6 Woman's Work In the Middle Ages. "Kin Arthur's sword, ExcaHbnr, 'Wrought br tho lonely maiden ottlie Lake, Wine ears she wrought it, mttln In tbo deep Vl on tha bidden baoi ol the luili." Sir bedivere's heart misgave him twice ere ho oold obey the dying commands of King Arthur, and fling away so precious a relic. The lonely maiden's industry has been equalled, by many ot her mortal sisters, sitting, not indeed upon tho hidden banes of the hills," but in all tha varied human habitations built above them . since the days ol King Arthur. The richness, beauty, and skill displayed In the needle-work of tho Middle Ages demonstrate . the perfection that art had attained; whilo hurch inventories, wills, and costumes repre sented In tho miniatures ol illuminated manu scripts and elsewhere, amaze us by the quantity as well the quality of this department of woman's work. Though regal robes and heavy eburch vestments wi re sometimes wrought by monks, yet to woman's tasto and skill tho greater share of the result must b attributed, - the profe-sional handi being those of nuns and their pupils in convents. The ine of woman m tho-ie days was extremely uonotonous. For tho mass of the people, there hardly existed any menus of locomotion, tho swampy state ot the land in England and on the Continent allowing lew roads to bo made, ex eept such as were traversed by pack-horses. Ludiea of rank who wished to Journey were borne on litters carried upou men's shoulders, and, until ttie lourtcenth and tilteenth centuries, lew representations ol carriages appear. Much a conveyance is depicted in an illustration of the Romance of the Bote, where Venus, attired in the fashionable costume of the tilteenth con tury, is seated iu a chare, by courtesy a chariot, but in fact a clumsy covered wagon without springs. Six doves are perched upou the shafts, and fastened by medieval harness. The god dess ol course possessed superhuman powers lor guiding this extraordinary equipage, but to mere mortals it must have been a slow coach, and a horribly uncomloriablo conveyance even when horses were substituted for doves. Au ordinance ol Philip le Bel, in 1294, forbids any wheel curriases to be used by the wives of citi zen, as too great a luxury. As the date of tho coach which Veuus guides is two hundred years later, it is dillieuit to imagine what style of equipage belonged to those ladies over whom I'hilip le Bel tyrannized. With so little means of going about, our siBters of the Middle Ages were perforce do mestic; no wonder they excelled in needle-work. To women ol any culture it was almost the only tangible form of creative art they could com mand, and the love ot the beautiiul implanted in their souls must find some expression. Tho great pattern-book ol nature, tilled with grace lal forms, iu ever-varied arrangement, ami illuminated by delicate tints or gorgeous hus, suggested the beauty thev endeavored to repre sent. Whether religious devotion, human affection, or a taste for dress prompted them, the needle was the instrument to eilect their purpose. The monogram of the blessed Mary's jnaioc, intertwined with pure white lilies on the deep blue ground, was designed and embroidei ed with holy reverence, and laid on the altar of the Lad.y-eliapel by the trembling hand of one whoso borrows had there found solace, or by another in token of gratitudo for joys which were heightened by a conviction of celes tial sympathy. The pennon of the knitrht a silken streamer athxed to the top of the lance boro his crest, or an emblematic allu sion to some event in his career, embroidered, ii was supposed, by the hand of his lady-love. A yet more sacred gilt was the scarf worn across the shoulder, an indispensable append age to a knight fully equipped. The emotions of the human soul send au electric current through the ages, and women who, during lour years ot war, toiled to aid our soldiers in the irreat struggle of the nineteenth century, felt iheir hearts beat in unison with hers" who gave, with tears and prayers, pennon and scarf to the knightly and beloved hero seven hundred jcars ago. Not only were the appointments of the war riors adorned by needle-work, but the ladies must have found ample scope lor industry and taste in their own toilets. The Anglo-axnn wo men as far back as the eighth century excelled in needle-work, although, Judging 'from the representations which have come down to us, their dress was much less ornamented than that of the gentlemen. During the eighth, ninth, and tenth centuries there were lew changes in Jashion. A purple gown or robe, with long yellow sleeves, and coverchief wrapped round the head and neck, frequently appeals, the edges ot the long gown and sleeves being slightly ornamented by the needle. How the ladies dressed their hair in those days is more difficult to decide, as the coverchief conceals it. Crisp-ing-oeedles, to curl and plait the hair, and golden haircauls, are mentioned in Saxon wri tings, and give us reason to suppose that tho locks of the lair damsels were not neglected. In the eleventh century the embroidery upon tho long gowns becomes more elaborate, and other changes of the mode appear. From the report of an ancient Spanish ballad, the art of needle-work and taste in dress must Lave attained great perfection in that country while our Anglo-Saxon sisters were wearing their plain long gowns. The fair Sybilla is described as changing her dress seven times iu one evening, on the arrival of that successful and victorious knight, Prince Baldwin. First, he dazzles him in blue and silver, with a rich turban; then appears in purple satin, fringed and looped with gold, with while feathers m her hair; next, in green silk and emeralds; anon, in pale straw-color, witn a tuftf flowers; next, in pink and silver, with varied plumes, white, carnation, and blue; then in brown, with a splendid crescent. As the fortunate Trineo beholds each transformation bo is be wilderedas well ho may be to choose which array becomes hei bebt; but when "Lastly In white she comas, and loosely Down in ringlets floats her nuir; 'Oh,' exoiauni the Prince, 'what beauty! Ne'er was Princess half so fair.' " Simplicity and natural erace carried the day after all, as they generally do with men of true taste. "Woman is line for her own satisfaction alone," says that nice observer of human nature, Jane Austen. "Man only knows man's insensi bility to a new gown." We hope, however, that the dressmakers and tirewomen of the fair Sybilla, who had expended so much time and invention, were handsomely rewarded by tho Prince, since they must have been most accom plished needle-women and handmaids to have got tip their young lady in so many costumes and in such raoid succession. A veiy odd fashion appears in the thirteonth and fourteenth centuries, of embroidering heraldic devices on the long gowns of the ladies of rank. In one of the illuminations of a famous psalter, executed by Sir Geotlery Louterell, who died in 1345. that nobleman is reoro-ented armed r.t all points receiving from the ladles of nis lamuy his tilting helmet, (shield, and pavon His coat-ol-arms is repealed ou every part of nis own uress, aim is emoroidercd on iiiaiof his wile, who wears also the cret of hernwn tutmltr Marie de llainault. witfe of thn trt linkn of Bourbon, 1J54, appears in a corsage and tram of ermine, with a very Herce-looking lion rampant embroidered twice on her longgowu. Her jewels are magnificent. Anne, Daupbine dAutrgne, wito ot Louis, second Duke of Bourbon, uiarri(i in 1371, displays au heraMio dolnlim of verv nmlnter Manor! u nun one sioe of her corsage, and on the skirt of tier long gown, wnicu, divided in the centre, seems bo be composed of two iiiflerent stutls that opposite to the dolphlu bei with fleur de lis. Her circlet of jewels is very elegant, and is worn Just above hr brow, while the hair 1s braided close to the. fe. An attendant lady wears neither train nor jewels, but her dress is likewise formed of differ ent material, divided like that of the Daunhinn. Hix;iittle parrots aie emblazoned on the right side, one on her sleeve, two on her corsage, and three on her skirt. The fashion of embroider ing armorial bearings on ladies' dresses must have given needie-women a vast deal of work. Jt died out IP, the fliteenth century. It was the enstom in fetiHal times for knightly familus to send their daughters to the castles of their suzerain lords, to be trained to weave and embroider. The Voung ladies on their return home instructed the more intelligent of their If male servants in these arts. Ladies of rank in all countries prided themselves upon the number of these attendants, and were in the habit of passing the morning surrounded by their workwomen, singing the chansons a tone, as ballads composed for these hours were cUei. F.Rtienne Jodelle, a French poet. lt7:, ad dressed a fair lady whose cuuninc fingers plied the needle in words thus translated: I naw ihoe wnavo a web with caro, Where at thy touch lrcsh roses grew, And mnvolled they were lormod o lair, And that ttiy heart mesh nature knew. Alas! how id o mv surprise, Mil oo naujiht so plain can be: Tliy cluck their richest hue Bupr llcs, And in thv breaih their periumo lies; Theirgracc and beaut.) all are drawn fromthco." If needle-work had its poetry, it had also its rrckdnu gs. Old account-books bear tnauy en tries of heavy payments for working materials used by industrious queens and ladies of rank. Good authorities btale that, before tho sixth century, all silk materials were brought to Europe by the Seres, ancestors of the ancient Bokharianu, whence it derived its name of Senca. In 651, silk-worms were introduced by two monks into Constantinople, but the Greeks monopolized tho manufacture until 1BI0, when Roger, King ot Sicily, returning Irom a crusade, collected borne Greek manufacturers, and estab-lu-hed them at Palermo, whence the trade was disseminated over Italy. In the thirteenth century, Bruges was tho great mart for silk. Die stutls then known were velvet, satin (called samite), ami tatleta all of which were stitched with gold or silver thread. The expense ol working materials was therelore very great, and royal ladies con descended to superintend sewing-schools. Kditrta, con.ortoi Edward the Oouiessor, was a biyhlv accomplished lady, who sometimes intercepted ilie master oi Westminster scnooi and his scholars in their walks, questioning them iu Latin. She was also skilled in all lemi nme works, embroidering tho robes oi her royal husbaud with her own hands. Of all the lair ones, however, who have wrought tor the service of a Kiug, since the manufacture of Excallbur, let the name of Matilda ot Flanders, wile of Willi'im the Con queror, stand at the Lead ot the record, in spa? ot histonaus' doubts. Matilda, born about the year Wol. was carefully educated. She hud beauty, learning, mdubtry; aud the Bayeux tapestry connected wi'h her name still exists, a monument of her achievements in the art of needle-work. It is, as everybody knows, a pic tuied chronicle of the conquest oi England a wne'8 triDute to tno gicry ol her mistmud. As a specimen bi ancient stiluherv aud lemmine industry, this work is extremely curious. The tapestry is two hundred and twen ty-two leet m length and twenty in width. It is worKea in aitieient-coiorca worsteds on white cloth, low brown wUh ago. The attempts to lepitsent the human tiguie are very rude, and it is merely given iu outline. Matilda evideutly had very lew colois at her disposal, as the hordes are depicted of any hue blue, green, or yellow; the arabesque patterns in troduced are rich and varied. During the French Revolution this tanestrv was demanded by tho insurgents to cover their guns; but a priest succeeded in concealing it until the Bionu had passed. Bonaparte knew its value. He caused it to be brought to Paris and displayed, alter which ho restored the pre cious reuc to isayeux. We have many records of roval ladies who practised and patronized needle-work. Anne of Brittany, lirst wife of Louis XII of France, caused three hundred girls, daughters of the nobility, to be instructed in that art under her personal supervision. Her dans bier Claude pursued the same laudable plan. Jeanne tl'Al- Dret, yueen ot Aavarre, and mother ot Henry IV of France, a woman of vitrorous mind, was skilled also iu the haudicratt of the needle, and wrougnt a set oi naneings cauca "ihe i'rison Opened," meaning that she had broken the DOEds ot the rope. The nractice of teach in 2 needle-work con tinued Iouk at the French couit, and it was there that Mary of Scotland learned the art in which sue so mucn excelled, vv lien cart into prison, she beguiled the time, and soothed the repentant anxieiies of her mind with the com panionship of her needle. The specimens ol her work yet existing arc principally bed-trim miugs, hu winners, and coverlets, composed of dark satin, upon which flowers, separately embroi dered, are transierred. The romances and lays of chivalry contain many dercriptions of the ornamental needle work of those early days. In one of the ancient ballads, a knight, after describing a fair .damsel w hom he had rescued and carried to his castle, adds that she "knew how to sewe and make all manner of silken worke," and no doubt he made her repair many of his mantles and scarfs frayed and torn bv time and tourney. The beautiful Elaine covered the shield ot Sir Launcelot with a case of silk, upon which devices were braided by her fair hands, aud added, from her own design, " A border fantasy of branch and flower, And yellow-throated nestling In the nest." When he went to the tourney she gave him a red fcleeve "broidered with great pearls," which he bound upon his helmet. Jt is recorded that, in a tournament at the court of Burgundy in 1445, one of the knights received from his lady a sleeve ot delicate dove color, which he fas tened on bis left arm. These sleeves were made of a diflerent mate rial from the dress, and generally of a richer fabric elaborately ornamented; so they were considered valuable enough to lorm a separate legacy in wills or those centuries. luauuaiena Donl, in ber portrait, painted by Raphael, which hanes in tho Pitti Palace at I loreuce, wears a pair of these rich, heavy sleeves, fastened slightly at the shoulder, and worn over a shorter sleeve belonging to her dress. Thus we see how it was that a lady could disengage ner sleeve at the right moment, and give it to the fortunate knight. The art of adorning linen was practised from the earliest dates. Threads were drawn aud fashioned with tho needle, or the end of the cloth unravelled and plaited into geometrical patlf rns. bt. Cuthbert's curious grave-clothes, as described by an eye-witness to his disinter ment in tbo twelfth century, were ornamented with eut-work, which was used principally for ecclesiastical purposes, and was looked upon in uimiand till the dissolution oi me monasteries as a church secret. The open-work embroidery, which went under the general name of cut work, is the origin, of lace. The history of lace by Mrs. Bury Palliser, recently published in Loudon, is worthy of the exquisite fabric of which it treats. The author has woven valuable facts, histori cal associations, and curious auecdote9 into the web ot her narrative, with an industry and 8k ill rivalling the work of her mediaeval sisters. The illustrations ol tins beautiful volume are taken from rare specimens of aurient and modern lace, so perfectly executed as quite to deceive the eye, and almost the touch. Italy and Flanders dispute the invention ot point or nccdle-made lace. The Italians proba bly derived the art of needle-work irom the Greeks who took refuge in Italy during tho troubles of the Lower Empire. Its origin was undoubtedly Byzantine, as the places which were inconstant intercourse with the Greek Empire were the cities where point-lace was earliest made. The traditions of the Low Countries also ascribe it to an Eastern origin, assigning tho mtioduction of lace-making to the Crusaders on their return Irom tho Holy ljitnd. A modern writer, Fruncis North, asserts that the Italians learned embroidery Irom the Saraceus, as Spaniards learned the same art from tho Moors, and, In pioot of his theory, states that tho word erMroiaer is umveu irom tne Aramc, and does not belong to any European lan guage. In the opinion of some authorities, tht English word (ace comes Irom the Latin word Ucina, signifying the hem or frinue ot a garment; others suppose it derived from the word luces, which appears in Ansrlo-Norman statutes, meaning braids which were used to unite different parts of the dress. In England the earliest lace was culled passament, from the fact that the threads were passed over each other In Its formation; and it is not until tho, reUn of It. chard III that the word lace aopeaw in royal accounts. The Frencn term df.ntclie is also of modern date, and was not used until fashion caused paitammt to be made with a toothed edge, when the designation passament dentele appears. But whatever the origin of the name, lace making and embroidery havo employed many tingers, and worn out many eves, and even created revolutions. in Emzlaud, until the time of Henry VIII, ohirts, handker chiefs, sheets, arid pillow-cases wero embroi dered in silks of d liferent colors, until tho fashion gave wav to cut-work and lace. Italy produced lace fabrics early in the fifteenth cen tury; and the Florentine poet, Fireuztiolu, who flourished about 1.V20, composed an eh-gv upon a collar of raised poiut lace made by tho hand of his mistress. Portraits of Venetian ladies dated a3 early as l.VJO reveal white lace trim mines; but at that period bice was, professedly, only made by nuns for the service of iheChureh; and the term "ntius' work" has been the designa tion of lace in many places to a verv modern date. Venice was famed for point, Genoa for pillow laces. English Parliamentary records have statutes on the subject of Venice laces; at the coronation of Richard III, fringes of Venice and mantle laces of gold and white silK appear. "To know tho aye and pcdlrcos Ot points ol Flanders aud Veuise," depends much upon the anciout pattern book3 jctin existence. Puichmeut patterns, drawn and pricked for pillow lace, bearing the date ol 1577. were lately found covering old law books, in Albisola, a town near Savona, which wasa place celebrated for its laces, as we infer from the tact that it was long the custom of the daugh ters of the nobles to telcct these laces for their wedding shawls and veils. Thee is a pretty tradition at Venice, handed down among the inhabitants of the Lagoonj, whh'h savs that a sador brought home to his betrothed a brunch ot the delicate coralliuo knowa as "mermaids' lace." The girl, a worker in points, attracted by the grace of the coral, imitated it with her needle, and after much toil produced the exciui- site labnc w hich, as Venice point, soon became me moue in an Europe, iace-making in Italy formed the occupation of many women of the higher classes, who wished to add to their in comes. Each lady had a number of workers to whom she supplied patterns, pricked by herself, pacing her workwomen at the end of every week, each day being notched on a tally. In the convent of Gesu Bambino, at Rome, curious specimens of old Spanish conventual work parchment patterns with lace in pro gresshave been found. They belonged to Spanish nuns, who long &sr taught the art of lace-making to novices. Like all point lace, this appors to be executed in separate pieces, given out by the nuns, and then joined together by a skilful hand. We see tho pattern traced, the work part ly finished, and thelvery thread left as when "Sister Felice Vittona ' laid down her work centuries aco. Mrs. Palliser rceived from Rome photographs of these valuable relics, en gravings from which she has inserted in her history of lace. Aloe-thread was then used lor lace-making, as it is now in Florence for sew ing straw-plait. Spanish point has been as celebrated as that of Flanders or Italy. Some traditions aver that Spain taught the art to Flanders. Spain had no cause to import laces; they were extensively made at home, and were less known than the manufacture of other countries, because very little was exported. The numberless images of the Madonna and patron saints dressed and undressed daily, together with the albs of the priests and decorations ot the altars, caused an im mense consumption lor ecclesiastical uses. Thread lace was manufactured in Spain in 14!)2. and in the Cathedral of Granada is a lace alb presented to the Church by Ferdinand and Isabella one of the few relics of ecclesiastical erandeur preserved in the country. Cardinal Wiseman, in u letter to Mrs. Palliser, states that ho bad himself officiated in this vestment, w hich was valued at ton thou sand crowns. Tho boe church lace of Spain was little known in Europe until the revolution of 1830, when splendid specimens were suddenly thiowninto the market not merely the heavy lace known as Spanish point, but pieces of tho most exquisite description, which could only Iibto Wu mnie, Mrs. Piilliscr, by those whose time was not monsy. Among the Saxon Hartz Mountains is the old town ol Annaburg, and beneath a lime-tree iu its ancient burial-ground stands a simple monu ment with this inscription: "Here lies Barbara Uttman, died on the 14th of January, 157G, whose invention of lace in the year 1561 made her the benefactress of the Hartz Mountains. 'An active mind, a skilful hand, Brings blessings down on Fatuarland.' " Barbara was born in 1514. Her parents, bur ghers ol Nuremberg, removed to the Hartz Mountains lor tho purpose of working a mine in that neighborhood. It is said that Bar bara learned the art of lace-making from a native of Brabant, a Protestant, whom . the cruellies of the Duke ot Alva had driven from her country. Barbara, observing the mountain girls making nets lor the miners to wear over i heir hair, took great interest in the improve ment of their work, and succeeded in teaching them a fine knitted tricot, and afterwards a lace eround. In 1561, having procured aid from Flanders, she set up a workshop in Anna burg lor lace-making. This branch of industry spread beyond Bavaria, giving employment to thirty thousand persons, and producing a reve nue of one million thalers. Italy and Flanders dispute the invention of lace, but it was probably introduced inio both countries about the same time. The Emperor Charles V commanded lace-making to bo taught iu Echools and convents. A specimen ot the manufacture ot his duy may be seen in his cap, now preserved In the museum at Hotel Cluny, Paris. It is of fine linen, with the Emperor's arms embroidered in relief, with designs in lace, of exquisite workmanship. The old Flemish laces aie of great beauty and world-wide fume. Mauy passages in the history of lace show bow severely the manufacture of this beautiful fabric has strained the nerves of eye and brain. The fishermen's wives on ihe Scottish coast apostro phize the fish they sell, alter their husbands' perilous voyages, and sing, "Call them lives o' men," Not more fatal to life are the blasts from ocean winds than the tasks of laborious luce-makers; aud this thought cannot but mingle with our admiration for the skill displayed in this branch of woman's endless toil and endea vor to supply her own wants aud aid those who are dear to her, in the present as well as in tho past centuries. In the British Museum there is a curious manuscript of the fourteenth century, af.er wards translated "inlo our maternal! englisshe by mo William Caxton and cmprvmed at Weat miiittre the last day of Jauuer, the hist yere of the regno of King Richard the thyrd," called "the booke which the Knight of iho To wero miido lor the enscygnemeut and techiug of his donchfres." Iho Knight of the Tower was ' Geoirory Landry, suruamed De hi Tour, of a noble family oi Anion. In tho mouth of April, 1371, he was one day rellectiug beneath the shade of some trees on various passages iu his lite, and upon the memory of his wile, whose early death had caused him sorrow, when his three daughters walked into the garden. The sight of those motherless girls naturally turned his thoughts to the condition ot woman in society, and he resolved to write a treatise, enforced by exam ples ot both good and evil, lor their instruction. The siate of bociety which the "evil" examples portray might well cause a father's heart to tremble. The education of young ladies, as we havo belote stated, was in that age usually aBdgned to convents or to families oi higher rank. It consisted ot instruction in no oiowork, confec tionery, surgery, and the rudiments of church music Men were strongly opposed to any high degree of mental culture lor women; and although the Knight of the Tower thiuks it good lor women to be taught to read their Bibles, yet the pen is too dangerous an instru ment to trust to then hands. The art of writing he disapproves, "Better worceu can naught of it." Religious observances he strictly recommends; hut we ehuddvr at some of the stoties which even this well meaning father relates as illustrations of the ellicacy of reli gions austerities. Extravagance in drcsa pre vailed at that time among men and women to such a dcrrec tuat Parliament was appealed to on tho subject in lncn. From the Knight's ex hoitatlon on the subject, thl9 nmu'a seems to nave ni.ected tne women alarmingly, and the examples given of the passion lor dress appear to surpass what Is acknowledged m ourday. Yet the vast increase of materials, as well as tho extended interests and objects opeuei to woman now. renders the extravagance ot dress in tho Middlo Apes lar less reprehensible. The record of woman's work in tho Middlo Apes includes far more than the account of what her needle accomplished. The position of the mistress of a family in those centuries was no sinecure. When wo look up at castles perched on rock, or walk through the echoing apartments of baronial halls, we know that woman must have worked there with brain and fingers. The househoM and lti dependencies, in such mansiong, eon-isted of more than a KCorc of persons, and provisions must bo laid in dining tho autumn for many months. As we glauce at the enormous Ore-places and ovens in the kitchens of those castles nd halls, and remember the weight of tho armor men wore, we can readily imagine that no trifling supply of brawn and beef was needed lor their meals; and tho sight ol a hus band irowning out of one of those old helmets because the dinner was scanty, must havo been a tearful trial to feminine nerves. The title of "Lad" means the "Giver of bread'' iu Sanon, ami the lady of the castle, dispensed lood to many beyond her own hoehold. The task of preparing the raimonl of tho family devolved upon the women; tor there were no tiavelling dealers except lor the richest and mor.t expensie articles. Wool, tho produce of the nock, was carded and spun; tlax was grown, and woven into coarse linen; and both mutt rials wero prepared and fash ioned iut3 garments at home. Glimpses of domestic life come down to us through early legends and records, some ot which' modern genius has melodized. Authentic history and ion, antic storv olten show ub that women 'of all ranks were little better, in tact, than household drudees to these splendid knights and courtly old baions. The lair Fnid sang a charming song as she tinned her wheel; but when Geriaut ar rived, she not only assisted her mother to re ceive him, but, by her father's order, lea the knight's charger to the stall, aud gavo him corn. If she also relieved the noble animal of his heavy saddle and horse furniture, gave him water as well as corn, and shook down the dry turze lor his bed, she must have had thecourago ann skill ot a leminine Karey; and we fear her dress of faded silk came out of the stable in a very dilapidated condition. Alter the horse was cared lor, Enid put her wii9 and hands to work to prepare the evening meal, and spread it before her lather and his guest. Tho knight, indeed, condescended to think her "sweet aud serviceable !" , The women ol those days are often described only ns they appeared at lestivals and tourna mentsladies ot beauty, to whom knights low ered their lances, of whom troubadours sang. They had their amusements and their triumphs, doubtless; but they aloo had their work, domes tic, industrial, and sanitary. They knew how to bind up w ounds and care lor the sick, and we read many recoids ot their knowledge in this department. Elaine, when she found Sir Laun celot terribly wounded in the cave, so skiltully aidei him that, wuen the old hermit came who was learned in all the simples aud science of the times, he told tho knight that "her tine care had saved his life" a pleasing assurance that there were medical men in those days, as well as in our own, who expressed no unwiliingress to allow a woman credit lor success in their own profession. Illuminated books sometimes show us pictures ot womeu of the humbler ranks of lite at their work. On the border of a line manuscript of the time of Edward IV there is the figure of a woman employed with her distatf, her head and neck enveloped in a coverchief. The figure rises out of a flower. In a manuscript of 1316, a countrywoman is engaged in churning, dressed in a comfortable gown and apron, the gown tidily pinned up, and her head and neck in a cove'rchiei. Tho churn is ot considerable height and of very clumsy construction. A blind bufwjAr approiiches her, led by his dog, who holds appa rently a cup in his mouth to receive donations. In another part of the same volume is a beauti iul damsel with her hair spread over her bhoul ders. while her maid arranges her tresses with a comb of ivoTy set in gold. The young lady holds a small mirror, probably of polished steel, in her hand. Specimens of these curious combs and mirrors yet exist in collections. A century later we tee a pretty laundress, holding in her hands a number ot delicately woven napkins, which lock as if they might have come out of the elaborately carved napkin pre&s ot the same period in the collection of Sir Samuel Myrick ct Goodrich Court. Although the Knight of the Tower disapproved of young ladies being taught to write, there were women whose employment writing seems to have been; but these were nuns safely shut up from the risk of billets-doux. In Dr. Maitland's "Essays on the Dark Ages," he quotes from the biography of Diomudis, a devout nun of the eleventh century, a list of the volumes which she prepared with her own band, written in beautiful and legible characters, to the praise of God, and of the holy Apostles Peter aud Paul, the patrons of the monastery, which was that of Wessobrunn in Bavaria. The list comprises thirty-one works, many of them In three or four volumes; and although Diomu dis is not supposed to have been an authoress, she i9 certainly worthy of having her name handed down through eight centuries in witness ol woman's indelatigablework in the scriptorium. One missal prepared by Dieniudis was given to the Bishop of Treves, another to the Bishop of Augsburg, and one Bible in two vol umes is mentioned, which was exchanged by the monastery lor an estate. We can picture to ourselves Dieniudis in her conventual dress, seated in the scriptorium, with her materials for ehirography. The sun, as it streams through the window, throws a gclden light over the vellum page, suggesting tho rich nue of the gilded nimbus, while in the convent garden she sees the white lily or the modest violet, which, typical of the Madonna, sbe trauslers to her illuminated borders. Thus has God ever interwoven truth and love with their correspondence of beauty and development in the natural world, which weie open to the eyes of Diomudis eight hun dred years ago, perhaps as clearly as to our own in their latter days. That women of even an earlier century than that of Diomudis were per mitted to react, if not to write, is proved by the deseiiptiou of a private library, given In tho letters of O. S. Sidonius Apollinaiis, and quoted in Fdwards' "History of Libraries' This booK collection was the property of a gent:eman of the fitth century, residing at his castle of Prusiana. It was divided into three depart ments, the lirst of whioh was expressly in tended for the ladies of the family, and contained books of piety and devotion. Tho fecond department was for men, and is rather uiiealliiutly stated to have been of a higher order; yet as tho third depart ment was intended lor the whole family, and contained such works as Augustine, Origen, Vurre, Priidentlus, aud Horace, tho literary tastes ol tho ladies should have ben satisfied. We are also told that It was tho eiB-tom at the castle of Prusiana to difcuss at dinner the books read in the morning which would tend ton belief that conversation at tho dinner-tables of the filth century might bo as edifying as at tuose ot the nineteenth. ... A few leminine names connected with the literature of the Middle Ages have come down to us. The lays of Marie de France are among the manuscripts in the British Museum. Marie's peisonal history, as well as tho period when sho flourished, is uncertain. Her stylo is extromuly obscure; but in her Preface she seems aware of this defect, yet defends it by the example of the ancients. She considers it the duty of all per sons to employ their talents; and as her gilts were intellectual, she cast her thoughts in va rious directions ere she determined upon her peculiar mission. Sho had intended trans fating from the l atin a good hintory, but some one else unluckily anticipated her; and she finally nettled herself, down to poetry, ana t the trantdatlon of numerous lays she had trea sured in her memory, as these would bo new to roany ol her readers. Like other literary ladies, she complained of envv and persecution, but he perteveres through ail difhcultics, and dedicates her book "to tno King." Mario was born in France. Sorao authorities suppcec she wrote in England during tho reign ol Henry 111, and that the patron she names was William Langue-espec, who died in 1226; others, that this plvs raimfpntron was Wil liam, Count of Flauders, who aucoinpnnied St. Lotus on his first crusade in 121m, and was killed at a tournament in 1261. A later sur mise H that the book was dedicated to (Stephen, French being his native lan guage. Amcng the manuscripts ot tne Bibliotheque Royalo at Paris is Marie's transla tion ol th ; tables which Henry Beauelerc trans lated irom Latin Into Euglish, and whicu Mario renders into French. A proof that Marie's poimsnro extremely anciout is deduced Irom the names in one ol these tables applied to the woli and the lox. the uses other names than those ot isengrln and ReiiaM, which were introduced as early as the reicn of Corur do Lion, and it, would seem that she could not have failed to notice these remark able names, hail thev existed in her time. A complete collection of the works of Marie de Fiance was published in Paris in 1820, by M. do Roquefort, who speaks of her In the following terms: "Sho possessed that penettation which distinguishes at first sight the diflerent passions ot mankind, winch seizes upon the dilleroit forms they assume, and. remarking tho objects of their notice, ditcovers at tne same time the moans by which they are attained." It this be a true statement, the acuteness of feminine observation has pained but little in th progresof the centuries, and her literary sisters of th" present era can hardly hope to eclipse the penetration of Mario de France. The Countesses do Die, supposed to be mother and daughter, were both poetesses. The elder lady wa: beloved by Rabaud d'Orange, who d'cd in 117;), and the younger is celebrated by William Adhcn.ar, a oistingnished troubadour. He was visited on bis death-bed by both these ladies, who afterwards erected a monument to his memory. The younger countess retired to a convent, and died soon after Adhcmar. In the Harleian Collection is a lino manu script containing tho writings of Christiuc de Pisan, a distinguished woman of tho lourtcenth century. Her lather, Thomas de Pinun, a cele brated savant of Bologna, had married a daugh ter of a member ol the Grand c!ouueil of Venice. So renowned was Thomas de Pisan that the kings of Hungary and Franco deter mined to win him away from Bologna. Charles V of Fiance, suruamed the Wise, was successful, and Thomas do Pisan weut to Paris in 1S(J8, his transfer to the French court making a great sensation among learned and scientific circles of that day. Charles loaded bun with wealth and honors, and chose him Astrologer Royal. According to the history, as told b.v Louisa Stuart Costello, in her "Speci mens of the Early Poetry of France," Christine was but live years old when sho accompanied her parents to Paris, where she received every advantage of education, and, inheriting her lather's literary tastes, early became lcarued in languages and science. Her personal charms, together w ith her lather's high favor at Court, attracted many admirers. Sbo married Stephen Castel, a young gentleman ot Picardy, to whom she was tenderly attached, and whose chaiacter she has drawn in most lavorable colors. A lew years passed happily, but, alas 1 changes came. The king died, the pension and ollices bestowed upon ' Thomas do Pisan wero sus pended, and the Astrologer Royal soon fol lowed his patron beyond tho stars. Castel was also deprived of his preferments; and though he maintained his wile and family for a time, he was cut oil' by death at thuty-four yea is of age. Chrittino had need of all her energies to meet such a succession ot calamities, following close on so brilliant a career. De voting herself anew to study, 6he determined to improve her talents for composition, and to make her literary at tainments a means of support lor hpr children. The illustrations in the manuscript volume of her works picture to us several scenes in Chris tine's lite. In one, tho artist has sliced oil toe euie of a house to allow us to see Christine in her study, giving us also the exterior, roof and dormer-windows, with points finished by gilt balls. The room is very small, with a crimson and white tapes try bauging. Christine wears what may be called tho regulation color for literary ladies blue, with tho extraordinary two-peaked head-dress of the period, put on in a decidedly strong-minded manner. At her feet sits a white dog, small, but wise-looking, with a cellar of gold bells round his neck. Before Christine stands a plain table, covered with green cloth; her book, bound in crimson and gold, in which she is writing, lies belore her. Christine's style of holding the implements- one in each hand aud the case ot materials lor her work which lie beside her, are according to representations ot the minialori cali- arafl at their labors; and, as the art of cahgrapby was well known at Bologna, so learned a man as Thomas do Pinan must have been acquainted with it, and would have caused his talented daughter to be instructed in so rare an accomplishment. It is not therefore unreasonable to believe that, in iho beauti iul volume now in tho British Museum, the work of Christine's hand, as well as the result ot her genius, is preserved. The next picture shows us Christine presenting her book to Chailes VII of France, who 13 dressed in a black robe edged with ermine; he wears a golden belt, order, and crown. The king Is seated Deneatn a canopy, oiue, powdered with flews de lis. Four courtiers stand beside him. dressed in robes of ditlerent colore one in pink, and wear ng a laree white hat of Quaker-like iasmon. Christine has put on a wmte roue over ner Diue aress, perhaps as a sign ot mourning bhe Doing then a widow, A white veil depends from the peaks of her bead-dress. (She Kneels oeioro the king, and presents ner pook. Another and more elaborate picture repre sents the repetition of the same ceremony bei'ore Isabelle of Bavaria, queen ol Charles VI. We are here admitted into the private royal apart ments of the lourteenth century. Tho hang ings of the apartment consist of strips, upon which are alternately emblazoned the armorial devices ot France and Bavaria. A couch orbjd, with a square canopy covered with red and blue, having tho roj al anus embroidered in the centre, stands on one side of tho room. Tho queen is seated upon a lounge of modern shape, covered to correspond with the couch. She is dressed in a t-pltndid robe ot purple and gold, with long sleeves sweeping the ground, lined with ermine; upon her head arises a structuie of stuffed rolls, heavy in material, and covered with jowels. which shoots up into two high peaks above her forehead. Six ladies are in waiting, two In black and gold, with the same enormous lieadgefcrs. They sit on the edge of her Malestv's sofa, while tour ladies of Interior rank and plainer garments are contented with low benches. Christine roup pears iu her blue dres-. aud white-veiled, peaked cap. She kneels belore the qjcen, on a square carpet with a geometrical-patterned border, and presents her book. A white Itulinn houud lies at t?ie loot of the couch, while beside Isu belle sits a small white dog, resembling the one we saw in Christine's study. As wo can hardly suppose Christine would bring her pet on so solemn an occasion far less ullow him to Jump up beside the queen and as this Utile animal wears no gold bells, we are led to suppoao that little white dogs were in fashion in the four teenth century. We canuot say that the portrait of Isabelle gives us any idea ot her splendid beauty; but "handsome is that handsome does," and as Isabella's work was a very bad one in tho Mid dle Ages, we will say no more about her. Christine was but twenty-five years ot age when she became a widow, and her personal charms captivated tho heart of no less a person age than the Eurl of Salisbury, who came am bassador from England to demand the band of the very youthful princess, Isabellej tor his master. They exchanged verses; and although Salis bury spoke by no means mysteriously, the sage Chriktiue affected to view his declara tions only in the light of complimentary speeches from a gallant knleht. ihe Earl considered himself as rejected, bade adieu to love, and renounced marriugo. To Christine he made a very siugulsr propo-al for a rejected lover that of taking with him to Kngland her eldc-i eon, promising to devote himself to his education and preferment. The oiler was too valuable to be declined b.v a poor widow, whose pen was her only mesne ot supporting her family. That such a proof of devotion argued a tenderer leeling than that ot knightly gallantry must have been apparent to Chr.stme; but for reasons best understood by herself nnd shall i wo not believe with a heart" yet true to her hus band's memory ? sho merely acknowledged the kindness shown to her sou; and the Earl and his adopted boy left France tosether. When Richaid II was deposed, Henry Bulingbroke struck oil the head of the Karl of Malisbury. Among the panel's of the murdered man th lays of Christine were found by King Henry, who Wiis so much struck with their purity and beauty, that he wrote to Iho fair authoress of her sou's safety, under his protection, and in vited her to his court. This Invitation was at once a compliment and au insult, lor tbo hand that sent it was stained with the blood other friend. Christine, how ever, had worldly wisdom enough to send a-.re-spectful though firm refusal to a crowned head. a suoec'stiil soldier, and one, moreover, who held her son in his power. Feminine tact must have guided her pen, lor Henry was not oiieuoed, and twice despatched a herald ti renew tho invitation io his court, bhe steadily de clined to leave Frat.ee, but managed the affair 60 admirably that she at last obtained tho re turn ot her son lioni England. Like her lather, Thomas da Pisan, Christine seems to have been sought as an ornament ot their courts by several rulers. Henry Holing broke could not gain her for England, and the Dukeot Milan in vaiu urged her to revdo in that city. Seldom has a literaiy lady in any age received such tempting invitations; yet Christine refused to leave Franco, although her own toituues were an thing but certain. The Duke of Burgundy took her son uuder his protection, aud urged Chriftine to write tho history ot her patron, ChuilesV of France. This was a work grateful to her ieelings, and she had commenced tho memoir when the death of the Duke deprived her of his patronage, and threw her sou again upon her care, involving her tp many anxieties. But Christine bore her self through all ber trials with firmness and pru dence, and her latter days were more tranquil. She took a deep interest iu the ati'turs ot her adopted country, and welcomed in her writings the appearance of the Mai 1 of Orleans. We believe, however, that sho was spared the pain of witnessing tho last act in that drama of his tory, where an innocent victim was given up by French perfidy to Engliea cruelty. The deeds of Joan of Arc need no recital here. A daughter of France in the nineteenth century bad a soul pure euougn to retiect the image of the Maid ot Orleans, and with a skiltul hand she embodied the vision in marble. The statue of Joun ot Arc, modelled by the Princess Marie, adorns or rather sauctiiles the hulls of Versailles. Of woman's work as an artist in the early ceuturies we have a curious illustration in a manuscript belonging to the Bibliotheque Roy ale at Pans, which exhibits a female figure paiutmg the (statue of the Madonna. The artist holds in her Iclt hand a palette, which is the earliest notice of the uso ot thn implement with which antiquarians are acquainted. The fashion of painting figures cut iu wood was onco much practised, and we see here the representation of a lemale artist of very ancient date. Painting, music, and dancing come under the designation of pccomplishneuts; yet to obtun distinction in any ol these branches implies a vast amount of work. Au illustration of Lygate's "Pil grim" shows us a young lady playing upon a species of organ with one hand; in the other she holds to her lips a mellow horn, through which she pours her breaih, if not her soul; lying beside her is a stringed instrument called a sawtry. Such varied musical acquirements certainly argue both industry and devohou to art. Charle magne's daughters wero diaiinguishod for their skill in dancing; and wo read ot many instances in the Jliddle Ages of women excelling in these tine arts. The period of lime generally denominated the Middle Ages commences with tho filth century and ends with the fifteenth. We have in several instances ventured to extend the limits as far as a part of trio sixteenth century, and therefore include among fe male artists the name of Sofonisba An guisciola, who was born about 1640. Sho was a noble lady of Cremona, whoso fame spread early throughout Italy. In 155!), Philip II of Spain invited her to his court at Madrid, where on her arrival she was treated with groat dis tinction. Her chief study was portraitures, and her pictures became objects ot great value to kings and popes. Her royal patrons of Spain married their artist to a loble Sicilian, giving her a dory of twelve thousand ducats, and a pension of one thousand ducats, beside rich presents in tapes tries and jewels. She weut with her husbaud to Palermo, where they resided several years. On the death of her husband the King aud Queen of Spain urged her to return to their court ; but she execused herself on account of her wish to visit Cremona. Embarking on board a galley for this purpose, bound to Genoa, she was en tertained with such gallantry by the captain, Orazio Lomellini, one of the merchant princes of that city, that the heart ot the distinguished artist was won, und she gave hi in her hand on their arrival at Genoa. History does not tell as whether sho ever revisited Cremoaa, but she dwelt in Genoa during the remainder of her loLe life, pursuing her art with great success, On her second mar riage, her laithtul irieuds in the royal family of Spain added lour hundred crowns to her pension. The Empress of Germany visited Sofonisba on the way to Spain, and accepted from her hand a little picture. Sofoni9ba became blind in her old age, but lost no other faculty. Vandyck was her guest when at Genoa, and said that he had learned more of his art from one blind old woman than from any other teacher. A medal was struck in her honor at Bologna. The Academy of Fine Arts at Fdinburgh contains a noble picture by Vandyck, painted in his Italian manner. It represents individuals of the Lomellini family, and was probably in progress when he visited this illustrious woman, who had become a n.ember of that house. Stirlinr , in his "Artists ot ipain," states that lew ot Sofonisba's pictures are now known to exist, and that the beautiful portrait of herself, probably the one mentioned by Vasart in the w ardrooc of the Cardiral di Monte at Rome, or that noticed by Soprani in the palace ot Gio vauni at Genoa, is now in the possession of Earl Spencer at Altborp. Tho engraving from this picture, in Dibdiu's yfdes Attiorpiaiias, lies before us. We think the better of kings and queens who prized a woman with eyes so clear, and an expression of such honesty and truth. The original is said to be masterly in its drawing and execution. Solouisba is represented in a simple blacK dross, and wears no jewels. She touches the keys of a harpsi chord with her beautiful hands; a duenna-like figure ot an old woman stands behind the in strument, apparently listening to the melody. Whatever of skill or lame women have acquired through aees in other departments, thc'nuisery has ever been an undisputed sphere lor women's work. Nor have we reason to. think that, in the ceuturies wo have been con fKleiitig, she was not faithful to this, her espe cial province Tho cradlo of Henry V, yet in existence. Is one ot the best specimens ot nursery, furniture m the lourteenth century which have come clown to us. Beautifully curved loliage oils up the 3pace between tho up riahts aud stays and st ind of tho cracilo, which is not upon rockers, but apparently swings like the modern crib. Ou each of these uprights is perched a dove, carefully carved, wuoo quiet influences had not much, etrect on the infant dreams of Prince Hal. Henry was born at Monmouth, 1388, and sent to Courtfield, about seven miles distant, where the air was considered more salubrious. There he was nursed under the superintendence of Ladv Montacute. and in that trface this cradle was preservod lor many years. It was sold dj a steward or tne uonta-.