BY'r.'HAV/LEY - '.'.&':•.t . RE . R. AN AUTUMN 'IDYL As through the forest, disarrayed By Nov enitter, late I strayed, • 'A leneli minstrel' of the wnutf, - Was :lining , to the - solltu de ;' I love thy music, .thttsl said, :-- When o'er thy perch the leaves were spreadi : Sweet was thy song, lint sweeter novi. Thy carol. on , the leafless bough: Sing, little bird ! thy hote shall cheer The indnetis Oftihd dying'year'' f r 'G When violet Pratilted die' turf with tail& And =Jilting filled theft , Thy slender voice with rippling trill The budding. April bowers would fill, Nor,passed its joyous tones away When April rounded into May: • Sing, little bird ! the spring is gone. But n the summer's chant is done • 1 And mute the choral antiphon ; The birds havOeft the shivering pines To flit among the trellised vines, 0i fan the air with 'scented plumes, ,ApAifd the lovesick prange 'And bere Sing, little bird-I:thereat have flown. The snow has capped yon distant - - At morn the running brook was still, From driven herds the clouds that rise, Are like the smoke et - sacrifice, . ,Erelong the frozen sod shall mock • The:plowshare: ehangfid to stubborn rock, The brawling streams shall soon be dnntb-=.- - ,fikng, little bird ! the frosts have come.' dt Fast, fast the lengthening `shadows creep, The "Bootlegs fowls are halt asleep, The air grows chill; the setting sun May leave thee ere thy song , is done, . The pulse - that' warms thy' breast groWs cold, The secret/die with thee, untold ; The lingering sunset Sing, little bird ! 'twill soon' be night. STRANGELY BETROTHED. "(10ING OUT, Ellen, are you-?" said U my father, as he. tightened the Teign of his sturdy hill-pony. "Well, well, my dear, I have to face' the heat, too, and shall envy you the shade of your favorite trees, be de the big tank. That Mala 'bar headman I sp4e of, who has just brought over a gang of fresh coolies from the mainland, has promised _to meet me in front of thet joss -house-in the Nal Tan tee village, to see if we can come to terms. I shall be back before tiffin time I hope." . And with a kindly nod and smile, he rode °flat a brisk trot ; his house-keeper a bare.:footed Cingalese lad,: easily keep ing pace with the pony, at d - running swift and silent, like _a. ,brown brown shadovi, beside his 'Master's stirrup. Times had changed,.au-I for the worse, since Mr. Traters 'bad been reckoned among the most, thriving coffee rplantera in Ceylon. Our once famous plantation, called Trav ers after tue family that had possessed it two generations, was not now. the source of profitthatiti7my grauf,ifattie:4..time, it bad tie4ilf-'oiic rich boil,' WOratOt by over!cc4iiiiing - aid :neglect, 'e vigil edj 4 ti -heavy ' harvest :o.f.'retl-larown beriies i'fwiiile,*reclEiirn fresh ;and from the fUngle was; both toilsome 'atild, ; costly. The'estate gave us the means of..mt.in tenance, and little more. I walrfati only - child, and my lather was a widoi - er,',ii6that our octriatnecessities, in shat cheap arid frugal - , country, were easily provided for ; nor should . Iyhave had alcei4i4 iti - the world, save for the:old, said story of , love, the course .ot which hard circumstances would not, sutrtfr to nearest.neighbor-7,and Christ lan neigtibo t re, with - white faCeS and Er, lists-s were - searee in northern °pylon—y(ls - ro t ifer, a piat/ter:.by than,':We'vere. No'.:Osw,ifid:and. 1 were - plighted but.: 6m:Yery-idea -of an engitigement be tweerrhisi.'ouly son and the Of hiEr.'oiifhiAtiiiiied, neighbor. gli . 4 and wofinWt'i l &La' oiniald'a father, - a pioad, str6r.g- willed man; who, managed'- thriving., property, so as to , extract from every heegati - or arable land its .: utmost yield in::Si ' - '-‘ tO:faie l e froin Oiwaild's mind the,40,4 , 0t marrying ; poor. little.• Ellen Travers,,,Mt: Forster, with .his wife's con cnrrence, pmposed to 'send 'his -Soil to. Etri*,tonfident that . foriiigtitrajrel and change of scene'' would'. ,sOon' - Obliterate from hls - MemtirY the "image .of thi3 lone ly tittle, - girt - beside 'the",, grat Tank of ,And 'noli word concerning tile- tank - itself, the namP of;-which. - (fear oons.ls to European .zeaders but a . very inailecinate con ception' of tlie stupendous reality ! The ',tank - Of Minary, justly t i e d fail:lo4 the mirvels,.whicb:the , Islritid or Ceylon has still to show, is per !alts 'thedargest .of the artificial lakes planned by moral engineer.,, More' , tla ti, tW9. thousand _years hayo. passed sincle,; fitlf..re. the Uhristiiin,i,'-era; 4- Bud., • 41,1e8t 1 . Mut. bildelit , 4ubjeCts-thiFto erect ilia massive_ walls rof hewn -stone and I, )lighchunam i that environs =that vast, sheet Ortratef, - 'air eurnferenet. With the MinagyiLikei or tank,"whit . . . . . . . •,• -4 , i...... - ;' , .. - s --, •-4 ,--, - - : - '7' ~ V. 'v. r ,-;;: , • ;; -- 7 7------- ---... * ~ . . . -, • . ... _ _ . . ._. . - . 2 - .. • • , . . . . . ~ . ... • _ . . . •-• , . . . . . . ~ . . - ~ ,...f. , , ,-.,..• .•, -,.;;!‘ ,;;: i. .- -. '•.,.. 4 • . . ~., •! - ..- ::, .'-' - N \\;:;. ,N\ \-.:: ) :...'.. ".\ _ . .• ';',',.; . . .-1:. • ' l ',,Z -.',.. ',',%:\ 7 - . i . . „ 1 . ',r,•; . . - .. •,, . . . . .:. el - ..' ' ' '' '.. . 4 ' - ;- '• ff - '.: •*- ---.• ~ ''',ii - ' :. Pis :. ..::: ~ .. , .. - . i ,-.... : ....,. . r.,..c, .70. .....„..\, ~ . ... ...• t.„.... ...„,, ..,rt-..„ ~ 7 , .. •-•-: - ''' . . ',. ~ , ' Ir i :- .l'' ' '.. - 47. ) fi ' -' c r t • 4 :;i 4 • ''"•:. -• •• :. :,:• , i , 4,--, . .... .. .. ~... •, ~ . ~:: • ..; • -. e! . • s.„ ~ . k, • ‘• . _ . . _ -.. . , ~ • . • .- 1. • .- ~..., . • - ~- ~.,\,,.._, •',. ''-).',•;, : , %. -,-• . ' ' eg el' - ~ , ......• .....• .-z..: - ,i: . 1.. , . ,- - - -• t,...,•••.,, , ..,. . . ~ . ~, • .r.. ,d 4 r 'F . s . % - it' - . , •'4 ' ' : !..'i „•:!;'.. . . . -. . , ~..- _ ', 7 di ...,e .4- - ..- - ~. 4.4 ., •.- 1 -- - i • • . .. . : - :„.• - ..,.: -;.• ; -...,,..., ,-, •:. , -.: . - :,...: • . . . „.., • -.,-, -..;. : „, • ,gt -.- ” • • : . , . : . - • . . . - ".k. • ~• - - .... 1 / 4 : .-.-- t,,,-- •,, ,, 1: ...,,,,* -.•:. ,•,... ... i ..-.,. • • lIMII== and its slender tongue protruded from lay-close to my own. home, I had been from childhood familar, and I dearly loved . the - mirror-like expanse of - its, clam waters studded`with floating, islands, - of the' criinson•=blOsioirici ,lottis' 'of India, the red-flOwers and green'leaves of- which covered' many thousand acres of the sur face. Strange fish, of brilliant colors, glided in glittering shoals through the ,deep, clear water,,,,rarely disturbed Ay pads i lle',i' bright' birds e'verl fi f. em'''the''schrlet'llikiiiiiiig,o to the I,itfy 10ri010.,-)orc ) .the to weri n g adjutant, 11040 alt around grew in der* prelusion the mighty trees and flowering creepers of the virgin forest,* whence Came at times the mountain cat, the belling of the deer, the panther's snarl,or the cra - shing:olthe, , cane_and sap ling, as a-wild elephant forced. their-wity through„, the ,tracklesS recesses of the jangle:' • ` l ,l am bound to admie'that - fink; Were 'Other.tenants -of lake 'and 'forest less at tfacti7,o than the brigh t phi maged-tsirds and the, pretty littlelizards baking in the pzi,thless - ol yellow sunshine. Alligators, ;werd very common, snakes plentiful, and 'the' scorpion, the d'entiPede and the tree• leech•were often to be. met ,with in. the more swampy arid tangled,,tracks of the woodland., But we, who were, colonial learn a disregard 'Of the creeping things that surround us' which astonishes a- new arrival = from Europe, and I had never..in my life known what it was to , feel real fear of beast or reptile. I watChed my father's retiring figure nntil it 'disappeared amid the feathery bamboos that -lined the path, and then; turning.; my back - on the white house With ,its green' verandahs, walked, on, under .the shadow of the great forest tree's. till I' reached thelmbankment theXinarY Tank. Half-in-hour's Walk ink-brought me within sight of a ruined - sammer4iouse,- built on the edge of the lake by some,. former. Dutch proprietor.- and yet surmonuted by, a- large ball of gilded . oA,perehed on a pole. Near the summer-house it was my custom to mpeC.:Ciiivald.-' And it '•would ,-be but velky seldom that we were to meet, hence forth, sin le, pniv fellow, he' Was to sail- bY the Lord Dalhousie, expected, at. Point' de Gallo on the 31st of the month. 9ri my'way I 'paused now and then, familar as was the prospect, to gaze-up on the wide, expanse of the-lake, the very waters which rolled away so'gradual ly that it was hard to concieve that What seemed, almost entitled- to take rank as an inland sea could, be actually the' work of human _hands,. Flocks of wiltlfowl; with white wings and shrill scream, hov ered above the:swarms' of georgeously tinted fish that swarm around the huge weed-biishd,s, while here and there among the red lotus- blossoms appeared what might hay . been easily tniataken fora floating butwhich knew. to be au ttill Bator, drOwSily basking in...the glad sunshine.. • • , - tne heavy beat Seethed to render exer tion, even for the natives, difficult, for I sal ffsher. 813 !mud!, padding his light canoe or preparing- his- tough nets of cocoanut. fibre ; and -the very Clingalesi woodcutters' had . desetted their work; "leaving behind theth a great heap of hewn tiniber, iti - front' of 'which, imbedded in the spongy, wood .of, A pypress - tree, four or five short bh - ght : axes remained stic% l ing. Some few paces from hisheap wad the ruin summer-house;'aii4 fieyonii thirettoiteml 'aloft the eititg_talipot treei: with its.yast serr4,t94: le,ilyes i , that serve the, Ciogalese' , ,for and:- thatch and screem bengat4 _which Oswald and 1. , wore accustomed' to meet. . - .TO mysurprige, and . .perliaps chagrin, I d:i d nut iini F'qt foe)iiin - for 'Whonirl iociii.. ed, aild began in`fear that be hadlorgot tett to keep his - .wonted tryst ;_ but on drawing.nearer. I.beheld a eights that for the momeat -froze my.`viry 'veins with horfor,vittd , Caused , the cry of 'anguish that ross, to. ' ml; ; :liiibs. to dig_ 4,way. . i OB- ward, lyi n g on the ' turf among the roOt . § of , the glgautiC:' palms tide,We niect46 be' asleep s . oyereorne,l. probably : . by ..he tiiinS lit-Wheat; Witire:arentid ..11141".;Was "loosly coiled:soinething that resembled a stout rope, curiously streaked with black; and orange, and white—lonnthiug that caus ed the withered leaves atql crisped grais to rustle as it stirred, writhing. I had never seen a living. ,tic . palunge, bntl kneti,a9 flie' first"- glance .that the snake before my eye 3 was no other than a ..: large -- spee,ie a that.:dreadiid - , :top tilo, w!iich in Cllon takes the position that in Continental India belongs to the tobra for the bite of which there is no known remedy.s Twice within - the -- slast three years, laborers on my father's plantation had .oeen , brought in' dying, from . the venom N.the 'tic :paltinga, but in.each. instance the :skill =of• the , native •snake:-' Charmers had led" to the capture of the reptile, end it was , notheliefid -that'any i)f* this species,, rare ,a s .welkkg. dangerous, been left alitge in ou rinitneitiate neighbor hood. This, , however',- was' unquestion 7 abl)a ticlikflunga, many feet;lbng, an d it; bad wrapped lts' coils 'is - Waugh i a p hideous ort, around, Oswald'4,4lll4frak bellyt ere unconscious. , ~ ti The. r e` kW' 'et thi len &mous MONTR,QS - F,,,::: - PAi .. - . NQY:. - .i.:•:OW, 1876. snake rested,on tlit , ground, among .-the: flowers arid ferns. I pub! see its eyes, bilglit as jewels, filed upon me. It sbow ed for the tribMent, hoWever, no partieu lar sign of anger or ordistrust,blitieon 7 tented itself with' quietly ;contemplating= the intruder-upon its liaiintse As :1-stotur' gazing on, my ,sleeping ', 1 , 0 Ye,1,', 4 1 14,.. the indnstrous,6reature' pat 'lay, Wakeful .bnt qnies'nerif,' - go'neai'to'hini; Ail 06,0,61 1 1'68 orisitaVes'tliat thad e#e'r heiliid Or read . came crowding: in .upon:.my quickened ruentory... I knew,. that,: c the, ficpalutiga, , in commoo,,with the; mostr:of the yenom, bus 'yarefieti of 'its r.iae,..406,92 - employed', it'3 tioiSoiAlings . ii`iileis''Orlien - tittacked' Or' annoYed.- ' bigl also kriewithidthe hard iest .e le pllan t- bun ter of the . forest; would sooner, pooh:oat ; the ~ciarge,of 4 !teal:did . incensedtuckers thati„factk the_Unce 7 like dart 'Etna 'rancorous bite' of this dread denzizen - of the jungle. -: '''- ' - ' •• -'' -' Thentic , ,Palunga, 'IOW t6c;boa and , the python, rarely,i- if eves,: . preys - upon ; the auitnals„:such as cielt or oattle,oo:ll7' CiiiinLitiliet,.for. the most partto birds, : frogs 'anti liz,Ardz: Some' caprice, - most likely, Mid* riansed it 'to' 'twine a part of tts supple-i3onitilsi_ms amiiiid 'Oswald as - he lay,, and,.sp, tong as heiremamed asleep and, motionfesstlt.rewas little, p_robabil 7 , if y that the serpeni. . would hifarm ,lkiin, mtgroi'f:ear 'was lest he - should awake, and itraivaking, by B , itne ' hastYi move, meta: arouse ,the.ire of the resistleßs foe.' Oswald was brave and - trcog, but it was mockery'to speak of Str ugith or.cottrage when :so terrible an antagonist was in qUestion. '--- - - . . . - Suddenly, as . if it` had bi!en . a whisper from Heaven, there .danie 'into my mind a thought,,that promised' how!, even in that dire ey..tremity of need. . I haa awn . seen harmlfss :snakes kept tame in,.c010.. vial honsehblds, and was aware or their habits, and of 'their love for ceitain kinds` of . food, and , above all for,milk. . couta I but ; bring,to, that spot a supply) of: milk, and,place. it, before Oswald should awake temptingly dear to the tic valunka, all might yet 'be well. And yet to desert him—pifintfellow—in such terrible cod". pany, seemed cruel ; yet , it was for his sake, and I felt , that I _must go, Very slowly, Abet!, ~lest my , - footsteps _should distUrb the sleeper or irritate the huge reptile that. "kept watch beside him, I stole away, Enid when at a'safe _distance, flew „rather. than ran,` .along the: forest path. , ~',:-...,,--': _ ; s The nearest European dwelling .*as Oswald'sown linme. There were;Ching-, alese huts nearer no dqubc,where dwelt some of Mr. Forster's - hired men, buti should not - he able to -procure' what I sought save from the planter's hono. at another time I should, not have.willinaly trespassed on, the _domains :of Oswald's father ; but • this was - no occasion., for scruple or ''punctilio. Life . and death, as "knew depended one my speed. ,There,,at length, • rose up before: me,' the milk-thorn-hedge,, the, impenetrable, thorns of which. are useful in. keeping out teiliard and jackel; which surrounded the plaint-ilia hoMestead - , and - passing through an open gate, I entered the com pound. The first servant that I. met; . and who tiftedhis hand-to hissnow-white turban with a polite "Salaam," and a smilei that show( d the white teeth between his bearded - 'l , ps,. was , man whom I knew, a Marhatta groom .who had furinei , he,!nin fily father's sflrvice ; and whose child I had ntirvd thrinigh rn attlickfOr Cevifm fev - c.r. i•Lall Singh-!" Li.gasPed, ottt,- panting for breath .."do me, 41 kindness for the sake of . 614 bread and salt.. Get _me some 'fresh quickly, for , the love of God, but, ask no queetfolis-4hal 1". Something . in my 4 lOne"tiniiiiiised - the Mahratta, for without a word' he hurried off, an 4 eooa returned, • , bearing..a jarof milk.and :drinking vessel,. ,cr,Jota,, which. would COntliin something, than a pint, add ' - whibli` at 'a - sign''.froin the, he filled-with This verylliet;"slight asit may.seetn;. wa4 np small Compliment for it was. doubtless, his .own, drinking, that: ; ing , giving ,me, and n slionld at y, n - helong:,to one of pare Hitida;decelit'louoh 'burnished it ivouldhereafter be: unfitfertise.' ever, I EC4rcely waited itie utter :a !word of thanks,, but.. snatched, up OP , braes, lota aritidarted Out: - : - may be thought :that' litid"not' given: the alarm to' the household at Mr. Forster!' - plantation I, , buel had 'resolved that L. would n ot, , skald' do my errand unquestioned, create._ a., tUrinoil.,.which might tiring about the very evd against which - I-was striving. Oswald's .inother` arid' sisters ' , loved him; but' :their 'fierveS were not of -the strongest; ; and lheir out. er!es, had they heard„,the- - newe,,:woukl have had, the effect of, 'surnurtning,a 804 4 a or servants and cbolies, te seal, Oiwaltre-fate'bY Sending' a posse,Of fol.; anthers tofthe'place , tvhere:-helay'at the' 81141f.PVinorey. , AB, it :au. minged tfeety4.ourrying, the, precious- draught of; Milk _with ilitlnus, care, I litirrie4 back to th'e' , Spot where,', a titha 'ffetelif the' ~h il i g''t.lifrptifirec d *'lay Osivaidifet'asleero' The snake; heare'ver, - * as t4ofigly tintlisrd,Ww fbegiastingt to stir., sideicttiastrml.heO,WitgfiedoftiowlyAm, to Side among the lOW witifftweri , • between' 'its :griin jaiirs:Bni'll "was lu ti nt and, as'l ponivd the mliki or. rather a. portion of it; 4 . 11 ~ the ground, so.iliatit.a , long trail. should , ; lead. to the. spot , w,herp I set doWn the brass ,drit,king-c,up,w,io, What'. - of . abn4hts ' re.mai,Aed,T, was cardul.to tumid.; fiy:aufzibrtip6 incensittgthiltic t•-• - .1; • Tilq caPle, ; 1 Pilltte - or tvirct.of, ki,ekunt i an i cy i anti thep ; _iq my; gre§tinyi ; I' save,the,,..-eptale: fnaking 'or`` ffi'd `Rigt One-.lWi4atli and ., th.in °ititietherlibtlth4' suake'S.{ body was, cm - twined,: antirl great seFPPYti:n l V.Psh big :04 ro,vg4 Alietfoc eit grape and , tlowerets,,!Eitoo*!ts hr i tuid hiiid to saw Oswa'd fritiErtieol, difd- the in snsilic tiffS'ed fat:tiler-Aid fiirthetv, iiway;frdni the iliice~ where , ..,hc-,repospd.t I ,ifelt . the 'strength which had hitherto supported me ,boome „ a ,4 a weak-ness. My n,clv,es .being-.no longer braced by the Sense of Oiwald's mortal peril, the te rroi And disgust had freniC etfildhOOd' , fele6r the attrpent l tribe oyerpowered me laud - rI grew giddy anc.l Weak - , ,and , could sparclly, •-- . - What. was - 'this "before*: dint eyes,? The well. known parch, of the eolontst's; suipmcr-Jiouse,..,itvergrowM !by trailing creepers and all but cbOked.bv • ~1./ S• • • • •••••• tall weed - e. .A.technuically I entered, and, sinking 4' mouldering wooden seat; - once decked •with silken ctieslitoiis audzoltl. leaf L aradually..rekained.:the physical ptrengtli which . ; - had,deserted me, and with it the 04pacity for thou lit. : - It'is curious '4,20 crises ' Cif ;ex treme - e*hattStion;' th'e*. benUmbed - Iniiiid slowly resumes some , train of -a6nc 0ti1... ed tbaught, and .thia it was. With ine By degree's ,I remnietnertd ()lima tisdart. 7 gvr;and my own efroris.tO saye him, and;-. What was - 'that rdstliug among:'the stems, ariA leztves 'and - binds of thirluxtr ious plants that festooned the' .shatieied windows of toe suminer-house, in - all the: rank profusion of ,thPy,trop:cal,growtb i3cot 4 ilie rippling, undula ting motion - with 'a huge' shake . drags - Maisel f titre ugli the brakes and jdngle:grasi , lAree ;-.my tears'- were but too ;true, fqr ktiere in jhe. onen: window space--the.brokeii trellie : wprk of, which had been replaed by wild vines and loci glingorchids - --: appeared, .nt , a height.of Six or. seven feet' above trio . ! ground, the . hideoita, -head: of. the .serpeut .that , ,had . lately. menaced Qswald, and now confropp, ed me. And then it flashed upon me that'the deserted kiosk was I;:irtibably the reptile'd actual home, and thatOta though in the very irony of - terror; I - had -- Yentured to intrude into , the lair‘of the terrible crea ture, from, the sight of which had— oneeihat o.4svala safety seemed assured —reeled diziily had dtenleard of the itraiige taste, which snakes,e7ince for an abandomed :human dwelling, and how frequentlY they haunt the, outrbuild ings,of *Europeans . abodes and the huts of the natives; and yet' here had I ly ztrayed into:the ;place Of the. deadliest guardian , ()Utile Ceylen jun- That thP imake was .perturbed there , could be doubt. It curved its gfnee fill-neck like that of=.-a .swan; and'hissed slightly while - its broad jaws were partly opened. :I fancied that . ' could ,see the curved poison fangs,. . more, to bP dreaded than,ever wa.4. Malay_ oreese or Mootish dagger—While the jewel bright eyes glisteifed - ominously. '! One wild; piercing` shriek I could-not -repress:; _and theii the futility of resistance ~ o r of. , flight forezd itself upon rue, and ; stood,, motionless, as a inaible statue of embodied'fear; gaz ing at: the emeraldine , eYe fixed 's6 pitiless a stare on mine. The subtle -suffobating' odor Which large- serpents: - exhale' when: angry, reacheknie ;. but already I gave myself up s for lost,`, and waited: -passive till the'tie palariga, should make his'fatal daft:. • ' -The sibilant 'nois!ii from „ the-snake's half leb.Ptiows had,grow.nlouder; and:the bright balgful eyes more menacing; while the griin - head towered . high randy„' to — §tfik—r `strike- - Mien, .bright th idngh 't 'floive3ting vines of,,•66.,;creeping: plant,, , anti_ the snake's hidpu§ i head,anil lithe body Alis .appeared,.ati by. magic. ,Then ,fe!low ed the sound: off - a fierce St :, rUggle; ed blows, trampling 'feet; and ea'applig boughs,anti ascents of - human voices ; and. then.,oawald . came leaping through the iloorwabzlasped Joe his,arms, and, ba - re ineotit'into the. broad light of day, where 10—writhink yet=--q.ie - carcass Of of the dead .zoiake ; : hewn through- by. the sharp-caging axe ',which • ©s'Wiilct: still grasped in.:, right imnd. "Sliab4pb eAclaimed whose swarthy face gleamedwith delighi, as he spurned the hodrof the ed was,” wet/'thafs'ithe'.llrst. blow:went , home; or it would , hawk fared bukbadly , ;the young : sahib this accused slayer of _men turned ,on Wali I I'd' sooner have faced 'gar. - vitittillindsta nin no= slight-ilezreek', indebted for my. I safely. , ..o,quince4h ) .141%/Allq vfg4i*A9A.:I9CAY) - a I th e 4 t t . 4 l{ / (it v •a B itT)4g. t o toie 'th, 'ace 4.,1 i~- 7 » rF If,- .v.p': - . - ,.,: - .'. , .,p - 40.',,.:4.8 of 'arousing' Oswald from his slumber, • when the'pi.ercing. shriek. which fear. had wrung from reechoed thmugh .thQ - 1 woods•and- calling, attention- to tho im— minepce of_ the,perll. Then Oswald had silitChed' up One'of -Ile - keen, Shortuxes, whiCh the: native' Wbodcutter , i'' 'left:* Sticking' in a ~t ree-trait k; and whad- -- been fortlitlate enonglk,to ,disahle thennake; at' thet , . UFO b10 6 w.,„1.. - MY 404 is ilftlW (OM; and ti)ay r e,pAly i to add that "I was 'overwhishil j ea"ilth praises and so'Coldand ‘ltliat', oil 'the fol io Wang day; !13ir.t.Forstert thmself rod!. over. to my father:4 f,lionsr it ,to,.e_ptreateti l frpny. s ..:Eyb . onl .4! 4 ,444 ; 0f,iftte, been to accept his 'yaw ivect friendship and to aekliii my htind'On,beit h alf;of 1 his 'sdn. OA Wald- lost' 'Mel passage; on; /board the.: homeward-,bound' steamers that ,was to touch at Point de-Panel , auk tvlter visit Europe,be took Ellen T'racer's as his wife. We 'hive Writ' been happily' settled' ,ar from - tropic jungles , 'and c ttiei dattgeroluc' habitaats 7 —but neser,have:either hus4 f, band or myself forgottp„those y few in!:,- stants of biteranguish_aud, al arm beside the Tans of Minary.—Aagosy. All '78611,80. 11•111 • - , • J. ;41 ~• The tie4t ry - for an icaptiiptmin-.• rush right, • - :r1 'Oitility is dear to' ever yli) , and y . et air it' nosts• nobody Anything. " 1 4 • Whyls a •drawn tooth 'like' thiings for paten Because WS out 'd the heady :? Where are happiness lind eon tentmetti atway4,ts). be fou!id Jct. the .dietionary. We, prey : for. meat," aa the t foxes re niarked .wheutiley jumped into,tte try, yard. "One'atinnot epeak" in 4. balloon with. ont having high• words, undiree it it , ' death to fall - VIA: • Cologne; where the celebrated water of this name Is made; is called the - eentiinen tal .;The.ovian finds thelvater instinotively;'ll but the man is born in element.,. •; • $' ') Would . , it, be fair, to , i ityle a. merchatit,a, ; lucky dog:IVO 'half a - dozen, Wake upon' "the' sea' ? Yoting man your that be won before marriage, but you .mat both be one afterwards. ' The affe,etton : of, parents is beat oho**. • to their tkildrep by, teaehipg, *Aar what is true. . . •• t • married,A'a :stan4 by' yptr.,youcig bride when you 'are -- stlind her. ' , • afterwards. • New York is a reariiia She has a 'Pauper; who Ctill solicit aline in ten) tift ferent languages. ; Always be aa .witty, .you Nip your parting bow--.your last speech , the, one:remembered.,, Superficial _knowledge is - like soil upod water—it shines deceitfully, bitt, ; is ly skit:tinted:A Absenceis to love' what fasting is,to the -body ; little 'stimittates' - it, but a' long abstinence is fatale If you would pasi flit more than your value, say little. It is easier to look ivise . than to talk, wise. The, love ..ahown I‘ , ,,berk We, are ill mateii 118. l'ealji,E „fact., often tel. n ,1 "Flow sweet, but: bow 'bald . for . out eo youfig what a ' rutnan~i& Maiden said - beside an last:es : ,Fear sometiMes adds wings 'te" / the heefs l and,sometimes.onils.)4lu toithe ground and fetters them from ,moving I The firmest friendship, has begn , form ed in asiron is most ,strongly united by the. Pereeat 1,41f09. If . ,yon.Would k nown and,notlnow, ; . vegetate - 14 ;'jf 'yOu`s'Oulci kno w'; and ibe known; live insa eitje. a retharkable debta that , then !expanding poWeviebniiti" . nes to ihorease,a4 i yon,coutraot them. : Ambition ofi,e4 puts men lo dOing:the ,nieaneqt ntrices, clinihing ispeyformefill 'in 'the 'Sadie ft pOsitire as.creeping.. ' on ' * a lovely 114; Ithe'soft,' - 'svieet s olOtidfi foie" 'like' latubif'`: through the blutv liastures- ot the • ens. .4 'A. -Milwaukee . : girl,' in ~ o rder kesi) , , her lo ser up to - WO prop2iie.. iltices . biin as "my intended 41,44 baud." „ „ A idly spenti by a fool . , maybe picked 'by e viise* w ho knows .. better what' to do'' , with it ; if la net Be cotr.esfrom-women mole: than frwp I„,mothets moSt., , orAIL who, carry.the of . qpr spala in it hsiz: boidOS. ' , v .. An hour's , indastry ' wildA(); uore,ta produce olieertutniss,: surpOss"4l:lliit ! ,• ; mot., *, 40trievS''yilitr i , inontiamaonl, fliX - - "lliatelc•:;hear people' talkibiltAlltd— r SoiHef IMoks7.*lttiecrOkOrtitaitl whew theor constatile was chasing qvfogs.o . ,: "top thief." MEE MEM • .42 74. ~, :~•. =lllll =IMMO