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A il . g E 4, T THE .CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: SUNDAY, MAY 11, 1873. his bad debts, This -pruden not to say fimum]mg:eun Th mposed long. lives fim&hfls enjoyed.. The indicationy mercy of this quarrcl- | then the floodgates of criticism - sre raised, and ted. ey were 00! of guished in general for therr rank, | now are that - s SETTLING - "0 | youare a womsn at the T i t ; “ ‘ROBERT BROWNING. b N - A .~ .| Some multitude. You. pick out the mostcivil | tho ‘tide pours forth a stesdy sfream.: Bhe q = knavish, aspect of her conduct no differ- | persons di y 5 P s one, and tell him fo go on with the work., Then %é’iflfl',""-g her gm; in gnt 8 {m‘e are legion. re ence to Leonce, or, for that matter, to Browning. mam.':f'g," Tospectable character, Who wers fro- | abova 90 years e .;':h':s% vfi° o!!n :;:1: will oy T 2y i Jou' bad better run and let them fight it ot nevar siop, now that sho has bogun 7 - Loonco aays : uently at Mrs. Vesey's and a fow other houses | family are all hale aod hearty for therr ors : : 3 .| Ioiong tnessseives, for their romarks will bo | Next comes the brokor's wife, with her -rather £ the Post of Tn Whatever b my lady's prosent or past for tho sole purpose of conversation, and were s T Shelr years. I. The Manifold Miserios of t1e | sharper ihan the stones with which Stephen was | fast daughters; and then s grand old lady, who The Last Effort of the Poet of Incom- Or future, this is certain of myself, - different in no respect from other parties but = - i is queen-like in the dignity .of : her. mien: and = Tlove berl in despio of al T Enow, that the company did not play st " . RUSSIAN PILGRIMS. i . day seven stove billa are pre- M % Process. . fzfi%fl:x’?’g‘x‘m;ifom that was not dene, but | spoech. A fast-failing race, of whom few living . . a charge for - time, and the least exorbitant | epeoimens are to be found. . Two or three nonen- — ! that of the man who did put up that | tities, who have evidently cometo take an inven- s e G - * | 'pipe. You hand them to John, and are com- | fory of your furnishings, and ng"'your social * - Troubles with Plumbers, Stove-Men, | forted vith the sympathetic remark, *That s | status therefrom; snd lastly that Iow-browed Q. 3 fnat like & woman ; she is always gemng amen SWEET-FACED WOMAX S -Serub-Women, Eto,, Ete, 1 .- | into trouble.” You hope your nextmove will be | whom you have met on the street once or twice, i 5 into that family vault at Graceland, only you are | when sho has bowed to yon so pleassntly.’ Bhe Defiance of the much I have to fear, 1 ventare happiness on what I hop And love her from this day forevermors { This devotion of ber lover turned Clara from bad to good. She becomes s proper woman. Leonce and she cannot wed,—her husband still lives,—but that makes no difference tosuch ure natures. They will dwell together, and oni soit qui mal y pense. Her husband bad tr'.zl;mmh .gf" dawrib?u the zaom; she pm ! ez o at these parties as *‘ pleasant and instructive.” | he Monnstery of Troitsae-Masc She atatés that she found there learning without ovite pedsatry, g °°‘1d :_E‘ '1 m by “§e fi: o, and s;:ncomb-—:l‘m: Year’s Pilgrime conversation out calumny, levity, or sny t‘brrMmttqlWWmDm‘l e gasiralq e~ Dirin s Lady of T Las Cen | vy So7ogzondencs o the Londun Dty e onss. bt - N tery of Troitsa, and dwelt on the contrast be. tween the praying—most earnest praying—with. * prehensibility. } “Red Cotton Night-Cap. Céuntry." Red Cotton Night-Osp Country, or Tarf and Tower,” is the -title of - Bobert Browning's new i b . ;! | sure that John admires that stands before your favorite Turner, makes some A B X e 2, b O 2 P FORWARD MI58 GUSHINGTON,— Pleasant remark npon it as’ you enter, and then | poem, just about to be published by Osgood & | bocome one of the most successful failors of : LITERARY NOTES. in doors and ths begging withont, I did an in- £ “of - f Conjugal FAST) g . 3 o i . Poem, Just Paris, and, fearful that she wonld claim s share | | —John Esten Cooke has written anew n ustice to Ruian -pilgrims. Perhaps the ¢« Evocation -of the Spirit of C€onjugal | smae pretty mother aho woud make to sour | admires toyour beart's contont Millais’ Bisck | Go., Boston. . Browning’s poetry dofles oriticism. | - pim fod: fes opsamon, had ot a diver fom | 56 Majesty Lho Qroun 2 & new novel, i e et oty b o e d 6 Learned Blacksmith,” Elilm Barrité, | ‘8ome effect on _the character of the crowd at is about to publish » *Grammarof the San- | Troites. Perhaps it was my evil fate to stum. serit.” ble smong ‘a mercenary orew. Bo that —P. M. Haverty, of New York, Pmmlau 8 lit- | a8 it may, I perceive here in keif a very marked Jicit children, Bo you conclude, after all, that yoy | Brunswicker. Here is & friend, indeod. You Infelicity. * 7| will put that Graceland change off for as long n | are immediately en’ rapport, and feel slightly " time as possible, and, instend of dying, will get | like gushing; in fact, yon do averfiow a litile in the houso in order, give & reception, and not in- describing her to John st dinner that evening. -There are many people who consider it grand; to othors, it is incomprehensible; to otbers, com- prehensible, but not-admirable. To like Brown- bed and board. This, under French law, did not permit Clara to marry again, "but who cares ? Even Leonce’s mother, . who, seems fto -have been much more rigor~ - 2 cp= | vita Mies Gushiny {on, - All sorts of people come. - . 5 fng is & nataral gift, and those who ars not en- . B, , e n © . Welieal Bickering, Eeclesiastical Prose- | ™4\, iiion is becoming commos, Joho's tem- Bl e, | e mant ot oon- | 308, About money-matiors than morale | eray curosty n o book ontitled ' Easy Lessons | lino betweon the pilgrima and the mendicani : " Yyiing, Social Boring, and the : per is modif; and you feal as if you might | of the neighborhood calls o ascertain your theo- Lol i o et | Ldnot cate. e uttered no word of complaint | in Irish,” by the Very Rey. U. J. Bourke. It'| These jaded, footsore men and women, who toil E - Iyiing, =il St Test a little. Alrhost everything is unpacked and b Brother Bine-Nose and his sider - themaelves * ~ lacking oir | till Leonce—whose father and brothers had op- | will be the ‘first book. in the Irish langusge nFto e Pecherskoi, have no thonght of aakin . Dence to Pay Generally. : 1 place. Yous owa veom insn ot and som o“ ua‘on;mmm. ro! un b day: time intellectual ' equipment, nor must . they | portuncly died, leaving him heir {o a magnif- printed in America. alms. They rather bring offerings—and conai B .| goto the hamper to get out 1 \'}'mfi:, L b “:‘8“ tr:‘g:o‘—dlgbefly Jook down on those who enjoy - what to them Is ui:iné s‘stlh—%:ii%o h‘:n down and rebuild the 4 —'l;lwoubo?ks by 3[155 d]}mflvrrmh!nlé are to ar;pl;mamnnga, too, forsuch bumble folk— i " ke on of - THAT EXQUISITE TOILETTE-SET 0188 edgo of the chalrs, and diescass your pros- | 8o ualaviting. Thosa who Like' Browning ned oy aa b beon (b bome o e Tt | o whish 3 Jovecatory, Sutitled - & Tasd Shaken | they Bave boruaed et ot Thale e, oz hich + - Having moved, and taken posseesion of your | yy;ay Annt Eloise brought you from Paris. You | pects of eternal damnation, when you esy that, | Browning ;. those whose .nacessities. are differ- | her now ssinted Miranda; wsa it not:good by Igm Vfind."ia'llienfiyin fifll and the o"h:-i befare commencing the journay. Those amo ‘;; ipressions of America,” she is now enga; 4 them who come_empty-handed, the majority o upon. The same publishers also contemplate | course, come fuil of geal to worehip nm.'l.,l, a reissue, during the coming year, of the Viclo- | shrines of Kief, and pay no attention to any- T Magacine, of which Miss Faithfall is editor | thing elee. You sy seo them trampisg and proprietor. - wearily along with little bundles in &qr —Mra, Louise Chandler Moulton has a volume | hands; the women often - barefoot, sinca of fiction in press entitled * Bed-Time Stories.” | it is warm weather now, carrying their lop —Mill is said to be preparing what he intends | boots. slung at their backs; the men stil shall be & posthumous work. L wrapped up, regardless of temperature, with —At the sale of the books of M, Ruggieri, the | &carcely a due proportion of linen to oyercoat. pyrotechniat, at the Hotel des Ventes, Paris, | On they go, anxious only to get the journey the * Ceremonial du Couronnement de Charles | done. Now and again you may see them pause Quint,” s unique copy, was knocked down at the | to ask their way, seeming bewildered by the heavy figure of fisfl% 3 bustle of civilized iifo; but they donot halt for —1.ce & Shepard, of Boston, will issue *The |.more than an instant. The end is 8o near that Fireaide Saints and Other Sketches,” by Donglas | they will make no unneceasary delay. They pass enough for the unconventional Clara' and Leonce ? Then, for tho first time, she ntters disapproval. She laughs at “ Qlairvaux restored,” and asked, What means & lll.lvldnre1"d' 4 i This Tower, stuck like a fool's cap on the roof— . Do you intend to soar to Heaven from thenco 27 - From the sequel it appears that be had some such intention. But, for the present, his only thought is that life is not worth living; if his mother does not like the addition ho has built to the house. He throws himself, rashly importa- nate, into the Seine, and — swima carefully back to shore and Clara. His mother dies. Then comes remorse. Ho reads tho let- ters which the guilty Clara’ had written ent are led elsewhere by their ‘appetites. - Espe- cially does the reviswer need to.exercise the broadest toleration. Persecution is not fash- jonable in religious mattors, but the Infallible Pontiff who sits in the critic’s chair {s too prone to launch his thunderbolts of excommunica~ tion against suthors. and readers whose likings end writings. differ from his. There is & vast amount of quiet, un- moon, but very tyrannmical persecution in lllenr'u'y mx‘clbsry andey{woibty at fil‘xu. Literary critica, even when they have strength of mind enough to rise beyond:the nsual mediocrity, new house, found all your chattels wore of less | have alwaya been so proud of it. Real Sevres, | ¢ While you respoct esch individusl right tos I : battered by the journey, then the and your piece de resistance when any of your | freedom'of theological opinion, yet yon'lnvg & p _PROCESS OF EETTLING e dear bosom-friends have op]g:euarl you with'real | never yet-acknowledged any particular creed, 7 pommences. Daring the firat month, moat of Gobelin tapestry, wrought-lace curtains, or Au- | until the masculine exhorter suddenly falls on - © c:pommences. 8 ks % " snt.| bresson carpets. That was your bit of real fur- | his knees, and thunders at Heaven in your your thoughts ‘are occupied.with the constant™| pighing; but oh, vanityof ail things earthly! not | half, while his wife looks mildly ant be- tocurrerce of unsuspected disagreeables con- | a single piece remains in its entirely.. You re--| causo you keep your sitting position. The mext ‘pected with the lovely house that looked £0 member, then, tho trightened look with which | wants'to eave you by water ; the third assures “ tharming when * distance lent enchantment.” John came to you on that fatal moving-dsy, and | you there are infants in hell not & span long ; s ronsinaL h & will ; rosches ad- | 25ked: in & huihed voice, ‘*Clara, dear, what did | the fourth discusses Apostolical succossion an However, though rats yoam at will ; roaches | you have'in that hamper 7" You told him, snd | the Thirty-nine Articles ; the fifth is flowery of vanes in squadrons, brigades, entire armies; | queried *Why?"” but he made no answer. You | speech, and vague in theory ; whils the aixth—a - - fhie sewers exhale an odor suggestive of charnel- | are mourning over your ruined treasures when | long-haired inrfi:idull, rathordirty—has reached houses; and you.find your next-door neighbor | ho comes in. He tries to look coo, but it is of | the Bpiritual Elma, and discusses deep truths, ¢ . bans babe, like & cherub thst eternally doth | B°use, and he must at last explain: “Yes, he | being of the Pantarch order.. o to- B habiey ke & supposed he did it, but "And 50 you gradually know all your neighbors, ally across the open spece which serves as glacia to i . coy; -especially at. night,—still, thix is by mo | = 1T WASN'T HIS FAULT. . secularly and evangelically, and évent which carries discrimination, the watchword of | te d _ written | 70 19” “Phis yolume gathors up the means the worst of it. The day after you ar- | Who would have imagined you would ever have WORK INTO THE NEw GRoovzs, . | criticism, no farther than s carful choice of ad- | Mim. He rosolves that ' he will | purily | iy which have not S5t seon book-forts in | the citadel, enter tho gatewsy in the massive rive, you drag jourself from your improvised | been so silly as to put china- into that bamper? | forming new likings and dislikings, snd grow- | jeitivos, fall into the grester impertinence of | fner in the blnzing grate-fire, saying, % Burn, | Epgiand; and includes *The Hedgehog Set- earthen rampart, and presently find themselves 7 B gra ) BRTING, D, | tors,” « My Husband's Winnings,” * Recollec- | in front of the Pecherskoi Monastery, the espe- imposing their own judgments as canons upon readers.-. They inaist that a book is good, or that it isbad ; forgetting tha what is good or bad burn, and purify my past.” Pulled away from his mad sel x-cmmltinme rushes back, ’uying, * Burn, burn, and purify.” During the subse- quent three months of medical attention, we are bed, been madé up anyyhero. Itmast; | You had always kept it for_soiled linon, and g0 | ing comfortablo, but for the fatal, warning firiger gt . i | fo threw it ot of tho window £ save the tron- that pointa stoadily onward to another lat-of - perforcs, be sban early hour, for cleaning s to | yR/reh 0 B 0%y oivrold thing down stairs. | May, and another possible disruption of every- o done, aud ‘the scrub-womon at 82 day will | B0 0318 0'henrd & apash when it struck the | thing, E tions of Guy Fawkes,” ¢ An Accomplished Vil- | cial object of their pilgrimage. It isnot so in- Iain,” etc. tensely an ecclesiastical stronghold as is Tro- —The current ‘nurber of the Walchmaker’s | itss, for it is eurrounded by ‘modern fortifica- Magazine,. publishod in this city, has several | tions, and just opposite its main entrance thers ‘be ure to be on hand before breakfast. gronad, but s was mure' o waen't to blame.” — to them may be tha reverso to tho Test of"the | J1A8E throe Monis BYMECEE REeRiRR, We Are £ p _ From the brist, view you had taken the night on!do 1_::; quote o‘thexm, !‘or !r?hut was his pal- THE LOST IN ROCK RIVER. world. Very often the best service a aritic ¢ad | he was purified. But no sconer is_he well th{r: very interesting srticles. Among these 'are: | ia 3 umdagmh m:;n-l, ;icl!‘: m;p}na;x of captured - previously, you ses that fyfandes v fosoulome T : do the publio is o describe with ntter impartial- | he goes back to Clara, He could mever part | o Dismagd Cuiting =l Dolihine GrowiE | Cewod with as much veneration s Troiten it: TEE LAST TENART B e manet thoa-te Guanatioh s4a fouior (han | The sonth wind softly blew that day ity, snd complete suppression of oplnion, tho | from ber sgain; bub he tried to_protect | Gorel ' fatituds and Longitude, © | gelf, and the pilgrims, srrived thus far, press is by nomeans all out yet. There will have to ozt TUpon '-_Y:ung;nd;'hg" “fl}:‘:‘;’,i M work before him, and to leave with readers the | his future by yomng himself to the Virgin at La _oletn;‘y;iv]).l beflmx:fimbarad that, ayear befors eagerly forward, If we follow them fi; the Spring’ o fi's T, nsibility of forming their own opinions. Raviseante,—trying to serve two mistrezses, one tha Boston fire, & Mir, Bird wroth to ihe Boston | paved footpath to the cathedral door we may in Heaven and one on earth, at the same time. For two years ho continues this dual devotion,—. refusing to give up Clars,—trying to win absofu- tion.. For two years he wooed the Virgin; he bath-morn, Adverti: Jetter of i hich ed to | Dotice that many who look like mers peasants vertiser a letter of warning which prov 0 : e be only too true & prophecy, picturing as it did fxva ‘what little they can afford to the blind and in detail the course that & great fire in_that part | lame, who are clamoring for help on either eide. *_ be = forcible eviction, npon your part, of several | That is the way you feel, if you don't €8y it, | Game into life that Ba _ Joads of him. - - Your landlord has promised to l:pfl dxlnuarnz eaten in aJm‘::bm mlutm:e l;n |bnz no RO ¥ i oss of appetite upon John’s part, while you, | That eunny day in esrly May, gt your house in pectect arder, and plumbers, | SO ]\}:)se prfilt your own?-rm'nga and i3 | The tmmmersion.priest bad led tho wey 'his we propose to do with *“The Cotton Night-Cap Country,” which is described from the proof-sheets by L. C. M., the Boston corre- i painters, snd other mechanics arestwork re- | Fina Just feRe8 of SOUS OFFSIORED WIC M9 | Adown the banks of the turbid iver, : epondent of the New York . The:poam 4 ; . ity mij torwards did, run. - He | Some stoop and kisa the ground in front of the - - -noving some of that last resident. Yon scrub e il openiine g Botles tolave and souls to deliver, © | i inacribed to i Thackeray, as its aubject | adorned bor imags in the chapel with goiden aftha ity ailght, and Alterwardss Pt o | cathedral i s ocatasy of devotion. Othars rav- man -was suggested during a visit el egnd the poet | crowns; he turned nol ace amay from a0Y | p oy inat Fire,” and which disusses very thor- | erently fouch the threshold with their lips ss r man ; he made—and this was at Clara's en- eaty—his will, bequeathing all he had to the uses of the Church ; he prayed, and she—shall shemot b forgiven becanse ahé loved much 7— prayed constantly at hisside. And then thers came & morning When he waa about to ride—a ‘morning fair with spring ; and with hope, one would have thought, in the very air. Clara was somowhiat ill, and must be left behind. ° He bade her good-bye—was there something in that kiss which thrilled her lips with its remembered swootness in the empty days afterward? ' Who knows? When he taken farewell of her, ho went up-stairs to the yreat tower, and.stood thers lookiug off toward La Bavissante, where was the beantiful Virgin—the Virgin of his wor- ship—whom, long ago, the angels brought there. He looks toward the Virgin, and cries: onughly the ' means of prevention. His leading'| they enter. For ihe time all their thoughts !dug: 1’? ma!:z:ploymennfi)t umlnhlnd—enginug geem to be absorbed by the work in hand. Un- which can be scattered all through a city. aré so many congregations, this one of pil- -+ ZBafore 1840 thore were not more than'40 Ger- | grims scarcely glances to the right or lett. Every man newspapers in the United States, now there | eye is fixed on the officiating _priest, or on the are 356. roportion is as follows: 24 are Jovely ornamented shrine, which glitters with & purely political, 44 are given to instruction 'and | profusion of silver and gold. What a contrast amusement, 8 to belles lettres, 30 to religion, 2 tween the shrineand the worshipers, between to Freemasonry, 2 to music, 4 to sgriculture, 4 to | the gorgeons interior of the Catht and the juvenile resding, 8 to commerce and the nsoful | earnest but dingy érowd! Yet these pilgrims arts, 1 respectively to 0dd Follows, Druids, gym- | have zeal enough to grace any shrine. ough nastics, and fashion. .New York haa 65, Pennsyl- rough and ignorant inmost things, they ate quite vania, 63; Ohio, 87 ; Tllinois, 29; Missouri, 283 at home here. This is the crowning act of their Wisconain, 84; Indiana and Tows, 15 each; New | pil and they throw themselves into it Jersey, 13; Texas, 9; Kentucky, 8; Californis, | With proportionate fervor. ; Marylan ., himup from your floor by tubsfull, carryhim | No doubt s piece of the beef and & Wing of | xr, pressing amain the sight to scan. * " out from furance and grates by hodsfall, scrapo | the chicken would make you feel better and | 4 sily now bridge it was, I ween; ° “him off the kitchen-sink in disgustingly dirty | more forgiving, but you don’t want to feel any | But whether the buyer or builder had been = o1 1 - hi better, and, as for forgiving, nothing short of { The fool or the knave, it could not be sscn. . quantities, and finally carry him out of thesard | ;b i"tyyoh g solitaire you Bave beon wantin i by cart-loads, It takes a regiment of men and | uolong, or the Chantilly ehawl like Mrs. Midas', | Jhat timo the prisst the waters Z pluah, | ) . ‘womentodo this. You.wonder how sny one | will make that a possibility. John probably e Tor Casty "t n Going for Cash, *“ conld be 80 outrageonsly dirty, and you begin to-| known this, but money is fight, moving 6x- | Going] Going! Gotng!™ Crash! causm!l CRASHIIy think that yon never shall get rid of him. When | Pensive, rent payable in advance, and he does, s hatyou £ not see his way clear toward making all serene | Poor mortal priest] and poor mortal man you believe he is all ont, he “‘:l"h:!’ from “0me | ssain. Dimmer endsd, ho lights B cigar, puts | is e spirit of God, or s apiit of mtn, . i) 1t e Heavens, or | ing the’ H # new place, and you begin to fesl haunted Y6u | on his hat, and slama fhe front door as he goes | Hendiod e Toarets, FR8 TR T R socz to hear the same dismal ehont of “ Never- | ont witkiout s word. This is dreadful. i " i hich Y unha] DIVORCE LOOMS IN THE DISTANCE. more™ with which Poe's Baven woke WnbaDRY | gy oyiee (riq breaking of a tolletto-set. You | St of Sishy . .memories; but, unlike that uncanny bird, heis | - o on ey Yo will not live With- & man | Chase from before us this vision of Night1 * not content to remain in one place, but is spread | who trx::ynf.u 531 go. Then, the crisis past, 8 now | Out ‘of the water the poor priest ran, ‘&- 5, o1l over, from Mansard to basement,—notthinly, | set of symptons obtain, classified as lachrymose | Amid shricks of the woman and groans of the man. at his -sea-shore home,—* Baint bert,” on the coxst of Normandy. Here they .spegt the days - together, = walkin on - the cool, -gray beach which ringes [this quiet Normsan country. Miss Thackeray called it the “White Cotton Night-Cap Country.” But, the poet argued, white means fiuflty, and all the ;ug}!;mpc are not thus symbolically white, everi in Normandy. . Plenty were red with the’ wild, strong color of sin.” To prove that nocturnal head-gear thereabouts is thus-incarnndineal, he tells the story of La Ravissante, where tha Ravissante Origin had lately been crowned with = circlet made by Mirands, who was a noted jeweler- of Paris. “The central and supreme eplendor " of the orown, the Btone, was the -gift of Mirands himself : * , -covie. D o d, 65 Minnesots, 53 Lonisisoa, 4; | _Besides the cathedral dedicated to the Ascon- Michigan; 4; Tennessee, 4; District of Colum- | €ion of tne Virgin, thore are some very curious bis, 3-and tho other Btalos genorally ono each. | catacombs in the 'Pocherskoi Monastery. Itia “ The Stons, sither, but with unctuous thickness. and sentimental. You find Moore more in Lar- il Aok et il i O e : s 1 e et upon baving him svacuste antirely, | oDy With your present mood than Shakepeare, | RRReTER SRR QS PILbAY S at g e had to focsge o om Tork, Riheid me, Tady calisd Tha Bavtasents, = % Sir. Lucius Adams, of Agawam, Mase, has | partof tho pilgrimage to visit them, and one A and quote : Go, let fly the news! Calll brethren, call This Jeweler, and country-gentie: 4 » . .| been experimenting with the plowman of | may gee by many signs how much they are fre- ‘however, and put yourself at the head of the ex- : a y thren, cal 3 -gen! o long since that I cannot say ** I give.’ s o b & Alzs? how light & thing may move Btrike the wires! ‘And most undoubted devotee beside | He bosseches ier to givo him some sign ; sho, Gray's Elegy, and finds that there are no less | quented. \The narrow passages cut in the sand- terminating army, until, completely worn out, Dissension between hearta thatlovo: Start the fires | Worthily wived, oo since his wife it was P - N Sorme 8ign 5 #4% | than ninety-ono different methods of stating hia | Stone cliff are blackenod with tho smoke of inna- Bestowed “ with friendly band " bofliting phrase! e fitptia WOrKOr; WAT BAFR ST.a0L p o case, all grammatical, thongh nob all bearing | merablé candles, borne along thom by innumer- you determine to give a few orders ahead and when a hoarse ery from the nursery&!lollnwnd by g:;:e?fn l.p‘lji:‘l ll REST A TALF-HOUR. that frightful barking cough, sends you, shod- | Sather IS LAEL, Y angels ; he prays that tho eamo angels wil el o i 'Ho piis one fook Syer the | tho precisd sense of tho original. Of theso va- | sblovisitors. Thoro i s iron pavement under riations, seventeen begin with *‘the,” twelve | foot, rubbed aud polished by tho constant tread The lace which trims the coronation-robe— S| of tha davont, and thors are quantities of small B wear—a mint af wealth on the brocade.: : to ihat place s 5 it i You know you need it, and you find the softest | den with the fleotnoss of foar, How fiyeth the land 7 Ttis in the h £ th ificont Mirands | Tiling without fear. Ho belioves that tho an- | Fi3 b ith 8 i i where baby lies flushed and feverish. There| closo up the valve; we are resching the gosl; g Honte . of the mumacen| a0ds | ot will + thi ill bo mpborne ; with weary,” fourteen with ! homew: A : lounge, and determine upon a brief spacs of ro- B p % | that the poet proceeds to proye that “a night- | ¢! jcomo ; that he will bo npborne ; he ” ith * hi " twenty-f coins freshly deposited on the breasts of the ) IT I8 CROUP, We speed, Mr. Priest, 100, In saving a sonl, Po 3 oven_believes (hat his hands will b restored s‘wpeintv ?Frfl:;mw his );ulg. ?,13 yn o o e oo ay dffl’h ol lods ord, 8 sevonty -cap gleams of visionary Red, mot White, for um:u.fi Miranda himself has long been dead, and his son, Leonce Miranda, followed him two years ago. His widow lived there with the ser- vants. Bhe is thus described : Her figure? somewhat small and dariing-like, Her face? well, aingularly colorless, 4 For st thing: which scarcs suits 8 bloade, you 0w, Pretty you would not call her, though perhaps Attalning 10 the ends of prettiness And somewhat more, aupposs enough of soul, Then she is forty full : you cannot judge What beanty waa her portion at eighteen, The age she married at. So, colotless to him; and that, some day, with them he will lawfally - wed Clara. Meanwhile he will show his faith in his patron YVirgin. Ho pats forth his other foot, and from tower to turt falls dead on his green lawn. -The gardener lifts him up, saying: 4 ggh—the Red Night-cap I” (aa he raised the head) “ This must be what be meant by thoss strange words While I was weeding larkspurs, yesterday, + Angels would take him I’ Mad 7" Not mad, but sane, says the poot. Such being the conditions of his life, Buch end of lifo was not irrational. ‘Hold a belief, you only half belicve, With all-momentous {zsues, either way— ily scen, uld not be wutilized in the | their breasts inno figurative sense. aamo posiflon‘,w on sccount ‘of the impos- | Or eighty Russian saints in these Catacombs of sibility of disposing of the article ‘‘the.” 8t. Anthony are most of them lying in open The mere number of transpositions is not re- | coffins, with only a covering of embroidered silic remarkable, seeing that five F:Memunbe lacod | wrapped round’ their withered remains. Tho 120 different ways, but it is romarkable that so | pilgrims can actually fouch them, and can feel msany changes should retain a comprehensible themselves, with a grim reality, to be in the Tensing. Fow “ainglo lines could havo been | prasenceof the vensrated desd: ' S, Anthony, tried this way with the same success. the Russian saint of that name, was the founder —¢The English Catalogue of Books Publish- of the monastery, about the time of Edward the ed during 1863 to 1871 Inclusive. Comprising | Confessor, and here is his quiet and gloomy riod American Publicati wve, deep down at the end of the labyrinth. dflfgw,‘li:ndfi ), i8 expect:; 15 b r..ai“n‘l"SL Jece, tolt{r;r;ot fl-rh-mlvly. e’t; m g?;idy tg‘ t'l_iha Ji’u- R i i occupyil rian or, who live 6 Pe- e L ) BOTer | cherskol. T could not underatand one-half - cuperstion. How luxurious it feels ; and, 6atis- | and the wheezing, gasping, 'n§nnizlng ‘breathing | Unladen the derrick; drop down the fall] " fed that, if it is to be perfect Test, you mustrid | chills your blood. You send » messenger in . * jourself of all thoughta: of your eurroundings, | heste for the doctor, and begin applying all the | ko F3ier3 SHI faw e oso, This fs the brief calm befors the | Temedies you can think of. - Your messenger Te- | TUATI SRR L 3 . 5 tums, and_snpounces that the doctor wasin, | Dathitcle and then . storm which ehall eweep like a hurricane | ,ng will follow immediately. An hour passes | A waiting for light, through the house, completing the workof reno- | and he does not come. Baby grows worge, and you | To strike in their might. vation. You banishall care. You are deaf to | are both ;nx.\nn; and aa: t‘byl‘::d“flr: %ecjond' ,1:1'1“1::, kl;z;!;:d, -.nr(: :geln'd‘,n iy p i time, and are informe e had sterted jus ‘and Hope, fi:mon},':,‘."}fl"fw‘},’f;“{.f’d&‘ ar UPOR the | | efors your last mossoger got there. Another | Death has strigcled and won; ‘The fight is over and done. hear the “Beolding scrub-women, the swearing | balf-bour of weary waiting. John does notcome | Gury the bodies to gather,— Taechanics, Tor tho squabbiing children. The | home: Oh! it hoonly wonlal WWhel wro all | Tovssod lered iy hanic o -sets in will | Qur over io-night; cushions mover felt so soft. You have thruat | 0. el oot Torior, "o click of & | e gather your Desd by the morning light; asido every tormenting intorrogatlon of | 3 By o -known st d b- | And whon help and sorrowing all are don T atick to, and i foatureless T add, ccnscience or nocessity, and sre in as vacu- | WLELRAT) & FeVC RORT SLOR e e Bt e, | And Tho Dasd sc0 huried cao by oney e | 1o aMbsags 3 3 dn and inane a siate aa is desirable to make | bIng out an account of your troubles in his arma. | g1 T8 20 ok 2 grows complater oug] And I advise you imitate this leap, 450 pnges, shows the titles of 32,000 new books 0 s and inan The or does not come, Thore is no timo to | We Ll presch yous funeral sermon—true; I noticed that her nose was aquiling, Put falth to proof, be cured, or killed at oncel ‘oditions issued during nine years, with | of what my guide was kind enough to tell me, "Tortll be Eood for s, and good far you. The whols effect amounta with me to—blank = jodnew e fibmir.! o aten it of | a0d canmot now ' remember tho bhalf of f what I underatood. There was s story of that half-hour a medicine to weary mind | | P50 o one hes noticed a physician's . and body. Youare just a\i&ping away from the ot itestys, when » | 8ign on the next block. —John rushes off, and | A tale about bridges—buflt to rmaah1 1 haver Ebw whal 1 Cold e Qescrcibe i st ietive, pri iter- The eyes, for {natance, unforgefabie Tho Blue Stockings. learned societies, printing clubs, and other liter- Tt 1 TR PR SRS BOY DL and N present into that border-lanc e} b 5 A r ocie I % ‘oomes at the door. You start up, but will [ brings back a gray-haired, benevolent-looking | Built very Chesp—bullt for Cash! Which ought o be, ae out of mind aa &ight. And now, in the year 1757, the celebrated word associations, and books issued by them. - 5 T fear. A secand one, and atill yon are deaf, | Oldman. - - Cheap! Cheap] Cheap!—Cheap for Cah1 e e < B an st owsurs 1n Hre. Montagus | - - The admirers of George Herbert will bo glad | each onohad his own peculiar merits, -to be o- A third, snd the door opens, and *‘Please, “HE DENURS A LITTLE » B e A e oy Gusl 11 R D e aoast s, corrospondencs. Boswell, under the dato 1781, |. to lesrn that eight poems of his, hitherto unpub-~ | celled to mind. = Peaco to tholr ashes. If the mo'am, - 5 : on account of professional etiquette, but it is an [ GO GONE p 8 F Which, a2 you bendingly grow warm sbove, tella s, in his * Life of Johnson,” that, “'abou} | lished, hays been discovered, ‘snd will be pub- | s7arm of earnest pilgrims which pacses by TEE PLUMBERS ARE DOWN STAIRS, urgent case, and you plead for s life dearer than | But our sermon s trus, Begins o take impressment from your bresth: this timo, it was much the fashion for several | lished at onte. It is 8sid that they throw consid- with every --wceedmtfi Jear, sud bresthon ita and would yor ak to them about the range?” | your own. ~John keeps on hat and overcoaf, | Open your schools! Which, ax your will itself were plastic here Iadies to havo evening assembligs, whers the | erable light on some of the poot's religions | YOW8 over them, and imprints warm living _ Downyougo. Youarea victim of those peripa- | Teady to rush tc the nearest drug-store, when a | SCATTEL YoUR FooL8 | R, Nor needed exersiss of handicraft, fair sex might participate in conversation with | opinions, kisses on those old embroidered robes, can com- == letic bot-water arrangements that make of Chi- .| small leather case, filled with infinitesimal vials, [ ~Pxav, IlL, Msy 7, 1873. From fermless molds iasf to corfespond Jiteracy and ingenious mes, animated by a dosire | ' —The Court Journal prints_the following : fort the tenants of tho Catacombe, they hiave . cago only an overgrown vilsge. You have | is produced from a sido-pooket. Ho takes threo —————— R all you ok ind fes Sadals—tuluy to please. 'Thess mocietiés wero denominated | Ap of the American story we recantly | that comfort to the fall. Thelr wori Lives atter - brought yours with you, but fonnd the Iast ten- | or- four globules from ono of these, and puts Coming toun Understand ing. Who know now for the first time what you want? Blde Btocking clubs. One of the most eminent | gave of 10 book agent whom the Omaha peopls | them, and.the flfl-h!gl o thelr o d.ljcehlnd * anihad not removed his, but wanted to sell.|them on the child's tongue, and then | - English Correspondence of the New Pork Mail Here has been something that could wait awhile, members of these societies, when thoy first | tried to but who returned with Cassel's II- | 1snguage _sfe ready by 0'25"1 A : Enm - You have tried it, and, by dint of making up s | calls for glasses and spooms. A few | Having onone occasion afew hours to spare | Learn your roquirements, nor take shaps befors. commenced, was 3fr. Benjimin Shillingfleet, | Justrated Biblo, trying to got a subscription from tanor.- o may eée & canstant siream of pil- new firs every balf hour, have su d_in | drops from s second vial, and alittls powder | while the English mail ateamer on which I was | But by adopting it, make palpstle whose dress was remarkably grave, and, | the head of the attacking party, an equally good | Erims moving down the wooden &mmm from Foue xight ko a1 impotiance of you: own in particular, it was observed that he wors bluo’ | story is told of tha canvasser of a London pub- ::;ps::r trh :h:_ 'l;:w gfi;} o ;;‘,;Z:‘:,‘g”fi;’; warming, to that condition of tepidity which | from a third, are put in these, and mixed with a | & passenger waited in the harbor of Queenstown Paul docried, sbont & pint of water. . Scrnb- | half-glass of water. No poultices, no draughts, | for the English maila to arrive, with & few of ‘women have been frantic, and the last fenant | no goose-grease, no draatic fluids,—nothing but | my fellow-passengers, I spent thoss few houra w28 1ot amensble to cold baths. He required | that mockery of medicine, which he administers | walking abont the streets of the town, bemet st soalding water and abundant detergents fo re- | alternately abont every ten minutes. You are | every step, of course, by the ragged and impor- - 'move him. You have sent for the plumbers,—for | apprehensive, and dim recollections of oldrhyme, | tunate venders of black thomn sticks, ** rael” your peripatetic cook-stove, with water-back, will | in which all the lakes took part, and, after hav- | Irish lace, bog oak jewelry, bits of shamrock in atTeast keep fire enough to heat water. They dis- x'ngl}:mpt_afly diluted the d.mf of -medicine orig- | little flowerpots, and very hard and green- sppoint you until just the moment when-you | inally given to their dissolving powers, a tea- | lookin apprfel. One plrgmhrly impartuning Bave found you must rest. Then they come. | spoonful is to be administered, haunts you with | old lngy attached herself particularly to our Realizing tho situation, you go to meet them, | its Iudicrous representation of the system you | party, and more particularly to me, who, and they cut the water off altogether. Scrub- | are trying in spite of yourself. John'sbrow is | she said, was ‘' of her.complexion.” I do ‘women, irats, cannot work, ‘and must be paid. | lowering; but even a reedis s not believe that redder hair was ever seen on a | Plumbbrs leave. They are accommodating, like BETTER THAN XO SUFPORT human being, and on her di face thers was thosa described by Dudley Warner.. Find that | when all moral ground has given away. - Gradu- | not room enough left for another. freckle. She thoy will not return' until the mext day. No | ally, however, baby's breathing is lass distressed, | had, unfortunately, canght my eye fized almosé chance of any dinner, 80 you send the women | the cough is beard less frequontly, and the | admiringly ona certain iace handkerchief among - off, and think now youwill try to rest again. | fever seems sbating. You havoe clung to thet | Ler other atores, and devoted her forencon to . Your room-door is scarcely closed when & voice | White-haired old man, even though you do not | making me its purchaser. .with s rich. brogue-shrieks up the stair-case, | believe in his manncr of administering reine- Wurfidl please buy it, gir, to put round m; ¢ Shure, mem, and g Y dies, m%}z a5 he turned to go,: sug- | swestheart’s neck when I went home? I coul ..., IT'S THE BTOVE-MAX gosting at “Once ao hour will - Do | geest a glanco how elegant it waa, and to me the is afther wantin' ye's.” Downyou go. He has | often enough now to give the medicine, | price would only be four-and-six, the very lowe . come tosot the pipe,—that not being . plumbers’ | gradually increasing the time as the patient im- | est; there nuw{ ¥ work. You tell iun it cannot be done until they | proves,” you cannot bear to ses him leave. You | . 1'd give her nincpence! e t.hm'u‘gl?, but beg him.to come the next day, | feel thatitisall glamour, and, 88 soon 23 the I must bo joking. Iwas.' Couldn't I ses . aa they will finigh in the moming. A third at- | magician departs, the power of the spell will be | that them chaps in the shops would charge me a 5 um&.; ‘sud this time it is s query abont old | over. A quick ring, however, and a rustle in the E;nmll’m‘ the likes of it, and they hadn't the- . bottles and iron, which anybody might answer, | ball, and your own £omy ‘medical man, in glossy os of itatall; but I " was of {ar complex- and * would st apy other time but in | black, with heavy chaln and seals, is ushered in. | jon,”—ehe seemed osed to dwell on! that,— the present state of demoralization, when it ia | He starts back, and would retrest; but his med- | and to me she'd make it four shillings, the very of course referred to you. Your reputstion for | ical OEgonent has groeted him %fllefly‘ They had | lowest ; there now! * 3 sriisbility, we fear, is in danger st this crisis. | once boen colleagues 'and fellow-Allopathists, | Ninepence was my price. e h until the stranger went over to the enemy. Now | Did I mean to insult the Connty Cork and the Companions somehow were 0 slow to s, Leonce Miranda, her last husband, - At his birth ‘Mixed the Castilian passionate blind blood ‘With answerable gush, his mother's gift, Of spirit, French and critical and cold. Such mixturs makes a battle in the brain; Ending as faith or doubt gels upparmost ; Then will bas way a moment, but no more. o nicaly-balanoed are the advarse streugths, - And viciory entails reversa next time, ; There is no red cotton night-cap yet visible ; but, wait ; the © sinistrous coil™ is not all un- wound. e poet goes back to the story of the wooing and the wedding. Leonce, who was sowing franca for wild oats, went, one New Year's night, to the Varieties Theatrs, in Paris. Here he saw—not the red cotton night-cap—but & polyanthus, more commonly called Clara de efleurs: No sooner was hs seatéd than, behold, Qut burst a polyanthus] He was 'ware Of & young woman niched in neighborhood: = And ero one moment filtled, fast was ho Found bondalave o the besuty evermore, For life, {or death, for heaven, for hell, her own, ‘Monslour Léonce Miranda ate ber up With eye-devouring ; when tho unconscious fatr Passed from the closé-packed hall, he pressed behind ; Bhe mounted vehicls, he did the same, Coach stopped, and cab fast followed, at ons door— Good houss in nnexceptionable street. Out stepped tho Iady,—never think, alone! A mother waa not wanting to the maid, Or, may be, wife, or widow, might one say ? lisher. He found his way into the parlorof & | branch bank, ndnwfl:ei&mgm‘,w 0, a8soon | Cstacombs, There are many beggars ask- a5 he learned hus business, ordered him out. | 08 slms on the stairs; = and you Very quietiy he eaid : *I meet so many gentle- | Iy again motice how rough-looking men, wha , men in the conrse of the week that I can afford | might ba beggara thomselves, o the supercilions %o moet a snob occasionally,’ and walked ont, | Western gaze, give a kopock bere and thero in Next day he called ab_the bank again, and wish- | the way of charity, and hurry on ssif half d to open an account. He was again shown in | ashamed of such weakness. Groupsof women to the mansger, and gave very satisfactory roa- | Sit resting in the shade, mostly examinin g their sons for opening tho account, and deposited | Poots with anxious care. Bome pilgrims, tired £270. The ‘mauager could not do less than | out with the journey, have gone fast asleop, Bpologize for his rudeness on the dsy preceding, | their bundles under their heads ; and flm.?}! and ordeod copy of the work—an expersive | more Yigorous, aro strolling sloly away towa Bible—and allowed .sccess to_the . clerks, | the city. They sre very quiet, " inoffensive several of whom did the same. Two dsys af- | people. My only wondor is that they terwards every farthing was drawn ont.”’ va _managed 1o travel so far m:h; —The total number of newspapers published | Out being turned back. Will they come md in Paris during the past year was 785, ranging | Are . they destined to become & sort o from the Journal Oficel to the Shoemaker’s | Teligious gipsies, inured to pilgrimage, -or will Moniteur, . The statistics which have beon got | they eettle down i their villsges whén this together inform us that smonget them were 75 | Journey is over, and retumn to the pursuits of reviews, of which the Revue des Deuxr Mondes averywu{ life? The answer is, that most of enjoya the highest amonnt of popularity, and no them simply return home and go to work as fower than 84 roligions journals, of which 58 | before. There are some who may, Pcrh:r:y be Topresent Catholic_interests, 23 belonging to | led into further roving—some who are already Yarious forms of Protestanfism, and 4 to the | Well-nigh beyond the line which separates vag- Jewish faith, Amongst the Catholic journsls | Fancy from p e. But most of them have Imay be cited the Echo from Purgalory, which | ¢omo to Kief through a gonuine zeal for wha! Protestes to publish “ the works and events | they think a meritorions work, and they will ro- Calculated to edify the faithfal who are dévoted | turn home convinced that they have secared 1 to the sonls imprisoned in this place of peni- | blesting by the trouble which they have takon. {ouce, vhich i happily butprovisionel” Mirser | OB 3, ST IS 00 £ ponfbtfor lous sota find their champion in a monthly pub | $F00 £o0'okon spread dinease, and make the con- stockings. Such was the excellonce of _his con- versation that his absence was felt 8s 50 great s Joss that it used to be said, ‘ We can do nothing without the blue stockings,’ and thus by de- groes the title was establ d.” Boswell was eatly mistaken, for, in 1781, Bojamin Stilling- eet,|the hi&hly accomplished ‘genflemm, philos- opher, and barrack-mnster of Kensington, had been doad ten years, and ho had left off wearing blue stockings at least fourteen years before he died. In 1750 Mra. Montagn ond some other Iadies attempted to reform manners by having parties ‘whers carda could not be thought of, and whera the mental power was freshest for conversation. In that year there was & charming French lady taking notes among us. Alsdame du Bocage, in her * Letters on England, Holland, and Italy,” notices Mrs. Montaga ; and from tho notice may e learned that the last named lady was already giving entertainments of a nature to benefit so- ciety. While at the Duke of Richmond's, ss many as eighteen card-tables were ‘‘set for laying” in the gallery of his house, near White- with eupper and wino. to follow, for the consolation of the half-ruined, and congratula~ tion of the lucky gamblers, Mra. Montagu gave breakfasts. Madame da Bocage thus speaks of them and of the hostess : 3 “ In the morning, breakfasts, which enchant as much by the exquisite viands 28 by the rich- .ness of the plate on which they are.served up, agreoably bring together the peoplo of the coun~ ‘Then the painters are sorry to disturb you, but would like to know where you wish them to go | they indnige in all that whole Irish people by ‘such. an .offer as 'that: | Outstepped snd properly down flung herself and strangers. = We break(asted in this man- | lication which is very detailed 1n ita account of Ofte a 5 next. The man comes to turn on the gas, which [DELICIOUS PROFESSIONAL SPITE, - ' Couldn’t T oo for mugelf the work on it; the ele- | Monslenr Leonce Aibanda ot ber feei— :,’,_. to-day, A%lfl 8, 1750, at Lady Montagn's™ | what took place ‘t%e Grotto of Lourdes last | e 0f pxlgm?l%a‘thaf cfintre_ of (:n{ifmn'h )d}ifl . he had forgotien or meglected the previous day, | €nvy, and hatred which is allowable to profes- | gant work, and woulda't it look beantida sound And merer L e o boe of lfe (as Madame du Bocage misiakenly calls hor), | year, and smong other courious fitles ‘msy bo | in the present stats of, SERT TREORE Tach CR T Fened th g “in's closetlined_with painted papor of. Pekin, | cited the * Couronne de Marie,” the * Anga do | SOWREFRIN; PRI Rlc 1o 1d tat thiey aro froe sional etiquette. Meantime you are “‘between | my sweeotheart’s neck, and wasn't I ‘“of - her two stools.” You don’t want to offend the oid | complexion,” and wouldn't I give her thres-and- family doctor who has dosed you, since you wero | six, the very lowest ; there now | B s baby, with ell sorts of nauseous mixtures, vao- My limit was ninepence. N cx_mwi, lseched, blistereG, cupped, and other- ‘Would I rob the poor ‘blind girl, hér' grand- wige made the attempt to live a torture to you. | daughter, who had worn her fingers to this bone, . Neither do you want to give up the magician. | and lost her eyesight, and ruined her health, an But yon must do one or the other, and 'so you | spent the Iast four montha in making that lace ; cast™ little, "beseeching glances at, ,John. | wasn't she giving it to me for nothing, and was Tho . profossionals glower at each other. | hard-hearted, and did I wank to oppress thé poor, Both would, and. yet ' would not, .yield, | and wouldn't shs pray for me the longest dayehe until finally some sort of & crisis comes, and the | lived, and I could have it for three ngininga, the When he em, 8 procipitate. YLove proffered and accépted then and thera! - -Buch potenoy in word and look has truth, * Trath T ssy, tvath I mean : this love was trae, And the rest happened by due conssquence, By which we are to learn that thers existx Afalsish falsp, for truth’s inside the same, . And truth’s that's only balf trus, falsish truth, The better for both parties] folks may taunt ° | That half your rock-built wall is rubble-heap? - Answer them, half their flowery turf is stones! | Our friend had hitherto been decking 2oat | 1f not with atones, with woeds that stonea befit, . With dandelions—* primrose-buds,” amirked he; This proved s polyanthus on his breast, i m;fl.wm, or prize lawless, flower the same, | Polyanthus first tells her precipitate adorer a gonl-moving story of noble bi estates van- ished, struggles with poverty, attempts-to earn bread by acting on the stage, heartloss thrusts of jealousy, and failure. In &, foreign: land, enniless and friendless, she had become a uke's “ favorite,” Of conrse Leonce believes 2o that you have been subjected to all sorta of improvised lights.. Next, the men to measure the rooms for the new carpets. 5 13 . Now, surely, yon may R BNATCH THAT ‘* FORTY WINES.” . You ars again just ebout resching the haven of your desires.—in fact, are dreaming that you a6 under the Falls of Nisgara, and some ono ia . shooting you in the head with red-hot bullets,— _ when youwake with a start, to realize that the lumbers have ‘unexpectedly come back, and -. bave turned on the water. Some one haa left the facet ‘open in the bath-room; the tub is overflowing; there is some surreptitious | leak ; end your bullets were ' the drops which were {falling on your face, whils ths now calcimining is ruined. You epring up o prevent further damage, and give up all hopes of that necessary rest. The plumb- exsgo, however, without doing anything buta little ostentatious measuring, and do not return i i ille,” “ Analecta Juris Pontificli.” ] t 0 and farnished with the choiceet movables ?flf:‘l;m‘l’%mgfld tl;gmfl‘ ota faria POtiel.” | o visit their holy st ;o miy the: ue of many of which first saw the light in 187'3, and | being_free for any purpose ? Men - sometimes oxpired before its close. There were 99 gcien- | SOmS from tho most distant provincea to Kief, oz tific publications, and 121 classed a8 belonging to Troitss, and are content to tramp ths whole to jurisprudence, public edncation, political econ- | W2y on foot with a crust of -bread and a draught oy, and acchitecture. Tho “litorary” joursals, | Of water a8 their daily meal. Thoy cortainly 25 they are called France—those which donot | donot err by riotous living. It is rather their tonch wupon politics in- any shape—num- want of ‘means to live more comfortably that bered 82; but Spiritualists, who claim tobe in | does the mischief. Here, outaide the Pe- great force, can only muster three exponents of cherskoi, you may ses a score of them lying on §ho faith that is in them. These same statistics | their backs near the dusty road to rest, befors throw somo light upon tho mewspapers which |-80Ing auy further in search of quarters for the appoared during the Communo. Varions writers | Right. _They might be the wounded of some re- have been inclined to estimate the number as | cent skirmish—and hark to tlie roll of very much larger than it was inreality; we which seems to confirm the idea! . Bat no. Ths Jeatn, in fact, from the compiler of theso re- | Toll 0f drums could belong to nothing but out turns, that there were but 83 daily pepers, and | familiar friends of many a continent rampart, ‘many of these were old friends with new faces. | The pupils of the drum-major are out {or exer- Thas when the Bien Public and the Temp$ wera | ciee, and hard at work. Close to the place ifi sappressed by order of the Commune, they came | Pilgrimage is the busy, modern city, with i ong the ‘moxt day under new names, and this | garrison and its railway station and its ::nnnfi China, A long table, coverod with the fineat linen, presented to the view a thousand glitter- ing cups, which contained coffee, chocolate, bincuits, ' cream, butter, toasts, and ex- uigite tes. You must understand that ore is no good tes to be had any- ‘where but in London. The mistress -of the house, who deserves to be served at the tablo of the gods, poured it out herself. This !isthe custom, and, in order to.conform to it, the dress .| of the English ladiee, which suits exactlytd their statue, the white apron and the pretty straw hat, become them with tho greatest propriety, not only in their own apartments, but at noon in St. James Park, where they walk with tha stately and majestic gait of nymphs.” B Mrs. Montagn was not the only lady who gave those literary breakfasts. Lady Schaub (a foreign lady who would marry Sir Luko) re- ceivei‘ln company at those pleasant repasts. Whon matter is decided for you. Baby gets better, very Ilowest ; thero now | and the ghost of Divorce that threatened you is T'd go no more than ninepence! 1aid until the next annual hogira. . Yourold doc- | Wasn't I taking the very potato out of her tor did not get there in time simply becsnso | granddanghters mouth, and hada't she hor ront each messenger had forgotten to state whers | to pay, andnota ba'penny in ber pockei that you had moved, and he had gone to the old | blessed minute to pay it with ; and would .I see house, roused tho inmates, to the mutual dis- | her turned out on the bog to starve ; and wasn't gust of both parties and at last, after much { T a gentlemsn, everyinch of me; and waen't I questioning, almost hy ‘mere chancs, had found | “of her complexion’;” and she'd give it: to' me ont where you had gone to. for two-and-gix, the very lowest ; there now ! e A ;o:?ol)?g?fn% Soren | TEriving o laat ekiios things, e ama was sl P ped. T3 promied | hom and of courgo the story, as all suchwamen's | SO0 SSBPRR G (00 PR CORRG % horcn ; bungry. You are in despair. You cry, John YOUE NEIGHDORS : my parents befors I laft homo that I'd not give | 50ries A0, Was false. erwards tolls him | b0 PEet e " Qeith orgeat, lemonades, | oporation was repcated several times over: The | trade. When we have driven on in hasts s tes, “and biscuits), in mot known, - Alter | Teturns are evidently made “up with » great deal | the sound of tho drums Ja bGP e swears, and you don't reprove him for being * so ungentiemanly,” 88 yon would at any: other ‘time, - but rather envy his freedom of res- eion. No fire, and nothing to. eat, John :Ifiy,— Clara de Millefleurs, of the noble racs, Was Lucio Steiner, child to Dominiquo . And en Commercy ; born at Slerck, About the bottom of the Social Couch, The father having come and gone again, begin to make ceromonious calls. First arrives | more than nineponce for lnythinF;f and here of, the very of care, enumerating the principal features of had lasted a few years, the 'word fhose " I : each paper and review. ‘blus stocking” occurs ~ for tho ! first time in Mrs. Montagu's letters. -Writing in March, 1‘1571‘:0 Dr. Monsey, she says: * Our and then we get & peep of the river, whero & steaming e towiag & whole siigg of b el . wly against the stream, Eve: g o A Long-Lived amilyo Tookiag in Kief, out of all proportion to the dates the old maid from across the way, Wwho, being » | was ninepence for tho handk fixture, Juxuriated in her neighbors’ business on | highest; ‘‘there now!"” 2 7 the first of May, and made an inventory of their y all the saints in the calendar I was laugh- household-belongings. -This specimen is nat al- | ing at her, and trying to murder her poor grand- ’;hfln m;.\n always Isa—;nfittben{iissh, because B e s 8 e will net hibernate and feast on his own pawa s singlo; but, i e happen to.havea | dsughter, who was blind, and had killed herself | The mother and the dsughter found their way , friend, Mr. Stillingfleet, is more attached to the From the Louisville Courier-Journals, il , d professed mode-merchandise, e e AT 1o s Rtkn of tho town, | Probably tho Hosgland family of Hunters | of its bistory, ;}fj;’f‘g“‘,’;g‘*gm',:fl in the absenceof more palatable food, and he does not evince the elightest disposition to hug yow 3 busband, is only a little worse than_tho strictly | at the work, snd so on, for a mile or two_alon; Eginfldhnd,_u Ehe adds spice to the vinegar of | the -hm,k’ooming down in her price a penny o 0 latter’s oriticisms. You loarn all about every- | two every few hundred yards, and all the fime body near you, and resolve, before sho lenvaa‘ displaying powers of eloguence that would have that, the nmr flx_;n;fg; ?‘111_-; ** you will be out.” | made her fortune if she had only written a book LADY-] ONESS . and had gone to the *States” to lecture, and of the neighborhood swoops_down upon you, | displaying powers of persussion never equaled crushes you with her brocade, humilintes you | except by a life insurance agent. 3 with her chantilly, dazzles you with her din- | ~ Finally, when she had reduced -her prico to monds, overpowers you with her rich relations | 18 pence as * the yery lowest, there novw,” and in New York, who live on Fifthavenue andkeep | geemed as dateming to stick to that fizurens T s dozen gorvants, and who are ‘real ! elegant | o my 9.pence, I offered to compromide, One people,” provokes your mirth with her gtammar, | shilling to end the matter—9 pence for the hand- and aggravates you with her vulgarity. Another | kerchief, because that waa all I said I'd give, and “not at home,” you resolve. Deluded little | tho 8 pence extra to go away aud let us have woman who will not be patronized by money and | peace, “With s few muttersd words that might low-breeding, what are you thinking of? Do ve been & bad-natured blessing " or's yon ever expect to make the Grand Begum ‘re- | humored curse, she pushed ‘the_handkerchief e mahing Were milliners, we English roughlier say ; . And soon a follow-lodger in the house, e Monsleur lysse Maliwuson young sad smart; Tailor by trade, perceived hia house-mate's youth, Smartness, and beauty over and abore, : Oourtship ‘was brief, and marriage followed quick, And quicklier—} osity, At ndon, w) re] compliment Bt sourilr, sinco ioba whit the more Trade prospered by the Thames than by the Seine, Failing al other, 18 a st ¥ He wonld bave traflicked in his wife,"—she ssid, 1f for that cause they quarpeled, *twas, I fear, Tather from reclamation of her rights To wilely independence, than as wronged Otherviso by the coursa of 1ifc proposed : Sinc, on cscape to Paris buck galz, From horrorand the husband—ill exchanged For safe maternal home recovered thus— who toil and spin a8 little a3 the others, and, like the former, are better arrayed than Solomon in all his glory. I nssuro you, our philosopher is s0 much a man of pleasure he has left off his old friends and his blue stockings, and is at operas and other gay assemblies every night; go0im- sgine whsfi:‘er 8 ung: doctor, & dmpmni pment‘ and a bleak monntain are likely to atfract him.” Mr, Benjamin Btillingfleet used to be séen 28 often as Mrs. Vesey's gatherings as af Mrs, Montagu's. ‘‘Blue stockings” was not a term exclusively. apgliod toMrs. Montagu's assemblies. To all mssemblies whore ladies presided and scholars were welcomed, the name secms to have been given. A ‘‘blue .a&oc!g'ng club ™ never ex+ isted. The title was given in derision by per- sons who, as beforo said, lacked the bs or Bottom, ,» affords the most eminent intance ! s b of longavity of any on family in. the fWest, | 22d conflsgrations, so that in i x:hspedm B There were ten children, &ix of whom aré now | City 18 actually almost new. Even the living in the -same locn’lity where thair father, | 50I of \ vich are very ancient—have been l: Judge Corneliua Hosgland, from Morris County, P"'EIM ‘“‘}R{I‘g‘%e?m‘n ‘E\;B:w‘:r o b New Jersey, settlod in the'year 1800. Thia fam- | RO, of 8, Tittle Ciataice, T from ily of sons and dsughters are_sged as follows: | been only just built. 'As you leo' 8060 L0 Hoses, 91 years ; Gills, 78 Martin, 65 ; -John, | to left bank of the Dnieper nnd eco the ab R 71; Okey, 82; Jane, 84 ; Gearge, 80 ; Caroling, | domes and cupclas, the Breen 10015, B4 s of 75} Cornélis, 78 ; Emily, 70 ; making a-total of | Wasked walls, which crown these S8 i) 769 years, or an aversge age of 77 years. As bo- | Kief, you might fancy the city a co fors stated, Cornelins Hoagland, the fatkier, set. | established twenty years ago. : tlod in Carroll County in 1800, He was_elected S e Judge of the Circuit Court, and served with great | Anti-Opium Pills. ¢ the gatisfaction to his district. Ono evening, after 1In s recent report on the condition: of din court had adjourned, ho visited a pleco of new | English hospital at Peking, China, the atten g ground which was being prepared for cultivation, | physician gives a formula for ** anti-opium pn-n o recaived a blow from a falling limb, and died” E‘hm remedy is composed of extract of Henl HAVING CRIED OFF Lo your nervous exasperation, and John. having made emphatic remarks until he is comparative- _ 1y good-natured, yon remember the existence of s gas-stove. Two hours’ overhauling and mn- packing revenls it, and it is brought forth in tri- umph. Coffee bacomes a poseibility, Q%E: ‘wear » favorable aspect, and, ot last, with the rem- pants of cold meat’ from some dinner which . seems now ‘to have been eaten ages ago, you manage {0 satisfy that on of the human syatem which makes man like unto a polyp. The plumbers at last finish their work, and . present their bill. _Another of the pleasant little items connected with .the freedom of the hot- water privilege. You pay it. It is only one alize it ? , 5 E into my hanc ‘ookth ehillin d disaj 1 find ber domiciled and dominant istinguis] i amopg many. You hvo{eenln nehmnicymu THE SILEXT WOMAN 1 NED efldxanlyi'a the h:fleqningi;n a mma In that apartment, C;f'mm"m% :gsxgfivgo:nfilfi m&e?obn’:g:ii:x%i“ %: soon after, This was in the year 1805, mear Port | extract of gentian, cumphor, quinine, cje3n® of paying bills ever since you frst arrived in | calls, sits two hours while you make talk, and | treating s to a bit of tranaformation scens e |- Yohers all tha splendid magic met and mazed: sesemblion of Mrs. Montsgu, Mra. Vesoy, and | Williams, now Carrollton. His oldest on. Moses, | pepper ginger, and clonamon, with, castlle s your new house. Now thé stove-man doesn't | answers with monosyllabic negation or s~ | she left, for the handkerchiof she’ gave mo was | Alopsieur Leonoe Miranda ventirous cye. Mrs. Ord were spoken of indifferently as bas- | wad on the staff of Gen. Andrew chkm‘m& Kt?mfi& {o form the pa:;ing. i’é‘l; heg:c!‘:d ¢ it se pills in overcoming the Only, the same was furnished at tho cost . ©Of #ome one notabls in daya long since, Carlino Centofanti; he it was Found entertaining unawares—if not ' An angel, yet & youth in search of one... | This story the artful and adulterons Polyan- thus does not tell till her g:;mour, disguated bs the inroads of Leonce, deserted her, an thrown on hor the inconvenient burden of all thronghout the Creck and Beminole war an g 0 e nae the war'with Great Britain, serving ‘with much | in preventing the suffering on glving up. the o distinction, with the rank of Major. Formany | of that paison, ia stated to have been PIDYERZ years all matters of dispute bstween neighbors | numerous instances. The native mnd st in the section in which he lived were referred to | is said,, contain. .zgmm in some form, 82¢ T him for adjustment. This family havelived very | frequently the ashes of opium already EmO (S quietly, and in all probability to their sobristy [ it being as difficult to discontiuue and regular habits is to bo attributed the | such nmedicine a3 of the drug itaelt. blea assemblies. [ In 1781 Hannah More took the BlueBStotkings for a theme for her uim'ght!y little- poem,, which she entitled “ Bas Bleu,” and dedicated to Mrs. Vesey. Ina fewintroductory words the auditor explained the origin and character of the as- semblies to which the well-known epithet was given. *‘Those little societies have beon come- tion. What does she like? You are in-despair. | by no means the handkerchief for which I had Wil she never go, but keep “sitting, siiting for | been bargaining, but one very much its inferior evermore?” You have criticised books, auf ors, | in every way, and ons which had not until that artists, moving, even urnnts,——f.bné #Open | moment appeared. It was probably worth: the Beaame " to every woman's hidden spring of lan- | 9 pence it cost me, however, to say nothing of gusge and invective,—but still you only get the | the amusement it afforded, and is kept in the same undemonstrative replies of simplest | family as 8 memento until this day! e lady breyity, until you hit upon boarding-houses, and | “ of my complexion ” I never saw sgain, come, althongh he faithfally promised to, and it isnot the plumbers’ work to set stove-pipe. Frantic scrub-women clamoring for hot ‘water, mm eend for any number of stove-men. Tostesd of a bave &%, Each insists one ‘you ive Bix, . TRcntus job, John hap gome down-tows, and