The Husbandman. of man the bounteous mother, “Fog him still with corn and wine; He who best would aid a brother, Shares with him these gifts divine. Many a power within her bosom, Nolseldss, blaen, works bepeath. nu gre and leaf and blossom, Golden ear and cluster’d wreath. These to swell with strength and beauty Is the royal task of man; Man's a king, his throne is duty, Since his work on earth began. Bud and harvest, bloom and vintage— These, ike man, are fruits of earth, Stamp'd in clay, a heavenly vintage, All from dust receive their birth, Barn and mill, and wine-vat's treasures, Earthly goods for earthly lives; These are Nature's ancient pleasures— These her child from her derives. What the dream, but vain rebelling, If from earth we sought to flee? *Tis our stored and ample dwelling— *Tis from it the skies we see. Wind and frost, and hour and season, Land and water, sun and shade, Work with these, as bids thy reason, For thy work thy teil to aid. Sow thy seed, and reap in gladness! Man himself is all a seed; Hope and hardship, joy and sadness— Slow the plant to ripeness lead. IE RSET A FUGUE. and mid June, rectory-garden, and their luscious scent not see because the red-and-white awn- ing is let down over the study-window. Datherine and Evelyn Lascelles, his daughters, girl with fleecy, golden hair; Evelyn wears her brown locks in a crop. Nature has given them a persistent wave, and whe barber cuts them short. ul dressing does she give to her head be- prder, or rather always a picturesque disorder in her locks. The girls have been talking aoons. Their conversation fire, in the deep-brown orbs of Evelyn. She throws herself full length on the bamboo reclining-chair by the window, ter. Evelyn says: *‘It is wholly immaterial lo me!’’ She is 18, and some indescriba- ble expression on her face gives the lie to her haughty words. ‘I move an inch! He comes, he all one. And it is not all Here the soft fire in her eyes takes a flash, and becomes a sparkling fire, “In the sense you would put upon it, it is all one,” replies Cathie the elder by one year; ‘‘but it is not all one if look at it from ny point of view. It may be very fine for young Gerald Wickham to come here, but it is not very fine that he should make love to the rector’'s daughters at once, [hat is what people say——"' “Indeed! They make no mark be- tween the two daughters?”’ Evelyn would be careless, cannot act the part. “How can they? They only see us all in public, 1 wish aunt would send over for mel” “* As if you need wait for the sending! 3 toa 11 Sill O88] one t vou vou Hoth but she Gerald can follow yi re,’ *Can! Yes! Will No.” “Take care!” cries Evelyn. Ang at the instant there comes, min- gling with the scent of the roses, another perfume, that of tobacco. Gerald Wickham, the squire’s son, from the Priory, lifts the red striped awning. And Evelyn lies languid, playing with a huge red Japanese fan: the color has all .gone for a moment out of her face, while he lazily leans against the frame of the French-window by which he has come in. Cathie’s color heightens one degree—the smallest degree. He is nothing to her; but she is angry that he will make love to her, he for whom Eve- iyn is wearing out her fiery soul. He is quite honest; he does not know yet which girl he likes best. He plays | with both, but his nature—hus lighter | nature—wants the pride, the ambition, the fiery purposing of Evelyn's to make him a successful man, Will he find this | out, or will he play on, and in the end think that gentler Cathie *‘best,’” simply | because he will have stung Evelyn into | some bitter revolt against him? He has nearly an hour of flirtation, if you please to call it by such an ugly word, But he is so bright and gay, he s taking the world to be a very good hing indeed, his future squireship is such a comfortable one, he is the very :ulmination of optimism-—why not talk ‘or an hour with two such nice girls as the rector’s daughters? Cathie thinks she knows why not. She slips out of the room, and puts some needful gear into a black bag, and goes down to the aunt who keeps house for ithe rector. Then she signifies her in- | tention of going over to Aunt Mary's for a day or two. Mrs. Symons knows that Mary always | wants the girl, and both girls always do | just as they like, so she merely says: | “Very well, dear.”’ And now we see Cathie standing at the rectory gate. Better, far better, to | fly for a few days, for a week even, if only Gerald will in the interval come to his senses, Something strikes the doing a strange thing. Her visit is not strange—no, that might happen any day, use Aunt Mary, who is wife to the doctor in Pucksleigh village, half an hour's walk along by the canal and the meadows, is more truly mother-like to these girls than is the other aunt, who pas lived with them for so many years, No, there is no strangeness in going over there for a day or two, but is there not bY mastering or commanding of late in what she has taken for the reason of her action, This thought makes her grave. She foes not feel the sweet evening coolness that comes acroks the shining canal waters; sie does not see the fair white, . and blue, and gold meshings of flowery . and reedy things that fringe the bank; he does not hear the cheep and twitter of the waterfowl hidden in those rushy — en s—— nests, No; and when she has walked for the half hour she pays no heed to a whisle that is directed towards her; she feels none of the reddening western light that is pouring over her head, and mak- ing of her such a szuny bit of fairness no, she is simply absorbed in her thoughts, She certainly does not see Aunt Mary wave back the author of that very pro- nounced whistle, Chris, or Christopher Landon, the doctor's pupil, or assistant, or deputy, whichever you will, must keep out of sight, so Aunt Mary decrees, Ah, she is a wise woman! She has the intuitive eyes of motherhood; she sees that Cathie, with her bag, has not come over to Pucksleigh without a reason, And so, alone, she comes out across the pretty, unkempt, daisy-bestarred lawn to greet the girl and to hear her story. It is soon told. A whole week runs by, and a couple of pressing messages have gone over from Aunt Mary to her brother, the rector, to beg for Cathie a bit longer. What his women folk desire, good Mr. Lascelles also desires, so there is a sec- ond week running by with Evelyn alone. Alone, do we say? Not at all that. One cannot go from the Priory to Pucksleigh without passing the rectory, tomed to water at the rectory founts. Perhaps the impassioned eyes—girls cannot always set a calm veil over their passion—of Evelyn declare their beauty He always stops there and never gets to Pucksleigh, the fact that no such intention He is sure which girl is *‘best’’ now. Evelyn is “‘best’’ the most perfect girl, cet, dreamy way. Evelyn some flery words of scorn about his aim- less, pleasure-loving, empty life, and, at the Priory. and, like a tacit reproach to his own do- upon hurrying over port wine and straw- berries, He is up to the ears in before the morrow; he has this and that to do. And telling it all as by habit to his son, he little thinks what purposes he is driving into that son's, as yet, irresponsible personality, Ie goes away to his den, and Gerald lights a cigar and saunters out over the quaint old pleas- ance with his collie at his heels, A young many ways. Gerald may somewhat displeased with the reproving world in which he suddenly finds himself, he may ith his own or lack of actions. We do not dive into the mystery he is perhaps a thoroughly tr: honest-souled individual, and as such may not reward our search, However, he smokes out a second cigar, and he finds himself at what he is pleased to consider a logical econclusi to one division of a multiform difficulty, He will marry Evelyn Lascelles! ° he'll tamvel a while, hon t all tiie mo turned are man’s fancies . be be somewhat dissatisfied Ww actions, of his ther ASN retTioral of i general eeciion “Hey! Prest “and is all this the 5 “Assurediv!’ srald the end of it Gerald He then looking th grizzled, along by his lower-beds, ean hands are loosely together behind bis back, the OOS taps of his clerical coat are quaintly opposed to the severe, thin, dry character of his physical self. He is either controlling or watching a girl in her morning gardening-a girl who nan, wi walking 1 1 clasped 3 i flapping willow hat. A lilac bush, full age may screen him, and Gerald chooses to be s0 screened; it does not enter into his masterful plans that he should see the rector in any way but one that day, How the dear rector dallies among the roses! But he goes in at last, and Gerald then clicks the latch of the little Enough, By-and-by he walks into the study, and he has that interview have, And another evening comes when he tete, The squire, good old man, is magistrates have had a full time of it, nap, and heedless of the restless vivacity of his son and heir. But Gerald rules the hour, Suddenly his easy, happy-go-lucky nature finds a persistent masterfulness within, and He tells the squire that he has ‘won his wife," “No-—hey! Well, that's right, my boy. And who may she be?” The squire nods his head roguishiy, Blass of “Maybe I have a guess. port, “Miss Lascelles.’ Gerald is loftily cool. The squire smacks his knee; he has turned, and sits sideways in his coms fortable everyday habit, . “Good-—good!” he ejaculates half to himself. “Which one, though? They hy" “They! Who are they?’ and Gerald at once feels wrathful at any “they” da tospeak of him or his, “Walcott, of Bray, and Daly, and" “Bah!” contemptuously. ‘‘Itis Miss Evelyn Lascelles, I wonder you talk of private concerns withsuch men as those!” “Miss Evelyn? Ha-—hum!”’ rather doloriously, “My good sir'’—the squire rouses, ‘‘those are all very good men- very good men, indeed. Walcott is older than we are in the county, mind you 1" “What may they have chosen to say of me?" The young man has walked from his seat to the window, but here he comes back again, rests his two hands on the back of his chair, looking at his father with a laughable deflance in his blue eyes, but after a second or two seats himself. Clearly, the situation calls for tragic demonstration, “Why, the place pairs you and the other young lady; the fair one—Miss Cathie!” ‘““The place is wrong, then!” Simultaneously with this Evelyn and her aunt talk of the same subject from their feminine point of view. Strange though it may seem, at the very hour when the squire is enlightening his son with the public opinion of the county, Mrs. Symons is giving to Evelyn her private opinion, which concurs with that of the public, Some women are idiots—blind, foolish rousers of evil passions, destroyers of peace, and all with the best ‘‘inten- tions.”’ Evelyn is dazed for a moment. Then she gathers together her forces, and slips away to bed. But—you have had a hint of her fiery, passionate nature—she is wild. She has given her love; she has been played with—she sees it all now, No doubt Gerald has been haunting Pucksleigh, and no doubt he takes her because Cathie will have none of Plainly, she is bereft of her senses, She lies awake all night, and in the gift of a lover back to her! The morning wakes and she goes, No, Gerald, though, has been Cathie has had a ““heavenly time” Aunt Mary is glad to have under her wing just now, for she knows is getting astir in its deeper Pucksleigh, as a hamlet, drones on as it seems to have droned since prehistoric times, and its future has no apparent the present, is her own house, the knows that a drama of its climax. Her husband, the doctor, had a pupil, who is no longer a pupil, but works with the doctor An open-browed young man is Christo- pher Landon; he has but lately come back Pucksleigh from winning his M. D.. and he elects for a year to work on with his old master and friend, while him for a prac- doctor's house, life is LO 3 tra 5 1 . he looks quietly about He stands alone in the has treated him kindly, : he inherits has never hel temptation towards idle: a race of doctors, and tered by the people among whom nm up. He is a i looks forward will 1 TOR i f £1 t bef has grown he or the Mw vista spread, 8 When he : from over the meadow, } sll. he whist] sees Ci ows het hris draws back, ™ : hought. He had wished for Cathie alone! That means one thing; and Chris is manly and true, a that moment he ened thought his first sword, clasps his latel) boy knight He hasa in purity as a treasure and brs the illage parlance he girl's lover! » gentleman ly uifeiy a would do Aunt Mary bid him him give ings, she is vy. even by a Knows The doctor and ‘God speed!” but also } Cathie time, AS they sex not a girl to be wor 3 man she Ki well as she Christopher Land NO days run on time. and Cathie cause of her flight, because, her is becoming steeped in the sweetest rest she can know; for, one evening, Chris speaks some words in her quiet, brave, manly words they and she, flushing rosy red under OWS as Weel summer- to forget the unwittingly, grows soul are them, is in an unclouded paradise, They are to walk together along the valleys and hills And he is satisfied with the still answer, It is the evening when, under the same radiant sunset, Gerald and Evelyn are thinking of her—Cathie. The morning comes, There is a sea of harmony floating about her—serenest, divinest content, All is, if may speak, like one burst of grand majesttic monotone, Have you never heard many voices. singing free from ane Wy almost godlike power? But they are flying to meadows, and by the canal's banks. Burdened with the dis- come, each bringing a surging, angry tumult into the grand peace! garden paths join in a surrounding rive, The flight is over. No one runsaway any moreno one seeks to fly any more, Again we borrow from the ways of old music; all discords, all the fine, sweet melodies, all the quaint fancies are gathered together, and march in simplest grandeur of finale, The har- mony is perfect; one would shout a cry of victory on the sound of the first crea- tive theme, Christopher, coming out of the dim- ness of the doctor’'sdoorway, is drawing a white-clad girl along with him. The irl is Cathie, and she, smiling up at im, is saying something one not hear. At the moment two figures meet be- fore their Chris draws Cathie's hand within bis arm. “We are going to the rector,” says Chris “Turn back with us.” Tie man whose negligence drives his fowls, for the satisfying of their thirst, to the snowdrift or vile gutter, is worse than Pharaoh, if he demand er expect eggs. “A Man as Was Wronged.” m— If it had been a pleasant day, and if we hadn’t all been out of sorts with our luck, we should have had a word of welcome for the stranger as he entered our camp that wretched afternoon, As Trail at Dead Man's Elbow and walk into our camp, and never a man rose up to salute him, The stranger seemed to expect just such a reception, That is, he seem a bit surprised, Riches, pine tree, and without once looking around him he staked off a claim and began to erect a shanty. “Bad man, I'm afeared,” growled the squint, “Bin bounced out of some camp fur stealin’,”’ tucky. “Tell you, he's got a hang-dog look,’ put in the man known as “Ohio Bill.” Every man in the camp was down on the fresh arrival, and that cause, us the devil was to pay. ging to camp had strayed off and on ti 4 he » + + . ement that we had only salt enough to BUZAL { i last two days, Willie the tirely gone, RO We Were cross-grained , and it that he gave was lucky for the stranger pick a quar- rel, The day was bright and fair, and if it hadn't been for Judge Slasher i pone over and woulda manners and the sorts 1s Ho cause Lo next some of us have excused our asked borly: but the Judge said: “He's a bad un, he is, by the Fust thing . I Kin we know a committee will come along here and gobble him up fur robbery or murder,” Two weeks had passed, and while ” had struck “good morning’ hands with him, to smoke a friendly pipe. came, The six of shanty were working in co iv | q f friat 1 Our bag of aust no one us occupying one nmon, and a corner ing this bag was buried in Une mo of the fire-place, ir ba and you can HHS TOW + was the hole where some inder the stones and carried off our 10M Were we Lo suspect’ each other, and we beans itsiders none wir bag was con- wns the first own on Betses mad, and in tl We Calne Lear ourselves, It 4 discovery Raoht atid er fight among anger 10 discover reasonably suspect y catch at we months of hard work, and dnt stop 10 197 ay the charg it the i i if he co the The news we called our shanty, spread like wildfire, and as bered a full hundred, at work, and as he saw us coming he was startled, black looks must have frightened him. You will say that an innocent man would have stayed and braved the storm. man be started off at a run. “Halt! Halt! Halt, or we'll shoot!” shouted a score of men. “He's the thief—stop him! stop him!"’ roared the Judge. Five or six shots were fired almost as Three bullets entered his the foremost man bent turned his white scared on the rocks, back, and as over him and “You have murdered me give youl” “Now to search him!’ said the Judge as he came up, and a half made quick work of it, breast, and made fast to his neck by a ribbon, was a package wrapped in oil as the Judge rudely snapped the string and held the package in his hand. was our dust, No! the pac there were white faces among us. What the card was written: “Mary--—died June 9th 1857." That was the dead man's wife! was a second photograph-—that of a babe about a year old, and the Judge read aloud in a trembling voice: “Qur Harry—died April 4th, 1857.7 On a card were locks of their bair. There was a gold ring once worn by the wife, a faded rib- bon which ber fingers had touched, and a bit of plaid like the dress the baby wore when photographed. Relies of what? Of years agone-—of a fond wife and beautiful child—of joy and happi- grief! And we were looking dewn upon these things and feeling our hearts swell- ing up and our eyes growing misty when up comes our good-for-nothing, half- witted cook with the bag of dust in his hand! In repairing the fire-place he had moved the , and in the excitement over its su loss what little wit he had was f ghished away for the mo- ment. The hole under the stones had — A food, and in our haste we had accused and murdered an innocent man, It came to us in full force as we stood there, and men sighed and wiped their eyes and walked away with trembling | steps, The Judge felt that hie was most ito blame. He was looked upon as a | hard, wicked man, but those jelics of | the dead broke him up. He sat there | and wept like a child, and In a volce | hardly audible for his great emotion, he { moaned: | “Heaven forgive me for this awful | deed!” With sorrow with tenderness | hearts like children, we dug a grave and | put the poor body iuto it, and with his i { board and engraved thereon: “Here lies a man as was wronged!’ Fortunes Made in Old Corks. | “You wouldn't think a { make a fortune selling old bottles, would you? Well, | man who bought out a coffin shed twen- | Ly-tive corks old corks, Eight years ago he went into the bottle business, and he i snow a rich man,’' The policeman who said this took the writer down Mulberry street, and a few blocks below Bleecker stopped in front of filled with 1 i 1 1 1 ¥ 3 S$ before a rickety old building. BMYEeTal 18 bari 3, There were bottles » Vermouth, Piper Sed , of Bass’ ale, cla Inside the shop if a thousand bx the ile ' claret and Wels OX ike littie were piled up and asked the policeman, Eight barrels.” “How many bottles?” “Seventy-five gross. You we | never take the labels off, and never wash the bottes, The men who r wine bottles want the labels as well Sometimes want the labels much more than the bottles; but we do not deal in labels. When a junkman comes in with a load of bottles he may have y different kinds, We i them, W] get a gross of a cer- tain kind we know where to sell them A gross of quart champagne bottl fetches $4.50: pints, $2.25. ( 1 y per day, Hugh?” Be the bottles t vont $ twent 8011 €n we ial i gross, and so do soda water worth $2.25, but fo » wine bottles we get $0 per gross, ““Tom’’ gins and stomach bitters go « worter and Vino Ver- Apolliz KIONS, ohn i Bass’ ale is quarts i > beer bring $8 jl for $6, il B50. We sell no pring men We have rks in the past twen- Sp haa Bus 3 gynth § oy » years to float the Great Eastern, re y 54) Dandisd enough ty. ————— English Farmers in America. Mr. Burt, Britis Suin- a member of the Parliament, spent much of last mer in this country, and in an interest. ing letter writes: On the prairies of Iili- Kings ton, Canada, I met several people who were formerly laborers in England and in the north part of Ireland, who are now the owners of the farms they till They seem to be doing well. 1 spent a | pois and in the neighborhood of who went from the north of England some thirty vears ago. They took nothing with them but stout hearts and i a pair of ready, willing hands, They | have now farms of their own, in ohne case of one hundred acres and in of eighty acres, They | erected good houses, stables, | and the usual outbuildings | with a well-equipped farm. Surroun ing their homesteads are orchards in which they grow many Kinds of fruit Their land is well cultivated, and well stocked with fine animals, Nearly evervthing they require is produced Ly themselves; in short, they are indepen. dent as far as anybody on earth can be independent. | but work for | other have barns, connected themselves, and were | travels. There was a quiet dignity, a self-possession, an absence of haste and | ers which afforded a pleasant contrast to in other parts of ui ‘much that I saw | America, CAMP, How to Open Oysters, “Talk of Hurrican, ** only know how," “And how's how,” light. “Scotch suuff,” answered old Herri- cane, very sententiously, *‘Scotch snuff; bring a little of it ever so near their noses, and they'll sneeze their lids off.” “I know a genius,’’ observed Mr, Karl, “who has a better plan. He spreads the bivalves in a circle, seats himself in the center, and begins spin. ining a yarn, Sometimes it’s an adven- ture in Mexico—sometimes a legend of his love--sometimes a marvellous stock operation. As he proceeds the oysters get interested; one by one they with astonishment at the tremendous and direful who which are poured forth; and as y gape, my friend whips ‘em out, peppers ‘em al swaller’ em, “That'll do,” said Starlight, witha long sigh. “I wish we had a bushel of them here now--they'd open easy.’ opening oysters,’’ said old why nothing's easier if vou inquired Star- Italics im Our English Bibles, The King James Bibles italicize all the words supplied in translating, even the pronominal subject which is implied in the verb by its inflection, or the co- pula-verb fmoplied by the juxtaposition of The revisers, in their preface lay down a rule which is, for substance, that they will italicize only the words that are supplied for making good sense in English, and not those which are properly implied in the phraseology of jut in their use of this rule they seem to count all the ordinary English supplements the Hebrew phraseology as implied; it is only in ex- they count anything as supplied, That their rule, That their usage is that which ordinar- ily obtains in popular translations into English from other languages will read ily be admitted; but the English Bible, though a popular translation, i8 in some important respects different from other popular translations, If was any reason why revisers should spend so much time upon it, that reason 1 in the fact that the Bible book-a which are expected not merely to read ¢ they in. but to studs most tt Lier religions igs DOGK do 1h it does initeriere ww, It where- re therefore 10 Lhe of either the istic stvie of the onduces ne accurate expression ing or the character ] iginal. Probably } or more of the omissions of italics in the Res Version are in violation of this princi- ple let me illustrate this by a few in- stances taken at random from Malachi 1) “My name shall be great among (Mal. i. 113, the Revised reion translates ‘my name is great, ”’ be’ into the therefore, here tit 18 a matter of had nether Yyie EPL ised the Gentiles” margi recogniie difference the copula tt: + Liat were iat for matier because anat James evi up sors take meeal the If one he should retransiate the Re- i would obtain a result different from the original, A very different instance is ‘‘a ym honoreth his father, and a servant his master’ (Mal. 6). Here the vision omits the italics. In this case it is true that the word his is implied, which would ordinarily be sufficient rea- son for leaving it undistinguished. But here it is also true that it would be as natural for the Hebrew to express the pronoun as for the English; that the omission of it is a mark of peculiar style; that this peculiarity might be transferred into perfectly good English: “A son honoreth a father, and a servant his master;” that the peculiarity is at least indicated in the old version by its noting that the word his is supplied; that it is buried out of sight in the re- vision, and that the test of retransiation would here vindicate the old and con- demn the new, The instances thus objected to must be nearly half as numerous as the verses ju the Old Testament. They may be relatively fewer in the New Testament. In this matter the Bible of King James, with all its superfluity of italics, is greatly to be preferred to that of the revisers, with its thousands upon thou- he re- guishable from the other parts of the text. M. Mangins, of Paris, France, has recently made an interesting experi- ment with a paper balioon of about 150 feet cuble capacity. It was filled ia ten minutes with pure hydrogen, furan by the Egasse apparatus. A candescent lamp was suspended in the centre of the balloon, surrounded by the gas, and a current passed through it. The imcandescent light rendered the balloon Sampurent, giving 1s Se appearance mmense C - tern. It — captive about 70 feet above the surface of the ground and experiments made to prove iw val- ue for sigualing. The signals were made by lighting and extinguishing the lamps, The same experimenter is work- ing on the problem of reheating balloon gases during nocturoal voyages, but beyond the ability to use the balloon as a sigual-light carrier in case of war, the invention bas apparently little real value, SP The process of feathers in thom sighily betore th dre then them with the back of a knife, they will curl . SA