Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 23, 1876, Page 9

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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1876—TWELVE PAGES, & — e e T arty and make it scem what {t la, the most seem- | the traln leaves Modane, nnd with a whiz starts | them. * Iiclen’s DBables ' met with instant | In polgnancy for loss of breadth, aod in the rox, Author of **Norti Nailads." 12m: LITERATURE. ';",,.f‘,','.',l, tlci_llrltl;h:b:ifl:m;l:uhme‘:t l»:flv\v:ugm gan un the mountain; *“for," says Mr. Btleler— fame, and its sale has been rapld and stea'ly up | prosent vu(l1umn ('),hlcr’ F:ml‘("" l;w!"llxlly h;:- LH:"rfpfl gg‘g'fllfl,?gafig':g'%g{"‘:;“;,fi ,‘(,;muu' ':’:lr':aux:ll::-"h(l'&l?l'; :::']nlfa}:‘:h;:’x::):figf “'K’Ji“nff. ey C| Vi - re comed an edge, o nt of e '#| A o 8 ON '] STURY OF A C] N 4 H netrnciton i ths school of experietice, H0w 10 | 1ich wbogt B0 feot sheer ahen thesonion sl | to the present moment. Tt has been by far tha | S0P NHEG O ROIILO! the keencat pathor, 1 By dous & Baoabca D. 1., LLJY.. Author ot ‘| Sctive fertllo brain was continually buey with concact u multitude of delicate and avory | line makes two huge carves before teaching It | Rreatest lterary success of 18i0. *“Tho Bar- | content ourselves with saying that it wes the mont : : 0 dishes for breakfast, lunch, and dinner; th Tho gradient {a something really tremendous. The | ton Experiment { le in its way as its | ontire expression of hereayement wu know In Iit- Hermons, 12mo., pp, 241, New York: Shel. | lems of natural history, and sketching faces and Housewifery: Practicnl Cooking | [oith of rereing hen bt moestto e | e o lonmes ny call (fomendate, "The predcamsior: bit, a8 tha world. s i Jass | gratnee. o that dfine f ¢ does ot iy praise | o o, Chichgo? Janven, Meclurg & Co. | scones whorever wixibi. At o1 he as 1o the s B beointe) , aee i’ 1ha bouk, Price, 25, servlce of th and Dinner-Giving. L’l;’,:g:_'fi:“;%"gg‘.] a‘.‘,‘hh‘;l‘l’ zgm‘;gfiuflmfilfl(‘lfig ?onffl;",,,’nfflm“:l‘;},"’,‘;',’;’l foumvinatndght dls gray | vazer to be’ fnstructed than to be amused, It [ 'The first poem, *That Naw World," with tte | AZALIA. A Nover, Ty Creu,Gravrox, Author | anyual ‘;’;mfif :lv‘lk 5%‘5,” H:’f’%‘;‘a Btlch.u“ ;é’l’-‘:&l:; ‘teating on the l"mpn'\rnlllnn “and _Delivery of | planning engineering works, solving the prob- I i L ; hinuTa roofs of Modane, lyiny far he . Pnp | vaunot be anticipated that the ook will attain { sarcasm full of heart-nche,~— of ''Efe's Game." Paper, New York: Harper e ¢ y anpea :{“!Lurl'fll]'{ Soclesy,. [ The recipan ara cholce | engino given n lond yell, ke the Gy of % Mg end | Lo wd popularity nelicved by the ‘one which How eraclois we are v grant (he dead & Nrothets, Price, 50 centa. :g;})::%:igfi‘pf ok ifi’e"l.nt"(fiff‘»’vf‘if: o dns B ¥ and the baok, as a wwiiole, 18 4 | genty hurled down fato the dnrkncea: the etvam | 80 triumphantly vpened the way forit. Never- Thowr vagtie, wids laniis {0 tha foraign sy, A BMALLER DICTIONATY OF RIOGRAPHY, | pldue siily,, At the naeof 45 hie created his -{ N f Gen UllBtBl‘--It(l] fl‘D fll treasure which' ey u,v housckeeper desfring to | twi, ind writhen low down on the ground; a mo- | thelcss, there i3 occasion for sincere satfsfaction Tteserring thin world for ourselves instead, MYTHOLOGY, AND GEOGRAPHY: Anntnarn Michuel Ar B0 0 he Last Supper., it Lifo of v 1y irom 106 | snerease her knowledge and kil shiould hasteu | ment's dim twillght. nnd then ntles bisckneas, in the evldence it afforsis that the abllity of the | And tho theill of that sumetimes ntolerable long- | YRox vur Lanorn Dicriopany, By Witniaw el Angelo, sightly spoken of as “aking i Alns to M, Et to possess, Wo wers really rolling through the Mont Cents | writer was not exhausted tn is initial work, and | 08— Fvnn B, € L LLD. 12mo,, pp i, With | Sonis men, was dustined for the law; uthe 41 ps » bitna, Tunncl, and ioat of un exporicnced a strange #en- | thing wo may expect a forlon of books from hiin, Andset i theso ematy eyes conld seo tatratlone, New york: Harpor & Hratlicrs. | £0 carly nanilested o genius for art'that, at f A COMPLRTI 108 Or R RO A cus SEhig of Boins o aeHeid et ot Albok wiic) will; glve “Miluitalle. proofe of & O'H‘l¢;C".'Jm?:"zfl'nn'fif":'ngn'r'»fn?;"-'\f& o e VISR IS, T PATILOl. GAT: | painter Ghironders. " TGRS f" OMPI, x N, . CUB- ralson d'etre. oo e sctnt of one ity to teil Pane, By Witriau D, lowrsis, ~ Boston: | i 0 3 McCosh on Evolutione-An- | Iridaion-Gexena. or Voronrezin Birver- ot S ht ng nman tond du‘:m]g tiowh | " WThe Bnrton Experinent” is at once n skill- Thatt srew outstdoat this worla, st meat, Jamua I, m?{mvl A e T et o :}"fl‘;'\‘::2,?;::5:},,","%{"}"’“”3 statio of Davil (¢ Dr. M= | Mo Grxraat Usiten Szares Atnn axn | Gonemiles, 0. " Any stone fn tho vauit sbovs | ful storyand a_ stirri. treatiso on tho tris That whispeis of some tinéaribly coast, LIVEICCOMULAINT, "XERVOLS DYSPEPSIA, | Was Tiventy-three yom nis serjecananlo, whe i other Story by the Author iy K paey Whireakom, Tovor: | HAmIBDE Ue rd of qur fvon, ant Natno 1t eome | methiods of reclafming the templed and tho | 1y takey note b the renh b 118 ok penotratea | AxD MEADAGHE! Tuiin cavene, rarve | RALITTLTUIES yoors his toplor, for the com Y f ¢ Helon’s Babics.” oSl ath e York Neteran Cavalry. 810., | warm, damp alr, which opreasod the repiration, | an filustration of tho working of the snthor's | tasmlves " Mo uonpete “orroyr whick | dior of tho Hernid” of fieaith, ste., e, | 18 \as 89 ‘years of ago when lio'tuinta tha i o elen’s Dabies, B T ihawariet”Sholdan & Cn. pourell fn. 1t \vas Impostible, on locking aut, t0 | cude of principlen in. that which would abolieh | acarcely less thin terribie a snch a boem as thiss - | L20W0 PP 141 “New York: M. L. Holbraok & calling of the Sistine Chancl, and above 40 ' . The above biography s n fitting tribute to tho. | reo either tho walls of the tunricl or the nest car. reLn e : . s wwhen he hegan painting the **Day of Judg- memory of & noblo man, a bravo soldior, and a | TiARe, 80 tremendons was the darknoss: wo coutd | Juobriscy iiyet it would bean Injustice to the book Al (SOMPONTSRT'A (GOYINN, TIE PRATTLER: A Pictune Axn Stonr Boox | ment.” Raphael dicd on his 87th Dirthiay. oo a3 'y 1o consider, lulmrlynuncflon inhehaif of tem- The b1d enrhavted story! Oh, ran Hova AND Gints, nl-:dulch".l:(!;yhp;cu"llnlxr {A‘muugllml baloved that all Ltaly mourned ' for . Piiiadelphin: ‘3. B. | ifm. Ho loft . ¢! ¢ percoive only the MK of ki The Brain---Dore’s Illustra- | Zjiest offiecr. 1t s writtn with oo enthiuslasm | oy gitted bunt e Jhiod windonn. Thors was | perance. Its eailnently Judicious and practical b e e 3 e which In the begluning secms overweening, | moiething welrd, and almost dintoile, in th deas aply Lo every rellzious and philunthrop-' Teliwonia poor cirihl 1o Joves a bir Livpincott 3 cago: Jansen, MeClurg & o Tho Transfiguration ™ unfin- T avena b, ished, but the number of beautiful works lio n of “The Ancient but forinloss anparitions, which now were gliding un- | iz schema for the nnendnient of wayward and Andknows e liotds. 0. Price, $1,45. 7 a io! pesancien oo i the ond plends lte oxuse In B | o heots, now Fising lo'the oo, Sre ep | Tallan himanisy, and they deserve earelul s | po o fioih Eaiandt oS00 JUBAISSUAT HONE: 1.°C. 7010 A, D, 140, Dy | had executed was immenec. While s boy of 12 Mariner, emonstration of the brfillant decds and gener- | fnz away and Uehvi reproduecd. . Tho iofve of the | tontion from all'persons Micrested, - benev. G0r enten =it you winpr MM Eneognics Wonioran. | Limo, “pp. 010, | 18 UL NG sthdlo of Deruging, and at 20 ous attributes of its subject. Thae manly char- nflzlnc Tocamo torHbIE: Ve wern conncions, a5 it | Jent and practical cnterprises. We commend 4l New Yark: James Miller. Mwl ? 3 : 'l"l': nefnted bis colebrated Lo Spotalitsia, or tho 1 acter, th alls, and the spl . | were, of the lierculean Iabor that it was perform- hook to ti A, friend of mine, TIE BELIEP OF THE FIRST TIREE CENTU. spousals.” now at Mllan, Nelther Leonardo, + tho gencrous kralls, and the splendid ea- | {5 20 Yoot VAN and groans for there tnan | Lig hook to the two grent clusnes of lovers of The tte Cwhich Caf hath noe heard?) JITES CONCRRNING CHRIST'S MISSION TO | nor Michacl Angelo, nor’ Raphacl, was ever by Mrs. S. M. B. Piatt reer of Gen. George A, Custer Irresistibly win | wecent of more than 400 foat within_ the tunnel, | fetion aod of decds of philanthropy. Attweat walls from tie skics LD, By Fnropuick lisne. | married. ' The first of the three was 67 when ho Poems_by Mrs, S. M. B. Piatt=== | ypon the reader who now for tho first. time | Sometimes It soxmed almost on if the locomotive e T Tttt Dp. 183 © New York: James | dled, and the second lived to o 88, The Floral Kingdom. views hlin clusely, as thy appear to have won | NOUM, came fo standatil aslf tbad mo more | o FROWERS. alnuintheconnliae ot et | ecthoren \eas born o 1770, aid hiy father during bis lifo upon all who came In contact | thelahorhegan ogaln. 1 louked ot my watch. ' We | - SENTI) AND POETRY, A Dicrioxant EA tho htgh lieavens avans PERIODICALS RECEIVED. oo pun crllivation, of his yg;'::lml | Jaterte with him. The occasions in which Custer earned E".‘.’.fifi’é‘:";‘r‘.fi.‘&'.‘.é'l‘i“&‘i"'.fé‘a‘u"':J‘{‘,'.'Ei‘i.'.‘c‘a barely or Monr ’l‘iltnm. Huspney PLAN Wit 1, friend of mine. BT, NICHOLAS for Jannary (Sceibner & Co., New I«Fa of 8 his brilliant pcrtormnm-'u; on the Gonins Boforo the Ago of 30--The | promotion and fac are too recent and too well | ™ Wotiiic, fon minutes nammcd by the ale became | Tom XAERe AND Faxttize vo, Winci Tuer Ure 1 I oan 1t York). Cuntentss Lrontieplece, ' The Min: | vlolin excited thoastonishment of avery listenor; Blindworm-~Eggs---Gold-Fish kuown, and his whole military carcer has been | stil] more eultry and oppreasives 1t was impossile | wiri APPROPIGATE UEMs OF BORTRY. Dy Mro. P LT, icture by 0. B Aimeins s UTne < atmm,® | 8nd ot 18 he had published & volume of eonza B too marked and too exposed to the scrutiny of | to read or slecii; yet we felt that tho highest point | - Convewsa HAnnts Tunxen, With an Autograph €I you vould shuw tne any Siuch by . M. 10,1 ‘$3A Lettor to n Young Naturalt and sonatas. o romatned unmarried, and diod ---Inseot-Foes to Vege- tho publlc, to need rehearsal herej yet th of the tunnel ind been reached, for auddenly the | TFetter and Introductory’ Poein by WitLtast In wir that [ can breattict) by Willlam Hownte o Earnie 8 oman | i 1827, in ioncliness and povorty. Tho saving putviley to need rehoarsal here; yet there | way honeath us changed—it vecame level—it pamk. | Cutnex Buraxy: and a-Practical Treatine for And surely Deatl's cold liaud has maich, e much, | 2 FV R ORI S Ketluka, uan | of Guetlie,* Who never wet Lifs bread with tears tation, ara varlous partlculars of his private bistory Teas | Then the locomotive hegan to push unward with | Apmaieurs. an the Cultvation snd Analyeln of About i we can tuuch! StorT" of“tha. Centoonial by author¥of | knows ye hiot, ya heavenly powera 11 s an apt : generally familiar.which every one will be Inter- :‘r_ln;!::r “l'::i"tf' umu;flt‘ it ‘.1"‘4:?.“‘“5“ to llm;lke Plants, _Chicago: = Moses Warren, 103 State " Al frlend of mine, 2 # % ** liclon's Bables:™ ‘‘The Stars for January," | commentary on hig career, Mozart began com- IOUSEWIFERY. ested to learn, from thoir fmportance In making | rather—in the inteHor of the tanncl, appeared il #:fi:';os,;‘:"f’uf,p; e e e it Yo Sy e knove! Blapteet. s Toocso0, e Ovn, Matice, | Doalt muslcal works whena more 4year-old; bridga; ** King | and tivo years later was playing tho clavichord 1 3 PRACTICAL COOKING AND DINNER-GIV- | 8 Just cstimate of his abllities aud his services. | 8o many will-'o-the-seisps; for the algnalmen stood 1t 44 the Iast time you ¢an Kiss % o "' by Lucy Larcom: '* Little Travel- | In a scrica of concerts q . 5 S i there with dazzling lantorns In thelr fiands, to cor- | all fts Leanty of blue and gotd, Is s fresh con ot (o ne ag e ¥ Hiarrl R i The citios of Saops, srengiog by ha ING. A nmAmNC Coxtaiixn Pnacrican v | George Armattong Custar was born in New | e that they T Lot posta, et Sofer | tribution toward populating the bistory, —n“,_.""‘:':’ (R ted et by Amalle. L Farmes - origosy | Mster In the cities_ of “Europe, Cichling by hig eIy or BIHES Avb i pos amrosy | Rumley, O, n 1830 Hisparents, stiliving,wero | axT know, Tha Hont Conis’hay bliherto oo % | jo o0 Lo poetry of flowers, Tho depart- U TRin tolF tallen head. o 1 Grizite," by Lanm, £ Richardss i The Grey. | S5l ah extraordinary sensatlon. At the age of TI0DES Gr ESTERTAINING AT TnriaRrass, | AmMODE the humblo but sturdy class of ploncers | empt from erious accidents. Qnly once, on the 3 D Not one of these atriking poems is switnont some | houni's Warning,» by Hezekiah Dutterworth: | & his syiplionles formed a part of tho pro- o X XK, 5 3 4] ot 24th_of May, 1873, it is said that two tralns en- | tnent of floriculture, one of the most beautiful 4 king po . N Lo ) 5 - | gramine In his London conces % “’l’lh‘n)nll\n“{c‘:l. P‘-”mfi‘:' n‘nl‘”z!'ml: lk‘l:w :‘;g: h;:lwl::"n:“y :?: “:fl l:m p:l.h mm" (Avlll.m- tered the tunnel at the eame time, cnmlu‘c inopvo- | yn the whiole range :)f Itterature, hassnot heen ;‘t;};“l‘:ydgl‘:?fi;fli‘fi: ;‘11":?:‘“!;,&3? ‘n:‘rmv‘.-:alu‘;fi:-{ fn('l{:rn‘::n;‘:giz; ::‘;fielcm{-‘n’-cm". O eanane: bihed AL I arper & Brothers, progr cstward, o great- | alte directione. fut, Ly u timely applicationof | co 0 extensively cultivated among us; and the | the myrtical veraex, **Enchanted,und you must | 12The Two Dorathys, ™ by C, ¥, Jackson; " tho brako, they wern stopped, and remained o 2 v .- The communicatlons that crowdl the domestic | Bandfather of Custor was onc of the troop of | {he kake: they ord, stobne: " Fhirty-ono | inviting opportunity tupublish an elegant, artist. | fecl the spell, and' recoznlze yuir own dmpalse— ?fé’fl?y'“n‘:'fi‘»?.'fi‘;"f-":'ulag' g dopartment of Tis Tnipuxe's Saturdsy Bup- | licasians surrendered by Burgoyne In 1778, who | mitiutes hnd elamsed. snd already o began (ah colle o Jourown, haweyer ato—tn that ol hirwiio Lol b plepmfi"'- witesk n Wbliie Tutheat ,,,-m,’,'g o | became enamored of the and he fought to sub- AIAr—ol!an'Hmmeltlnuor o Liliht which norated | 1crand well-finfshed work on a somewhat neglect- —aat 1n a pltcous hut, by ifjalmar itjorth Boyceeu 1+ KnotherDaylelt | almost without mumber. Te dled gt 5. by I, E. Scudder; ( time his first six sonatas wero published. At 16 Tfl’ 'l::‘;x ,,}',,':,:i‘," llg_:: cl:vmn:nhmlng. and h;d then " by ope; thirtecn o and 1," a Fairy Tale, | twenty-four plunol omonnmindsgfl:gr ;‘311";:; < 4 oo 3 ed but always delightful subject has beenseized | 1In & wood whern polsons grew! Hurglary —Pleture diawn by F. Opper; ** The Mendelssohn commenced his public [l feminine portion of our community tn matters | dUe and mado it bis own by adoplion. The | g0 gh] of S Gribier (TR esombiive mahed | {08t e ago. publishers, | 1€ sometimes st talk of Poe's welrd powors but | Qd-Tiine, Minsteele™ br. ¥ B30 Marto's | yha concort-roam whoo in bl bk oon C4eer 18 pertalning to their special province n the house- | Ilesslan soldier scttled in Pennsylvauln, and | ghipboard one hears tho cry ** Land ‘—Land!® % | Aoscs Warren. Tho poctic geuius, so happlly | hore,'}8 foemtliat sutpustes bis careful elabora- B PRI VLS Wil ot o0t g | already writtea musical works of all norts, somo ks Pt ] : 2 hold. But the repeated inqulries they proffer for thence his descendants found thelr way to Ohlo. ll-n.llnhm'l'nvuy countenance was written ** Light1— blended with au Intimate knuwledn’za of plu‘:fl-l :,:,.'::. ".h.?’,,‘{J,.‘,‘,J‘.‘,'f'g'fil"i’{.‘;n‘-';"'Rxfl’.fg"",‘.'fl .:;r Frog's' Plenlc,' by John Lewees,—' Droken | Of them of o very intricatc character; informatlon upon every polnt that falls within | Youns Custer galned hie carly education at the { LENLC 00 open alr onco mores thosunshine | and an almost worshipful love of flowcre, in | 8Lty to dramatize the most clusive ngds of the § (074, byn.;.'ou'nn':l::m e ottt ?)‘l‘r"eeh[la‘lnnuol? "unpr?n?tlnlf hfgauoflfl mx';]nslugm o 15, thelr clrele of home-luties prove that many of | district-sclioolinNew Rumley; sud,when10years | poured jta full raya ovor the monntain-peake: tho | tho gifted authoreas, supplied the power of | S hejC arc often simple pasesces fu Mew Piatte | fiots ol ng O RElelts f XOURR Contributar's bl “ The light of his brilllant genius was extin- old, he accompanfed a newly-married sl reen fir-trees and slender birches wore neen: wo work that move ong_inexpreasibly with their far. entt, extin: 4 - ng was lving around nua! , a1 A N H h £0.y N Y Y ¢, bt Tslons of Ignoranca ar no lcss 3 than they | 10F porton of the comulug sl year. Jo0ked Bk WhER 50 Yaa atome poHal\ICH 1O | S maeve 1t waman ot vt mers pons el e ol tho rorentteds | i Hiinun *Norway skt ares, | DAoL for musle, and bogan s sysiematle was durinj s pe 10 enteance Lo the tunnel.—upon this fortressof | 7 £ s U b 9 3 0T 3 ¥ composed sre surprising, for it Is an ignorance that s ds 3 period of his residence in D They bear wo much of fancifal similitude But o, the truest scarcher of the men, " by Hjalmer 1. ncl: ;3;:‘;,‘ “’{‘!;::ll‘-u!g’l?g numerous sonatas, and. before ho was 90 had g i Y A wier] Oty {rratlonal as it s fncxcusable, There are within | 20nFoe that Custer ontored upon o romance of | Hholuman intulleet, W e s the whole monntale: | my ferawn listory ; like hersell repayiog In the blown breath of English daisics walted. Lowre's, " VI, by F: a Tove whicl parallels the most futcresting Inven- | FARE, aroults whose entratla we had passed, with | \itiauch Interest all tho cherishing One of tho tendorcat poumng I the foley tale [ MiseD.,fnerAlly the reach of all women a sclection from any | gion In fictfon. Tho opening ficident runs That calla their beauty and thelr sweotnees forth. | called *“Tho Glit of Empty Iands, " andamong | by R, W, Gitde B 28 . . t s number of treatisesondomestic cconomy and on | follows: Lol i 351i"nfc'g'r”r:n':'fxf'n".'%kf&éf’n—m"fn“m!"n'i'“:'z |'h,: Hitherto the few bouks of the kind that hnd m“&'mfi "I %‘:)‘fér-' u‘I‘:‘l”'"‘ !I,“:e"ilirl'r{u'l: pre o] :finxllka Tablcs, et cookery, which impart thorough and systematic Coming from school one day to Mrs, Reed's, the | centre undorground. In truth, {t was not merely | come fromn the Auicrican press were cheap, i~ [ 3on S¢e ame thean pleces withomt auoting Liverworts and Ferne," by Instructlon in the varfous departments fucluded | toush, nuen-luhcdl freckle-faced boy was pertly | the scnsation of belng unco moro froe which ex- | slgniticant,und inartistic scxfodeclinos or duode- | them, because we espect the reader to go for them ““John Burroughe, " i fn housewitery, Al the detafls and_mysteries | cCosied by alittioxlel with black ver, Sewas | panded our btoasts st that moment, 1t was alen o | clinow, Tho Justfication of such luck of entor- | o the book, whore tiere ate muny that ‘e caupot [ **Gliosie. by Tsabella T, Hopkin written the operaof ‘ Almira. Among the works left n{whll death are fifty o) niga and twenty-six oratorlos. He shared “in fie afllle- tions that beset genius, wrote and llstencd to . 8. B, | compositions of "his closing years in the dark- 05},;']:1“5’!: ness of blindness. Ho died nt the ripe age of 75, e En | The boy Handel waa at 8 singer Iu the cholr of ihost )y rounded_und plamp, hier | fecling of pride and sntisfaction that” wo llved in | priso in porbagin fo be found In tho previous cn- % M sk Workingman's Home, " by Chiarlea Barnard of tho craft arc thereln discussed and explainéd | fattier's pet, an anly child, and natrally apolled. days when mica aseorkc caa posible. It may la Sition of the hatiun, - The. lteraturoof & reeeutly | b sls siinzans - Conime e Goame o e | RO arae Pl by T e o amard: | 8t. Stoplon's, Vienna. Defore he bad reached '+ , soclearly aud fully that any woman of averago | Like most lhslnlehkdrm‘.lmfcwn:rlrourl iogronai | caflols mivacio; butl o' mivacle wrodsit by | ceuaifisbed vouple foloms thu eamo law ss s | dhove colloniice widh xhcfiudmu‘»hmnme slmple | oAt the Window, by it 1. steddirds: & {‘;{n‘{ l’,’,‘,&'.,';},f,‘.’,c‘h:n&' e ho ol e e[ b ahe kncw, and sho knew that Custer was a atranger, z ] » soclal and domestic Hee, Wers a6 di ed wil X, melanzhol or on the Nlle, " corpe I, an; ho violin In an or- |7 Intolligenco can mako hersolf, witliout othier ald} | ho enid ircily, ne sho wwung on (he ate. ‘et | A book filled with oloquent and instructive | - Fiis now work on iante snd flowers has been | weaing: <" Anmworing & Rl ¥ anailioe totlonny | Dream & by 1 T S ehoian Sintam ¥ 10, by | chestra. Ho' was {8 A 8 when his first quartct - ° the completo mistress of them, preity faco dimpling with smiles, ** Hello! you~ - | brought ant with all accesaoricn of tho typograph- [ hetween mother ond child concerning I J. 6. 'Ho My Friend Moses.™ 'hy John | for stringed fns P Why Is 1t, then, that, sceording to thelr own | CUr BOYY" Thens frighioned at hor owh tomosl: }',;‘.';‘:fi;’,’,,i‘,';‘;,:’;’;;,;fit};“,.,’{,‘“l},‘,ld“;‘,‘;u:’,fd‘,’,,';“g( fcal nel, in tho excollent siylo ehaactoriatic of 1ho | deat: ang -3y BIAtbrict 5 the padient of th | Tiablorions o+ \hat Our Gharches Cost Ue, by | when Cobog Neaaments was produced, ez ! ) that, 4 iy furnedand fod o to huuse, . . tamas | overy subject, affonds a museun of literary and | [Lbllalicr, who spares no paine or cxpenss fn mak- | earlh-bound poema: - Folied Handw," the tragedy | James Morcison Whiton; ¢ Emuwanuel," by Con? | sleai composer and director, o with & saisry of © ° confesslon, there aro so many housekeepers in- | tho beginniny of Cytera drstand last love, | Tho e enjoguient not often dorived i lm.n:’ Jonk what It iauld ho tresting b this taste | uf aapiration boyond the power of nerformance, — stantla I, Iirooks; lca of the e 200 floring, freo lodgings, and table With ‘tho competent to exccute the dutles of their pecul- | Sveet, ‘arch faca uf that littlo girl waa tho fret rov- und discrimiation of hix countrymen for ndequate | n_ di e Wlas e | Dukic's secretarles” ami other ofticials.’? cnit something vory thoroughiy felt and $+The OMd Cabinel: Api elation to the wild young savage, whosa whole {dea | 8ingle volume. . rotuens to fustify hin_confidence and compensate | triumphant) ed. Certaln of th +* Culturc and Progres far officl This Incapacity fs an unhappy dls- | Gflf'was thot of pysical oxorcinc, wan s ioa S for the outlay. Accardinzly, *+Tha Floral King- | tiriner o it wwe 107 tne Rerce mincocHh i | Brlt-a-Brae, « o Hagdn dled, like Handel, in England, aftera . tinctlon of American women. Their European | chuse, of aomefhing else,—of anothor aido to Iife, EVOLUTION. dom* in by ‘mnch the haudsomest baok of the | which the eut-flowers of consolation are thrust | GALAXY for danuary (Sheldon & Co., New York), | @ 10ng 1ifc of trying viclssitudes. R sisters hiave a truer appreciation of the honor | 18Vas to him luve at first alghts and he then and | TUE DEVELOPMENT NYPOTIESIS: 1S 1T [ kind ever published, aslde, and the ineffuble loss thraugh death 18 con. Cantenf {Tho Administration’ of Abranam The gentus of Chaucer was mot developed "There are {520 pagos devoted to'the _description, | fronted, Such one Is thut calied **No Help, | Lincoln," by Gideon Welles: **Luctile's Let- | until fafe in life. Ilis “Canterbury Tals” and duty of ekil}fully adminlatering thelr house. | LIS 796ordcd an fnywned vaw that some duy that | * SUFFICIENT? Ly Jaxrs MeCos little girl should be his wife. He kept his vow President of P ton Coll: 10mo.. » | language, and poctry of as many flowers, the ntost | with ita tremendous close: ters® “‘Some Old Almnnacks," by Charles | were written w H v N holds, and, inevery rank and condition of life, | through many obstaclos, P 13':.! New York: Hovert Clanie & Cor ot P F"P""“I wectl: and ‘ornamental produetnof tho Gol cannot hirlp me, for God cannot break Wyllys Elllott; +To Walt \"!'"m°“-¥' by Jon- | his gift for lm‘:!il.\snlgat:&g?fi‘# 'ifl?‘n'é";!’.ffi&fiff 4 realize nnd strlvé to acquit themselves of tho Cuater had from ehildliood a strong predilec- There 1s unquestionably not n writer engnged | ¥5 vtable lkiinzdom having been earcfully sclected., s own dark law—~for my POOF FOFTOW's sake, quin Millers adcap Violet," = Chapters | which were compoeed ere e had adyanced far i i cach of thoro puges ara sroupod from fourto | +s\o Twa" Is anothier such a pocm, with that | MbIV to End, by William Black: **Julicton | yeyopd the tacred responsibllitics dovolving upon them ns | Hon for a milltary life, and, before hio wna 18, | i tho great controversy hetween Belence and | ten soloctiuns of posiry, HHistrative of the It | ateain of toia Hrony in 1t Which I somewnera fa)s, | the liaicony,” Uy Howard lyndon;, '>Our rime and manhood of bis futel- o : v ' The “Shiepherd's Calendar® wi mistress of a fomfly, There is & mischieyous | NAd Fesolutely overcome tho obstacles impeding | poyioion who, . on the side of the lntte a0 of sentfment af the flower to which the page [ f 3 althe i A which in th Rural Divinity," by John Burroughe; **Love's | oGt ¢ “Sheplierd’s Calendar” was pub- 3 his entranco to the school at West Polnt. By | Bellglon, who. ranged on tho s e oty | rupriatcd, Tacre arc about 1700 ‘of thuso | U feafix all tho pléces, and which in the poem, | Q0 A O R nke Dek'stes ~“¥hg | Hshed when Sponser was 35, and “The Faer motlor'prevalling in our country, that ladics pecsanal pllention ho sbtained Trony Genator | 14 mor ablo to give ls cause tho stout upt Fenn gleaned fram tho writings of ot joxs than | > G1¥ng Up the TWorid, " 1e a0 polgnant Tlead of Horelon, by dames s Frosds 1+aoe | Queen™ was written during Lix reeidence. on should not soll thelr dainty fingers with work, | Blugham s cadetship, although his father was | port of neute, sound, and fair arguinent, (han | 450 poets. A truc poetis instinct, combined with R “‘l""';’n‘"' '"fl% “‘VU"‘L"- mance,” byJ, W. DeForrest: **Deer," by 8. | Kilcolman Castle in Ircland.” He took uphis ¢ and that domestlc labor is ecspechally fgnoble, | opposcd to the politics of the party in power. | Dr, James McCosh. From his days of student- | 8 rare discrininntion and artistic tanto, has presided | 89, from the rulnsbe the world stone: @, Younz: ' On lteading Shakeepenrc: Playsof | abode on this estato in 1550; and. three years i Hence it fs unt 11 ‘The prepossessing qualltics of the youth sccured over the grouping of thvee liferary bonquets, AR | y¢iiat ofier teinpies must be overthrown, the Third Perlod,™ by Richan! Grant White; | after, tho author belng then 36, “The Fuor encc It is universally avolded, or miserabl, 4 ship In Edinburg University he has evinced rare v vt largely for o o 4 " “CAp! Y 4 > 4 : A ¥ | bim fh ted position. Hlis scholarsl il P ths pocts lave ever drawn largely for purposes of | “Founded lu sand or auow, Applled Science: A Love Story In Two Chap cen 1" ed, 1 : shirked, or delegatod to gorvunts, who are, an n | hifh 12 covoted position. Mis scholarship while | ocory of reasoning, which have been used with | {llustratian froin the floral Kiaiom of ature, and : tera" by Chiarigs Harpards *+ From Normandy o | (ucchy cbheared, whth an adutatory dedicd- clusg, notably dnekilied and freflcient,* Tho | 8t tho Atadumy was not profound, ashls plica | PEREIRS I diseusaing the most Intricato | GCrived not u little of tholr hest. Maplration from | Dut, hoaven cannot be butlt with Jeweled handat tho” Pyrencer, by llenry James, Jr.5. :+rne | Lon to, Queen Ellzabeth, When Sliakepcara disrclish of mothera for domestic concerns {s | 8 the foot of ihe clans of thirty-live with whom ant success (n digcusaing the most Intricate | 450 2amo eource, it Is but yuet. that tiey xhould be [ - Then-froi my owi 1 wein Ballsd’ of Constance,” ~ by William 'Winters | ¥28In his 20th year, hls * Venus and Adonis transmitted to their doughters, who, as a rule, | I'C gruduated, testifics. But Custor was one of | problemns. of theology, philosophy, and logic. | mnde 1o repay the debt by contrlbutingof thelr Giliter uf wuld, the eitts of iany landss 3 The Ileartlreak Cameo, " by Lizzie W, Champ. | W8 Fl"fi“ to the world, followed, a year later, lmll;‘llnl\'cd lu‘zr!fivlupwwumunlmod and tako :‘:3 {\_'\;t;{:l%r;t ufr?:?i'h:&lnafldc'd \}‘lmse llallur?lu Sinea the mooted hypothesis of Evolution has enflgu*mculmfihu Tmmnumcmmu Vofig.. || Tiloscastlly poriialAlng. v neys +*Monsienz DetLfile! .‘:}nlc-uagk of aec a.rfl{l‘:z t)’.‘:f:):rfigs{"’flfff'xm ‘:llc ag |rr|olml)1y on the cares of wifehood with no preparation ) 5 oG fose ¥ictorles | poquired popularity through the ekillful sery. | F2hfilnzdom 1t n lterature, Itravén nust hve fowers—after the worm bas cr refary of Legation,® by oy ool | W S s drtmas hefore o wns/ s are the product of {nspiration rather thi - q pop! y it sery- Whilo thus praviding liberally for tho esthetic | Hgarennus ce thin warm hus crosied flucnce,™ by Charles Catroll; **Driit-Wood, 80. Marlowe and Ben Jonson bad botl; - £ g‘l’l’; :11:;'?"‘0""““““ ot what Is really thelr Jife- purlcncel. o r $hn €X- | tccs of Darwin, Dr. McCosh has frequantly | andsentimonta) wanta 6t the public, 1t swan dectned AT Tt o eind thole breathe by Phitlp Galilbots +*Scientific Mincellany} | duced successtul plays before they were53; bnd ! In what light would a man bo held who Custer concluded his cadot )ife In the summer | written upon the question, and always with a i‘:‘i‘éi;‘é‘.fl"’.fit’c‘:{’& f:g:fl;;rx\él"g:r:n(l‘hn’t":«‘tfl_\‘l’d"'hfi :‘!;: 11aa made them white witli death? ;:;!C;Lr:cut fteratare;" ¢*Nebule," by the Jeremy Taylor was preaching to large mul captl- ; thould marry without an_cducation fn some | 9f 1801, sud In July reported for sorvics ot | display of learning and wisdom that command- | b, oC Y IO 0 N Facogntzed that. however at- | Heaven must haro muste-but the birds that siog AVPLETONS; JOURNAL for Jannary (D. Apple- | joted audiences is St Paul's Cathedrl, Lon- trade or profession fitting him to earn & com. | \Vashington. He wis immediately appolnted | ed from fricnds and antuzonists profouud re- | Foiis i orsst i o e e | R DAt div st i ton & Co., New Yarkl. Contenta: +io Wa. | 40ih 0t the ze of 16, fartable support for bis family? Why is I Licutenant of the Sccond Catalry, which was | spect R o ; % | Thither must waver, wounded Io the wing F'tivo N Bt b ¥ e |, Bacon entercd Cambridge 2t 13, and bec y Is 1t any ) pect. as woll as the flowers themrelves, the successful [ THithermust wacer, wound terfalls of tiio Northwest, " by J. Murphy; **The b mioro respectablo or honorablo for awoman to | then attached to the command ‘of Gen. Mc- | " He fs one of the clear-beaded, strong-earted | cultlvation of thens requires information, skill, and e ot Heir of 3ondolfo,” by Mary Wollstunecrafe | Bludent of daw at Grav's Inn nt 10, marry who b Dowell. Everybody kuows the successive steps | belleyers in the religiou of Chriatianity, who do | tante, no loss than patience, close attention, and Stelteys **Huinrich Tleine, " iy \Jantus Honri | Counsel Extruordinary fo the Queen o y a8 neglectod to educate herself in yurs I religi Cl vy Hiraven must bo Jighted—at the fallen light A AL 4 Browne; *‘Lake-Travel by Dog-Sledge,” by ton wrote his grand “** Hymn on the Nutlvity the stlenc ctie ¢ of his rapld carcer, and how, at the agre of 1 much sbeorvatlon. To make the work complete in | o moon. snd star, Y sclence and practice of housewlterv? The Dl " e of 25, | not fear any harm to thelr falth from' the dis- 0 i oty Tungled Theeads;" by C.M. | fnhis 21t year; and hls Arendes, Conius, and happincss and prosperity of the wedded pafr | 1¢ %38 wearing tho star of 2 Major-Goneral,—a | coveries of Science. Ho is perfectly nssured | iteclf,and not only o handsome book ’"rlhcllm‘;'g;; Afl,mal tice thiss bave e 1 X Nobinsons: yaun ado the earth 00 bright, depend quif : E . | distinction fair); ined by many a daring and | that trith cannot be overcome, thi toble of tho lady florlcuiturist, but a ueelu g 3 he Tower of Percemont,” by | Lycidas were produced while he wus still wler fope ho;lxw*:‘ i much Hpon: hm:l;lg{"{n manng- | Geihing “plm}' b muv,"lwh“g low 1o sped | the snd Lriumpuantly m“"‘."'_m’;‘h‘: l‘,‘::}"e‘;} tlcal book of reference for nli ihut I3 necosiary ta | To sy of Mrs, Plutt's pocms that they are mor- | Ggorge Sand; **Tho lHolly, " hyMarle Lo linrans | 5, The Paradies Lot was begun when e ws et D ¥ 10 pro- | f s Tove was known only to a few confidential tho proper care of a collection of plants, several | bld s crlticism quita too casy not to be contempti- Between Two Firca, by Albert Rhodes: | ahout 50, and was concluded within soven years T e e, aand yet how wolully, In w ma- | 4 oY R O L be Tariomant | fectly understands that muchi which Is put Tor. | depnrtments havo boen supplicd which are'entiraly | ble, That is sa plain tiat Yo hiuve not o inquire | **The Ghiurch-Clock," Uy Corellus Mathewa: | fooith 50y and was concluded withly soven vears. jodty of I;ulflncu. does sho fall to understand while ‘; catlet at )Xom"’uc Ehd his ru‘n l‘::!o;lsll Wi utlnm: \\lllll nollhuf th :cn n(dr orous of that cliaracter, ¢ ubout it; bot it 14 1o sclflsh or egotistic marbid- "T‘""‘i‘.“ und_ Its Pcnnh;‘.:: 'b‘y George M. | wocious genius i the lines: ! Ilt‘.lt to trafn herzelf to meet this vital truth. bty Yoe, D rom | examiuation. Hence he serutinizes and fnveati- The Floral Kingdom' {a ushered Into favorable { ness. In tho rushof thess hopeless tears, this Towle; 'Two Women—1842:" *+Out of Lan- : A v akes timeond also thought to conduct a | B¢rVice in the srmy were improved by visits to | gates fearlcesly, cautiously, every conclusion | notice with o letter ayl an introductory poem, in | heari-broken scorn of cowmfort, this unreconciled | don, " 'Chap. V., by dulian liawthorne; **The As yet a cllld and all unknown to fame, houschold; but t the same alluring spot; and yot it was not until | which 8clence nces, to discover whether or | fae ebnile, by that Neator of American poets, | patience of grief, Inthe dramn of tho race's s J, Wight: **Love's 1lsped fn numbers, for (he numbers cane. it Is as much a wife's duty to ¥ vances, " ¥ Mic- | Trall of tuo Berpent, by 1 Dodgs 'a8c0¢ devote both these to the service of tho family the winter of 1803-"3 that lic gained an Intro- | not b is decisive, and therefore to be taken as | Willlam Cullen Iiryant, wnoso love of natare, 8s | tlon; in the utter dewolation of ane woman's sor- Fenlty,"” by Mary ot asit is thut of the hushand, « And he ductfon to the young girl who had unwittingly | authority. In bis mquiries he fs nelther fright. | becomen tho teus puct, has Loen fllustrated by | row the univerial nogulsh of mortality ex- Tewple Nar, " by C. should be'oe choerfuly and ubemltingly oz, | 11 big heart captie éver stnco hcr o geeut | g o blasoy but calmly treals b videnees, | ARy Erdcefal it e hosttlon, " | premed, e ot patniem: 16doua ot gesme | N ) "Eaire o, | Samuel Johneun lnd proved s tremsudous erclsed ns his, ing of the atrango * Custer boy" nine years bo- | estimates thelr value, and dlscerns thelr Ieads | ornamontel otial inttor Tpol e ream Edrape, A DIy the Ditter Trath V.bnnp iy TSl B e it capacity for Hterary work long before he bad How scldum do we hear n man complaining of ":gfll according to tho exact mothods whivh pre- | engraved Ly Amorlcan artists, cxpressly fr ibis | rience through which all ‘men must pass, and the | POTTER'S AMERICAN MONTHLY for January | Feached }'"ifi!fiflf ;‘l’i '.”'f plceof Clmllwrwf\ i the toll, aud fatiguc, and auxicty Incident to hils vall lu the researches of Scjence and of Philoso- | work. Thered-line border, printed with an ink | reader need not be told that auch poems were Hved (lohn E, Potter & Co., Philadelphis). Con- | smong youthful pr igies fs open tono dispute. position us bread-winner. Why shonld not the' [ magnate of the Michigau village, was far above | phy, Thus his labors ald tho followers of | that has never, been surpusaed for dellcacy | befora thoy were writlen, tents: Jen. Washington at ‘Prenton and | The gifted boy died by his own hand at the uzo % Wwoman imitute him fu Lis chivalrous example of | YOUPE Custer In soclal'rank; but he swiftly rose | Sclence as well as of Religlon, because, his aim | and brightners, and the _fincly-tinted, There is, of course, n monotony n the book, but | Princeton: December and January,—Hundred | of 18, The Mlfe of Burns was cut off at thia B diligent and patient effort to sceure comforts | L0 hev level by dint of militury prowess, aind at | belng to find the truth, he is sagacious in scck- | snper-calendered ' paper, aro obvious beaus | It is lkoa rythmical repetition—not the monot- Yeara Apo," by Ambrose B. Carlyl same ape as that of Raphael, and he hud anluxurios fo s loved cncal” ¥ horo irurn | 1300 had the “happiuoss of ‘incetine e In her | ing iy nd Mberal ' acknowledging . whon | Uek; oRrNGHICH, xctllens and an” prOLlY | Smo Lheone n o Troanent. than Teneetueneinel | Bont s ha Lont. Whtth—a” Thke oy gy | Saroed Mimmortal fame at 37, A voluiu !fl'fi"“.‘uk?,’“"fil"{fl oAy “:;‘,i;“{gg,,‘,"‘,“ %’g){ :’v‘a‘l;‘l:?ltl]I‘;"}vfili*?«:tiéw;‘;-fiulg‘ruflxl:?rdc'p- o rc’i‘fi“x‘:fifl:pnpon combined under the general | HT0E0CS paled l“‘““"lc“ Nalls the ngravell) | Bar-sompsuation, 1680y b nestenc Mo hate an | ‘CRallG oA Adtic vase s By Blicabeth Oskey Beote l;{flo‘\?l:l'{n s puglrhhelsgu Vi o d 3 > § e-pingo and cover-tamp are’ unusnally attract- | clevation—a rupture—away from all commonness smlthis **The American Drama—} e " ; i i . pot_impose upon her tHo sume useful any | 10ve a8 in wan Custer bravked tio repuise. 1le | titioof *The Devolopment. Hypothcals " havo | Hive: MHcuwass pas henids Srmmeileans o | and hessinoss of trsrae T1om plL ominonneas | L s puicrican Drauin it Sus Upat | vas St Excon's s volume'of. postey pas pulr, busy occupation o tho home! If men nnd | Droke down the barricrsof her dignity by declar- | been printed or delivered on scparatc vccastons, | namental in ull Its parts, —a gem of which boi the | ness, more porhaps than In anything else, the | the Barracke, by Mra, Alice Ve Collier; *+Ef- | lished when he was 17, and he was only 22 when ¥omen aro truly partners in the heritage of Ing hie had met her befors and ghe” bad made | yet bear upon the samo subject, and are marked | author and tho pubhannrm y'wall be proud: and it | hook shows fimwm of artlstic faculty: we have figlea in Brans and Stone, bg Nelllo Hces Mor- | the opening cantos of Childe Hurold urgunr‘:«l. e, In_its dignities and rewards,—as they cer- the adyances, ‘The lady’s * freczing suggostion | by a unitorm driit of argunient. They will | should be eutfored to carry lf- brightness, beauty, | herctofore ad to blame the author for obscurity, ria; ** The Natly e of the Pacific States," | and he “awoke one morning and found himself talnly should be,—why ought. Lbo‘y not to share | that ‘he must be mistaken’ was met by the | awaken the deepest interest In minds which are | and rofinemcnt into every houschold in the land. of which we stlll find traces; and we could avo by Demwon J, Lossing, LL.D.; ‘+The Falr | famous.” 1Io died at 36. Colerldga describes ts biurden of tolll [t {s not easy to discuver | DOId reaponse, (Ol no, Tom not, It was—let | most capablo of unrrcchun: broed, impartial, v wlehed, for the sake of the wad umity which we l’:fl[h;l of the u'e:i::,ul_gzn " by David Mordoch; | himsclf as belng, from 8 to 14, “nrluylculdm». i ittlo en—e] v + » = == v, feel In the firvt two grroups of pooms, that tho **Wooed a1 Al Ross Nouchette Carey 3 ¢ m the equity of the custom which pormits n | M€ 8co—seven—elght—nine years ugo; you were | and logleal dissertatlons. THE BRAIN, entitled *SWith Chlhrre"n P had fm Hess In:)udm‘lf S Upward,™ by T, \ 24 dreaner, a helluo lbrorum ;" and he ‘was At 16 Popo had begzun his * Pastorals,” und at 23 had finished his “ Essay on Criticdsm.” Dr, ore The only daughter of Judge Bacon, the chief *1 Natew and Querio woman to pass a third, a balf, or a wi swinging on a gate, and you sald to e, ¢ Hello, - . THE FUNCTIONS OF TIIE DRAIN. By Davip ety gy YRUIETR e, | else unto the end. Yet {n college he displaved diys In the ploaaucos of s Llls ornre QRSP | You Custer bog § ™ The acquaintanca thuscome | OIS ** ANCIENT MARINER.? Fumn, 3, D.. F. It, 8. Memboraf the Noyal | She, Buve tholt churm, thelr gdin, lWfo-like | - Curront’ Momaranda" | Literaturo ™ "' Sel- | o acveral occasfons tha rich liagination that while her husbaud fs drudging at his businegs | ncnced wasbriskly pushied by theardent sullor, | ;L USTRATED BY GUSTAVE DORE. TiE | College of Physctane, cfc., ole, With Num athera, and ono feels o paluful crudenoss, almost, | _ thirty-four liiustrations. was his distinctive talent, The grave closed from morning until night; which pronounces it | 87d tho malden capitulated” and pledged her WIME OF THE ANCIENT MARINER. By ous Illustrations, Hvo.y pp. ew Yorl in thelr realistic humor after rpndlng" for {u | LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE for January (J. B. | over Keats at 25, and Bhelloy at 80, a proper thing for her to' lounge in the parlor, | Lroth to im befora the winter was coucluded | Sawues T, Cougntnax. Follo. New York: | U P lutnam's Sonn, Trice, 84,50, siance, 8o striking a pocm as thia: Lippincatt & Co.,' Phlladeiphia), Conignta: | Turning to tho greatest wurrlors of all time. and &’ most improper thing for him to Ho the | It was nearly a year before thie futher's consont Harpor & Drothcre, Chicago: Jansen, McClurg Dr. Ferrler, of King's College, London, Is- TIE ALTAR AT ATHENS, “‘Pictures from Spatn," I, by Edward Kine; | Alexander was but 18 when, after the battle of same thero or cleewhoro; which sanctions—nay, could be gaiiied to thelr open engazement; but & Co, known to Beicice ns ane of the most eminent 4 Tn the Unknown God," oTranslations from the Freuch of Krancols | Charones, fn which ha overthrew the Sncred even requircs—her tobe In company array af | 841y fu 1804 Gen, Custer boro his bride to tho | ‘A book fllustrated by Gustave Doro must | cercbral pychologists of the day, His re. | PEgAusemylife was iollaw with & pain & o e v e Tl Bardot the Thebane, hls fathor embraced him, least very afternoon, while Lo tinds oppor- | €aHD of is brigade, at Stevensburg. drw upon itselt tho erltical observation of overy | searclics huve followed in the direction poluted ASThG Reree iropiia atick iontimat ratns 1Y e, X1 . by Kile bl "'gl + My son, seck for thyself another king- l(lmlwlndunl). by Kllea 0 Fith Drederessarn dom, for that which I leive fs too small for i e ai. | thee At 20, Alexunder nscended tho throno ro Abhors s Vacunm, " by Williem 3, | LI 2 e e o irkland: **Even- | queror of the then known world, “Hannibal ac- *Tho Marquis of | companied his father on an armed expedition Ih‘by‘“u?urg )*?c- into” 8pain when he was a child of 9, rica " » £} : ! o e :‘:‘:‘:"’cfifi:“iflfé,gfimrfi“& ouly D:l?:‘:lflz)';v w,;',',’:,';',‘,“,’,f,{;',c‘,’,“(fl‘}{,,',‘(’,’;’1:{,‘“.:;.‘“,,,‘:‘ J['(‘:g:;' cultivatedmind, It cannot be gainsald that this | out by Fritsch and Hitzig, who, only six years'| cchuteiny reaticss volce sald **Why7"and * Why? generally too futigued to attempt tho core: Jlier cap thiat part of {t occurting in tho | French painter nosscases tho mightlest genlus | ngo, made tho important discovery that the cor- | Woundedsnd worn. Linelt within the tehit, mony, t montlis of lis career, A vallant defenso of | that bas been bequeathed to thopresent genera- | tex of the brain was tapable of excitation by w‘r\x::,"ygh ol Croncont cat Mg foidcd ‘-'l':"n!'." . But there Is not, we truat, so general an un- | the soldicr from the choice of rashness is under- | yon—-jt might even be asserted to tho present | means of electricity, Dr, Ferrler has demon- [ And¥howeda phsutom Aliar in my rovni. lingncss on the part. of housewlves to per- | taken and consure ls unaparingly adwtnlstored | coptury—of artists, Iits works recall in thelr | strated this imporiant fact by still more de | 1 was e Altar Faulat Athens saw. bah, form thelr whole v, - | to thbse who arc sccuscd of interfering with ds X ’ \l i I, | aud before ho wns 80 Lad completed tho mportant character of the lowlcst and | the fatal defeat of Juno 17, Whero tho hlame | which surpass oll other efforts of thelr kind In [ FOVEL WG, Iteresting bhories bl Periitbo | o bt fnefr odtrings on that suadowy stoge. ML feratute of the Doy Srontaly Qousipi™ | sar returned from the study of elogucnte under Iinutest dotalls portalning to ft. 1t Is bacause | 1ies cannot bo satiafactorlly determined uutil the | tho sublime conceptions they exuite. Dore hus | haye arouscd much discussion and no Httlooppo- | The Beyptisn worshined thers tho erocodile, CATAOLIC WOUL for Tanuary. (catholic, Pub- the shetor Apclloniie’ Avto, of Windes, at the Yomeu have falled, throuh want of tho righy | testimony on all sides snall bo elllted; but | 4ho samo wonderful power; thersare the same | sition amonz men of Science, which {8 good | - There tnoy of NIneren the bulh with winks; o O Ot o | tilex of Rame, From this time o was an activo traluing, to e 7 meantima the name of George Armstrang Cuse = . | Th fan th -Jifted mnlte, Vhittls AR EENE pmdoratand that dolostia work 640 | fer desorven. to-ba eld e mighest souos, | transcendent posslbilitics within his grasp; but, proof that thoy carry weight with them, al- | Ty R oSt Wi dhiag ate’ brishe sisge. e e e Neriae Posttionrs | participant in pol(tieal affairs, but mono, of his b 4 o hough they may not “be altogether convincing, . 44 = exalted into i -incart, requiring for it ador | He Who bore It was o trug horo, and will bere. | alas! he missos tha helghts ho should reach, for | Higiih Loy 1oaY BUE 6 CLPECLIT systematle | Thero the wetrd Drutd hetd hism i Johtue: o, :';1!"“? mfif,n )‘31]:"‘.',":.: T ‘33.‘,‘,',.,:5,'5'3’5 e quate cxecutlon tho excreiso of ull tho wit ang | Barded s such in the future history of his { lack of discipline and self-control. Thero is In expositlon ot the neculiar views to which Dr, ere for the scorched aub of g ingenuity that can Lo _brought to country, bisart o Titanle strongth that evokes amare- | Fo beon led by hisinterprotation of the | The torridenake was hissing shary Army of the Interior, and at 80 wus the First that they haye come to regard ftus Ekuuma u‘x'a Tho account of his life as written by Capt. | ment aud admiration, Rt 1t talls alort of the ro- ::.'fif,‘_.:l;c‘;“g.umm el 1,‘“ atidlos upon the | Andthere tho Weatera savaze pald hle rite. Puters % 3odern C‘E,‘,‘,‘“ln on ""a""h“]"'“fd‘i"h“ ".‘II‘:‘,:‘]“ F{::‘L’-‘-_ degrading. Thero fs sctually ns brond o fleld | Whittaker would havo galned by compression; | sults it should produce, because of the careloss | aution 6f fuo cerebrospinal systom. - Tiis ex: | *Alant" the Sorlem darkly mutterad there: Chirlstman Legend:™ Inco, tms ot liowing the selection to by | | for tis cployment of genfug and learning, and | Yot it {8 an entertaining narrative, and furma & | wusto of its forco on hastily-studicd and uatin- | periments in vivisection and researchies in cor rahmia!" tho Jewrled fndirs of the Fast. vents™* *The Yearof Our Lord 18783 Lttt Bl B e i ‘whatever high endowments s woman may pos- valuable contribution tu the records of the late | fahed subjects. arative anntomy are coucisely and clearly re. | & through thelr spices, with & languld prayer: Publlcatto clther caroful or complete; yet they sufiice to tess, in her domestlu sphere, s there s fu 'the | CIv!l War. Appended tuthe maln portionof the | ~ Batiafied with bis Imracnse dowry of Imagina- [ [y, and thotr “bearlnss. Hpor whyslolory and rist?” alntly auestioned maoy s palrpriest. | PYOTESTANT EPISCOPAL ALMANAC AND | show that the statement is uot smiss which whole wide domain u}’ s ac work {8 an impressive sketeh by Lawrence he ol i{ " 1 L s # CHE 9 DIRECTORY for the Year of Our Lord 1877 | avera that geujus makes {tscll knowa beforethe man’s activitios, As b4 4 of the Ittimney which f tlon, he is content ta let ft remal for the most | payeliology unhesitatingly ndicated. Thiore {8 | Aadstili tho Athentan Altar's glimmering Doubt (I Whittaker, Now York; Mitchell & Hatheway, | ago of 80; uch execuitlyo abillty as would it out a Grat- | Darrett of the lutlmacy which for miany years | part untanied, and express itsolf fu every man- | 1o reserve i Dr, Ferrder's fulth fu his own de- | \Onailre gjona—avermors tho came. ' 14 9 ¥ " J - Tato financier can find abundant avenues of ex- | Uhited Gon. Guster fu the Louds of fricudship | sfer of wild and grotesque fautasy, It 1s not | ductions, and ho therefore writes with what bis | Yayahtenre ¢ or Chicazo), v o i 7 naine: HUKCH N, o of Our Lord nditure in suporintendiufg tho econvnty of & | With tho talented actor. desirabl that {ts character should bo changod, | opporients declaro to ba o onc-aided MANDCE: | 1113 Misaanrd for arars o Iocis onnrire to | CC sttt Rbaconn Tram Bocioty, Now SPARKS OF SCIENCE. useliotd. A"f' amount of | uvention — but sulidued to the control of a judgment rene | Agalnst the influence of his not unuatural sel find, fn (N iy el f Aoy Piatt's, the dovelop- | York: Mitchell & Tatheway, Chicago), M @n bo employed fn devising ways JLTALY. dered sensitive and stern by an obedlent recog- | partisanship, the students and professors of | ment of her genlus rather than her mannorisme, | AMERICAN HOOKSELLER for Dec, 16 (Amer- THE BLINDWORM, . od - means (o “secura the smooth, and | ITALY FROM THE' ALPS T0 SOUNT ETNA, | nition of th aims aud requirements of Avt, | Kelence, to whom his book 1s addressed, will | Guf goniusce aro not sa. many that wo. con afford News C A writer In Hardulcke's Sclence-Gossip, who 1s Roiseless und_harmonfous play of the domestic Edited by Tioxaw AoLruus Tuontors. fllus- | There fs no cenius exalted above the necessity | doubticss bo sufiice : lcan News Compuny, Now York). 1y guarded, The work ia | tohavo any of them fall a proy to accontricity of | LITTRLL'S LIVING AGE. Current numbers | g great lover of pels, is rejolcing fn the sdvent ' : mechivery, The most prec trated with Upwarda of One Hundred Full-Page | of sub W, Iaw d of . vi solf-concelt—~which way madness und Browning- (Littell & Gay, Boston), 1 ok tarto nd fesling ean sosti: Eorfocdoriiic | und Three Hundsan Smallor Engravinge. . Failse | autys muy Bove, toe kron. Darer vt bj, | profusely “,',‘f,:{.’;."fi;‘,;‘,é,’,fi‘,‘“ e AU o | fam e, o | ORI Wiir—conent aumbers | 0 s ivsrlum of o brood of Blladvorme Gl ment and fruition fn tho beautiful work of pp. 408, c{:fl ‘\,'prk: Scrivner, Welford & Arm- | qeieurably greater were he to appreciate and publishers. né‘ffv l‘fflwldu Now York), guls fragis), The reptile is avovivaporous, 3 s . A 14 3 . 8. M. J Y lisbing rendering regularly-rocurring ovents of overy- | 200% Hadley Brothiers; and Jan: | poyd bufors the Inflexible ruls set over ail hu- B, TRl Tari 2 Giber Taroats St 8- 3 C, fur Docember (Repubils Pdb and produces from seven to thirteen young at u day lifo & succeasion of plctues and posma %’;‘f{,fi':fi heE:'ea:[::e:f-(n l‘"'l::"' #:3: tlon | AN facultles. " In examiniug his picturcs, and ART AND POESY. . Rl o PR Nabiuiton, 1 &2 for January (8, | birth, Theso are caveloped In thin kiniko , his 1s nelther sentiment, nor ideality, nor preparation | acknowledgig thelr extraurdinary vigor and | vioLET, WITH EYES OF BLUE! Illustrated BOOKS RECEIVED, 1. Wells & Co., New York). sliells, from which they emergs soou after Ig:mg'dh |,'mm’1,1,,, of practical demonstra- | Of thia wnrktt':lr the hollday demand. Without | boldness, there Iu‘ulwuyn the rnllulnl Aelmp ?j h‘ the Autho? L. Cuanksox. Hoyal Octavo, | ACOMMENTARY ON TIE HOLY SCRIPTURES: iy beug extrudod, The young ones in question, nder N"{, amily-roof in the civilized | restrictfon the resources of the hook-maker | how much mure his genius might hiave achieve: Philadelphla: J. L. Slbole. CRITICAL, DOCTRINAL, AND HIOMILETICAL, FAMILIAR TALK. wero, when soveral weeks old, * very lively aud world, There noderate fncome, il 3 had it not defied ad- Lect, G wuficlont. resoingion put usoos iy | 180} tho sumptuousuoss of its constructlon | REVCULATN TIEKL etudys hech it nok Ueled ot | havo seon this yoar has tio tuviting titls of | neciioh with'a" Number of kminent Kuropesn | GENIUS BEFORE TILEE AGE OF 80. | gy iihyund Swere o littlo mors than three an creato a panorama fu her diulng-room, 'with | From the deslgns on the cover to the last 1ne | grawing and of tomposition. , “Violet, with Eyes of Bluel" It consists of | Divines. Translated from the German, and Ed- | The assertion was made, the other day, that fnches long, of & beautiful slivery greentshe the repctition of each meal, that will dolight tha | of the letterpress, it will successfully bear | 'Tho weird, ghostly *Riino of the Anclent | & scrlea of exquisite water-color skotches aud ited, with Addliion, Orlginal and Solected. bY | genius securcs recognition beforo the age of 80, | o o l.t:v back, baving s dark line runninz :‘.:E‘:,‘,:;::, woll aa tho Bustatory souse; but can | searcling fnspection. Its editor, Mr, T, A. Mariner larich in subjucts most cangeulsl to | poncll-drawings, Intorsporacd with the datntlest | o nSindlary of Varigus Lva while the rewards of talent and industry aronot ‘f:;’,'l oppostto the eyes, whero it slightly ior apartmcnts at ull timea a scene | Trollope, has an enyiable renown as an historlan | Doro's pencil, It 1s cusy to sco that his braln | verges, Flowers form the subject of most of | tion recclved until after tho age of 50. Tho remark | gihe ) S0 Loie the vents the belly Is black ¥ was a striking one, and challenged Inquiry as to and gh;"y.n i Ofrefined attractivoness that will affect theminda ot Italy. His resillence In that country has ex- | 1as reveled in the wild, Illwlflllll y Vllll:glo 295 | the devices, and tholrgracoful beauty and tender theyreciso amount pf truth on which it {s based. The Blindworm belongs to tho order of *'lis- of itsinmates likea charming composition ested by the text, uutil It was in a o musie or poetry, ‘Tho pmduguuu o‘}"m,_,h ,'n': tonded beyond twenty years, and during this h:(um .Im 1o that In which Coleridge rioted | meanlogare skilifully portrayed with bothbrush YIOW TO LEARN THE SENSE OF THRER Sults is worthy of the noblest powers, and | Deriod ho has dovoted himsclf to o study of fts | when under the spoll of oplum. Verlly, genius | and pon. Tho designs are marked by thelr | “RiioUSAND FRENCH WORDS IN ONE IIOUR: | There aro exceptions to all rulvs, as atritcadage onts? (S idia) Dich £ Greates o satlsfaction unsurpassed gy any pubhe | past and prescut 1fe. Its exgorior is famillar | s a form of {nsanity, and Dore {s ofio of the | artistic arrangement and thelr fulthful tinting, A Lxuson By Piovsason, GRAVUATE OF Tt | qociares; but lot us ce whothier, {n & mafority ard-scrpents? (Saurophidia), which forms a trlunpli to him through travel; and Ite’ beuuties of ns- | maddest of those who are born mad from a sur- | Tho lithographers—dicasrs, A. Hoen & Co., of | - Fapwcit Univeasiry, Paper. New York: Dick J ) it el link between the lizards and the true snakes, It ture, its treasures of art, and the tragedy and plus of Imagination overbaluncing and subordl- | Baltimore—have executed thelr part of the -tl‘mg:r?hl. » & < of cases lllfl!d?nl 0 cstablish the rule, the men varles fu length from eleven tu Afteen Inches, 4 Y natiog the stable qualitics of the mind, It s, | work ldmlnhl);!'nnd reproduced the coloring | DICK'S RECITATIONS AND READINGS. No. | who have mccomplished the most NMlustrious [ gi"1, conted with small scales. Jts gencrul not 1 iad it not scorned the helps aud restraints of vl 3 NI | . @ woman unjmln%ll_ have been called upon to perfect fn every de- | 1iad it nut scor: ot e etod a: | , Tho lovellest thing in book-covers that we | wimit H"fi',‘;J:::':‘-“nr:»fi'lffu!:!,:mfpl';:Al’::'gtm’- healthy, haviug grown about half an Inch slnco We'bave no doubt that “JL IL" feels as fuch prido and huppiness n the adornment of er hivine as shie docs in the writhy oks | romance of ita human charactor have revealed | peyertheless, a divine maducss, and its ccstasics | with true_and delicate uflect, The pencilings [ ~ 2. A CaneruLLY-CouriLen BELEcTioN oF Pixcks | works have given slgnul evidenceof tholr powers 5 > aod that her success in cauérl‘mm »fi;fifififi&’mfi thelr secrets to him as the reward of dlligent | are to he cn“led. s its vuxnrlu; and weakncsscs | aro also excellently done, belug well-drawn and Exciumveiy Desioxan ror REcravion om | o early ‘fig' ln!h(hvlr i » color Is silvery-gray, & «dark linc running fodu of decorating o room, now with Japancss | qbacrvation and fnquiry. are to be commiserated. full of expresslon.” The poems are the counter- | .. RLeantng, z-m;u liy \MI-LIAH B, DWK‘-‘ mo., Tho ™ Vits N W tho firat work of Dants slong tho back, and often rows of spots on tho fans, and again with green and flowering things | * Too skotclies Included In tho volumeto not | Bt wo would ot from the sbove romarks | parta of the pleturcs, embodylog thasameprotty [ _Dp. 163 New York: Dick & Fitzgerald. 6 dovel te lirdd wark o s | sidos, ‘Tho ereaturais perfoctly Jurmless, ite Irom the ‘woods, s aa gratoful to her true vketclies Included In tho volumeNlo nob | gy, n", (ot ract from the genuine merit of these | concelts and refined tato. WABLINGTON: A Dmaus i Five Acta. By | was published in 1500, although It 18 commonly ( y.u) yying unablo to penctrute the huwnan skin, Woman's Leart us that which comes from tho | 8¢¢m to bave como directly from lls peni but | rumarkable (llustrations, Thero is s vivid | _ The suthor of the work (s alsdyof about 34 | MamtinE, o DeG: L ) YEEth o H] '+ | mssumed to have been written in 1205, at which A Use uf her talcnts in tho construction of @ | thelr excellence Is an indorsement of his capact- | majesty and v aftiuence of faucy manifest in | years of age, and a relative of Bishop Clarkson, | 1 8 Author of, "{.’3‘,‘""{2‘,{.‘. Joehlar. | date its author wos 30 years old. Tho “ Divina “'l’n."’““‘ It '““"P"n“' bite, "“:"‘ it does Hovel, or an easay, or a sony. Khe knows the | ty for spproviug good work, The description | them Which chpracterize all of Dore’s work: Lmnerl of Chicago. Thia s her first venture DRAMATIC i,'u"o""”,“'u AND CILARADES By | Commedin" was completed twonty-iva years only on provacution, Its movements are very uf. Which every woman should learn, of calling | of scenes from tho Alps to the Arno fs by Karl | aud there aro llkewlse the faulty drawing sud | before the public. aud {t {s to be hoped that its | DAy o athor of **T'arlor Acting 'Chl! { D" ) fel) slow, from which It {s commouly called the Slow- nto service her best faculties in the execution Btieler; from the Arno to the Tiber, by Id- the heedless Infidelity to nature which too fre- | geauins artistic mefit will be rewarded with ades, ctc. 10mo,, pp. 170, Now York: Dick later. The weight of Dantc's name may safely | worm,—u miore appropriate uume thun that of 3 of the humble y H . eclation. The u t shoul ; 2 be thrown on thoe afllrmative side of our ques- | Blindworm, sait basquick, keeneyes, thouphver) r Landaare ver veh 1o acomptie® "4 O | ward Puulus; and from the Tiber to Etas, by | BHias which taspires. i o8- sesinious bbo | bo such as o, 1ndico the: suthorss pomeverence | ol omld, s OF GEN. HYAN.THE | thons ot vebshe pout had found rest 1 (e | Siamil1ia o cobaia of worines aveasas wrd wilrs, Mary F, Henderson, whoso baok on | Woldemar Kader. Thése writers show an {nti | of thelr faculties for the Interpretation of truth, | in the twin arts of paintiog snd poesy. CUBAN MARTYIt, By an Old Comrade. Yaper, grave from his many sorrows before his gentus | the emalter 1nollusks. It s sbutident in G Practical Cooktug " has furnlshed the text for | mute acquatutance with the cltles aud land. | I8 wanting to thls gifted artist, to_whom wo ——— New York and Chicago: Scully & Co. be b cciated by his countrymen, | DBritain, and is found In most parts of Europe. ¢4 comments, 1s’ another cxample of & wous they dell T .ol 1 ‘must still do homage even while e censure. POEMS BY MRS. 8, M. I8, PIATT, DIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF 80K oF Tig | Dekan to bo apprecialoc by Yoot | It lulibits wools atyl alan dry, saudy places. W of intellect and cultura wiio hus @ Just ap. | oo by ino). dclineate, and a cultivated faculty — "Atlantio Yonthty for TEATLY HEXLLENS OF TITS CITY OF OnicA. | Lowell remarks upon the outward fullure of | Tho reptilols extremely Umid, hiding"1n bolzs Meclation of the exalted offics and ano:l.u.nl{: of striklug off graphic word-plctures, A sam- HABDERTON'S BECOND BTORY. Thosswh Nave sosd (A" Women's Poens . Paper. Number Slx, Chbicago: Forgus | hislifo: * Our nineteenth century made an {dol | or fu nioss to escapo observation. When tlea ot tho liousckeeper, ‘Tho cuts which tllus. [ Plo of tho narrative talont of Karl Sticlor Is | ppyp ARTON EXPERIMENT. By the Author 2 ¥ toTales " will think | Feinting Company, of the noble Lord who broks bis heart fn vorse | frightened it hus u babit of contructing itsclf trte her vuluna plaioly declare how beauty | given In his firat chapter, describlug the rosd Jiiolems Bables. Bqusre 1000 kp 205, | 424 Voyage to the Fortunatelales " will think | ,p sy NEISON 1N THE FORECASTLE; on, | Ofce avory six monthas but the fourteenth wag | forcibly, becoming so little that it suaps fu two tia fnd an endless cxpresulon in the various | through the Mont Cenis., It was just after the Nork: G, B. Putnaa Sous. " Chicaga: | 8 new book from Mre. Piatt amovg the best | * uw Srowrseaw's CLus Amoxo Tie Wiaixks, | ONCO overy bt P Iike a plpe-stem un belug struck. Other species toductions that cmsuato from the kitehens | complotion of the great tuntiol fu 1571 that (he | Janen, McClorg & Co. FPrice, §1. glfta of & year which s not been poor Iu verse, | Dy flaunt Cisziuuss, Author of i\ Gunboat | ducky ouough to produce, and mot o make ad | of tho suakerliku lizands pouscss thio sume re- neas * wompunts Instinctive craviog for daiuti- | writer traveled uycr tho foute; abd his sened- | Tho publle may congratulato itselt upontho | whatever clue it bas lacked. No woman now [ gerieny Sie, 10mer, pp; [0% Fhiladelpblas ) idol of, that ravest carthly plienomenoa, & uian | markable fucully. | by (ihie Suuks | (Onic i sud - oleguneo can bo “gratiied in | tlons during the lung, bluck paseage through | advent of an suthor who has an unequivocal | writing has & moro chiaracteristic style; and 1o | qup OHILDREN'S PARADISE. By Katnpsixx of genlus who could hol (nufizz lrx'l;:u(:'il dn’z ‘m' Bhaten: furciies s well-nown aample: This -Tedlpes and directlons which theso woodeuts ace . 3. Habberton displayed o remarkablo capacity | may be sure that no waveriog or uncertalo ‘ap- [ Mongs. Square ddmo., pp. 176 New York: | U} 500 onystidvdness gave bim uu exalted rauk | length of two or three feet, varlousl colored, Eumpny aro . valiuble olfurlig. 1 Abcrican | tare, Wi o n‘f%;iflut‘ifmz'}n' e bumrue) by | for mnusing b @ b Puimamis Hone " dhleagor Jsusen, Mo- | B8 e enitoct, engincer, and | and hayiug tho prfect sppedrance of % serpents caders; and, fn this second ef- cal will bo made to your futerest, 1f therange Clurg & Co. Pri 1,50, d Mowen,” ‘Phoy treat the culivary artas s bi b | wolocomotives, Aho lawps frolla * hafe-g | # 4 - . RS ] ek rtoie e g | SVE G m“ S'NAX. Py E. L. Axves- | sclentist. eviuced tho possossion of extraordl- | Tho owber of the youog fawily of Bliud

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