Two Discarded Poen a by Lsagfellow. " Jecknym" was Mr. Iswtgfellow's rendering of (he name of a mountain in New Hampshire, now written "Otoconia." The poem, tliongh he did net care to gather it iulo hie rollootod works, in worth reprinting: sauaoiva. (The Indian chief, Jockoyva, m tradition a_ve, perished alono on tho mountain which now bears hie name. Night overtook him whilst hunting among the cliffs, ami ho wse not heard of till after a long time, when his half-decayed norpee wse found at tho fool of a high rock, over which ho must hare fallen. Mount Jeekorva is near tho Whitn IliUs.) They made the warrior's grave beside The dashing of his native tide ; And thorn was mourning in tho glon The strong wail of a thousand men O'er him thna fallen in his pride, Ere mist of ago, or blight or Mast Had o'er hi* mighty spirit passed They made the warrior's graro lxinnalh Tho bending of the wild elm's wreath, Whero the dark hunter's piercing eye Hail found that mountain rest ou high. Whore, scattered by tho sharp wind's breath, Beneath the ragged cliff wcro thrown The strong btlt and tho moldcricg bone. Where was the warrior's foot when first The roil snn 011 the mountain hurst 7 Where, when Iho sultry noon-time came On the green vales with scorching tlame. And made the woodlands faint with third 7 Twaa whero the wind is keen and loud. Anil the gray oaglo breasts the cloud. Where was the warrior's foot when night Voilod in thick cloud tho mountain height 7 None heard the loud and sullen crash Nouo saw the fallen warrior dash Down tho baie rock so high anil white Hut ho that drooped not in tho chase Made on the hills his burial-place. They found him there, when the long day Of cold desertion passed sway, And tracos on that barren cleft Of struggling hard with death were left Deep marks and footprints in the clay I And they have laid his feathery helm lly the dark river and green elm. The following "Song" was T/ingfoltow'a last contribution to tho l.ilrrary (}aiHlt. It was published in the number for April 1, 1826, not long before he sailed for Europe, and has not been reprinted. SOB a. Where, from the eve i>l day. The dark and silent river Pnnines through tangled woods away o*rr which tho tall trees quiver; The silver mist, that breaks Prom out that woodland cover. Betrays the hidden path it takes And bangs the current over 1 So oft the thongh'a that burst Prom hidden springs of foeling. lake silent streams, unseen si first. From oar oold hearts are stealing. bnt soon the clouds that veil The eye of Love, when glowing, betray the long nnwhispered talo Of thoughts in darkness flowing I Carrying Off the Prize. " Nobody goes to chnrch on Eutn dmy witboat an entirely now anit in the very latest fashion 1" aaid Mrs. Do No vel le. "Certainly not!" mid Alicia, her eldest daughter. " Mrs. Pelham has written to Paris for a new bonnot, to my certain knowledge." "And, of coarse," added Kraily, tho : ronngest scion of the honse of De Nordics, "as yon are spending the winter with ns, Madeline, yon will be expected not to disgrmoo us." Madeline Moray looked from one to the other of the speakers with a trou bled expression of countenance. " Bat, Annt De Novellas," said she, "mamma writes mo that onr old Consin Zaphaniah and his wife bare eome from Maine, very poor, and that we mast economize as much as poesiblo in order to keep them ofT the town. They are very old, and they noed a great many little lnxnries, and—" Mrs. D N ore lies' face darkened visibly. " Madeline," aaid she, " will you never forge* that yon belong to a ( fanner's family down-East? Tour I Cousin Zephaniaha are nothing to me. , Of coarse, while yon are my guest, 1 ahall expect yon to drees as becomes , jonr station as my niece." Madeline knitted her pretty brows in sore perplexity after Annt De Novel lee had rustled oat, leaving a strong odor of patchouli benind her. Hhe had admired the devotion of her annt and the girle in attending the church services so regularly during Lent; site, too, had aat in the dim, re ligions light of the perfumed church trying to recall her wandering thoughts to the words whieh she uttered, and had come to the cone! o< ion that she wae not half so good as her aunt, and EmiJy, and Alicia. And now, Annt De Novel lea felt no charity for poor old Oonsin Zephaniah, and wanted her to spend all her little money for drees and fashion to make an outside show. She bed a fifty-dollar bill yet left of tho small store which they had scraped together at home when they sent her to spend a winter in Boston with Annt De Rovslks, sad she took it from her purse wad smoothed it out upon her desk, fifty dollars f Hhe had hoped to save it all for Cooin Zephaniah. Her pretty shot silk, with the tlamaase front, was very freah and pretty still —she hud only worn it some half dozen times aad her neat little split-strew hat would look very a ice, if ■he bought new ribbon for it end re arranged tho flowers. At least that was the mental conolnaion at which she had arrived, when Mra. Do Novellas issued her commands, binding AS an imperial ukase, that a new Easter suit was among tho necessities. Madolino knew vory woll that Hho was pretty. She nover looked into tho glass without perceiving the difference between her fresh, apple-blossom of a faco, and tho enameled and rouged complexions of her oity cousins. She knew that her long hair war like bur nishod cods of gold, her long-lashed eyes liko stars ; and she would have liked a new Easter suit as well as any one—and the bonnetß in Madame Prin tcmp's window looked infinitely beauti ful in her eyas, with their French roses and perfectly simulated violets ; but there was the old man and his enfeebled wife to remomber—the ancient relics of a bygone generation who had outlived tho sympathy of almost all tho world. "No," said Madelino to herself, "1 must not spend this money, Easter suit or no Faster suit." 80 she sat hersolf down ia tho rainy March afternoon to rip up tho shot silk dress and alter it so that even Alicia and Emily should not know it fcr the same. But with all her skill in amatour dressmaking tho folds would not hang stylishly, tho old creases would obtrude themselves on tho eye, and tho costumo proclaimed in its every glisten and puff, "Mado over, made over, made over !" Emily Do Novelles shook her head. "Madeline," said she, "it's of no use. Yoti never can wear that dross ! Aud your hat, too A plain split straw, with out so much as a French flower." Madelino burst into tears. " Very well, Emily," she said. " Then I will remain at home. You need not foar that 1 will disgrace the congrega tion of 8t Etheldroda on Easter Hun day." And this pledgo evidently relieved the mind of Miss Da Novelles. " For," as sho afterward told her sis ter Alicia, "theso half civilized country girls are capable of anything." And the two elegant sisters did not take the trouble, when Captain Braba zan dropped in to 5 o'clock tea, to send up word to Madelino that thero was company in the parlor. " I suppose sho don't care to see me!'* the captain thought, with a sinking heart, when at last he went away, after having lingered as long as politenosa wonld admit. " I supposed he never asked for me !'• Madeline Mid to herself, as, from her window, she saw hie retreating figure naunter slowly down the street. " Well, it matters less than ever now abont the Easter suit. Nobody will know whether I have one or not." Hot when Easter eve came, and Madeline was crying softly in her own roorj, to think of the radiant spring snnset that was flooding all the world at home, the oolored waiter came grin ning np to the door. " Please, Miss Maddy." ho Mid, "hyar's a basket o' laylocks. Heal springy-smellin', Ido declare! Wid de eappen's card—Cappen Brahaxan. mi sa P Madeline nttered an exclamation of delight Ob, the lovely, purple things ! Clus ters of lilac fragrance I Delicious re minders of the springtide at home. Ob, how kind it was of Captain Braba 7.1 n to remember that she was a country girl, exiled here among brick walls! Madame Cressonde's young woman Mt np until 12 o'clock that night to finish the three elegant costumes which Mrs. DeNovollss and her daugh ters had ordered. The threo bonnets did not oomo homo nntil Sunday morn ing. But Madeline watched them Mil forth to church, to tho gii tor of golden sun beams and the clanging of melodious bells, like three fashion-plates. And then she put on her plain little "mtde-ovor dres," and, taking a fresh cluster of lilacs from the vase of water, pin tie 1 it across the split straw hat. "Therel" aho thought, as she tied the strings under her chin, "no Paris exotic ever looked half so sweet as that! And I am sure that heaven will inoline its ear no less favorably to my praysrs than if I went to St. Etheldreda sin Worth'a newest design." And she crept to the little oh n rob in the adjoining street, whish had long gone ont of fsahion, and whore the spectacled old olergyman practiced all tLe austerities of the early fathers, through dire necessity. She eat there listening to the as. theme and thinking 'of the dear once at home, and wondering if Oonsin Zephaniah and his poor old pnrblind wife sronld ever know that ahe (little Madeline Moray) had jaat her mite to relieve their tore necessities, and re calling Tagualy the poor widow whose offering bed onoe been so precious to the Holiest of eyes. Hers was not much now, bnt aha also had givan it from a freo and willing heart. As ahe moved quietly and srith rever ent, downcast eyes ont of the oh arch, •erne one stepped to her aide. " You have dropped something, Miss Moray," said OapUin Brabaean. And ho held up tho cluster of lilacs, drooping now, and a little faded. Hho put her hand up to nor bonnet, with a scarlet blush. "Your lilacs, Captain Brabazan I" sho said. Ilia face brightened. " I am proud that you doomed them worthy of wearing," said he. "Yonr oonsin told me that yon wero snch an anchorite that yon did not care for flowers or books or society—that you wero not evon going to church on Easter day." "I ? 'cried Madeline. "Oh, Captain Brabazan, 1 like all thrco 1 I cried over your flowers whon they came lost night. They seemed to mo liko doar friends from homo. And I wore them in my bonnet becanso— becauso I could not affcrd artificial blossoms. There I now you know jnst how poor I am I" And she laughed evon while tho rose ate tinge suffused her cheek. " I do not know whether you ore poor or not," said ho; "bnt I do know that I think you aro the nearest perfection of any girl whom I ever saw !" "May I tell you all about it?" she asked, hurriedly; "for I do not want yon to think me avaricious or secui bar barian, as my cousins sometimes pro nonnce mo. And then you shall tell mo whether yon think I am right or wrong." They walked slowly homo from church in the soft, bland sunlight of that Easter day, and when they reached the brown stone mansion on Hilverston street, Captain Brabazan went in and formally asked Mrs. D 3 Nevelles' per mission to address her niece with a view to marriage. That was Madolino Moray's Easb-r gift. A man's trno and loyal heart the dawn of a great happiness over a life which, up to this hour, had been but chill and solitary. Thero was no denying that Mrs. Do Novclloswas mnch disappointed. Emily and Alicia had been in society tbree seasons now without having received any eligible offer; and it did seem strange that this pale, qtiito littlo girl from tho backwoods, as Mrs. De No velles contemptuously expressed it, should have carried off such a glitter ing priza as Captain Brabazan—for it never occurred to them that Madeline's sweet unselfishness and quiet self de nial could possibly Lave anything to do with the matter. And as long as old ConMn Zephaniah and his wife Le washed out by blood, and accordingly, as the phrase goes in such oases, " placed themselves in the hands of their friends." The friends met in solemn conclave, and after care fully discussing the merits of the qusr rel raferrod to them for settlement, came to tho conclusion that the fol lowing method of combat would exact ly meet the exigencies of the situation. Two tiny spheres, one white the other black, wero placed in a wineglass, and tho "principals," having been blind folded, were asked to "draw." Both the would be combatants, it should be observed, had ple/g-d their honor to observe tho conditions of strife pre scribed by their seconds in common. He to whose lot the black ball fell fonnd himself, to his infinite surprise and discomfiture, compelled to fast upon bread and water for a whole fort night, under the supervision of his ad versary's "friends." According to the Ma-jvar Potgar, be fulfilled bis pledge with a good grace, to the full satisfac tion of his wounded honor, if not of bis healthy appetite. —Londm Telegraph. Auroral Display*. The recent anroral display on a Son day night extended all over tho country, and waa the moat brilliant display of the kind ainee 1860. Professor Henry Draper, the astronomer, said to a New York reporter that he viewed it through the spectrum with a great deal of in terest. "It was not so well defined in its colors as the display in 1860, M he re marked. "We know more abont the anrora boreal is now than we did then, bat there is still mnoh to be learned. It Is of coarse an electrical display, and is abont 100 miles above the earth. Yonng, who is good anthority on the subject, oonnects it with spots on the son, and there is a gooa deal of evi dence bearing on the point. Bbcnld any new spots be discovered on the snn that wonld be farther proof. There is almost a vacuum where this display takes pi so*. We can prodnee something tike it in a vacuum tube. The red lines are caused by vapor in the atmosphere, bat what aanses the greet lines is not known." ttOUDM OP WIHDOM. Htrivo and encourage a mind[and will of your own. Littlo things console us because little things allliot us. Never be penmaJod contrary to your better judgment. Want of care does uh more damage than want of knowledge. " Wishing" is the stumbling block of progress and reform. " Doing " is the lever that moves the world. 1 never had a man come to mo for ad vice, but before ho got through ho had more advice to offer than to ask for. One of tho most fatal temptations to the weak is a slight deviation from tho truth, for tho sake of apparent good. Tho moon, liko some men, is tho brightest when it is full; but, like them again, it HOOU begins to lose its luster. 1 don't want to know people that look ngly and disagreeable, any more than 1 want to taste dishes that look disagreo able. If you will follow this rule you will save yourself many a heart ache: " Never bite till you And out whether it is broad or stone." One may be betrayed into doing things by n combination of other cir cnmstances which one may never have done otherwise. If yon can trust yonr neighbor yon i may possibly be a credulon* man, bnt if yon can bonostly trust yourself you mttßt bo a good one. Love, hatred, jealousy, destiny are blind; tho eyes of justice are blind folded; and one must then quit life in : order to l>o able to see in it. The Hire* of Head*. The controversy over the question of whelhtr men's hcadsj are smaller now than they were a hundred years ago suggests to a Now York paper another, the inquiry whether there is any note worthy difference in the sine of heads at the present time in this city among the representatives of various races, nation alities and social conditions. Careful inquiry among the hatters fails to de velop the existence of any iuch differ ence, to such an extent or with such regularity of application that it can bo formulated or stated as even ap proximating to a fact A celebrated uptown hatter said, when questioned on the subject: " With the excep tion of Spanish Americans, who seem to have generally small heads, I know of no people whose heads do not average, in point of sue, just about the same as any other people's heads. Cuban and Bonth American heads are frequently as small as 6} and seldom run over 7j. IS ill then it moat be remembered that they aro generally rather undersized people, with small, bony structures. Where you come across a big one among them his head ia likely to be, in proportion, equally as exceptional as his body. The Bcotch are, as a rule, big-boned people, and they bavo big heads, running very generally from 7\ up to 71, and in some instances as high as 8. But the latter number ia rare, even among the Hootch. Leave ->nt these nationalities of extreme* and all the rent aro just about equal. An Elephant's Revenge. There is no creatnro in tho world so cunning as the elephant, and no crea ture, moreover, so full of duplicity. The elep ant in the Jardin dea Plantes, in Paris, never forgave his keeper for having made him ridiculous before the crowd assembled to witness his per formance on a penny trumpet, which tho poor man had been at the greatest pains to teach him. A note camo out in "J'ai du bon tabao" with a shrill squeak, when it should have l>een deep contralto. The creatnre was vain of its artlstio skill, as all artists are, and, flinging down tho trumpet, made a charge against the iron bars of its cage, which sent the crowd flying right and left in the utmost terror, while the keeper, who fortunately had time to creep through the opening left at the bottom of the cage for the purpose of escape in time of danger, ran out of sijht immediately. He never dared enter the cage again, for he knew by the expression of the creature's eye that the grudge sras owing still. The new keeper wiaely withdrew the penny trumpet, and "J'ai du bon tabao" sras beard no more. To wound the vanity of the greatest of beasts is as dangeroas as to trifle with that of the greatest of moo arc hs. Hounded to His Grave. Frank Armstrong, who committed suicide recently In San Franciaoo, waa persecuted to his death. Ha once served a brief tarn in tha Oregon pen iteutlary for stealing an ovarooat while drank Being afterward restored to honeet employment in Portland, a very ex-convict who knew him blackmailed bim in snms ranging from fifty ©cut* to 910, and kept bim in eonatant fear of loaing hie plsee. Ha oonld stand the psraisteot calls for money no longer, and got on n apree and than resigned, going to San Franciaoo, TOPICS OF Til K BAY. It is believed that not fewer than 40,000 Americans will visit Europe this year, which Is a largor number than ever before, and that the emigration hither will rise to 450,000. This jus tifies the most extremo .vigilance con cerning the vehicles which are to trans port so large a number of souls. Armies are used for difforetApur. poses in different countries. In Russia the military and civil authorities are kept busy looking for dynamite mines laid for the purpose of annihilating the sacred person of tho czar. I t's a bad duy for the searching party when he fails to discover a Nihilist contrivance of this kind. If bo doos fail the knout or a somewhat protracted sojourn in Siberia awaits him. During the past year 2'>2 fatal acci dents occurred in the streets of Lon don, being tho largest number ever re ported. Tho figures arc surprisingly large, and yet it was only one out of every 10,000 inhabitants, tho great me tropolis now having a population of over 4,700,000. Of tho 252 fatal acci dents, 140 were caused by vans, wagons, drays and cars, forty-four by omnibuses and street cars, thirty-one by cabs and fourteen by carriages, while thirteen persons were killed by horses. Oarihaldi showed, on his recent visit to Sicily to attend tho celebration of tho Vespers, how weak and infirm he has become. 110 was placed in a car riage to be taken to tho villa prepared foi his reception, and rode doubled up, with uh; head on the knees of his wife, who sat opposite, Thero were 00,000 people in the crowd gathered to wol como him, but in *;inpatby with bis sufferings they stood in silence with uncovered heads, as their illustrious guest passed among them. English missionaries have begun to work in the peninsula of Cores—a land from which almost all Europeans have heretofore been jealously excluded. The aria of Corea ia 90,000 square miles and the population about 10,000,000 souls The language ia qnito unlike both Chinese and Japanese, and much diffi culty has been experienced iu learning it. Some progress haa, however, been mode in this direction, and the transla tion of the New Testament has been be gun by a Presbyterian missionary named Ikw. The bureau of statistics at Wash ington has furnished figures giving the exports ot oleomargarine to Europe during the last six fi'cal years, snd the value thereof. Iu 1875 there were 1,098,401 pounds exported, valued at 870,483. in 1881, 25,327,876 pounds, worth $381,566, were exported. In each cise the figures are for the fiscal year ending June 30 of the year named. The quantity of dairy butler exported iu the year ending Jnnc 30, 1881, was 31,560,- 600 poauda, valued at 86,257,024. At thia rate in about two yoara more the quantity of oleomargarine and butter ine exported will equal the exportation of the real article. It has been calculated by a recent writer on vital statistics thst, of ten children born in Norway, s little over seven reach their twentieth year; that iu England and the United Slates of America somewhat loss thsn seven reach that stage; that in France only five reach it, and in Ireland less thsn five. He tells us thst iu Norway, out of 10,000 born, rather more than one out of threo reach the age of seventy; in Enr.lsnd one out of font, in the United Htates, if both sexes bo computed, less than one out of four; in Frsnoe leas than one oat of eight, aud in Ireland less than ouo out of eleven, and he adds these figures aro significant even based on what may be called the commercial riew of the vital qnestion. An exchange has this to say on the subject of elephant acclimatisation : The fact already demonstrated that elephants can be bred in this country would seem to indicate thst the species might be naturalised and acclimated. Being of a t.uybl disposition, a few generations wmld domesticate them as thoroughly as horses and cows have been. The climate of the Southern States wonld be friendly to them, and for large operations in farming and the mechanic arts they oould be mads as useful as they are in India. As milk prodnoers, they surpass the cow in point of richness, if not of economy. Pro fessor Doremua, the ohemist, has an alysed that from the mother ot Bar naul's baby elephant, and prononnoea it in flavor and odor superior to that of many animals. An American Jady who bee spent some time ia Hungary, writes enthusi astically about the beauty of the peo ple. The men are simply gorgeous creatures— Um handsomest in tbe.vrorld. The first of them she saw, the captain of a Danube steamer, was "a very god in physique," and aha aooo found that ha was oaly a fair specimen of the vase. These grand fellows drees with taMe and magniScenes. In describing one of than who visited her, aha My ".lie came in iobei an uplendid aa tba robes in an Eastern tale. lie vore tba costliest of velvets, the richest of satin* and the meat of fare. He wora a girdle of precious stones, and bis sn perb mantle was fastened across bis breast by large rosettes composed of jewels. lam willing to confess that I was impressed. Never bars I seen a man so splendidly arrayed and so woriliy of it. You can fancy bow im posing a eompany of these nobles are on state occasions. I attended requiem inas at which the nobles were all present in this magnificence, and they were simply dazzling. Costly jewels are sometimes worn at the knee or a dom the tops of the high boots, which are always worn outside of the trou sers." The women are pronounced nearly a match to the men. fine of the mott singular of all avo cations is dotenbed by an English journal in away to indicate that it Las an established ex isle no :n Lon don. It is nothing more nor less than the bringing off of prize- fights, ami the business gives employ ment to a number of middlemen. The middleman has his regular be at and calls on regular customers. He also has bis pairs of gladiators always at call. Happening that n set of men wish to see a genuine combat, they aimplv subscribe twenty or thirty or fifty pounds, and place the money in the middleman's hands. A £2O " mill" is not a very sanguinary affair but £SO will buy a good deal of blood fhed. When the money is deposited the agent picka out " two lads that would like to have a turn." The " lada" are mostly Lazy louts who do not love work. They train for a week on money supplied by the " merchant" who arranges the meeting. When tbey are finally placed in the ring they really do hnrt each other, and the sj>ectators Lave the pleasure of battle and con spiracy simultaneously. There are half an hour of heavy hitting, a few spirited rallies on the cords, a large amonnt of bad language., and then on* man gives in. The middleman pockets half the money, and the rest is divided between the battered ruffians who afford the entertainment. CLII'I'IMiS FOR THE Cl'RIOl'S. ID 1H75 sixty ton* of human hair •were exported from Chin* to Europe. AD ostrich egg in considered equiva lent to twenty-lour eggs of the domes tic ben. In Jsvs sn inferior must walk with his bsnds on heels till his superior is out of sight. Paper mule from strong fibers can now l>o compressed in a substance so hard that nothing but a diamond can scratch it. A French statistician has estimated that the total length of all telegraph wires at present tail is sufficient vo ex tend forty-six times around the globe. Bpiders nave been seen as small as a grain of sand, and these spin a thread so fine that it takes four thuuvand of them put together to equal in site a single hair. Pumioe dust, ejected from volcanoes, sometimes floats out upon the occaa and makes so thick an accumulation that boats find it difficult to force their wsy through it. Horning kerosene oil can be extin guished by throwing milk npon It. A person s first impulse is to throw water, but the oil rises and tho only result is to make the fire spread. A man weighs about forty times as much as tho new-born infant. The caterpillar of the silkworm, when fully developed, is seventy thousand times heavier than when it came from the <***• Noah's ark was 81.662 tons burden. This (quels the tonnage of about eighty one first rate ahipa of war. It was 647 feet long, eighty-one feet broad and fifty-four feet high, making 2,730,782 solid feet. Two twins born in Kentucky only four minutes apart will date their birthdays in different years. One was born at two minutes to 12. December 31, 1881, and the other two minutes after 12. Jannary 1, 1882. In some parts of Germany a curious custom exists. The peasantry who posaeas a bit of land, however email, never enter a church without having a nosegay in their band. They thus show that they claim the consideration due those who possess some property in the pariah. The megapod of the Bast Indies builds an artificial mold in which its eggs are deposited to be hatched. The mounds are sometimes fourteen feet high, with n circumference of 160 feet, and the decay of the vegetable matter of which they an composed produces an artificial warmth sufficient to hatch the eggs. In Germany, during the slippery see son, temporary calks am used for horse shoes. Two sharp pointed studs sn inch long are sore wed into boles left in the shoe, and when the horn sn ten the •table they am taken out and a button eerewed into their plaaa, thereby pre venting ail damage to the home and keeping the screw holes from filling.