his decided
-manner, ‘the quest will still be worth pursuing.
-No matter what you say, Miss Dupuy, we shall
-meet again—before long—in Trinidad. A young
-lady who has just left school has plenty of time
-still to reconsider her determinations.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Mr Noel! Please, don’t! It’ll be quite
-useless.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I must, Miss Dupuy; I can’t help myself.
-You will draw me after you, even if I tried to
-prevent it. I believe I have had one real passion
-in my life, and that passion will act upon me
-like a magnet on a needle for ever after. I shall
-go to Trinidad.’</p>
-
-<p>‘At anyrate, then, you’ll remember that I
-gave you no encouragement, and that for me,
-at least, my answer is final.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I <i>will</i> remember, Miss Dupuy—and I won’t
-believe it.’</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>That evening, as Marian kissed Nora good-night
-in her own bedroom at the Southampton hotel,
-she asked archly: ‘Well, Nora, what did you
-answer him?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Answer who? what?’ Nora repeated hastily,
-trying to look as if she didn’t understand the
-suppressed antecedent of the personal pronoun.</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear girl, it isn’t the least use your
-pretending you don’t know what I mean by it.
-I saw in your face, Nora, when Edward and
-I caught you up, what it was Mr Noel had
-been saying to you. And how did you answer
-him? Tell me, Nora!’</p>
-
-<p>‘I told him <i>no</i>, Marian, quite positively.’</p>
-
-<p>‘O Nora!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, I did. And he said he’d follow me out
-to Trinidad; and I told him he really needn’t
-take the trouble, because in any case I could
-never care for him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘O dear, I <i>am</i> so sorry. You wicked girl!
-And, Nora, he’s such a nice fellow too! and
-so dreadfully in love with you! You ought to
-have taken him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear Marian! He’s so awfully black,
-you know. I really believe he must positively
-be—be <i>coloured</i>.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="OUR_DOMESTICATED_OTTER">OUR DOMESTICATED OTTER.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">One</span> fine day in early autumn, while straying
-along the banks of one of the sparkling little
-trout streams which appear to be at once the
-cause and the purpose of those lovely winding
-valleys so numerous in Northern Devon, our
-attention was drawn, by a faint distressed chirping
-sound, to a small dark object stirring in the
-grass at some distance from the stream. We
-hurried to the spot, and there saw, to our great
-surprise, wet, muddy, and uneasily squirming at
-our feet, a baby otter! Poor infant! how came
-it there? By what concatenation of untoward
-circumstances did the helpless innocent find itself
-in a position so foreign to the habits of its kind?
-Its appearance under conditions so utterly at
-variance with our experience of the customs and
-manners of otter society, was so amazing, that
-we could scarcely believe our eyes. However,
-there the little creature undoubtedly was; and
-congratulating ourselves on this unlooked-for and
-valuable addition to our home menagerie—for
-these animals are rare in Devon, and to light
-upon a young scion of the race in evident
-need of a home and education was quite a piece
-of good luck—the forlorn bantling was promptly
-deposited in a coat-pocket and proudly borne
-homewards.</p>
-
-<p>Introduced to the family circle, ‘Tim’—as he
-was afterwards duly christened—became at once
-the centre of domestic interest and unceasing
-care. To feed him was necessarily our first consideration.
-A feline or canine mother deprived<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">{54}</span>
-of her young was suggested as a suitable foster-mother;
-but, unfortunately, no such animal was
-at hand, and meantime the creature must be
-fed. We therefore procured an ordinary infant’s
-feeding-bottle, and filling it with lukewarm cow’s
-milk, essayed thus to make good the absence
-of mamma-otter. At first the little stranger
-absolutely declined even to consider this arrangement,
-and in consequence pined somewhat; but
-in the end the pangs of hunger wrought a change
-in his feelings, and after several energetic though
-unscientific attempts, he overcame the difficulties
-of his new feeding apparatus, and was soon
-vigorously sucking. For a time, all went well.
-Tim, with commendable regularity, alternately
-filled himself with milk and slept peacefully in
-his basket of sweet hay. But at the close of the
-second day, a change came over our interesting
-charge; he was restless and uneasy during the
-night, and in the morning, refused to feed, and
-appeared to be suffering pain. Finally, his respiration
-became laboured and difficult, and for a
-whole day and night our hopes of rearing him
-were at the lowest ebb. But at the end of that
-time, to our great satisfaction, the distressing
-symptoms began to abate, and in a few hours
-had disappeared, and the convalescent returned
-<i>con amore</i> to his bottle. Believing his attack
-was attributable to over-feeding, we henceforth
-diluted the cow’s milk with warm water, and
-removed his bottle at the first sign of approaching
-satiety, nor did we again administer it until
-his demands for sustenance became vociferous and
-imperative. On this system we were successful
-in rearing him in the face of many prophecies
-of failure.</p>
-
-<p>At this early stage of his existence, being
-exhibited to admiring friends, he crawled laboriously
-and flatly about on the carpet, with a
-decided preference for backward motion; but
-if he encountered a perpendicular surface, such
-as the sides of his hamper or a trouser-leg, he
-would, with the aid of his claws, climb up it
-with considerable agility. He distinctly showed
-a love of warmth, and gave us to understand
-that he appreciated caresses, by nestling down
-in feminine laps, and ceasing his plaintive cry
-while our hands were about him. On awakening
-from sleep, he would begin, as do ducklings and
-chickens, with a gentle reminder of his existence
-and requirements. If no notice were taken of
-this, the note—which was something between
-the magnified chirp of a chicken and the very
-earliest bark of a puppy—would steadily increase
-in power and insistence, until it became an
-absolute clamour. When his bottle was given
-to him, he would seize on the leather teat and
-tug at it, and plunge about with a violence and
-impatience which defeated its own end, and woe
-to the unwary or awkward fingers which came
-in the way of the tiny fine white teeth at this
-moment!</p>
-
-<p>Obstacles overcome and success attained, Tim
-settled down to steady sober enjoyment; the
-webbed paws were alternately spread and closed
-like a cat’s when thoroughly content, and the
-tail curled and uncurled and wagged to and fro,
-as does a lamb’s when happily feeding. After
-the lapse of a few days, our new pet showed
-decided signs of intelligence and a sense of fun:
-he would run round after one’s finger in a
-clumsy-lively way, and a jocular poke in the
-ribs would rouse him to an awkwardly playful
-attempt to seize the offending digit. In less
-than three weeks he knew his name, and scuttled
-across the room when called, followed us about
-the garden, and endeavoured to establish friendly
-relations with a pet wild rabbit, which was
-furiously jealous of the new favourite, and
-administered sly scratches, and ‘hustled’ him
-on every possible occasion.</p>
-
-<p>About this time, he also acquired a charming
-habit of beginning, the moment the sun rose, a
-clamour which deprived half the household of
-further sleep, and which was only to be quieted
-by his being taken into some one’s bed, where he
-would at once ‘snuggle’ down and lie motionless
-for hours. At first we resisted this importunity
-on the part of Tim, partly because an otter is not
-exactly the animal one would select as a bedfellow,
-and partly because we could not think
-it a desirable or wholesome habit for the creature
-itself. But Master Tim was too much for us. ‘If
-you won’t let me sleep with you, you shan’t sleep
-at all!’ he declared in unmistakable language,
-and by dint of sticking to his point he carried
-it.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the first month of his civilised
-life, some one gave him a scrap of raw meat;
-and after that, though he ate bread and milk
-very contentedly between times, he made us
-understand that his constitution required the
-support of animal food, and was never satisfied
-without his daily ration of uncooked flesh. Fish,
-strange to say, he seemed to prefer cooked.
-When we were seated at meals, a hand held down
-would bring Tim quickly to one’s side with an
-eager look in the small yellow eyes; his cold
-nose sniffed at one’s fingers with rapid closing
-and unclosing of the curiously formed nostrils;
-the softly furred head would be thrust into the
-palm in search of the expected dainty morsel.
-If none were to be found, his temper would be
-sadly ruffled, sometimes to the extent of inflicting
-with his teeth a sharp reminder that not even
-an otter’s feelings should be trifled with!</p>
-
-<p>As he grew older, he developed an amount
-of intelligence scarcely to be expected from the
-small brain contained in the flat and somewhat
-snake-like head; he showed decided preferences
-for some members of the family over others; if
-permitted, he would follow everywhere at our
-heels like a dog, and played with the children
-after the manner of one, but with awkward
-springs and jumps that put us in mind of a
-particularly ungraceful lamb. He occasionally
-made quite energetic assaults on the ankles of
-some of the ladies of the family; and if he perceived
-that the owner of unprotected ankles went
-in fear of him, showed a malicious pleasure in
-renewing the attack at every favourable opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>When the children went for a country ramble,
-Tim frequently accompanied them, taking the
-greatest delight in these excursions. He would
-be carried until beyond danger from wandering<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">{55}</span>
-dogs, and then being set at liberty, the fun would
-begin. Master Tim, all eagerness, trotting on
-before in search of interesting facts, the children
-take advantage of a moment when all his
-faculties are engaged with some novelty attractive
-to the otter mind, to vanish through a neighbouring
-gate or behind a haystack. The unusual
-quiet soon arouses Tim’s suspicions; he looks
-round, and finds himself alone. The situation,
-from its strangeness, is appalling to him; he
-utters a shriek of despair, and scurries back as
-fast as his legs can take him, squeaking loudly all
-the time. If he should chance, in his fright, to
-pass by the hiding-place of his young protectors
-without discovering them, great is their delight.
-One little face after another peers out and
-watches, with mischievous glee, poor Tim’s plump
-and anxious form trundling along as fast as is
-possible to it in the wrong direction! But very
-soon the humour of the situation is too much
-for some young spirit, and a smothered laugh
-or a half-suppressed giggle reaches the tiny sharp
-ears, and Tim quickly turns, and with another
-shriek of mingled satisfaction and indignation,
-gives chase to his playful tormentors. Once
-arrived in the open meadows, where this novel
-game of hide-and-seek is not possible, it is
-Tim’s turn. Still, he follows obediently enough,
-frisking and gamboling in the fresh soft grass,
-until one of the innumerable small streams is
-approached. As soon as he catches sight of the
-water, he is off. At a rapid trot he hurries to
-the brink, and with swift and noiseless dart, in
-a flash he has disappeared in the current, and in
-another reappeared some yards away. Rolling
-over, turning, twisting, diving, he revels in his
-cold bath, and it is sometimes a matter of no
-small difficulty to get him out of the water. A
-cordon of children is formed—the two biggest
-with bare feet and legs, to cut off his retreat up
-and down stream—which, gradually closing in
-on him, seizes him at last; and reluctantly he is
-compelled to dry himself in the grass preparatory
-to returning to the forms and ceremonies of
-civilised life.</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 VI.</h3>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">How</span> do you feel now, Margaret?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Nearly over, Miss Nelly. I shall die with
-the morning.’</p>
-
-<p>A week later, and the patient had got gradually
-worse. The constant exposure, the hard
-life, and the weeks of semi-starvation, had told
-its tale on the weak womanly frame. The
-exposure in the rain and cold on that eventful
-night had hastened on the consumption which
-had long settled in the delicate chest. All signs
-of mental exhaustion had passed away, and the
-calm hopeful waiting frame of mind had succeeded.
-She was waiting for death; not with
-any feeling of terror, but with hopefulness and
-expectation.</p>
-
-<p>Up to the present, Eleanor had not the heart
-to ask for any memento or remembrance of the
-old life; but had nursed her patient with an
-unceasing watchful care, which only a true
-woman is capable of. All that day she had sat
-beside the bed, never moving, but noting, as
-hour after hour passed steadily away, the gradual
-change from feverish restlessness to quiet content,
-never speaking, or causing her patient to speak,
-though she was longing for some word or
-sign.</p>
-
-<p>‘You have been very good to me, Miss Nelly.
-Had it not been for you, where should I have
-been now!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Hush, Margaret; don’t speak like that. Remember,
-everything is forgiven now. Where
-there is great temptation, there is much forgiveness.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope so, miss—I hope so. Some day, we
-shall all know.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t try to talk too much.’</p>
-
-<p>For a while she lay back, her face, with its
-bright hectic flush, marked out in painful contrast
-to the white pillow. Eleanor watched her
-with a look of infinite pity and tenderness. The
-distant hum of busy Holborn came with dull
-force into the room, and the heavy rain beat upon
-the windows like a mournful dirge. The little
-American clock on the mantel-shelf was the only
-sound, save the dry painful cough, which ever
-and anon proceeded from the dying woman’s lips.
-The night sped on; the sullen roar of the distant
-traffic grew less and less; the wind dropped,
-and the girl’s hard breathing could be heard
-painfully and distinctly. Presently, a change
-came over her face—a kind of bright, almost
-unearthly intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>‘Are you in any pain, Madge?’ Eleanor asked
-with pitying air.</p>
-
-<p>‘How much lighter it is!’ said the dying girl.
-‘My head is quite clear now, miss, and all the
-pain has gone.—Miss Nelly, I have been dreaming
-of the old home. Do you remember how we
-used to sit by the old fountain under the weeping-ash,
-and wonder what our fortunes would be? I
-little thought it would come to this.—Tell me,
-miss, are you in—in want?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not exactly, Madge; but the struggle is hard
-sometimes.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I thought so,’ the dying girl continued. ‘I
-would have helped you after <i>she</i> came; but you
-know the power she had over your poor uncle,
-a power that increased daily. She used to
-frighten me. I tremble now when I think of
-her.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t think of her,’ said Eleanor soothingly.
-‘Try and rest a little, and not talk. It cannot be
-good for you.’</p>
-
-<p>The sufferer smiled painfully, and a terrible
-fit of coughing shook her frame. When she
-recovered, she continued: ‘It is no use, Miss
-Nelly: all the rest and all your kind nursing
-cannot save me now. I used to wonder, when
-you left Eastwood so suddenly, why you did not
-take me; but now I know it is all for the best.
-Until the very last, I stayed in the house.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And did not my uncle give you any message,
-any letter for me?’ asked Eleanor, with an
-eagerness she could not conceal.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am coming to that. The day he died, I was
-in his room, for she was away, and he asked me
-if I ever heard from you. I knew you had
-written letters to him which he never got; and
-so I told him. Then he gave me a paper for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">{56}</span>
-you, which he made me swear to deliver to you
-by my own hand; and I promised to find you.
-You know how I found you,’ she continued
-brokenly, burying her face in her hands.</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t think of that now, Margaret,’ said
-Eleanor, taking one wasted hand in her own.
-‘That is past and forgiven.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope so, miss. Please, bring me that dress,
-and I will discharge my trust before it is too
-late. Take a pair of scissors and unpick the
-seams inside the bosom on the left side.’</p>
-
-<p>The speaker watched Eleanor with feverish
-impatience, whilst, with trembling fingers, she
-followed the instructions. Not until she had
-drawn out a flat parcel, wrapped securely in oiled
-paper, did the look of impatience transform to an
-air of relief.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, that is it,’ said Margaret, as Eleanor tore
-off the covering. ‘I have seen the letter, and
-have a strange feeling that it contains some secret,
-it is so vague and rambling, and those dotted
-lines across it are so strange. Your uncle was
-so terribly in earnest, that I cannot but think
-the paper has some hidden meaning. Please,
-read it to me. Perhaps I can make something
-of it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It certainly does appear strange,’ observed
-Eleanor, with suppressed excitement.</p>
-
-<p>Turning towards the light, Eleanor read as
-follows:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp74" id="i_056" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_056.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>Darling, we must now be friends. Remember, Nelly, in
-the garden you promised to obey my wishes. Under the
-care of Miss Wakefield I hoped you would improve
-but now I see it was not to be, and as prudence
-teaches us that all is for the best I must be
-content. Ask Edgar to forgive me the wrong I
-have done you both in the past, and this I feel
-his generous heart will not withhold from me.
-Now that it is too late I see how blind I have
-been, and could I live my life over again how
-different things would be. Times are changed, yet
-the memory of past days lingers within me, and like
-Niobe, I mourn you. When I am gone you will
-find my blessing a gift that is better than money.</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The paper was half a sheet of ordinary foolscap,
-and the words were written without a single
-break or margin. It was divided perpendicularly
-by five dotted lines, and by four lines
-horizontally, and displayed nothing to the casual
-eye but an ordinary letter in a feeble handwriting.</p>
-
-<p>The tiny threads of fate had begun to gather.
-All yet was dark and misty; but in the gloom,
-faint and transient, was one small ray of light.</p>
-
-<p>Eleanor gazed at the paper abstractedly for a
-few moments, vaguely trying to find some hidden
-clue to the mystery.</p>
-
-<p>‘You must take care of that paper, Miss Nelly.
-Something tells me it contains a secret.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And have you been searching for me two long
-years, for the sole purpose of giving me this?’
-Eleanor asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, miss,’ the sufferer replied simply. ‘I promised,
-you know. Indeed, I could not look at
-your uncle and break a vow like mine.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And you came to London on purpose?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes. No one knew where I was gone. I
-have no friends that I remember, and so I came
-to London. It is an old tale, miss. Trying day
-by day to get employment, and as regularly failing.
-I have tried many things the last two bitter
-years. I have existed—I cannot call it living—in
-the vilest parts of London, and tried to keep
-myself by my needle; but that only means dying
-by inches. God alone knows the struggle it is for
-a friendless woman here to keep honest and virtuous.
-The temptation is awful; and as I have
-been so sorely tried, I hope it will count in my
-favour hereafter. I have seen sights that the
-wealthy world knows nothing of. I have lived<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">{57}</span>
-where a well-dressed man or woman dare not set
-foot. Oh, the wealth and the misery of this place
-they call London!’</p>
-
-<p>‘And you have suffered like this for me?’
-Eleanor said, the tears now streaming down
-her face. ‘You have gone through all this
-simply for my sake? Do you know, Madge,
-what a thoroughly good woman you really
-are?’</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>I</i>, miss?’ the dying girl exclaimed in surprise.
-‘How can I possibly be that, when you know
-what you do of me! O no; I am a miserable
-sinner by the side of you. Do you think, Miss
-Nelly, I shall be forgiven?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I do not doubt it,’ said Eleanor softly; ‘I
-cannot doubt it. How many in your situation
-could have withstood your temptation?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am so glad you think so, miss; it is comfort
-to me to hear you say that. You were
-always so good to me,’ she continued gratefully.
-‘Do you know, Miss Nelly dear, whenever I
-thought of death, I always pictured you as being
-by my side?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you feel any pain or restlessness now,
-Margaret?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, miss; thank you. I feel quite peaceful
-and contented. I have done my task, though it
-has been a hard one at times. I don’t think
-I could have rested in my grave if I had not
-seen you.—Lift me up a little higher, please, and
-come a little closer. I can scarcely see you now.
-My eyes are quite misty. I wonder if all dying
-people think about their younger days, Miss
-Nelly? <i>I</i> do. I can see it all distinctly: the
-old broken fountain under the tree, where we
-used to sit and talk about the days to come;
-and how happy we all were there before she
-came. Your uncle was a different man then,
-when he sat with us and listened to your singing
-hymns. Sing me one of the old hymns
-now, please.’</p>
-
-<p>In a subdued key, Eleanor sang <i>Abide with me</i>,
-the listener moving her pallid lips to the words.
-Presently, the singer finished, and the dying girl
-lay quiet for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>‘Abide with me. How sweet it sounds!
-“Swift to its close ebbs out life’s little day.”
-I am glad you chose my favourite hymn, Miss
-Nelly. I shall die repeating these words: “The
-darkness deepens; Lord, with me abide.” Now
-it is darker still; but I can feel your hand in
-mine, and I am safe. I did not think death was
-so blessed and peaceful as this. I am going, going—floating
-away.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Margaret, speak to me!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Just one word more. How light it is getting!
-Is it morning? I can see. I think I am forgiven.
-I feel better, better! quite forgiven. Light, light,
-light! everywhere. I can see at last.’</p>
-
-<p>It was all over. The weary aching heart was
-at rest. Only a woman, done to death in the
-flower of youth by starvation and exposure; but
-not before her task was done, her work accomplished.
-No lofty ambition to stir her pulses,
-no great goal to point to for its end. Only a
-woman, who had given her life to carry out a
-dying trust; only a woman, who had preserved
-virtue and honesty amid the direst temptation.
-What an epitaph for a gravestone! A eulogy
-that needs no glittering marble to point the way
-up to the Great White Throne.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
-
-<p>Mr Carver sat in his private office a few days
-later, with Margaret’s legacy before him. A
-hundred times he had turned the paper over.
-He had held it to the light; he had looked at
-it upside down, and he had looked at it sideways
-and longways; in fact, every way that his
-ingenuity could devise. He had even held it to
-the fire, in faint hopes of sympathetic ink; but
-his labour had met with no reward. The secret
-was not discovered.</p>
-
-<p>The astute legal gentleman consulted his diary,
-where he had carefully noted down all the facts
-of the extraordinary case; and the more he studied
-the matter, the more convinced he became that
-there was a mystery concealed somewhere; and,
-moreover, that the key was in his hands, only,
-unfortunately, the key was a complicated one.
-Indeed, to such absurd lengths had he gone in
-the matter, that Edgar Allan Poe’s romances of
-<i>The Gold Bug</i> and <i>The Purloined Letter</i> lay before
-him, and his study of those ingenious narratives
-had permeated his brain to such an extent lately,
-that he had begun to discover mystery in everything.
-The tales of the American genius convinced
-him that the solution was a simple one—provokingly
-simple, only, like all simple things,
-the hardest of attainment. He was quite aware
-of the methodical habits of his late client, Mr
-Morton, and felt that such a man could not
-have written such a letter, even on his dying
-bed, unless he had a powerful motive in so
-doing. Despite the uneasy consciousness that
-the affair was a ludicrous one to engage the
-attention of a sober business man like himself,
-he could not shake off the fascination which held
-him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Pretty sort of thing this for a man at my
-time of life to get mixed up in,’ he muttered to
-himself. ‘What would the profession say if they
-knew Richard Carver had taken to read detective
-romances in business hours? I shall find myself
-writing poetry some day, if I don’t take care,
-and coming to the office in a billy-cock hat and
-turn-down collar. I feel like the heavy father
-in the transpontine drama; but when I look in
-that girl’s eyes, I feel fit for any lunacy. Pshaw!—Bates!’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Bates entered the apartment at his superior’s
-bidding. ‘Well, sir?’ he said. The estimable
-Bates was a man of few words.</p>
-
-<p>‘I can <i>not</i> make this thing out,’ exclaimed
-Mr Carver, rubbing his head in irritating perplexity.
-‘The more I look at it the worse it
-seems. Yet I am convinced’——</p>
-
-<p>‘That there is some mystery about it!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Precisely what I was going to remark. Now,
-Bates, we must—we really must—unravel this
-complication. I feel convinced that there is
-something hidden here. You must lend me your
-aid in the matter. There is a lot at stake. For
-instance, if’——</p>
-
-<p>‘We get it out properly, I get my partnership;
-if not, I shall have to—whistle for it, sir!’</p>
-
-<p>‘You are a very wonderful fellow, Bates—very.
-That is precisely what I was going to say,’ Mr
-Carver exclaimed admiringly. ‘Now, I have
-been reading a book—a standard work, I may
-say.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">{58}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Williams’s Executors, sir, or——?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No,’ said Mr Carver shortly, and not without
-some confusion; ‘it is not that admirable volume—it
-is, in fact, a—a romance.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Bates coughed dryly, but respectfully,
-behind his hand. ‘I beg your pardon, sir; I
-don’t quite understand. Do you mean you have
-been reading a—novel?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, not exactly,’ replied Mr Carver blushing
-faintly. ‘It is, as I have said, a romance—a
-romance,’ he continued with an emphasis upon
-the substantive, to mark the difference between
-that and an ordinary work of fiction. ‘It is a
-book treating upon hidden things, and explaining,
-in a light and pleasant way, the method of logically
-working out a problem by common-sense.
-Now, for instance, in the passage I have marked,
-an allusion is made, by way of example.—Did
-you ever—ha, ha! play at marbles, Bates?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, sir, many years ago, I might have
-indulged in that little amusement,’ Mr Bates
-admitted with professional caution; ‘but really,
-sir, it is such a long time ago, that I hardly
-remember.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very good, Bates. Now, in the course of
-your experience upon the subject of marbles, do
-you ever remember playing a game called “Odd
-and Even?”’</p>
-
-<p>Bates looked at his principal in utter amazement,
-and Mr Carver, catching the expression of
-his face, burst into a hearty laugh, faintly echoed
-by the bewildered clerk. The notion of two
-gray-headed men solemnly discussing a game of
-marbles in business hours, suddenly struck him
-as being particularly ludicrous.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, sir,’ Bates said with a look of relief,
-‘I don’t remember the fascinating amusement
-you speak of, and I was wondering what it
-could possibly have to do with the case in
-point.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I won’t go into it now; but if you
-should like to read it for yourself, there it is,’
-said Mr Carver, pushing over the yellow-bound
-volume to his subordinate.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Bates eyed the volume suspiciously, and
-touched it gingerly with his forefinger. ‘As a
-matter of professional duty, sir, if you desire
-it, I will read the matter you refer to; but if
-it is a question of recreation, then, sir, with your
-permission, I would rather not.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That is a hint for me, I suppose, Bates,’ said
-Mr Carver with much good-humour, ‘not to
-occupy my time with frivolous literature.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, sir, I do not consider these the sort
-of books for a place on a solicitor’s table; but
-I suppose you know best.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t think such a thing has happened
-before, Bates,’ Mr Carver answered with humility.
-‘You see, this is an exceptional case, and I take
-great interest in the parties.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, there is something in that,’ said Mr
-Bates severely, ‘so I suppose we must admit it
-on this occasion.—But don’t you think, sir, there
-is some way of getting to the bottom of this
-affair, without wasting valuable time on such
-stuff as that?’ and he pointed contemptuously
-at the book before him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps so, Bates—perhaps so. I think the
-best thing we can do is to consult an expert.
-Not a man who is versed in writings, but one
-of those clever gentlemen who make a study
-of ciphers. For all we know, there may be a
-common form of cipher in this paper.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That is my opinion, sir. Depend upon it,
-marbles have nothing to do with this mystery.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Mr Seaton wishes to see you, sir,’ said a clerk
-at this moment.</p>
-
-<p>‘Indeed! Ask him to come in.—Good-morning,
-my dear sir,’ as Seaton entered. ‘We have
-just been discussing your little affair, Bates and
-I; but we can make nothing of it—positively
-nothing.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No; I suppose not,’ Edgar replied lightly. ‘I,
-for my part, cannot understand your making so
-much of a common scrap of paper. Depend upon
-it, the precious document is only an ordinary
-valedictory letter after all. Take my advice—throw
-it in the fire, and think no more about
-it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Certainly not, sir,’ Mr Carver replied indignantly.
-‘I don’t for one moment believe it to
-be anything but an important cipher.—What are
-you smiling at?’</p>
-
-<p>Edgar had caught sight of the yellow volume
-on the table, and could not repress a smile.
-‘Have you read those tales?’ he said.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, I have; and they are particularly interesting.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then I won’t say any more,’ Edgar replied.
-‘When a man is fresh from these romances, he
-is incapable of regarding ordinary life for a time.
-But the disease cures itself. In the course of
-a month or so, you will begin to forget these
-complications, and probably burn that fatal
-paper.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I intend to do nothing of the sort; I am
-going to submit it to an expert this afternoon,
-and get his opinion.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes. And he will keep it for a fortnight,
-after reading it over once, and then you will
-get an elaborate report, covering some sheets of
-paper, stating that it is an ordinary letter. Who
-was the enemy who lent you Poe’s works?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I read those books before you were born,
-young man; and I may tell you—apart from
-them—that I am fully convinced that there is
-a mystery somewhere. ’Pon my word, you take
-the matter very coolly, considering all things.
-But let us put aside the mystery for a time,
-and tell me something of yourself.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am looking up now, thanks to you and
-Felix,’ Edgar replied gratefully. ‘I have an
-appointment at last.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am sure I am heartily glad to hear it.
-What is it?’</p>
-
-<p>‘It was the doing of Felix, of course. The
-editor of <i>Mayfair</i> was rather taken by my
-descriptive style in a paper which Felix showed
-him, and made me an offer of doing the principal
-continental gambling-houses in London.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Um,’ said Mr Carver doubtfully. ‘And the
-pay?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Is particularly good, besides which, I have
-the entrée of these places—the golden key, you
-know.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Have you told your wife about it?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, not altogether; she might imagine it
-was dangerous for me. She knows partly what
-I am doing; but I must not frighten her. I
-have had two nights of it, and apart from the
-excitement and the heat, it is certainly not
-dangerous.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">{59}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I am glad of that,’ said Mr Carver; ‘and
-am heartily pleased to hear of your success—providing
-it lasts.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, it is sure to last, for I have hundreds
-of places to go to. To-night I am going to a
-foreign place in Leicester Square. I go about
-midnight, and think I may generally be able to
-get home about two. I have to go alone
-always.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I hope now you have started, you
-will continue as well,’ Mr Carver said heartily;
-‘at anyrate, you can continue until I unravel
-the mystery, and place you in possession of your
-fortune. Until then, it will do very well.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am not going to count on that,’ Edgar
-replied; ‘and if it is a failure, I shall not be
-so disappointed as you, I fancy.’</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
-
-<p>It wanted a few minutes to eleven o’clock,
-the same night when Seaton turned into Long
-Acre on his peculiar business. A sharp walk
-soon brought him to the Alhambra, whence
-the people were pouring out into the square.
-Turning down —— Street, he soon reached his
-destination—a long narrow house, in total darkness—a
-sombre contrast to the neighbouring
-buildings, which were mostly a blaze of light,
-and busy with the occupations of life. A quiet
-double rap for some time produced no impression;
-and just as he had stood upon the doorstep
-long enough to acquire considerable impatience,
-a sliding panel in the door was pushed
-back, and a face, in the dim gas-light, was
-obtruded. A short but somewhat enigmatical
-conversation ensued, at the end of which the
-door was grudgingly opened, and Edgar found
-himself in black darkness. The truculent attendant
-having barricaded the exit, gave a
-peculiar whistle, and immediately the light
-in the hall was turned up. It was a perfectly
-bare place; but the carpet underfoot was
-of the heaviest texture, and apparently—as an
-extra precaution—had been covered with india-rubber
-matting, so that the footsteps were perfectly
-deadened; indeed, not the slightest footfall
-could be heard. Following his guide in the
-direction of the rear of the house, and ascending
-a short flight of steps, Edgar was thrust
-unceremoniously into a dark room, the door
-of which was immediately closed behind him
-and locked. For a few seconds, Edgar stood
-quite at a loss to understand his position, till
-the peculiar whistle was again repeated, and
-immediately, as if by magic, the room was brilliantly
-lighted. When Edgar recovered from
-the glare, he looked curiously around. It was
-a large room, without windows, save a long
-skylight, and furnished with an evident aim at
-culture; but though the furniture was handsome,
-it was too gaudy to please a tasteful eye.
-The principal component parts consisted of glass
-gilt and crimson velvet; quite the sort of apartment
-that the boy-hero discovers, when he is
-led with dauntless mien and defiant eye into the
-presence of the Pirate king; and indeed some
-of the faces of the men seated around the green
-board would have done perfectly well for that
-bloodthirsty favourite of our juvenile fiction.</p>
-
-<p>There were some thirty men in the room, two-thirds
-of them playing rouge-et-noir; nor did
-they cease their rapt attention to the game for
-one moment to survey the new-comer, that office
-being perfectly filled by the Argus-eyed proprietor,
-who was moving unceasingly about the
-room. ‘Will you play, sare?’ he said insinuatingly
-to Edgar, who was leisurely surveying
-the group and making little mental notes for his
-guidance.</p>
-
-<p>‘Thanks! Presently, when I have finished my
-cigar,’ he replied.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ver good, sare, ver good. Will not m’sieu
-take some refreshment—a leetle champein or
-eau-de-vie?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Anything,’ Edgar replied carelessly, as the
-polite proprietor proceeded to get the desired
-refreshment.</p>
-
-<p>For a few minutes, Edgar sat watching his
-incongruous companions, as he drank sparingly
-of the champagne before him. The gathering was
-of the usual run of such places, mostly foreigners,
-as befitted the neighbourhood, and not particularly
-desirable foreigners at that. On the green
-table the stakes were apparently small, for Edgar
-could see nothing but silver, with here and there
-a piece of gold. At a smaller table four men
-were playing the game called poker for small
-stakes; but what particularly interested Edgar
-was a young man deep in the fascination of écarté
-with a man who to him was evidently a stranger.
-The younger man—quite a boy, in fact—was
-losing heavily, and the money on the table here
-was gold alone, with some bank-notes. Directly
-Edgar saw the older man, who was winning
-steadily, he knew him at once; only two nights
-before he had seen him in a gambling-house at
-the West End playing the same game, with the
-same result. Standing behind the winner was
-a sinister-looking scoundrel, backing the winner’s
-luck with the unfortunate youngster, and occasionally
-winning a half-crown from a tall raw-looking
-American, who was apparently simple
-enough to risk his money on the loser. Attracted
-by some impulse he could not understand, Edgar
-quitted his seat and took his stand alongside
-the stranger, who was losing his money with
-such simple good-nature.</p>
-
-<p>‘Stranger, you have all the luck, and that’s
-a fact. There goes another piece of my family
-plate. Your business is better’n gold-mining,
-and I want you to believe it,’ drawled the
-American, passing another half-crown across the
-table.</p>
-
-<p>‘You are a bit unlucky,’ replied the stranger,
-with a flash of his white teeth; ‘but your turn
-will come, particularly as the young gentleman
-is really the better player. I should back him
-myself, only I believe in a man’s luck.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Wall, now, I shouldn’t wonder if the younker
-is the best player,’ the American replied, with
-an emphasis on the last word. ‘So I fancy I
-shall give him another trial. He’s a bit like a
-young hoss, he is—but he’s honest.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You don’t mean to insinuate we’re not on
-the square, eh?’ said the lucky player sullenly;
-‘because, if that is so’——</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, don’t you get riled, don’t,’ said the
-American soothingly. ‘I’m a peaceable individual,
-and apt to get easily frightened. I’m a-goin’
-to back the young un again.’</p>
-
-<p>The game proceeded: the younger man lost.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">{60}</span>
-Another game followed, the American backing
-him again, and gradually, in his excitement,
-bending further and further over the table. The
-players, deep in his movements, scarcely noticed
-him.</p>
-
-<p>‘My game!’ said the elder man triumphantly.
-‘Did you ever see such luck in your life? Here
-is the king again.’</p>
-
-<p>The American, quick as thought, picked up the
-pack of cards and turned them leisurely over
-in his hand. ‘Wall, now, stranger,’ he said,
-with great distinctness, ‘I don’t know much about
-cards, and that’s a fact. I’ve seen some strange
-things in my time, but I never—no, never—seed a
-pack of cards before with two kings of the same suit.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It must be a mistake,’ exclaimed the stranger,
-jumping to his feet with an oath. ‘Perhaps the
-cards have got mixed.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Wall, it’s not a nice mistake, I reckon. Out
-to Frisco, I seed a gentleman of your persuasion
-dance at his own funeral for a mistake like that.
-He didn’t dance long, and the exertion killed
-him; at least that’s what the crowner’s jury said.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you mean to insinuate that I’m a
-swindler, sir? Do you mean to infer that I
-cheated this gentleman?’ blustered the detected
-sharper, approaching the speaker with a menacing
-air.</p>
-
-<p>‘That <i>is</i> about the longitude of it,’ replied the
-American cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p>Without another word and without the slightest
-warning, the swindler rushed at the American;
-but he had evidently reckoned without his host,
-for he was met by a crashing blow full in the
-face, which sent him reeling across the room.
-His colleague deeming discretion the better part
-of valour, and warned by a menacing glance from
-Edgar, desisted from his evident intention of
-aiding in the attack.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the sinister proprietor and the
-players from the other tables had gathered
-round, evidently, from the expression of their
-eyes, ripe for any sort of mischief and plunder.
-Clearly, the little group were in a desperate
-strait.</p>
-
-<p>‘Have it out,’ whispered Edgar eagerly to his
-gaunt companion. ‘I’m quite with you. They
-certainly mean mischief.’</p>
-
-<p>‘All right, Britisher,’ replied the American
-coolly. ‘I’ll pull through it somehow. Keep
-your back to mine.’</p>
-
-<p>The proprietor was the first to speak. ‘I
-understand, sare, you accuse one of my customer
-of the cheat. Cheat yourself—pah!’ he said,
-snapping his fingers in the American’s face.
-‘Who are you, sare, that comes here to accuse
-of the cheat?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Look here,’ said the American grimly. ‘My
-name is Æneas B. Slimm, generally known as
-Long Ben. I don’t easily rile, you grinning
-little monkey; but when I do rile, I rile hard,
-and that’s a fact. I ain’t been in the mines for
-ten years without knowing a scoundrel when I
-meet him, and I never had the privilege of
-seein’ such a fine sample as I see around me to-night.
-Now you open that door right away;
-you hear me say it.’</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchman clenched his teeth determinedly,
-but did not speak, and the crowd
-gathered more closely around the trio.</p>
-
-<p>‘Stand back!’ shouted Mr Slimm—‘stand back,
-or some of ye will suffer. Will you open that
-door?’</p>
-
-<p>The only answer was a rush by some one
-in the crowd, a movement which that some one
-bitterly repented, for the iron-clamped toe of the
-American’s boot struck him prone to the floor, sick
-and faint with the pain. At this moment the
-peculiar whistle was heard, and the room was
-instantly in darkness. Before the crowd could
-collect themselves for a rush, Mr Slimm passed
-his hand beneath his long coat-tails and produced
-a flat lantern, which was fastened round his waist
-like a policeman’s, and which gave sufficient light
-to guard against any attack; certainly enough
-light to show the hungry swindlers the cold
-gleam of a revolver barrel covering the assembly.
-The American passed a second weapon to Edgar,
-and stood calmly waiting for the next move.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now,’ he said, sullenly and distinctly, ‘I think
-we are quits. We air going to leave this pleasant
-company right away, but first we propose to do
-justice. Where is the artist who plays cards with
-two kings of one suit? He’d better come forward,
-because this weapon has a bad way of going off.
-He need not fancy I can’t see him, because I can.
-He is skulking behind the brigand with the earrings.’</p>
-
-<p>The detected swindler came forward sullenly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Young man,’ said Mr Slimm, turning towards
-the boy who had been losing so heavily, ‘how
-much have you lost?’</p>
-
-<p>The youngster thought a moment, and said
-about twenty pounds.</p>
-
-<p>‘Twenty pounds. Very good.—Now, my friend,
-I’m going to trouble you for the loan of twenty
-pounds. I don’t expect to be in a position to pay
-you back just at present; but until I do, you can
-console yourself by remembering that virtue is its
-own reward. Come, no sulking; shell out that
-money, or’——</p>
-
-<p>With great reluctance, the sharper produced
-the money and handed it over to the youth.
-The American watched the transaction with
-grave satisfaction, and then turned to the landlord.
-‘Mr Frenchman, we wish you a very
-good-night. We have not been very profitable
-customers, nor have we trespassed upon your
-hospitality. If you want payment badly, you
-can get it out of the thief who won my half-crowns.—Good-night,
-gentlemen; we may meet
-again. If we do, and I am on the jury, I’ll
-give you the benefit of the doubt.’</p>
-
-<p>A moment later, they were in the street, and
-walking away at a brisk pace, the ungrateful
-youth disappearing with all speed.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am much obliged to you,’ Edgar said admiringly;
-‘I would give something to have your pluck
-and coolness.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Practice,’ replied the American dryly. ‘That
-isn’t what I call a scrape—that’s only a little
-amusement. But I was rather glad you were
-with me. I like the look of your face; there’s
-plenty of character there. As to that pesky young
-snip, if I’d known he was going to slip off like
-that, do you think I should have bothered about
-his money for him? No, sir.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">{61}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I fancy he was too frightened to say or do
-much.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps so.—Have a cigar?—I daresay he’s
-some worn-out roué of eighteen, all his nerves
-destroyed by late hours and dissipation, at a time
-when he ought to be still at his books.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you always get over a thing as calmly as
-this affair?’ asked Edgar, at the same time manipulating
-one of his companion’s huge cigars. ‘I
-don’t think dissipation has had much effect on
-<i>your</i> nerves.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, it don’t, and that’s a fact,’ Mr Slimm
-admitted candidly; ‘and I’ve had my fling too.—I
-tell you what it is, Mr—Mr’——</p>
-
-<p>‘Seaton—Edgar Seaton is my name.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Mr Seaton, I’ve looked death in the
-face too often to be put out by a little thing like
-that. When a man has slept, as I have, in the
-mines with a matter of one thousand ounces of
-gold in his tent for six weeks, among the most
-awful blackguards in the world, and plucky blackguards
-too, his nerves are fit for most anything
-afterwards. That’s what I done, ay, and had
-to fight for it more than once.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But that does not seem so bad as some
-dangers.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Isn’t it?’ replied the American with a shudder.
-‘When you wake up and find yourself in bed
-with a rattlesnake, you’ve got a chance then;
-when you are on the ground with a panther over
-you, there is just a squeak then; but to go to
-sleep expecting to wake up with a knife in your
-ribs, is quite another apple.—Well, I must say
-good-night. Here is Covent Garden. I am staying
-at the <i>Bedford</i>. Come and breakfast with
-me to-morrow, and don’t forget to ask for Æneas
-Slimm.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I will come,’ said Edgar, with a hearty handshake.—‘Good-night.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SNOW-BLOSSOM">SNOW-BLOSSOM.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Under</span> the above title, Professor Wittrock, in
-<i>Nordenskjöld’s Studies and Researches in the Far
-North</i>, has given us a wonderful and exhaustive
-account of the lowest order of plants—those
-which have their existence on the surface of
-the snow and ice, and colour the monotonous
-white or dirty gray of the everlasting snowfields
-with the warmest and most lovely rosy red and
-crimson, vivid green, and soft brown, until it
-almost appears as if these frigid zones have also
-their time of spring and blossom.</p>
-
-<p>Late researches go to show that the snow and
-ice flora is far greater and richer than was at
-one time supposed. Formerly, people had only
-heard of ‘red snow’—which Agardh poetically
-calls ‘snow-blossoms’—and ‘green snow,’ first
-discovered by the botanist Unger—specimens of
-which were brought from Spitzbergen by Dr
-Kjellmann, and from Greenland by Dr Berlin.
-But a closer examination has discovered in the
-‘green snow’ about a dozen different kinds of
-plants, and these not merely comprising the
-<i>lowest</i> order, but also including some mosses.
-The latter, however, were only in their germinating
-state, looking like the green threads of
-algæ, and therefore showing a much inferior
-degree of development to that which they would
-have if growing on a warmer substratum. The
-flora of the loose snow, too, is generally far richer
-than that of the solid ice; already forty different
-varieties of plants having been found, which
-number will no doubt be greatly increased by
-every fresh expedition to the arctic zone. On
-the solid ice, only ten different kinds have been
-observed.</p>
-
-<p>There is a great difference between the real
-ice and snow plants which grow exclusively
-on the snow-line and those hardened children
-of the sun which only grow on the snow.
-The latter all belong to the one-celled microscopic
-algæ of the lowest order, which increase
-by partition, possessing no generic character, and
-generally appearing in large horizontal masses of
-vegetable matter. They are also distinguished
-by seldom having the pure green chlorophyll
-colour of other plants, but instead display shades
-of red, brown, and sap green, whence they have
-been named coloured algæ.</p>
-
-<p>Some botanists suppose that the chief and
-most numerous of all the algæ, the red snow,
-only represents a lower state of a higher class
-of algæ which has never attained to full development
-in the region of perpetual snow; and this
-supposition is the more remarkable, as the brilliant
-red granules of this species—about the
-four-thousandth part of an inch in diameter—probably
-surpass in reproductive powers every
-other plant. They cover enormous tracts of snow
-in such dense masses that it sometimes appears
-as if the snow was coloured blood-red to the depth
-of several feet. Ever since it was first found,
-red snow has greatly exercised the minds of the
-learned. It is often mentioned in old writings,
-though whether the red snow referred to took
-its colour from the red algæ or from the meteor-dust
-which contains iron, is not certain. But
-there is no doubt that it was the real red-snow
-algæ which De Saussure found in his Alpine expeditions.
-He mentions this phenomenon several
-times in 1760, and states that he had found the
-most beautiful species on Mont St Bernard, but
-had thought it must be pollen, wafted thither
-by the wind, although he knew of no plant that
-had that kind of red pollen.</p>
-
-<p>The knowledge that the red snow of the polar
-regions and mountains owes its colour to a living
-plant, only dates from the year 1818, when Ross
-and Parry made their celebrated polar expedition,
-and Ross discovered the ‘crimson cliffs’ of the
-coast of Greenland, six hundred feet above the
-level of the sea. Here the red snow coloured
-the rocky walls of Baffin’s Bay a rich glowing
-crimson, reaching in some parts to a depth of nine
-or ten feet, and close to Cape York extending
-over a distance of eight nautical miles. Various
-were the surmises and conjectures as to the origin
-and nature of the phenomenon. Bauer was the
-first to examine it under a microscope, and he
-fancied the organic red granules represented a
-species of fungus. The same year, Charpentier,
-the great Alpine explorer, started the idea that
-the red appearance was caused by some meteoric
-matter, which, falling from the sky, spread over
-the immense tracts of snow. Hooker was the
-first who recognised the true nature of this new
-plant, and compared it to the red slime algæ
-which are found floating in blood-red masses in
-water or damp places; while Wrangel declared
-the granules had apparently no organic substratum,
-and they must therefore be of the lichen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">{62}</span>
-tribe, suggesting also that the germs were generated
-by the electricity in the air, for he had
-once seen a rock split in two by lightning, the
-sides of which were thickly covered with a red
-dust similar in nature to the ‘red snow.’ Two
-more botanists agreed that the red granules were
-‘red powder that had become organic matter in
-the oxidised snow;’ the stern hard rock as it
-decayed had defied death, and come to life again
-in a new form. It remained for Agardh to put
-an end to these various fancies by proving the
-undoubted algal nature of the plant, and to give
-it, besides, its poetical name of ‘snow-blossom,’
-the scientific one of crimson primitive snow-germ
-(<i>Protococcus Kermesina nivalis</i>). In 1838,
-Ehrenberg watched the development of this new
-species by sowing some specimens he had brought
-with him from the Swiss Alps, on snow, and
-noting how they developed first into green and
-then into red granules, joined together like a
-chain; he called it snow granulæ (<i>Sphærella
-nivalis</i>), which name it still bears.</p>
-
-<p>Even now, the wild theories about the red
-snow were not yet ended. Seeing that the young
-spores of the algæ moved incessantly backwards
-and forwards in the water, the idea arose that
-they were animalcula, and ‘red snow’ only the
-lowest form of animal life. By degrees, however,
-it came to be an accepted fact that this voluntary
-motion does not belong exclusively to animal
-life, and that the young spores of the lower
-plants, although they move freely about in the
-water, and are plentifully provided with fine
-hair-like threads like the real infusoria, still
-remain plants, and never turn into animals.
-And thus the plant-nature of the ‘snow-blossom’
-was finally settled.</p>
-
-<p>The red-snow alga found on the Alps, Pyrenees,
-and Carpathians, and also on the summits of the
-North American mountains as far down as California,
-is not, however, such a determined enemy
-to heat as its having its home in the ice-region
-would imply. In the arctic circle, as well as
-on our own mountains of perpetual snow, especially
-on Monte Rosa, the red snow is seen in
-summer like a light rose-coloured film, which
-gradually deepens in colour, particularly in the
-track of human footsteps, till at length it turns
-almost black. In this state, however, it is not a
-rotten mass, but consists principally of carefully
-capsuled ‘quiescent spores,’ in which state these
-microscopic atoms pass the winter, bearing in
-this form the greatest extremes of temperature.
-Some have been exposed to a dry heat of a
-hundred degrees, and were found still to retain
-life-bearing properties; while others, again, were
-exposed with impunity to the greatest cold known
-in science. This proves that the reproductive
-organs in a capsuled state can hear vast extremes
-of temperature without injury; a significant fact,
-in which lies the secret of the indestructibility
-of those germs which are recognised as promoters
-of so many diseases.</p>
-
-<p>Time, too, that great destroyer of most things,
-seems to pass harmlessly over this capsuled life.
-If the spores find no favourable outlet for their
-development, they do not die, no matter how
-long a time they may remain thus; and so the
-dried remains of red snow brought home from
-various polar expeditions have, even after the lapse
-of several years, fructified. During the uninterrupted
-light of the arctic summers, the ‘snow-blossom’
-develops itself so rapidly, that at last it
-covers vast and endless tracts of snow. Although
-the sun does not rise very high above the horizon
-even at midsummer, yet, owing to the great
-clearness and dryness of the atmosphere in those
-high regions, it has a considerable degree of
-warmth at noon, and Nordenskjöld observed that
-one day in July, at mid-day, the temperature just
-above the snow was between twenty-five and
-thirty degrees centigrade. But it must not be
-supposed that the red alga vegetates in the pure
-snow; this would not be possible, as, according
-to chemical analysis, its body contains numerous
-mineral substances. The outer skin or membrane,
-particularly, in which the granulæ are stored
-seems to hold a quantity of silicon; but chalk,
-iron, and other mineral substances peculiar to
-the vegetable world, are also not found wanting
-in the ashes of the red snow. In fact, the upper
-surface of the snow and ice always shows, whenever
-it has lain long enough, a thin coating of
-inorganic dust, which brings to the snow alga
-the mineral constituent parts it requires.</p>
-
-<p>Nordenskjöld gives some very interesting details
-about this dust, from observations made during
-his various expeditions. At one time it was
-supposed to be a slimy mass carried down from
-the hills which pierce the snow, and lodged on
-the lower stretches of its upper surface; but
-Nordenskjöld found this same dust in like
-quantity on the interior ice-fields of Greenland,
-where for miles around there were no mountains
-near, and also on ice-hummocks that quite
-surmounted the ice-plains, as well as on the
-nearest hills. During their long sojourn in the
-land of ice, they searched very carefully for any
-traces of small stones even as large as a pin’s
-head; but they could find none; while many
-square miles were covered by this fine dust,
-gray in its dry state, and becoming black when
-moist. It was therefore at last decided that
-this dark-coloured matter must be a precipitate
-from the atmosphere, and that the summer sun
-melting the snows, had allowed numerous dust-showers
-to accumulate thus, one on the top of
-the other. Nordenskjöld further thinks that it
-is not exclusively earth-dust wafted thither by
-currents of air, but that it contains a number
-of metallic particles, that can be extracted by
-a magnet, consisting, like the metallic meteor-stones,
-of iron, nickel, and cobalt. This metallic
-cosmic dust, which has been noticed previously in
-our pages, and which is spread over the whole
-world, is best observed and gathered on these vast
-snow and ice fields, and as it also bears a similitude
-to our ordinary earth-dust, Nordenskjöld has
-given it the name of Kyrokonit, or ice-dust.</p>
-
-<p>At first, the alga of the red snow was looked
-upon as the sole inhabitant of the ice-lands of
-the polar regions; but in 1870, Dr Berggren,
-botanist of Nordenskjöld’s expedition, discovered
-a second or reddish-brown alga. It is allied to
-the ‘snow-blossom,’ but has this peculiarity, that
-it is never found on <i>snow</i>, but combined with the
-kyrokonit, it covers enormous tracts of <i>ice</i>, giving
-to them a beautiful purple brown tint, which
-greatly adds to their beauty. Besides growing
-on the surface of the ice, this red-brown alga
-was also found in holes one or two feet deep,
-and three or four feet across, in some parts so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">{63}</span>
-numerous and close together that there was scarcely
-standing-room between them. A closer examination
-showed that this very alga was the cause
-of these holes, as wherever it spreads itself, it
-favours the melting of the ice. The dark-brown
-body absorbs more heat than either the gray
-dust or the snow, therefore it sinks ever deeper
-into the hollows, until the slanting rays of the sun
-can no longer reach it.</p>
-
-<p>Thus these microscopic algæ play the same part
-on the ice-fields of Greenland that small stones
-do on European glaciers. By creating holes, they
-give the warm summer air a larger surface to
-take hold of, and thus materially assist the melting
-of the ice. Perhaps it is to these microscopic
-atoms that we owe some of the vast changes that
-our globe has experienced; it may be by their
-agency that the vast wastes of snow that in the
-glacial period covered great tracts both of the
-European and American continents for some
-distance from the poles, have melted gradually
-away and given place to shady woods and fields
-of grain. It is indeed a remarkable instance of
-the power and importance of even the smallest
-thing in nature; all the more interesting in this
-case, that the sun creates for itself in these tiny
-dark atoms, the instruments for boring through
-the ice.</p>
-
-<p>One important fact we must not forget to
-mention in conclusion, namely, that these microscopic
-plants have tempted many insects—to
-which they serve as food—into these inhospitable
-regions. A small black glacier flea lives
-principally on the red snow; and even in the
-arctic regions we find many tiny insects subsisting
-entirely on the red and green algæ.
-These insects, too, possess the same property
-as the algæ, of shutting themselves up in capsules
-during the long winter, and like them too,
-remain alive even when in a dried condition.
-When Professor Wittrock, in the winter of 1880
-to 1881, placed the dried spores of the red
-snow in water to germinate, a number of tiny
-colourless worms appeared, still living. Thus
-even the stern, rigid north pole cannot prevent
-the universal spread of life; and if those cosmological
-prophets are right who declare that the
-whole surface of the earth will one day be covered
-with snow and ice, then these minute insects
-will have an ample store of food in the red,
-green, and brown algæ, and as the last of
-living beings, will be able to mock at the general
-stagnation; ay, perhaps even become the foundation
-of a fresh development of life on our earth,
-should any cosmical cause sufficiently increase
-the temperature.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="OCCASIONAL_NOTES">OCCASIONAL NOTES.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>EXTENDED USE OF GAS COOKING-STOVES.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have repeatedly called attention to the
-practical utility and convenience of gas-stoves
-for cooking purposes, and facts to hand seem to
-show that these are being largely taken advantage
-of by the public. Many gas Companies now
-lend them out at a cheap rate, and they may be
-had for purchase at a price to suit most buyers.
-Since the Corporation Gas Company of Glasgow
-introduced the system of hiring out these stoves,
-about three thousand five hundred had been lent
-out in six months, and the demand continues
-unabated. In hotels, restaurants, and many a
-private home, they are found doing their work
-with economy, ease, and a great saving of labour.</p>
-
-<p>Dr Stevenson Macadam, speaking of gas-cooking
-in its sanitary aspects, says: ‘The wholesomeness
-of the meat cooked in the gas-stoves
-must be regarded as beyond doubt; gas-cooked
-meat will be found to be more juicy and palatable,
-and yet free from those alkaloidal bodies produced
-during the confined cooking of meat, which are
-more or less hurtful, and even poisonous.’ A
-joint cooked in a gas-oven weighs heavier than
-the same joint cooked in a coal-oven, from the
-fact, that in the case of the gas-cooked joint the
-juices are more perfectly preserved.</p>
-
-<p>At the East London Hospital, where the entire
-cooking for an enormous number of patients is
-done by gas, the managers calculate that fully
-six hundred pounds is saved yearly since the
-introduction of gas-cooking.</p>
-
-<p>For the extended use of gas-stoves in Scotland,
-the public is greatly indebted to R. and A. Main,
-Glasgow, who are ever ready to adopt everything
-new in gas-apparatus. Gas is also now largely
-used in connection with washing by means of
-steam. When we noticed Morton’s Steam-washer,
-probably not more than half a dozen had adopted
-this easy and economical method of washing, in
-Scotland, and now those who do so may be
-counted by the hundred.</p>
-
-
-<h3>AUTOMATIC RAILWAY COUPLING.</h3>
-
-<p>For several months past, some of the goods-wagons
-working the traffic on the South Dock
-Railway lines of the East and West India Dock
-Company have (says the <i>Times</i>) been fitted with a
-new form of coupling, which possesses several
-important advantages over the ordinary coupling.
-Not the least of these are simplicity in construction
-and automaticity, combined with certainty
-in action. The coupling is the invention of
-Mr J. H. Betteley, of 42 Old Broad Street,
-London, and consists of a long shackle which is
-attached to the drawbar, and stands out at a
-slight angle of depression from the carriage or
-wagon. Connected with this shackle is a hook
-of special shape, which is attached to a bar
-running across the carriage front, and having a
-short lever fixed on either end just outside the
-buffers. To couple the vehicles, they are run
-together in the usual way, and, on meeting, the
-shackle on one carriage runs up the shackle on
-the other and instantly engages with the hook.
-Thus the shunter has no dangerous work whatever
-to perform. To uncouple, he has simply to
-depress the lever, which action raises the hook
-and releases the shackle. The hook is so formed
-that no matter how much bumping of the
-carriages there may be, it cannot be freed from
-the shackle without the intervention of the lever,
-and the combination therefore forms a perfectly
-safe and reliable coupling. In fact, the whole
-train could be coupled up automatically, and
-the engaged hook and shackle then constitute a
-locking apparatus which prevents the carriages
-becoming accidentally detached. The coupling can,
-moreover, be used on any kind of railway vehicle,
-and it is of no moment if the couplings are not
-all on the same level, as the higher shackle will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">{64}</span>
-always travel up the lower one and engage
-with the hook of the latter. The apparatus has
-been examined and the trucks fitted with it have
-been severely tested by General Hutchinson and
-Major Marindin, of the Board of Trade, who have
-given it their united approval. It certainly
-appears to be well fitted to supersede the ordinary
-coupling, which has cost so many lives.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHARLES DICKENS AT WORK.</h3>
-
-<p>An unpretentious volume entitled <i>Charles
-Dickens</i> has been issued in the ‘World’s Workers’
-series (Cassell &amp; Co.), written by the eldest
-daughter of the great novelist. It is simply and
-pleasantly compiled, and though it may be read
-through at a sitting, it gives a good idea as to
-what manner of man Dickens was, and how he
-lived, talked, wrote, and spoke. As Forster’s
-Life of Dickens is beyond the reach of many,
-this book, which has been specially written for
-the young, will form a good introduction to his
-writings, of which there is a complete summary
-at the end of the volume. It forms an affectionate
-tribute from a daughter to a father, and,
-as was to be expected, exhibits the more human
-side of his character. A sketch of his demeanour
-in his study, as witnessed by one of his daughters,
-who had been taken there after an illness, will
-have the charm of novelty to many people. ‘For
-a long time there was no sound but the rapid
-moving of his pen on the paper; then suddenly
-he jumped up, looked at himself in the glass,
-rushed back to his desk, then to the glass again,
-when presently he turned round and faced his
-daughter, staring at her, but not seeing her, and
-talking rapidly to himself, then once more back
-to his desk, where he remained writing until
-luncheon-time.... It was wonderful to see how
-completely he threw himself into the character
-his own imagination had made, his face, indeed
-his whole body, changing, and he himself being
-lost entirely in working out his own ideas. Small
-wonder that his works took so much out of him,
-for he did literally <i>live</i> in his books while writing
-them, turning his own creations into living realities,
-with whom he wept, and with whom he
-rejoiced.’</p>
-
-
-<h3>PLASTERING MADE EASY.</h3>
-
-<p>Architects and those interested in the erection
-of new houses have frequently looked upon the
-application of plaster as one of the greatest drawbacks
-of modern building, showing, besides, a
-marked deterioration from old plaster-work, such
-as that found on walls of ancient buildings,
-some of which, of a highly decorative character,
-may still be found almost as sound as when first
-executed. In Hardwick Old Hall, Derbyshire,
-though roof and floor are gone, the decorative
-friezes still remain in wonderful preservation.
-Many ancient manor-houses and farm-buildings
-show specimens of fine and enduring plaster-work.</p>
-
-<p>A new cement has been invented, and patented,
-which appears to have the qualities of both
-cement and plaster, and greatly simplifies the
-process. The patentees are Joseph Robinson &amp;
-Co., of the Knothill Cement and Plaster Works,
-near Carlisle, who have been engaged in the
-manufacture of plaster for the past sixty years.
-From the almost inexhaustible products of their
-alabaster quarries in Inglewood Forest, this new
-cement is made. It is claimed for it that, while
-being equal to the Keene’s and Parian cements now
-in use, it is cheap enough to be used as they are,
-and also as a substitute for ordinary plastering.</p>
-
-<p>In the erection of new buildings, the plasterer’s
-pit takes up much room, and is often looked upon
-as a necessary evil. In putting on the common
-three coats of plaster, the second and third can
-only be laid on when that before it is sufficiently
-dry. Owing to the unequal shrinkage of the different
-materials, it is often an uncertain method
-of doing good work. When using the cement
-we speak of, the plasterers can be put into a room
-with the requisite quantities of sand and cement,
-and work straight away. There is no delay
-required for drying, for as fast as one coat is
-done, the finishing coat can be run on and the
-whole completed. It has the merit, also, of
-neither shrinking nor expanding, is impervious
-to absorption and infection, and its hard surface
-affords facilities for washing or taking on paint.</p>
-
-<p>As to its fire-resisting qualities, Captain Shaw,
-of the Metropolitan Fire Brigade, is of opinion
-that it ‘would be much more effectual in preventing
-the spread of fire than any other of the
-common plasters or cements generally used in this
-country.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="AT_WAKING">AT WAKING.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">I bore</span> dead Love unto his grave,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Beneath a willow, in winter’s rain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Where he might feel the branches wave,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And hear me, if he woke again.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">One withered rose-tree on his tomb</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">I planted, so that, by-and-by,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">If he should wake, the rose might bloom,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And I should know, and hear him cry.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">I decked his breast with rosemary,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Laid on his lips one violet,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That once he kissed; I think if he</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Should wake, he will not quite forget.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">I set a crown about his brow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The crown affection weaves and wears;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">At waking, he will hardly know,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">I fear, whose diadem he shares.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">I placed a lily in his hand—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Sceptre of his dead sovereignty;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">At waking, will he understand</div>
- <div class="verse indent2"><i>Who</i> placed it there, to bloom or die?</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">I laid my heart, that for his sake</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Remembers now no old sweet strain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Close to his ear; he, if he wake,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Perchance may tune its strings again.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">If he should wake! Till death be dead,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Till life begin, and sleep be past,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Till on his breast he lay thy head,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And flowers begin to bloom at last—</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">O soul, remember! lest by thee</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That unknown sweetness be forgot</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which now thou lookest for, and he</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Bid thee ‘Depart! I know thee not.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Sidney R. Thompson.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">Printed and Published by <span class="smcap">W. &amp; R. Chambers</span>, 47 Paternoster
-Row, <span class="smcap">London</span>, and 339 High Street, <span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center"><i>All rights reserved.</i></p>
-
-<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. 108, VOL. III, JANUARY 23, 1886 ***</div>
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