HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1877-03-09, Page 21.
SLEEPING LOVE
within a forest as I strayed,
Fardowna Sombre autumn glade, -
I found the god of love -
His bow and arrows cast aside;..
• His lovely arms extended_ wide,
4eptb of leaves above,
Between b'eraiehing boughs he made
- A placefOr sleep In rtniset Shade. .
- -
MI lips, more red than any rose,
Were like a flower that overflows
With honey pure and sweet;
, And, Clustering round that holy mouth,
The golden bees in eager drouth -
Plied busy wings and feet:
Tney knew, as every lover knows,
-There's.no.suct houey-bloom that blows.
_
•
tb... 4 `4:.
Otri OF THE QUESTION.
a:coLE-pY,
Y W. D-.-„HOWELLS.
[CONTINUED.]
• , •
The scene three Weeks after theeventslast-
r.epresented in once- More. that hotel parlor• _
- 1:which we knevt. Iler,e Sits Mrs. Bellingham.
and her sister,in-livr; both. witn. sewing; to
...which the latter- abandons herself with an-
• 'apparently exasperated energy, whilethe'for-
mer lets her work lie in her lap; and listens
With Bente lady -like. trepidatien to whist.Mrs:•-
-.- Murray is saying: • _
' tins. MURRAY. "Frombeginning:to end
r it has been _quite like :a -Sensational play.
' Leslie dust: feel herself - a heroine of mete-
• drama. She -is sojourning at a country
and she goes 'sketching in the woods, when.
two -ruffians-. set upon her and try to rob- her.:.
Her ecreama-reitchthe ear et the young man
- of humblelite-butnoble heart, who professed
toliave. gone away but who was oppor-
thnely hanging about: '-he rashes on the ,
scene and disperses the brigands, from whom
he -rends_ their prey.-.. She Seizes his hand to
thank -him- for his behaviour, and
: discovers:that his*. wrist has been broken by
bloWfromthe bludgeon of one Of the wicked.
• luffiana. Very, pretty; very charming, in,
deed ; :and. so. appropriate for a- girl -of Les.'
.lie'S training;: family, :and station in life.:
1.Y.p.on mywordI congratulate yen,
To think of being the mother . of a heroine! -
-.., It was fortunate that you let :her snub Mr.
Dudley. - If she had. married him probably
nothing of the kind' wonld have happened." -
MRS:1 BELLINGHAM. "1 iglad.the affair
• amuses tilt I see hew evenyObean
the- child resionsible for what has hap-
. , _ •
- pened." _ - - - . -
"Responsible! ._ I should
be the -legit:* do. that, I hope. No, indeed.
consider her the vietini_..of circumstances,
• and :since ..‘the- hero has been thrown'. back
- Our hands, I'm, sure every one _must say
•.. that her:devotion is most exemplary. - I
-t, delft hold her reapensible-. for. that, even."
As Mrs.. Murray continues, -Mrs.. :Belling-
- Belling -
ham's uneasinessAncreases,--andehe drops her:
hands: with:a baffled look upon the work .in
her. lap. • " It's:quite en reale that she should
• be-ankioui about.hira ; . it would bealtogether
•- ant of character, otherwise. - It'sa pity that
he doesn't lend. himself more gracefully to.,
being petted. When I saw her bringing him .-
* pillow, that. first day, after _the. doCter, Set'
his -wrist and she had got him to :repose his.
,exhausted frame on. the sofa,. .1was almost -
-.Me/tea to tears. 01 course, it Can end only
in one way:"
Mits. BELLIN0trAtt. Sate; I will have
- any more of this. intolerable, and you
have no right to torment me sti. You know
that I'm-as:much vexed- is you: Can be. It..
annoys me -beyond- endurance, but Idon't tee
: what, as isiady,: I can do about :it. 1 Mr.
• Blake is-hereagani-by.no-- fault - of his own, _
certainly, and neither Leslie nor treat
hid with indifference."
Mits. MURRAY.- ." I. don't object to ,Your:
treating him'aSkindly is you like; but you
had_ better leave- as little' kindness as possible
to You mit sooner or later recog,
_ ; -
•
nize one thing, Marion, and take- year. mea-
• sures', accordingly. ; advise you to 'do- it
Sooner.", 7- • - •
•
•-MRS. BELLitto-Att; "What. de you mean?".
:ME& MuitEAY: „." mean what you loow.
well enough; that Leslie is interested in this
Mr: Blake. - I SAW that she was; from the
very He's . just- the kink of
•-min to fascinate a girl like Leslie; you know
• that. He's -handseme, and he's shown him-
self . .
brave; and. all that unconventionality
-which Marks him of a different Clime gives.
•'him. a Charm to gitle fanCY; even:When she
has recognized, herself, that he. isn't,.gen--
•_tlenian. She , soon forgets • that, and sees
• 'merely that he sis clever, and- god& She
would very promptly teach a girt -of his . tra-
ditions her place, but a- young. min is differ-.
att."
- MRS. BELLINGHAM. "1 hope- Leslie would
.. treat even a *oniart- consideration." •
?Mits. MURRAY. "Oh,: consideration,. con-
• sideration!' You maythank yourself, Marion,• -
And yenfiMpossible ideas, if this cornea to
the worst., .Yon' belong to one. order of
thinor you. belong to another. If yoube-
• . lieNie that several.-.gentrations of -Wealth,
• - breeding; and,: station distinguish a- girl .so
& .
that a new. man, however saeor wise or
-.bravo- he is can. never be . her equal, you
- -
,mus act-- on,your belief, and In a, ease lite
]Laugh' "Why, Miss Belling'
ham, it isn't one O my ankles that's broken."
• LEsuE, conceEsaively " No ; but if you'd
only let me dos something for you! I can '
both play and sing, and really not at all bad-
ly. Shan't play to you ?" She runs up and
strikes genie chords on the piano, and with
her hands on the keys glances gravely round
at Blake, who remains undecided. She turns_
about. "Perhafte you'd rather have me
read to you ?" • -
• BLAKE. "DO you eaUy wish me to
choose ?"
I do. And ask something diffi-
cult and disagreeable." - _
BLAKE. I'd rather have you talk to me
than either," -
LESLIE. Is that your idea. of something
difficult and disagreeable?"• _
BLAKE. " ',hope you won't find -it so."
• LEsLut. "But I shan't feel that any-
thing, then! Shall I begin to talk, to you
here? Or where?" . •
BLAKE. "This is a good place, but if I'm
to chose again, I should say the gaUery
would be better."' -
LESLIE. "Oh, you're - choosing that be-
cause I said I wondered how .zpeople could
come into the country and sit all their time
in stuffy rooms r
BLAKE, going to the window and looking
•
BLAKE. 46 it? I haven't seen you
i
wear t.,
- •
1.1E. brokesomething in it when I
'et
' threw it dOl,in. I If. doesn't o. Beside, I
thought perhapsyon: wouldn't. like to see it."
• BLAKE. 1" Oh, yes, I'shbuld."
-
LESLIE, starting u'i) i'c-ff III go get it.' *
BLAKE I" Not no i -!'" They are both silent
—Leslie - falters an then its down again,
and folds one ver the other on the bal-
cony . if
-nd.
- rail, letting her fan dangle idly by
its Chain from her Nraist. He leans forward
.,..
out:- ``.There are .no _sats,". He returns,:::
andputting the backs of two hairs together
lift them with his loft hand to carry them to
the gallery. . - , . . - , r - -,' - . '-'
-,
LESLIE, advancing tragedically upon- him
and reproachfully possessing 'herself of the
chairs :--" Nivel. 1- Do you think I have no
. sense of shame ?" She lifts 'a chair in either
hand and carries theni'Ont, 'while Blake in -4.
charraed -embarrassment ' follows her, and
they; are heard speaking without. - "Therei -
Or no.! . That's in a -draught! You lutists' -ft
sit in a draught."
. -BLAKE,'.' " It: won't hurt me:: -I'm not a
young -lady." . . ' 1 . . • .- i
- LESLIE. `f, That's the very reason it will
hurt -you,' If you. Werea toting lady You
couldstandanything; , Anything you liked."
-
There . are -.indistinct - imirmars . of further
feigned. dispute, broken by more or less con-
scious laughter,- to -which :Mrs. ,Bellingham
listens with alarm, and Mrs. Murray with
the self-righteousness .of those who have told -
you so, and who, having thus washed their
hands of an 'affair, proposes to give you
A shovier-bath of the water.
_ MES: MURRAY. "Well, Marion r
Ms. BELLINGHAM; rising, with a sigh:
"Yes, it's quite as bed as you -could wish."
-Mns. MURRAY. "As bad as I could:wish.
That is too much, Marion. What are you
going to do ?" Mrs. Bellingham is gathering
up her work as if to quit the room, and Mrs.,.
Murray's demand. is pitched in a tone of fall-
ing indignatioii and riaing'ainazement.
MRS. BELLINGHAM. "We can't remain to
overheartheirtalk'. I am going to my room."
MRS MURRAY; -6g Why, Marion, the child
is your own daughter
Hits. BELLINGHAM. "That is the very
reason WhY don't wish to 'feel that she has
cause to be ,.aehanted of me; and I certainly'
should if -Lstayed to eavesdrop."
Mus; MuituAv. " in the -Werld should .
she ever know- it ?"
Mits. BELLINGHAM. ." I. should tell her.
13ut.that ii't the point; quite,"
- 4 -That is quite fantastic! -
Well,- let her marry .her--Calibanl Whit:
don't, you go out and: join them ? That
:needn't give her cause to - blush for .you.,
..Remember; Marion-, that Leslie a
ig-
norant, inexperienced child, - and that it's
your duty to sive her, troin
MRS. s -BELLnithis.31, "MY ., daughter is, a
lady and. will remember herself."
- MRS, - MURRAY. "But she's a Woman
Marion, and will.forget herself !". .
BELtitiosAtt, who hesitates in a brief
perplexity, but abruptly finishes her prepara-
tions -for. going -ent-:- "At any irate, I can't
dog hersteps,„nor play the spy upon her. I
, .
wish
to know only 'Whit she freely tell
. .
.M1tRRA. Y.. "And are , aettiallyL`
me ,
a little,. and taking the:fah,. opens and shuts
it, while She looks clown upon_hid with a
slight smile: he relinquishes itwitha Situate
it her; andlea_ens k'tagam-
-T4RSUE 4gWt Were you -winning ,
le. wretch
=hurt
,
about; the., hideoua
BLAKE. "Why, was t.hinking, for. one,
- thing, that heldicin. hleaU to do it."
• LEstatE, Oh
&mutt
partner, though.
. went through my
ing that a good
tramps."
LESLIE; "For
_ liy did he do it then ?"- -
iere he meanttohit his
cAn't exactly tiayWhy.*_ It
Mind. - And I was think= -
'eel might be said for
MO that steal watches
and break wrists? - My philanthropy doesn't_
rise to those giddy.: heights, quite. NO; de--
ei4,•ffly, Mr..1Blake; II draw -' the line at
tramps. TheY.1 never leek clean, . and why
don't they go to ygok r'. .: Tr.,--
-, _B.LAKE,11 4fIV,fell,- they -couldn't 'find work,
just' now, l if they wanted it,!.'aild:-generally I
anpPlaie thefl.don't want it. A man who's
been out Ofl*Orkithreeimontha is gladto get
1
it, but if jh 's idle -4 year he doesn't Want it. -
When I see.one cif kour eettonliiills standing
idle, - I know that t it ineana:, so Much .tramp-
ing, so much atarv44 and Stealing 'so' flitch
., . . i - ,
misery: and murder . We're all part . of the
'tangle ; Vierete— all ! of -Its :: to-'blanie, - we're
. none of s to Warne:I.': '• - . ..
,.
- : LESLIE.oh, - that a very ... well. >But - if -
you pity such wi46hed :what- becomes of the;
deservin pair rr,-1- . I" - , '-.- ' - •".
i.l.
. BLAKE?, . ' I ein-ii t Tire there are any de-
- serving_ .p001.41;14.13 j y , it_ ;pall r them any, - More
than .there - -are des ,rving rich. ,: 'So- r- don't_
-draw-theline at t Ili, ' The - fadt is;_Miss
Bellingham, I. had . ustibeen.:deing those fel-..
• 1pWa a charity ,-bef re they you—
givingattacked
" ' 1 'don't -
the* . I- some tobacco. - Youap- .
-.prove of that :1'
-.1,Esu.E4:::" oh, .i_liike .smoking:"
- BLAKE laughing: "-And I got their idea -
, of a gentlenian.", I. . '
this you can't act too promptly."
- Mits. BELLINGHAM. 'What. should you
- •
- " Do ? I should.fling away
at.- absurd- ideas., of consideration, to begin
_
with. I should deal frankly with
sliotild-apPeal. to her ,Pride and her common
*
'Sense : and x. -should speak so distinctlyto
this young T, Man that - he couldn't possibly
4‘ 'mistake:my Meaning.' And I should tell him
\7—l- should. advise him- to -try change of air
for his *rand; or whatever it is."
BEtt.iNonA31-, after a moment's
dreary reflection That's quite impossible,
Kate: I will speak to Leslie, but I never can
effer_effence,to one we. Owe so much."
•_ MRS." MURRAY. Do you wish meta Speak
to him ?" -
•-MEE: BELLINGHAM. "No, 4 can't PerMit.
that, either.," - -
lftintil-ifT--`:"---Very en you
- must abide: by the result." Mrs. Murray, -
'Clutches her work together, Stooping to ire!.
cover -dropping- spools .,and Scissors With .an
• activity 'ear -prising a lady of her massive
person, and -is about to leave the room, when
..t sound of steps and.: voices arrest her.: a.
moment after, and. Miss Bellingham
enter; io intent Upon, each . other ak net to :
!-.Observe the ladies. -in theireoner.
Tifundt,.. "I'M afraid you've . let me tire
k you. ..- I'M such an -insatiahle walker, and I
neverthoughtof your. not being perfectly
strong yet.." -• - ••41••
going ? -Well, Marion, I 'suppose I mustn't
say what I think of you," •
MRS. BELLINGHAM. "It isn't necessary
that you should." = . •
MRS. MTJRRAY. "If I were to speak I
should say that your lc•gie . was. worthy of
Bedlam, and your morality of—of—the mil-
lennium !" She whirls furiously out of the
parlor, and -Mrs. Bellingham, with a linger
Mg glance at the do- or opening upon the bal7
cony,,,follows her amply eddying skirts. `- At
..theimoment of their_ disappearance, Leslie
comes. to the -gallery door and looks explar,
inglY into the parlor. .
.LEaLrE speaking to !Blake without: ." I
was sure I heard voices. -• But there's no -
bodyi".:. She turns, and, glancing at the hill -a
which show their irregular masa through the
open window, sinks down into.a .chair beside
the low gallery -rail. "Ah, this is a better
point still," and as Blake appears with his.
chair and plants it vis-a-vis with, her: "Why
old Penkwasset, I wonder? But peopie al-
ways say old of mountains : old' Wachusett,2
old Aga,menticus, old Monadnock, old. Ponk...
wasset Perhaps the young mountains have°
• • P•
gone West, and. settled. down on the prairies
with all the other young people of the neigh:
borhood: Wouldn't that , explain it ?" She
looks 'with mock seriousness at Blake, who
supporta-in his left hand the elbow of his hurt
arm. • "I'm sure it's paining yeti."
BLAKE: "No, no not the least. The
fact is"—he laughs- no;
I'M afraid. I
Wasn't thinking' about the mountains just
now when you spoke."
LEsLi.E. Oh; 17e11, neither Was I ----very
'
LEsuEl -After a monient
•
was that?" ' i • -•'
BLAKE' ,;." A sman
-and ' don't iaskr.-Why
"la? -.gentleman - ha
1 .,,
light your pipeti
notion of a gentle7i
LESLIE, zonsbicin
exactly.'
who -gives you toba.ccO,-
, . ,
ou dou't, go to work ,A.
matches about him. to
t afterwards. Is that your
0407: • ' - -
ly : :" I den't know;. not
,
'BLAKE. 1" It mats me thinkofthe notion
of a gentleman I mice heard from a very nice
fellow years ago J' i believed that you could
not be a gentlent unless you began with
• your. grandfather'? ..- I was younger . then;- and
riii
I remember shive ' ig. ever it; for it left me
quite old' in the col , though I- couldn't help
liking the man: he l was a gentleinan in spite
of what he sai - d: '
made allowance or
allowance for every
who have had all
to put thein Wrong
in g that the kart i
splen td fellow; if you
hint:, You have to make
body, especially formen
he advantsges. It's apt
or -life; they get to think -
the race. I used to look
do*n on:that sort - ,of Men, .orice-in _theory:
:But what- I )3aW ' o- Alienifin the War taught
- '
me better. They 0 ly Wanted in emergency,
and they. Could showthedselVes-- -as :good as
anybody"; ' It safe :to judge people by
-their, circunistanc
-many men who
.,and-neiir came to
-._ the trainpes ide • is
fiatterint-that Ion- are ,a :gentleman. tf . you .
- Chooite- t� be st:1 j•What de yOifthitiE _1' '-• - . .
IL,s-F,SLIE4.i .--•" II' (IC 't 'know. . 4 think' it's a
very un'pleasant l' bject:., '- Why. deU't-'yen
.: taW, of something lie ?"1
. -BLAKE; • -- "Oh,'_ I waan't ;:tio. talk atall; as - I
understood. . •-.1::. aa-to.he- talked. to."
. I.atai.i.* Well, ihat shall I talk to. you
-ationt? ,IYou must it choose that, tee:"
-,
BLAKE. ' "Let . Us.: -`,t lk., about :yourself, .
:then." -.t ,. ' . --.. .::-, I ,- , . ,- ,
, _ ,
, ItSEIEi, r":Therif;.: is nothing about -..ine.--
tioi just like ' etefly"- other girl. . ..Get Miss:
Wallace to.tell,.ye ',...--abent herself,- some :day, .
and then-. Yeli'll -kn itv my- whole history. I've'
-done ev-irything lie!s- i. done, ..' We ."had. . the
.
same danCing;.--sinting, piaee, .17renOdGer-
man, and .. -Italian ..esSOns_;::Welwent to the
• Same schools and tie r_ same lectures ;::Welhave.
both : been:.abie - andr.canisketoh,',0id Can:
afil
,: paint .enitiles,' :. -.ft _ e're as nearly alike As the.,
. eau* - experiences t and ' aSsomationS. effiuld..
make nil and we'ri0:,. jus t- like . all. the 'other
girls -We knOw;* _ Isi-# t : it 'Father monotonous?" -
; !-besides I know too
ad all the disadvantage:-
nything. Still I prefer
perhaps because it'a- more
iSappeintMents-
•
[From 'The Queen.':']
-,
All the tiials of life are to be Clused un
-one or other of these two heads—thetria
having- to clb or. to bear that which you
not like,toldo or to bear, and the trial
!ming up viliat you wish to have . the t
• • .•
of Active pain, of positive stiffenng, and
of passive :negation and the dreariness
disappointnient. And in like. manner t
are the two classes of people to Whom -t
- trials zof life, are either tolerable orintcle
—the activp.: and energetic; who are st
enough to do what they dO not like- to
,
• • sidehewy oeul well Ighi ant
er eloped poet
4
do
of
'al
at
of
whose_future'
his present.
second. Byre
e!and-easi
een iungry
...11. 4-t
-, with A _gol e pouch .at its
and never b e. We loved ”
as. girls- do I ve -the nude-
-.whoa they believe, :And
hey take for granted- because
ey accept as sure; but the
'took :to gin,and-water and
and we and our children have
land . ragged as the practical -
pain for the avoidance of
re ,-sappointm and :,the-• of our
ese deem- T .tall, handsome
tile . ' whose audacity Won *way .Where modest
lig -.merit had --ii4! been abletomake an-impres-
[t 07 -..., Sion --=that ;441*in-roll: 'Conrad :Anla. iline:., :
bolo whom it is Worse than .death to 'Ve- teenth-century - boo of romance, 'against -
",a4a.wphi;iitogrothltwerottlistohvitioe‘vill. airgithvee.tiinpdoe. yot..,i ..ithoin our 'm 124, warned .48 ABA to 11FhOM
•tthheeirmhosacthOslieris_ bear
dee& tritel4hieeraethmeer thiardne- , n:edr. lifh°:libeo:rg blihtt,o?lciraili4eggPriratind-411:11611:t.yvfel:h. 6.- heali-iyfatk,pjirlir:ri: '
thing in the viorldtheniOst-Coveted Obi t, i , :11: fatheri1 l 44 ik fg 43:. kIrv; a Clen: ewhen the_ house—We Ivoni: 1:11,1:8
It all depends Oh the nature of the indi ' nal , Peintnle
I, .of our felly -4-Ai& Woad not -brook. a -die p-
, _ „ . 0 W . , is unp _ t. - - (1 - - - a'.- '''
force themielirea to _d- hit '
- or petulantly fretted! under, -.maybe Ire. tea '
...of by love and Ifdtgilkiti mapped,ita,ahetterthing in., the ,
elid than -the" at.tainment Of our •
to whom one or other of these two 0
. trial comes, Whether it is borne with pati 'lice , -
be -
under
mithl such egelw aiid.pomsniaie de? _ wailinnegrehlvealm, ao-lreesatt '.ttl:471.13ect; :44u-steght
.spair at breaks them to _pieces and : fini hes . peimitslOtt "join their friends the ReTete • - —
..lithfee awahdeeletirtiheinwgoognetthoefi.-."Bd4;'t _endingno
one , o at hn - - . tith 0 theiriht ' wil.1,hertiff_roihatir urniitinind,ital,alask'Thlteu' -. 1 '
say that the one trial is better thantheo ei-- '..- hest ..ef other." things: ito 'which she ' would
whole difference between -What 114 to 0 e a ' , scarcely-hfab: 'ch.: lithk-c'eud-tt-ho-°i:ri-7 'Ilia Pe-ii:necaiu-gb:1-tt-1- he for universal huntanitY,' seeing that it is the.'
Roverale
nature of the individual Which, makes the ' . wa.8 'firm, tit ng -k she Iva' sorry, juitl:-the'-.
tolerable Annoyance - and to another an ^hi-. Rernan-feli 'P.11-cl had --4--!ore'time a' �n the *
tolerable - anguish—what one , can suffer tid- - ,Iyiwhuo,_laeuldn.Al 41)ernoinfessatliteougs -strong..7h.1116e:e*se-b-deP,t4e71._e,,
net faint under, - and another cannot bear any will
that ofthe unhappymarriage the other -married to a llomart '
no -daughter left behind in ra
,
Were than the human frame can bear to tire turned with
Without chttreas,- . Take the most tam
and to be endured, and that of -th 'ha
one promised, built -on,. coveted, but, w
faileil in its" fulfillitient. - . Which is wOr
hear?, Who can tell ? Hearts -break equ
:tinder bot I ; and now one; now the othe
1 1
1 1
mach.," They - th: -"[Bitt why do
you put your 3,1001 under your -Arm, if it
doesn't pain you
jar,- nunnery, an
dir, noble of Met 'degree, shrewdly suspected to
be a hotel waiter outofplace. Even -the
Lel. girl herself Wad to Acknowledge tharperhapa -
-twere
o papa thiveams-11013t desirable uabl-teli7-paeteptlhe--e in-14)-tyherivorld
• to go. about with-L-And_t that •-one -disappoint;
•
'choice of death rather than the-. suffe ' g: •thing for her than. in the first place, toeing
thent had be on -the whOle. a --better thing
. ,. ..
, e i era r- . - - “- - - - - -
shown tOli insupPortable. by the d- rb te
which it entails. .,There are people „so I' on-
stitnted- that even an unhappy marriage his .
its cordpentiatioris in the station security,Or_'
the home 4-rthe children that it gives,f_ an
there are Others, to , whom- the less of the
dearest Creature that ever lived is in -
'compensated -for hy• the liberty that-celi
Contains and the absenceofthese doni
mi;inwh such Arqueer Set of people
in* the second, than the chance of laid
Up for months, perhaps dyin , right
of the fever;: in the -third, of being 06 verted
and made into a nun; in the fourth Of being
aid done for for ever by a hand-,
a slouched hat and huge cloak,
a Chi *---or a Spina; as said,
might -a. simple Bezzi, as his -
. fascinated
a,oy, .,some fellow
be worries..wtiteh • are inseparable - 17uht°-winilighaleit •
marriage, even. the happiest. *Ara --algain 1 'nearest -14044s -averred-
are'otherf tewhOm thersun has -islet ItSi ory- Many an44berinstatie0-nlight 13s as
and earth itajoyi: to whom the love of •an'exalnple! a°1:aetlinles ;dlaaPPolitt•
dren COnntS for nothing, the pride of ion ..-nlent i8 'ter blessing than the :granting,
dream, if OU :the one. hand they. :Ave- - Of -a -wisetit ;le to take
to, bear:: active annoyances p -*sit 60T:es, tAii1,4OPItiealtY,. than to beat
-sorrows .ofianY:kind; or on the other - oneself 139 Peg -e0 -againot- -the rocks 'and! break
- he*: balked of their- Wish Andlorced to ive ' One's heart -1,117er-A-lie inevitable. • 70-6 have
to
4:aily3 v.? 11:okti 4shi-elYit c103:07.:oirdteei4s'4at. able; but there 6.174e. .:;-)1"pd94'laiacnoe, tttif'gsnn aetTgillus he
*Pc. Suri V:gyl i.thda otherwan hive onfa :407e. 1S44.obatviec..11- bear7duouvn;-
World-Of 'cliffereuce in theinanner Of he 1.4 -.fortune,. kaNpw,ess-:_anai-plea-soro, stweesi and
them; few thingsrequirerildreT attainment �f that abject forwhichwe have
wholesOmkself-disciplin by striven long and wrought hard fail Us;
•_ which We. 'always remain masters of -91.1ra tea.. -
and. we _ar -.dissapointatent as
_even when weare the 1 -slaves of Or •
fitance, - than the.'-blew:-..41disaPpoin ent. . d8eisakvPohuur8.-131ilewli:m'-iwilt,g-toYPoiel.bf.Tfrhu_ jetrieessi4senn..;.: ..
r -. , use Of lying dOwnatthe foot Of the hill be- -
tTlii-o ntre‘'4;e4nitiefriltabveinbgurtathtitrimalilinAdal Id ' eanee vie -have .slipped back - once, And -wore.
. personal pleasure, A disappointment . en ails - than-enee; -itit our endeavor to climb to the _
. the watt petuant ill-hunior or the . Ofit ' -
to The top has to be reached in some -
despair.-Pasaionate; Itis all one Vilie_the the '. call„ iit-o- era- the -blow- has - to be borne
.fact - is important Or,lt?ii.ioPortitatt• - . Let t be quietly; lint -tans "all---diSsapointnient should
-ticketsfor. thelplay„ Which ' were .pio is 4i.
,e. -, _come as a -lesion; not a scourge—a ,trial
and do not come—the faire of the - fey. riti
,--soit to vise the: examilaon by - wbie his -, bwuhretn-wcehiwohe-4f.o.rer -Itt cl:Pradit isititriifitt4esingswin-lcIttlia ..
: *hole 'after career would have been regu )613-- --- ..- ,petnience -0 _grief or -unmanly, Violence of
—or the promotion over his own head - i -an: dest-mir;.-. t i - - -
inferior, aeubordinate; with more :ill eoce , - - F -
' and .feiver brains ,to the post "for w ' he
• • .. •
_ BLAKE'. g4'i I d-04-kli-OW;a11_ the.oth_et girls
I 'Pan judge .frina Miss
elie.vie you're like them;
ke
hat's too' fine a dis-
ou haven't answered
had. -worked; and which had been half
quiet *lig to DO.
inised—ancl the 'Whole Warld . has to _
elstill while_ the tumult of disappointe ex-
. •
T It' 1 trick -d•
t and d
pectation w s along „ he highway, 011,--ltsol.uelni- pcloy' theit-9 sibesfecAss: -wh-y--.ig°,x°0
1 h. 1 • t h'
I -
-finally it exhausts itse f,i' the- dust: .8 ties, - . -hoot) :thorn eat. of marradef.. . _Empioyea mien,
and thing i go r-baok't°--th4itr n°1•10al C-134:1. i°n'- , are most othitented. ---._ There ism) eonspiracy:
/
There - is. - .-.no atteinpt to restrain the.; ill•-•
humor, to moderate that : despair;or110,g, i-- tinge; iMpcol'elea%Pcoadc:ti'inan,„ii' iittydt° -cr7 i iletprofitable _nalige;madspitilieol.rYeeisuptitip.f.lecerene, dtb3r0.4'01: -
, pouligOleey'i ever !priebeeecnk,;ansintgheast companionh ego , ando,iia - .
'Up of the .loins to ward s
stage further on the thorny road of elide. vor; . viandtienia itith-de.i,,,,e1: s:corini(pAetesati_o:fn pro-
withiin..peoronptoertatio,at.
thebe it stimu nt. -GOtl. never intended:0 :man:
amount f labor performed. Theremust'
- h haePriiel niself37°81; re: 11- seucli lir itfih,ast : as the tihoes s al igi nu: .- 693184' - shOuld.-sW t Without:eating of th-e' fruits .Of
- 'appointments of every -day existence, is -a folly.
• Of - Which 1. no one worthy the . name " of : - A.:
reasonable being should be guilty. 'A, _
disap-
pointmenthas befallen him; and disap oint _
nimbi - whether. merely unpleasant or more
..graveiy disastrous, warrant an excuse hisi
mind =Ye:mount of frantic howling.
• 1
his labor-, eapirtg a-reward—more than. he
intended t '4.. idle man should revel in plenty
and grow g !ay on luxuries. Industry is a
110
greatpeacenlaker—amind-yctur-own;business
that you know.
Wallace; don't
.t
but they may be
.LESLIE, laughin
tinetion- for me, incl.:
. 1)
:My question, -
• .
[TO B -CONT
INUED]
BLAKE. " Oh,—I happened. to think of the
scamp who broke it for in."
LESLIE, shuddering: ".Don't speak of it!
Or yes, do! , Tell me about it ;1 I wanted to
ask you. rought to know. about it."
BLAKE. " Why, those things are better
imagined than described." t. 1
LESLIE. "But I want it describrd. I
• -
must hear it, no matter how terrible it is."-
,
BLAKE. "Oh, it wasn't 'terrible there
wa.-Ts---4ery- little of it, one way or the other.
The 'big fellow wouldn't give up your watch:
and I had to—urge him; and the little
Irishman came dancing up, and made a pass
at us with his stick, and My wrist caught it.
That's all." - - -
LEsLiE, with effusion: All? You risked
your life to get me back my wateh, and
asked:about that firet, and. never mentioned.
-you." - -
BLAKE. "1 hadn't done -anything worth
mentioning: '
Then. getting my Wath wasn't
worth mentioning r-
-his 1 Whistle: -
. -..,t I 1- • - •
I -
:NO many yearsi,agN When.a lofty building -
. was on the point Of camitletiett,. the -Mason
who w4finishingithe-Mghest portion -was in -
' the halm otwhistling to the whowas
"
attending -him Whiknevi3, he wanted -A fresh .
s
supply of lime, and, as the scaffold. on which
he. _wrought l we -rather MA. this oecurrect.-.
very Often during a day's .work. ' ,A- -. joiner
who was: fitting in a 'window iminediately
underneathl noticing Pau answer dutifully to .
every whistle froip. the 'Masan, thought of-
. playing -ta .trick ,cin - him by :imitating- the .
whistle, and t14,4, brought him up with .a
. .
The mas n told _ 4 t -that the had not whistled;
'hodful o - lime wr :fl there was no room for it..
so he had.to other alternative -than to trudge
back with his lea This: having occurred
for thethirdtinie uririg One day,Tat thought
. . - I. — " 1 ' - --
he would watch.. t hear - where the ‘ whistle
came Irani: i, He ad not . waited:, long with
.. , _ ,
the _ hod on : his. shoulder. when he heard
the - identiCal - W, histle 'directly uaderneath.
where he stood.) ' d Aleaning over, he saw
.. ., :.,....,
the heal._ Of - the joiner-- protruding out of
the window ..iiii edia ',ely . - bele*. -' - - -Pat
.:without 1 more . a a emptied - the *hod right
:
1,
over the Whistl ,r.' -s. - head: - -. __The , joiner
.- yelled -and Et lt tterea. . while ,- attempting
-lifrom'the adhesive. masa, -
t..;of: 'a . confusion -heard- .
• outing - at: -. the top of his
. !when yen. want: - more
Yet, disal Ppeintments are 'salutary: It Ls
.one of the i Mysteries Of life on this eait thatt
fie many Salutary things are disagr ble,
and. that those which are pleasant an. -Soft
are for themostpart hurtful to the more
't es- of the soul; Or abet) utely
inasdijii'nek virtues
disappointment folio 'thef
.• i..1".rttplenwigt:it*tps hhve rest. Iwteeoaraere s j'eneitieads,, e;.tto....,,
wjW.e-catild get all that we "k- hed
' $
ion th. second ,generallY- -fgege-.1
would not a
we yaw. .
. second ;..1.1 an Again, . we
11
beyond the :first powel
Cohlti get a:11 that. we wandt;-:, eifiaagerabi.nh f
us
-POoliet-it- is doubti his
ful, ifi w_.e-Shofildbe nab
_ -happier in the long run. than we are now.:
• had a priVate bit of peaff
11
It is diffidult, nay impoisible, to ma the
young understand this. I It is only b
teaching of experience that we come
where to fa real and not affected belief
even maturity; but how often we se
the attainment of a desire has been
misery, and that the disappointmen
eherished]wish has deen. a mercy in -die
We fall M love, and we marry. We t
-At that fever -time that life would hav
no more elia.-rin for us if we had not .•
this manler this woman of our choice
we blessed one 'good fate, thanked
Providence, when our wish was grante-
We were if' revodably-boundto the ench
• creature,,, ithat Dora 'whOse sweet _ gi
youth, :innocence,. and beauty had capti
our imagination and taken possession a
heart, and without whom we shonld,
been Wrecked and desolate, or thought
to clear ," hirnse
and in the irk
Paddy abeve
voice, -1`,Whistl
, mortar t"
citizen.- . -Staething-to renders the -des-
-cryof the hUngty,.aind--..promotea all virtue,
Th 4 'best ine*.Are themost industrious; the
hey
to4- 40Ym:6 17,e. vt,"07:,1 attiOh:h,d:34111: iDdoeost.,i!iuever
7tire_
l:ieirAlbs-Uncle-It me
pairing iliatitreclod lopefiii,-43tppli the .
the
any -
this,
that
OUT
of a
ise.
ugh t
had
rried
,and
ndly
and
ting
s of
ated.
•
most wealt
always fin
..wonder t
an0,,enjoy-li
young inet ook forward with antici moh to _
the time -kr` retiring.' It is doubtful if a
t man shoulci Over retire' from business as long '
as he live. We -think we know men who,
were they, to abandon business; would. be
-ruined, nOt'pecuniarly, but mentally—their
liv'es' wonitif be shortened. God never in -
34
-tended man s mind should become dormant,
it is: g6yera d by fixed laws. Those laws are '
iinperativelin their exactions. '
- Something -to doll "Oh, if I had some-
thing to ore"- There are young men who
sigh for it, iet onethingthey can do—that
is, seek f.1, -,,r fob.' Once found, provided it '
is An lion* one, do not hesitate to 'p00-rni.
it, even if it doel. not pay as well *you_
expected. - -7, - -';-
. 1
our
have
our-
selves so; i But as time goes on, and v.; latiod
beeoines :womanhood, and youth --de' elops.
into maturity, she herself changes into .
more
ould
ther
ade:
melts
-- save ,
rapt
Ung:
nf -a
tare,wn—
.
something that wrecks our life even
than the disappointment of her loss
nileagvieedd7tuel S:ur inas:13V,!ee;ea;a8...*lireeniWa5
as a housekeeper extravagant, she has
ourbonte a place of misery,: where hap
is unknown, a word without meaning
the .sorry one of mockery. Of we wer.
away by the msthetic charms of that
Poet Wliose works.- were . to -.make
ideathless name in the great field of liter
and earn for hiniself as substantial ren
1 - •
,
Panthers as Seed Distributers.
It is
WeilItitown that bees carry pcillen
from flot+e'fito lower, And that eggs of niaine
•a malt
;the sto
' curious
t6
v ge.abl
which no
ely.to
,often ‘ carried long ,dititance
of -_94na,tic birds. A ve
.ance of this kind, showing 'how
ecies may be -diffused by means
tanist;however acute, would be
hink of is. mentioned: by Mr,
fled 8 . ee, who states that, attached. to
the_akin. or a Panther recently shot in India,
wlere fou 0.--mrinerous seeds, each of which :
• had two Oiled hooks, 'Manifestly designed ,
to ;attach themselves to foreign bodies. As ,
the panther moved about 't collected the
Seeds On the skin and. 'carried them .about
wherever lit went: :Jut when It rubbed ., ,
against tilleicattuht,thnfia
itdistributed
itym.
,,:`brushedOnev
f
roducedi a handsome plant. and
lusters of tubular flowers. It was
yrecognized-ta he the Martynia
plant which, although introduced .
d. as 'far back_ As 1121, has
een cultivated, although it has - -
ented on by botanists and other -
some o
the seeds
beautiful
ithmediat
dr
'ine4atsonrceEnicir:g'
been cotA
riters