The Scrap Book, Volume 1, No. 4

By Various

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Title: The Scrap Book, Volume 1, No. 4
       June 1906

Author: Various

Release Date: April 24, 2010 [EBook #32121]

Language: English


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           THE SCRAP BOOK.

  Vol. I.    JUNE, 1906.    No. 4.




  June,--BUNKER HILL--June,
  1775.               1843.

  Peroration of the Address Delivered by Daniel Webster,
  June 17, 1843, at the Dedication of the
  Monument That Now Marks the Scene of
  the Famous Revolutionary Struggle.


We have indulged in gratifying recollections of the past, in the
prosperity and pleasures of the present, and in high hopes for the future.
But let us remember that we have duties and obligations to perform,
corresponding to the blessings which we enjoy. Let us remember the trust,
the sacred trust, attaching to the rich inheritance which we have received
from our fathers. Let us feel our personal responsibility, to the full
extent of our power and influence, for the preservation of the principles
of civil and religious liberty. And let us remember that it is only
religion, and morals, and knowledge, that can make men respectable and
happy under any form of government. Let us hold fast the great truth that
communities are responsible as well as individuals; that no government is
respectable which is not just; that without unspotted purity of public
faith, without sacred public principle, fidelity, and honor--no mere forms
of government, no machinery of laws, can give dignity to political
society. In our day and generation let us seek to raise and improve the
moral sentiment, so that we may look, not for a degraded, but for an
elevated and improved future. And when both we and our children shall have
been consigned to the house appointed for all living, may love of
country--and pride of country--glow with equal fervor among those to whom
our names and our blood shall have descended! And then, when honored and
decrepit age shall lean against the base of this monument, and troops of
ingenuous youth shall be gathered round it, and when the one shall speak
to the other of its objects, the purposes of its construction, and the
great and glorious events with which it is concerned--there shall rise,
from every youthful breast, the ejaculation--"Thank God, I--I also--am an
American!"




The Latest Viewpoints of Men Worth While.

    Praise and Blame for American Women From Dr. Emil
    Reich--Earl Grey and Secretary Root Discuss the Relations of
    Canada and the United States--William J. Bryan Defines the
    Limits of Socialism--Rabbi Schulman Explains Certain
    Prejudices Against the Jews--William T. Jerome, Senator
    Lodge, and Norman Hapgood Criticize or Defend the Noble Army
    of Muck-Rakers--With Other Interesting Expressions of
    Opinion on Current Issues of the Day.

_Compiled and edited for_ THE SCRAP BOOK.


FEMININE RULE MAY DOOM OUR COUNTRY.

  American Women Are Like the Spartans
  in Their Desire to Dominate the
  American Man.

Dr. Emil Reich has been lecturing to fashionable London on such
universally fascinating themes as woman and love. According to the news
despatches, so great has been the popularity of his talks that there have
not been seats enough to accommodate his titled hearers, and at one
lecture the Duchess of Portland sat on the floor. He has said of "Love and
Personality":

    Personality is always a mystery with its antithetically
    mingled elements in man and woman. Women have loved wrongly
    and known it, were perfectly aware of it--they only know
    also that they were helpless to avoid it; the desire of
    their lives has been gratified, something has happened.

    What was there about George Sand, save perhaps pretty good
    eyes, to send such men as Alfred de Musset and Friedrich
    Chopin absolutely crazy? Nothing interesting about her--even
    her unattractiveness enhanced by her constant smoking. Yet
    she could inspire the "Prelude," which Chopin composed on
    seeing her approach in a garden in Minorca--the greatest
    piece of music ever compressed into a single page.

    Goethe's Gretchen, the little bourgeoise, without apparent
    attractiveness, yet inspiring his mighty genius--what is
    this mystery of man and woman? The beauty of nations differs
    very much. The Latins are less beautiful than the
    Anglo-Saxons. The angularity of the North German woman is
    notorious; an uncharming person. Why? It has nothing
    whatever to do with race. The growth of the Hanseatic cities
    brought great wealth in North Germany; money-bags married
    money-bags; the result was a people of severely plain
    aspect. There are not many money-bags in America, although
    there are many money-bags in the hands of a few.


    American Men Marry for Love.

    The American is insulted if mention of dowry is made in his
    wedding arrangements. He marries because he loves the woman
    and she him. Hence, the American people have become
    exceedingly beautiful. Then the facilities for divorce
    presented in the United States are an important factor in
    the beautification process. Love is really at the bottom of
    it all--not money-bags or race, but love.

    The French are always talking about _l'amour, l'amour_; but
    really there is no _amour_ there at all--people generally
    talk most about what they haven't got or don't know. Yes,
    indeed, so rare is _l'amour_ in France that it accounts for
    the decline in facial beauty of the French woman--not in
    movement, for in movement she excels the world, but in face.
    Rome and Greece were ruined by treating marriage as a matter
    of business.

Complementary to Dr. Reich's praise of the American woman's beauty is his
criticism of her love of domination. In that characteristic he reads the
doom of America. We quote his reasons from the New York _American_:

    Nations differ in nothing so much as in their women. The
    French, English, or American woman is easily
    distinguishable. The American woman is totally different
    from the English woman. So is the French woman, though the
    difference in this case is not so intense; so is the German
    woman; so is the woman of Italy. The American woman, while
    differing from all her European sisters of to-day, bears a
    marked resemblance to the woman of ancient Sparta. The
    Spartans resembled the present-day Americans; the Athenians
    were like the English.

    I do not blame, I do not praise; I only say, and I say
    emphatically, that the American woman is not womanly; she is
    not a woman. The whole of the United States is under
    petticoat government, and man is practically non-existent.

    In America, woman commands man. Man does not count there.
    The last man that came to America was Christopher Columbus.
    To-day, man has no existence; he does not talk in the
    drawing-room, but is a dummy. The woman lives one life, the
    man another, and they are totally distinct from each other.


    The Best Complexion in the World.

    She is as new as a man born to-day is new; she is made up of
    restlessness and fidgetiness long before she is twenty-five.
    But she is very beautiful; she has the best complexion in
    the world--better than that of any European woman. She is
    also well built and handsome. You see fine specimens of the
    American woman in Kentucky and Massachusetts.

    A few miles distant from the Athens of old--what would be
    but a short railway journey in these days--lay Sparta. The
    Spartans were imperialists, and they wanted to conquer the
    whole of Greece. The Spartan woman, as I have remarked, was
    like the American woman of to-day. She never dreamed of
    lovers; her idea was nothing less than conquering man; she
    never thought of him as more than a fellow athlete.


    The Spartan Woman Ruined Sparta.

    There was no womanhood in them, no more than in so many
    sticks. The Athenians said that they were very fine, but
    there was nothing feminine about them. They were far richer,
    too, than the men, for the men went to the wars and died,
    and the women thus became rich. Aristotle said that the
    Spartan woman was sure to ruin Sparta very quickly. And so
    she did, for we find Sparta trying to rule Greece in the
    fourth century B.C.; in the third century she was sinking;
    in the second century she had ceased to exist.

    Modern British men and women, what are they? That is what I
    want to bring out. A nation can never survive with women of
    the Spartan type, which, as I have told you, is the American
    woman of to-day. The Romans were the same, and they ruined
    their empire. They had one idea, an all-absorbing idea which
    killed all ideas of religion, of art, of everything--the
    idea of empire. They spent their entire life in that one
    absorbing pursuit--domination; in such a country woman has
    no place.


GROWING EMPIRE AT OUR NORTH.

  Development of New National Spirit in
  the Dominion Discussed by Earl
  Grey and Secretary Root.

Canada has been making tremendous strides in the last few years. The
opening up of the vast untilled grain lands of the Northwest has been
followed by an influx of new blood from other countries, and particularly
from the United States. Throughout the Dominion energy is dictating to
enterprise. In all the provinces there are stirrings of a new national
spirit.

Relations between Canada and the United States are certain to assume a
different character in view of the changing local conditions. The future
before Canada is so great in its promise that any pronouncement by high
authorities as to her newer feelings is at present very important. Such
pronouncement was made at the dinner given in New York by the Pilgrims of
the United States to Earl Grey, Governor-General of Canada. The earl and
Mr. Root, our Secretary of State, made significant speeches.

Said Earl Grey:

    Any idea of the possible annexation of Canada by the United
    States is scouted by us as an impossibility as great as you
    would regard the annexation of the United States by Canada.

    And now, gentlemen, may I say the more we see of Americans
    the better we shall be pleased. All we want is to know each
    other better than we do, and to help each other as much as
    we can. If Canada can at any time help the United States in
    any direction which will improve the conditions of life for
    your people, she will consider it a blessed privilege to be
    allowed to render that assistance; and I feel sure that the
    people of the United States will also be only too glad to
    assist us in our struggle toward the realization of high
    ideals and toward the attainment of a national character
    distinguished by the fulness with which the principles of
    fair play, freedom, and duty shall be applied by the people
    of Canada to the various occupations of their lives.

    There are several questions outstanding between the Dominion
    of Canada and the United States which have been left open
    too long, and which call for settlement.

    Both governments desire to take advantage of the opportunity
    which the present feeling of amity between the two countries
    affords, and I am persuaded that the people on both sides of
    the frontier will be glad when their respective governments
    have given effect to their desires.

Secretary Root denied the rumor that at this banquet any sensational or
unexpected announcement would be made, declaring that all existing
questions between Canada and the United States had been settled. "I wish,"
he said, "it was so." But he pointed out the attitude that must be adopted
to facilitate the settlement of disputes--an attitude considerate and
just.

Of the changed conditions in Canada he said:

    I think the American people recognize the fact that much has
    taken place on the other side of the border--much which
    materially affects the theoretical, assumed, or supposed
    relations between the United States and Canada.

    It was with apparent doubt that the American people read the
    treaty of the eighteenth century, whether Canada was to
    become a part of the United States, and in 1812, the British
    governor-general of Canada wrote that a majority of his
    people were rather in favor of the Americans than the
    English.

    We must recognize that a great change has taken place.
    Canada is no longer the outlying country that it once was,
    when a few remnants of French descendants were left upon its
    borders to subsist upon precarious livelihoods. It has
    become a great community with increasing population and
    wealth.

    In her relations with England one can see that, while she is
    loyal to her mother country, as she has attained maturity
    she has contracted a personality of her own. Her relations
    to us have become of great importance. With enormous natural
    wealth, and with vigor and energy, she is protecting her
    industries, as we are protecting ours.

    Her people are proud of their country, as we are proud of
    ours, and we appreciate that from what was a little dominion
    upon our borders there has grown a great and powerful
    nation. And the people of America look with no grudging or
    jealous eye upon her development.


HOW MUCH SOCIALISM DO OUR PEOPLE WANT?

  Bryan Suggests that "Individualism"
  Best Defines Limit to Be Set
  on Socialistic Tendencies.

A tendency toward factional alignment at present characterizes the radical
movement which has been sweeping over the country. The different elements
of that movement are beginning to offer their individual claims for
recognition. At this juncture William Jennings Bryan contributes to the
_Century_ an important article on "Individualism _versus_ Socialism," in
which he seeks to dispel the fogs which have enveloped the economic
situation. First, he defines the two terms opposed in his title:

    For the purpose of this discussion individualism will be
    defined as the private ownership of the means of production
    and distribution where competition is possible, leaving to
    public ownership those means of production and distribution
    in which competition is practically impossible; and
    socialism will be defined as the collective ownership,
    through the state, of all the means of production and
    distribution.

Mr. Bryan points out that much of the strength shown by socialism is due
to the fact that "socialists advocate certain reforms which individualists
also advocate."

    Take, for illustration, the public ownership of water-works;
    it is safe to say that a large majority of the people living
    in cities of any considerable size favor their public
    ownership--individualists because it is practically
    impossible to have more than one water system in a city, and
    socialists on the general ground that the government should
    own all the means of production and distribution. Then, too,
    some of the strength of socialism is due to its condemnation
    of abuses which, while existing under individualism, are not
    at all necessary to individualism--abuses which the
    individualists are as anxious as the socialists to remedy.
    It is not only consistent with individualism, but is a
    necessary implication of it, that the competing parties
    should be placed upon substantially equal footing; for
    competition is not worthy of that name if one party is able
    arbitrarily to fix the terms of the agreement, leaving the
    other with no choice but to submit.

The civil service, says Mr. Bryan, is our nearest approach to ideal
socialism. Does it afford a stimulus to the higher development of the
civil servants?

    Justice requires that each individual shall receive from
    society a reward proportionate to his contribution to
    society. Can the state, acting through officials, make this
    apportionment better than it can be made by competition? At
    present official favors are not distributed strictly
    according to merit, either in republics or in monarchies; it
    is certain that socialism would insure a fairer division of
    rewards? If the government operates all the factories, all
    the farms, and all the stores, there must be superintendents
    as well as workmen; there must be different kinds of
    employment, some more pleasant, some less pleasant. Is it
    likely that any set of men can distribute the work or fix
    the compensation to the satisfaction of all?

    At present private monopoly is putting upon individualism an
    undeserved odium, and it behooves the individualist to
    address himself energetically to this problem in order that
    the advantages of competition may be restored to industry.
    And the duty of immediate action is made more imperative by
    the fact that the socialist is inclined to support the
    monopoly, in the belief that it will be easier to induce the
    government to take over an industry after it has passed into
    the hands of a few men.

In the substance of his opinion Mr. Bryan's "individualism" does not seem
to be very far removed from Fabian socialism--or at least not from such
socialism as is expressed, say, by Robert Hunter, who said not long ago,
while speaking about the problems of poverty:

    I have been asked if I think socialism is the cure for these
    evils. As we do not know what state socialism would bring
    about, we cannot say. But I am sure that certain socialistic
    measures are necessary. We need municipal tenements, as they
    have in Liverpool, Birmingham, and London, where the
    children will have healthful surroundings, plenty of places
    to play, and there are no landlords to exact profits.

    Other places have nationalized the coal fields, and the poor
    get coal at cost. At Rochester, in England, the death-rate
    has been cut down one-half by the municipalization of the
    milk-supply, and the children of the poor, instead of the
    pale-blue poison they used to have, get a fine, healthful
    food. These are socialistic measures, and every advance we
    make is toward socialism.


FALSE SYMPATHY WITH CRIMINALS.

  That Sham Humanitarianism Has Become
  a Stench Is the Declaration
  of a Leading Humanitarian.

Andrew D. White, ex-president of Cornell University, ex-ambassador to
Germany--scholar, publicist, humanitarian--said wholesome words to the
Cornell students a few weeks ago on the problem of "High Crime in the
United States." The basis of his address was the fact that more murders
are committed every year in the United States than in any other country.
His attitude in regard to lynch-law is rather startling:

    The number of homicides that are punished by lynching
    exceeds the number punished by due process of law. There is
    nothing more nonsensical or ridiculous than the goody-goody
    talk about lynching. Much may be said in favor of Goldwin
    Smith's quotation, "that there are communities in which
    lynch-law is better than any other."

From this he proceeded to decry over-wrought sentiment in favor of
criminals:

    Germs of maudlin sentimentality are widespread. On every
    hand we hear slimy, mushy, gushy expressions of sympathy,
    the criminal called "plucky," "nervy," "fighting against
    fearful odds for his life."

    It is said that society has no right to put murderers to
    death. In my opinion, society must fall back on the law of
    self-preservation. It should cut through and make war, in my
    opinion, for its life. Life imprisonment is not possible,
    because there is no life imprisonment.

    In the next year nine thousand people will be murdered. As I
    stand here to-day I tell you that nine thousand are doomed
    to death with all the cruelty of the criminal heart, and
    with no regard for home and families, and two-thirds of
    those murders will be due to the maudlin sentiment sometimes
    called mercy.

    I have no sympathy for the criminal. My sympathy is for
    those who will be murdered, for their families and for their
    children.

    This sham humanitarianism has become a stench. The cry now
    is for righteousness. The past generation has abolished
    human slavery. It is for the present to deal with the
    problems of the future and among them this problem of crime.
    Young men, like Jerome, like Folk and Hughes, resolve never
    to be servants of criminals, but to do your best to punish
    crime as it should be punished.


OLD MALIGNMENTS OF THE CHOSEN PEOPLE.

  The Long-Existent Prejudice Against the
  Jew Is Explained by a Leading
  Rabbi of New York.

No other race has been so vilified as the Jew. Hatred for Hebrews has been
endemic in Europe since the Dark Ages, and even to-day in France and
Germany the anti-Semitic movements have considerable strength. How can
this be? Is the feeling a survival of anger at a race which rejected
Jesus? Or is it based on desperate hostility toward a race which can
succeed in business where a Gentile fails?

The Rev. Dr. S. Schulman, of the Temple Beth-El, New York City, in a
recent sermon sought to answer these questions. Part of his discourse we
quote:

    We are the victims of the world's literature, of its
    prevailing creed, and the popular judgment. The greatest
    master in the world's literature, seeking a type that on
    account of peculiar conditions and circumstances could stand
    for cruel hatred and implacable revenge, deliberately
    changed the contents of a story and made _Shylock_ the Jew
    the embodiment of inhuman revenge.

    The poet must have felt that if ever in a human soul there
    could arise such unyielding hate as he desired to portray it
    might, in a sense, be justified in one whose heart rankled
    with the memories of ages of persecution and unjust hatred
    to which his race had been subjected.

    Here was one, the poet seemed to say, who could well execute
    the villainies he had been taught. He therefore produced a
    character dramatically consistent, but at the same time he
    did an everlasting injury to the Jew, because he produced a
    character altogether historically untrue. The Jew is
    anything but vindictive; he forgets injuries readily; that
    is why he is so optimistic; he has a horror of shedding
    blood, and whatever vices the Jew may be capable of, the one
    of ferocious cruelty cannot be saddled upon him.

    Nevertheless, the word Shylock has become in English speech
    synonymous with everything that is bad. This injustice in
    literature will persist until some great genius possessing
    the broad-mindedness of a Lessing and the dramatic power of
    a Shakespeare shall arise among English-speaking people and
    create an English Nathan the Wise.

    The Western world's creed centers in an event which,
    strictly speaking, belongs to the same category as that of
    the killing of Socrates, the burning of Giordano Bruno, and
    of Servetus. Thus, classic Greek, Catholic, and Protestant
    were all equally guilty of sacrificing the best of their
    time. The progress of mankind has, sad to say, often been
    purchased by the martyrdom of some of the noblest men that
    walked on earth.

    Yet it is the Jewish people that have been singled out to be
    held up to the world as Deicides, and every child at the
    time when the soul is most receptive is inoculated with an
    antipathy against every living Jew because of an event that
    took place nineteen hundred years ago.

    It is therefore no wonder that the world is prejudiced
    against the Jew.


MANDATES OF ART TO HER VOTARIES.

  A Great Word-Artist Shows That Under
  the Levity of Bohemian Life Is a Serious
  and Lofty Philosophy.

The late Lafcadio Hearn was one of the great prose-poets of the time. The
glimpse into his intimate mind which the _Critic_ affords by printing a
sheaf of his letters to H.E. Krehbiel, the music critic, will be
appreciated by all who followed his literary wanderings up to the time of
his settlement in Japan. The letters were written many years ago, when
Hearn was still in his early prime. When he learned of the death of Mr.
Krehbiel's child he wrote this exquisite expression of sympathy:

    Your letter rises before me as I write like a tablet of
    white stone bearing a dead name. I see you standing beside
    me. I look into your eyes and press your hand and say
    nothing.

Hearn was ever an artist, and he ever knew what art meant. In advising his
friend to break away from the exhausting routine of daily journalism, he
gave a typical expression of his philosophy of life:

    Under the levity of Henri Mürger's picturesque Bohemianism
    there is a serious philosophy apparent which elevates the
    characters of his romance to heroism. They followed one
    principle faithfully--so faithfully that only the strong
    survived the ordeal--never to abandon the pursuit of an
    artistic vocation for any other occupation, however
    lucrative; not even when she remained apparently deaf and
    blind to her worshipers.

    The conditions pictured by Mürger have passed away in Paris
    as elsewhere; the old barriers to ambition have been broken
    down. But I think the moral remains.

    So long as one can live and pursue his natural vocation in
    art, it is a duty with him never to abandon it if he
    believes that he has within him the elements of final
    success. Every time he labors at aught that is not of art he
    robs the divinity of what belongs to her.

    Do you never reflect that within a few years you will no
    longer be the YOUNG MAN--and that, like Vesta's fires, the
    enthusiasm of youth for an art-idea must be well fed with
    the sacred branches to keep it from dying out?

    I think you ought really to devote all your time and
    energies and ability to the cultivation of one subject, so
    as to make that subject alone repay you for all your pains.

    And I do not believe that art is altogether ungrateful in
    these days; she will repay fidelity to her, and recompense
    sacrifices. I don't think you have any more right to play
    reporter than a great sculptor to model fifty-cent plaster
    figures of idiotic saints for Catholic processions, or
    certain painters to letter steamboats at so much a letter.
    In one sense, too, art is exacting. To acquire real eminence
    in any one branch of any art, one must study nothing else
    for a lifetime. A very wide general knowledge may be
    acquired only at the expense of depth.


PURSUIT OF A HUSBAND BY THE MODERN WOMAN.

  After All, Says the New York "Times,"
  It Is Doubtless Better for Man to Be
  Chosen Than for Him to Choose.

Taking up a discussion inaugurated by the _St. James Gazette_, of London,
the New York _Times_ says what it has to say on the subject of choosing
wives.

The English paper said frankly that the title would better be "The Choice
of a Husband," inasmuch as the male, though unaware of the fact, is
generally not the pursuer, but the pursued. This condition, however, is by
no means to the discredit of woman.

As the _Times_ remarks, "A young woman whose intentions are both serious
and honorable has nothing at all to be ashamed of in endeavoring by all
womanly means to acquire the man whom she believes she can make happy and
knows that she means to try to."

In America and England there is objection to the man who marries for any
other reason than being in love. Yet the _mariage de convenance_ is not
altogether without legitimate recommendations. To quote the _Times_:

    If one is really bent on making a marriage of reason instead
    of waiting for a "call," excellent recipes may be given him.

    A wise man once advised his son, who had shown some
    disposition to choose instead of waiting to be chosen, to
    "look for a good woman's daughter." It would be hard to find
    any better basis for a happy union.

    In general, of course, mixed marriages, whether the mixture
    be of religion or of country, would be viewed by a wise
    adviser with apprehension, although Lord Curzon's experience
    is only one of very many as to the possible happiness of
    marriages between persons of different nationalities, much
    more alike as are the nationalities of Lord and Lady Curzon
    than any other two nationalities.

    Dr. Johnson's famous saying that marriages would be happier
    if they were arranged by the Lord Chancellor, due regard
    being paid to the ages and conditions of the parties, has
    never been accepted as a working rule in his own country. In
    France, again, there is the wholly "reasonable" and
    extremely circumspect Count Boni Castellane, whose marriage
    of reason has so lately been shown to be so far from a
    success.

    There are quite enough more failures of the same kind to
    offset the unhappy marriages of romance. It is of these, of
    course, that Burton declares that matches are made in
    heaven, though matches of the sulfurous kind, of which all
    of us know some instances, suggest a very different place of
    manufacture.


    The Marriage of Reason.

    Swift's saying that the reason why so few marriages are
    happy is that "young ladies spend their time in making nets,
    not in making cages," is doubly outrageous. In the first
    place, it is an outrageous begging of the question. The
    testimony of less cynical observers in our day and country
    is that most marriages are entitled to be called happy.

    In the second place, it outrageously puts the whole blame
    for unhappy marriages on the female partner, contrary alike
    to probability and to fact. But at least as many of the
    marriages are failures in which men "choose" their wives, or
    think they do, as in cases in which men become the prey of
    their own imaginations.

    And there is this to be said from the point of view of
    reason in favor of marriages with which reason has nothing
    to do. In the first months of married life there are
    necessarily very many differences to be adjusted and small
    incompatibilities of ways of thinking and feeling to be
    reconciled. That, as all experienced spouses know, is the
    trying period.

    Marriage is like life in that it is a school wherein whoso
    does not learn must suffer. Now, to diminish the friction of
    this trying time no better lubricant could possibly be
    provided than the romantic love, which cannot be expected to
    last forever, but which may very probably outlast this
    greatest necessity for it of the early connubial period.

    When the glamour of the romance "fades into the light of
    common day," and a real man and a real woman take the places
    of the creatures of each other's fancy, and passion cools
    into at best the tenderest of friendships, both parties are
    better off, and will acknowledge themselves to be better off
    because the romance has been.


EVERY MAN MASTER OF HIS OWN STOMACH.

  Instinct Best Determines What You
  Should Eat, So Eat What Your
  Normal Instinct Tells You To.

In that series of compromises which we call life there is no compromise
more perplexing than the compromise with the stomach. No problem requires
more earnest thought than the food problem. It is the stomach that makes
men work. There would be no produce exchange were it not for the
stomach--no yellow fields of wheat and corn, no grazing herds of cattle,
no fleets of white-sailed fishing-vessels. Clothing and shelter are
secondary demands. The stomach is master; and, as is ever likely to be the
case with autocrats, it is selfish--wherefore we humor it--we hold out
crutches to it--we offer it tempting inducements to be lenient with us.

A sense of relief, therefore, is produced by reading Dr. Woods
Hutchinson's article, "Some Diet Delusions," in the April _McClure's_; for
therein is advanced the doctrine of "intelligent omnivorousness." Says Dr.
Hutchinson:

    Every imaginable experiment upon what would and what would
    not support life must have been tried thousands of years
    ago, and yet our most striking proofs of how highly men
    value their "precious right of private haziness," as George
    Eliot shrewdly terms it, are to be found in the realm of
    dietetics. The "light that never was on sea or land" still
    survives for the most matter-of-fact of us in the memory of
    "the pies that mother used to make," and nowhere else do we
    find preferences so widely accepted as evidence, and
    prejudices as matters of fact, as in this arena. In fact, if
    we were merely to listen to what is said, and still more to
    read what is printed, we would come to the conclusion that
    the human race had established absolutely nothing beyond
    possibility of dispute in this realm.


    When the Doctors Disagree.

    Every would-be diet-reformer, and we doctors are almost as
    bad as any of them, is absolutely certain that what
    nine-tenths of humanity find to be their food is a deadly
    poison. One philosopher is sure that animal food of every
    description, especially the kind that involves the shedding
    of blood, is not only absolutely unfit for human food, but
    is the cause of half the suffering and wickedness in the
    world. Another gravely declares that the only thing which,
    above all things, is injurious is salt. Another takes up his
    parable against pork. Still another is convinced that half
    the misery of the world is due to the use of spices; and one
    dietetic Rousseau proclaims a return to very first
    principles by the abolition of cooking.

    Another attacks the harmless and blushing tomato, and lays
    at its door the modern increase of cancer, insanity, and a
    hundred kindred evils; while Mrs. Rohrer has gently but
    firmly to be restrained whenever she hears the mild-eyed
    potato mentioned.

    There is almost an equally astonishing Babel when one comes
    to listen to the various opinions as to the amount of food
    required. Eighteen grave and reverend doctors assure us that
    overeating is the prevalent dietetic sin of the century,
    while the remainder of the two dozen are equally positive
    that the vast majority of their patients are underfed. One
    man preaches the gospel of dignified simplicity on one meal
    a day and one clean collar a week, while the lean and
    learned Fletcher declares that if we only keep on
    masticating our one mouthful of food long enough we shall
    delude the stomach into magnifying it into ten, and can dine
    sumptuously on a menu-card and a biscuit.

    Fortunately, when it comes to practise, philosophers,
    reformers, and doctors alike have about as much influence
    here as they have over conduct in other realms--and that is
    next to none at all. The man in the street follows his
    God-given instincts and plods peacefully along to his three
    square meals a day, consisting of anything he can find in
    the market, and just as much of it as he can afford, with
    special preference for rich meats, fats, and sugars.


    Instinct Far Superior to Reason.

    Here, as everywhere, instinct is far superior to reason, and
    a breakfast diet of sausage and buckwheat cakes with maple
    syrup and strong coffee has carried the white man half
    around the world; while one of salads and cereals, washed
    down with a post-prandial subterfuge, would leave him
    stranded, gasping, in the first ditch he came to.

    All the basal problems of dietetics were, by the mercy of
    Heaven, settled long ago in the farmhouse kitchen, in the
    commissary department of the army in the field, in the
    cook's galley amidships, and in the laboratory.

    There is little more room for difference of opinion upon
    them than there is about the coaling of engines. Simply a
    matter of size of boiler and fire-box, the difference in
    heating power and ash between Welsh and Australian, and the
    amount of work to be got out of the machine, multiplied by
    the time in which it is to be accomplished.

Dr. Hutchinson proceeds to give reasons why spices do _not_ heat the
blood, why pork is a most excellent food, why fish is no better for the
brain than other things, why vegetarianism is a mistake, and so on. His
principal caution is not to eat in a hurry; his principal advice is,
virtually, to eat whatever seems to agree with you.

All of which brings to mind the story of the old dyspeptic who, after a
long term of misery, one day apostrophized his stomach thus:

"I have humored you for many years. I have coaxed you, coddled you, petted
you. I have gone hungry to please you. I have swallowed bad-tasting
medicines on your account. I have been your servant--but now I am through.
From this time I will eat what I please and drink what I please. If you
protest, I shall ignore you. Hereafter you are the servant, I am the
master. Now make the best of that!"

This brave man's stomach, we are told, was so thoroughly cowed by the
words that it never again demanded a milk diet.


THE EXPOSURE OF EXPOSURE.

  Things That Are Being Said About the
  "Journalism of Conscience" by Critics,
  Passionate and Dispassionate.

When fire is discovered in a house it sometimes happens that the tenants,
in their excitement, hurl fragile bric-à-brac from the windows and with
much effort carry the feather beds down-stairs and out to safety. Suppose
that the incongruity of such action suddenly becomes apparent. The alarmed
tenants may reverse the process. Better still, they may endeavor to put
out the fire. But to cease all effort because they stand convicted of
excited folly would be absurd.

The inevitable reaction from recent wild exposures in finance and politics
has lately shown itself. Prominent men and leading journals have convicted
the "yellow" newspapers and magazines, and the people influenced by them,
of excited folly. Senator Lodge has said in the Senate, concerning
sensational contributors to the magazines:

    Writers of that type come and go. They seize upon the
    excitement of the moment and presently rise like a flock of
    shore birds and whirl away to another spot where they think
    they can find a fresh feeding ground. These modern imitators
    of Titus Oates will pass away as he passed away. They will
    bring no innocent heads to the block as he did, although
    they may here and there cause distress. They will not end in
    the pillory as he did, because the pillory has been
    abolished, but they will go out of fashion just as he did
    into silence and contempt.

District Attorney William T. Jerome, speaking at a banquet in New York,
referred to magazine articles which have described the Senate as
treasonable.

    Treason is an ugly word. It is punishable by death. We have
    got so used to superlatives that our own racy tongue has
    become debauched and we have no superlatives left. The
    Senate of the United States--is it a treasonable body? A
    body that holds a man like Murray Crane, of Massachusetts?
    Because some men are there who ought not to be there--some
    who bought the position--shall we say that the governors of
    our body politic are guilty of treason? Base men are there,
    but when in the bright, breezy sentiments of modern
    newspaper life you assert there is treason, you either lie
    or misconceive the meaning of the English language.

On the other side, Norman Hapgood says, in _Collier's_:

    Who is doing most to make railroad and beef trust facts and
    problems understood? Who but the same magazine which has
    printed the history of Standard Oil and explained to the
    people the needed changes in State and city government. What
    a farce to speak of _McClure's Magazine_ as yellow; what a
    dull, injurious farce, unless by yellow we mean every
    movement of benefit to our kind! Did Mr. Steffens's printing
    of the news about Philadelphia do any harm to the
    inhabitants of that town? Did it, or did it not, act as a
    battle-cry which spurred the good citizens and the
    newspapers of that town to action? When original, living,
    and conscientious journalism speaks, the routine newspapers
    are sometimes forced to echo bold words which receive the
    public's approving seal.

So the balance of expressed opinion on the subject shifts up and down. In
all the confusion we sometimes hear an opinion like that, uttered by
Herbert S. Hadley, attorney-general of Missouri:

    There is no reason to question the efficacy of existing laws
    so long as they are supported by public sentiment, for law
    is, in fact, merely the reflection of the moral sense of the
    country. What I mean by that statement may be illustrated by
    the fact that while a vast majority of lawyers, as well as
    laymen, will to-day agree that corporations are amenable to
    laws from which an individual might be exempt, the same
    proposition would have met with violent refutation hardly
    more than two years ago by most lawyers and many laymen.

    But the public is now practically agreed, and the courts
    have sustained this view, that corporations are not above
    the laws of the State which made their existence possible.
    An officer of a company may to-day refuse to answer
    questions on the ground that he would himself be
    incriminated by replying, but he cannot refuse to answer on
    the ground that his company would be incriminated. In other
    words, corporations are no longer considered to have the
    same rights as individuals and cannot evade investigation
    and prosecution by maintaining a policy of silence.

    Such is the moral sense of the country and such is the law
    as determined by the highest courts, and with such a
    condition of public sentiment and law it is no longer
    possible for public officials to plead that they cannot get
    at the facts whenever there is a suspicion that any
    corporation has failed to comply with the laws of the State
    which created it.


LEGITIMATE SCOPE OF DRAMATIC ART.

  Waxworks May Deceive for a Moment,
  But They Do Not Leave the Lasting
  Impression of Michelangelo's Moses.

Otis Skinner, the actor, recently made a plea for the teaching of dramatic
art in our public schools and colleges. In that way, he urged, public
taste can be improved to the point where a better quality of plays and
acting will be required to fill the theaters. He was speaking before the
Ethical Culture Society, in New York. In beginning he explained at some
length what he considered art, drawing his distinctions very carefully:

    The purpose of the play is to hold a mirror up to nature,
    although such things as horror, meanness, lust, or crime
    must not be shown for their sake alone, merely to display
    accurate dramatic photographs. They must be utilized toward
    a definite end. The stage has many detractors, and among
    them are the ones that say the stage does not represent real
    life always. Nor should it. I will give you a definition of
    art which I got from Dr. Adler. It explains what I mean:
    "Art is the pattern, and not so many ells cut from the
    fabric of life."

    Some years ago in London I went to Mme. Tussaud's waxworks.
    Curious to identify the figures, I turned to a lady and
    asked her where I might obtain a program. There was no
    answer. I became embarrassed and a little angry when I saw I
    was the subject of amusement for the crowd. I looked closer.
    The lady was made of wax. Well, I don't remember how she
    looked, but I do remember every line of the beauties of the
    Venus of Milo, which I saw in the Louvre, and of
    Michelangelo's Moses. I did not consider them figures or
    real persons, yet they live with me.

The charge that the theater gives too much attention to vice was discussed
by Mr. Skinner. When used on the stage to heighten the dramatic effect,
the simulation of drunkenness, he said, is ethically right. "Mrs. Warren's
Profession," he declared flatly, was quite properly suppressed, since
there was no reason for it except the exhibition of vice. False and
namby-pamby melodrama, on the other hand, is fully as detrimental to
dramatic art.

He outlined the plot of a play in which a poor young man, after rescuing
the daughter of a multimillionaire by a feat of virtually impossible
agility and strength, is promptly provided for by the thankful parent, and
marries the girl.

The story, as he told it, was glaringly untrue to life--wherefore he
denounced it as immoral. It represented the extreme of romantic falsity,
just as "Mrs. Warren's Profession" represented the extreme of disgustingly
literal reality.

In art no extreme is acceptable--a lesson which the Greeks, with their
supreme intuition of artistic fitness, taught the world once and for all.


WOMAN HAS ALWAYS EARNED HER LIVING.

  The New York "Sun" Disposes of the
  Old Notion That She is the Mere
  "Beneficiary of Man."

The Rev. John L. Scudder, of Jersey City, recently preached a sermon on
the subject, "Business Women--Do They Reduce the Number of Marriages, and
Do They Make Good Wives?" He said, among other things, that if the
business woman marries, she marries "as an equal and not as a dependent";
that, therefore, we must expect fewer marriages in proportion to the
population. But he added:

    The business woman of to-day refuses to be a moon revolving
    around a masculine earth--she will be a twin star or
    nothing. I believe her industrial training will make her a
    better wife, for she will know the value of a dollar and be
    able to sympathize with her husband in his daily toil.

    She will apply business methods to domestic economy. Should
    her husband attempt to maltreat her, she has courage enough
    to separate from him and return to self-support. What she
    has done once she can do again. Being fearless and decided,
    she will be respected and well treated. The broader outlook
    she has acquired in the business world will make her a
    superior wife and a more capable mother.

    The era of feminine imbecility and cowardice is passing
    away, and in its place we see about us a new age of
    well-rounded, exalted womanhood.


An Equal Partnership.

The New York _Sun_ does not agree with Mr. Scudder. In the course of an
editorial on the subject it says:

    It may be remarked that nobody who enters into a partnership
    of any sort can expect to retain absolute personal freedom.
    The rule is equally true in business and marriage. The
    attempt to exercise absolute personal freedom by one or both
    partners is pretty sure to result in disaster to any
    enterprise of any description.

    But this is not the main point. Mr. Scudder's most serious
    fallacy lies in the notion that in any healthy marriage
    relation the woman is non-self-supporting and the mere
    "beneficiary of man." The proposition is as absurd as it
    would be to say that the member of a law firm who pleads in
    the courts is a mere tender, a mere appendage, a mere
    beneficiary of the gentleman who sits in the office, sees
    the clients, and collects the bills, or that the expert
    engineer at the head of a steel plant is a mere tender to
    the man who manages the finances of the concern.

    Nobody earns his or her livelihood more honorably or more
    directly than the wife and mother of a family who does her
    duty. She is her husband's business partner in a phase of
    his life which is at least as vital to his interests as the
    outside one by which he makes his money under the eye of the
    world. If the couple are partners in a poor and struggling
    concern, the wife contributes as much to the general success
    by the work of her hands as the man does by his; if they are
    more fortunate, and prosperous, the woman's busy brain
    contriving and ruling in the household is earning by
    earnest, eager, expert, and honorable exertion as good a
    livelihood as the husband is able to provide her with.

    The law holds good in the realms of wealth and luxury. The
    woman who creates and maintains an eminent social position
    for her family is likely to be her husband's most important
    ally, and her share of all the benefits that they enjoy in
    common is not a mere gratuity; it does not come to her from
    her husband's bounty; it is her compensation for the
    services she does in advancing the interests of the
    alliance.


OUR OPPORTUNITY TO EDUCATE CHINA.

  Great Possibilities Lie Ahead for Us if
  We Take the Lead in Teaching the
  Chinese Western Ways.

Dr. Edmund J. James, president of the University of Illinois, favors the
appointment of an educational commission for the study of the social,
intellectual, and industrial situation in China. The reasons for his
suggestion are contained in a memorandum which he recently submitted to
President Roosevelt, and may be briefly stated as follows:

    A great service would be done to both countries if the
    government of the United States would at the present
    juncture send an educational commission to China, whose
    chief function should be to visit the imperial government,
    and, with its consent, each of the provincial governments of
    the empire, for the purpose of extending through the
    authorities of these provinces to the young Chinese who may
    desire to go abroad to study a formal invitation on the part
    of our American institutions of learning to avail themselves
    of the facilities of such institutions.

    China is upon the verge of a revolution. Every great nation
    of the world will inevitably be drawn into more or less
    intimate relations with this gigantic development. It is for
    them to determine, each for itself, what these relations
    shall be--whether those of amity and friendship and kindness
    or those of brute force and the mailed fist. The United
    States ought not to hesitate as to its choice in this
    matter.

    The nation which succeeds in educating the young Chinese of
    the present generation will be the nation which, for a given
    expenditure of effort, will reap the largest possible
    returns in moral, intellectual, and commercial influence.




LAST WORDS OF FAMOUS MEN.


When a man is in the full flower of health and intellectual activity, his
utterances, either guarded or careless, usually are more or less tinctured
by his social environments--environments that are rather more artificial
than natural. But when the shadow of death falls upon him, and earthly
vanities crowd out of the chamber that is marked as the vestibule of his
tomb, the language he speaks is that of the man himself--one who realizes
that he is nearer eternal truth than human pretense. For this reason the
last words he speaks on earth are more significant of his true character
than any he has spoken before. No better proof of this fact may be adduced
than is to be found in the following collection of sentences uttered by
dying men:

    =Adams, John= (1735-1826), American statesman: "Jefferson
    survives."

    =Adams, John Quincy= (1767-1848), American statesman: "This
    is the last of earth! I am content!"

    =Beethoven, Ludwig van= (1770-1827), German composer: "I
    shall hear now!" (He was deaf.)

    =Bozzaris, Markos= (1790-1823), Greek patriot: "To die for
    liberty is a pleasure and not a pain."

    =Brooks, Phillips= (1835-1893), American clergyman: "I am
    going home."

    =Byron, Lord= (1788-1824), English poet: "I must sleep now."

    =Charles I= of England (1600-1649): "Remember."

    =Charles II= of England (1630-1685): "Don't let poor Nelly
    (Nell Gwynne) starve."

    =Chesterfield, Lord= (1694-1773), English courtier: "Give
    the doctor a chair."

    =Columbus, Christopher= (1440-1506), Italian navigator:
    "Lord, into Thy hands I commit my spirit."

    =Cowper, William= (1731-1800), English poet: "Feel? I feel
    unutterable, unutterable despair. What does it signify?"

    =Cromwell, Oliver= (1599-1658), English statesman: "My
    desire is to make what haste I may to be gone."

    =Franklin, Benjamin= (1706-1790), American philosopher: "A
    dying man can do nothing easy."

    =Frederick the Great= of Prussia (1712-1786): "We are over
    the hill. We shall go better now."

    =Gilbert, Sir Humphrey= (1539-1583), English navigator: "We
    are as near heaven by sea as by land."

    =Gladstone, William Ewart= (1809-1898), British statesman:
    "Amen."

    =Goethe= (1749-1832), German poet: "Open the shutters and
    let in more light."

    =Greeley, Horace= (1811-1872), American journalist: "It is
    done."

    =Hale, Nathan= (1755-1776), American patriot: "I only regret
    that I have but one life to give to my country."

    =Havelock, Henry= (1795-1857), English general: "Tell my son
    to come and see how a Christian can die."

    =Henry, Patrick= (1736-1810), American orator and patriot:
    "Here is a book (the Bible) worth more than all others ever
    printed; yet it is my misfortune never to have found time to
    read it. It is now too late. I trust in the mercy of God."

    =Holmes, Oliver Wendell= (1809-1894), American poet and
    prose-writer: "That is better, thank you." (To his son, who
    had just assisted him to his favorite chair.)

    =Humboldt, Friedrich von= (1769-1859), German savant: "How
    grand these rays! They seem to beckon earth to heaven."

    =Jefferson, Thomas= (1743-1826), American statesman: "I
    resign my spirit to God and my daughter to my country."

    =Julian= (331-363), Roman emperor: "O Galilean, Thou hast
    conquered!"

    =Keats, John= (1795-1821), English poet: "I feel the daisies
    growing over me."

    =Latimer, Hugh= (1485-1555), English reformer: "Be of good
    cheer, brother; we shall this day kindle such a torch in
    England as I trust shall never be extinguished." (To
    Nicholas Ridley, who was burned with him.)

    =Lawrence, James= (1781-1813), American naval officer:
    "Don't give up the ship."

    =Louis XIII= of France (1601-1643): "There come to me
    thoughts that torment me."

    =Louis XIV= of France (1638-1715): "I thought dying had been
    harder."

    =Louis XVIII= of France (1755-1824): "A king should die
    standing."

    =McKinley, William= (1843-1901), American statesman and
    President: "Good-by. All good-by. It is God's way. His will
    be done."

    =Moody, Dwight L.= (1837-1899), American evangelist: "Earth
    is receding; heaven is approaching; God is calling me."

    =Napoleon= (1769-1821), Emperor of France: "Head of the
    army."

    =Napoleon III= of France (1803-1873): "Were you at Sedan?"
    (To Dr. Conneau.)

    =Nelson, Horatio= (1758-1805), English admiral: "I thank God
    I have done my duty."

    =Palmer, John= (1740-1798), English actor: "There is another
    and better world."

    =Pitt, William= (1759-1806), English statesman: "Oh, my
    country, how I love thee!"

    =Raleigh, Sir Walter= (1552-1618), English courtier and
    navigator: "Why dost thou not strike? Strike, man!" (To his
    executioner.)

    =Scott, Sir Walter= (1771-1832), Scotch poet and novelist:
    "I feel as if I were to be myself again. God bless you all."

    =Scott, Winfield= (1786-1866), American general: "James,
    take good care of the horse."

    =Sidney, Sir Philip= (1622-1683), English patriot: "I would
    not change my joy for the empire of the world."

    =Thurlow, Edward= (1732-1806), English lawyer: "I'll be shot
    if I don't believe I'm dying."

    =Vane, Henry= (1612-1662), English statesman: "Ten thousand
    deaths for me ere I stain the purity of my conscience."

    =Washington, George= (1732-1799), American general and
    statesman: "It is well, I am about to die, and I look upon
    it with perfect resignation."

    =Webster, Daniel= (1782-1852), American statesman: "I still
    live."

    =Wellington, Duke of= (1769-1852), British general and
    statesman: "Yes, if you please." (To a servant asking if he
    would have some tea.)

    =Wesley, John= (1703-1791), English divine: "The best of all
    is, God is with us. Farewell."




OLDEN TIME PUBLICITY.

  How an artful tradesman drew attention to the presence and the excellence
  of his wares in 1875.


REMEMBER

Governor Tilden says that John Hanson told him that he heard Web Wagner
say that Anna E. Dickinson told him that D.S. Decker heard that there was
no doubt that John McLaren said that S.T. Benedict thought Fred. Seward
had told Jim Johnson that Cushney had declared to John Fulton that it was
generally believed that Harry Hull said, in plain terms, that he heard Al
Berry say that his friend, Harriet Beecher Stowe, had said that Fred.
Hotchkiss informed her, at Delmonico's, that it was well known all over
the country that Fin Helwig had caught Jimmey Farthing in saying that in
his opinion it was a matter of fact, of great public interest, that Nate
Wells had said Fred. Howell told him that COHEN BROS. would receive, on
Thursday, Oct. 28th, the first invoice of LYNN HAVEN OYSTERS, never before
sold in Gloversville, and all for 35 cents a quart.

  New York, 1875.




When Vesuvius Destroyed Pompeii.

BY THE YOUNGER PLINY--79 A.D.


    Pliny the Younger--Caius Plinius Cæcilius Secundus--was
    perhaps, the most cultivated and graceful man of letters of
    the first century A.D. Literally a man of letters, he left
    ten books of his "Epistles," which he himself
    collected--probably even wrote with a view to
    publication--and their fluent charm still pleases the taste
    of the reader. One of his letters, written while he was
    Governor of Bithynia, asks instructions from the Emperor
    Trajan as to what policy should be pursued against the sect
    of Christians.

    In other epistles he tells two excellent ghost stories. But
    the two letters which are most vital in their human
    interest, and which record the most thrilling events, are
    the two addressed to his friend, the historian Tacitus,
    concerning the great eruption of Vesuvius on August 24, A.D.
    79. Pliny was only seventeen years of age when he witnessed
    this eruption, which destroyed Pompeii and Herculaneum, and
    in which his uncle, the elder Pliny, author of the
    celebrated natural history, perished.

    Until the year 79 Vesuvius was not suspected of being a
    volcano. The mountain was covered with vegetation, and the
    ancient crater was like a circular bowl scooped from the
    summit. Then came the explosion which buried Pompeii and
    Herculaneum. Never since has the volcano long remained
    quiet. The most serious eruptions have been those of 203,
    472, 512, 685, 983, 1066, 1631, 1779, 1794, 1822, 1855,
    1865, 1872, 1878, 1880, 1895, and 1906.

    Pliny's descriptions of the scenes on the slopes of the
    vengeful volcano--the raining ashes; the fleeing, terrified
    crowds--are as fresh and vivid to-day as those Roman
    frescoes which it has been the good fortune of the modern
    archeologist to uncover after two thousand years of burial
    beneath the Vesuvian scoriæ.


Letter No. 1.

Your request that I would send you an account of my uncle's death, in
order to transmit a more exact relation of it to posterity, deserves my
acknowledgments, for if this accident shall be celebrated by your pen the
glory of it, I am well assured, will be rendered forever illustrious. And
notwithstanding he perished by a misfortune which, as it involved at the
same time a most beautiful country in ruins, and destroyed so many
populous cities, seems to promise him an everlasting remembrance;
notwithstanding he has himself composed many and lasting works, yet I am
persuaded the mentioning of him in your immortal writings will greatly
contribute to render his name immortal.

Happy I esteem those to be to whom by the provision of the gods has been
granted the ability either to do such actions as are worthy of being
related or to relate them in a manner worthy of being read; but peculiarly
happy are they who are blessed with both these uncommon talents, in the
number of which my uncle, as his own writings and your history will
evidently prove, may justly be ranked.

It is with extreme willingness, therefore, that I execute your commands,
and should indeed have demanded the task if you had not enjoined it. He
was at that time with the fleet under his command at Misenum.

On the 24th of August, about one in the afternoon, my mother desired him
to observe a cloud which appeared of a very unusual size and shape. He
had just taken a turn in the sun and, after bathing himself in cold water
and making a light luncheon, gone back to his books; he immediately arose
and went out upon a rising ground from whence he might get a better sight
of this very uncommon appearance.

A cloud, from which mountain was uncertain at this distance (but it was
found afterward to come from Mount Vesuvius), was ascending, the
appearance of which I cannot give you a more exact description of than by
likening it to that of a pine-tree, for it shot up to a great height in
the form of a very tall trunk, which spread itself out at the top into a
sort of branches, occasioned, I imagine, either by a sudden gust of air
that impelled it, the force of which decreased as it advanced upward, or
the cloud itself being pressed back again by its own weight, expanded in
the manner I have mentioned; it appeared sometimes bright and sometimes
dark and spotted, according as it was either more or less impregnated with
earth and cinders.


The Elder Pliny's Heroism.

This phenomenon seemed to a man of such learning and research as my uncle
extraordinary and worth further looking into. He ordered a light vessel to
be got ready, and gave me leave, if I liked, to accompany him. I said I
had rather go on with my work, and it so happened he had himself given me
something to write out.

As he was coming out of the house he received a note from Rectina, the
wife of Bassus, who was in the utmost alarm at the imminent danger which
threatened her, for her villa lying at the foot of Mount Vesuvius, there
was no way of escape by sea; she earnestly entreated him, therefore, to
come to her assistance.

He accordingly changed his first intention, and what he had begun from a
philosophical he now carried out in a noble and generous spirit. He
ordered the galleys to put to sea, and went himself on board with an
intention of assisting not only Rectina, but the several towns which lay
thickly strewn along the beautiful coast.

Hastening then to the place from whence others fled with the utmost
terror, he steered his course direct to the point of danger, and with so
much calmness and presence of mind as to be able to make and dictate his
observations upon the motion and all the phenomena of that dreadful scene.

He was now so close to the mountain that the cinders, which grew thicker
and hotter the nearer he approached, fell into the ships, together with
pumice-stones and black pieces of burning rock; they were in danger, too,
not only of being aground by the sudden retreat of the sea, but also from
the vast fragments which rolled down from the mountain and obstructed all
the shore.

Here he stopped to consider whether he should turn back again, to which,
the pilot advising him, "Fortune," said he, "favors the brave; steer to
where Pomponianus is." Pomponianus was then at Stabiæ (Castellamare),
separated by a bay which the sea, after several insensible windings, forms
with the shore.

He had already sent his baggage on board, for though he was not at that
time in actual danger, yet being within sight of it, and indeed extremely
near, if it should in the least increase he was determined to put to sea
as soon as the wind, which was blowing dead inshore, should go down.

It was favorable, however, for carrying my uncle to Pomponianus, whom he
found in the greatest consternation. He embraced him tenderly, encouraging
and urging him to keep up his spirits, and, the more effectually to soothe
his fears by seeming unconcerned himself, ordered a bath to be got ready,
and then, after having bathed, sat down to supper with great cheerfulness,
or at least (what is just as heroic) with every appearance of it.

Meanwhile broad flames shone out in several places from Mount Vesuvius,
which the darkness of the night contributed to render still brighter and
clearer. But my uncle, in order to soothe the apprehensions of his friend,
assured him it was only the burning of the villages, which the country
people had abandoned to the flames; after this he retired to rest, and it
is most certain he was so little disquieted as to fall into a sound sleep,
for his breathing, which on account of his corpulence was rather heavy
and sonorous, was heard by the attendants outside.

The court which led to his apartment being now almost filled with stones
and ashes, if he had continued there any time longer it would have been
impossible, for him to have made his way out.

So he was awakened and got up and went to Pomponianus and the rest of his
company, who were feeling too anxious to think of going to bed. They
consulted together whether it would be most prudent to trust to the
houses, which now rocked from side to side with frequent and violent
concussions as though shaken from their very foundations, or fly to the
open fields, where the calcined stones and cinders, though light indeed,
yet fell in large showers and threatened destruction.


Tied Pillows on Their Heads.

In this choice of dangers they resolved for the fields, a resolution
which, while the rest of the company were hurried into it by their fears,
my uncle embraced upon cool and deliberate consideration. They went out
then, having pillows tied upon their heads with napkins, and this was
their whole defense against the storm of stones that fell round them.

It was now day everywhere else, but there a deeper darkness prevailed than
in the thickest night, which, however, was in some degree alleviated by
torches and other lights of various kinds. They thought proper to go
farther down upon the shore to see if they might safely put to sea, but
found the waves still running extremely high and boisterous.

There my uncle, laying himself down upon a sailcloth which was spread for
him, called twice for some cold water, which he drank, when immediately
the flames, preceded by a strong whiff of sulfur, dispersed the rest of
the party and obliged him to rise.

He raised himself up with the assistance of two of his servants, and
instantly fell down dead, suffocated, as I conjecture, by some gross and
noxious vapor, having always had a weak throat, which was often inflamed.

As soon as it was light again, which was not till the third day after this
melancholy accident, his body was found entire, and without any marks of
violence upon it, in the dress in which he fell, and looking more like a
man asleep than dead.

During all this time my mother and I, who were at Misenum--but this has no
connection with your history, and you did not desire any particulars
besides those of my uncle's death, so I will end here, only adding that I
have faithfully related to you what I was either a witness of myself or
received the news of immediately after the accident happened, and before
there was time to vary the truth.

You will pick out of this narrative whatever is most important, for a
letter is one thing, a history another; it is one thing writing to a
friend, another writing to the public. Farewell.


Letter No. 2.

The letter which, in compliance with your request, I wrote to you
concerning the death of my uncle has raised, it seems, your curiosity to
know what terrors and dangers attended me while I continued at Misenum,
for there, I think, my account broke off.

  Though my shock'd soul recoils, my tongue shall tell.

My uncle having left us, I spent such time as was left on my studies (it
was on their account, indeed, that I had stopped behind) till it was time
for my bath. After which I went to supper, and then fell into a short and
uneasy sleep.

There had been noticed for many days before a trembling of the earth,
which did not alarm us much, as this is quite an ordinary occurrence in
Campania, but it was so particularly violent that night that it not only
shook but overturned, as it would seem, everything about us.

My mother rushed into my chamber, where she found me rising, in order to
awaken her. We sat down in the open court of the house, which occupied a
small space between the buildings and the sea. As I was at that time but
eighteen years of age, I know not whether I should call my behavior in
this dangerous juncture courage or folly; but I took up Livy, and amused
myself with turning over that author, and even making extracts from him,
as if I had been perfectly at my leisure.

Just then a friend of my uncle, who had lately come to him from Spain,
joined us, and, observing me sitting by my mother with a book in my hand,
reproved her for her calmness and me at the same time for my careless
security; nevertheless, I went on with my author.

Though it was now morning, the light was still exceedingly faint and
doubtful; the buildings all around us tottered, and though we stood upon
open ground, yet as the place was narrow and confined there was no
remaining without imminent danger; we therefore resolved to quit the town.


Effects of the Earthquakes.

A panic-stricken crowd followed us, and (as to a mind distracted with
terror every suggestion seems more prudent than its own) pressed on us in
dense array to drive us forward as we came out. Being at a convenient
distance from the houses, we stood still in the midst of a most dangerous
and dreadful scene.

The chariots, which we had ordered to be drawn out, were so agitated
backward and forward, though upon the most level ground, that we could not
keep them steady even by supporting them with large stones. The sea seemed
to roll back upon itself and to be driven from its banks by the convulsive
motion of the earth; it is certain at least the shore was considerably
enlarged, and several sea animals were left upon it. On the other side a
black and dreadful cloud, broken with rapid, zigzag flashes, revealed
behind it variously shaped masses of flame; these last were like sheet
lightning, but much larger.

Upon this our Spanish friend, whom I mentioned above, addressed himself to
my mother and me with great energy and urgency. "If your brother," he
said, "if your uncle be safe, he certainly wishes you may be so, too; but
if he perished it was his desire, no doubt, that you might both survive
him; why, therefore, do you delay your escape a moment?" We could never
think of our own safety, we said, while we were uncertain of his.

Upon this our friend left us and withdrew from the danger with the utmost
precipitation. Soon afterward the cloud began to descend and cover the
sea. It had already surrounded and concealed the island of Capri and the
promontory of Misenum.

My mother now besought, urged, even commanded me to make my escape at any
rate, which, as I was young, I might easily do; as for herself, she said,
her age and corpulency rendered all attempts of that sort impossible;
however, she would willingly meet death if she could have the satisfaction
of seeing that she was not the occasion of mine. But I absolutely refused
to leave her, and, taking her by the hand, compelled her to go with me.
She complied with great reluctance, and not without many reproaches to
herself for retarding my flight.

The ashes now began to fall upon us, though in no great quantity. I looked
back; a dense, dark mist seemed to be following us, spreading itself over
the country like a cloud. "Let us turn out of the highroad," I said,
"while we can still see, for fear that, should we fall in the road, we
should be pressed to death in the dark by the crowds that are following
us."

We had scarcely sat down when night came upon us, not such as we have when
the sky is cloudy, or when there is no moon, but that of a room when it is
shut up and all the lights put out.


The Terror of the People.

You might hear the shrieks of women, the screams of children, and the
shouts of men; some calling for their children, others for their parents,
others for their husbands, and seeking to recognize each other by the
voices that replied; one lamenting his own fate, another that of his
family; some wishing to die, from the very fear of dying; some lifting
their hands to the gods, but the greater part convinced that there were
now no gods at all, and that the final endless night of which we have
heard had come upon the world.

Among these there were some who augmented the real terrors by others
imaginary or wilfully invented. I remember some who declared that one part
of Misenum had fallen, that another was on fire; it was false, but they
found people to believe them.

It now grew rather lighter, which we imagined to be rather the forerunner
of an approaching burst of flames (as in truth it was) than the return of
day; however, the fire fell at a distance from us; then again we were
immersed in thick darkness, and a heavy shower of ashes rained upon us,
which we were obliged every now and then to stand up to shake off,
otherwise we should have been crushed and buried in the heap.

I might boast that during all this scene of horror not a sigh or
expression of fear escaped me, had not my support been grounded in that
miserable though mighty consolation that all mankind were involved in the
same calamity, and that I was perishing with the world itself.

At last this dreadful darkness was dissipated by degrees, like a cloud or
smoke; the real day returned, and even the sun shone out, though with a
lurid light, as when an eclipse is coming on. Every object that presented
itself to our eyes (which were extremely weakened) seemed changed, being
covered deep with ashes as if with snow.

We returned to Misenum, where we refreshed ourselves as well as we could,
and passed an anxious night between hope and fear, though indeed with a
much larger share of the latter, for the earthquake still continued, while
many frenzied persons ran up and down, heightening their own and their
friends' calamities by terrible predictions.

However, my mother and I, notwithstanding the danger we had passed, and
that which still threatened us, had no thoughts of leaving the place till
we could receive some news of my uncle.

You will read this narrative without any view of inserting it in your
history, of which it is not in the least worthy, and indeed you must put
it down to your own request if it should appear not worth even the trouble
of a letter. Farewell.




THE OLDEST CITY IN THE WORLD.

  The Damascus Seen by Saul of Tarsus Still Exists, Presenting the Same
  Scenes and Cherishing the Same Customs That Characterized It 1,000 Years
  Ago.

If you were suddenly asked to name the oldest city in the world which is
still in a flourishing condition, what would be your answer?

In nine cases out of ten, the person to whom such a query might be
propounded would hark back to Egypt, Greece, or Rome. He would be wrong.
The oldest city in the world is Damascus.

Tyre and Sidon have crumbled on the shore; Baalbec is a ruin; Palmyra is
buried in a desert; Nineveh and Babylon have disappeared from the Tigris
and the Euphrates. Damascus remains what it was before the days of
Abraham--a center of trade and travel--an isle of verdure in the desert;
"a presidential capital," with martial and sacred associations extending
through thirty centuries.

It was near Damascus that Saul of Tarsus saw the light above the
brightness of the sun; the street which is called Strait, in which it was
said "he prayed," still runs through the city.

The city which Mohammed surveyed from a neighboring height and was afraid
to enter "because it was given to man to have but one paradise, and for
his part he was resolved not to have it in this world," is to-day what
Julian called the "Eye of the East," as it was in the time of Isaiah "the
head of Syria."

From Damascus came the damson, our blue plums, and the delicious apricot
of Portugal called damasco; damask, our beautiful fabric of cotton and
silk, with vines and flowers raised upon a smooth, bright ground; the
damask rose introduced into England in the time of Henry VIII; the
Damascus blade, so famous the world over for its keen edge and wonderful
elasticity, the secret of whose manufacture was lost when Tamerlane
carried the artist into Persia; and that beautiful art of inlaying wood
and steel with gold and silver, a kind of mosaic engraving and sculpture
united--called damaskeening--with which boxes, bureaus, and swords are
ornamented.




A FEAST OF AUTO SONG.

  The Egotism of the Motor-Car, Even in the Realm of Poesy, Proves More
  Than a Match for the Wit of People Who Continue to Traduce It Until
  They Decide What Model They Will Buy.


UNCLE HENRY ON THE PASSING OF THE HORSE.

    Every little while they tell us that the horse has got to go;
    First the trolley was invented 'cause the horses went so slow,
    And they told us that we'd better not keep raisin' colts no more.
    When the street cars got to moting that the horses pulled before,
      I thought it was all over for old Fan and Doll and Kit,
    S'posed the horse was up and done for,
          But
                he
                     ain't
                             went
                                    yit!

    When the bike craze first got started people, told us right away,
    As you probably remember, that the horse had saw his day;
    People put away their buggies and went kitin' 'round on wheels;
    There were lots and lots of horses didn't even earn their meals.
      I used to stand and watch 'em with their bloomers as they'd flit,
    And I thought the horse was goin',
        But
               he
                     ain't
                              went
                                      yit!

    Then they got the horseless carriage, and they said the horse was done.
    And the story's been repeated twenty times by Edison;
    Every time he gets another of his batteries to go
    He comes whoopin' out to tell us that the horse don't stand a show.
      And you'd think to see these chauffeurs, as they go a-chauffin', it
    Was good-by to Mr. Dobbin,
        But
               he
                     ain't
                              went
                                      yit!

    When the people git to flying in the air I s'pose they'll say,
    As we long have been a-sayin', that the horse has had his day.
    And I s'pose that some old feller just about like me'll stand
    Where it's safe, and watch the horses haulin' stuff across the land;
      And he'll mebby think as I do, while the crows above him flit,
    "Oh, they say the horse is done for,
        But
               he
                     ain't
                              went
                                      yit!"

    _Chicago Record-Herald._


HE BIDED HIS TIME

    There lived, one time, a shiftless chap, who wasn't satisfied;
    To settle down and plug along he never could abide.
    He felt the fire of greatness burn within his eager breast,
    And knew himself cut out for deeds the highest and the best.
    His spirit fairly fumed and frothed at cruel Fate's restraint;
    Of favorless environment he ever made complaint.
    "But some fine day," he used to say, "I'll set the world afire;
    It's not for me unknown to be when I do so aspire."

    Each day our hero might have found some labor to pursue;
    On every side stood waiting work for willing hands to do;
    The neighborhood wherein he dwelt had crying need of men
    To mow the lawns, for instance, and to beat the rugs--but then
    A man so keenly conscious of his real inward worth
    Could hardly care to tackle toil so tainted of the earth.
    And so, to pass the time away until his chance should come,
    He boarded with his mother when he wasn't drinking rum.

    No doubt, good-natured reader, you opine and apprehend
    That this vain, shiftless person met a mean and sorry end.
    The facts are these: He waited till the time, for us so sad,
    When wagons run with gasoline became the reigning fad.
    A sudden, wild demand arose for drivers, men with cheek,
    And Shifty got a handsome job at fifty bones a week,
    The people stare, where'er he goes; he's gained his great desire,
    And every-day he sets the world, or part of it, afire.

    _Newark Evening News._


WHAT THEY CALL IT.

    Grandma says we're right in style,
    A-sittin' in our automobile.

    Grandpa says we're fit to kill,
    A-ridin' in our automo-bill.

    Ma, she says we ought to feel
    Grateful fer our automo-beel.

    Pa says there ain't no other man
    Kin run an auto like he can.

    Auntie preaches near and far
    'Bout our lovely touring car.

    Uncle Bill says he ain't seen
    Nowhere such a good machine.

    Brother Jim, he keeps a-braggin'
    'Bout the speed of our new wagon.

    But, oh, it sounds so grand and noble
    When sister Sue says automoble.

    _Puck._


AN "AUTO" IDYL.

    The automobile owner crawled
      With haste into his car
    And said good-by, for he was called
      To travel fast and far.

    He grasped the steering wheel with glee
      And gave the clutch a yank,
    And then, with objurgations, he
      Climbed down again to crank.

    Again he mounted to the seat
      Prepared like wind to fly,
    Yet there he lingered in the street;
      The water tank was dry.

    He filled the tank; it seemed a cinch,
      Once more he starts to chauff,
    Behold, he does not move an inch--
      The differential's off.

    In rage he toils with might and main
      Till he is faint and weak;
    Again he starts--and stops again;
      The tire's sprung a leak.

    The shades of night are falling fast,
      But joy illumes his brow,
    He shoots ahead--his trouble past,
      Pray who can catch him now?

    And yet, around the corner we
      May find the same machine;
    Its owner is not there, for he
      Has gone for gasoline.

    _Council Bluffs Nonpareil._


SHORT STORY OF SPEED.

    Thisisthewayheracedalong
        Ateighteenmilesanhour;
    This  the  speed  he  walked  back  home
        When  busted  was  his  power.

    _Exchange._


SONG OF THE AUTOMOBILE.

By Joe Cone.

    I am coming, I am coming, don't you hear my thunder roll,
    Don't you feel my mighty power thro' your body and your soul;
    Don't you dread my awful presence, my momentous throbbing feel?
    I'm a dashing, thrashing, bucking, clucking
                   Auto-mo-bile!

        I'm a wonder, I'm a snorter, I'm a bull put on parade,
        I'm a devil, I'm a terror for the people who're afraid;
        I can paralyze the horses, I can make 'em dance a reel,
        I'm a rearing, tearing, rumbling, grumbling
                   Auto-mo-bile!


    Clear the track, ye meek and lowly, for I claim the right of way!
    There's no limit to my tenure, or my speed by night or day;
    To the woods with everybody, that's the way we devils feel,
    I'm a lusty, dusty, ramming, jamming
                   Auto-mo-bile!

    _The Pneus._




GRAVE, GAY, AND EPIGRAMMATIC.


LOVE, THE ILLUSION.

    Love is just a cobweb, wet with morning dew;
    Love is just a fairy spell, invisible to view;
    A tread--a touch too heavy, and the cobweb is not there!
    A sigh too long, and lo!--the spell has vanished into air!
    Love is just a morning-glory, doomed at noon to die;
    Love is only half a story, told in passing by;
    Love is gold so delicate, the faintest flame would melt it;
    Love's--NOTHING; but--God help the man who's never known nor felt it!

    _Helen Rowland in Life._


WON HIS BET.

General Miles, in company with a friend, was walking down Pennsylvania
Avenue, when a person, entirely unknown to the veteran soldier, rushed up
to him, and grasping his hand, said, warmly, "Well, Nelse, old boy, I'll
bet anything you don't remember me!"

"You win!" coldly and laconically replied Miles, as he released himself
from the grasp of the stranger and resumed his walk.--_Woman's Home
Companion._


SORRY HE LEARNED IT.

Attorney William S. Barnes, of San Francisco, has a new office boy. The
last boy with whom he was associated resigned a few days ago because the
law business did not suit his peculiar temperament.

"How long have you been here?" asked Barnes, when the small boy made known
his intention to engage in a different vocation.

"Six months," replied the boy.

"And you don't like the law business?"

"Naw. It's no good, and I tell you straight, I'm mighty sorry I learned
it."--_Technical World._


WHAT FIELD WANTED.

Eugene Field, sad of countenance and ready of tongue, strayed into a New
York restaurant and seated himself at a table. To him there came a swift
and voluble waiter, who said:

"Coffee, tea-chocolate, ham 'n' 'ggs--beef-steak--mutton--chop--fishballs
--hash'n'--beans," and much more to the same purpose.

Field looked at him long and solemnly, and at last replied:

"Oh, friend, I want none of these things. All I require is an orange and a
few kind words."


DECIDEDLY "WILLIN'."

Miss Maude Adams has a favorite story about a certain "Miss Johnsing" and
an uncertain "Culpeper Pete."

Pete became enamored of the dusky maiden and not having the courage to
"pop" face to face, called up the house where she worked and asked for her
over the telephone. When he got her on the line he asked:

"Is dat Miss Johnsing?"

"Ya-as."

"Well, Miss Johnsing, I'se got a most important question to ask you."

"Ya-as."

"Will you marry me?"

"Ya-as! Who is it, please?"--_Exchange._


A HEROIC RESCUE.

The following sublime paragraph is from one of the latest fashionable
novels:

"With one hand he held her beautiful head above the chilling waves, and
with the other called loudly for assistance!"--_Exchange._


WHY SHE WAS MADE OF A RIB.

A young woman having asked a surgeon why woman was made from the rib of a
man in preference to any other bone, he gave the following gallant answer:

"She was not taken from the head lest she should rule over him; nor from
his feet, lest he should trample upon her; but she was taken from his
side, that she might be his equal; from under his arm, that he might
protect her; from near his heart that he might cherish and love
her."--_Exchange._


A GRACIOUS JUDGE.

Lord Ellenborough once said to a barrister, upon his asking in the midst
of a boring harangue: "Is it the pleasure of the court that I should
proceed with my statement?" "Pleasure, Mr. Smith, has been out of the
question for a long time, but you may proceed."--_Old scrap book._


LIGHT.

    The night has a thousand eyes,
      And the day but one;
    Yet the light of the bright world dies
      With the dying sun.
    The mind has a thousand eyes,
      And the heart but one;
    Yet the light of a whole life dies
      When love is done.

    _Francis W. Bourdillon._


CURE FOR A NAGGING WIFE.

Having advertised as a widower in search of Wife No. 2, a man of St. Gall,
Switzerland, showed the fifty replies and photographs which he had
received to his wife, and, stating that if she did not want him there were
others who did, he effectively cured her of her "nagging" habits.--_Le
Petit Parisien._


A RICH RETORT.

It is said of the late Marquis of Townsend that when a young man and
engaged in battle, he saw a drummer at his side killed by a cannon ball,
which scattered his brains in every direction. His eyes were at once fixed
on the ghastly object, which seemed to engross his thoughts.

A superior officer observing him, supposed he was intimidated by the
sight, and addressed him in a manner to cheer his spirits.

"Oh," said the young marquis, with calmness but severity, "I am not
frightened; I am only puzzled to make out how any man with such a quantity
of brains ever came to be here!"--_Old scrap book._


GREELEY ON JOURNALISM.

Horace Greeley's favorite poem of his own make was:

    Man's a vapor,
      Full of woes;
    Starts a paper--
      Up she goes!


JUST AROUND THE CORNER.

Lloyd Osbourne says that Robert Louis Stevenson once invited a friend to
visit him in Samoa. His friend replied that nothing would give him
greater pleasure, if he could secure the leisure to do so.

"By the way, Louis," added he, "how do you get to Samoa, anyhow?"

"Oh, easily," responded Stevenson, "you simply go to America, cross the
continent to San Francisco, and it's the second turning to the
left."--_Woman's Home Companion._


THE ANGEL'S KINDNESS.

The recording angel suddenly put his fingers in his ears.

"What was that for?" asked St. Peter, when they had been removed.

"Oh, I saw Brown's new derby hat blow off, just as he was getting on a
car," was the explanation of this kind-hearted action.--_Smart Set._


DUNBAR'S RESIGNATION.

Paul Laurence Dunbar, the negro poet, is dead. Incomparable in his
presentation of his race's language and thoughts, he occupied a unique
position in the literary world. W.D. Howells called him the only man of
pure African blood and of American civilization to feel the negro life
esthetically and express it lyrically. Last year, while he was dying of
consumption, he contributed to _Lippincott's_ this verse-sermon of
resignation:

      Because I had loved so long,
    God in his great compassion
      Gave me the gift of song.
    Because I had loved so vainly
      And sung with such faltering breath,
    The Master in infinite mercy
      Offers the boon of death.


A RETORT TURKISH.

The following we take to be of Turkish origin:

"As a woman was walking, a man looked at and followed her.

"'Why,' said she, 'do you follow me?'

"'Because,' he replied, 'I have fallen in love with you.'

"'Why so? My sister, who is coming after me, is much handsomer than I am.
Go and make love to her.'

"The man turned back, and saw a woman with an ugly face, and, being
greatly displeased, returned, and said:

"'Why should you tell me a falsehood?'

"The woman answered 'Neither did you tell _me_ the truth; for, if you were
in love with _me_, why did you look back for another woman?'"




FLASHES OF ROYAL REPARTEE.

While there is no royal road to cleverness, the real road, such as it is,
frequently is traveled by royal feet. In these days the functions of
royalty are not of a nature that is likely to develop merry dispositions.

Rich in sly humor was the reply of Henry IV of France, who one day reached
Amiens after a prolonged journey. A local orator was deputed to harangue
him, and commenced with a lengthy string of epithets:

"Very great sovereign, very good, very merciful, very magnanimous----"

"Add also," interrupted the weary monarch, "very tired."

The same king, who appears to have been a constant sufferer from the
stupid orations of these wordy windbags, was listening to a speech in a
small country town, when an ass brayed at a distance.

"Pardon me, gentlemen," said the witty sovereign; "one at a time, please."

Henry's minister, Sully, was a Protestant, and happening to hear that a
famous physician had quitted Calvinism for Catholicism, the king said to
him:

"My friend, your religion is in a bad way--the doctors give it up."

George III was the author of many clever sayings. Meeting Lord Kenyon at a
levée soon after that eminent justice had been guilty of an extraordinary
explosion of ill humor in the Court of King's Bench, the king remarked to
him:

"My lord chief justice, I hear that you have lost your temper, and from my
great regard for you I am glad to hear it, for I hope you will find a
better one."

On another occasion, when coming out of the House of Lords after opening
the session, he said to the lord chancellor:

"Did I deliver the speech well?"

"Very well indeed," was the reply.

"I am glad of that," said the king, "for there was nothing in it."


When Royalty Had Worst of It.

The laugh, however, has not always been upon the side of royalty. When the
Prince-Bishop of Liège was riding to battle at the head of a fine body of
troops he was asked by a spectator how he, a minister of religion, could
engage in the iniquities of war.

"I wage war," said the prelate, "in my character of prince, not of
archbishop."

"And pray," continued the interrogator, "when the devil carries off the
prince, what will become of the archbishop?"

Decidedly the worst of the exchanges did an Eastern sovereign receive
when, having bought several horses from some merchants, he gave them a lac
of rupees to purchase more for him. Soon after they had departed, he, in a
sportive humor, ordered his vizier to make out a list of all the fools in
his dominions. The vizier did so, and put his majesty's name at the head
of them. The king asked why. The vizier replied:

"Because you entrusted a lac of rupees to men you didn't know, and who
will never come back."

"Aye, but suppose they should come back?"

"Then," said the vizier, "I shall erase your name and insert theirs."

In the answer which a German prince was given there seems to be a rebuke
for his misgovernment implied. Having in a dream seen three rats, one fat,
the other lean, and the third blind, he sent for a celebrated Bohemian
gipsy and demanded an explanation.

"The fat rat," said she, "is your prime minister, the lean rat your
people, and the blind rat yourself."


Court Laureate Too Frank.

One of the Shahs of Persia was more anxious than able to acquire fame as a
poet. He had just completed a new performance in very "peculiar meter,"
and summoned the court poet into the royal presence to hear the poem read.

The laureate, when his opinion was asked (in theatrical language),
"damned" the composition.

The Shah, enraged at this uncourtly criticism, gave orders that the court
poet should be taken to the stable and tied up in the same stall with a
donkey. Here the poor sinner remained until his royal rival had
perpetrated another poem, when he was again commanded to appear before the
throne and submit to a second infliction of sovereign dulness.

He listened in silence while the new poem was read, and at the conclusion,
his opinion being required, he fell upon his knees and significantly
exclaimed to the royal author:

"Send me back to the donkey!"




The Nation's Debt to Mothers.

BY GILSON WILLETS.

  Great Americans Who Have Achieved World-Wide Reputations By
  Reason of the Success That Has Attended Their Careers,
  Ascribe Their Triumphs to Maternal Influence.

_An original article written for_ THE SCRAP BOOK.

The debt which the United States owes to the mothers of its citizens is
one that is beyond the expression of either figures or language. It is a
debt on which the republic can only pay the interest--interest that
consists of the manifestation of an ever-increasing reverence for American
motherhood; for, with all its magnificent resources, the nation is too
poor to make even a feeble attempt to pay the principal.

No better evidence of the effect of maternal influence on the careers of
successful Americans need be adduced than that which is offered here.

In the lives of the Presidents of the United States, it is found that the
nation owes much to American mothers.

George Washington was only eleven years old when his father died, leaving
the widowed mother, Mary Washington, with five children to educate and
direct. She used daily to gather her children around her and teach them
the principles of religion and morality from a little manual in which she
wrote all her maxims.

That manual was preserved by Washington as one of his most valued
treasures, "and was consulted by me many times in after-life." A French
general, on retiring from the presence of Mary Washington, remarked: "It
is not surprising that America should produce great men, since she can
boast of such mothers."


Andrew Jackson.

A few days previous to the birth of Andrew Jackson his father died, and
the widow and her two little sons rode to the churchyard in the wagon
with the coffin. The support of the family fell, then, entirely upon the
mother. She went to the home of her brother-in-law and there engaged
herself as housekeeper.

Until her sons were old enough to take care of themselves she toiled for
them, clothed them, and educated them as best she could.

Many stories are told of Mrs. Jackson's benevolence, her thrift, her
decision of character, and "a rigid honesty and pride of good name that
went hand in hand with a quick and jealous self-respect which was not
likely to be patient under any injustice."

When Andrew Jackson became President, he said of his mother:

"One of the last injunctions given me by her was never to institute a suit
for assault and battery, or for defamation; never to wound the feelings of
others, nor suffer my own to be outraged. These were her words of
admonition to me. I remember them well, and have never failed to respect
them."


Thomas Jefferson.

Thomas Jefferson's father died when the lad was fourteen, and then his
mother became more than ever his companion and adviser. Thomas had,
indeed, always lived more under the influence of his mother than of his
busy father. She was a woman of unusual refinement of character, having
the culture of the best society. Thus equipped, she assumed the training
of Thomas. Upon the death of her husband she found herself her children's
guardian, responsible for a vast entailed estate that was to go to the
eldest son, Thomas.


John Quincy Adams.

John Quincy Adams's father was devoted to his family; but, engrossed in
political activities, he was frequently absent from home for long periods.
From the hour in which the boy learned to talk, his mental activities
received an uncommon stimulus from his mother.

"Being taught by my mother to love my country," wrote John Quincy Adams,
when he became President, "I did it literally by learning to love the
actual hills and rocks and trees, and the very birds and animals." And he
added elsewhere: "All that I am my mother made me."

It is an interesting coincidence that the three martyred Presidents should
each have been peculiarly dominated by a mother's influence.


Abraham Lincoln.

That expression of habitual melancholy in Lincoln's face, for example, was
really a reproduction of the features of Nancy Hanks Lincoln, his mother.
For, through long drudgery and privation, in cabin after cabin, Mrs.
Lincoln had lost all her comeliness, and became bent and care-worn and
sad-faced while Abraham was still an impressionable youth.

How Lincoln reverenced that mother is told by all his biographers. She it
was who, possessing the accomplishments of reading and writing, not common
at that time among the poor people of Kentucky, taught Abraham his letters
and gave him his first lessons in writing.

When Mrs. Lincoln died her son spent months roving the woods, vainly
trying to recover from his grief. The mother was buried without any
funeral service, there being no minister in the vicinity. But Abraham
traversed the country for twenty miles in every direction till he found an
itinerant preacher and induced him to come to his mother's grave and there
preach a funeral sermon.

"Now," he said, "I have henceforth but one purpose in life: to live as she
would have me live."

And in after years Lincoln was deeply and visibly affected whenever he
heard of any incident involving the love of mother and son.


James A. Garfield.

What a contrast is this experience of Lincoln's to that of General Ulysses
S. Grant, whose mother survived his Presidential career, and to that of
Garfield, whose mother lived to stand by his side when he read his
inaugural address on the steps of the Capitol and then to weep at his
tomb! And to that of McKinley, upon whose venerable mother the eyes of the
nation were turned with tender interest on March 4, 1897, when she was the
first person to whom McKinley spoke as President of the United States!

"Eliza," said the father of James A. Garfield to his wife, on his
dying-bed in a log cabin in the wilderness bordering the Ohio River, "I
have brought you four young saplings into these woods. Take care of them."

The future President was then only two years old. His mother was left to
fight the battle of life alone. She managed, by hard work, to run the
little farm, and even found time to give her sons daily lessons in
Bible-reading. Upon James in particular she impressed her personality,
until her own high nature dominated him deeply.

When James was old enough he drove mules on the tow-path of the Ohio
Canal. One pay-day his wages fell short of the proper amount.

"I want every cent for my mother," he said to his employer, insisting upon
the few extra pennies.

Finally he earned enough to enable him to enter the seminary at Chester,
ten miles from his home. While there, he spent a certain holiday, with his
classmates, on a mountain. As darkness gathered about them--they were to
remain overnight--Garfield took a Testament from his pocket and said:

"Boys, I read a chapter every night simultaneously with my mother. If you
please, I will read it now."

And on the day of his inauguration, he turned to his mother, saying:

"It's all because of you, mother."


William McKinley.

At the outbreak of the Rebellion a "war meeting" was held in Poland,
Ohio, in the Sparrow Tavern. There were speaking and beating of drums, and
finally an appeal for volunteers to defend the flag. The first to step
forth was William McKinley, Jr.

"No, my son," said the senior McKinley, laying a restraining hand upon his
son's arm; "you are too young."

"No, he is not too young--none are too young to carry a light in this dark
hour."

The speaker was William's mother.

"And thus, strange to say," wrote William McKinley, years afterward, "the
usual order of things was in my case reversed: my father would have held
me back from the mighty struggle that was to ensue, on the ground that I
was only eighteen years old; and my mother was the one to say 'Go!' For
she had, and still has, a strong and passionate patriotism. Next to God,
she loves her country. She believed in freedom, and was ready to offer up
even a woman's most priceless jewel--her child--to save her country's
flag. She had convictions, and the intellectual powers to impress those
around her--impressing most of all her son."

McKinley's mother was still living at Canton, Ohio, at the age of
eighty-seven, at the time of her son's first inauguration as President.
That day a seemingly trifling incident endeared the new President in the
hearts of the mothers of the country. For William McKinley, as soon as he
had taken the oath of office, went to his mother and kissed her.


Levi P. Morton.

Levi P. Morton once established a dry-goods house in New York, and failed.
But to his creditors he gave all he possessed, settling for fifty cents on
the dollar. Years afterward he made a great success as a banker, and then
he again gave thought to those whom he had not paid in full as a merchant.

One day all his former creditors received invitations to a banquet. His
guests took their seats at the table, and as each opened his napkin he
found a check for the full amount of his claim, with interest.

"Gentlemen," said Mr. Morton, "the one who deserves the credit for
the--shall we say favors of the evening?--is not your host, but the
mother who, by her early influence, has guided him through life. My
father's salary as the village parson was not sufficient for all the
household expenses; so I went to clerking in the village store for a few
dollars a month. When I brought my wages to my mother she said:

"'Levi, do you owe any of this money to anybody? Yes? Then go at once and
pay it, if it takes every dollar. If you owe money, you are not a free
boy.'

"My emancipation to-night, gentlemen, is the direct result of that
mother's early counsel."


Rockefeller and Rogers.

"My mother," says John D. Rockefeller, "taught me to make everything
count. When I became partner in a grocery, I got some barrels of
beans--cheap, because there were many black ones among them. I expected to
sell them cheap, too. But my mother said:

"'John, put in all your spare time, night and day, sorting those beans,
and then they will be all extra quality and you can sell them at an extra
price.'

"For weeks I worked, picking over those beans, by hand, throwing out all
the black ones. It was a lesson I have never forgotten. Through me, my
mother says to all young men:

"'Throw the worthless out of your life; make everything count.'"

Henry H. Rogers, of the Standard Oil Company, said recently:

"Up to a very few years ago I went to my mother with all my joys and all
my woes, just as I did when a boy."

Once a week, in Fairhaven, the model Massachusetts town for which Mr.
Rogers has done so much, he drives to the grave of that mother whom he
loved.

In his mother's cottage while she lived (she would never consent to move
into the great new castle her son built) Mr. Rogers put a long-distance
telephone. Then, every morning in his New York office, at eleven o'clock
precisely, in the very midst of the battle for millions, he would call a
truce for a few minutes "to telephone my mother."


Stephen V. White.

Stephen V. White, "Deacon White," one of the most trusted men in Wall
Street, has a long strip of canvas hanging on his office-wall on which are
painted, in large letters, these lines:

    I shall pass through this world but once;
    Any good thing which in passing I can do,
    Or any kindness I can show to any human being,
    Let me do it now;
    Let me not defer it,
    Nor neglect it,
    For I shall not pass this way again.

"That's my philosophy of life," says Mr. White, "as my mother taught it to
me. Every young man should copy those lines and put the copy in the finest
frame he can afford. For those lines I owe my mother much; it was she who
made me repeat them over and over."

Edwin Markham, "The Man with the Hoe," says:

"It was the influence of my mother--my father having died--that dominated
me. She was an extraordinary woman. She kept a general store in Oregon
City, and conducted the business with remarkable energy. She was known as
the 'Woman Poet of Oregon.'

"It was from her that I got my poetical bent. Her poems were full of
feeling and of the earnestness of a strong religious spirit. They were
published only in newspapers--and to-day my scrap book containing poems
written by my mother is my most precious possession."


John Wanamaker.

"When you marry," said John Wanamaker, to a young men's Bible class,
"remember that your mother-in-law is your wife's mother. Never allow a
so-called 'mother-in-law joke' to make you forget that you are reading a
reflection on some one's mother. My own mother I reverenced. Her maxims
taught me forbearance, tolerance, and the homely lesson of live and let
live."

The mother of Henry O. Havemeyer, the "Sugar King," urged her son to don
overalls and go to work in his father's refinery--though the family was
even then very rich.

"So my mother taught me," says Mr. Havemeyer, "to know the joy of work at
a time when I might have slipped into a life of idleness."

The Rev. Dr. Charles H. Parkhurst, the well-known New York clergyman,
says:

"My father was a farmer, and my mother, with four children on her hands,
and no servant, did all the work of a farmer's wife. Her days were long,
for she also devoted herself to her children, to their character and
education, declining to farm us out to the supervision of nurses or
school-teachers. My mother had the old-fashioned notion that children were
born of mothers in order that they might have mothers to bring them up."

David Starr Jordan, president of Leland Stanford University, was asked
what great man or woman most influenced him as a boy.

He replied, in writing:

"I was far more influenced by my mother than by any other person I ever
knew or heard of."


Fulton, Franklin, and Astor.

Robert Fulton was only three years old when his father died. "So that," he
said, "I grew up under the care of my blessed mother. She developed my
early talent for drawing and encouraged me in my visits to the
machine-shops of the town."

Robert was a dull pupil at school, however, and the teacher complained to
his mother. Whereupon Mrs. Fulton replied proudly:

"My boy's head, sir, is so full of original notions that there is no
vacant chamber in which to store the contents of your musty books."

"I was only ten years old at that time," said Fulton, "and my mother
seemed to be the only human being who understood my natural bent for
mechanics."

The fact that Fulton's mother let the boy have his own way in his
"original notions" had its direct result later in the building of the
first steamboat.

Benjamin Franklin many times, in his own story of his life, mentions the
powerful influence which his mother had over him, referring to her always
with peculiar affection.

"My son," said that mother, "is endowed with more than ordinary talent,
and he shall enter one of the professions, perhaps the ministry."

The family was then very poor, the elder Franklin having no ambition
beyond that of making a bare competence as a ship-chandler. Encouraged by
his mother, however, young Benjamin "took to books" with such ardor that
before he was ten years old his mother spoke of him as "our little
professor," and added:

"He shall serve either humanity or his country; the one as a minister of
the Gospel, the other as a diplomat."

The first John Jacob Astor said: "Whatever I have accomplished through
thrift is due to the teachings of my mother. She trained me to the habit
of early rising; she made me devote the first waking hours to reading the
Bible. Those habits have continued through my life, and have been to me a
source of unfailing comfort. Her death was the greatest grief of my
existence."




WHEN THACKERAY WENT ON STRIKE.

  In a Letter Written to the Publisher of an English Magazine, the Famous
  Novelist Demanded as Good Pay as That of the "Monthly Nurse."

There are authors' clubs and authors' societies in nearly every national
literary center in the world, but up to the present time the trade of
authorship has not been formally affiliated with that of any kind of
trade-unionism. For this very reason, authors are compelled to make their
demands individually.

This was the situation that confronted William Makepeace Thackeray at a
time when his writings were first beginning to win popularity in England.
It was in 1837, the year after his marriage to Isabella Shawe--a
chronological sequence which perhaps accounts for his increased need of
money. He was contributing "The Yellowplush Papers" to the successive
issues of _Fraser's Magazine_, and he had made up his mind that his work
ought to yield him a more satisfactory financial return. The result was he
went on strike, as may be seen by the following letter which he wrote to
James Fraser, the proprietor of the magazine:


  Boulogne, Monday, February.

  MY DEAR FRASER:

    I have seen the doctor, who has given me commands about the
    hundredth number. I shall send him my share from Paris in a
    day or two, and hope I shall do a good deal in the diligence
    to-morrow. He reiterates his determination to write monthly
    for you and deliver over the proceeds to me. Will you,
    therefore, have the goodness to give the bearer a check (in
    my wife's name) for the amount of his contributions for the
    last two months? Mrs. Thackeray will give you a receipt for
    the same. You have already Maginn's authority.

    Now comes another and not a very pleasant point on which I
    must speak. I hereby give notice that I shall strike for
    wages. You pay more to others, I find, than to me, and so I
    intend to make some fresh conditions about Yellowplush. I
    shall write no more of that gentleman's remarks except at
    the rate of twelve guineas a sheet and with a drawing for
    each number in which his story appears--the drawing two
    guineas.

    Pray do not be angry at this decision on my part; it is
    simply a bargain which it is my duty to make. Bad as he is,
    Mr. Yellowplush is the most popular contributor to your
    magazine, and ought to be paid accordingly; if he does not
    deserve more than the Monthly Nurse or the Blue Friars, I am
    a Dutchman. I have been at work upon his adventures to-day,
    and will send them to you or not, as you like; but in common
    regard for myself I won't work under prices.

    Well, I dare say you will be very indignant, and swear I am
    the most mercenary of individuals. Not so. But I am a better
    workman than most of your crew, and desire a better price.
    You must not, I repeat, be angry or, because we differ as
    tradesmen, break off our connection as friends.

    Believe me that, whether I write for you or not, I shall
    always be glad of your friendship, and anxious to have your
    good opinion. I am, ever, my dear Fraser (independent of £
    s. d.), very truly yours,

  W.M. THACKERAY.






MY LADY ON PARADE.

  Verses, Old and New, Dealing With Various Phases of That Highly Important
  Subject, the Philosophy of Feminine Costume.


WHAT THE CHOIR SANG.

By Harriette Hammond.

    A foolish little maiden bought a foolish little bonnet,
    With a ribbon, and a feather, and a bit of lace upon it.
    And that the other maidens of the little town might know it,
    She thought she'd go to meeting the next Sunday just to show it.

    But though the little bonnet was scarce larger than a dime,
    The getting of it settled proved to be a work of time;
    So when 'twas fairly tied, all the bells had stopped their ringing,
    And when she came to meeting, sure enough, the folks were singing.

    So this foolish little maiden stood and waited at the door;
    And as she shook her ruffles out behind, and smoothed them down before.
    "Hallelujah! hallelujah!" sang the choir above her head--
    "Hardly knew you! hardly knew you!" were the words she thought they
        said.

    This made the little maiden feel so very, _very_ cross,
    That she gave her little mouth a twist, her little head a toss;
    For she thought the very hymn they sang was all about her bonnet,
    With the ribbon, and the feather, and the bit of lace upon it.

    And she would not wait to listen to the sermon or the prayer,
    But pattered down the silent street and hurried up the stair,
    Till she reached her little bureau, and in a bandbox on it
    Had hidden, safe from critic's eye, her foolish little bonnet.

    Which proves, my little maidens, that each of you will find
    In every Sabbath service but an echo of your mind;
    And that the little head that's filled with silly little airs
    Will never get a blessing from sermons or from prayers.


AN OMAR FOR LADIES.

By Josephine Dodge Daskam.

    One for her Club and her own Latch-key fights,
    Another wastes in Study her good Nights.
      Ah, take the Clothes and let the Culture go,
    Nor heed the grumble of the Women's Rights!

    And she who saved her coin for Flannels red,
    And she who caught Pneumonia instead,
      Will both be Underground in Fifty Years,
    And Prudence pays no Premium to the dead.

    Th' exclusive Style you set your heart upon
    Gets to the Bargain counters--and anon
      Like monograms on a Saleslady's tie
    Cheers but a moment--soon for you 'tis gone.

    They say Sixth Avenue and the Bowery keep
    The _dernier cri_ that once was far from cheap;
      Green Veils, one season chic--Department stores
    Mark down in vain--no profits shall they reap.

    _Exchange._


SHE FELT OF HER BELT.

    I saw her go shopping in stylish attire,
                And she felt
                Of her belt
                At the back.
    Her walk was as free as a springy steel wire,
    And many a rubberneck turned to admire
                As she felt
                Of her belt
                At the back.
    She wondered if all the contraptions back there
    Were fastened just right--'twas an unceasing care,
                So she felt
                Of her belt
                At the back.

    I saw her at church as she entered her pew;
                And she felt
                Of her belt
                At the back.
    She had on a skirt that was rustly and new,
    And didn't quite know what the fastenings might do,
                So she felt
                Of her belt
                At the back.
    She fidgeted round while the first prayer was said,
    She fumbled about while the first hymn was read--
                Oh she felt
                Of her belt
                At the back.

    Jack told her one night that he loved her like mad;
                And she felt
                For her belt
                At the back.
    She didn't look sorry, she didn't look glad--
    She looked like she thought, "Well, that wasn't so bad."
                And she felt
                For her belt
                At the back.
    But--well, I don't think 'twas a great deal of harm,
    For what should the maiden have found but an arm
                When she felt
                For her belt
                At the back?

    _Los Angeles Herald._


REGRETS.

By Carolyn Wells.

    I cannot wear the old gowns
      I wore a year ago,
    The styles are so eccentric,
      And fashion changes so;
    These bygone gowns are out of date;
      (There must be nine or ten!)
    I cannot wear the old gowns,
      Nor don those frocks again.

    I cannot wear the old gowns,
      The skirts are far too tight;
    They do not flare correctly, and
      The trimming isn't right.
    The Spanish flounce is fagoted,
      The plaits are box, not knife;
    I cannot wear the old gowns--
      I'd look like Noah's wife.

    I cannot wear the old gowns,
      The sleeves are so absurd;
    They're tightly fitted at the top,
      And at the wrist they're shirred!
    The shoulder seams are far too long,
      The collars too high-necked;
    I cannot wear my old gowns
      And keep my self-respect!

    _Saturday Evening Post._


MY AUNT.

By Oliver Wendell Holmes.

    My aunt! My dear unmarried aunt!
      Long years have o'er her flown;
    Yet still she strains the aching clasp
      That binds her virgin zone;
    I know it hurts her--though she looks
      As cheerful as she can;
    Her waist is ampler than her life,
      For life is but a span.

    My aunt, my poor deluded aunt!
      Her hair is almost gray;
    Why will she train that winter curl
      In such a springlike way?
    How can she lay her glasses down,
      And say she reads as well,
    When, through a double convex lens,
      She just makes out to spell?

    Her father--grandpa! Forgive
      This erring lip its smiles--
    Vowed she would make the finest girl
      Within a hundred miles.
    He sent her to a stylish school;
      'Twas in her thirteenth June;
    And with her, as the rules required,
      "Two towels and a spoon."

    They braced my aunt against a board
      To make her straight and tall;
    They laced her up, they starved her down,
      To make her light and small;
    They pinched her feet, they singed her hair,
      They screw it up with pins--
    Oh, never mortal suffered more
      In penance for her sins!

    So when my precious aunt was done,
      My grandsire brought her back
    (By daylight, lest some rabid youth
      Might follow on the track);
    "Ah!" said my grandsire, as he shook
      Some powder in his pan,
    "What could this lovely creature do
      Against a desperate man?"

    Alas, nor chariot nor barouche
      Nor bandit cavalcade
    Tore from the trembling father's arms
      His all-accomplished maid.
    For her how happy had it been!
      And heaven had spared to me
    To see one sad, ungathered rose
      On my ancestral tree.




MISMATED MEN OF GENIUS.

  Some Distinguished Writers, Artists, and Composers Who Were Rather Less
  Fortunate in Choosing Wives With Congenial Temperaments Than in Following
  the Paths That Led Them On to Fame.

In writing on the subject of the influence of matrimony on men of genius,
E.P. Whipple, the Boston essayist and lecturer, mentioned the cases of
several who, like Molière and Rousseau, have had unsympathetic wives.
Among these was Sir Walter Scott, who while walking with his wife in the
fields called her attention to some lambs, remarking that they were
beautiful.

"Yes," echoed she, "lambs are beautiful--boiled!"

That incomparable essayist and chirping philosopher, Montaigne, married
but once. When his good wife left him, he shed the tears usual on such
occasions, and said he would not marry again, though it were to Wisdom
herself.

A young painter of great promise once told Sir Joshua Reynolds that he had
taken a wife. "Married!" ejaculated the horrified Sir Joshua; "then you
are ruined as an artist."

Michelangelo, when asked why he never married, replied:

"I have espoused my art, and that occasions me sufficient domestic cares;
for my works shall be my children."

The wives of Dante, Milton, Dryden, Addison, and Steele shed no glory on
the sex, and brought no peace to their firesides.

The list of "unhappily married" is large and brilliant. It includes
William Beckford, the author of "Vathek," who, however, does not seem to
have deserved a happy life, and whose enormous fortune and great talents
were alike wasted.

Lord Lytton was also unhappily, though romantically, married, and a large
part, at least, of the subsequent misery was due to his temper and
conduct. But perhaps full justice has not been done to the ill effects of
the long and hard struggle with poverty, which he maintained with such
success, but with such constant labor, during many years.

The temperaments of Charles Dickens and his wife were so different that
they lived apart for several years preceding the great novelist's death.

Lord and Lady Byron separated about a year after their marriage, and they
never met again.

Sir Henry Irving and his wife spent the last years of their married life
in separate homes.

Haydn's marriage was unhappy. In 1758 the young composer had, after great
struggles, got so far as to obtain a musical directorship with Count
Morzin, and settled in Vienna. His salary was only two hundred florins,
but he had board and lodging free. Many pupils came to him, and among
others two daughters of the hairdresser Keller.

Haydn fell deeply in love with the younger, but his affection was not
returned, for she entered a convent and became a nun.

Father Keller, who was very familiar with Haydn and had helped him
oftentimes with small loans in his early struggles, persuaded the young
composer to marry his elder daughter, and the marriage, after awhile, was
celebrated November 26, 1760.

Maria Anna was, however, no wife for Joseph Haydn. She was extravagant,
bigoted, scolded all day, and was utterly uncompanionable to a musician.

Finally she became so bad that she only did what she thought would annoy
her husband. She dressed in a fashion quite unsuited to her position,
invited clerical men to her table, tore Haydn's written musical scores and
made curl-papers of them, etc., and yet the great composer bore it all as
well as he could.

In one letter he says: "My wife is mostly sick, and is always in a bad
temper. It is the same to her whether her husband is a shoemaker or an
artist."

After he had suffered this state of things in a miserable marriage of
thirty-two years he seemed exhausted, and wrote, then a renowned composer,
to a friend from London:

"My wife, that infernal woman, has written me such horrible things that I
will not return home again."

At last Haydn separated from his wife and placed her as a boarder with a
schoolmaster in Baden, where she died in 1810. Her memory was always
disagreeable to him, even after her death.




A Chapter on Puns.

BY THEODORE HOOK.

    Theodore Hook (1788-1841) belonged to that singularly
    fortunate class of writers whose fame was greater while they
    lived than after death closed the book of life. To
    present-day readers Hook is known only as the subject of
    many a merry anecdote, the coiner of epigrams, and one of
    the most celebrated practical jokers of his time.

    But among his contemporaries Theodore Hook was something
    more. Before he was twenty years old farces and comic operas
    from his pen had been successfully produced on the London
    stage, and he was a pet of London society. When he was
    thirty he was the editor of the Tory paper _John Bull_, and
    the novels that he published at this period attained a high
    degree of popularity.

    As a punster Hook had few equals, and "A Chapter on Puns,"
    which is herewith reprinted for the readers of THE SCRAP
    BOOK, constitutes an excellent specimen of the sort of humor
    for which its author was famous.

There is one class of people who, with a depravity of appetite not
excelled by that of the celebrated Anna Maria Schurman, who rejoiced in
eating spiders, thirst after puns. If you fall in with these, you have no
resource but to indulge them to their heart's content; but in order to
rescue yourself from the imputation of believing punning to be wit, quote
the definition of Swift, and be, like him, as inveterate a punster as you
possibly can, immediately after resting everything, and hazarding all,
upon the principle that the worse the pun the better.

In order to be prepared for this sort of _punic_ war (for the disorder is
provocative and epidemic), the moment any one gentleman or lady has, as
they say in Scotland, "let a pun," everybody else in the room who can or
cannot do the same sets to work to endeavor to emulate the example. From
that period all rational conversation is at an end, and a jargon of
nonsense succeeds which lasts till the announcement of coffee, or supper,
or the carriages puts a happy termination to the riot.

Addison says, "One may say of a pun, as the countryman described his
nightingale, that it is _vox et præterea nihil_, a sound, and nothing but
a sound;" and in another place he tells us that "the greatest authors in
their most serious works make frequent use of puns; the sermons of Bishop
Andrews and the tragedies of Shakespeare are full of them; if a sinner was
punned into repentance as in the latter, nothing is more usual than to see
a hero weeping and grumbling for a dozen lines together;" but he also
says, "It is indeed impossible to kill a weed which the soil has a natural
disposition to produce. The seeds of punning are in the minds of all men,
and though they may be subdued by reason, reflection, and good sense, they
will be very apt to shoot up in the greatest genius that is not broken and
cultivated by the rules of art."

Here is something like a justification of the enormity; and, as the pupil
is to mix in all societies, he may as well be prepared.

Puns may be divided into different classes; they may be made in different
ways, introduced by passing circumstances, or by references to bygone
events; they may be thrown in _anecdotically_, or conundrumwise.

It is to be observed that feeling, or pity, or commiseration, or grief
are not to stand in the way of a pun--that personal defects are to be made
available, and that sense, so as the sound answers, has nothing to do with
the business.

If a man is pathetically describing the funeral of his mother or sister or
wife, it is quite allowable to call it a "black-_burying_ party," or to
talk of a "fit of _coffin_"; a weeping relative struggling to conceal his
grief may be likened to a commander of "_private tears_"; throw in a joke
about the phrase of "funerals _performed_" and a re-_hearsal_; and wind up
with the anagram _real-fun_, funeral.

I give this instance first, in order to explain that nothing, however
solemn the subject, is to stand in the way of a pun.

It is allowable, when you have run a subject dry in English, to hitch in a
bit of any other language which may sound to your liking. For instance, on
a fishing party. You say fishing is out of your _line_; yet, if you did
not keep _a float_, you would deserve a _rod_; and if anybody affects to
find fault with your joke, exclaim: "Oh, _vous bête_!"

There you have _line_, _rod_, _float_, and _bait_ ready to your hand.

Call two noodles from the city in a punt, endeavoring to catch small fry,
"_East Angles_"; or, if you please, observe that "the _punters_ are losing
the fish," "catching nothing but a cold," or that "the fish are too deep
for them." Call the Thames a "_tidy_" river; but say you prefer the _Isis_
in hot weather.

Personal deformities or constitutional calamities are always to be laid
hold of. If anybody tells you that a dear friend has lost his sight,
observe that it will make him more hospitable than ever, since now he
would be glad _to see anybody_.

If a clergyman breaks his leg, remark that he is no longer a clergyman,
but a _lame man_. If a poet is seized with apoplexy, affect to disbelieve
it, although you know it to be true, in order to say--

  Poeta nascitur non _fit_;

and then, to carry the joke one step farther, add, "that it is not a _fit_
subject for a jest."

A man falling into a tan-pit, you may call "sinking in the _sublime_"; a
climbing boy suffocated in a chimney meets with a _sootable_ death; and a
pretty girl having caught the smallpox is to be much _pitted_.

On the subject of the ear and its defects, talk first of something in
which _a cow sticks_, and end by telling the story of the man who, having
taken great pains to explain something to his companion, at last got in a
rage at his apparent stupidity, and exclaimed, "Why, my dear sir, don't
you comprehend? The thing is as plain as A, B, C." "I dare say it is,"
said the other; "but I am D, E, F."

It may be as well to give the beginner something of a notion of the use he
may make of the most ordinary words, for the purpose of quibbleism. For
instance, in the way of observation: The loss of a hat is always _felt_;
if you don't like sugar, you may _lump_ it; a glazier is a _panes_-taking
man; candles are burnt because _wick-ed_ things always come to _light_; a
lady who takes you home from a party is kind in her _carriage_, and you
say "Nunc est _ridendum_" when you step into it; if it happen to be a
chariot, she is a _charitable_ person; birds'-nests and king-killing are
synonymous, because they are _high trees on_; a bill for building a bridge
should be sanctioned by the Court of _Arches_ as well as the House of
_Piers_; when a man is dull, he goes to the seaside to _Brighton_; a
Cockney lover, when sentimental, should live in _Heigh Hoburn_; the
greatest fibber is the man most to _re-lie_ upon; a dean expecting a
bishopric looks _for lawn_; a _sui_-cide kills pigs, and not himself; a
butcher is a gross man, but a fig-seller is a _grocer_; Joshua never had a
father or mother, because he was the son of a _Nun_; your grandmother and
great-grandmother were your _aunt's sisters_; a leg of mutton is better
than heaven, because nothing is better than heaven, and a leg of mutton is
better than nothing.

Races are matters of _course_; an ass never can be a horse, although he
may be a _mayor_; the Venerable Bede was the mother of Pearl; a baker
makes bread when he _kneads_ it; a doctor cannot be a doctor all at once,
because he comes to it by _degrees_; a man hanged at Newgate has taken a
_drop_ too much; the _bridle_ day is that on which a man leads a woman to
the _halter_. Never mind the aspirate; in punning all's fair.

Puns interrogatory are at times serviceable. You meet a man carrying a
hare: ask him if it is his own _hare_, or a wig?--there you stump him. Why
is Parliament Street like a compendium? Because it goes to a _bridge_. Why
is a man murdering his mother in a garret a worthy person? Because he is
above committing a crime. Instances of this kind are innumerable; and if
you want to render your question particularly pointed, you are, after
asking it once or twice, to say "D'ye give it up?"--then favor your
friends with the solution.

Puns scientific are effective whenever a scientific man or men are in
company, because, in the first place, they invariably hate puns,
especially those which are capable of being twisted into jokes which have
no possible relation to the science of which the words to be joked upon
are terms; and because, in the next place, dear, laughing girls, who are
wise enough not to be sages, will love you for disturbing the
self-satisfaction of the philosophers, and raising a laugh or titter at
their expense.

Where there are three or four geologists of the party, if they talk of
their scientific tours made to collect specimens, call the old ones
"ninny-hammers," and the young ones "chips of the old block"; and then
inform them that claret is the best specimen of _quartz_ in the world.

If you fall in with a botanist who is holding forth, talk of the quarrels
of flowers as a sequel to the loves of the plants, and say they decide
their differences with _pistols_.

In short, sacrifice everything to the pursuit of punning, and in the
course of time you will acquire such a reputation for waggery that the
whole company will burst into an immoderate fit of laughing if you only
ask the servants for bread, or say "No" to the offer of a cutlet.




GREAT WRITERS OFTEN POOR TALKERS.

  Among Those Who Were Singularly Deficient in the Art of Conversation Were
  Corneille, Addison, Milton, Dante, and Goldsmith.

"He wrote like an angel and talked like poor poll," was the manner in
which Oliver Goldsmith was described by one of his contemporaries, and all
acounts agree that the author of "The Deserted Village" made a sorry
figure as a conversationalist. But Goldsmith was far from being the only
writer of undoubted genius whose conversation was devoid of charm. Indeed,
there is a wealth of evidence to prove that the art of writing well and
talking well are not akin.

    Descartes, the famous mathematician and philosopher; La
    Fontaine, celebrated for his witty fables; Buffon, the great
    naturalist, were all singularly deficient in the powers of
    conversation.

    Marmontel, the novelist, was so dull in society that his
    friend said of him, after an interview, that he must go and
    read his tales to recompense himself for the weariness of
    hearing him.

    As to Corneille, the grandest dramatist in France, he was
    completely lost in society--so absent and embarrassed that
    he wrote of himself a witty couplet importing that he was
    never intelligible but through the mouth of another.

    Wit on paper seems to be something widely different from
    that play of words in conversation, which, while it
    sparkles, dies; for Charles II, the wittiest monarch that
    sat on the English throne, was so charmed with the humor of
    "Hudibras" that he caused himself to be introduced in the
    character of a private gentleman to Butler, its author. The
    witty king found the author a very dull companion, and was
    of opinion, with many others, that so stupid a fellow could
    never have written so clever a book.

    Addison, whose classic elegance has long been considered a
    model of style, was shy and absent in society, preserving,
    even before a single stranger, stiff and dignified silence.

    In conversation Dante was taciturn and satirical.

    Rousseau was remarkably trite in conversation--not a word of
    fancy or eloquence warmed him.

    Milton was unsocial, and even irritable, when much pressed
    by talk of others.




FAMOUS LOVE POEMS.

  An Elizabethan Dramatist and One of the Cavaliers of
  Charles I Gave to Our Language Two of
  Its Most Charming Lyrics.

The English language is particularly rich in poetical expressions of the
tender passion, but among these two have long been regarded as preeminent.

One, "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love," was written by Christopher
Marlowe (1564-1593), the only great predecessor of Shakespeare in the
British drama. This lyric, which is described by old Izaak Walton as "that
smooth song which was made by Kit Marlowe," is one of the most beautiful
of its kind that has come down to us from the Elizabethan period. It has
frequently been imitated by minor poets, and a delightful reply to it was
made by Sir Walter Raleigh.

The second famous love poem published herewith was from the pen of the
gay, loyal, brave, but unfortunate Cavalier, Sir Richard Lovelace
(1618-1658). The exquisite verses constituting his address "To Althea from
Prison" were written while the young poet was confined as a prisoner, by
order of the Puritan Parliament, in the Gatehouse of Westminster, for
presenting to the Commons a petition from Kentish royalists in the king's
favor. He was released on bail which amounted to two hundred thousand
dollars. The young woman to whom the lines "To Althea" were written
subsequently became the wife of another. Lovelace died in the most abject
poverty.

       *       *       *       *       *


THE PASSIONATE SHEPHERD TO HIS LOVE.

BY CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE.

    Come live with me, and be my love,
    And we will all the pleasures prove
    That valleys, groves, and hills, and fields,
    Woods or steepy mountains yields.

    And we will sit upon the rocks,
    Seeing the shepherds feed their flocks
    By shallow rivers, to whose falls
    Melodious birds sing madrigals.

    And I will make thee beds of roses,
    And a thousand fragrant posies;
    A cap of flowers, and a kirtle
    Embroidered all with leaves of myrtle;

    A gown made of the finest wool,
    Which from our pretty lambs we pull;
    Fair lined slippers for the cold,
    With buckles of the purest gold;

    A belt of straw and ivy buds,
    With coral clasps and amber studs:
    And if these pleasures may thee move,
    Come live with me, and be my love.

    The shepherd swains shall dance and sing
    For thy delight each May-morning:
    If these delights thy mind may move,
    Then live with me, and be my love.

       *       *       *       *       *


TO ALTHEA FROM PRISON.

BY RICHARD LOVELACE.

    When Love with unconfined wings
      Hovers within my gates,
    And my divine Althea brings
      To whisper at my grates;
    When I lie tangled in her hair
      And fettered to her eye,
    The birds that wanton in the air
      Know no such liberty.

    When flowing cups run swiftly round
      With no allaying Thames,
    Our careless heads with roses bound,
      Our hearts with loyal flames;
    When thirsty grief in wine we steep.
      When healths and draughts go free--
    Fishes, that tipple in the deep,
      Know no such liberty.

    When like committed linnets I
      With shriller throat shall sing
    The sweetness, mercy, majesty,
      And glories of my king;
    When I shall voice aloud how good
      He is, how great should be,
    Enlarged winds, that curl the flood,
      Know no such liberty.

    Stone walls do not a prison make,
      Nor iron bars a cage;
    Minds innocent and quiet take
      That for a hermitage;
    If I have freedom in my love
      And in my soul am free;
    Angels alone, that soar above,
      Enjoy such liberty.




Speech on Duluth.

BY JAMES PROCTOR KNOTT.


    James Proctor Knott was born in Kentucky on August 29, 1830.
    He went to Missouri in 1850 and there began the practise of
    law. In 1858 he was elected to the Missouri Legislature and
    subsequently he became attorney-general. He returned to
    Kentucky in 1862 and was elected to Congress from that State
    in 1866. It was while in Congress that Mr. Knott attained
    national fame as a humorist. As a satirist he had no equal
    among his fellow members, and he was responsible for several
    bills being "laughed out of the House."

    Mr. Knott's most famous speech was delivered in the House of
    Representatives, January 27, 1871, on the joint resolution
    extending the time to construct a railroad from the St.
    Croix River to the west end of Lake Superior. At that time
    Duluth was a small and almost unknown village. Knott's
    grandiloquent forecast of its future, intended as a satire,
    has since been in great part verified by the city's
    wonderful development. It now has a population of more than
    fifty-five thousand persons, and as one of the principal
    shipping points of the great Northwestern grain-fields it is
    world-famous.

    Of this speech, which has long been regarded as a model of
    its kind, an abridged version is given below. The complete
    text may be found in the third section of the appendix of
    the _Congressional Globe_ for 1870-1871, beginning on page
    68.

Mr. Speaker: As to those great trunk-lines of railway spanning the
continent from ocean to ocean, I confess my mind has never been fully made
up. But with regard to the transcendent merits of the gigantic enterprise
contemplated in this bill--to construct a railroad from the St. Croix
River, or lake, to the west end of Lake Superior and to Bayfield--I never
entertained a shadow of a doubt.

Now, sir, who that is not as incredulous as St. Thomas himself will doubt
for a moment that the Goshen of America is to be found in the sandy
valleys and upon the pine-clad hills of the St. Croix?

Sir, I have been satisfied for years that if there was any portion of the
inhabited globe absolutely in a suffering condition for a railroad, it was
these teeming pine-barrens of the St. Croix.

At what particular point on that noble stream such a road should be
commenced I knew was immaterial, and so it seems to have been considered
by the draftsman of this bill. It might be up at the spring or down at the
foot-log, or the water-gate, or the fish-dam, or anywhere along the bank,
no matter where. But in what direction should it run, or where should it
terminate, were always to my mind questions of the most painful
perplexity, until I accidentally overheard some gentlemen the other day
mention the name of "Duluth."

Duluth! The word fell on my ear with a peculiar and indescribable charm,
like the gentle murmur of a low fountain stealing forth in the midst of
roses, or the soft, sweet accent of an angel's whisper in the bright,
joyous dream of sleeping innocence.

Duluth! 'Twas the name for which my soul had panted for years, as the hart
panteth for the water-brooks. But where was Duluth?

Never in all my limited reading had my vision been gladdened by seeing the
celestial word in print. And I felt a profound humiliation in my
ignorance that its dulcet syllables had never before ravished my
delighted ear. I was certain the draftsman of this bill had never heard of
it, or it would have been designated as one of the termini of this road.

I asked my friends about it, but they knew nothing of it. I rushed to the
library and examined all the maps I could find. I discovered in one of
them a delicate, hair-like line diverging from the Mississippi near a
place called Prescott, which I supposed was intended to represent the
river St. Croix; but I could nowhere find Duluth.

Nevertheless, I was confident that it existed somewhere, and that its
discovery would constitute the crowning glory of the present century, if
not of all modern times.

Thanks to the beneficence of that band of ministering angels who have
their bright abodes in the far-off capital of Minnesota, just as the agony
of my anxiety was about to culminate in the frenzy of despair, this
blessed map was placed in my hands; and as I unfolded it a resplendent
scene of ineffable glory opened before me, such as I imagine burst upon
the enraptured vision of the wandering peri through the opening gates of
paradise.

There, there for the first time my enchanted eye rested upon the ravishing
word "Duluth."

If gentlemen will examine it, they will find Duluth not only in the center
of this map, but represented in the center of concentric circles one
hundred miles apart, and some of them as much as four thousand miles in
diameter, embracing alike in their tremendous sweep the fragrant savannas
of the sunlit South, and the eternal solitudes of snow that mantle the
ice-bound North.

I find by reference to this map that Duluth is situated somewhere near the
western end of Lake Superior; but as there is no dot or other mark
indicating its exact location, I am unable to say whether it is actually
confined to any particular spot, or whether "it is just lying around there
loose."

But, however that may be, I am satisfied that Duluth is there or
thereabout, for I see it stated here on this map that it is exactly
thirty-nine hundred and ninety miles from Liverpool, though I have no
doubt, for the sake of convenience, it will be moved back ten miles so as
to make the distance an even four thousand.

Then, sir, there is the climate of Duluth, unquestionably the most
salubrious and delightful to be found anywhere on the Lord's earth. Now, I
have always been under the impression, as I presume other gentlemen have,
that in the regions around Lake Superior it was cold enough, for at least
nine months in the year, to freeze the smoke-stack off a locomotive.

But I see it represented on this map that Duluth is situated exactly
half-way between the latitudes of Paris and Venice; so that gentlemen who
have inhaled the exhilarating airs of the one or basked in the golden
sunlight of the other may see at a glance that Duluth must be a place of
untold delights, a terrestrial paradise, fanned by the balmy zephyrs of an
eternal spring, clothed in the gorgeous sheen of ever-blooming flowers,
and vocal with the silvery melody of Nature's choicest songsters.

As to the commercial resources of Duluth, sir, they are simply illimitable
and inexhaustible, as shown by this map. I see it stated here that there
is a vast scope of territory, embracing an area of over two million square
miles, rich in every element of material wealth and commercial prosperity,
all tributary to Duluth.

Look at this map; do not you see from the broad brown lines drawn around
this immense territory, that the enterprising inhabitants of Duluth intend
some day to enclose it all in one vast corral, so that its commerce would
be bound to go there whether it would or not? And on this map, sir, I find
within a convenient distance the Piegan Indians, which of all the many
accessories to the glory of Duluth I consider the most inestimable.

For, sir, I see vast "wheat-fields" represented on this map in the
immediate neighborhood of the buffaloes and the Piegans; and though the
idea of there being these immense wheat-fields in the very heart of a
wilderness, hundreds and hundreds of miles beyond the utmost verge of
civilization, may appear to some gentlemen as rather incongruous, as
rather too great a strain on the "blankets" of veracity, to my mind there
is no difficulty in the matter whatever.

Here, you will observe, are the buffaloes, directly between the Piegans
and Duluth, and here, on the right of Duluth, are the Creeks. Now, sir,
when the buffaloes are sufficiently fat from grazing on these immense
wheat-fields, you see it will be the easiest thing in the world for the
Piegans to drive them on down, stay all night with their friends, the
Creeks, and go into Duluth in the morning.

Sir, I might stand here for hours and hours and expatiate with rapture
upon the gorgeous prospects of Duluth as depicted upon this map. But human
life is far too short and the time of this House far too valuable to allow
me to linger longer upon the delightful theme. Nevertheless, sir, it
grieves my very soul to be compelled to say that I cannot vote for the
grant of lands provided for in this bill.

Ah, sir, you can have no conception of the poignancy of my anguish that I
am deprived of that blessed privilege! There are two insuperable obstacles
in the way. In the first place, my constituents for whom I am acting here
have no more interest in this road than they have in the great question of
culinary taste now perhaps agitating the public mind of Dominica as to
whether the illustrious commissioners who recently left this capital for
that free and enlightened republic would be better fricasseed, boiled, or
roasted; and in the second place, these lands which I am asked to give
away, alas! are not mine to bestow.

My relation to them is simply that of trustee to an express trust. And
shall I ever betray that trust?

Never, sir! Rather perish Duluth! Perish the paragon of cities! Rather let
the freezing cyclones of the bleak Northwest bury it forever beneath the
eddying sands of the raging St. Croix.




NATURE'S WILDERNESS COMPASSES.

  Some Simple Facts Concerning Woodcraft Which Will Enable Wanderers in a
  Forest to Get Their Bearings and Find Their Camps.

With the coming of vacation time, men's thoughts turn to woods and
streams, and there is a general rush for "the tall timber."

That many will wander far afield and lose themselves in "trackless
forests" is inevitable, but there is a sure way of finding oneself which
is well worth remembering, for it is a serious matter to be actually lost
in dense woods.

    Find a mature tree that stands apart from its fellows. Even
    if it is only slightly separate it will do. The bark on this
    tree will be harder, drier, and lighter in color on the
    south side. On the north it will be darker, and often at the
    roots it will have a clump of mold or moss.

    On the south side of all evergreen trees, gum which oozes
    from wounds or knotholes will be hard and amber-colored; on
    the north side this gum is softer, gets covered with dust,
    and is of a dirty gray.

    In fall or winter, trees which show a rough bark will have
    nests of insects in the crevices on their south side.

    Hardwood trees--the oak, the ash, elms, hickories, mesquits,
    etc., have moss and mold on the north. Leaves are smaller,
    tougher, lighter in color, and with darker veins on the
    south; on the north they are longer, of darker green, and
    with lighter veins. Spiders build on the south sides. In the
    South, air plants attach themselves to the north sides.
    Cedars bend their tips to the south.

    Any sawed or cut stump will give you the compass points,
    because the concentric rings are thicker on the south side.
    The heart of the stump is thus nearer to the north side. All
    these things are the effects of the sun.

    Stones are bare on the south side, and if they have moss at
    all, it will be on the north. At best, on the sunny side
    only a thin covering of harsh, half-dry moss will be found.

    On the south side of a hill the ground is more noisy
    underfoot. On the north side ferns, mosses, and late flowers
    grow.

    If you are on a marsh, small bushes will give you the
    lesson; then leaves and limbs show the same differences.
    Almost all wild flowers turn their faces to the south. There
    are many other signs that will aid the lost person, but you
    will find these enough.




ALL KINDS OF THINGS.

    Great Fortunes of To-day Compared With the Wealth of France
    Under the Bourbons--The Dangers of Dust, and the
    Eccentricities of Electricity--The World's Babel of
    Languages--Amusing Anachronisms Perpetrated By Authors and
    Artists--A Pin Scratch That Helped Nelson--With Other
    Interesting Items Gathered From Various Sources.


FRENCH MILLIONAIRES OF OTHER CENTURIES.

GREATER EXTRAVAGANCE TO-DAY.

  Prior to the Seventeenth Century No
  Frenchman Had an Income That
  Touched the Seven-Figure Mark.

Tales of the magnificent extravagances of France under the Bourbons have
led a wondering later age to think that never since has gold been lavished
upon luxury with so free a hand. But a French writer, the Vicomte Georges
d'Avenel, has taken the trouble to make comparisons, and he has found that
the incomes of to-day are relatively much larger than they were one, two,
and three hundred years ago. The New York _World_ has summarized from the
_Revue des Deux Mondes_ M. d'Avenel's discoveries:

    For purposes of exact comparison M. d'Avenel estimates all
    fortunes and incomes of bygone times in terms of their
    equivalent value to-day, not as mere nominal sums. Up to the
    end of the sixteenth century, he shows, no one had an income
    of $1,000,000.

    Louis IX in the exceptional year of the crusade of 1251
    spent $775,000. After the Hundred Years' War, in 1450,
    Charles VII's budget was $212,000. In 1516 Francis I, who
    was noted for his taste for luxury, had only $259,000 for
    his person and his court.

    Napoleon III's civil list amounted to $5,000,000, but Louis
    XIV had less than $4,000,000 for all expenses of an
    extravagant court.

    Richelieu and Mazarin derived tremendous incomes from their
    privileges, Mazarin leaving by will nearly $40,000,000 to
    the king, who refused it and let it pass to Mazarin's eight
    nephews and nieces.

    Except these three no person up to the time of the
    Revolution enjoyed an income of $1,000,000, and the revenues
    of Richelieu and Mazarin were subject in fact to charges
    really connected with the state.

The conclusion of this investigator is that the very rich of to-day are
six times as rich, or those of equal fortune are twelve times as many, as
the richest men of the old régime; and they are ten times as rich, or
twenty times as many, as the rich princes of the feudal period.


SERIOUS EXPLOSIONS ARE CAUSED BY DUST.

GRAVE DANGER LURKS IN SUGAR.

  Particles of Cork Floating in the Atmosphere
  of Linoleum Factories Must Be
  Kept from Unprotected Lights.

Almost every kind of dust which is composed of inflammable material will
explode when touched by a flame. For instance, the house-maid who uses the
contents of the sugar bowl to light the fire knows that nothing burns more
easily than powdered sugar. Proprietors of large sweetmeat factories have
learned that there is danger from this source.

    Some years ago an English inspector of mines conducted a
    number of experiments on the explosive power of coal dust. A
    disused shaft one hundred and fifty feet deep was chosen
    for the purpose. Samples of dust from different collieries
    were collected for the purpose. When two hundredweight of
    dust was emptied down a shaft and a charge of gunpowder
    fired, the result was startling.

    Huge tongues of flame, sixty feet in height, shot up from
    the mouth of the shaft, and enormous columns of smoke rose
    high in the air, forming a great black pall over the scene
    of the explosion.

    Coal is the carbonized remains of tree mosses. Oddly enough,
    these mosses were the big forefathers of the moss we know as
    lycopodium, which in a powdered state is used to produce
    flash signals. This will help to give an idea of the
    intensely inflammable nature of coal dust.

    In the manufacture of linoleum no unprotected lights are
    allowed in the mixing department. This is on account of the
    great danger of exploding the cork dust floating in the air.
    An additional danger in linoleum making is that the mixture
    of cement and cork dust has the unpleasant property of
    spontaneously igniting if left in a warm place. It is,
    therefore, customary to mix the material a sackful at a time
    in order to reduce the risks of an explosion.


SOME ECCENTRICITIES OF LIGHTNING BOLTS.

TARGETS OF HEAVEN'S ARTILLERY.

  Belief That the Electric Fluid Never
  Strikes Twice in the Same Place Is
  Shown to Be Wrong.

Among the duties assigned to the students of the Agricultural College at
Guelph, Ontario, is that of gathering statistics concerning loss and
damage from lightning in the province. The results thus obtained seem to
show the value of lightning-rods, if properly adjusted, and the
desirability of having trees standing near buildings. Summarizing the last
annual report from the college, the _Free Press_, of London, Ontario,
gives out the following novel facts:

    As to the question does lightning strike twice in the same
    place, the report says that there may be warrant for the
    idea in the fact that where lightning ever strikes there is
    very little left to be struck a second time; but where a
    barn has once been struck and another barn has been erected
    on the same site, that second barn is just as likely to be
    struck as the first, and, in some instances, more likely.

    The statistics compiled by the college show that in the five
    years since 1901 ninety-four trees were struck by lightning,
    as follows: Elm, 28; pine, 17; oak, 9; basswood, 7; maple,
    7; ash, 4; poplar, 4; cedar, 3; apple, 3; hemlock, 2;
    willow, 2; spruce, beech, chestnut, balsam, hickory,
    butternut, and fir, 1 each.

    The number of cattle killed in the same period was 114;
    sheep, 64; horses, 46; pigs, 4. Total, 228.

    Barns struck, 179; other buildings, 66.


LIVING LANGUAGES ARE STILL A BABEL.

MODERN CONFUSION OF TONGUES.

  Linguists Attempt an Impossible Task if
  They Try to Master the Hundreds of
  Languages Still Spoken.

Language is, of course, a wonderful telegraph system between minds; but
what a multiplicity of codes! The living languages to-day number eight
hundred and sixty, to say nothing of five thousand dialects. This is a
Babel indeed.

Europe has eighty-nine languages; Asia, one hundred and twenty-three;
Africa, one hundred and fourteen; America, one hundred and seventeen; and
the islands of the Pacific and Indian oceans have four hundred and
seventeen.

    Probably the most remarkable linguist the world has ever
    known was Giuseppe Caspar Mezzofanti, who was born at
    Bologna in 1774, created cardinal in 1838, and died at Rome
    in 1849. The list of languages and dialects which he
    acquired reached the astounding total of one hundred and
    fourteen.

    It would be interesting to know what system was pursued by
    Cardinal Mezzofanti in the study of languages, but little
    light is now obtainable on this subject.

    The most famous linguists of antiquity were Mithridates,
    King of Pontus, who is said to have been thoroughly
    conversant with the languages of the twenty-five nations
    over which his rule extended; and Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt,
    of whom Plutarch says that "she spoke most languages," and
    that "there were but few of the foreign ambassadors to whom
    she gave audience through an interpreter."


THE FLIGHT OF TIME CAUSES MANY ERRORS.

PAINTERS AND WRITERS MIX DATES.

  Artists Have Portrayed Abraham Threatening
  Isaac with a Blunderbuss, and
  Romans Smoking Pipes.

Whether it be due to ignorance or careless impatience, it is true that
many of the greatest writers and painters have been guilty of the most
surprising anachronisms. Thus Shakespeare introduces cannon into the play
of "Hamlet," and in "Julius Cæsar" reference is made to the striking of
the clock, though striking clocks were not invented until fourteen hundred
years after Cæsar's death. Schiller, in his "Piccolomini," refers to
lightning-conductors--at least one hundred and fifty years before they
were invented. Instances might be added almost indefinitely.

The anachronisms of painters are more noticeable, as a rule, than those of
writers. In "The Fancies of Fact" is the following compilation of blunders
by artists:

    Tintoretto, in a picture of the Children of Israel gathering
    manna, has taken the precaution to arm them with the modern
    invention of guns. Cigoli painted the aged Simeon at the
    circumcision of the Infant Saviour; and, as aged men in
    these days wear spectacles, the artist has shown his
    sagacity by placing them on Simeon's nose.

    In a picture by Verrio of Christ healing the sick, the
    lookers-on are represented as standing with periwigs on
    their heads. To match, or rather to exceed, this ludicrous
    representation, Dürer has painted the expulsion of Adam and
    Eve from the Garden of Eden by an angel in a dress
    fashionably trimmed with flounces.

    The same painter, in his scene of Peter denying Christ,
    represents a Roman soldier very comfortably smoking a pipe
    of tobacco.

    A Dutch painter, in a picture of the Wise Men worshiping the
    Holy Child, has drawn one of them in a large white surplice,
    and in boots and spurs, and he is in the act of presenting
    to the child a model of a Dutch man-of-war.

    In a Dutch picture of Abraham offering up his son, instead
    of the patriarch's "stretching forth his hand and taking the
    knife," as the Scriptures inform us, he is represented as
    using a more effectual and modern instrument; he is holding
    to Isaac's head a blunderbuss.

    A French artist has drawn, with true French taste, the
    Lord's Supper, with the table ornamented with tumblers
    filled with cigar-lighters; and, as if to crown the list of
    these absurd and ludicrous anachronisms, the Garden of Eden
    has been drawn with Adam and Eve in all their primeval
    simplicity and virtue, while near them, in full costume, is
    seen a hunter with a gun, shooting ducks.

    Another famous mixture of periods occurs in a picture of the
    Crucifixion, by Fra Angelico. In the foreground are a
    Dominican monk, a bishop with a crozier, a mitered abbot,
    and a man holding up a crucifix.


A PIN SCRATCH LED TO NELSON'S VICTORY.

DISCOVERY OF THE FRENCH FLEET.

  The Noting of the Distress of a French
  Maid by Sir John Acton Had a
  Strange Result.

The good points of pins have been generally appreciated, but never did a
pin point to a greater result than the one that made possible Nelson's
great victory of the Nile on August 1 and 2, 1798.

It was at this fight that Nelson, with his usual intrepidity, forced a
passage with half of his fleet of fifteen vessels between a small island,
near Aboukir in Egypt, and the French line of battle, while the other half
attacked the enemy in front, completely defeating the French fleet and
capturing or sinking thirteen of its seventeen ships.

The part that the pin played in the story came about in this way:

    Sir John Acton, then commander-in-chief of the land and sea
    forces of Naples, happened to be in his wife's dressing-room
    at the moment she was preparing for dinner.

    Lady Acton's French maid was also in the room, and was so
    startled at receiving a letter from her brother, a sailor
    in the French navy, whom she had believed to be dead, that
    she ran a pin into her mistress's flesh.

    Apologizing for her carelessness, the maid stated the cause
    of her surprise. With carefully suppressed eagerness Sir
    John Acton offered to read the letter while the maid
    continued her duties. The maid gladly consented.

    Having read the letter, the commander-in-chief left the
    house in search of Lord Nelson, who had in vain been seeking
    the French fleet. He found him and imparted to him the
    contents of the letter. It gave all the information the
    admiral had so long endeavored to obtain.

    Setting sail immediately, Nelson came up with the French,
    and the victory of the Nile was the result.


HOW COLUMBUS WAS MISLED BY PARROTS.

MISSED DISCOVERY OF MAINLAND.

  The Fate of the Most Important Exploring
  Expedition in History Was Decided
  by a Flight of Birds.

A flight of birds, coupled with a sailor's superstition, robbed Columbus
of the honor of discovering the continent.

When the great Italian navigator sailed westward over the unknown
Atlantic, he expected to reach Zipangu (Japan). After several days' sail
from Gomera, one of the Canary Islands, he became uneasy at not
discovering Zipangu, which, according to his reckonings, should have been
two hundred and sixteen nautical miles more to the east.

    After a long discussion he yielded to the opinion of Martin
    Alonzo Pinzon, the commander of the Pinta, and steered to
    the southwest.

    Pinzon was guided in his opinion solely by a flight of
    parrots, which took wing in that direction. It was good luck
    to follow in the wake of a flock of birds when engaged upon
    a voyage of discovery--a widespread superstition among
    Spanish seamen of that day--and this change in the great
    navigator's course curiously exemplifies the influence of
    small and apparently trivial events in the world's history.

    If Columbus had held to his course he would have entered
    the Gulf Stream, have reached Florida, and then probably
    have been carried to Cape Hatteras and Virginia.


MORE NUTRITION IN GRASS THAN POTATOES.

VALUES OF STOCK-RAISING FOODS.

  One Hundred Pounds of Hay Produce a
  Better Effect Than Six Times That
  Weight of Beets.

The relative values of different foods in stock-raising are shown by the
following table, in which the given number of pounds of the various
articles named produces the same effect as one hundred pounds of hay:

  Beets, white                   669   pounds
  Turnips                        469     "
  Rye Straw                      429     "
  Clover, red, uncured           373     "
  Clover, red, dry                88     "
  Potatoes                       350     "
  Oat Straw                      317     "
  Alfalfa                         89     "
  Buckwheat                       78.5   "
  Corn                            62.5   "
  Oats                            59     "
  Barley                          58     "
  Rye                             53.5   "
  Wheat                           44.5   "
  Oilcake, linseed                43     "

Hay, it will be seen, is rated as being more nutritious than potatoes or
beets.


GREAT FORCE USED TO WRITE LETTERS.

ENERGY SPENT IN LITTLE WAYS.

  Every Time the Typewriter Key Is
  Pressed, Several Ounces of Manual
  Power Are Used.

If a man realized at the end of the day how much energy he had expended in
normal and almost unconscious physical activities, he would be thankful
for the chance to sleep. The writer who pushes his pen over the paper for
several hours at a stretch would doubtless think he had worked hard if he
had excavated a well in the same time; yet it is believed that the sum of
the energy he uses daily in writing would be enough easily to dig a well.
The following figures are quoted from _Answers_:

    Our daily expenditure of force is simply enormous, but it
    seldom strikes us that we keep on expending force without
    noticing it. The stoker of a locomotive, when on duty, is
    said to shovel coal at the rate of about one ton an hour.
    Presuming that he works at this rate forty hours per week,
    it is obvious that in the course of a single year he lifts
    over two thousand tons of coal.

    Typewriting is not hard work, yet let us see how much energy
    it takes to write forty letters on a machine. Every time a
    key is pressed to print a letter a few ounces of force is
    used, and every time the carriage is returned to begin a new
    line between one and four pounds of force is requisitioned.
    Forty letters, averaging twenty-six lines each, would mean
    about twenty thousand pounds of force expended. Perhaps this
    never occurred to you before.


TRIALS OF AN EDITOR IN OLD CALIFORNIA.

SPANISH TYPE HAS ITS FAILINGS.

  Publishers of the State's First Newspaper
  Found It Difficult to Express Themselves
  Typographically.

Makeshifts of pioneer journalism have taxed the ingenuity of many a great
mind. Writing for the _Bookman_, J.M. Scanland tells the story of early
California newspapers. The first paper, the _Californian_, was published
at Monterey by Robert Semple, a Kentuckian, who acted as editor, and the
Rev. Walter Colton, a navy chaplain, who was then stationed at Monterey,
as typesetter and pressman. These two men brought out their first issue on
August 15, 1846. Semple went to the village of Yerba Buena (now called San
Francisco) a short time later, and during his absence Colton printed the
following paragraph:

    Our Alphabet.--Our type is a Spanish font picked up here in
    a cloister, and has no vv's [w] in it, as there is none in
    the Spanish alphabet. I have sent to the Sandvvich Islands
    for this letter; in the mean time vve must use tvvo v's. Our
    paper at present is that used for vvrapping cigars; in due
    time vve will have something better. Our object is to
    establish a press in California, and this vve shall in all
    probability be able to accomplish. The absence of my partner
    for the last three months and my duties as alcalde here have
    deprived our little paper of some of those attentions vvhich
    I hope it vvill hereafter receive.

  VVALTER COLTON.




ODDEST JAIL IN THE UNITED STATES.

IT IS CUT FROM THE SOLID ROCK.

  Eternal Cliffs Form the Safe Walls That
  Confine Convicts at Clifton, County
  Seat of Graham County, Arizona.

Troglodytes of history have lived in their caves from choice. At Clifton,
Graham County, Arizona, are a number of unwilling troglodytes who are kept
within their rocky home by officers of the law. Clifton is one of the
centers of copper mining in Arizona. In one sense it may be inferred that
the queer jail has its advantages, for the temperature of that part of
Arizona frequently rises in summer as high as one hundred and twenty
degrees in the shade.

    It comprises four large apartments, hewn in the side of a
    hill of solid quartz rock. The entrance to the jail is
    through a box-like vestibule, built of heavy masonry, and
    having three sets of gates of steel bars.

    Here and there, in the rocky walls, holes have been blasted
    for windows, and in these apertures a series of massive bars
    of steel have been fitted firmly in the rock.

    The floor of the rock-bound jail is of cement, and the
    prisoners are confined wholly in the larger apartments. In
    some places the wall of quartz about the jail is fifteen
    feet thick.

    Some of the most desperate criminals on the southwest border
    have been confined in the Clifton jail, and so solid and
    heavy are the barriers to escape that no one there has ever
    attempted a break of freedom. The notorious "Black Jack" was
    there for months.




FROM THE LIPS OF ANANIAS.

  Some Interesting Results Attained by Narrators Who Talked or Wrote While
  Seated Between Fancy and Fact and Who Might Have Been More Happy
  "Were T'other Dear Charmer Away."


THE MEETING OF EXTREMES.

In a hunter's camp different men began to unfold their yarns. Among others
a Kentuckian said he once shot a buck in such a way that the bullet, after
hitting the right ear, passed through the heel of the right hind foot.
Jeering and laughter greeted the story.

"Brown," called the Kentuckian to his companion, "tell these fellows if
what I say is not as true as gospel!"

"Why, yes," replied the other, "I saw it myself. You see, gentlemen, when
he pulled the trigger of his rifle, the buck was just scratching his head
with his hoof."

Then he whispered to his friend:

"That was a narrow escape. Another time don't lie so far apart."--_New
York Times._


A DAKOTA CYCLONE.

A southeast wind hurled tumble weeds and Russian thistle through the air
at a twenty-nine-mile gait, and the gait went too. Many stoves were drawn
out of the chimneys; the strong wind blew in at the neck of a bottle and
blew the bottom out. Nebraska wagon tracks passed over the town by the
thousands.

The strain on the wire fences was so great that staples were drawn out of
the north side of the posts. A kerosene barrel standing in front of a
grocery store was sucked out of the bunghole and turned inside out, like a
lady's slipper. The dirt blew from a post-hole in the hillside and left
the hole sticking out of the ground about two feet with no dirt around
it.--_Estelline (South Dakota) Bell._


NATURAL CHEMISTRY.

Senator Butt, of the Arkansas Senate, had just finished one of his droll
stories about feeding morphine to a pointer pup and watching him as he
indulged in the ensuing pipe-dream occasioned by the opium, when
Representative De Rossit, known as one of the most veracious men in the
State, said:

"Senator, your dog reminds me of my hen. Needing quinine one day, as we
often do in the bottom, I mixed up an ounce of the drug with molasses and
rolled it out into pills. Leaving the stuff to dry on the front porch, I
went into the house.

"Returning, I saw the last of my pills swallowed by my hen.

"Of course I thought her silly head would burst wide open. She simply
commenced cackling, and has been laying two eggs per day ever since. And
do you know, senator, those eggs are the best chill tonic on the market.
One of them taken internally will knock the spots from any case of malaria
in the State, and shaking ague can't stand before 'em an hour after they
are eaten. I keep that hen dosed; I do, and----"--_Memphis Commercial
Appeal._


A DISJOINTED NARRATIVE.

I have read with much interest the discussion about the joint snake, and
propose to give my experience with it. I have been familiar with the
"joint," or, as we call it here, the "hook-and-eye," snake since I was a
boy.

It is a snake of a brownish-yellow color, and grows to be about three feet
long, but at any stage of its growth it can be unjointed or unhooked. It
is fastened together by a hook-and-eye arrangement, exactly like those
used on ladies' dresses.

On one occasion while out taking a walk I saw a joint snake crawling
slowly along the top of an old stone wall; taking my cane, I gave it a
smart jerk about the middle of the body, and it immediately unhooked into
sixteen pieces, each about two inches long.

Taking the head part and putting it in my hat for safe keeping, I gathered
up the joints, and laying them along in a row in just the reverse order in
which they came apart, with all the eyes in contact, and also the hooks, I
took the head part out of my hat, and laid it alongside of the middle of
the row of joints.

It immediately began to move along the line, and without a moment's
hesitation backed up to the first joint, when a little snap was heard and
the first joint was hooked on. It repeated the process, and in the course
of sixty-five seconds by the watch it was again a complete snake.

Again catching it I took out the ninth joint and also the fourteenth, and
changed places with them, putting the ninth in place of the fourteenth and
then let the snake go on.

He gave one or two wriggles, but finding there was something wrong
commenced examining its joints from his head down, and when he came to the
ninth took it out and laid it on one side, then crawling along the rest of
his joints until he came to where the fourteenth ought to be, but where I
had put the ninth, took that out and hooked it on to the eighth and then
put the fourteenth back in its place, all of which was done in an
incredibly small space of time.

Again I separated him, mixing the joints up promiscuously and hooking them
together, having some difficulty in hooking the tail joint on to the head
part, as the hook and eye did not get very well.

Letting the snake loose, in one hundred and fifteen seconds he was again
properly jointed and I let him go.--_Chicago Inter-Ocean._


OFF THE FARM.

"Yes, sir," said the Dakota man, as a crowd of agriculturists seated
themselves around a little table, "yes, sir; we do things on rather a
sizable scale. I've seen a man start out in the spring and plow a furrow
until fall. Then he turned around and harvested back. We have some big
farms up there, gentlemen. A friend of mine owned one on which he had to
give a mortgage, and the mortgage was due on one end before they could get
it recorded on the other. You see it was laid off in counties."

There was a murmur of astonishment, and the Dakota man continued:

"I got a letter from a man who lives in my orchard just before I left
home, and it had been three weeks getting to the dwelling house, although
it had traveled day and night."

"Distances are pretty wide up there, ain't they?" inquired one.

"Reasonably, reasonably," replied the Dakota man. "And the worst of it is,
it breaks up families so. Two years ago I saw a whole family prostrated
with grief. Women yelling, children howling, and dogs barking. One of my
men had his camp truck packed on seven four-mule teams, and he was going
around bidding everybody good-by."

"Where was he going?" asked a Gravesend man.

"He was agoing half-way across the farm to feed the pigs," replied the
Dakota man.

"And did he ever get back to his family again?"

"It isn't time for him yet," replied the Dakota man.--_Detroit Free
Press._


A SHELL'S STRANGE EXPLOIT.

The late Major Merrill, of Lawrence, was well known in military circles
all over the country. When the G.A.R. encampment was held in Kansas City,
some years ago, the soldiers of the East and those of the West vied with
each other in telling stories of the war. After listening to some pretty
tough yarns, Major Merrill related the following, and carried off the
honors:

"You know, boys, that I served throughout the war in a Massachusetts light
battery. During the fighting at Malvern Hill our ammunition was running
low, and I was sent to the rear for powder.

"I had an open express wagon and four mules. I got about a ton and a half
of loose powder into the wagon and started for the front. About half-way
back to my battery a rebel shell landed right in the middle of the powder,
and, would you believe it, it burned up a bushel and a half before I could
stamp out the fire!"--_Boston Herald._


VITALITY OF A DUCK.

A correspondent at West Point writes as follows:

"Some time since, while out ducking on Dividing Creek, a tributary of
Chesapeake Bay, a hen duck, known as the dipper species, came within easy
range of my gun. I discharged both barrels, completely covering and
breaking her wing with No. 4 shot.

"Being determined to capture the game, a friend and myself secured a boat
and went in pursuit. Getting again in gunshot reach, I discharged two more
barrels, killing the duck to all appearances.

"We picked her up and removed the feathers and entrails, cut her head off
and put her in the water for the purpose of washing the blood off, when,
to our astonishment, she swam away, giving us another pursuit, which was
successful after some trouble. I can prove this."--_Richmond Dispatch._




JUNE, THE MONTH OF BATTLES.

  In the Season of Roses Have Been Fought Some of the Most Sanguinary and
  Decisive Contests of Modern Times--It Was a Period Fatal to Charles I
  and Napoleon.


Though June is frequently called the "Month of Roses," it might with just
as much propriety be designated the "Month of Battles." In it have been
fought some of the most memorable battles of history. Among these were
Naseby, Bunker Hill, Marengo, and Waterloo. In the following list will be
found the names of some of the more important engagements that have been
fought in this month:

  June.

   1. Lord Howe defeated and almost
      destroyed the French fleet               1794

      The British frigate Shannon captures
      the American frigate Chesapeake,
      off Boston                               1813

      McClellan defeated the Confederates
      at Fair Oaks, Virginia                   1862

   2. The Reign of Terror began                1793

   3. Admiral Blake's decisive defeat of
      Van Tromp                                1653

      Lee defeated Grant at Cold Harbor        1864

      Hobson sank the Merrimac in
      Santiago Harbor                          1898

   4. Kléber defeated the Austrians at
      Altenkirchen                             1796

   5. Pretoria taken by Lord Roberts           1900

   6. Capture of Memphis, Tenn.                1862

   7. Capture of Mamelon earthworks,
      at Sebastopol, by the French             1855

      Siege of Jerusalem begun by the
      Crusaders                                1099

  10. The Russians defeated Napoleon
      at Hielsburg                             1807

      Russia captured Khiva                    1873

      The Confederates defeated the
      Federals at Brice's Cross-Roads,
      Mississippi                              1864

  12. The British defeat the Boers at
      Diamond Hill                             1900

  14. Final defeat of Charles I, at
      Naseby, by Cromwell                      1645

      Battle of Marengo                        1800

      Napoleon's decisive overthrow of
      the Russians at Friedland                1807

      Napoleon's defeat of the Austrians
      at Raab                                  1809

  15. Siege of Saragossa begun                 1808

  16. Napoleon's defeat of Blücher at
      Ligny                                    1815

      Marshal Ney's indecisive attack
      on the British at Quatre Bras            1815

      The Federals under Grant attacked
      the Confederate lines in
      front of Petersburg, Virginia;
      fighting continued throughout
      the remainder of the month               1864

  17. The battle of Bunker Hill                1775

  18. Frederick the Great's defeat by the
      Austrians at Kolin                       1757

      War declared against England by
      the United States                        1812

      The battle of Waterloo                   1815

      Battle between the French under
      Grouchy and the Prussians at
      Wavre                                    1815

  19. Sinking of the Alabama by the
      Kearsarge                                1864

  21. Encounter between the Leopard
      and the Chesapeake                       1807

      Wellington's decisive victory over
      the French at Vittoria, in Spain         1813

  23. Clive's great victory at Plassey,
      near Calcutta                            1757

  24. The Austrians defeated the Italians
      at Custozza                              1866

      First engagement of the Santiago
      campaign, at Las Guasimas                1898

      The Scots under Robert Bruce
      defeated the English at Bannockburn      1314

  25. Battle of Little Bighorn--The
      Custer Massacre                          1876

  26. The Federals under Fitzjohn Porter
       defeated the Confederates
       under Longstreet at Mechanicsville,
       Virginia                                1862

  27. Peter the Great defeated Charles
      XII at Pultowa                           1709

      George II defeated the French at
      Dettingen                                1743

      Indecisive battle between the Federals
      under McClellan and the
      Confederates under Lee at
      Gaines Mill, Virginia                    1862

      The Confederates under Johnston
      defeated Federals under Sherman
      at Kenesaw Mountain, Georgia             1864

  28. The American sloop Wasp captured
      the British sloop Reindeer               1814

      Capture of Silistria by the Russians     1829

      Battle of Fort Moultrie, Charleston,
      South Carolina                           1776

      Washington defeated Clinton in
      the battle of Monmouth                   1778




How They Got On In The World.

  Brief Biographies of Successful Men Who Have Passed Through
  the Crucible of Small Beginnings and Won Out.


SUBDUED ARMED PUPILS.

  Young Teacher, Destined to Be a Famous
  Statesman, Enforced Discipline in the
  Class-Room.

James G. Blaine's early youth was spent on the banks of the Monongahela,
where he received the rudiments of his education from his father, an
extremely cultivated man. A common-school course followed, and in due time
he entered Washington College, from which he was graduated at the age of
eighteen.

A few years later he became a teacher of mathematics in a college in
Kentucky, where he gained the respect of his neighbors by quelling,
unarmed, a serious rebellion against his authority, notwithstanding the
fact that his opponents were armed with guns and knives.

It was in Maine, however, as half owner of the _Kennebec Journal_, in
Augusta, and later of the Portland _Advertiser_, at a salary of two
thousand dollars a year, that he first entered the political field.
Possessed of a remarkable memory for facts, and having the minutiæ of
local politics at his tongue's end, he was handicapped by a dislike for
stump-speaking. One of his first speeches was made under especially trying
circumstances.

A celebrated orator billed to speak on campaign issues had failed to put
in an appearance; and Blaine, being present, was forced by some of his
Augusta friends to ascend the platform. Nervous and entirely unprepared,
he began, however, by telling a story. He likened his situation to that of
a farmer, who had a horse for which he asked five hundred dollars. A
horse-trader offered him seventy-five dollars for the animal.

"It's a devil of a drop," said the farmer; "but I'll take it."

This anecdote caused much laughter, and at once put him in close touch
with his audience.

From that time the "Man from Maine" began to be heard of. His political
advance was rapid. The fact that he was not born a New Englander was not a
detriment to him, for, as one of his contemporaries said, "There was a
sort of Western dash about him that took with us Down-Easters." In 1862 he
was elected to Congress, and began his long and distinguished career of
public service at Washington.


BUILT HUDSON TUNNEL.

  Resourceful Engineer Also Completed the
  Bore Under the East River from
  Manhattan to Brooklyn.

Charles M. Jacobs, the builder of the Pennsylvania Railroad tunnel under
the Hudson River, is an Englishman, fifty-six years of age. His father
wished him to go to Cambridge University, but the youth preferred to go to
work, and he did so when sixteen years old.

He entered the office of a ship-building and engineering firm in Hull,
England, and there he became thoroughly grounded in mechanical work and
drafting. He was an earnest worker, and he established a precedent in the
office by getting work to do that was usually assigned to the head men. It
was not customary then to place such reliance on young men.

"Jacobs can do it," his employers were accustomed to say when surprise was
expressed at his being placed in command of big operations. "He knows what
is to be done, and he knows how to handle his men."

When he was twenty-one he went to India as the firm's representative in
some big engineering work, and he did so well that he was sent to China,
Australia, and the European continent. He helped build several tunnels in
London, and in 1889 Austin Corbin, then president of the Philadelphia and
Reading Railroad, brought him to this country to superintend several
important changes that were to be made in the road.

Jacobs liked this country so well and was so favorably impressed by the
outlook for big engineering work that he has remained here, and has become
a citizen.


His First American Success.

He made his first notable success in the construction of the East River
gas tunnel. It was a difficult piece of work, for instead of the river-bed
of solid rock that was supposed to exist, it was found that the bed was
full of fissures through which flowed the mud and water of the river. The
contractors wished to give the bore up and try one fifty feet deeper.
Jacobs refused to do it, and the board of directors of the company, after
listening to his arguments, sided with him.

"Can it be done at the present depth?" he was asked.

"Give me the men and plant, and I'll put it through myself," he answered.

The contractors sued the company and produced a score of experts to prove
that the tunnel could not possibly be built in the way Jacobs wanted it
built.

While the courts were considering the question Jacobs kept right on
digging. He had to encounter difficulties that would have turned most
engineers back. But in the end he pushed the bore through, and the courts,
with this evidence before them, decided against the contractors. He built
the tunnel big enough for trolley-cars in case it might be wanted for that
purpose, and he constructed it so solidly that none of the silt or water
of the East River has been able to filter in.


Another Difficult Task.

In 1877 an attempt was made to tunnel the Hudson River, but the work moved
along fitfully. In July, 1880, an accident that resulted in the death of
twenty men temporarily put an end to it. Two more attempts were made, and
again the work was abandoned. A fourth company revived the scheme, and
made Jacobs the engineer. The work was just in his line, for it gave him
the opportunity to overcome big obstacles and to carry through a project
that would be of big benefit to humanity.

It was an appalling task, for the course was through shifting sand, mud,
and rock, and before it was completed it was necessary to make more than
nine thousand blasts. All these were in the tunnel direct, under the mud
and sand and fifty or sixty feet of river water. Yet the undertaking
resulted in few accidents, for Jacobs knew how to take care of his men,
and he has established a reputation for never sending one where he will
not go himself.

In his early days of wandering in India, China, and Australia he had
learned how to accomplish much by simple means. It was simply learning to
do what he called the obvious thing. But the simple, little, obvious thing
is often the hardest for most people, including engineers, to see.


How He Met an Emergency.

In the building of one of the trolley tunnels under the Hudson, a careless
opening of the doors of the shield--the cylindrical cup pushed along at
the head of the bore, and by means of which all the digging is
done--caused the flooding of one hundred feet of the tunnel. It would be
as hopeless a task to try to bail that mixture of mud and water out as it
would be to drain the Hudson River and the bay adjacent thereto. Jacobs
saved the situation by a very simple expedient.

The cup defender Reliance had just been stripped of her canvas, and Jacobs
got this big spread of sail, sank it flat over the flooded part of the
tunnel, weighted it with a mixture of clay and stone, and thus mended the
bottom of the river so that it didn't continue to leak in mud and water.
It was so very simple that few people would have thought of it.

He completed his first Hudson tunneling work on the 11th of March, 1905,
and all he said when the work was done and he had walked through was:

"There isn't much to tell, except that Henry Hudson was the first man who
crossed over the river and Jacobs was the first man who crossed under it."


WAS INSULTED BY POE.

  Romantic Life-Story of Poor Boy Who
  Heard the Voice of the Muse in
  an Iron Foundry.

Richard Henry Stoddard, who won fame as a poet, critic, and journalist,
fought his way upward through conditions that would have discouraged most
men. His parents were miserably poor and his father died while the boy was
still young. His mother was of a restless, wandering disposition, and when
Richard was ten years old she left her New England home and brought him to
New York. "Here," he says, "we landed at or near the Battery one bright
Sunday morning late in the autumn of 1835, and wandered up Broadway, which
was swarming with hogs."

His step-father's brother-in-law kept an oyster bar, and he at once put
the boy to work learning to open oysters, attending to customers, and
keeping the place clean. The work and the surroundings were rough, and
Stoddard was so manifestly unfitted for his work that he was finally taken
away from the bar and sent into the streets to sell matches. After a few
months of this he was placed in a cheap second-hand clothing store, but
here his earnings were not sufficient to satisfy his family, and though he
was of frail physique his mother apprenticed him to a blacksmith.

"I was put to work at once on the anvil," he says, "and before the day was
over my right hand was so blistered that I had to open its fingers with my
left hand, and detach them from the handle of the sledge hammer that I
wielded."

He was eighteen years old when he was sent to work in an iron foundry, and
he remained at this occupation several years, studying and writing
incessantly at night. One poem, "Ode on a Grecian Flute," was accepted by
the _Broadway Journal_, a little weekly edited by Edgar Allan Poe. Later
the originality of the poem was doubted. Stoddard went to assure Poe that
it was original. He found him asleep in an office chair. On being
awakened and told by Stoddard that the poem was original, Poe jumped up
and yelled:

"You lie! Get out before I throw you out."

Stoddard fled, and the poem was not published. The last glimpse he ever
had of Poe was one cold and stormy autumn day. Stoddard was hurrying along
Broadway, well sheltered by an umbrella, when he noticed Poe, thinly clad,
crouching against the side of a building in an attempt to find refuge from
the storm. Stoddard walked around the corner and paused. He wanted to go
back and offer Poe the shelter of his umbrella, but he did not dare. The
following summer Poe died in Baltimore. Afterward Stoddard wrote the first
genuinely fair and appreciative life of him.


A MIGHTY ELECTRICIAN.

  Steinmetz Is Not Yet Forty Years Old and
  Has Taken Out Over One Hundred
  Patents.

Charles P. Steinmetz, chief expert at the Schenectady Electrical Works,
was born in Breslau, Germany. Though he is only forty years old, he has
already taken out more than one hundred patents for electrical devices,
and some of these are of immense value.

His father was a railroad employee, and on German railroads the pay is
small and the duties exacting. But the father managed to send his son to
the University of Breslau, and here he distinguished himself in
mathematics and chemistry, and spent his leisure time in chemical and
mechanical experiments at home.

At that time the German government was making an effort to stamp out
socialism, and laws of unusual severity were passed against those who
advocated it. Bismarck, who headed the anti-socialist movement, saw to it
that the laws were vigorously enforced. The natural result was a reaction
against the conduct of the government, and the universities became
permeated with socialism.

Steinmetz, then a boy of seventeen, was drawn into the work of
socialistic agitation, and he became the editor of a paper during a period
when the real editor was in prison for _lèse majesté_.

The paper was finally suppressed, and Steinmetz's connection with it was
reported to the university authorities. Then he received information that
a warrant was out for his arrest and he fled to Zurich, Switzerland. Here
he supported himself by tutoring, and by writing for electrical magazines
and for a daily paper.

The articles for the daily paper paid him two dollars a week. His income
was pitifully small, but he managed to save a few dollars, and, meeting
with a young American from San Francisco, he decided to relinquish his
ambition to become a professor of mathematics in some German university.
He then emigrated to America.


Lands as a Poor Immigrant.

Steinmetz and his American friend landed in New York with just twenty
dollars between them. They hired a small room in Brooklyn, where they
started housekeeping together. Steinmetz had acquired this knack during
his Zurich days, and through his first year in America he lived with his
friend in one room, doing their cooking and washing on a gas-stove, and at
the same time conducting electrical and chemical experiments.

Steinmetz had with him when he arrived in this country a couple of letters
of introduction, one to a man who manufactured electrical and chemical
supplies on a small scale. This letter was the first presented, but on
visiting the place Steinmetz was unable to see the manufacturer. He was,
however, told to call again. He called again, and was once more put off
with a polite invitation to return. After two more calls Steinmetz
realized that he was an unwelcome visitor. He thought it over for a few
moments, then laughed and, turning to the clerk, said:

"Oh, well, all right. He'll have to call on me, now, if he wants me--and I
think he will."

Eventually the manufacturer did want Steinmetz, but never got him, for
Steinmetz took the second letter of introduction to Rudolph Eickemeyer,
head of the Eickemeyer Elevator Company, of Yonkers. Eickemeyer sized the
young man up, and at once put him to work as a draftsman, at twelve
dollars a week.

It was while in Yonkers that Steinmetz drew attention to his ability by a
series of articles in an American electrical magazine on alternating
currents. This was followed by the first of the inventions and
improvements that laid the foundation of Steinmetz's substantial fortune.

From the first Steinmetz had taken a lively interest in America and
everything American, and the views for which he was forced to fly from
Europe were so modified that they agreed with the new conditions in which
he found himself. Speaking of them, he said:

"In this country they would be theories without any chance of practical
application, and there is no use in a theory merely for theory's sake."

When the Eickemeyer concern was taken over by the General Electric Company
Steinmetz went with it and was hailed as its greatest asset. He was first
sent to the Thomson-Houston Company--the Lynn, Massachusetts, branch of
the General Electric--and there he worked out the first successful plan
for transmitting power and light, on a large scale, over long distances,
and for controlling currents.

Incidentally he made several important discoveries and improvements in the
arc and incandescent lights and in electric motors.


A Mathematical Wonder.

In addition to being a thorough electrician, Steinmetz is a mathematical
wonder, and there are few tricks of the lightning calculator that he
cannot duplicate and go one better. It had been his intention to become a
professor of mathematics, and doubtless he would have done so had he
remained in Germany. The salary and fees of the professorship would have
given him at best a couple of thousand dollars a year. His work in this
country pays him a big salary, and this is supplemented by a large income
from patents.

Personally he is one of the most popular men in the business. "The
professor," as he is generally known, has been generous in offering
assistance to young electricians, and he has patiently spent his time in
aiding in the development of their ideas. He has shown the same skill in
bringing the best out of men that he has used to such effect in handling
machinery.


THE FIRST ROTHSCHILD.

  Founder of the House of Rothschild Had
  Vainly Attempted to Reconcile Himself
  to Being a Rabbi.

Mayer Amschel Bauer, founder of the house of Rothschild, was born in the
Ghetto of Frankfort, Germany. This section was set off for the Jews with
barriers, and at night these barriers were closed and no one was permitted
to leave the street. His father was a merchant in poor circumstances, and
it was the dream of his life to make the son a rabbi. So he sent him to
study with the rabbis learned in the law of Moses. The studies continued a
few weeks, and then young Bauer rebelled. He would go no more. His father
entreated and threatened. It was useless, for the boy took the few gulden
he possessed and set up as a money-lender.

There, on the sidewalk of the squalid Judengasse, or street of the Jews,
began the power of the richest and most famous banking family in the
world.

The business under the sign with the red shield prospered so that the
owner dropped his own name and adopted that of his emblem, Rothschild.
Around him there were men equally prosperous. Mayer Amschel Rothschild was
not only a lender and changer of money, but he was also a student of
coins. The Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel was also an enthusiastic student of
numismatics, so when he heard of the collector in the Judengasse he made
his acquaintance. This acquaintance enabled Rothschild to step out from
among his fellows and begin operations on a larger and different scale. He
became a negotiator of national loans, and his success brought him into
prominence with the nations fighting against Napoleon.

Napoleon invaded Hesse-Cassel, and the Landgrave fled, after entrusting
Rothschild with his money and treasures. At the risk of being shot
Rothschild buried the treasure in his own garden, and it remained there
until Napoleon swept on and the Landgrave returned to his home. Then
Rothschild restored the property, adding five per cent interest on the
money.

The first Rothschild remained to the end of his life in the old house in
the narrow Ghetto. Even when he had monarchs in his grip, when he was
parceling out Europe for the financial operations of his sons, he
continued there, and, when he died, his wife, the mother of all the
Rothschilds, remained there, and in the forties of the last century, when
the old woman was approaching her ninetieth year, it was one of the sights
of Frankfort to see her carriage, resplendent in crimson velvet and
decorated with monograms, drive through the street and stop before the
dilapidated house that was her home.


GOT SIXTY CENTS A DAY.

  The Head of the American Locomotive
  Works Began His Career as a Machinist's
  Apprentice.

Albert J. Pitkin, president of the American Locomotive Works, began his
business life as a machinist's apprentice at the age of sixteen. His wages
were sixty cents a day, and the little shop in which he was employed
turned out one small stationary engine each week. He is now the head of
the American Locomotive Company, which manufactures three thousand
locomotives a year, or ten for each working day, and is capitalized at
fifty million dollars. Seven men were employed in the shop where he
learned his trade. He has now control of sixteen thousand men.

Pitkin's father was in poor circumstances, and at twelve years of age the
boy went to live with his grandfather at Granville, Ohio. The grandfather
was a cabinet-maker and wood-turner, and before long he had taught his
grandson many of the secrets of the trade and had developed in the youth
an understanding and appreciation of what machinery could be made to do.

"There is no use using hand tools if you can make a machine do the work,"
said the boy.

Then, from an old spinning-wheel which he found in the attic of the house,
he made a machine that sawed wood and saved labor in the cabinet-shop. He
also constructed other machines out of wood, and the cleverness with which
they were fashioned and adapted to the needs of the little shop enabled
him and his grandfather to turn out an increased amount of work.

At sixteen years of age it became necessary for young Pitkin to choose
some trade, and he selected that of machinist. He was regularly indentured
for three years, and received sixty cents a day for the first year, ninety
cents a day for the second, and one dollar and twenty-five cents a day for
the third. His father was disabled by ill health during this period, and
the greater part of the son's meager earnings went to help support the
family.


Economy and Hard Study.

All this time he was forced to live on a few cents a day, and the only
money he spent besides the cost of his board and clothing was what went
for books on mechanics and material for mechanical drawing. When his
apprenticeship was finished he was not only a thorough machinist, but he
was also a mechanical draftsman.

His next position was in the locomotive repair-shops of the Cleveland,
Akron and Columbus Railroad. The year he spent here was one of hard work
and hard study, for he continued his drawing more assiduously than before.
At the end of the year he obtained a place in the drawing department of
the Baldwin Locomotive Works, having prepared himself for the stiff
examination given there without one bit of outside assistance.

He spent five years with the Baldwin company, worked up from the lowest
position in the drawing department to the highest, and during that five
years he introduced nearly one hundred improvements in locomotive
construction.

The training he had received in a small machine-shop was repaying him with
interest, and his determination to make machines do as much work as
possible was bearing fruit. Wherever he could, he introduced automatic
machines.

He was only twenty-five years old when he was promoted to the position of
chief draftsman in the Rhode Island Locomotive Works.

"Rather a responsible position for a young man," one of his friends
suggested dubiously.

"Not if the young man knows his business," replied Pitkin. "And I think I
do. I've thought of nothing else for the last nine years."


Became Superintendent.

After two years in Providence, he went to the Schenectady Locomotive
Works, and in two years he became superintendent of the shops. Here he was
free to put into operation many of the ideas he could not use before,
while he was working in subordinate positions, and it was largely due to
him that the Schenectady company became one of the most prosperous in the
country.

When the American Locomotive Company was organized, Pitkin was made
vice-president, for it was recognized that he was probably the most
thoroughly equipped man in the business. There was not a department with
which he was not acquainted, nor a mechanical operation in the shops that
he could not perform.

Two years ago Samuel R. Callaway, president of the company, died, and
Pitkin was unanimously chosen as his successor. It took him thirty years
to climb to that height, and the thirty years were marked by hundreds of
improvements in locomotive construction and by wonderful records in
turning out locomotives against time.

There were many mechanics who started with him and had an equal chance,
but they were soon distanced in the race.

"They were content," he said, "with a steady, plodding, uniform way of
doing things, and while they were methodical and obtained good results, I
tried to figure out some way of getting better results and getting them
more easily. I took chances on doing a thing in other than the prescribed
way, but often the new way was the better way."




Little Glimpses of the 19th Century.

  The Great Events in the History of the Last One Hundred Years, Assembled
  so as to Present a Nutshell Record.

[_Continued from page 260._]


FOURTH DECADE.

1831

Political disorder in Greece becoming increasingly serious, the President,
Capo d'Istria, attempted restrictive measures which were violently
resented. His opponents burned the Greek fleet at Hydra to prevent it
falling into his hands. On October 9 Capo d'Istria was assassinated; his
brother succeeded him and headed the government for a short time.

To suppress the Polish rebellion, Russia sent an army of one hundred and
twenty thousand men into Poland, under Diebitsch. A bloody but indecisive
campaign followed. The Russians were defeated in several battles, but
Polish expeditions into Lithuania and Volhynia failed completely; and
cholera, which had spread from India, devastated both armies, General
Diebitsch being among the first to die. The Polish struggle for
independence, however, was a hopeless one. The Russians received
assistance from Prussia and Austria, while the Poles ruined their cause by
their internal dissensions. On September 7 Paskievitch, who had succeeded
Diebitsch, took Warsaw, and the rebellion was crushed. The Polish language
was forbidden in the schools, and all who had taken part in the rising
were ruthlessly punished.

In Italy, a revolt of Modena and Bologna against Papal rule was put down
by Austria, Metternich insisting on extirpating all attempts at reform;
but France, which had approved Austrian intervention, compelled both the
Papal States and Austria to grant a few concessions to the people. The
disputed status of Belgium was settled by a conference in London, the
country being separated from Holland and established as a kingdom, with
Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg as king. Luxembourg was claimed by both
Holland and Belgium, and a Dutch army advanced to support the pretensions
of the former. France thereupon sent an expedition into Belgium to defend
her neighbor and protégé; but the other powers compelled both forces to
withdraw, the question of Luxembourg being left for future settlement.

The rulers of the German states sought to stamp out liberalism, and there
began a heavy emigration, many of the emigrants coming to America. Riots
in England because the House of Lords rejected a bill to reform the
election system, which the Commons had passed; the houses of several of
the opponents of reform were burned. Trade in England unsettled, and
cholera was added to destitution.

In the United States, general prosperity prevailed, and there was a heavy
westward migration. The Black Hawk War was fought to suppress a rebellion
of the Sacs and Foxes on the upper Mississippi. The abolitionist movement
progressed; Garrison's _Liberator_ was founded. France agreed to pay the
United States five million dollars for damage to shipping during the
Napoleonic wars. Schoolcraft discovered the source of the Mississippi.
Chicago organized as a town. New York the first of the States to abolish
imprisonment for debt.

Alizarin, the foundation of anilin dyes, was separated by Robiquet and
Colin, of Paris, and Michael Faraday made his great discovery of
magneto-electric induction. Deaths: James Monroe; G.W.F. Hegel, German
philosopher; Barthold Niebuhr, German historian; Mrs. Siddons, English
actress; James Northcote, English painter.

=RULERS--United States, Andrew Jackson; Great Britain, William IV; France,
Louis Philippe; Spain, Ferdinand VII; Prussia, Frederick William III;
Russia, Nicholas I; Austria, Francis I; the Papacy vacant at beginning of
year; on February 2 Cardinal Capellari became Pope, with the title of
Gregory XVI.=


1832

Otto, son of the King of Bavaria, became King of Greece. Switzerland
divided into two antagonistic federations of cantons; federal government
intervened, and tranquillity was restored. Failure of the Duchesse de
Berry to incite rebellion against the rule of Louis Philippe.
Disturbances in Portugal, owing to the misrule of Dom Miguel, who was
acting as regent for the girl queen, Maria da Gloria, daughter of Dom
Pedro, Emperor of Brazil. Miguel impoverished the country and persecuted
legitimists and foreigners; fleets were sent by France and England to
protest; and with their support Dom Pedro, who had resigned the crown,
landed in Portugal and attacked Miguel.

President Jackson opposed "wild cat" banks, and vetoed bill for a renewal
of the charter of the United States Bank at Philadelphia. Nullification in
South Carolina, and the Federal tariff laws repudiated. Calhoun resigned
as Vice-President and was immediately elected United States Senator from
South Carolina. Jackson sent troops to Charleston to collect the Federal
revenues. Renewed trouble with the Seminoles, on an attempt being made to
remove them from Florida. The Sacs and Foxes also rose in Wisconsin, but
were defeated.

Egyptians, under Mehemet Ali, invaded Turkish territory and defeated the
Turks. Repressive measures in Germany against the press and political
meetings. The actions of Papal soldiers caused renewed disturbances in
Italy; Austria sent troops again, and France landed a force at Ancona to
check Austria.

The Chartist movement in England assumed a definite organized form; Lord
Grey's ministry resigned; insistent demands for reform; rioters tried, and
several condemned to death; King William attacked by a mob; the Duke of
Wellington insulted; Wellington tried to form a new ministry, failed, and
Lord Grey was recalled; twenty new peers were created, and the Reform Bill
was finally forced through the Lords.

Sir Walter Scott, Goethe, Duke of Reichstadt, son of Napoleon; Charles
Carroll, last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence; Georges
Cuvier, naturalist; Sir James Mackintosh, philosopher, and George Crabbe,
poet, died.

=RULERS--The same as in the previous year.=


1833

Opposition to the abolitionist movement bitter in America. Northern
travelers in the South subjected to violence; antislavery meetings broken
up; office of Berry's _Philanthropist_, at Cincinnati, and Lovejoy's
_Observer_, at Alton, Illinois, destroyed. Wendell Phillips became a
leader of the antislavery movement. Nullification ordinance in South
Carolina repealed; on the other hand, Congress adopted the Compromise
Tariff, reducing duties on imports.

In Portugal, Dom Miguel was driven from Lisbon, and his navy destroyed by
Dom Pedro's fleet, commanded by Sir Charles Napier. Civil war also arose
in Spain, Don Carlos claiming the throne upon the death of Ferdinand VII.
Peace treaty between Turkey and Egypt; Russia obtained concessions from
Turkey by the treaty of Unkiar Skelessi, and thereby aroused the
opposition of other European powers. Tractarian movement in England. A
Quaker was admitted to Parliament on affirmation, but a bill to relieve
Jews of civil disabilities was thrown out. Slavery abolished in all
British territory, twenty million pounds being voted as reimbursement to
slave-owning planters in the colonies. On this bill Gladstone made his
maiden speech, defending his father's record as a slaveholder.

The "Young Italy" party active; Mazzini exiled. German states continued to
use stringent methods for stamping out radicalism. Polish refugees
expelled from Germany, and many come to America.

Electromagnetic telegraph set up at Göttingen, Germany. Legendre, French
mathematician; William Wilberforce, English statesman; John Randolph of
Roanoke; Edmund Kean, English actor, and Hannah More, English author,
died.

=RULERS--The same as in the previous year, except that Isabella succeeded
Ferdinand VII as ruler of Spain.=


1834

South Carolina Railroad built from Charleston, South Carolina, to Hamburg,
South Carolina, a distance of one hundred and thirty-four miles--the
longest line then in existence. Indian Territory set apart, and several
tribes transferred to it. Jackson censured by Congress for removing
government deposits from the United States Bank; specie payments resumed
after thirty years' suspension. Abolitionist movement gained in strength,
and bitter debates resulted in Congress.

China took from the British East India Company its monopoly of the opium
trade; British ships on the Canton River fired on. Trade-union strikes
general throughout England. The Houses of Parliament almost totally
destroyed by fire. Violence and labor troubles in France. Civil disorders
continued in Spain and Portugal; but the strife in the latter country was
ended by the submission of Dom Miguel on May 22. In Spain the cause of
Don Carlos was maintained by Zumalacarregui, a guerrilla chieftain of
Navarre.

Charles Lamb and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, English authors; Joseph
Jacquard, inventor of the Jacquard loom; the Marquis de Lafayette;
Schleiermacher, German theologian; Thomas Robert Malthus, English
economist; Thomas Stothard, English artist, died.

=RULERS--The same as in the previous year.=


1835

Attempt made to remove the Seminoles from Florida, and war followed;
Micanopy and Osceola, Indian leaders, were successful in fights at Fort
King and near Wahoo Swamp, but were defeated by General Clinch on the Big
Withlacoochee. Inhabitants of Texas successfully resisted a Mexican force
under Santa Anna. Fire in New York City caused a loss of twenty million
dollars. Colt revolver patented.

In England, Peel's ministry was wrecked on the Irish Church question;
Melbourne again formed a cabinet. Orange lodges abolished by the Duke of
Cumberland, head of the Orange order, it having been charged that the duke
was conspiring to seize the crown on the death of his brother, William IV.
South Australia became an English crown colony; Melbourne founded. War
between the English and Kaffirs in South Africa; friction between the
Dutch and English settlers; Dutch migration over the Orange River.

John Marshall, American jurist; Karl von Humboldt, German philologist and
statesman; William Cobbett, English reformer and journalist, and Mrs.
Hemans, English poet, died.

=RULERS--The same as in the previous year, except that Ferdinand succeeded
Francis I as Emperor of Austria.=


1836

Fighting with the Creeks in Georgia and Alabama added to the trouble with
the Seminoles; Creeks subdued, and many forced beyond the Mississippi;
Seminoles driven to the Everglades. "Gag law" to exclude antislavery
petitions passed by Congress. In Texas, the Mexicans under Santa Anna
captured the Alamo at San Antonio, and slaughtered its defenders,
including Bowie and Crockett; but on April 21 the Mexican general was
decisively defeated at San Jacinto, and taken prisoner. Texas became an
independent republic. Arkansas admitted to the Union. James Smithson, an
English merchant, left half a million dollars to the United States, "for
the diffusion of knowledge"; it was used to establish the institution now
bearing his name.

The French met with reverses in Algeria. Louis Bonaparte attempted an
insurrection against the government of Louis Philippe, but failed, and
fled to the United States. Magyar and Slav opposition to Austrian rule;
Louis Kossuth sentenced to imprisonment for circulating speeches in the
Magyar language. First railroad in Canada opened. Continuation of Carlist
rebellion in Spain; Portugal abolished its slave trade.

The British Parliament passed a bill for municipal reform in Ireland,
granted the right of counsel to persons accused of felony, and abolished
the law ordering the execution of a murderer within forty-eight hours of
his conviction. Wheatstone sent messages for a distance of four miles with
his electromagnetic telegraph.

Among the famous people who died in 1836 were Aaron Burr, ex-President
James Madison, James Hogg, Scottish poet; André Ampère, French scientist,
and Mme. Malibran, Spanish singer.

=RULERS--The same as in the previous year.=


1837

A year of financial panic and specie stringency in the United States.
Attempt in the Senate to censure ex-President John Quincy Adams, who had
become a Congressman from Massachusetts, for his attitude on antislavery
petitions. Henry Clay began a movement for international copyright.
Michigan admitted to the Union. Chicago incorporated as a city. Work begun
on the Croton aqueduct, to supply New York with water. First railroad in
Cuba opened.

Queen Victoria's reign began June 20, her first prime minister being Lord
Melbourne. The kingdom of Hanover was now separated from the British
crown; Ernest Augustus, Duke of Cumberland and brother of William IV,
became its king.

A rebellion broke out in Canada, under the leadership of Papineau in Lower
Canada (Quebec) and of Mackenzie in Upper Canada (Ontario). Froebel opened
his first kindergarten at Blankenburg. Constantine, Algeria, captured by
the French. In South Africa, the Boers, under Maritz and Potgieter,
defeated Dingaan's Zulus, December 16; the anniversary of the battle has
ever since been celebrated as Dingaan's Day.

François Fourier, French socialist; Alessandro Leopardi, Italian poet, and
Alexander Pushkin, Russian author, died.

=RULERS--The same as in the previous year, except that Martin Van Buren
became President of the United States, and Queen Victoria succeeded her
uncle, William IV, as sovereign of England.=


1838

The remainder of the Cherokees ejected from their lands in Georgia by
State troops in violation of treaties with the Federal government. Nearly
five thousand of the Indians died of hunger and exposure in making their
way to the Indian Territory. The Seminoles renewed war in Florida; Osceola
treacherously captured, and died in Fort Moultrie; Zachary Taylor, leader
of the American troops, forced the Indians back to the Everglades. The
Mormons were driven out from their settlement at Nauvoo, Illinois, and
started westward to the Great Salt Lake.

Papineau's rebellion in Canada suppressed by loyalists and British troops;
Lord Durham, sent out as special commissioner to investigate the causes of
Canadian discontent, proclaimed an amnesty. Father Theobald Mathew began
his temperance crusade in Cork, Ireland. Chartist movement strong in
England; demands for the ballot and other reforms presented to Parliament.
Heroic action of Grace Darling in rescuing survivors of the wrecked vessel
Forfarshire, in the Farne Islands.

Mexico and the Argentine Republic became involved in war with France; the
French bombarded Vera Cruz and blockaded Buenos Ayres. The steamer Great
Western crossed from Bristol to New York in fifteen days.

Talleyrand, French diplomat, and John Stevens, American engineer, died.

=RULERS--The same as in the previous year.=


1839

Anti-rent disturbances in New York State; settled by the Dutch patroonates
of tenants being permitted to purchase the ground. Abolitionists met at
Warsaw, New York, and planned to form a political party. Goodyear patented
his method of vulcanizing rubber. First normal school for teachers started
in Massachusetts.

Queen Victoria betrothed to her cousin, Prince Albert of
Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. Chinese Emperor tried to stop the opium trade, and
ordered the destruction of eighteen million dollars' worth of the drug,
imported from British India, at Canton. Several encounters ensued between
the Chinese and British, and a strong naval force was ordered to the scene
of the trouble. England also at war with Afghanistan; Candahar and Kabul
captured; Shah Shuja made ruler under British protection. Aden, in Arabia,
captured and annexed to the British dominions.

In England, a uniform penny postal rate was introduced by Sir Rowland
Hill. Civil war in Spain temporarily ended; Spain almost ruined
financially and industrially. France withdrew from Mexico, having received
six million dollars indemnity; revolt in Paris suppressed with much
bloodshed. Austria and France withdrew their troops from the Papal States.
War between Egypt and Turkey; Egypt victorious. Perpetual neutrality of
Belgium guaranteed.

Dr. Theodore Schwann published his theory of the cellular construction of
plants and animals. Daguerre announced his invention of the sun prints,
since known as daguerreotypes. Letizia Ramolino, mother of Napoleon; Lady
Hester Stanhope, Joseph Schelling, German philosopher, and John Galt,
Scottish author, died.

=RULERS--The same as in the previous year.=


1840

Famous "hard cider and log cabin" campaign in the United States, ending in
the defeat of Van Buren and the election of William Henry Harrison as
President, with John Tyler as Vice-President. New Mexico declared itself
independent of Mexico. Upper and Lower Canada reunited. Hawaii recognized
as an independent kingdom.

On February 10 Queen Victoria was married to Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg.
Young Ireland movement started. Continuation of the war between China and
England; England successful in many engagements. Khelat, in Baluchistan,
lost by the British in July, regained in November. Chartist petition with
a million and a quarter signatures presented to Parliament; demands
refused. Sir James Brooke helped the Sultan of Borneo to quell a native
uprising.

In France, Louis Napoleon landed at Boulogne and made another attempt at
insurrection; captured and imprisoned in the fortress of Ham. Napoleon's
body removed from St. Helena to Paris. Maria Cristina, Queen Regent of
Spain, forced to leave the country; General Espartero made regent.

Among the celebrities who died in 1840 were Nicolo Paganini, Italian
violinist; Marshal MacDonald, French soldier; Lucien Bonaparte, brother of
the great Napoleon, and George Bryan, famous as Beau Brummel.




Hunting the Grizzly.

BY THEODORE ROOSEVELT.


    In this selection there are found many of the
    characteristics which have made President Roosevelt so
    popular. Here one notes that love of all that is natural and
    elemental, the open-air effect, and the healthy tastes of
    the normal man. The style in which the President narrates
    his adventures in the West is also eminently in keeping with
    his frank, open, and unaffected nature. He writes both with
    enthusiasm and with an utter lack of self-consciousness. His
    diction is simple; his sentences are short, forcible, and
    vividly descriptive.

    They rouse in the reader that same love of adventurous sport
    which animates Mr. Roosevelt himself and which gives so keen
    a zest to his reminiscences of what he has experienced in
    the exciting pursuit of big game. The paragraph in which the
    killing of the bear is told is very striking in its command
    of expressive phrases.

    ="Scarlet strings of froth hung from his lips; his eyes
    burned like embers in the gloom.... Instantly the great bear
    turned with a harsh roar of fury and challenge, blowing the
    bloody foam from his mouth, so that I saw the gleam of his
    white fangs."=

    Here are two sentences which alone would show their author
    to be an unconscious artist in words; and the same qualities
    of style are to be found in his other books of
    adventure--"Ranch Life" and "The Rough Riders"--as well as
    in the more formal but not less spirited historical
    narratives, his "Naval War of 1812" and "The Winning of the
    West." Taken together, they admirably illustrate the
    President's versatility.

    _Reprinted, by permission of Messrs. G.P. Putnam's Sons,
    from "Hunting the Grizzly," by Theodore
    Roosevelt--Copyright, 1893._

I spent much of the fall of 1889 hunting on the head-waters of the Salmon
and Snake in Idaho, and along the Montana boundary line from the Bighorn
Basin and the head of the Wisdom River to the neighborhood of Red Rock
Pass and to the north and west of Henry's Lake. During the last fortnight
my companion was the old mountain man, already mentioned, named Griffeth
or Griffin--I cannot tell which, as he was always called either "Hank" or
"Griff." He was a crabbedly honest old fellow, and a very skilful hunter;
but he was worn out with age and rheumatism, and his temper had failed
even faster than his bodily strength. He showed me a greater variety of
game than I had ever seen before in so short a time; nor did I ever before
or after make so successful a hunt. But he was an exceedingly
disagreeable companion on account of his surly, moody ways. I generally
had to get up first, to kindle the fire and make ready breakfast, and he
was very quarrelsome. Finally, during my absence from camp one day, while
not very far from Red Rock Pass, he found my whisky-flask, which I kept
purely for emergencies, and drank all the contents. When I came back he
was quite drunk. This was unbearable, and after some high words I left
him, and struck off homeward through the woods on my own account. We had
with us four pack and saddle horses; and of these I took a very
intelligent and gentle little bronco mare, which possessed the invaluable
trait of always staying near camp, even when not hobbled. I was not
hampered with much of an outfit, having only my buffalo sleeping-bag, a
fur coat, and my washing kit, with a couple of spare pairs of socks and
some handkerchiefs. A frying-pan, some salt, flour, baking-powder, a small
chunk of salt pork, and a hatchet, made up a light pack, which, with the
bedding, I fastened across the stock saddle by means of a rope and a spare
packing cinch. My cartridges and knife were in my belt; my compass and
matches, as always, in my pocket. I walked, while the little mare followed
almost like a dog, often without my having to hold the lariat which served
as halter.

The country was for the most part fairly open, as I kept near the
foot-hills where glades and little prairies broke the pine forest. The
trees were of small size. There was no regular trail, but the course was
easy to keep, and I had no trouble of any kind save on the second day.
That afternoon I was following a stream which at last "cañoned up," that
is, sank to the bottom of a cañon-like ravine impassable for a horse. I
started up a side valley, intending to cross from its head coulées to
those of another valley which would lead in below the cañon.

However, I got enmeshed in the tangle of winding valleys at the foot of
the steep mountains, and as dusk was coming on I halted and camped in a
little open spot by the side of a small, noisy brook, with crystal water.
The place was carpeted with soft, wet, green moss, dotted red with the
kinnikinic berries, and at its edge, under the trees where the ground was
dry, I threw down the buffalo bed on the mat of sweet-smelling
pine-needles. Making camp took but a moment. I opened the pack, tossed the
bedding on a smooth spot, knee-haltered the little mare, dragged up a few
dry logs, and then strolled off, rifle on shoulder, through the frosty
gloaming, to see if I could pick up a grouse for supper.

For half a mile I walked quickly and silently over the pine-needles,
across a succession of slight ridges, separated by narrow, shallow
valleys. The forest here was composed of lodge-pole pines, which on the
ridges grew close together, with tall slender trunks, while in the valleys
the growth was more open. Though the sun was behind the mountains there
was yet plenty of light by which to shoot, but it was fading rapidly.

At last, as I was thinking of turning toward camp, I stole up to the crest
of one of the ridges, and looked over into the valley some sixty yards
off. Immediately I caught the loom of some large, dark object; and another
glance showed me a big grizzly walking slowly off with his head down. He
was quartering to me, and I fired into his flank, the bullet, as I
afterward found, ranging forward and piercing one lung. At the shot he
uttered a loud, moaning grunt and plunged forward at a heavy gallop, while
I raced obliquely down the hill to cut him off. After going a few hundred
feet he reached a laurel thicket, some thirty yards broad, and two or
three times as long, which he did not leave. I ran up to the edge and
there halted, not liking to venture into the mass of twisted,
close-growing stems and glossy foliage. Moreover, as I halted, I heard him
utter a peculiar, savage kind of whine from the heart of the brush.
Accordingly, I began to skirt the edge, standing on tiptoe and gazing
earnestly to see if I could not catch a glimpse of his hide. When I was at
the narrowest part of the thicket, he suddenly left it directly opposite,
and then wheeled and stood broadside to me on the hillside, a little
above. He turned his head stiffly toward me; scarlet strings of froth hung
from his lips; his eyes burned like embers in the gloom.

I held true, aiming behind the shoulder, and my bullet shattered the point
or lower end of his heart, taking out a big nick. Instantly the great bear
turned with a harsh roar of fury and challenge, blowing the bloody foam
from his mouth, so that I saw the gleam of his white fangs; and then he
charged straight at me, crashing and bounding through the laurel bushes,
so that it was hard to aim. I waited until he came to a fallen tree,
raking him as he topped it with a ball, which entered his chest and went
through the cavity of his body, but he neither swerved nor flinched, and
at the moment I did not know that I had struck him. He came steadily on,
and in another second was almost upon me. I fired for his forehead, but my
bullet went low, entering his open mouth, smashing his lower jaw and going
into the neck. I leaped to one side almost as I pulled the trigger; and
through the hanging smoke the first thing I saw was his paw as he made a
vicious side blow at me. The rush of his charge carried him past. As he
struck he lurched forward, leaving a pool of bright blood where his muzzle
hit the ground; but he recovered himself and made two or three jumps
onward, while I hurriedly jammed a couple of cartridges into the magazine,
my rifle holding only four, which I had fired. Then he tried to pull up,
but as he did so his muscles seemed to give way, his head drooped, and he
rolled over and over like a shot rabbit. Each of my first three bullets
had inflicted a mortal wound.

It was already twilight, and I merely opened the carcass, and then trotted
back to camp. Next morning I returned and with much labor took off the
skin. The fur was very fine, the animal being in excellent trim, and
unusually bright-colored. Unfortunately, in packing it out I lost the
skull, and had to supply its place with one of plaster. The beauty of the
trophy, and the memory of the circumstances under which I procured it,
make me value it perhaps more highly than any other in my house.

This is the only instance in which I have been regularly charged by a
grizzly. On the whole, the danger of hunting these great bears has been
much exaggerated. At the beginning of the present century, when white
hunters first encountered the grizzly, he was doubtless an exceedingly
savage beast, prone to attack without provocation, and a redoubtable foe
to persons armed with the clumsy small-bore, muzzle-loading rifles of the
day. But at present bitter experience has taught him caution. He has been
hunted for sport, and hunted for his pelt, and hunted for the bounty, and
hunted as a dangerous enemy to stock, until, save in the very wildest
districts, he has learned to be more wary than a deer, and to avoid man's
presence almost as carefully as the most timid kind of game. Except in
rare cases he will not attack of his own accord, and, as a rule, even when
wounded, his object is escape rather than battle.

Still, when fairly brought to bay, or when moved by a sudden fit of
ungovernable anger, the grizzly is beyond peradventure a very dangerous
antagonist. The first shot, if taken at a bear a good distance off and
previously unwounded and unharried, is not usually fraught with much
danger, the startled animal being at the outset bent merely on flight. It
is always hazardous, however, to track a wounded and worried grizzly into
thick cover, and the man who habitually follows and kills this chief of
American game in dense timber, never abandoning the bloody trail
whithersoever it leads, must show no small degree of skill and hardihood,
and must not too closely count the risk to life or limb. Bears differ
widely in temper, and occasionally one may be found who will not show
fight, no matter how much he is bullied; but, as a rule, a hunter must be
cautious in meddling with a wounded animal which has retreated into a
dense thicket, and has been once or twice roused; and such a beast, when
it does turn, will usually charge again and again, and fight to the last
with unconquerable ferocity. The short distance at which the bear can be
seen through the underbrush, the fury of his charge, and his tenacity of
life make it necessary for the hunter on such occasions to have steady
nerves and a fairly quick and accurate aim.

It is always well to have two men in following a wounded bear under such
conditions. This is not necessary, however, and a good hunter, rather than
lose his quarry, will, under ordinary circumstances, follow and attack it,
no matter how tangled the fastness in which it has sought refuge; but he
must act warily and with the utmost caution and resolution, if he wishes
to escape a terrible and probably fatal mauling. An experienced hunter is
rarely rash, and never heedless; he will not, when alone, follow a wounded
bear into a thicket, if by the exercise of patience, skill, and knowledge
of the game's habits he can avoid the necessity; but it is idle to talk of
the feat as something which ought in no case to be attempted.

While danger ought never to be needlessly incurred, it is yet true that
the keenest zest in sport comes from its presence, and from the consequent
exercise of the qualities necessary to overcome it. The most thrilling
moments of an American hunter's life are those in which, with every sense
on the alert, and with nerves strung to the highest point, he is following
alone into the heart of its forest fastness the fresh and bloody
footprints of an angered grizzly; and no other triumph of American hunting
can compare with the victory to be thus gained.

These big bears will not ordinarily charge from a distance of over a
hundred yards; but there are exceptions to this rule. In the fall of 1890
my friend Archibald Rogers was hunting in Wyoming, south of the
Yellowstone Park, and killed seven bears. One, an old he, was out on a
bare table-land, grubbing for roots, when he was spied. It was early in
the afternoon, and the hunters, who were on a high mountain slope,
examined him for some time through their powerful glasses before making
him out to be a bear. They then stalked up to the edge of the wood which
fringed the table-land on one side, but could get no nearer than about
three hundred yards, the plains being barren of all cover. After waiting
for a couple of hours Rogers risked the shot, in despair of getting
nearer, and wounded the bear, though not very seriously. The animal made
off, almost broadside to, and Rogers ran forward to intercept it. As soon
as it saw him it turned and rushed straight for him, not heeding his
second shot, and evidently bent on charging home. Rogers then waited until
it was within twenty yards, and brained it with his third bullet.

In fact bears differ individually in courage and ferocity precisely as men
do, or as the Spanish bulls, of which it is said that not more than one in
twenty is fit to stand the combat of the arena. One grizzly can scarcely
be bullied into resistance; the next may fight to the end, against any
odds, without flinching, or even attack unprovoked. Hence men of limited
experience in this sport, generalizing from the actions of the two or
three bears each has happened to see or kill, often reach diametrically
opposite conclusions as to the fighting temper and capacity of the quarry.
Even old hunters--who indeed, as a class, are very narrow-minded and
opinionated--often generalize just as rashly as beginners. One will
portray all bears as very dangerous; another will speak and act as if he
deemed them of no more consequence than so many rabbits.

I knew one old hunter who had killed a score without ever seeing one show
fight. On the other hand, Dr. James C. Merrill, U.S.A., who has had about
as much experience with bears as I have had, informs me that he has been
charged with the utmost determination three times. In each case the attack
was delivered before the bear was wounded or even shot at, the animal
being roused by the approach of the hunters from his day bed, and charging
headlong at them from a distance of twenty or thirty paces. All three
bears were killed before they could do any damage.

There was a very remarkable incident connected with the killing of one of
them. It occurred in the northern spurs of the Bighorn range. Dr. Merrill,
in company with an old hunter, had climbed down into a deep, narrow cañon.
The bottom was threaded with well-beaten elk trails. While following one
of these the two men turned a corner of the cañon and were instantly
charged by an old she-grizzly, so close that it was only by good luck that
one of the hurried shots disabled her and caused her to tumble over a cut
bank where she was easily finished. They found that she had been lying
directly across the game trail, on a smooth, well-beaten patch of bare
earth, which looked as if it had been dug up, refilled, and trampled down.
Looking curiously at this patch they saw a bit of hide only partially
covered at one end; digging down they found the body of a well-grown
grizzly cub. Its skull had been crushed, and the brains licked out, and
there were signs of other injuries. The hunters pondered long over this
strange discovery, and hazarded many guesses as to its meaning. At last
they decided that probably the cub had been killed, and its brains eaten
out, either by some old male grizzly or by a cougar, that the mother had
returned and driven away the murderer, and that she had then buried the
body and lain above it, waiting to wreak her vengeance on the first
passer-by.

Old Tazewell Woody, during his thirty years' life as a hunter in the
Rockies and on the great plains, killed very many grizzlies. He always
exercised much caution in dealing with them; and, as it happened, he was
by some suitable tree in almost every case when he was charged. He would
accordingly climb the tree (a practise of which I do not approve,
however), and the bear would look up at him and pass on without stopping.
Once, when he was hunting in the mountains with a companion, the latter,
who was down in a valley, while Woody was on the hillside, shot at a bear.
The first thing Woody knew the wounded grizzly, running up-hill, was
almost on him from behind. As he turned it seized his rifle in its jaws.
He wrenched the rifle round, while the bear still gripped it, and pulled
trigger, sending a bullet into its shoulder; whereupon it struck him with
its paw, and knocked him over the rocks. By good luck he fell in a
snow-bank and was not hurt in the least. Meanwhile the bear went on and
they never got it.

Once he had an experience with a bear which showed a very curious mixture
of rashness and cowardice. He and a companion were camped in a little
teepee or wigwam, with a bright fire in front of it, lighting up the
night. There was an inch of snow on the ground. Just after they went to
bed a grizzly came close to camp. Their dog rushed out and they could hear
it bark round in the darkness for nearly an hour; then the bear drove it
off and came right into camp. It went close to the fire, picking up the
scraps of meat and bread, pulled a haunch of venison down from a tree, and
passed and repassed in front of the teepee, paying no heed whatever to the
two men, who crouched in the doorway talking to one another. Once it
passed so close that Woody could almost have touched it. Finally his
companion fired into it, and off it ran, badly wounded, without any
attempt at retaliation. The next morning they followed its tracks in the
snow, and finally found it a quarter of a mile away. It was near a
pine-tree, and had buried itself under the loose earth, pine-needles, and
snow; Woody's companion almost walked over it, and putting his rifle to
its ear blew out its brains.

In all his experience Woody had personally seen but four men who were
badly mauled by bears. Three of these were merely wounded. One was bitten
terribly in the back. Another had an arm partially chewed off. The third
was a man named George Dow, and the accident happened to him on the
Yellowstone about the year 1878. He was with a pack animal at the time,
leading it on a trail through a wood. Seeing a big she-bear with cubs he
yelled at her; whereat she ran away, but only to cache her cubs, and in a
minute, having hidden them, came racing back at him. His pack animal being
slow, he started to climb a tree; but before he could get far enough up
she caught him, almost biting a piece out of the calf of his leg, pulled
him down, bit and cuffed him two or three times, and then went on her way.

The only time Woody ever saw a man killed by a bear was once when he had
given a touch of variety to his life by shipping on a New Bedford whaler
which had touched at one of the Puget Sound ports. The whaler went up to a
part of Alaska where bears were very plentiful and bold. One day a couple
of boats' crews landed; and the men, who were armed only with an
occasional harpoon or lance, scattered over the beach, one of them, a
Frenchman, wading into the water after shell-fish. Suddenly a bear emerged
from some bushes and charged among the astonished sailors, who scattered
in every direction; but the bear, said Woody, "just had it in for that
Frenchman," and went straight at him. Shrieking with terror he retreated
up to his neck in the water; but the bear plunged in after him, caught
him, and disemboweled him. One of the Yankee mates then fired a bomb lance
into the bear's hips, and the savage beast hobbled off into the dense
cover of the low scrub, where the enraged sailor-folk were unable to get
at it.

The truth is that while the grizzly generally avoids a battle if possible,
and often acts with great cowardice, it is never safe to take liberties
with him; he usually fights desperately and dies hard when wounded and
cornered, and exceptional individuals take the aggressive on small
provocation.




BALZAC'S VIEWS OF WOMEN.


Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) has been pronounced by many eminent critics
the most truly great of all the writers of fiction that France has
produced. This judgment has been questioned at times by admirers of Hugo
and Dumas, but on one point all students of French literature agree--that
as an analyst of human character Honoré de Balzac never has had a peer.

As might have been expected of such a profound student of human nature,
Balzac on various occasions attempted to analyze the character of woman.
Many millions of men had essayed this task before Balzac's time and had
failed, as millions of other men have been failing ever since.
Philosophers have been the first to despair, for they contend that no
woman ever thoroughly understands herself or any other member of her
sex--in short, that she is to be understood only by the angels. But it is
generally believed that Balzac came nearer the truth in his estimate of
woman than any other novelist has done. Naturally his views were
conflicting. THE SCRAP BOOK herewith presents some of them.


When a woman pronounces the name of a man but twice a day, there may be
some doubt as to the nature of her sentiment--but three times!

       *       *       *       *       *

In courting women, many dry wood for a fire that will not burn for them.

       *       *       *       *       *

No man has yet discovered the means of successfully giving friendly advice
to women--not even to his own.

       *       *       *       *       *

A man who can love deeply is never utterly contemptible.

       *       *       *       *       *

Women are constantly the dupes, or else the victims, of their extreme
sensitiveness.

       *       *       *       *       *

A man must be a fool who does not succeed in making a woman believe that
which flatters her.

       *       *       *       *       *

A woman when she has passed forty becomes an illegible scrawl; only an old
woman is capable of divining old women.

       *       *       *       *       *

A woman full of faith in the one she loves is but a novelist's fancy.

       *       *       *       *       *

The mistakes of a woman result almost always from her faith in the good
and her confidence in the truth.

       *       *       *       *       *

Woman is a charming creature, who changes her heart as easily as her
gloves.

       *       *       *       *       *

The man who can govern a woman can govern a nation.

       *       *       *       *       *

In the elevated order of ideas, the life of man is glory; the life of
woman is love.

       *       *       *       *       *

Marriage has its unknown great men as war has its Napoleons and philosophy
its Descartes.

       *       *       *       *       *

The Indian axiom "Do not strike even with a flower a woman guilty of a
hundred crimes," is my rule of conduct.

       *       *       *       *       *

Most women proceed like the flea, by leaps and jumps.

       *       *       *       *       *

When women love us, they forgive us everything, even our crimes. When they
do not love us, they give us credit for nothing, not even for our virtues.

       *       *       *       *       *

Marriage should combat without respite or mercy that monster which devours
everything--habit.

       *       *       *       *       *

There is one thing admirable in women: they never reason about their
blameworthy actions; even in their dissimulation here is an element of
sincerity.




THE WORLD'S RICHEST HUNDRED.

  Of the Five Score Men and Women Among Whom $6,760,000,000 is Divided
  Fifty are Citizens of the United States--England is Represented by
  Thirteen--Oil Yielded the Largest Individual Fortune.


When the average present-day millionaire is bluntly asked to name the
value of his earthly possessions he finds it difficult to answer the
question correctly. It may be that he is not willing to take the
questioner into his confidence. It is doubtful whether he really knows.

If this is true of the millionaire himself, it follows that when others
attempt the task of estimating the amount of his wealth, the results must
be conflicting. Still, excellent authorities are not lacking on this
subject, and the list of the world's richest hundred persons, which is
printed herewith, has been compiled from the best.

  Rank.    Name.             Country.      How Made.            Total Fortune.

  1--John D. Rockefeller     United States Oil                    $600,000,000
  2--A. Beit                 South Africa  Gold and diamonds       500,000,000
  3--J.B. Robinson           South Africa  Gold                    400,000,000
  4--Czar Nicholas II        Russia        Inherited               350,000,000
  5--Andrew Carnegie         United States Steel                   300,000,000
  6--W.W. Astor              United States Real estate             300,000,000
  7--Prince Demidoff         Russia        Inherited               200,000,000
  8--Emperor Franz Josef     Austria       Inherited               185,000,000
  9--J. Pierpont Morgan      United States Finance                 150,000,000
  10--William Rockefeller    United States Oil                     100,000,000
  11--H.H. Rogers            United States Oil                     100,000,000
  12--W.K. Vanderbilt        United States Railroads               100,000,000
  13--Senator Clark          United States Copper                  100,000,000
  14--John Jacob Astor       United States Real estate             100,000,000
  15--Duke of Westminster    England       Real estate             100,000,000
  16--Lord Rothschild        England       Banker                  100,000,000
  17--Baron E. de Rothschild France        Banker                  100,000,000
  18--King Leopold           Belgium       Inherited and acquired  100,000,000
  19--Grand Duke Vladimir    Russia        Inherited               100,000,000
  20--Russell Sage           United States Finance                  80,000,000
  21--H.C. Frick             United States Steel and coke           80,000,000
  22--D.O. Mills             United States Banker                   75,000,000
  23--Marshall Field, Jr.    United States Inherited                75,000,000
  24--Henry M. Flagler       United States Oil                      60,000,000
  25--James J. Hill          United States Railroads                60,000,000
  26--Archduke Frederick     Austria       Inherited                60,000,000
  27--The Sultan             Turkey        Inherited                50,000,000
  28--Prince Lichtenstein    Austria       Inherited                50,000,000
  29--Baron Bleichroder      Germany       Banker                   50,000,000
  30--M. Heine               France        Banker                   50,000,000
  31--Lord Iveagh            Ireland       Brewer                   50,000,000
  32--Señora Cousino         Chili         Inherited                50,000,000
  33--Sir Jervin Clark       Australia     Sheep                    50,000,000
  34--John D. Archbold       United States Oil                      50,000,000
  35--Oliver Payne           United States Oil                      50,000,000
  36--J.B. Haggin            United States Gold                     50,000,000
  37--Harry Field            United States Inherited                50,000,000
  38--Duke of Devonshire     England       Inherited                50,000,000
  39--A. Brehr               Austria       Banker                   45,000,000
  40--James Henry Smith      United States Inherited                40,000,000
  41--Henry Phipps           United States Steel                    40,000,000
  42--Alfred G. Vanderbilt   United States Railroads                40,000,000
  43--H.O. Havemeyer         United States Sugar                    40,000,000
  44--Mrs. Hetty Green       United States Finance                  40,000,000
  45--Thomas F. Ryan         United States Finance                  40,000,000
  46--Lord Strathcona        Canada        Finance                  40,000,000
  47--Miss Bertha Krupp      Germany       Steel                    40,000,000
  48--Grand Duke Michael     Russia        Inherited                40,000,000
  49--Mrs. W. Walker         United States Inherited                35,000,000
  50--George Gould           United States Railroads                35,000,000
  51--Prince Henry of Pless  Germany       Inherited                35,000,000
  52--J. Ogden Armour        United States Meat                     30,000,000
  53--E.T. Gerry             United States Inherited                30,000,000
  54--Robert W. Goelet       United States Real estate              30,000,000
  55--Don Luis Wizperrazas   Mexico        Mines                    30,000,000
  56--Earl of Derby          England       Inherited                30,000,000
  57--Count Henckel          Germany       Inherited                30,000,000
  58--J.H. Flagler           United States Finance                  30,000,000
  59--Claus Spreckels        United States Sugar                    30,000,000
  60--W.F. Havemeyer         United States Sugar                    30,000,000
  61--Bishop Kohn            Austria       Inherited                30,000,000
  62--F. Schwarzenberger     Austria       Inherited                30,000,000
  63--Jacob H. Schiff        United States Banker                   25,000,000
  64--P.A.B. Widener         United States Street cars              25,000,000
  65--George F. Baker        United States Banker                   25,000,000
  66--Duke of Sutherland     Scotland      Real estate              25,000,000
  67--Duke of Bedford        England       Real estate              25,000,000
  68--Duke of Portland       England       Real estate              25,000,000
  69--Baron A. de Rothschild England       Banker                   25,000,000
  70--Baron L. de Rothschild England       Banker                   25,000,000
  71--Duc d'Arenberg         Belgium       Inherited                25,000,000
  72--Angelo Quintieri       Italy         Inherited                25,000,000
  73--M. Nobel               Russia        Oil                      25,000,000
  74--Baron Leitenberger     Austria       Inherited                25,000,000
  75--Prince Yusupoff        Russia        Inherited                25,000,000
  76--Lord Mountstephen      Canada        Real estate              25,000,000
  77--Queen Louise           Denmark       Inherited                25,000,000
  78--Grand Duke of Hesse    Germany       Inherited                25,000,000
  79--Prince Anton Radziwill Germany       Inherited                25,000,000
  80--August Belmont         United States Finance                  20,000,000
  81--James Stillman         United States Banker                   20,000,000
  82--John W. Gates          United States Finance                  20,000,000
  83--Norman B. Ream         United States Finance                  20,000,000
  84--Joseph Pulitzer        United States Journalist               20,000,000
  85--James G. Bennett       United States Journalist               20,000,000
  86--John G. Moore          United States Finance                  20,000,000
  87--D.G. Reid              United States Steel                    20,000,000
  88--Frederick Pabst        United States Brewer                   20,000,000
  89--William D. Sloane      United States Inherited                20,000,000
  90--William B. Leeds       United States Railroads                20,000,000
  91--James B. Duke          United States Tobacco                  20,000,000
  92--Anthony N. Brady       United States Finance                  20,000,000
  93--Geo. W. Vanderbilt     United States Railroads                20,000,000
  94--Fred. W. Vanderbilt    United States Railroads                20,000,000
  95--Duke of Northumberl'd  England       Inherited                20,000,000
  96--Lord Armstrong         England       Inherited                20,000,000
  97--Lord Brassey           England       Inherited                20,000,000
  98--Sir Thomas Lipton      England       Grocer                   20,000,000
  99--Ex-Empress Eugenie     France        Inherited                20,000,000
  100--Queen Wilhelmina      Holland       Inherited                20,000,000
                                                                --------------
                                                      Total     $6,760,000,000




WIT OF THE ANCIENT GREEKS.

  A Garnering of Old Jokes from the Classics Impresses the Reader with the
  Fact that Modern Wit Isn't as New as It Ought to Be.

We moderns find it hard to improve on the ancients, except in such
insignificant conveniences as speed in traveling. Even our humor is in
large part no more than the re-tailored mummies of Roman, Greek, and
Egyptian humor--which means, of course, that those ancients merely
resurrected the jokes of their own dim ancestors. Humor comes before
speech.

The Greeks had a pretty wit. And how modern the old Greek jokes do sound!

    A truly didactic saying is attributed by Aelian to the
    Spartan magistrates. "When certain persons from Clazomenæ
    had come to Sparta and smeared with soot the seats on which
    the Spartan magistrates sat discharging public duties; on
    discovering what had been done and by whom, they expressed
    no indignation, but merely ordered a proclamation to be
    made, 'Let it be lawful for the people of Clazomenæ to make
    blackguards of themselves.'"

A number of apothegms, proverbs, or sayings of more or less wit occur in
the collected works of Plutarch, although Schneidewin does not hesitate to
attribute most of them to some impostor usurping his name. At any rate,
they are handily classified, and form a bulky addition to Mr. Paley's
translated specimens.

Here is a brief and bright saying which this writer attaches to King
Archelaus, when a talkative barber, trimming his beard, asked him, "How
shall I cut it?"

"In silence," replied the king.

The anecdote recalls one of Charles II's bragging barbers, who boasted to
him he could cut his majesty's throat when he would--a boast for which he
was only dismissed; though for a like rash vaunt, according to Peter
Cunningham, the barber of Dionysius was crucified.

To return to Plutarch, he tells the following stories, both good in their
way, of Philip of Macedon.

In passing sentence on two rogues, he ordered one to leave Macedonia with
all possible speed, and the other to try to catch him.

No less astute was his query as to a strong position he wished to occupy,
which was reported by the scouts to be almost impregnable.

"Is there not," he asked, "even a pathway to it wide enough for an ass
laden with gold?"

Philip, too, according to Plutarch, is entitled to the fatherhood of an
adage which retains its ancient fame about "calling a spade a spade."

Another story tells how Philip removed a judge, because he discovered that
the man's hair and beard were dyed.

"I could not believe," Plutarch reports the king as saying, "that one who
was false in his hair could be honest in his judgments."

Another sample of a witty saying from Plutarch's mint is one attributed to
Themistocles, that his son was the strongest man in Greece.

"For," said he, "the Athenians rule the Hellenes, I rule the Athenians,
your mother rules me, and you rule your mother."

Yet another is a retort attributed to Iphicrates, the celebrated Athenian
general. Harmodius, a young aristocrat who bore a name famous in the early
history of Athens, had reproached Iphicrates, who was the son of a
cobbler, with his mean birth.

"My nobility," the soldier replied, "begins with me, but yours ends with
you."

Another Athenian general, Phocion, was a man who preferred deeds to words.
He compared the eloquent speeches of one of his political opponents to
cypress-trees.

"They are tall," he said, "but they bear no fruit."

Elsewhere Plutarch tells of a man who plucked the feathers from a
nightingale, and, finding it a very small bird, exclaimed:

"You little wretch, you're nothing but voice!"

And again, the repartee of a Laconian to a man of Sparta who twitted him
with being unable to stand as long as himself on one leg.

"No," replied the other, "but any goose can."

An anecdote of Strabo gives a vivid picture of the clashing of a harper's
performances with the sounding of a bell for opening of the fish-market.
All the audience vanished at once save a little deaf man.

The harper expressed himself unutterably flattered at his having resisted
the importunity of the bell.

"What!" cried the deaf man, "has the fish-bell rung? Then I'm off, too.
Good-by!"




Tournament Scene From "Ivanhoe."

BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.


    Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832) was the first of the great
    romantic writers of modern England. As a boy he showed an
    extraordinary fondness for collecting and learning by heart
    the legends and old-time ballads which were current in that
    part of Scotland where he was born. Grown older, he found
    equal pleasure in studying the records and traditions of
    early English and Scottish history.

    From childhood he had a remarkable gift for story-telling,
    and would weave together strange and curious bits of antique
    lore for the delight of his companions. Later, he became for
    a while the most popular poet in Great Britain by publishing
    a series of romantic poems, among which "Marmion," "The Lady
    of the Lake," and "Rokeby" have endured the test of time.

    In 1814 Scott turned from poetry to prose and published
    anonymously the historical novel "Waverley," which took the
    whole English reading world by storm. This triumph was
    repeated in the splendid novels which followed in rapid
    succession. Between 1815 and 1825 twelve of these so-called
    Waverley novels came from his pen. They were translated into
    all the languages of Europe and exercised a profound
    influence upon the whole subsequent history of European
    fiction.

    The Waverley novels may be grouped under two heads--novels
    of Scottish life, and novels based upon incidents of English
    history. Of the former, the greatest are "Guy Mannering,"
    "Rob Roy," "The Heart of Midlothian," and "Old Mortality."
    Of the latter, the most famous are "Kenilworth," "Ivanhoe,"
    and "The Talisman."

    Scott may be said to have created the historical novel, and
    to have quickened by means of it the national pride of his
    countrymen. At the time of his death he was recognized as a
    great public character, so that when in his last illness he
    went abroad in search of health the British government
    placed a man-of-war at his disposal.

    The romance of "Ivanhoe," from which this selection has been
    taken, is the most spirited and stirring picture of the age
    of chivalry that English literature contains.

The lists now presented a most splendid spectacle. The sloping galleries
were crowded with all that was noble, great, wealthy, and beautiful in the
northern and midland parts of England; and the contrast of the various
dresses of these dignified spectators rendered the view as gay as it was
rich, while the interior and lower space, filled with the substantial
burgesses and yeomen of merry England, formed, in their more plain attire,
a dark fringe, or border, around this circle of brilliant embroidery,
relieving, and at the same time setting off, its splendor.

The heralds finished their proclamation with the usual cry of "Largesse,
largesse, gallant knights!" and gold and silver pieces were showered on
them from the galleries, it being a high point of chivalry to exhibit
liberality toward those whom the age accounted at once the secretaries and
the historians of honor.

The bounty of the spectators was acknowledged by the customary shouts of
"Love of Ladies--Death of Champions--Honor to the Generous--Glory to the
Brave!"--to which the more humble spectators added their acclamations, and
a numerous band of trumpeters the flourish of their martial instruments.

When these sounds had ceased, the heralds withdrew from the lists in gay
and glittering procession, and none remained within them save the
marshals of the field, who, armed cap-a-pie, sat on horseback, motionless
as statues, at the opposite end of the lists.

Meantime, the enclosed space at the northern extremity of the lists, as it
was, was now completely crowded with knights desirous to prove their skill
against the challengers, and, when viewed from the galleries, presented
the appearance of a sea of waving plumage, intermixed with glistening
helmets, and tall lances, to the extremities of which were, in many cases,
attached small pennons of about a span's breadth, which, fluttering in the
air as the breeze caught them, joined with the restless motion of the
feathers to add liveliness to the scene.

At length the barriers were opened, and five knights, chosen by lot,
advanced slowly into the area; a single champion riding in front, and the
other four following in pairs. All were splendidly armed, and my Saxon
authority (in the Wardour Manuscript) records at great length their
devices, their colors, and the embroidery of their horse-trappings.

It is unnecessary to be particular on these subjects. To borrow lines from
a contemporary poet, who has written but too little--

  The knights are dust
  And their good swords are rust,
  Their souls are with the saints, we trust.

Their escutcheons have long moldered from the walls of their castles. The
castles themselves are but green mounds and shattered ruins--the place
that once knew them knows them no more--nay, many a race since theirs has
died out and been forgotten in the very land which they occupied with all
the authority of feudal proprietors and feudal lords. What, then, would it
avail the reader to know their names, or the evanescent symbols of their
martial rank!

Now, however, no whit anticipating the oblivion which awaited their names
and feats, the champions advanced through the lists, restraining their
fiery steeds, and compelling them to move slowly, while, at the same time,
they exhibited their paces, together with the grace and dexterity of the
riders.

As the procession entered the lists the sound of a wild barbaric music
was heard from behind the tents of the challengers, where the performers
were concealed. It was of Eastern origin, having been brought from the
Holy Land; and the mixture of the cymbals and bells seemed to bid welcome
at once, and defiance, to the knights as they advanced.

With the eyes of an immense concourse of spectators fixed upon them, the
five knights advanced up the platform upon which the tents of the
challengers stood, and there separating themselves, each touched slightly,
and with the reverse of his lance, the shield of the antagonist to whom he
wished to oppose himself.

The lower orders of spectators in general--nay, many of the higher class,
and it is even said several of the ladies--were rather disappointed at the
champions choosing the arms of courtesy. For the same sort of persons who,
in the present day, applaud most highly the deepest tragedies were then
interested in a tournament exactly in proportion to the danger incurred by
the champions engaged.

Having intimated their more specific purpose, the champions retreated to
the extremity of the lists, where they remained drawn up in a line; while
the challengers, sallying each from his pavilion, mounted their horses,
and, headed by Brian de Bois-Guilbert, descended from the platform, and
opposed themselves individually to the knights who had touched their
respective shields.

At the flourish of clarions and trumpets they started out against each
other at full gallop; and such was the superior dexterity or good fortune
of the challengers that those opposed to Bois-Guilbert, Malvoisin, and
Front-de-Boeuf rolled on the ground.

The antagonist of Grantmesnil, instead of bearing his lance-point fair
against the crest or the shield of his enemy, swerved so much from the
direct line as to break the weapon athwart the person of his opponent--a
circumstance which was accounted more disgraceful than that of being
actually unhorsed; because the latter might happen from accident, whereas
the former evinced awkwardness and want of management of the weapon and of
the horse.

The fifth knight alone maintained the honor of his party, and parted
fairly with the knight of St. John, both splintering their lances without
advantage on either side.

The shouts of the multitude, together with the acclamations of the heralds
and the clangor of the trumpets, announced the triumph of the victors and
the defeat of the vanquished. The former retreated to their pavilions, and
the latter, gathering themselves up as they could, withdrew from the lists
in disgrace and dejection, to agree with their victors concerning the
redemption of their arms and their horses, which, according to the laws of
the tournament, they had forfeited.

The fifth of their number alone tarried in the lists long enough to be
greeted by the applause of the spectators, among whom he retreated, to the
aggravation, doubtless, of his companions' mortification.

A second and a third party of knights took the field; and although they
had various success, yet, upon the whole, the advantage decidedly remained
with the challengers, not one of whom lost his seat or swerved from his
charge--misfortunes which befell one or two of their antagonists in each
encounter. The spirits, therefore, of those opposed to them seemed to be
considerably damped by their continued success.

Three knights only appeared on the fourth entry who, avoiding the shields
of Bois-Guilbert and Front-de-Boeuf, contented themselves with touching
those of the three other knights who had not altogether manifested the
same strength and dexterity. This politic selection did not alter the
fortune of the field; the challengers were still successful. One of their
antagonists was overthrown, and both the others failed in the
_attaint_--that is, in striking the helmet and shield of their antagonist
firmly and strongly, with the lance held in a direct line, so that the
weapon might break unless the champion was overthrown.

After this fourth encounter there was a considerable pause; nor did it
appear that any one was very desirous of renewing the contest. The
spectators murmured among themselves; for, among the challengers,
Malvoisin and Front-de-Boeuf were unpopular from their characters, and
the others, except Grantmesnil, were disliked as strangers and foreigners.

But none shared the general feeling of dissatisfaction so keenly as Cedric
the Saxon, who saw in each adventure gained by the Norman challengers a
repeated triumph over the honor of England. His own education had taught
him no skill in the games of chivalry, although with the arms of his Saxon
ancestors he had manifested himself, on many occasions, a brave and
determined soldier.

He looked anxiously to Athelstane, who had learned the accomplishments of
the age, as if desiring that he should make some personal effort to
recover the victory which was passing into the hands of the Templar and
his associates. But, though both stout of heart and strong of person,
Athelstane had a disposition too inert to make the exertions which Cedric
seemed to expect from him.

"The day is against England, my lord," said Cedric in a marked tone; "are
you not tempted to take the lance?"

"I shall tilt to-morrow," answered Athelstane, "in the _mêlée_; it is not
worth while for me to arm myself to-day."

Two things displeased Cedric in this speech. It contained the Norman word
_mêlée_ (to express the general conflict), and it evinced some
indifference to the honor of the country; but it was spoken by Athelstane,
whom he held in such profound respect that he would not trust himself to
canvass his motives or his foibles. Moreover, he had no time to make any
remark, for Wamba thrust in his word, observing, "It was better, though
scarce easier, to be the best man among a hundred than the best man of
two."

Athelstane took the observation as a serious compliment; but Cedric, who
better understood the Jester's meaning, darted at him a severe and
menacing look; and lucky it was for Wamba, perhaps, that the time and
place prevented his receiving, notwithstanding his place and service, more
sensible marks of his master's resentment.

The pause in the tournament was still uninterrupted excepting by the
voices of the heralds exclaiming, "Love of ladies, splintering of lances!
stand forth, gallant knights, fair eyes look upon your deeds!"

The music also of the challengers breathed from time to time wild bursts
expressive of triumph or defiance, while the clowns grudged a holiday
which seemed to pass away in inactivity; and old knights and nobles
lamented in whispers the decay of martial spirit, spoke of the triumphs of
their younger days, but agreed that the land did not now supply dames of
such transcendent beauty as had animated the jousts of former times.

Prince John began to talk to his attendants about making ready the
banquet, and the necessity of adjudging the prize to Brian de
Bois-Guilbert, who had, with a single spear, overthrown two knights and
foiled a third.

At length, as the Saracenic music of the challengers concluded one of
those long and high flourishes with which they had broken the silence of
the lists, it was answered by a solitary trumpet, which breathed a note of
defiance from the northern extremity. All eyes were turned to see the new
champion which these sounds announced, and no sooner were the barriers
opened than he paced into the lists.

As far as could be judged of a man sheathed in armor, the new adventurer
did not greatly exceed the middle size, and seemed to be rather slender
than strongly made. His suit of armor was formed of steel, richly inlaid
with gold, and the device on his shield was a young oak-tree pulled up by
the roots, with the Spanish word _Desdichado_, signifying Disinherited. He
was mounted on a gallant black horse, and as he passed through the lists
he gracefully saluted the prince and the ladies by lowering his lance.

The dexterity with which he managed his steed, and something of youthful
grace which he displayed in his manner, won him the favor of the
multitude, which some of the lower classes expressed by calling out:
"Touch Ralph de Vipont's shield--touch the Hospitaler's shield; he has the
least sure seat; he is your cheapest bargain."

The champion, moving onward amid these well-meant hints, ascended the
platform by the sloping alley which led to it from the lists, and, to the
astonishment of all present, riding straight up to the central pavilion,
struck with the sharp end of his spear the shield of Brian de
Bois-Guilbert until it rung again. All stood astonished at his
presumption, but none more than the redoubted knight whom he had thus
defied to mortal combat, and who, little expecting so rude a challenge,
was standing carelessly at the door of the pavilion.

"Have you confessed yourself, brother," said the Templar, "and have you
heard mass this morning, that you peril your life so frankly?"

"I am fitter to meet death than thou art," answered the Disinherited
Knight; for by this name the stranger had recorded himself in the books of
the tourney.

"Then take your place in the lists," said Bois-Guilbert, "and look your
last upon the sun, for this night thou shalt sleep in paradise."

"Gramercy for thy courtesy," replied the Disinherited Knight; "and to
requite it I advise thee to take a fresh horse and a new lance, for by my
honor you will need both."

Having expressed himself thus confidently, he reined his horse backward
down the slope which he had ascended, and compelled him in the same manner
to move backward through the lists till he reached the northern extremity,
where he remained stationary in expectation of his antagonist. This feat
of horsemanship again attracted the applause of the multitude.

However incensed at his adversary for the precautions which he
recommended, Brian de Bois-Guilbert did not neglect his advice, for his
honor was too nearly concerned to permit his neglecting any means which
might insure victory over his presumptuous opponent. He changed his horse
for a proved and fresh one of great strength and spirit. He chose a new
and a tough spear, lest the wood of the former might have been strained in
the previous encounters he had sustained.

Lastly, he laid aside his shield, which had received some little damage,
and received another from his squires. His first had only borne the
general device of his rider, representing two knights riding upon one
horse, an emblem expressive of the original humility and poverty of the
Templars, qualities which they had since exchanged for the arrogance and
wealth that finally occasioned their suppression. Bois-Guilbert's new
shield bore a raven in full flight, holding in its claws a skull, and
bearing the motto, _Gare le Corbeau_.

When the two champions stood opposed to each other at the two extremities
of the lists, the public expectation was strained to the highest pitch.
Few augured the possibility that the encounter could terminate well for
the Disinherited Knight, yet his courage and gallantry secured the general
good wishes of the spectators.

The trumpets had no sooner given the signal than the champions vanished
from their posts with the speed of lightning, and closed in the center of
the lists with the shock of a thunderbolt. The lances burst into shivers
up to the very grasp, and it seemed at the moment that both knights had
fallen, for the shock had made each horse recoil backward upon its
haunches.

The address of the riders recovered their steeds by use of the bridle and
spur; and having glared at each other for an instant with eyes which
seemed to flash fire through the bars of their vizors, each made a
demivolte, and, retiring to the extremity of the lists, received a fresh
lance from the attendants.

A loud shout from the spectators, waving of scarfs and handkerchiefs, and
general acclamations attested the interest taken by the spectators in this
encounter; the most equal, as well as the best performed, which had graced
the day. But no sooner had the knights resumed their station than the
clamor of applause was hushed into a silence so deep and so dead that it
seemed the multitude were afraid even to breathe.

A few minutes' pause having been allowed, that the combatants and their
horses might recover breath, Prince John with his truncheon signed to the
trumpets to sound the onset. The champions a second time sprung from their
stations and closed in the center of the lists, with the same speed, the
same dexterity, the same violence, but not the same equal fortune as
before.

In this second encounter the Templar aimed at the center of his
antagonist's shield, and struck it so fair and forcibly that his spear
went to shivers, and the Disinherited Knight reeled in his saddle. On the
other hand, that champion had, in the beginning of his career, directed
the point of his lance toward Bois-Guilbert's shield, but, changing his
aim almost in the moment of encounter, he addressed it to the helmet, a
mark more difficult to hit, but which, if attained, rendered the shock
more irresistible.

Fair and true he hit the Norman on the vizor, where his lance's point kept
hold of the bars. Yet, even at this disadvantage, the Templar sustained
his high reputation, and had not the girths of his saddle burst he might
not have been unhorsed. As it chanced, however, saddle, horse, and man
rolled on the ground.

To extricate himself from the stirrups and fallen steed was to the Templar
scarce the work of a moment, and, stung with madness both at his disgrace
and at the acclamations with which it was hailed by the spectators, he
drew his sword and waved it in defiance of his conqueror. The Disinherited
Knight sprung from his steed and also unsheathed his sword. The marshals
of the field, however, spurred their horses between them, and reminded
them that the laws of the tournament did not, on the present occasion,
permit this species of encounter.

"We shall meet again, I trust," said the Templar, casting a resentful
glance at his antagonist; "and where there are none to separate us."

"If we do not," said the Disinherited Knight, "the fault shall not be
mine. On foot or horseback, with ax, or with sword, I am alike ready to
encounter thee."

More and angrier words would have been exchanged, but the marshals,
crossing their lances between them, compelled them to separate. The
Disinherited Knight returned to his first station, and Bois-Guilbert to
his tent, where he remained for the rest of the day in an agony of
despair.

Without alighting from his horse, the conqueror called for a bowl of
wine, and opening the beaver, or lower part of his helmet, announced that
he quaffed it "to all true English hearts, and to the confusion of foreign
tyrants." He then commanded his trumpet to sound a defiance to the
challengers, and desired a herald to announce to them that he should make
no election, but was willing to encounter them in the order in which they
pleased to advance against him.

The gigantic Front-de-Boeuf, armed in sable armor, was the first who took
the field. He bore on a white shield a black bull's head, half defaced by
the numerous encounters which he had undergone, and bearing the arrogant
motto, _Cave, adsum_. Over this champion the Disinherited Knight obtained
a slight but decisive advantage. Both knights broke their lances fairly,
but Front-de-Boeuf, who lost a stirrup in the encounter, was adjudged to
have the disadvantage.

In the stranger's third encounter with Sir Philip Malvoisin, he was
equally successful, striking that baron so forcibly on the casque that the
laces of the helmet broke, and Malvoisin, only saved from falling by
being unhelmeted, was declared vanquished like his companions.

In his fourth encounter, with De Grantmesnil, the Disinherited Knight
showed as much courtesy as he had hitherto evinced courage and dexterity.
De Grantmesnil's horse, which was young and violent, reared and plunged in
the course of the career so as to disturb the rider's aim, and the
stranger, declining to take the advantage which this accident afforded
him, raised his lance, and, passing his antagonist without touching him,
wheeled his horse and rode back again to his own end of the lists,
offering his antagonist, by a herald, the chance of a second encounter.
This De Grantmesnil declined, avowing himself vanquished as much by the
courtesy as by the address of his opponent.

Ralph de Vipont summed up the list of the stranger's triumphs, being
hurled to the ground with such force that the blood gushed from his nose
and mouth, and he was borne senseless from the lists.

The acclamations of thousands applauded the award of the prince and
marshals, announcing that day's honors to the Disinherited Knight.




NICKNAMES OF OUR STATES AND TOWNS.


Yankee humor and high-flown oratory are responsible for most of the
nicknames by which the States and many of the cities in the United States
have come to be known. As these nicknames are frequently encountered by
readers, it may be just as well to recognize the fact that a knowledge of
them is more or less of a necessity. For this reason the accompanying list
is given:


=STATES.=

  Virginia, the Old Dominion,
  Massachusetts, the Bay State.
  Maine, the Border State.
  Rhode Island, Little Rhody.
  New York, the Empire State.
  New Hampshire, the Granite State.
  Vermont, the Green Mountain State.
  Connecticut, the Land of Steady Habits.
  Pennsylvania, the Keystone State.
  North Carolina, the Old North State.
  Ohio, the Buckeye State.
  South Carolina, the Palmetto State.
  Michigan, the Wolverine State.
  Kentucky, the Corn-cracker.
  California, the Golden State.
  Indiana, the Hoosier State.
  Illinois, the Sucker State.
  Iowa, the Hawk-Eye State.
  Wisconsin, the Badger State.
  Florida, the Peninsular State.
  Texas, the Lone Star State.


=CITIES.=

  Philadelphia, the Quaker City.
  Boston, the modern Athens; the Hub.
  New York, Gotham.
  Baltimore, the Monumental City.
  Cincinnati, the Queen City.
  New Orleans, the Crescent City.
  Washington, the City of Magnificent Distances.
  Chicago, the Garden City.
  Detroit, the City of the Straits.
  Cleveland, the Forest City.
  Pittsburgh, the Smoky City.
  New Haven, the City of Elms.
  Indianapolis, the Railroad City.
  St. Louis, the Mound City.
  Keokuk, the Gate City.
  Louisville, the Falls City.
  Nashville, the City of Rocks.
  Hannibal, the Bluff City.




THE LAST WORD--POET TO POET.

  JOAQUIN MILLER'S FAREWELL TO BRET HARTE, HIS FAMOUS
  CONTEMPORARY IN THE LITERATURE OF THE FAR WEST.


From his cabin on the heights back of Oakland, California, the gray poet
of the Sierras, Joaquin Miller [pronounced "Hwah-keen"], looks down across
San Francisco Harbor and through the Golden Gate.

When word came to Joaquin Miller, in May, 1902, that his friend, Bret
Harte, was dead, he embalmed his grief in the wonderful poem of farewell
here printed. He pictured the somber ship of death traveling silently at
sunset out through the Golden Gate.

The poem originally appeared in the _Overland Monthly_ for September,
1902. The issue was devoted to the memory of Bret Harte, and included
reprints of "The Luck of Roaring Camp," "The Outcasts of Poker Flat,"
"Plain Language from Truthful James," and other of Harte's best work.

       *       *       *       *       *


GOOD-BY, BRET HARTE!

BY JOAQUIN MILLER.

    Yon yellow sun melts in the sea;
    A somber ship sweeps silently
    Past Alcatraz tow'rd Orient skies--
    A mist is rising to the eyes--
      Good-by, Bret Harte, good night, good night!

    Yon sea-bank booms far funeral guns!
    What secrets of His central suns,
    Companion of the peak and pine,
    What secrets of the spheres are thine?
      Good-by, Bret Harte, good night, good night!

    You loved the lowly, laughed at pride,
    We mocked, we mocked and pierced your side;
    And yet for all harsh scoffings heard
    You answered not one unkind word,
    But went your way, as now: Good night!

    How stately tall your ship, how vast,
    With night nailed to your leaning mast,
    With mighty stars of hammered gold
    And moon-wrought cordage manifold!
      Good-by, Bret Harte, good night, good night!




"THE LITTLE CHURCH 'ROUND THE CORNER."


In Twenty-Ninth Street, New York, and only a few paces distant from Fifth
Avenue, stands a low, rambling, picturesque brown structure that has the
appearance of a modest chapel to which various additions have been built
from time to time. Between this building and the street is a well-shaded
lawn, and there is scarcely a day in the year on which the twittering of
birds among the boughs of the big trees does not attract the attention of
passers-by. There is a sort of rural atmosphere about the quaint church
and its yard that seems so singularly out of place in the heart of a big
city that strangers invariably glance curiously at the board on which are
inscribed the hours of service and the name "Church of the
Transfiguration."

To most strangers this means nothing more than the name of any other
church. But were some friend to add, "It is also known as the 'Little
Church 'Round the Corner,'" a new light would dawn on the stranger's mind,
and he would know that he was standing before one of the most celebrated
church edifices in the United States--a church supported largely by
members of the theatrical profession--a church that has been famous for
many romantic wedding ceremonies, and from which hundreds of dead actors
and actresses have been borne to the grave.

The manner in which this church came by the name by which it is now
popularly known is as follows:

In 1870 the veteran actor, George Holland, died in New York, and Mrs.
Holland's sister desired the funeral to be held at her own church--a
fashionable place of worship in Fifth Avenue. Joseph Jefferson, as an old
friend of the family, went to the minister with one of Holland's young
sons. Mr. Jefferson told the rector that his friend was an actor, and the
rector replied that under the circumstances he should have to decline
holding the services at the church.

The boy was in tears. Mr. Jefferson was too indignant to say a word, but
as he and the boy left the room he asked if there was any other church
from which his friend might be buried. The rector replied that there was a
little church around the corner where it might be done.

Mr. Jefferson said: "Then if this be so, God bless 'the little church
around the corner.'"

And it was in "The Little Church 'Round the Corner" that the ceremony was
performed by the Rev. George H. Houghton, its rector, who, beloved by all
members of the theatrical profession, continued in this pulpit until his
death in 1897, when he was succeeded by his son.

The author of the following lines was a New York playwright who won
popularity a generation ago.


BY A.E. LANCASTER.

    "Bring him not here, where our sainted feet
      Are treading the path to glory;
    Bring him not here, where our Saviour sweet
      Repeats for us His story.
    Go, take him where 'such things' are done--
      For he sat in the seat of the scorner--
    To where they have room, for we have none,
      To 'that little church 'round the corner.'"

    So spake the holy man of God,
      Of another man, his brother,
    Whose cold remains, ere they sought the sod,
    Had only asked that a Christian rite
    Might be read above them by one whose light
      Was, "Brethren, love one another";
    Had only asked that a prayer might be read
    Ere his flesh went down to join the dead.

    Whilst his spirit looked, with suppliant eyes,
    Searching for God throughout the skies;
    But the priest frowned "No," and his brow was bare
      Of love in the sight of the mourner;
    And they looked for Christ and found Him--where?
      In "that little church 'round the corner."

    Ah, well! God grant, when with aching feet
      We tread life's last few paces,
    That we may hear some accents sweet
      And kiss to the end, fond faces;
    God grant that this tired flesh may rest
      (Mid many a musing mourner),
    While the sermon is preached and the rites are read,
    In no church where the heart of love is dead,
    And the pastor a pious prig at best,
    But in some small nook where God's confessed--
      Some "little church 'round the corner."




Captain Obstinate.

ANONYMOUS.

One fine evening in the month of July, an old soldier of the "grand army,"
who had left one of his arms on the field of battle, was seated at the
door of his pretty cottage.

He was surrounded by a group of young villagers, who were clamorously
reminding him of his promise to tell them some of his military adventures.

After a moment of pretended resistance to their wishes, the old man took
his pipe from his mouth, passed the back of his remaining hand across his
lips, and thus commenced his tale:

"In my time, my friends, the French would have disdained to fight against
Frenchmen in the streets, as they do in these days. No, no, when we fought
it was for the honor of France, and against her foreign enemies.

"But my story commences on the 6th of November, 1812, a short time after
the battle of Wiazma. We beat a retreat, not before the Russians, for they
were at a respectful distance from our camp, but before the sharp and
bitter cold of their detestable country, a cold more terrible to us than
the Russians, Austrians, and Bavarians all put together.

"During the preceding days our officers had told us that we were
approaching Smolensko, where we should get food, fire, brandy, and shoes;
but in the meantime we were perishing in the glaciers, and continually
harassed by the Cossacks.

"We had marched for six hours without stopping to take breath, for we knew
that repose was certain death. An icy wind blew the drifting snow in our
faces, and from time to time we stumbled over the frozen corpse of a
comrade. We neither spoke nor sang, even complaints were no longer heard,
and that was a bad sign.

"I marched by the side of my captain; short, strongly built, rough, and
severe, but brave and true as the blade of his sword; we called him
'Captain Obstinate'; for when once he said a thing, it was fixed; he never
changed his opinions. He had been wounded at Wiazma, and his usually
crimson face was then ghastly pale, while a ragged white handkerchief, all
stained with blood, was bound round his head, and added to the pallor of
his countenance.

"All at once I saw him stagger on his legs like a drunken man, then fall
like a block to the ground.

"'_Morbleu!_ captain,' said I, bending over him, 'you can not remain
here.'

"'You see that I can, since I do it,' replied he, showing his legs.

"'Captain,' said I, 'you must not give way.' Lifting him in my arms, I
tried to put him on his feet. He leaned on me, and attempted to walk, but
in vain; he fell again, dragging me with him.

"'Jobin,' he said; 'all is over. Leave me here, and rejoin your company as
quickly as possible. One word before you go: at Voreppe, near Grenoble,
lives a good woman, eighty-two years of age, my--my mother. Go and see
her, embrace her for me, and tell her that--that--tell her what you will,
but give her this purse and my cross. It is all I have! Now go.'

"'Is that all, captain?'

"'That is all. God bless you! Make haste. Adieu!' My friends, I do not
know how it was, but I felt two tears roll down my cheeks.

"'No, captain,' I cried, 'I will not leave you; either you come with me,
or I will remain with you.'

"'I forbid you to remain.'

"'You may put me under arrest, then, if you like, but at present you must
let me do as I please.'

"'You are an insolent fellow.'

"'Very good, captain, but you must come with me.'

"He bit his lips with rage, but said no more.

"I lifted him, and carried him on my shoulders like a sack. You can easily
imagine that with such a burden I could not keep pace with my comrades. In
fact, I soon lost sight of their columns, and could discern nothing around
me but the white and silent plain.

"I still walked on, when presently appeared a troop of Cossacks galloping
toward me, with furious gesticulations and wild cries.

"The captain was by this time completely insensible, and I resolved,
whatever it might cost me, not to abandon him. I laid him down on the
ground, and covered him with snow; then I crept beneath a heap of dead
bodies, leaving, however, my eyes at liberty.

"Presently the Cossacks came up, and began to strike with their lances
right and left, while their horses trampled us under their feet. One of
these heavy beasts set his foot upon my right arm, and crushed it.

"My friends, I did not speak, I did not stir; I put my right hand into my
mouth to stifle the cry of torture which nearly escaped from me, and in a
few minutes the Cossacks had dispersed.

"When the last of them had disappeared, I quitted my refuge, and proceeded
to disinter the captain. To my joy he gave some signs of life; I contrived
to carry him with my one arm toward a rock which offered a sort of
shelter, and then I laid myself by his side, wrapping my cloak round us
both.

"The night had closed in, and the snow continued to fall.

"The rear-guard had long since disappeared, and the only sound that broke
the stillness of the night was the whistle of a bullet, or the howling of
the wolves feasting on the corpses that lay stretched around.

"God knows what thoughts passed through my soul during that dreadful
night, which, I felt sure, would be my last upon earth. But I remembered
the prayer which my mother had taught me long before, when I was a child
at her knee, and bending low, I repeated it with fervor.

"My children, that did me good, and remember always that a sincere and
fervent prayer is sure to comfort you. I felt astonishingly calmed when I
returned to my place by the captain. But the time passed, and I had fallen
into a state of half stupor, when I saw a group of French officers
approach. Before I had time to speak to them, their chief, a little man,
dressed in a furred pelisse, stepped forward toward me, and said:

'What are you doing here? Why are you away from your regiment?'

"'For two good reasons,' said I, pointing first to the captain, and then
to my bleeding arm.

"'The man says true, Sire,' said one of those who followed him; 'I saw him
marching in the rear of his regiment, and carrying this officer on his
back.'

"The emperor--for, my friends, it was he!--gave me one of those glances
that only he, or the eagle of the Alps, could give, and said: 'It is well.
You have done very well.' Then opening his pelisse, he took the cross
which decorated his green coat, and gave it to me. At that instant I was
no longer hungry, no longer cold; I felt no more pain from my arm than if
that awkward beast had never touched it.

"'Davoust,' added the emperor, addressing the officer who had spoken to
him, 'see this man and his captain placed in one of the baggage-wagons.
Adieu!' And making me a motion of the hand, he went away."

Here the veteran ceased, and resumed his pipe.

"But tell us what became of 'Captain Obstinate,'" cried many impatient
voices.

"The captain recovered, and is now a general on the retired list. But the
best of the joke was, that as soon as he got well, he put me under arrest
for fifteen days, as a punishment for my infraction of discipline.

"This circumstance came to the ears of Napoleon, and after laughing
heartily, he not only caused me to be set free, but promoted me to the
rank of sergeant. As to the decoration, my children, here is the ribbon at
my button-hole, but the cross I wear next my heart."

And opening his vest, he showed his eager audience the precious relic,
suspended from his neck in a little satin bag.--_Harper's Magazine_,
1854.




THE ISLE OF THE LONG AGO.

BY BENJAMIN FRANKLIN TAYLOR.


    Oh, a wandering stream is the river Time,
      As it runs through the realms of tears,
    With a faultless rhythm and a musical rhyme,
    And a broader sweep and a surge sublime,
      And blends with the ocean of years.

    How the winters are drifting like flakes of snow,
      And the summers like buds between,
    And the year in the sheaf--so they come and they go,
    On the river's breast, with its ebb and flow,
      As it glides in the shadow and sheen.

    There's a magical Isle up the river Time,
      Where the softest of airs are playing;
    There's a cloudless sky and a tropical clime,
    And a song as sweet as a vesper chime.
      And the Junes with the roses are staying.

    And the name of this isle is the Long Ago,
      And we bury our treasures there:
    There are brows of beauty and bosoms of snow--
    They are heaps of dust, but we loved them so!
      There are trinkets and tresses of hair.

    There are fragments of song that nobody sings,
      And a part of an infant's prayer;
    There's a lute unswept, and a harp without strings,
    There are broken vows, and pieces of rings,
      And the garments that _she_ used to wear.

    There are hands that are waved when the fairy shore
      By the mirage is lifted in air;
    And we sometimes hear, through the turbulent roar,
    Sweet voices we heard in the days gone before,
      When the wind down the river is fair.

    Oh, remembered for aye be the blessed isle,
      All the day of life till night--
    When the evening comes with its beautiful smile,
    And our eyes are closing to slumber awhile,
      May that greenwood of soul be in sight!

       *       *       *       *       *

    Born at Lowville, New York, in 1819, Benjamin Franklin
    Taylor died at Cleveland, Ohio, in 1887. During the Civil
    War he was the Chicago _Journal_ war correspondent with the
    Western armies.

    Mr. Taylor wrote a number of books, among which are several
    volumes of verse and a novel, "Theophilus Trent." He is best
    remembered, however, as author of "The Isle of the Long
    Ago," that singularly felicitous picture of the home of
    sweet-sad memories.




Niagara, the June Bride's Paradise.

  The Eloquent Language in Which the Great Cataract Was Described by Sir
  Edwin Arnold, and John Galt's Romantic Account
  of Its Discovery.


    The compass of the honeymooner, like the compass of the
    mariner, has four points, but on that of the honeymooner the
    points are rather differently indicated. The East is
    represented by the term "abroad," the South by Washington,
    the West by almost anything lying between Pittsburgh and the
    Pacific, and the North by Niagara.

    The honeymooner who finds it less difficult to make money
    than to kill time shapes his matrimonial course via
    Pittsburgh or Paris. The good, patriotic, homespun sort of
    chap, who finds it more easy to kill time than to make
    money, and who may one day be the father of a President of
    the United States, whirls his bride off to Washington or
    Niagara. Washington is a little dull and rather warm after
    Congress adjourns, so the June bride is most likely to pick
    the last of the rice-grains out of her hair within earshot
    of the great Northern cataract.

    Two selections that have to do with the big waterfall are
    given herewith. Of these, one has been called the finest
    description of Niagara ever written. It is from the pen of
    the late Sir Edwin Arnold, the author of "The Light of
    Asia," and appeared originally in the London _Daily
    Telegraph_.

    The second selection is John Galt's account, partly
    historical and partly imaginative, of the discovery of the
    cataract. John Galt (1779-1839) was a native of Scotland. He
    was the author of several novels that were popular in their
    day. He traveled extensively, and wrote many articles on
    historical and geographical subjects.


THE SPLENDOR OF NIAGARA.

BY SIR EDWIN ARNOLD.

Before my balcony the great cataract is thundering, smoking, glittering
with green and white rollers and rapids, hurling the waters of a whole
continent in splendor and speed over the sharp ledges of the long, brown
rock by which Erie, "the Broad," steps proudly down to Ontario, "the
Beautiful."

The smaller but very imposing American Falls speaks with the louder voice
of the two, because its coiling spirals of twisted and furious flood crash
in full impulse of descent upon the talus of massive boulders heaped up at
its foot.

The resounding impact of water on rocks, the clouds of water-smoke which
rise high in the air, and the river below churned into a whirling cream of
eddy and surge and backwater, unite in a composite effect, at once
magnificent and bewildering.

Far away, Niagara River is seen winding eagerly to its prodigious leap.
You can discern the line of the first breakers, where the river feels the
fatal draw of the cataracts, its current seeming suddenly to leap forward,
stimulated by mad desire, a hidden spell, a dreadful and irresistible
doom.

Far back along the gilded surface of the upper stream, these lines of
dancing, tossing, eager, anxious, and fate-impelled breakers and billows
multiply their white ranks, and spread and close together their leaping
ridges into a wild chaos of racing waves as the brink is approached. And
then, at the brink, there is a curious pause--the momentary peace of the
irrevocable. Those mad upper waters--reaching the great leap--are suddenly
all quiet and glassy, and appear rounded and green as the border of a
field of young rye, at the moment when they turn the angle of the dreadful
ledge and hurl themselves into the snow-white gulf of noise and mist and
mystery underneath.

There is nothing more translucently green, nor more perennially still and
lovely, than Niagara the greater. At this, her awful brink, the whole
architrave of the main abyss gleams like a fixed and glorious work wrought
in polished aquamarine or emerald. This exquisitely colored cornice of the
enormous waterfall--this brim of bright tranquillity between fervor of
rush and fury of plunge--is its principal feature, and stamps it as far
more beautiful than terrible. Even the central solemnity and
shudder-fraught miracle of the monstrous uproar and glory is rendered
exquisite, reposeful, and soothing by the lovely rainbows hanging over the
turmoil and clamor.

From its crest of chrysoprase and silver, indeed, to its broad foot of
milky foam and of its white-stunned waves, too broken and too dazed to
begin at first to float away, Niagara appears not terrible, but divinely
and deliciously graceful, glad and lovely--a specimen of the splendor of
water at its finest--a sight to dwell and linger in the mind with
ineffaceable images of happy and grateful thought, by no means to affect
it in seeing or to haunt it in future days of memory with any wild
reminiscences of terror or of gloom.


THE DISCOVERY OF NIAGARA.

BY JOHN GALT.

Among the earliest missionaries sent to convert the Indians to the
Christian belief was Joseph Price, a young man who had received directions
to penetrate farther into the vast forests which clothe the continent of
America toward the north than had been at that time accomplished. In this
hazardous undertaking he was accompanied by Henry Wilmington, who,
actuated by the same religious motives, had volunteered to attend him.

They had been landed at Boston, then a very small but thriving village,
about a month previous, where they made the necessary preparations for
their expedition, and recruited themselves after a passage of thirteen
weeks from Plymouth, for so long a passage was not uncommon in those times
in traversing the Atlantic.

It was a fine morning in the latter end of May when they bade adieu to the
inhabitants, by whom they had been hospitably entertained, and,
accompanied by the good wishes of all, proceeded toward the hitherto
unexplored forest.

The buds were now beginning to expand into leaves, and the sun was often
darkened by the vast flocks of migratory pigeons, which, when the woods
allowed, sometimes flew so close to the ground that the travelers could
beat them down with their sticks. Before sailing from England they had
often heard persons who had crossed the Atlantic mention this
circumstance, but they suspected them of exaggeration until they witnessed
it themselves.

It was their intention to visit a distant tract of country, of which
nothing was known except vague reports of sheets of water so immense that,
but for the circumstance of their being fresh, might have led them to
suppose they were on an island. These reports were for the most part
gathered from the Indians, on whose testimony little reliance could be
placed, as none of their informers could speak from their own knowledge.


Into the Wilderness.

To aid them in their pursuit, they were provided with compasses and armed
with fowling-pieces. They, directing their course toward the place to
which most of the Indians alluded, had, it is true, but slight grounds on
which to rest their hopes of success; animated, however, with the desire
of fulfilling what they had undertaken, they thought little of the
difficulties which might attend it: accordingly, it was without regret
that they were now leaving the settled part of the country.

Having traveled several days without seeing anything worthy of notice,
they arrived at the ultimate farm they could expect to meet with before
their return. After remaining there for the night, they continued their
journey through the forest, which had most likely never been previously
trodden by the feet of civilized man. The startled deer frequently crossed
their path, and a few birds were the only objects that varied the silent
solitude around.

Guided by their compasses, they continued their progress many days until
they arrived at the banks of a large and rapid river, which they in vain
attempted to pass, as its breadth and swiftness precluded the hope of
their being able to swim across it.

After proposing many expedients, all of which they soon found to be
impracticable, they determined on trusting themselves to some one of the
many fallen trees which lay in every eddy along its banks; and having
selected one whose branches lay in such a manner as would prevent it from
turning over, they entwined boughs to form a small kind of basket, into
which, having provided themselves with stout poles, they entered, taking
care that neither their guns nor ammunition suffered from the water; they
then steadily pushed it from the shore into the stream, and continued
doing so until the water grew so deep that the poles were of no avail, and
they were obliged to trust to Providence to carry them to the other side.

For some time they continued in the middle of the river, without inclining
toward either bank, when they perceived that, by the help of the wind,
they were quickly gaining on a large pine, which was slowly floating
downward. On reaching it, they stretched out their poles with a great
effort, and succeeded in pushing themselves into water where they could
again find bottom.

After much labor, our travelers touched the bank, on which they quickly
leaped, and having taken out their arms they continued their journey
rejoicing.


A Battle of Stags.

They soon after arrived at a spot where they deemed it fit to wait till
the following morning, and, it being their custom, they went out hunting
in order to provide provision for the next day's wants, at that time
easily accomplished, as the forests abounded with herds of deer, which,
having been seldom disturbed, were exceedingly tame.

On this occasion they soon beheld a great number watching a furious
encounter between two large bucks, which, with the utmost animosity, were
endeavoring to gore each other. Surprised at a sight they had never before
seen, they determined to await the result; and after some time one of the
combatants, by an amazing leap, sprang past the other, and, swiftly
turning round, drove his horns into the side of his adversary and
instantly killed him.

The missionaries, running to the spot, frightened away the remainder of
the herd, while they took possession of the fallen one, and, having taken
what would serve them for several days, left the carcass to the wolves.

In about a week after, they reached a chain of mountains, where they
rested for the night, and next morning proceeded to ascend their steep and
sandy sides, up which they were enabled to drag themselves by grasping the
trees; nevertheless, they were several times nearly precipitated into the
gulf below.

Wilmington, on one occasion in particular, when they were ascending a very
dangerous part of the mountain, inadvertently seized a rotten branch,
which, giving way, caused him to be hurried downward to the very brink of
a precipice, where he saved himself by catching hold of a projecting
bough. Thus they advanced for the remainder of that day, in the evening of
which they took advantage of a small space of level ground, to remain
until the morning.

About noon they succeeded in gaining the summit of the ridge; and, in
order that they might view the surrounding country, they ascended a
barren crag that reared itself high above the others; for, without having
met with this, the trees would have excluded every prospect.


Climbed Tree to See Lakes.

Having reached its loftiest pinnacle, they turned their eager eyes to see
if they could behold any traces of the mighty seas of fresh water which
had been described to them by the Indians; but to their sorrow, as far as
their sight could stretch, only vast woods met their anxious gaze.

While thus engaged, they sometimes heard the piercing cries of the hawk in
pursuit of his prey; far under them, and among the trees, the drumming of
the partridge and the tapping of the woodpecker could be clearly
distinguished.

Being somewhat disappointed, they silently commenced wending their lonely
way down the side of the mountain; but, notwithstanding their utmost
exertions, they could not succeed in descending the range that evening,
and were compelled by the approaching darkness to seek a spot where they
might safely rest.

Early in the morning they awoke, and, continuing their descent with
renewed energy, soon surpassed the formidable obstacle which the hills had
opposed.

Having rested for the remainder of that day, they again began to cross the
level country, and continued doing so for many days, without having seen a
single human being since their departure from the farm, when, one day, in
a glade of the woods, they saw a band of Indians among the trees, who,
having approached, spoke in a pleasant but to them unknown language. Their
gestures betokened their surprise at beholding people so different in
color to themselves, and armed with what appeared to them only polished
sticks.

While thus employed, a flock of wild geese flew high above their heads, at
which the Indians discharged their arrows, but they fell short of their
intended mark; when Price and Wilmington, raising their guns, fired, and
to the astonishment of the natives two of the flock came fluttering to
their feet.

The spectators crowded around the Europeans, and with much curiosity
began to admire the weapons which they had formerly despised. Their
wonder was not diminished when they saw what they imagined pounded cinders
put into the muzzles of the guns, and then, on pulling a small piece of
iron, a flash of fire, accompanied with smoke and a loud report,
immediately followed.

The chief, by signs, appeared to ask them to accompany him, that the rest
of his tribe might see what seemed to them exceedingly wonderful, and
having followed him they soon arrived at a place where several Indians
were engaged in erecting small wigwams of bark.

The chief, however, made them understand that this was only their
hunting-ground, and told them that their village lay far off, in the
direction of the sun, which was then sinking behind the trees, and to
which they should soon return.

From this time the missionaries commenced learning the language of their
entertainers, in which they were able to converse with some facility by
the time that the Indians returned to their village, which was situated on
the Oneida. Having arrived there, Price began to teach them; but they,
having patiently listened to his first sermon, to his great sorrow, never
assembled to hear him again; and, in consequence, he told Wilmington that
he would try to discover whether there was any truth in the reports they
had heard at Boston concerning the inland waters, and asked him if he was
willing to be his companion.


Had Heard Great Roaring.

Wilmington assented, and having endeavored to inform the Indians of their
intention, the chief, who had conducted them to the village, made them
understand that the river which flowed past led to an immense basin, which
they supposed was formed by the continual running of several large rivers,
but that few of his tribe had ever paddled far round its borders.

There was, however, an old man who in his youth had ventured to proceed in
his canoe for many suns along it, and returned with the report that he had
arrived at an immense river which ran into the fresh sea, where, having
landed for the purpose of hunting, he had heard a terrific roaring, as he
thought, of waters, and, advancing through the woods toward the sound,
for some miles the stream became so rapid that no canoe could go up
against it. Being very much alarmed, he had hurried back to his bark and
instantly commenced his return; but he was the only one of the tribe who
had ever dared to sail so far, and from his account they supposed it the
source of the lake.

Having learned this, they asked the chief, whose name was Maiook, whether
he would allow any of his Indians to accompany them down the river to the
lake and ascertain from whence the sound that had alarmed the aged Indian
arose. He at first tried to dissuade them by every argument in his power,
but, finding his endeavors of no avail, he said that he would himself join
them in their expedition. It was, therefore, agreed that they should sail
down the river the week following; but, before the time determined on, an
event occurred that considerably delayed their departure.

On rising one morning they remarked that large clouds of smoke were
drifting over their heads, accompanied by an overpowering pressure of
heat, which the Indians said was occasioned by the woods being on fire;
and as the wind was high, showers of ashes frequently fell around them.

To avoid these, they took shelter in their wigwams, but the hotness of the
air, together with the smoke, increased so much that, being in danger of
suffocation, the chief proposed that they should cast themselves into the
Oneida; and as no better proposition could be made, they hurried into it,
and remained with only their heads above water, being often obliged to
immerse them likewise. They were thus situated many hours, while the water
was black with the ashes that fell around them.


First View of Lake Ontario.

The wind at last, to their great joy, changed, and relieved them from
their perilous position, by driving the flames in the contrary direction.
They did not, however, quit the water, as the ground was still covered
with burning embers. On leaving the river, they saw, to their
mortification, that the village was on fire in several places, and it was
some time before they succeeded in stopping the progress of the burning;
the canoes which they had drawn up on the shore were also consumed.

After repairing the damage and making other canoes, they began their
expedition; and, having paddled for several days, one calm and beautiful
evening they were astonished at the sight of Lake Ontario.

As far as the eye could reach they could only see what appeared to them
boundless water, which lay without the slightest ripple on its glassy
surface, undisturbed by the softest breath of wind. They then continued
paddling round the shore, looking out for a place where they might safely
moor their canoes during the night, and, among the many small inlets, they
soon discovered one fitted for their purpose, which they immediately
entered.

At sunrise they again advanced on their adventurous expedition. As they
coasted along, the deer would sometimes look at them from among the
thickets which fringed the borders of the lake; and at other times they
saw them swimming across the mouths of the various creeks or rivers which
they passed in their progress. They were, however, too much engaged in
admiring the lonely magnificence of the surrounding scenery to interrupt
the playful gambols of the deer by endeavoring to wound them, which they
did only when their necessities compelled.

Thus they paddled onward for several days without perceiving anything that
might lead them to suppose they were approaching the spot to which the old
Indian had alluded, when one hazy morning, having proceeded many miles
before the sun had power to dispel the thick mists, they were delighted at
seeing themselves, as the air at noon cleared, about to enter a large
river, which flowed rapidly into the lake.

As this in some measure coincided with the first part of what had been
related to them, they determined on entering it; but after paddling up it
for some time the current grew so strong that they were compelled to
disembark and continue their journey by land on the edge of the high
precipitous bank.

The wind, softly blowing, rustled among the trees, but sometimes they
fancied that a distant rumbling could be distinguished.

Having followed the course of the stream along the edge of the cliff for
some distance, Price proposed that one of them should ascend a tree and
follow the course of the river upward with his eye, and try if he could
discover whence the sound that reached them arose.

Maiook, therefore, told one of his Indians to climb up a lofty pine which
grew apart from the rest, and he had hardly ascended half-way when,
uttering a cry of astonishment, he hastened to the ground and told his
comrades that he had seen immense clouds of spray rising far above the
trees, but he could not perceive from what cause they arose.


The Cataract at Last!

Encouraged by this report, after refreshing themselves (being much wearied
by their toilsome march), they hastened along the edge of the cliffs,
while the rushing sound that had been gradually increasing was every
instant becoming more and more tremendous, and the velocity of the stream
made them imagine that they were in the vicinity of a furious rapid, when,
on advancing from the thick bushes, they suddenly found themselves on a
bare ledge of rock which overhung an immense chasm into which two streams
and a mighty river were tumbling with a noise that drowned all their
exclamations of surprise, and which was louder than the voice of the ocean
in a storm.

Springing back with terror from the edge of the precipice over which they
had so nearly plunged, they eyed the thundering and foaming torrent with
amazement, not noticing that part of the rock on which they had just been
standing was tottering, and slowly separating itself from the adjoining
mass, till they were roused by the crash with which it was precipitated
into the gulf below, shaking the living rock from whence it had been
detached, and resounding through the woods, far above the roaring of the
stupendous cataract.

The missionaries involuntarily leaped back among the trees, not daring to
return to the place where they had been, and viewed with more composure
the awful prospect before them. The river above the falls was for some
distance a furious rapid, rushing with incredible force toward the
precipice; but when on its very brink it, in some parts of the great
stream, became calm, other parts were white with foam.

While thus engaged, Maiook, with a loud cry, directed their attention to a
large deer, which, in vain struggling against the overpowering suction of
the falls, was rapidly coming to destruction. They watched its fruitless
endeavors to reach the shore; but, on arriving at the deceitful calm, it
looked wildly, with distended nostrils and outstretched neck, and seemed
to be crying; but the roar of the cataracts drowned its voice, and it was
soon precipitated into the boiling abyss.

The French, from the province of Quebec, may have reached as far before,
but Price and his companion believed they were the first who had
penetrated to that spot; and when they returned back to the settlements
their description of the unparalleled magnificence of the cataracts to
which Maiook gave the name of Niagara, or the thundering waters, was
deemed incredible.

But the wilderness has now been banished, and festivity and commerce have
there established themselves amidst the simple sublimity that
distinguishes this, the most impressive spectacle of the kind to be seen
on the whole earth.


    I think the first virtue is to restrain the tongue: he
    approaches nearest to the gods who knows how to be silent,
    even though he is in the right.--

    Cato. (95-46 B.C.)




THE GLORY OF THE CORN.

  An Eloquent Appreciation of the Greatest and Most Typical of All the
  Agricultural Staples of America, to Which Richard J. Oglesby, the Famous
  Old War Veteran and Governor of Illinois, Gave Expression.


    Richard J. Oglesby, from whose lips came this eloquent
    praise of Indian corn, was himself a son of the Corn Belt.
    He was born in Oldham County, Kentucky, July 25, 1824. He
    was elected Governor of Illinois in November, 1864, holding
    the office continuously until 1869. Again, in 1872, he was
    elected Governor. From 1873 to March 3, 1879, he was a
    United States senator from Illinois, when he declined
    reelection. In November, 1884, he was once more elected
    Governor, serving four years. He died at Elkhart, Indiana,
    April 24, 1899.

    The following speech was delivered before the Fellowship
    Club in Chicago, September 9, 1892, on the occasion of the
    Harvest Home Festival. At the speaker's table that night
    ex-Governor Oglesby sat between Joseph Jefferson and Sir A.
    Conan Doyle.

The corn! The corn! The corn, that in its first beginning and in its
growth has furnished aptest illustration of the tragic announcement of the
chiefest hope of man! If he die he shall surely live again. Planted in the
friendly but somber bosom of mother earth, it dies. Yea, it dies the
second death, surrendering up each trace of form and earthly shape until
the outward tide is stopped by the reacting vital germs which, breaking
all the bonds and cerements of its sad decline, come bounding, laughing
into life and light, the fittest of all the symbols that make certain
promise of the fate of man. And so it died, and then it lived again.

See it--look on its ripening, waving field. See how it wears a crown,
prouder than monarch ever wore; sometimes jauntily, and sometimes, after
the storm, the dignified survivors of the tempest seem to view a field of
slaughter and to pity a fallen foe. And see the pendent caskets of the
cornfield filled with the wine of life, and see the silken fringes that
set a form for fashion and for art.

And now the evening comes, and something of a time to rest and listen. The
scudding clouds conceal the half and then reveal the whole of the moonlit
beauty of the night; and then the gentle winds make heavenly harmonies on
a thousand thousand harps that hang upon the borders, and the edges, and
the middle of the field of ripening corn, until my very heart seems to
beat responsive with the rising and the falling of the long, melodious
refrain. The melancholy clouds sometimes make shadows on the field and
hide its aureate wealth; and now they move, and slowly into sight there
comes the golden glow of promise for an industrious land.

Aye, the corn, the royal corn, within whose yellow hearts there is of
health and strength for all the nations. The corn triumphant! That with
the aid of man hath made victorious procession across the tufted plain and
laid foundation for the social excellence that is and is to be. This
glorious plant, transmitted by the alchemy of God, sustains the warrior in
battle, the poet in song, and strengthens everywhere the thousand arms
that work the purposes of life.

Oh, that I had the voice of song or skill to translate into tone the
harmonies and symphonies and oratorios that roll across my soul when,
standing, sometimes by day and sometimes by night, upon the borders of the
verdant sea, I note a world of promise; and then before one-half the year
is gone I view its full fruition and see its heaped gold await the need of
man!

Majestic, fruitful, wondrous plant! Thou greatest among the manifestations
of the wisdom and the love of God that may be seen in all the fields, or
upon the hillsides, or in the valleys. Glorious corn that, more than all
the sisters of the field, wears tropic garments. Nor on the shore of Nilus
nor of Ind does Nature dress her forms more splendidly. My God, to live
again that time, when half the world was good and the other half unknown!

And now again the corn! The corn, which in its kernel holds the strength
that shall (in the body of the man refreshed) subdue the forest and compel
response from every stubborn field; or, shining in the eye of beauty, make
blossoms of her cheeks and jewels of her lips, and thus make for man the
greatest of all inspirations to well-doing, the hope of companionship of
that sacred, warm, and well-embodied soul, a woman.




OUR INTEREST IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY.

  Among the Impressive Memorials in the Ancient Edifice in Which England
  Lays the Bodies of Her Honored Dead Are Many That Possess
  Peculiar Interest for Americans.

To be buried in Westminster Abbey, or to be honored there by a memorial
bust or tablet, is one of the highest posthumous honors that can be
accorded an Englishman. The noble old structure enshrines many of the good
and the great; and it is gratifying to Americans that a number of their
fellow countrymen are there remembered. In the Poets' Corner is a
beautiful bust of Longfellow, set up in 1884 by English admirers of the
poet.

Before the tomb of Major André the American visitor pauses, and doubtless
he agrees with the inscription, which says that the ill-fated André was
"lamented even by his foes." André's remains were taken to England in 1821
from Tappan, New York, where he was originally buried.

Another memorial of the Revolutionary War is a monument to the memory of
William Wragg, of South Carolina. Wragg stuck to the fortunes of England
when the colonies revolted. On his way to England he was drowned. The
monument was erected by his sister in 1779. A very beautiful urn surmounts
it, on which is pictured the incident of the shipwreck in which Mr. Wragg
was drowned.

The visitor who does not penetrate to the remotest corner of the Abbey
will look in vain for the James Russell Lowell memorial. It has been
erected in the vaulted vestibule of the old chapter-house. This
chapter-house is the most interesting feature of the entire Abbey. It is
the oldest part of the building.

Originally the assembly-hall of the members of the convent and the scene
of the floggings of the older monks, it became the meeting-place of the
Commons soon after the separation of the two houses of Parliament, in the
reign of Edward I, and it remained their meeting-place until they removed
to the Chapel of St. Stephen, in the old Westminster Palace, in 1547.

The chapter-house itself is dark and gloomy. Far more so is the passageway
which leads to it, and in the dimness of its obscurity one who looks
closely will find a small tablet bearing the bust of James Russell Lowell
in bas-relief. Above this tablet is a beautiful triple stained-glass
window to the memory of Mr. Lowell, erected by his friends in England.

The tributes to Americans which appear in the Abbey are the tributes of
their English friends and admirers. Colonel Joseph Lemuel Chester, an
American little known to his countrymen, who edited the _Westminster Abbey
Register_, figures among the distinguished dead. He was a native of
Norwich, Connecticut, but lived for many years in London, and died there
in 1882. The dean and chapter of Westminster erected the memorial to his
memory.

Though the monuments in Westminster to Americans are the gifts of
Englishmen, the old church of St. Margaret's, which stands close beside
the Abbey, holds two memorials to famous Englishmen erected by Americans.
These are a fine stained-glass window commemorating Sir Walter Raleigh,
who was buried in St. Margaret's in 1618, and another beautiful window in
honor of John Milton, whose second wife and infant child also rest in the
church. The Milton window was erected by the late George W. Childs, of
Philadelphia; the Raleigh memorial by several American subscribers.




The Beginnings of Stage Careers.

BY MATTHEW WHITE, JR.

  A Series of Papers That Will Be Continued from Month to Month
  and Will Include All Players of Note.


BREESE EMULATED ANANIAS.

  Former Farm Boy and Swimming Instructor
  Told a Weird Yarn About Francis
  Wilson to Get Behind Footlights.

Some very unusual experiences form the foundation-stones upon which rests
the stage career of Edmund Breese, who has become widely known for his
work as the Lion (a multimillionaire supposed to typify Rockefeller) in
the season's success, "The Lion and the Mouse."

Breese was a Brooklyn boy, with no tinge of the theater in any of his
forebears or surroundings. Before he reached his 'teens the members of his
family were in the habit of making frequent trips to Atlantic City, via
Philadelphia, where they had relatives, who now and then took young Edmund
to the play.

On one of these journeys the boy chanced to spy a notice outside the
Eleventh Street Opera House, where the Carncross Minstrels were holding
forth. This announced that a number of boys were wanted for a certain
production about to be made. Instantly young Breese was fired with the
determination to apply for a job on the stage.

Presenting himself at the box-office he made known his desires. A man
inside looked him over and said he thought he would do, and told him to
present himself on a certain day in the following week. Breese returned
home to Brooklyn all aglow with anticipation, informed his mother of his
good luck, and--well, was made very clearly to realize that school and
home and the keeping of early hours were his _métier_ just then.

It was some little time after this stirring of the Thespian bug in his
blood that he received another inoculation--also in the City of Brotherly
Love. He saw Dore Davidson in a performance of "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,"
and the characterization made such an impression on him that after he
reached home he took the first opportunity of showing his mother a
duplication of it.

At first she listened with the complaisant toleration of a parent anxious
to appear interested in a child's enthusiasms, but presently young Breese
became aware that she was following his depiction with absorbed attention.

"I really must have it in me to do something in the acting-line," he told
himself.


Becomes a Farm Boy.

But soon after this a big change in his life occurred. He left Brooklyn
and went West to study--what do you suppose? Nothing short of farming. It
was decided that he should learn to become a tiller of the soil, although
he had been born and brought up in a city.

At twenty dollars a month, then, he started in to milk the cows, do the
chores and make himself generally useful about the place. But it did not
take him long to discover that for a young fellow of eighteen, the
prospects in such a life were not very illuminating.

Finally he decided to give it up, and he went to Kansas City, where he had
a friend who obtained for him a post as bookkeeper in a mercantile
establishment. He continued in this environment for several months, but
one day he awoke to the fact that the more satisfactory he proved himself
as a bookkeeper, the more likelihood there was that he would never rise to
anything higher.

At this time he had twenty-one dollars in the bank, but it availed him
little, as the bank failed. With what he had in his clothes, he set out
for St. Louis, where he hadn't a friend, determined to find out if fate
could not do something for him in a city so big as that.


Made a Swimming Instructor.

He was walking about the streets on his arrival, his hands in his almost
empty pockets, wondering if anything would turn up for him or whether he
was expected to set to work and turn it, when his eyes were attracted by
a gaudy advertising wagon, emblazoned on both sides with the announcement
of a new swimming-school. The sight set a train of possibilities stirring
in the youth's mind. He was a swimmer and a good one; he hadn't neglected
his opportunities in having been reared so close to Coney's isle.

Noting the address of the swimming-school, he hunted out the place,
obtained an interview with the manager, and set forth his own
accomplishments with such success that he was forthwith engaged as one of
the swimming-masters at a salary of four dollars a week. This was
afterward increased to seven, and when one day he saved the life of a man
who was drowning in the pool, he was raised to the munificent wage of ten
dollars a week.

But now, in a city atmosphere again, the bug of acting began to stir
within him once more. The sight of the billboards and of the theaters
themselves, reawakened the old craving to strut behind the footlights. One
day, in poring over the columns of the papers devoted to amusements, he
came across the advertisement of one Lillian Graves, who desired a
comedian to join the Wild Rose Company at Eureka Springs, Arkansas.

Breese determined to apply for the post, but as the advertisement
requested that all applicants should state salary expected, he was stumped
to know at what figure to rate his services, having, of course, no
criterion by which to gage them. He consulted a friend in the
swimming-school, who advised him to ask fifteen a week, and then come down
to ten, if they kicked.

So Breese sat down and proceeded to concoct a letter which should have
recommended him as a novelist, whatever might have been its merits as an
application for a theatrical job. For fiction played the biggest part in
its composition. He boldly stated (in reply to the ad's request for
information as to experience) that he had been with Francis Wilson, with
whom he had played important rôles, and he hoped that Miss Graves would
consent to give him a trial.

Imagine the elation of the youth when back came the answer that he was
engaged. He was directed to report in Eureka Springs at once. Arrived
there, he discovered that his mention of Francis Wilson had filled his new
employers with awe. He had been billed to play the leading rôle in "My
Awful Dad" and everything in the outfit was supposed to revolve about
him.

A reporter from the local paper waited upon him soon after his arrival,
eager to interview a man who had consented to appear with so humble an
organization as the Wild Rose after having played with Francis Wilson.


How He "Left Wilson."

"Why, Mr. Breese," asked the young scribe, "did you come to leave Wilson?"

This was a poser for the Münchausen who had never even been with the man
whom "Erminie" had made famous.

"Well, you see it was this way," replied Breese, speaking slowly, so as to
gain time to think. "There was a man named Plunkett in the company. He
became a good friend of mine. He came to me one day and said, 'Breese, I
want to warn you. You know you made a hit with the public and Wilson
doesn't like it. In short, he is jealous, and is apt to make things very
uncomfortable for you at a time when you are least prepared for it.' So I
decided it was better for me to quit when I saw my way clear to make
connections elsewhere."

The Eureka Springs reporter was duly impressed and went away to write up
an article in which merit sidetracked through envy was the keynote.
Meantime, Breese, who knew absolutely nothing about makeup, was
floundering through his preparations for the evening, in which the
learning of his lines was not the least of his troubles.

How he finally managed to "fix his face" he has no clear recollection. The
one thing that stands out in his memory is a period midway in one of the
early acts when he became conscious that he was absolutely ignorant of
what he had either to say or do next.

In this emergency he suddenly remembered that he had been told that he, as
the leading man, was to address the audience during the evening and tell
them what the program was to be for the remainder of the week, as was the
custom in repertoire companies. So what did he do, but step out of his
character then and there, and, walking up to the footlights, start to
apprise the spectators of what they would see if they came to the "opera
house" during the other nights of the Wild Rose troupe's engagement.

As it happened, there was no second performance, and Breese has now no
inkling of how that unhappy first one was ever brought to a conclusion. He
does know, however, that he never received any pay for his services, that
the company went smash then and there, and that the hotel held his trunk
for board.

By good luck he met a friend in the town who took him to his home to stay
until he secured connection with another management, and began a
legitimate career which brought him, by way of _Danglas_ and _Nortier_ in
"Monte Cristo" with O'Neill, on through the Indian and the football
trainer in "Strongheart," to _Jefferson Ryder_ in "The Lion and the
Mouse."


WAGER BROUGHT EDESON ON.

  "Soldier of Fortune" Was in Box Office
  Until His Employer's Lamentations
  Drove Figures Out of His Head.

Although he is the son of an actor, this fact was the means of an attempt
to keep Robert Edeson off the stage rather than an aid to him in getting
on it. His father, George R. Edeson, who died while comedian and stage
manager of the Philadelphia Girard Avenue stock company, in 1899, was so
convinced that the actor's calling brought principally heart-sickness and
disappointment that he used every means to dissuade his son from taking up
with it.

As a sort of compromise, when young Robert finished school (he was born in
New Orleans, and the family now lived in Brooklyn) he went into the front
of the house and obtained a position with Colonel Sinn as guardian of the
box-office at the Park Theater.

It was just nineteen years ago that Cora Tanner was booked to appear there
in a new play, "Fascination." The first performance was set down for
Monday night, and at a rehearsal on the Friday previous the player of a
minor part failed to show up. He sent word that he was ill.

Colonel Sinn strolled into the box-office where young Edeson was trying to
balance his accounts, and began to bemoan the ill luck of the thing. To a
fellow engaged in the task of adding figures this running accompaniment of
self-commiseration was not conducive to accuracy in the totals, So,
finally, Edeson turned on his employer with the exclamation:

"Look here, Colonel Sinn, if you will keep quiet and allow me to
straighten out this account in peace, I'll play that part."

Dazed into silence by this daring proposition, his employer remained
speechless long enough to permit Edeson to complete his task. Taking his
coat and hat, he was in the act of leaving the box-office when Colonel
Sinn called after him:

"Young man, I'll bet you one hundred dollars you can't make good on that
bluff."

"I'll go you," was Edeson's reply. "Get me a substitute here and give me
the part."

Concerning the outcome, Edeson himself has since observed:

"I remember very little of that first performance. However, I believe I
was not offensive and therefore was allowed to play the week out. The
following season, not being able to come to terms with Colonel Sinn, I
determined to adopt the stage as a profession and was fortunate enough to
secure the juvenile part in a small company playing Daly's 'A Night Off.'
Then came 'The Dark Secret,' in which the villains and myself were the
only members of the company who escaped the tank."

A few seasons later he was with Charles Dickson in "Incog," which came to
be called in the profession "the matrimonial play," as no less than four
couples met their affinities while acting therein, viz.: Charles Dickson
and Lillian Burkhardt, Louis Mann and Clara Lipman, Harry Davenport and
Phyllis Rankin, and Mr. Edeson and Ellen Burg.

Ten years ago Mr. Edeson was in the Empire stock company, understudy to
William Faversham, and making a particularly good impression when he
played the latter's part in "Under the Red Robe," which ran so far into
the spring that the leaders in the cast became tired out and left their
parts to the next in line, Ida Conquest falling heir to Viola Allen's
_Renée_.

The aftermath of the Spanish-American War nearly lost Edeson to the stage,
as for a time he seriously thought of going to Porto Rico as the agent for
a house selling sporting goods. Luckily he changed his mind and accepted a
position as leading man in the splendid cast Amelia Bingham collected for
"The Climbers."

This play, in the estimation of some critics, made Mr. Edeson, and in the
winter of 1902 he became a star on his own account, with Augustus Thomas's
dramatization of Richard Harding Davis's "Soldiers of Fortune" as the
vehicle.


HITCHCOCK SOLD DRY GOODS.

  His Original Assets Consisted of a Shirt,
  a Pair of Shoes, a Trunk, and
  Much Cheerful Impudence.

The other day I happened to run across Raymond Hitchcock at lunch in the
Players' Club. I reminded him of the request I had made him for material
with which to enrich this department of THE SCRAP BOOK.

"Yes, you'll get it," he assured me, in that rugged intonation which does
so much to infuse fun into his remarks on the stage, "I spent a good hour
over the typewriter yesterday, pouring into it the story of my life. May
you survive the reading thereof."

He had "poured" to such good purpose that not only did I survive the
reading of his autobiography, but the screed itself was found worthy of
survival in its original form, and I am giving it to the reader herewith.


The Actor's Own Story.

I came down from Auburn, New York, with twenty-five dollars in my clothes,
and the "absolute certainty" that New York was clamoring for me--as I had
been a hit in an amateur performance in Auburn and everybody said I "just
ought to go on the stage." The twenty-five dollars was soon only a bright
spot in my memory, and I found that, while I was well known in Auburn, not
even the street-car drivers knew me in New York.

After a bit, I fell in with a fellow who was a regular "theatrical
agency." He had just about as much money as I had, and as we were doubtful
pay in the boarding-house where we were stopping, we were relegated to the
attic, where we roomed together, at five per week, which was charged
against us on Saturday night.

He took me over and introduced me to Colonel T. Allston Brown, who had an
office on Union Square, and from his office I received my first
postal-card telling me "to call." Of course, I applied for nothing but the
"leading part." Knowing nothing of the business I, naturally, was a
"leading man."

I called promptly. I think I was there a little early. The card said ten
o'clock, but I think I got there at nine. I was engaged by a man by the
name of Davidson to play in a Western drama the leading part, at a salary
of twenty-five dollars per week. I packed a shirt and a pair of shoes in a
trunk, which I managed to get hold of somehow, but just how I don't
remember. I had come down to New York with only a satchel, and later had
to leave my satchel for unpaid board.

When I arrived at rehearsal the next morning, I found it was a
"ten-twent-thirt" repertory company, and that the Western drama had not
yet been written. I was cast for _Ingomar_, _Pygmalion_, in "Pygmalion and
Galatea"; _Hardness Craig_, in "The Colleen Bawn"; _Hawkshaw_, the
detective, in "The Ticket-of-Leave-Man"; and _George Markston_, in "The
Pink Domino."

I could see at a glance I was not suited for _Ingomar_, as I only weighed
about one hundred and fourteen pounds, with the sun shining on me. In
spite of all my confidence as to my ability as an actor, I could not see
myself as _Ingomar_, and I don't think the management could either. I only
rehearsed three days, when I found out that we were not suited to each
other. Then, I was all alone in Philadelphia without a nickel.

I went to work in Wanamaker's store, stayed there a year, and then found
myself once again on the street without a cent.

I made some acquaintances in the musical line while in Wanamaker's, and
one of these chaps, knowing my desire to go on the stage, took me over to
William T. Carleton, who was then rehearsing the opera "The Brigand." I
applied as a chorus tenor, and was asked to sing the scales.

I got half-way up the ladder and went all to pieces, but informed Mr.
Carleton that I had been ill, and after he had looked me all over he
engaged me "on general appearances," so he told me, at sixteen dollars per
week.

We went on the road doing one-night stands, and during such journeys on
the train I used to play on the banjo and sing little songs which amused
Mr. Carleton very much. He would frequently call me and ask me to get out
the banjo and sing to him.


Takes Bigelow's Place.

Our first week's stand was in Montreal, and here the comedian, who was
Charles A. Bigelow, was taken ill and unable to play. After having
rehearsed all the possible understudies, and none of them being competent
to take the rôle, it was first thought they would have to close the
theater, when Mr. Carleton said: "Where is that chap who plays the banjo?
I think he could do it."

I was, fortunately, blessed with a wonderful memory. I knew every song,
every number of the music and every word of the dialogue in the opera; in
fact, starting from the opening lines I could read it right through. They
found me about half past five in the afternoon, and I went over to the
theater.

Mr. Carleton met me, and came at me with the rather surprising question:
"Can you play Bigelow's part?"

I said, "Yes, sir."

He said: "Do you want a rehearsal?" I said: "No, sir."

"All right," he said; "then be here at seven o'clock."

I went on that night and never missed a number. In the middle of the
performance, Mr. Carleton said to me:

"Now, let loose. Do anything you like."

Being exceedingly limber, I did a slide down the run, stumbling over
everything, and made a hit from the start. From that time on I took
liberties that no one else in the company dared.

Mr. Carleton was a very strict disciplinarian, but he always encouraged me
to go ahead. After two or three years playing leading rôles in the
principal opera companies, I determined to step forward and go after "the
big things." So back to New York I came, still unknown.

After waiting around for three months, I decided that the world was
against me; that a bright and shining light was being crushed. Also, that
a law ought to be passed whereby no Englishman could come to this country
and play.


Took Bull by the Horns.

I remember standing on the corner of Twenty-Eighth Street and Broadway,
with my head just full of such anarchistic ideas, when something plainly
said to me:

"If you are as darn good as you think you are, why don't you go out and
get a job? There is room for every one."

I immediately walked over to the office of Jesse Williams, a dramatic
agent, and said, "I want a job. I will play prima-donna rôles or old men's
rôles. I want a job, and I don't care what it is."

He said, "I don't think I have anything for you."

"You MUST have something for me, and I have got to have it," I replied.

"Well, call around and see me later," said he.

"I will do anything, and if I am not all right, and don't prove
satisfactory, it won't cost you a cent," I persisted.

"Well, you come around and see me to-morrow."

There was a little fat man sitting in the office--and he turned to me and
said:

"Wait a minute."

Then he went over and had a talk with Mr. Williams.

Mr. Williams came out and said: "Mr. Hitchcock, this is Mr. Fred Miller,
the composer of 'The Golden Wedding.'"

Mr. Miller then asked me if I could play the part of an English lord, and
I said I did not know any one in the whole world who could play it any
better than I could.

It was a little after twelve o'clock. Mr. Miller looked at his watch and
said: "Can you catch the one o'clock train?"

"If it is necessary, I can catch the twelve o'clock train," I replied.

He then gave me a ticket to Boston, and a ten-dollar bill. It was so long
since I had seen a ten-dollar bill I had to ask what it was. I caught the
one o'clock train, and in two days was playing the part of _Sir Tobin
Tobax_ in "The Golden Wedding" before an enthusiastic audience in
Worcester, Massachusetts, and from that time to the present day I have not
asked for an engagement.

It is true I have been without ten-dollar bills--in fact, have been
without most everything--except an engagement. I was a poor boy, and
started out in life at three dollars per week in a shoe store. The first
one-hundred-dollar-a-week engagement I ever had seemed like millions of
money to me, so I never saved a cent.

I soon found out that I had to learn the value of money, and how true the
old adage: "Any fool can make money, but it takes a wise man to save it."
I wonder if I am growing wise?




SOME OF THE CHANCES OF MARRIAGE.


The minimum age at which marriage is permitted varies in different
countries. In Spain, Switzerland, Hungary, and Greece a boy may marry at
fourteen, a girl at twelve years of age. In Austria the age is fourteen
for both sexes. In France, Belgium, and Germany the age is eighteen for a
youth and fifteen for a girl, though the rule in Germany is modified by
the special law in Saxony, where girls are required to be at least sixteen
before marriage. The minimum in Russia is eighteen for the youth and
sixteen for the girl.

A physician drew up an exhibit of the registered cases of 878 married
women in France. Of that number there were married--

   14 at 14 years     36 at 25 years
   16 at 15   "       24 at 26   "
   43 at 16   "       28 at 27   "
   45 at 17   "       22 at 28   "
   77 at 18   "       17 at 29   "
  115 at 19   "        9 at 30   "
  118 at 20   "        8 at 31   "
   86 at 21   "        5 at 34   "
   85 at 22   "        7 at 33   "
   59 at 23   "        5 at 32   "
   53 at 24   "        3 at 35   "

Of 878 women only three were married at thirty-six or later.




A HOROSCOPE OF THE MONTHS.

BY MARION Y. BUNNER.

  What the Old Astrological Traditions Say as to the Characteristics and
  the Destiny of Those Born Under the Sign "Gemini."

_Compiled and edited for_ THE SCRAP BOOK.


GEMINI: THE TWINS.

MAY 20 to JUNE 18.

CUSP: RUNS MAY 20 to MAY 26.

The constellation Gemini--the third sign of the zodiac--is the positive
pole of the Air Triplicity, governing the shoulders, arms, and hands. It
is a masculine, common, double-bodied, commanding sign. The higher
attributes are reason and sensation.

A person born in the period of the cusp, when the sun is on the edge of
the sign, does not receive the full benefits of the individuality of
either sign, but partakes of the characteristics of both Gemini and
Taurus.

Most Gemini persons have two natures, and these are of a contradictory
character. They are affectionate, generous, courteous, and kind to all.
They are endowed with probity, an accommodating disposition, a temper
quickly irritated but just as quickly calmed. The sign gives its subjects
natural inventive genius, and with it a love of science and a talent for
commerce.

In judgment they can be relied upon to give a far-sighted view, supported
by argument of a very clear and convincing nature. They are intensely
aspiring and energetic; are great lovers of education, and set great value
upon attainments in literature, science, and art. They take a practical
and philosophical view of things.

The Gemini people are usually well-formed, of dark hair and bright
complexion, with a round forehead, and a cold, but intellectual and
restless expression of the eyes. The physical temperament is
sanguine-bilious in a southern latitude, and bilious-nervous in a northern
one.

The chief fault of this sign is impatience. Gemini people are prone to
scatter their forces. They are continually finding fault, and they are
prone to look upon the dark side of life.

The union of these with persons born under Aquarius or Virgo will be
harmonious, and the offspring is usually very bright and quick of
intellect. Children born in this sign should be associated with persons
who are quiet and restful.

The governing planet is Mercury, and the gems are beryl, aquamarine, and
dark-blue stones. The astral colors are red, blue, and white.

April and August are the lucky months for a Gemini subject, and Wednesday
the fortunate day of the week. The ancient Hebrew tribe over which this
sign rules is that of Issachar. The ruling angel of the sign is Ambriel.
The floral emblem is the mayflower.

June, according to Ovid, was named in honor of Juno. Others connect the
term with the consulate of Junius Brutus. Without doubt, it has an
agricultural reference, and originally denoted the month in which crops
grow to ripeness.

At the time of the Julian reform of the calendar its days were only
twenty-nine. To these Julius Cæsar added the thirtieth. The Saxons had
several names for the month of June. They called it "the dry month,"
"midsummer month," and in contradistinction to July, "the earlier mild
month."

In modern times June has been called "the month of roses," and "the month
of brides." There is an old rhyme to the effect that--

  Married in month of roses, June--
  Life will be one long honeymoon.

A prediction which, unfortunately, has not always been carried out.

The summer solstice occurs in June. The principal days now observed are:
June 11, St. Barnabas; June 24, Midsummer Day (Nativity of St. John the
Baptist); and June 29, St. Peter.

Jay Gould, born during the Gemini period, was a type of the mental ability
and restless aspirations of this sign. Julia Ward Howe, Emerson, Margaret
Fuller Ossoli, and Alexander Pope are excellent illustrations of the
literary genius of Gemini people. Queen Victoria was born upon the cusp of
the sign.





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