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succession he took on two wheels, but never for an instant slackened
the pace; and within five minutes the last uneasy sounds of pursuit
had died away. Still we continued to press on. The pair of us seemed
to realise by silent agreement that it would be a good thing for us to
vanish at once into some burrow where we could take counsel together on
the best way to elude the allied hostility of Law and Disorder.
The Chinaman drove westward for some distance, into that part of the
city where I had crossed the Soochow Creek several hours before. Then
we turned south, and in a few moments were spinning down the broad,
bright-lit Nanking Road, with its queer blend of western paving with
eastern shops and their garishly carved and gilded fronts. Some way
farther on we turned east once more into the fringes of the French
Concession, and at last drew up at a compact bungalow standing in its
own grounds at the point where town and country meet.
We seemed to have been expected, for no sooner had the noise of our
horn broken on the quiet night than I saw a wide wooden gate swing
open, and my companion had driven the car straight into its garage.
The gate was immediately closed. Nobody watching in the street a moment
later would have had a notion of our arrival. There was no light
whatever to be seen in the house.
The Chinaman jumped down, leading the way along a path hidden in
shrubbery, into a side door of the bungalow. This opened on a long dark
passage. My companion disappeared down this, leaving me in charge of
the native servant who had opened the gate to us. Together we entered a
small room richly furnished in Chinese style, with one or two fine old
scroll-pictures hung round the walls, and cabinets through the glass
doors of which I could see a collection of carvings in choice white | |
Seek the spirit’s shrine of prayer,
Jesus there will meet and bless you
And you’ll leave your burdens there.
* * * * *
As the blessed, healing mentha
Holds for mortal pains nepentha,
So hath sympathy the art
To soothe the bruises of the heart.
* * * * *
From each act, however small,
Some result must ever fall;
Drop a pebble in the wave
Distant shores its ripples lave.
* * * * *
Give gladness to childhood! ’twill brighten life’s years;
Pour hydromel for it, unmingled with tears,
So fondly, caressingly, memory clings
To youth’s every joy, forgetting its stings.
* * * * *
Experience teaches some lessons of worth—
That wealth is not always of lordliest birth,
That duty makes labor, tho’ humble, sublime—
That crucial trial gives strength to the soul:—
There’s no royal road to Life’s coveted goal,
Earth’s throngs must all pass the same doorway of Time. | |
[_She runs hurriedly and makes the rope fast to the mast,
while Finn remains gazing at it as if dazed. In a moment
the Climber is seen swinging along it, immediately followed
by the Gripper, the Listener, and the Marksman. Finn
remains as if spellbound, while the Gripper runs to the
tiller, seizes it from him, and turns the boat completely
round._]
FINN
[_To himself, as if bewildered._]
This is more than any sense deserves!
CLIMBER
[_Shaking her head at him._]
Fancy going off like that in an open boat
Without your coat!
Your state of mind is preying on my nerves.
[_She helps him into his coat, which he submits to
passively, gazing at her as if dazed; then suddenly falling
on his knees, he snatches her hand, crying exultantly—_]
FINN
Before the sun shall rise upon the land
I’ll shake all darkness by this other hand!
[_The storm gradually abates, and as the ship slips away
the Gripper leans back against the tiller and sings._]
GRIPPER’S SONG | |
and, under the Mycroft & Moran imprint,
THE REMINISCENCES OF SOLAR PONS, by August Derleth
PRINCE ZALESKI & CUMMINGS KING MONK, by M. P. Shiel
THE CASEBOOK OF SOLAR PONS, by August Derleth
and Stanton & Lee,
EVERETT TRUE, by A. D. Condo
Bibliography
THE OUTSIDER AND OTHERS, by H. P. Lovecraft. Collected by August
Derleth and Donald Wandrei. Arkham House, Sauk City, Wisconsin, 1939.
pp. xiv., 553. $5.00. 1,268 copies printed. Contents: _Howard Phillips
Lovecraft: Outsider_, by August Derleth & Donald Wandrei / _Dagon_ /
_Polaris_ / _Celephais/Hypnos_ / _The Cats of Ulthar_ / _The Strange
High House in the Mist_ / _The Statement of Randolph Carter_ / _The
Silver Key_ / _Through the Gates of the Silver Key_ / _The Outsider_
/ _The Music of Erich Zann_ / _The Rats in the Walls_ / _Cool Air_
/ _He_ / _The Horror at Red Hook_ / _The Temple_ / _Arthur Jermyn_
/ _The Picture in the House_ / _The Festival_ / _The Terrible Old
Man_ / _The Tomb_ / _The Shunned House_ / _In the Vault_ / _Pickman’s
Model_ / _The Haunter of the Dark_ / _The Dreams in the Witch-House_
/ _The Thing on the Doorstep_ / _The Nameless City_ / _The Lurking
Fear_ / _The Call of Cthulhu_ / _The Colour out of Space_ / _The
Dunwich Horror_ / _The Whisperer in Darkness_ / _The Shadow over
Innsmouth_ / _The Shadow out of Time_ / _At the Mountains of Madness_
/ _Supernatural Horror in Literature_.
SOMEONE IN THE DARK, by August Derleth. Arkham House, Sauk City,
Wisconsin, 1941. pp. 335. $2.00. 1,115 copies printed. Contents: _When
the Night and the House Are Still_ / _Glory Hand_ / _Compliments of
Spectro_ / _A Gift for Uncle Herman_ / _McGovern’s Obsession_ / _Three
Gentlemen in Black_ / _Muggridge’s Aunt_ / _Bramwell’s Guardian_ /
_Joliper’s Gift_ / _Altimer’s Amulet_ / _The Shuttered House_ / _The
Sheraton Mirror_ / _The Wind from the River_ / _The Telephone in the
Library_ / _The Panelled Room_ / _The Return of Hastur_ / _The Sandwin | |
of the evening, before facing her step-mother with the packet which
had just been given him. Alice’s superior intelligence, he thought,
would help him in the difficult task of telling a straight story. He
knew, however, that she would not be satisfied with the perversion of
the truth involved in saying that Tom Cheever was dead; to him it did
not seem so bad. Tom Cheever really was dead, so far as Oldbury was
concerned, and it certainly was right that Mrs. Pickering should get
her property back. But his uncle had made him promise not to tell any
one that he had come back; of course, he could not even tell Alice. His
unaided intelligence must steer him through the dangerous channels by
which he should convey the message and the packet to the good lady; and
he must suppress the truth in the doing it.
Stopping under the trees outside the Deacon’s house, he could see into
the sitting-room lighted by lamp and candles. Alice and her mother were
seated near the table in the middle of the room, the elder sewing at
some white garment, while Alice was reading a heavy, leather-covered | |
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explosion were remarkable. The whole city was shaken. Ponderous houses
reeled and tottered, and buildings miles away were rent and split.
Every tree within a radius of a couple of hundred yards was blasted and
withered. Huge masses of masonry were hurled high into the air. Heavy
guns were tossed away as if they had been toys caught by a strong wind.
The six-feet walls of solid masonry were shattered to crumbling ruins,
burying many hundreds of natives, while hundreds more were blown up
into the air like wisps of straw. The destruction of the war material
was complete. Not a pound of powder, not a shell, not a gun, remained
for the natives to use against the white men. To that fact probably we
owe our ultimate success over the rebels. For if all that ammunition
and all those guns had fallen into the hands of the mutineers at that
moment, there is no telling what they might have accomplished.
Willoughby had indeed nobly done his duty. To their disgrace, however,
be it said, there were those at home--the fireside politicians, the
little Englander and carpet-slipper travellers--who censured him for
the act. But Englishmen at heart admire courage and devotion to duty.
Generations yet unborn, when they read the pathetic story of Shelton
and Blanche Merton, will draw a sigh of pity, while around the memory
of Lieutenant George Willoughby will ever shine a halo of glory, and
Englishmen will refer to him with a sense of swelling pride as the Hero
of Delhi, who with fire and death helped to save India.
NOTE.--Curiously enough Willoughby and a comrade, Lieutenant Forrest,
escaped from the fiery blast that scattered such ruin and death around.
Willoughby, however, was much burnt, and Forrest was severely wounded,
having been shot in the arm. The brave Scully who fired the train
must have been blown to atoms. It was estimated that 2,000 mutineers
at least were killed by the explosion, and as many perhaps had been | |
At this point there entered a rusty elderly man with a _Cruden's
Concordance_, to know if I would buy it. I said we already had
several, and I could not as a conscientious business man add to the
stock. He sighed, surveyed me attentively, and went away, saying
that he would bring something else. I implored him not to, but with
an ineffable look of misfortune he shuffled away. I turned again to
the page:--
"With Horace and Petrarch, and two or three more
Of the best wits that reign'd in the ages before;
With roast mutton, rather than ven'son or teal,
And clean, though coarse linen, at every meal.
With a pudding on Sundays, with stout humming liquor,
And remnants of Latin to welcome the vicar;
With Monte, Fiascone, or Burgundy wine,
To drink the king's health as oft as I dine.
May my wine be vermilion, may my malt drink be pale,
In neither extreme, or too mild or too stale;
In lieu of desserts, unwholesome and dear,
Let Lodi or Parmesan bring up the rear.
Nor Tory, or Whig, Observator, or Trimmer
May I be, nor against the law's torrent a swimmer;
May I mind what I speak, what I write, and hear read,
And with matters of State never trouble my head."
At this point a lady faltered in, saying she felt very faint, and
might she sit down a moment. I gave her my chair, and called to Mrs.
Duckie for some water. The lady told me her home was in Ashford, and
she was only up for the day, having to get some things for her boy
who was joining a merchant-ship, and did I know where Heronsgate | |
the cottage—from the loving, weary mother, who had just finished her
day's work and "cleaned up" the place; from the little ones, who had
been allowed to stay up an hour later than usual because their brother
was coming; and from his father when he came back from carrying home
the last basket of linen—that warm, joyous welcome seemed to make
amends for all Reuben had had to endure since he left home.
Christmas morning was bright, and both Mr. and Mrs. Grant appeared
at church, accompanied by their beloved son. Reuben saw them in the
churchyard when the service was over. They greeted him very kindly.
"We are so glad," said Mrs. Grant, "that you and Owen see each other
sometimes in Birmingham. It is so nice for him to have an old friend
near him, for he must often feel lonely when he is away from home."
Her words were rather discomposing to Reuben. He hardly knew how to
reply to them.
"We are not near each other," he said abruptly.
"Mother knows that," put in Owen quickly, as if to prevent his saying
more; "she knows that you live in another part of Birmingham, and it is
impossible for us to meet very often."
"But you see each other on Sundays," said the old woman gently; "you go
to the same church, Owen tells me." | |
things of a useful nature. The following words, carrying out the lines of
thought suggested by J. B. Say and Malthus, are remarkable:
“It is true that wherever there is utility, the addition of
labor as necessary to production constitutes value, because,
the supply of labor being limited, it follows that the object
to the supply of which it is necessary, is by that very
necessity limited in supply. But any other cause limiting
supply is just as efficient a cause of value in an article
as the necessity of labor to its production. And in fact,
if all the commodities used by man were supplied by nature
without any intervention whatever of human labor, but were
supplied in precisely the same quantities as they now are,
there is no reason to suppose either that they would cease to
be valuable, or would exchange in any other than their present
proportions.”[137]
Senior adopts this last heroic hypothesis only in passing, by way of
exhibiting, in a striking way, what he considers to be the true relation
of labor cost to value. In criticism of Ricardo, he says:
“As limitation of supply is essential to the value of labor
itself, to assume labor and exclude limitation of supply, as
the condition on which value depends is not only to substitute | |
THE BALL OF THREAD
There was a young lady one time, and a young boy came to her to ask her
to marry him. He gave her a pound ball of thread, and bade her to leave
it on the ground, and to take the end of the thread in her hand, and
when the end of it would be run out, to stamp her foot on the ground and
she would come to him.
So she bought a shilling’s worth of bread and a shilling’s worth of
apples, and she took the ball of thread as he told her. And when she
stamped her foot a door opened in the ground before her, and she went
in, and all she saw in the room was a dog and a cat.
So she divided the bread and the apples between them, and she gave them | |
Defect you cause.
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failed--unassisted--in discovering the secret of the parchment.
The puzzling document was a list of some sort which the finder could
not understand, as it was in French; beneath it was a drawing of a
square with a human skull in the centre, from which radiated lines
ending in certain letters, and having figures upon the rays.
The solution was discovered, however, after the young Crusoe had been
on the island for upwards of twelve months (he stayed eighteen months
in all), and in a most unexpected manner.
Being a Crusoe, it was not at all a surprising matter that he should
have a man Friday, and one day during a storm a Friday really did
appear, in the form of a French sailor, whose little vessel was wrecked
upon the hostile granite shores of Jethou. The man saved, the sole
survivor of a crew of four, was at once christened Monday, from the day
on which he was saved. This man (Alec Ducas) spoke very fair English,
and the two young men soon became fast friends.
One day the young Englishman, whose name was Harry Nilford, bethought
him of his curious parchment, and producing it from his box, asked his | |
CHAPTER IV
A DELAYED LETTER
But Mr. Alcando, to Americanize his name, did not faint. After
reeling uncertainly for a moment, he obtained command of his muscles,
straightened up, and stood rigid.
“I--I beg your pardons,” he said, faintly, as though he had committed
some blunder. “I--I fear I am not altogether myself.”
“Shouldn’t wonder but what you were a bit played out,” put in Hank.
“What we’ve just gone through with was enough to knock anyone out, to
say nothing of the crack you got on the head. Maybe we’d better get a
doctor?” and his voice framed a question, as he looked at Joe and Blake.
“No, no!” hastily exclaimed the Spaniard, for he was of that
nationality, though born in South America, as the boys learned later.
“I do not require the services of a physician,” went on Mr. Alcando,
speaking rapidly. “I am perfectly all right now--or, I shall be in a
few moments. If I had a drink of water--”
His voice trailed off feebly, and he looked about rather helplessly.
“There used to be a spring hereabouts,” said Hank, “but I haven’t been
this way in some time, and--”
“I know where it is!” interrupted Blake. He and Joe, with a training
that had made it necessary for them to “size up,” and know intimately
their surroundings, for use in taking moving pictures, had sensed the
location of a bubbling spring of pure water along the road on their
first visit to it. “It’s right over here; I’ll get some,” Blake went on.
“If you will be so kind,” spoke the Spaniard, and he extended a
collapsible drinking cup.
Blake lost little time in filling it, and soon after drinking Mr.
Alcando appeared much better.
“I am sorry to give all this trouble,” the Spaniard went on, “but I
have seemed to meet with considerable number of shocks to-day. First
there was the runaway, which I certainly did not expect, and then came | |
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indulgently as he remembered the doubts, the vague gropings, the boyish
passion that he had put into the quest for something that always eluded
him, something that glimmered now and then from a printed page, that
throbbed in a chord of music, that took him sharply when autumn rang
against the pines. He was done with abstractions now. He was face to
face with something actual, something that yielded results that could
be computed upon an adding machine.
He was living in town now, back in the little brick house. Polly had
fulfilled her destiny and had done very well for herself. Her husband,
already out of olive drab, was back in his substantial law practice in
Richmond; and Richmond was one of the very few other cities in America
in which a Charleston girl could contemplate existence without an
instinctive shudder of repulsion. Then there had been another change in
the little house, a sad one from which Saint’s mind still winced when
his thoughts touched it. Maum Netta had gone. Almost a year before,
when the carnage had been at its height, unknown, except in her tiny
orbit, the old woman had joined in the vast migration and answered | |
“I suppose, then,” continued Queen coldly, “you don’t remember ushering
somebody into the last row, next to the last seat, during the second
act?”
“No, sir.... Aw, I know I shouldn’t have done it, maybe, but I didn’t
see a thing wrong all night.” She was growing more nervous at each
question. She furtively glanced at the Parson, but he was staring at
the floor.
“You’re a great help, young lady,” said Queen, rising suddenly. “Beat
it.”
As she turned to go, the gangster with an innocent leer slid across the
rug to follow her. Queen made a sign to the policeman. The Parson found
himself yanked back to his former position. | |
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make the best of it."
While Phil Warrington talked, he was working with the blade of a big
jackknife at the wooden casing of a barred window at the rear of the
hold of the British man-o'-war, _Vixen_. Andy lay stretched on a
mattress on the floor, watching his companion.
It was over two weeks since the young captives had found themselves
afloat. It had taken old Dobbin and Peters and Swithins all of one day
to reach the coast. The two British spies had signaled a ship in the
distance. A yawl put ashore, the old horse was turned loose, and after
a brief row over the fast-darkening waters, Phil and Andy were hoisted
aboard the _Vixen_. They were immediately conveyed to their present
prison place and locked in.
The little strong room in the rear hold was an apartment having a heavy
door set in a strong partition and two barred windows about eight feet
above the water mark. Here the boys had remained close captives. An
old mattress comprised their bed. Twice a day a gruff old fellow in a
semi-naval uniform brought them their meals, which consisted of the
ordinary ship fare. The man never addressed them, and they asked him no
questions.
The lads had seen nothing of either Peters or Swithins until that
morning. The former had been let into the prison room by their jailer
and the door locked behind him. He looked surly and ill at ease, and
Phil decided that he acted like a man who had met with some hitch in
his plans. | |
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the fact being that production must, in the long run, conform to the
nature and measure of human want. And thus also, I am afraid, comes
the idea, certainly common among the employing classes, that wages
are dictated by them from above, instead of being produced by the
labourers themselves—an idea degenerating in many cases into the belief
that combinations of workers to secure their share in the product are
illegitimate interferences with capital.
What is contended is that the Law of Cost is a good working secondary
law as regards articles reproducible at will under large and organised
production; that is, of course, as regards the vast majority of goods
produced. But it has always been taught by economists that it did
not hold outside these cases. On the other hand, the Law of Marginal
Utility is claimed as the universal and fundamental law of value. It
has not been difficult to prove its validity in the simpler cases; and
if now, in the later chapters, our law has been shown to be the real
background of the empirical Law of Cost, the contention is justified.
And thus, as representing, however humbly, the modern Austrian school,
I may close with the words written by our own Jevons twenty years
ago. “Repeated reflection and inquiry have led me to the somewhat
novel opinion, that _value depends entirely upon utility_. Prevailing
opinions make labour rather than utility the origin of value; and
there are even those who distinctly assert that labour is the _cause_
of value. I show, on the contrary, that we have only to trace out
carefully the natural laws of the variation of utility, as depending
upon the quantity of commodity in our possession, in order to arrive at
a satisfactory theory of exchange, of which the ordinary laws of supply
and demand are a necessary consequence. This theory is in harmony with
facts; and, whenever there is any apparent reason for the belief that
labour is the cause of value, we obtain an explanation of the reason.
Labour is found often to determine value, but only in an indirect
manner, by varying the degree of utility of the commodity through an
increase or limitation of the supply.”
APPENDIX I | |
The grape it rattled like hail,
The minies were dropping like rain,
The first of a thunder shower;
The wads were blowing like chaff,
(There was pounding like floor and flail,
All the front of our line!)
So we stood it hour after hour;
But our eagle, he felt fine!
’Twould have made you cheer and laugh,
To see, through that iron gale,
How the old fellow’d swoop and sail
Above the racket and roar,--
To right and to left he’d soar,
But ever came back, without fail,
And perched on his standard-staff.
All that day, I tell you true, | |
Greek language was spoken. Its adherents were found chiefly among the
slaves and freedmen. From the third century onwards it is
over-shadowed by the worship of Mithra.
The myth, which was represented annually, makes the mourning Isis seek
out the scattered fragments of the corpse of Osiris and raise a lament
over it. Then the limbs are laid together and wound round with
bandages, whereupon Thoth and Horus raise the slain Osiris to life
again, and this is announced amid jubilant outcries.
In the service of Osiris-Serapis the worshipper gains assurance of
eternal life. Therein consisted the attraction of this religion.
The early Egyptian doctrine was simple enough. After his resurrection
Osiris became lord of the world [pg 185] and at the same time judge of
the dead. Those who at their trial before him are not approved fall a
prey to destruction; others have eternal life with him in a realm
below the earth.
Life—and this was the tremendously serious feature of this
religion—was therefore regarded as a preparation for death. This is
the thought reflected in the mysteries, no doubt modelled on those of
Eleusis,_(_151_)_ which were attached to the Egyptian cultus after the
worship of Serapis-Osiris had been ordained by authority. They
represent the esoteric element. By means of the tests which he
undergoes in the Serapeum, of the ecstasy which he experiences and the
ceremonies of initiation in which he takes part the believer wins his
way, along with Osiris, from death to life, and acquires the assurance
of eternal being. | |
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As the door closed, Johnny could have sworn he heard an extra click.
“Locking us in?” he asked pleasantly, and Emanuel’s eyebrows rose.
“Locking you in, Johnny? Why, do you think I’m afraid of losing you,
like you’re afraid of losing Marney?”
Johnny sipped the glass of water, his eyes fixed on the old man’s
face. What was behind that buffet? That was the thought which puzzled
him. It was a very ordinary piece of furniture, of heavy mahogany, a
little shallow, but this was accounted for by the fact that the room
was not large, and, in furnishing, the proprietors of the club had of
necessity to economise space.
There were two cupboard doors beneath the ledge on which the side
dishes should have been standing. Was it his imagination that he
thought he saw one move the fraction of an inch?
“Ever been in ‘bird’ before, Johnny?”
It was Emanuel who did most of the talking.
“I know they gave you three years, but was that your first
conviction?”
“That was my first conviction,” said Johnny.
The old man looked up at the ceiling, pulling at his chin.
“Ever been in Keytown?” he demanded. “No good asking you, Peter, I
know. You’ve never been in Keytown or any bad boob, have you? Clever
old Peter!”
“Let us talk about something else,” said Peter. “I don’t believe for
one moment the story you told me about Lila having been married
before. You’ve told me a fresh lie every time the matter has been
discussed. I’m going to give you a show, Emanuel, for old times’ sake.
You’ve been a swine, and you’ve been nearer to death than you know, | |
One day a woman told me that her two little boys had been playing in the
courtyard while she was at work, and the “Muchwezi” (evil spirit) from
the Crater hill two miles away had come and run off with her elder child.
For two years he had remained lost to them, when suddenly he returned
clothed in a strip of bark-cloth and a charm round his neck peculiar to
that evil spirit. He was sworn to divulge nothing of what had happened to
him while being with the evil spirits in the crater, under the penalty of
being caught away again by them.
[Illustration: THE MARKET PLACE.
_Photo by D. V. F. Figueira, Mombasa._]
Here let me recount a rather unique picnic we had at one of these crater
lakes three miles away. It happened on a Monday—the Missionaries’
off-day—when general repairs and washing are usually done, or visits paid
to neighbouring villages. We started off on our bikes in high spirits
which managed to survive a heavy thunderstorm that overtook us half way
and soaked us through. We hung ourselves out to dry round a fire in the
hut on the lake shore, and having warmed ourselves with tea made for the
lake in search of wild-duck. We baled the water out of the dug-out canoe
and set off with three boys as paddlers. You never met with anything more
aggravating than an African dug-out; they are so badly balanced that the
least movement threatens to overturn the skiff; and as for steering,
that is out of the question. Anyhow, when we were far away from our
landing point, the canoe refused to move, except in complete circles.
We could make no headway; the united efforts of all—barring myself, who
did not row—failed to move the boat except in rapid revolutions. Then a
storm blew up and darkness seemed to be suddenly settling down on us. | |
calm exterior lay a tremendous latent power that once aroused could be
terrible and deadly to his enemies, and that this was really the case
was soon to be amply proved.
Another of the group was a still younger man, handsome as Apollo, and
with a frame that seemed to be knit with steel. Although younger his
military rank was equal to Willoughby’s, for he too was a lieutenant
of the Bengal Artillery, and was also stationed at Delhi. His name
was Richard Shelton, and, like his friend and colleague, he had a
pronounced soldierly bearing, and his fine bright blue eyes, of the
true English type, and his clear cut features and firm mouth, spoke of
a frank, open, loyal, and brave nature.
These two officers and friends had ridden over that afternoon from
Delhi on a visit to their friend, the colonel, with the object of
discussing the portentous signs of the times, for the air was filled
with rumours, and mutiny had displayed itself. Discontent was rampant
in the native regiments, and the question was to what extent would it
go? If there were those amongst the British who read the handwriting
on the wall with ill-concealed alarm, it is none the less true that
the majority of the officers in Upper India were rather disposed to
laugh these fears to scorn. For with the almost fatuous self-reliance
peculiar to the English, they believed they were powerful enough to
hold their own against any number of natives. With one exception, | |
spectator at the Oval? How could he do himself justice as a bat
under such a humiliation? And think of the report the next
day--"Wynne, the brother of the notorious Suffragette, secured a
well-merited duck," or, "To be 'caught out' seems just now to run in
the Wynne family." Lionel's fancy played with the theme like a comic
journalist in an evening paper. He covered himself with gratuitous
ridicule.
"My dear boy," I said at last, "how extraordinarily out of date you
are. You are making two of the least pardonable mistakes of your
age--you are taking something seriously and you are disregarding the
benefits of advertisement."
He turned on me like a tiger. "Oh yes," he said, "you never find
fault with anything. You just smile and enjoy it."
"I can't find much fault with Drusilla," I said humbly, "because she
is sincere. There is no harm in wanting to be considered more
important than you are: it is not wrong to want to vote. Personally
I hope I shall never vote again, but that is not virtue in me--it is
deplorable, unpatriotic weakness. Drusilla takes a passionate
interest in public affairs and wants to be allowed to participate in
them, and considers it an injustice that she should not be allowed to
because she is a woman and not a man. In her excitement for this
cause she and her friends seem to have gone a little too far and have | |
of the engine will be sustained on three points. Now it is a well
known fact that any tripod, like that on which an engineer’s level is
mounted, or a three-legged stool, will adjust itself to any surface,
however uneven, and stand firmly in any position; whereas if there are
more than three points of support, if they are all of the same length
the surface on which they rest must be a plane, otherwise some of them
will not touch. All railroad tracks have inequalities of surface, and
therefore it is of the utmost importance that a locomotive should be
able to adjust itself on its points of support to any unevenness of the
track on which it must run. This is possible only when the weight rests
on three points of support.
[Illustration: _Fig. 186._
_Fig. 187._ | |
now that it began to look real nifty.
And the inside looked as fine as the outside. When we began, the
woodwork was discolored both by age and dirt. This made the whole
interior look worse than a cheap tenement. Twenty dollars’ worth of
white lead and oil changed this as though by magic into a clean white,
as fresh as when the house was first built. There is nothing which
shows age more than paint and there’s nothing so easily remedied. If
the owners had done what I had already done they would have made almost
three hundred per cent. interest on their investment. In three weeks,
at a cost of four hundred dollars, I had added fifteen hundred in value
to the place. And it was a legitimate value. My paint hadn’t covered up
defects; it had simply brought out the honest worth of the structure.
With the floors painted and the windows drawn, we were now ready for
the personal details which should make this house into a home. It was
then that we had a great stroke of luck in hearing of an auction in
another village some eight miles away and off the main road. Seth told
us about it and said if I was looking for old trash he reckoned I could
find enough of it there. He said he wouldn’t give a quarter for the
whole lot, which didn’t sound very encouraging. But Ruth said she had
heard them talk like that before, and anyway it would be good fun to go. | |
By Ben Ray Redman. Nat. (N. Y.) Sept. 27. (115: 311.)
NEVINS, ALLAN.
Anton Chekhov. Post. Nov. 26, ’21. (2: 200.)
NEWTON, ALMA.
Algernon Blackwood. N. Y. Times. April 2. (16.)
NOCK, ALBERT JAY.
Sherwood Anderson. Free. Feb. 8. (4: 513.)
Arthur Machen. Free. Aug. 2. (5: 502.)
O’Higgins, Harvey.
By Heywood Brown. Book. (N. Y.) Oct., ’21. (54: 156.)
OSBOURNE, LLOYD.
Robert Louis Stevenson. Post. Dec. 24, ’21. (2: 297.)
PENNELL, JOSEPH.
Henry James. Cen. Feb. (103: 543.)
PHELPS, WILLIAM LYON.
Fyodor Dostoevsky. N. Y. Times. Jan. 15. (8.)
Pirandello, Luigi.
Anonymous. Times Lit. Suppl. April 13. (21: 243.)
Poe, Edgar Allan.
By Raymond A. Preston. Post. July 22. (2: 830.)
By Theodore Stanton. Post. July 22. (2: 830.)
POWYS, LLEWELYN.
Thomas Hardy. Dial. March. (72: 286.)
Prado, Pedro.
By Ernesto Montenegro. Post. Dec. 10, ’21. (2: 259.)
PRESTON, RAYMOND A.
Edgar Allan Poe. Post. July 22. (2: 830.)
REDMAN, BEN RAY.
James Branch Cabell. Post. Dec. 17, ’21. (2: 276.) | |
address to the Queen of Ygoth.
"My first memories are of the clash and ring of metal upon metal in
the heat of a great battle and sweat and blood on my face as I called
our battle-cry. I was a mercenary on the field of Sate fighting in the
service of the fool King Tærus, whom later I had the satisfaction of
spitting on my sword."
"Over a dancing-girl!" concluded the Queen spitefully, and sniffed.
The captive shrugged but remained silent.
Nione contemplated the swordsman through half-closed eyes. Calmly he
returned her gaze, and something in the depths of his fierce blue eyes
caused her pulse to beat a little faster, and a faint flush tinged her
alabaster cheeks.
"If," she asked finally, irritated at these signs of weakness in her
august person, "my guards should conduct you in safety to the limits of
my borders, on any side you desire, would you go--peacefully?"
Again Duar shrugged and the chains rattled. "Perhaps," he said.
"Perhaps--not."
"You fool!" cried Nione, now crimson. "I am giving you your life! Know
you I could have you impaled, torn apart, killed a thousand ways! I
grant you mercy and you care nothing?"
"Mercy? For what? For defending myself from onslaught? From cruelty?
Your eyes belie the name you seek to frighten with!" He sighed. "Almost
I wish I were a king again!"
"Throw him into the Pits!" screamed the outraged ruler of Ygoth.
"And--and put extra chains on him!" | |
moment his face registered intense surprise, followed instantly by an
abysmal fear, as his glance centered on the menacing figure of Skookum.
Then, swiftly he swung his dogs clear of the trail, and urging them on
gave wide margin on the frozen crust. As he passed his eyes met the
girl’s in a gleam of sullen hate. The next moment he was gone, and Lou
started her own dogs and continued on to Soloman.
“What in the world is he doing here?” she wondered, “Surely he is not
going to enter his dogs in the Sweepstakes! Oh, why couldn’t he have
stayed on the Yukon? Why did he come to Nome? He’ll never try to steal
Skookum again. He’s deathly afraid of him, and he has a right to be.
I never saw Skookum act that way before! Why, he would have eaten
him up! But, he might try to kill Skookum! I wish Pete Enright were
here. He would keep an eye on Dalzene for me. As long as Dalzene is
in Nome I’ll worry every minute that my dogs are out of my sight. I
know he’s up to some deviltry. I could see it in his eyes. Maybe it’s
just hooch-running,” she reasoned, when the first shock of the meeting
had worn off. “Because he evidently didn’t expect to see me here. His
face showed surprise until he saw Skookum. Then fear. Oh, why didn’t
you chew him up, Skookum?” she cried aloud, but for answer the big dog | |
Yoné’s strangled “h’s” of admiration grew deeper and deeper. Her
admiration for the _Ijin San’s Bot’chan_ knew no bounds; and then
the pride of having a foreign-dressed baby of her own! Why, not one
of her acquaintances, not even the rich _saké_ merchant at the corner,
dressed their children “foreign fashion.” It was a height beyond their
ambition, a dizzy pinnacle only reached by the _samurai_ and the Court!
And Yoné’s strangled “h’s” of admiration and her indrawn whistles of
politeness knew no bounds. Even the _O Bā San_ in the corner turned her
head round and showed some signs of interest. And the baby stopped its
feeble cry and lay back on the _Ijin San’s_ lap--and smiled. | |
[Illustration: “_The valley became muddier and muddier._”
SEE PAGE 66.]
[Illustration: “_The sun’s farewell glance spread a woven gold mantilla
on the naked shoulders of a grim, forbidding world and the motor car
sank, helpless, into the mud as if, also, its day was done._”
SEE PAGE 69.]
We had crossed several rivers that would have been ten to fifteen feet
deep with water during the rainy season. Even now some of them had
treacherous bottoms of irregularly piled stone. Before fording, it was
necessary for one of us to wade through to map out a route over the high | |
of use to one man in France,[21] whom he is not, as you know,
fond of. He says that in England they considered him as merely
speaking like a Russian parrot when he said that the Emperor
Nicholas did not wish for war, and that he was considered in
Russia almost a treacherous Anglomane when he declared that
our Government did not wish it. He had been right in both
cases, and yet by extraordinary bad management the war had
come. He thinks it will take a whole generation to efface
the recollection of it. He attributes the hatred of us, and
comparative forgiveness of the French, not so much to the
destruction in the Baltic, not so much to our Press and our
public speaking, as to our having been old friends, and their
always having thought of the French as enemies. He does not
believe in any great changes in Russia. The Emperor has good
intentions, but there have always been good intentions at
the beginning of each reign. He has one great advantage over
his father. Alexander during his life told Nicholas nothing.
Nicholas, since his son has been of age, told him everything,
and the latter, being of a very amiable disposition, heard
everything that others did not dare tell his father. He is
supposed not to have military tastes, but he issued new
regulations about uniforms almost before his father was buried;
and he and Constantine appeared in new hussar jackets a day or
two afterwards, which were supposed to be foreign, instead of a
new dress which he had been in such a hurry to exhibit himself
in. He dismissed Klein Michel and another (two great robbers);
and when his mother remonstrated on the ground of their having
been his father’s friends, he made a good answer, which he had
probably previously prepared. He said: ‘I am not a great man
like my father. He could use such men as his tools—I am not
strong enough.’ He (Pahlen) lays much stress on the absolute | |
Then she said: “Do you remember your father, Saint?”
“Sometimes, just barely--but to-night at supper----”
“Yes, I know. It was when Charles Raymond came to our table. I saw him
then too. You’re a strange boy. Sometimes I’m glad. Charles’s son would
never have gotten that.”
She stood for a moment considering, her glance lowered, then she looked
him full in the eyes and continued: “You’ll be wondering why we had
that flash. You’ll be thinking it strange, maybe, but it’s not strange
at all, really. You see at the first ball of the season twenty-three
years ago both Mr. Raymond and your father proposed to me. I loved your
father--everybody did. To-night everywhere I looked I seemed to see him
again. That’s all--that’s the story.”
Saint said huskily: “And these things that mean so much to you--things
that you could have had--you let them all go--for him?”
Kate Wentworth’s form stiffened. Saint felt her fingers tense in his
grasp. “Certainly I did not give them up. You could not have said that
if you had known him well. We were both willing to wait awhile, that
was all, until he had won them for me. We were gambling with all the
odds in our favour--there was only one thing that we did not count | |
absolutely essential, which generally resolved itself into cooking the
one meal for the day. Their homes offered no occupation for them. The
rude grass huts possessed no furnishing, for their wants were of the
simplest. Bark cloth stripped off the wild fig tree and beaten out into | |
stone. Often we would travel through a whole day seeing no more than some
shed feathers; and on the morrow, within a few hours a shift of wind
would drive all the few ptarmigan in the district out into the open.
The traveller over the high ground of Labrador, even if he carries a
shot-gun, will be rash to trust to obtaining any supply of these birds.
Throughout our marches to and fro we saw but twenty-seven, of which we
killed eight. Also, a shot-gun is too heavy, and its ammunition quite
out of the question for long portage. We had with us, therefore, a ·22
rifle, and with this we killed such small game as came in our way. It
shot with wonderful accuracy, and I do not remember our losing anything
we fired at, though down in the valley of the Fraser River it was
valueless, except for shooting squirrels, as the birds rose from the
thick underbrush of willow and alder, where it was impossible to observe
their presence in time to get a sitting shot.
We were travelling on a daily ration of a cupful and a half of flour, a
few raisins, and a thin slice of bacon per man, so that it had become
a matter of paramount importance to secure a caribou; as should we
fail to do so, a time of hunger was probably close upon us. The chance
of sighting caribou was extremely vague, as days might elapse before a
deer happened to come into our range of vision, for among the ridges and
hollows through which we were moving a band of caribou might pass within
a hundred yards without our becoming aware of their presence. However, | |
5. Three triple bandeaus in front; a small “catogan” surrounded by three
rows of plaits; three large curls behind.
The hair was generally worn high, and dressed in a complicated style, but
it was, above all, dishevelled. It was frequently worn quite loose and in
disorder; less so, however, than in 1875.
The ornamental portions of dress were extremely handsome and expensive.
A great deal of jewellery was worn. In 1869, at the Beauvais ball, the
Duchess de Mouchy wore diamonds to the value of 1,500,000 francs. Her
dress consisted of a gown and train of white gauze spotted with silver;
a rather short over-skirt of red currant-coloured silk, forming a ruched
“tablier;” a low, square-cut bodice, and shoulder-straps of precious
stones; a sort of scarf of flowers, with silver foliage, fell from one
shoulder slanting across the skirt.
At Compiègne, Biarritz, and the Tuileries, by turns, brilliant costumes
such as these were seen and admired, and the day after a fête the
fashionable newspapers gave minute descriptions of the most elegant
dresses, and a guess at their approximate cost.
For many years, and although there was little novelty in the fashions,
they never ceased to be the order of the day. More than ever did women
make them their occupation, and men also were deeply interested in the
subject.
There was, so to speak, a tournament of coquetry in Europe, in which the
French ladies always bore away the palm. | |
universally nevertheless. It sounded odd to compliment a lady on her
Bedouin sleeves, or her busked or loosely-laced bodice!
Head coverings underwent singular changes. The “bibi” was suddenly
transformed into the “cabas,” with a deep crown concealing the neck; and
the next season brought in Pamela bonnets, with rounded brims, that very
prettily revealed the outlines of the cheeks. The hair was, generally
speaking, arranged in curls on each side, and in large rolls held by a
comb at the back of the head.
Almost all family portraits of that date represent the hair arranged
thus, and adorned either with feathers or more frequently with artificial
flowers, such as are still worn. Great perfection had been attained in
the manufacture of roses, geraniums, nympheas, chrysanthemums, camelias,
and many other lovely flowers, to enliven the attire of women.
The most fashionable style of dress in 1830 was as follows:—Gowns either
high or low, with or without capes; long sleeves with wristbands, or
short sleeves and long gloves; bodice with or without a waist-band, and
generally worn with an embroidered collar; scarf and parasol of some
dark tint; black prunella or Turkish satin shoes; no trimmings to the
gown, but red or flame-coloured ribbon bows scattered here and there; and
necklaces composed of two rows of pearls.
But we must not imagine that this was all, and that capriciousness and
the love of change can ever abdicate their throne. The “leg-of-mutton,”
the “berêt,” the “imbecile,” and the “elephant” sleeves were succeeded by | |
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The days sped rapidly; boats went to and from St. Peter Port bringing
stores and taking various goods for sale. Half-a-dozen carpenters and
a smith, besides the sailmaker and others, were busy with the ship’s
hull and rigging, refitting and altering, repairing and renewing all
kinds of gear, and over these men was placed Trefry, to whom the whole
crew looked up as skipper during Barbe Rouge’s frequent and prolonged
absences ashore on Jethou.
The young Englishman gnawed his very heart away in devising schemes
for Mary’s release, and his eyes grew weary with looking for the
preconcerted signals from her, but none ever appeared.
Could she have forgotten him?
Was it a case of “out of sight out of mind”? No, that could never
be, for the girl’s anxious desire was to escape, and reach her dear
old Yorkshire home, from which she had been absent nearly two years.
She had left it to take a trip on her uncle’s bark, _The Develin_,
from Whitby to Samos in the Grecian Archipelago, in company with her
brother, who was two years her senior.
They reached Samos safely, but one morning, her uncle and brother
being ashore, two native boatmen came alongside, one of whom, in fair
English, said the old gentleman had sent them “to fetch Mary, to show
her some of the sights of the place.” Mary accordingly seated herself
in their boat, but the men took her to another port, a league up the | |
back, eh stuff de moss een de holler, an eh pit fire ter um, an eh mek
er hebby smoke; but eh cant see ner yeddy nuttne bout Buh Rabbit. Den
eh biggin fuh spicion say Buh Rabbit might er git out, an eh tackle de
Goose bout um. Eh notus de Goose yeye red an eh duh run water. De Goose
tell um how Buh Rabbit bin trow rotten wood een eh yeye wen eh bin er
peep up de holler. Den de Dog know fuh sutten say Buh Rabbit bin wuk
dat plan fuh git way, an dat eh done gone fuh true. Eh so bex eh cuss
de Goose fuh er fool, an eh tun on um fuh stroy um. De Goose holler, an
manage fuh sail way een de element, but eh leff eh fedder een de Dog
mouf.
XLIV.
BUH SQUIRLE AN BUH FOX. | |
again starts, by means of inclined planes, or marine railways.
The other method is by “locks,” as they are called. That is, there are
built a series of basins with powerful, water-tight gates dividing
them. Boys who live along canals well know how locks work.
A boat comes along until it reaches the place where the lock is. It is
floated into a basin, or section, of the waterway, and a gate is closed
behind it. Then, from that part of the canal which is higher than that
part where the boat then is, water is admitted into the basin, until
the boat rises to the level of the higher part of the canal. Then the
higher gate is opened, and the vessel floats out on the higher level.
It goes “up hill,” so to speak.
By reversing the process it can also go “down hill.” Of course there
must be heavy gates to prevent the higher level waters from rushing
into those of the lower level.
Some parts of the Panama Canal are eighty-five feet higher than other
parts. In other words, a vessel entering the Canal at Colon, on the
Atlantic side of the Isthmus, must rise eighty-five feet to get to the
level of Gatun Lake, which forms a large part of the Canal. Then, when
the Pacific end is approached, the vessel must go down eighty-five feet
again, first in one step of thirty and a third feet, and then in two
steps, or locks, aggregating fifty-four and two-thirds feet. So you see
the series of locks at either end of the great Canal exactly balance
one another, the distance at each end being eighty-five feet.
It is just like going up stairs at one end of a long board walk and
down again at the other end, only the steps are of water, and not wood. | |
been injurious.
By an ingenious mechanism the special bed could be hoisted, tilted and
inclined till it was in any desired plane and at any convenient height,
and any portion of the patient’s body could be reached without turning
him over.
A Perfect Hospital.
This Hospital of St. John is perhaps the most perfect we have in France.
It is housed in good wooden huts, amply spaced out and admirably planned
for convenience in working and administration; each wooden ward is
light, airy, cheerful in colour and provided with every imaginable aid
to cleanliness and good order. One of its special belongings is a
cardiograph, or apparatus for recording on a chart, by the help of
electricity, all the movements of the heart, so that in cases of
irregular action of the heart the evenly serrated line produced on the
paper by a normal heart action is varied with spasmodic upward leaps or
downward collapses.
Varied Conveyances.
Between the front and the base a wounded man may travel, for some part
of the way, in any one of a large variety of conveyances. The ordinary
stretcher and the overhead trolley have been mentioned. The wheeled | |
About a week after the above conversation with Mr. Alcando, the
Spaniard came to the boys, waving an open letter in his hand. The mail
had just come in, bringing missives to Blake and Joe. Some were of a
business nature, but for each boy there was an envelope, square and of
delicate tint--such stationery as no business man uses. But we need not
concern ourselves with that. We all have our secrets.
“I have my marching orders,” laughed the Spaniard. “I leave you this
week, for my own particular jungle. Now I must arrange to get my
cameras.”
“We’ll help you,” offered Joe, and then, with the catalogue of a moving
picture supply house before them, the boys sat down to plan what sort
of an outfit would best be suited to the needs of Mr. Alcando. He was
not limited as to money, it was evident, for he picked out the most
expensive cameras possible to buy.
“I wish you boys would come and see me, when I get to work taking views
along our railroad line,” he said. “It isn’t altogether a selfish
invitation,” he added with a laugh, “for I expect you could give me
good advice, and correct some of my mistakes.”
“I’m afraid we won’t get a chance to go to South America,” Blake
answered.
With a tentative list of what he needed, Mr. Alcando went to write a
letter to his railroad officials, asking them to order his outfit for
him.
As Blake pushed back his chair, intending to leave the cabin to seek
his own stateroom, he saw, on the floor, a piece of paper. Idly he
picked it up, and, as he saw it was part of a letter to the Spaniard he
folded it, to hand to him. But, as he did so he caught sight of a few
words on it. And those words made him stare in wonder. For Blake read:
“Stuff is all ready for you. You had better do the job and get away.
There is some fine scenery in Europe.”
Saying nothing to his chum about it, Blake went with the letter toward
the Spaniard’s stateroom. He was not in, but Blake put the paper on a
desk, with some others, and came out hastily.
“I wonder what that meant?” he thought to himself. “That must have been | |
carbonic acid gas the refreshing, while the hop extract strengthens the
stomach, helps digestion, acts on the bladder and is grateful to the
human constitution. There is no doubt that lager beer brewed and stored
strictly as before mentioned is hardly intoxicating.”
An impression has gained ground in some quarters that as a matter of
fact, beer is extensively and injuriously adulterated and certain
persons claiming to be well informed have spread statements that
potato starch, grape sugar, glycerine and molasses are added as
substitutes for malt (barley), that Indian corn and rice are used
instead of barley, that pine bark, quassia, walnut leaf, wormwood,
bitter clover, aloes, picric acid, cocculus indicus and strychnine
are substituted for hops, and that various chemicals are used to
neutralize acidity or conceal dilution. A few of the first named would
not be objectionable, unless in point of flavor, and as a matter of
fact all of the substances named may at some time have been used by
irresponsible brewers. A careful inquiry, however, has satisfied us
that the adulteration of beer is rare, and one who reflects on the
lively competition that exists in the trade must see how speedily
and surely such a practice would be detected and exposed by business
rivals. Touching the use of strychnine in particular, Dr. Ure says that
1st. “Strychnine is exceedingly costly.
2d. “It has a most unpleasant bitter, metallic taste.
3d. “It is a notorious poison whose use would ruin the reputation of | |
“Oh, very well, nine it shall be.”
“I said eight, and I shall pay no more.”
“Ah, I misunderstood you then. We will call it eight per cent, though
there is no one else in town to whom I would lend on such terms. I | |
suffers from it who is an habitual walker. Rheumatism and gout are
caused by the settling of deposits about the joints. Those deposits
of poisonous matter are not permitted to form if there is a thorough
elimination by means of walking and much water drinking.
Indigestion in its various forms can be corrected, especially in
the earlier stages, by walking, in connection with careful diet.
Indigestion is a physical failing, especially peculiar to women.
Walking, by bringing into play unused muscles and by making deep
breathing necessary, as a walk always does, relieves this condition.
Whatever clears the internal organs clears the complexion. Whatever
naturally clears the internal organs brightens the eyes. Whatever
promotes deep breathing lays in a new stock of vigor, as we fill our
cellars with coal in the winter.
Riding is good exercise for women, if not taken in excess. Its drawback
is that the side saddle forces one hip and shoulder higher than the
other. If a woman rides she should by all means ride astride, so
obviating this difficulty.
While I take my own morning exercise after the bath, with no aid
whatever, dumbbells are valuable to those who “cannot become interested
in freehand exercise.” I should advise beginning with the smallest
dumbbells made, those weighing one to half a pound. | |
But the death in the deep awoke not then;
Mine and torpedo they spoke not then;
From the heights that loomed on our passing line
The thunders broke not then.
Safe through the perilous dark we sped,
Quiet each ship as the quiet dead,
Till the guns of El Fraile roared--too late,
And the steel prows forged ahead.
Mute each ship as the mute-mouth grave,
A ghost leviathan cleaving the wave;
But deep in its heart the great fires throb,
The travailing engines rave.
The ponderous pistons urge like fate,
The red-throat furnaces roar elate,
And the sweating stokers stagger and swoon
In a heat more fierce than hate.
So through the dark we stole our way
Past the grim warders and into the bay,
Past Kalibuyo, and past Salinas,--
And came at the break of day
Where strong Cavité stood to oppose,--
Where, from a sheen of silver and rose,
A thronging of masts, a soaring of towers,
The beautiful city arose.
How fine and fair! But the shining air
With a thousand shattered thunders there
Flapped and reeled. For the fighting foe--
We had caught him in his lair.
Surprised, unready, his proud ships lay
Idly at anchor in Bakor Bay:--
Unready, surprised, but proudly bold,
Which was ever the Spaniard’s way.
Then soon on his pride the dread doom fell,
Red doom,--for the ruin of shot and shell
Lit every vomiting, bursting hulk
With a crimson reek of hell. | |
THOMAS DUNN ENGLISH.
(By special permission of the author, and of Harper and Brothers.)
7
THE YANKEE MAN-OF-WAR
’Tis of a gallant Yankee ship that flew the Stripes and Stars,
And the whistling wind from the west-nor’-west blew through the pitch-pine spars,--
With her starboard tacks a-board, my boys, she hung upon the gale,
On an autumn night we raised the light on the old head of Kinsale.
It was a clear and cloudless night, and the wind blew steady and strong,
As gaily over the sparkling deep our good ship bowled along;
With the foaming seas beneath her bow the fiery waves she spread,
And bending low her bosom of snow, she buried her lee cathead.
There was no talk of shortening sail by him who walked the poop,
And under the press of her pondering jib, the boom bent like a hoop! | |
Blake spent a week at Culebra Cut, making pictures of the removal
of the great mass of earth that had slid into the water. The chief
engineer, General George W. Goethals, had ordered every available man
and machine to the work, for though the Canal had not been formally
opened, many vessels had started to make trips through it, and some of
them had been blocked by the slide. It was necessary to get the dirt
away so they could pass on their voyage.
So with dredges, with steam shovels, and hydraulic pumps, that sucked
through big flexible pipes mud and water, spraying it off to one side,
the work went on. Blake had Mr. Alcando to help him, and the Spaniard
was now expert enough to render valuable assistance. While Blake was
at one scene, getting views of the relief work, his pupil could be at
another interesting point.
Blake had telegraphed to New York that the one picture above all others
desired had been obtained--that of a big slide in the Culebra Cut. He
did not tell how Joe had nearly lost his life in helping get the films,
for Blake was modest, as was his chum, and, as he said, it was “all in
the day’s work.”
Joe was left to recover from the shock and slight injuries at Gatun,
while Blake and Mr. Alcando were at Culebra. For the shock to the young
moving picture operator had been greater than at first supposed, though
his bodily injuries were comparatively slight.
“Well, what’s next on the programme?” asked Joe of Blake, about two
weeks after the accident, when Blake had returned from Culebra. Most of
the work there was done, and the Canal was again open, save to vessels
of extreme draught.
“I guess we’ll go on making pictures of Gatun Dam now; that is, if
you’re well enough,” spoke Blake. “How do you feel?”
“Pretty fair. How did Alcando make out?”
“All right. He’s learning fast. We can trust him with a camera now, out
alone.”
“That’s good. I say, Blake,” and Joe’s voice took on a confidential
tone, “you haven’t noticed anything strange about him; have you?” | |
included a shifty-eyed old priest in charge of two nuns, the rules of
whose order forbade them to speak to men, and the mozo of an influential
Honduranean who had shot a man the night before and was taking advantage
of his master's personal friendship with the judge of the district. The
launch wound between bushy banks and came out at last on a rich-blue bay
shut off in the far distance by several jagged black volcanic islands,
toward one of which it wheezed a hot and monotonous three hours. This
was "Tiger's Island," named evidently from the one moth-eaten specimen
that had once been landed here by a passing circus. At a narrow wooden
wharf of this we at length gradually tied up. Ragged, barefoot soldiers
stopped us to write our pedigrees, as if we were entering some new
country, and addressed us in monkey signs instead of the Spanish of
which experience had convinced them all traveling foreigners were
ignorant.
Amapala is a species of outdoor prison to which all travelers to or from
Honduras on the Pacific side are sentenced for a term varying in length
according to their luck, which is generally bad. Those who do not sleep
in the park toss out their imprisonment on a bedstead of woven ropes in
a truly Honduranean building that disguises itself under the name of
"Hotel Morazán," the slatternly keeper of which treats her helpless
inmates with the same consideration as any other prison warden devoid of
humanity or oversight. The steamer I awaited was due before I arrived,
but day after day I lay marooned on the blazing volcanic rock without a
hint as to its whereabouts. Not even exercise was possible, unless one
cared to race up and down the sharp jagged sides of the sea-girt
volcano. The place ranks high as an incubator of malignant fevers and
worse ailments, and to cap the climax the ice-machine was broken
down. It always is, if the testimony of generations of castaways is to
be given credence. Our only available pastime was to buy a soap-boxful
of oysters, at the cost of a quarter, and sit in the narrow strip of
shade before the "hotel" languidly opening them with the only available
corkscrew, our weary gaze fixed on the blue arm of water framed by the | |
wealth of proof which he brought to their defence. The earliest
evolutionists tried to solve their problems by deduction, making the
theory first, and searching for the facts afterward. Darwin’s method
was just the opposite. As he himself says, he searched for fact
after fact, at the same time straining to keep all thought of theory
from his mind. Finally, when he had ascertained how things actually
were, and had arranged his information, he set forth to formulate a
theory that might accord fully with what he knew to be the truth.
He took the ancient, indefinite idea of evolution and welded it into
an organized theory, and armed it with an array of facts that made
it irresistible. While some of Darwin’s beliefs have failed to show
the importance he assigned them, and others of them are very probably
errors, there are few indeed who seriously, from the standpoint of
science, care to question the conception that all living things have
developed from earlier living things of simpler or more primitive
character. His careful, painstaking work gained for his ideas a world
wide acceptance among thinking men, and made Charles Darwin one of
the greatest figures in the history of science.
The story of Darwin’s life is a story of long, careful study and
preparation, of rapid publication of his discoveries when he set out
to write them, and finally of triumph over those who opposed him. He
was born on the twelfth of February, 1809, the same day that brought
the world Abraham Lincoln. Someone has said that on that day the
world’s greatest liberators were born--in America the one who would
free the bodies of men from bondage; in England the man who would
free their minds from a no less real slavery to custom, power, and
worn-out dogma.
When he was sixteen years old, Darwin went to Edinburgh to study
medicine. But he was already a rebel against dryness and dead
academic thought, and wrote home that the lectures in anatomy were
quite as dry as was the lecturer himself. After two years of
medicine he gave up his work at Edinburgh, and went to Cambridge to
become a preacher. But while studying for the ministry the young
Darwin spent a great deal of his time with nature, and acquired
something of a reputation as a naturalist. When, in 1831, he was
offered the chance to make a five years’ trip around the world as
naturalist on the exploring ship “Beagle” he did not delay long in | |
which cost me £18 some years ago, now stands in the booksellers’
catalogues at £30. It may be assumed that my pleasure, as a cultured
man, in the possession of this first edition is measured by something
like £30. But suppose I now suffer a reverse of fortune. The subjective
use value of the book remains as before: the objective exchange value
also remains as before: but the _subjective exchange_ value has
immensely risen. In my former circumstances the price of £30 was a
bagatelle: now it may perhaps pay my insurance premium: this second
subjective value is distinct alike from subjective use value and
objective exchange value.
In former chapters, we have seen that the value of a good is determined
by the marginal utility which depends on it: in the same way this
secondary value will be determined by the marginal utility which
depends on the things obtained in exchange for the good. This being
so, the _amount_ of this exchange value will depend on two things:
(1) on the objective value, or price, of the goods—which determines
what or how many things can be got for them: (2) on the existing state
of the owner’s want and provision—which determines what place the
satisfactions, obtainable from the goods got in exchange, have in his
scale of living. For instance: the use to me of the one riding horse
which I can just afford may be quite definite, as giving me a pleasant
form of exercise. But its subjective _exchange_ value depends (1) on
the sum of money I could get for him, and (2) what part this sum of
money plays in my scale of living.
And here we come in sight of the decisive distinction between
subjective and objective exchange value. The objective exchange value
of the horse is the same to every one; the subjective exchange value
varies from person to person according to the previous state of his
wants and resources. An article in a poor man’s house which he can, in
case of need, sell for 20/ has a very different importance to him from
what a similar article has to a rich man—20/ is a large part of a £50 | |
give reverential greetings.
“To the honoured Mahomed Emin, Mudir of Hatalastiva.
“May God lead him in the paths of His gifts. Amen.
“After greeting you, I would remind you that the world is a house of
change and decay, and everything in it must one day perish. God is the
Master of all His creatures.
“We are of the army of God. With our army is victory. Victory is to the
believers. God help the Faithful. It is written in the Koran.
“The whole country is subject to the prophet. Hicks, Stewart, Gordon,
all are dead. Make peace with the Mahdi.
“We have landed here with an army of the defenders of the faith. It
is your duty to submit. Submit and be assured of a free pardon, of
protection for your children and your property, and of the blessing of | |
_B_, ....
Page 176: ... the tops guides are usually ... changed to ... the top
guides are usually ....
Page 179: ... the journals of the coupling-rods, the brasses at m, m,
... changed to ... the journals of the coupling-rods, the brasses at | |
Granada,
Leon, rivalry with, 77 ff.;
capture of (1855), 81
Granados, Miguel García, 52
Great Britain,
bondholders in Guatemala supported by, 289;
bondholders in Honduras supported by, 294;
bondholders in Nicaragua supported by, 240;
Central American commerce with, 274 f., 277 ff., 282;
protectorate on Mosquito Coast, 95 f., 168 f.
Greytown, 82, 95 f.
Groce, Leonard, execution of, 228 f.
Guardia, General Tomás, 33, 146, 291 | |
bestowed in recognition of gifts to the Society’s Menagerie, and not for
contributions to zoological knowledge. Flower’s contributions to both
the _Transactions_ and the _Proceedings_ of the Society were numerous,
and, needless to say, valuable; the earliest in the former having been
published in 1866, and in the latter in 1852. With very few exceptions,
these communications relate to mammals. Fuller details with regard to Sir
William’s Presidency of the Zoological Society will be found in a later
chapter.
Of the Linnean Society, Flower was elected a Fellow in 1862, but he does
not appear to have ever taken any active part in the administration of
that body, or to have contributed to its publications, although for a
time he was a Vice-President.
To the Geological Society, on the other hand, of which he became a Fellow
in the year 1886, Sir William contributed three papers on paleontological
subjects, by far the most important of which was one on the affinities
and probable habits of the extinct Australian marsupial _Thylacoleo_.
Further allusion to this is made in the sequel. Of the other two, one
recorded the occurrence of teeth of the bear-like _Hyænarctus_ in the
Red Crag of Suffolk, and the other that of a skull of the manatee-like
_Halitherium_ in the same formation.
Of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland Flower
was elected a Vice-President in 1879, while in 1883 he succeeded to
the Presidential chair, and occupied that position till 1885. Of his
numerous contributions to anthropological science, many appeared in the
journal of the Institute.
In the annual meetings of the British Association for the advancement
of science, Flower, from an early date, took a lively interest. At the
Norwich meeting, in 1868, he acted as Vice-President of the section of
Biology, while he was President of the same section at the Dublin meeting
of 1878. At York he presided over the section of Anthropology in 1881;
he was a Vice-President at the Aberdeen meeting of 1885, while for the
second time he occupied the Presidential chair of the Anthropological
section in 1894 at Oxford, when his opening address on Anthropological
progress displayed great breadth of thought and generalisation.
Finally, he was President of the Association at the meeting held in | |
“If races are to evolve into a higher state it must be through
finer, cleverer methods than war. War is a stupid return for
education.... Internationalism is a remedy.”
_Cloth, 12mo, net $1.35_
Publishers · FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY · New York
GRAPHID PRESS, NEW YORK
Transcriber’s Notes
Advertisements were collected at the end of the text. | |
war aims, as this would be a step toward peace. Before this note was
completed, the German Government sent out a communication, asking the
same definition. But the German Government issued this document on the
idea that the German armies had triumphed, and incorporated in it a
threat to neutral governments. From a thousand sources, official and
unofficial, word came to our government that unless the United States
used her influence to end the war on the terms dictated by Germany,
Germany and her allies would consider themselves free from obligation
to respect the rights of neutrals. The Kaiser was frankly ordering the
neutral nations of the world to force those Powers which fought him to
accept the peace he offered. If they failed to do this, Germany would
resume her submarine warfare on neutral commerce with new ruthlessness.
The President, continuing his own purpose, finished his note to both
sides, sending it on the 18th of December, 1916. Both sides replied,
the Powers who resisted Germany declaring that their principal
end in the war was the lasting restoration of peace. Germany and
her associates refused to state their terms, and merely proposed a
conference--another method of delay. The President, in an address to
the Senate on the 22d of January, 1917, outlined the terms of the peace
which the United States could honorably join in guaranteeing.
“No peace can last,” he stated, “or ought to last, which does not
recognize and accept the principle that governments derive all their
just powers from the consent of the governed, and that no right
anywhere exists to hand people about from sovereignty to sovereignty as
if they were property....
“I am proposing government by the consent of the governed; that
freedom of the seas which in international conference after conference
representatives of the United States have urged with the eloquence of
those who are the convinced disciples of liberty; and that moderation | |
attitude of indifference.
“It’s a very nice name,” Ann reflected. “I like it. I shall call him
Angelina too.”
“If you do, you won’t do it a second time,” her brother mentioned in
accents of quiet rage.
Ann was astonished. “Don’t you like it? Why do people call you it then?”
“Nobody calls me it, except a lot of fools who think they’re being
funny.”
“Angelina――――” meditated Jim. “I say!――let go――you’re hurting me!”
Edward had caught his ear and was twisting it viciously.
“Ouu!” Jim squealed; and promptly kicked his brother on the shins.
Edward flung him away and pulled up the leg of his trousers. “Little
brute!” he spluttered. “Look what he’s done!” He made another rush, but
Jim darted behind Palmer, who held the aggressor at arm’s length.
“I say; let him alone; you hurt him first.”
Edward hesitated. Then, with a limp suggesting that each step cost him
untold agony, he stalked on alone to the house.
“I’m afraid we’ve made him really angry,” said Ann, cheerfully. “It
was your fault, Balmer, too, because you must have known he would get
cross. I didn’t. It was you and Jim.”
“He can swear all right,” put in Jim. “Can’t he, Palmer?” | |
XXXVI. There is another objection to experimental observations, which
is not more reasonable, or better founded than that we have just
mentioned, which is made by some superficial schoolmen, who say, that
these sort of enquiries, do not require reason and perspicuity, but
only eye-sight, diligence, and memory; on which account they condemn
them, as things not well calculated for the exertion of invention, and
ingenuity. But how little do these people know of the nature of those
physical experiments, or of the manner in which they are made, which have
employed the attention of so many learned and sublime spirits, of France,
Italy, England, and Germany. In order to discover whether any deceitful
appearance has crept in, they repeat every experiment many times over;
and invent many ingenious methods of examination, to find out, whether
the phenomenon proceeded from that cause, which at first sight it seemed
to be derived from, or whether it was the effect of some accidental, or
occult one. They make exact and nice combinations of their experiments,
and invent ingenious methods of comparing them one with another, and then
weigh in a most delicate balance, both the analogies, and the differences
between them, in order to derive with almost mathematical certainty, the
consequences to be deduced from them; and they peep into those crevices
of nature that are nearly imperceptible, that they may discern through
them, her inmost secrets; and I beyond comparison, find more delicate
ingenuity, and more perspicuity, in many of the experiments of the famous
Boyle, than I do in all the abstractions, and reduplications, of the most
subtle metaphysicians.
SECT. X.
XXXVII. It is certainly and indispensably necessary, to make experimental
observations with the most exquisite attention, in order to avoid our | |
have a dim idea that silver, as one of the precious metals, has a value
almost innate. Yet after 1873 mine after mine was abandoned although
the ores were as rich and the reefs as plentiful as ever. What was
the cause?—Simply that silver was discarded as currency in certain
countries: that is to say, silver fell in the estimation of great
communities, and the loss of value was carried back till the price
realised by the virgin silver was not enough to pay for the mining of
it.
Of course the identity of value between final product and groups of
higher and higher rank is not absolute. It would be strange if it were;
for where all the groups get their value from the last product, and
this gets its value from a thing so inconstant as human want and so
elastic as human provision, it is to be expected that the calculation
which conducts value back and back, will, often enough, be mistaken.
Builders tempted, by high freights at a time of sudden demand, to lay
down a ship, must reckon with the possibility that, ere it be finished,
the tide of prosperity may have ebbed, and that the price realised for
the ship may scarce repay the wages and prices paid in anticipation.
And, besides these fluctuations which cannot be reduced to law, and
are often the chances on which the employer (as distinguished from the
capitalist) makes his great profits—and losses—there is one constant
difference between the value of the productive groups and that of
the final product; that is, Interest. With this, however, we have no
concern here.
CHAPTER XIII
FROM MARGINAL PRODUCTS TO COST OF PRODUCTION
Thus far the matter has been comparatively simple. We have looked
at a concatenation of successive groups with one final product, and
with, of course, one marginal utility and one value. But we have now
to face the fact that productive groups may pass into a great number
of final products, each with a different marginal utility and value.
The more industry is divided, the more is this the case. Productive
goods, such as coal, oil, labour, go more or less to the making of
millions of products. It is this that gives the Supply side its almost
overwhelming weight in modern economic science. And it is here that we | |
It is therefore natural that the deer should desert the woods and waters
at the fly season to seek relief on high and open ground, where they can,
to a certain extent at least, escape from this plague.
[Illustration: A Bear-Path over the Reindeer moss.]
[Illustration: Antlers of Caribou killed by Nascaupee Indians at a
crossing-place on Indian House Lake.]
The Barren Ground caribou of Labrador, when met singly or in small bands,
are quite difficult of access, though, as with other kinds of deer, the
wildness varies with the individual animal or animals. Curiosity is
the bane of the caribou, and although some would bound away scared at
the bare sight of man, others would circle round us in order to get to
windward, and, in doing so, usually approached within range. | |
I thought you had a little common sense.
Didn’t I tell you she was bound
To carry you quite safe and sound
From earth to Heaven, if you could handle
Her properly. It’s a fair scandal
To see the way you hold the tiller.
You’ll sink her. Look! You’ll sink and fill her!
[_The ship heels and dips, the Tracker yells again, and
even the Carpenter gasps and moans._]
I thought that she would even carry
God back again to earth to tarry.
Oh! If she’d had another master
Than you, she would have got on faster,
But with this God-forsaken mind
No other body could I find. | |
their wages to the latter's eight or ten cents a day. In this case, as
the world over, the workmen earned about what he was paid, or rather
succeeded in keeping his capacity down to the wages paid him. Many
galleries of the mine were "worked on contract," and almost all gangs
had their self-chosen leader. A peon with a bit more standing in the
community than his fellows, wearing something or other to suggest his
authority and higher place in the world--such perhaps as the pink shirt
the haughty "jefecito" beside me sported--appeared with twelve or more
men ready for work and was given a section and paid enough to give his
men from fifty to eighty cents a day each and have something over a
dollar left for himself. Miners' wages vary much throughout Mexico, from
twelve dollars a month to two a day in places no insuperable distances
apart. Conditions also differ greatly, according to my experienced
compatriots. The striking and booting of the workmen, common in some
mines, was never permitted in "Pingüico." In Pachuca, for example, this
was said to be the universal practice; while in the mines of Chihuahua
it would have been as dangerous as to do the same thing to a stick of
dynamite. Here the peon's manner was little short of obsequious
outwardly, yet one had the feeling that in crowds they were capable of
making trouble and those who had fallen upon "gringoes" in the region | |
the day off his hands on his weather-beaten overalls. “I shore thought
yuh was Magpie. Yuh see we ain’t used to havin’ strangers hereabouts.
Magpie’s my pardner and he’s supposed to be down at th’ cabin gittin’
dinner.”
“I saw a man sitting on a log down the trail a ways as I rode up,” I
remarked. “Seemed like a curious kind of a person. Wouldn’t talk at all.
Just sat there and gazed off across the hills.”
“’Bout six feet long and ten inches wide--sort of uh roan with sparsely
settled whiskers?” asked the prospector.
“Exactly,” I agreed. “I noticed particularly the moth-eaten hirsute
gathering and also the immense distance from the lobe of his right ear
to his rear suspender buttons.”
“Haw, haw!” exploded the prospector. “Suspender buttons! Haw, haw!
Dog-gone good thing yuh didn’t mention suspender buttons to him, ’cause
he’s sort a sensitive over such trifles. Uh-hu,” he grunted
reflectively, “that was Magpie Simpkins, shore was. Did yuh say he
didn’t seem to be lookin’ at anything particular--jist sorta lookin’?”
I assured him that as far as I was able to discern there was nothing
about those mesquite-covered hills to cause a man to focus on one
certain spot for an indefinite period of time, oblivious to all material
matters.
“There’s one or two words in th’ American langwidge I ain’t never been
introduced to,” he replied, “and jist now yuh used ’em all in uh heap,
but I gits th’ drift. Magpie’s trancin’.”
“He’s what?” I asked. | |
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small fat envelope in the same hand, but more recognisable to my eye.
It was, so far as I could remember, the writing of Ronald Mirlees.
"Dear Hugh Jevons" (ran the missive)--
"It becomes necessary that you should step in to help me a second
time--and a last time--in my life. I have not forgotten how you helped
me before. You were a solid man to me then, and it is proof enough.
I believe you a solid man still that I have picked upon you to be
custodian of my confidences now that I can no longer hold them myself.
You will understand what I mean, as you read on.
"In the first place, my number is up. I see death approaching as
clearly as you look to the rise of to-morrow's sun. But I do not intend
that my secret shall die with me. Some other human being must carry | |
Louis Panzer, a Broadway theatre-manager.
James Peale, the Don Juan of “Gunplay.”
Eve Ellis. The quality of friendship is not strained.
Stephen Barry. One can understand the perturbation of the juvenile lead.
Lucille Horton, the “lady of the streets”—in the play.
Hilda Orange, a celebrated English character-actress.
Thomas Velie, Detective-Sergeant who knows a thing or two about crime.
Hesse, Piggott, Flint, Johnson, Hagstrom, Ritter, gentlemen of the
Homicide Squad.
Dr. Samuel Prouty, Assistant to the Chief Medical Examiner.
Madge O’Connell, usherette on the fatal aisle.
Dr. Stuttgard. There is always a doctor in the audience.
Jess Lynch, the obliging orangeade-boy.
John Cazzanelli, _alias_ “Parson Johnny,” naturally takes a
professional interest in “Gunplay.”
Benjamin Morgan. What do you make of him?
Frances Ives-Pope. Enter the society interest.
Stanford Ives-Pope, man-about-town.
Harry Neilson. He revels in the sweet uses of publicity.
Henry Sampson, for once an intelligent District Attorney.
Charles Michaels, the fly—or the spider?
Mrs. Angela Russo, a lady of reputation.
Timothy Cronin, a legal ferret. | |
of entrepreneur’s cost (not that they employed the term entrepreneur’s
cost), co-ordinate with wages and “profits of stock.” Ricardo never
stated a law of entrepreneur’s cost plainly, formally, as such, though
he gave it an obscure recognition as a source of difficulty to the pure
labor theory of value. But he influenced its form profoundly, for when
the doctrine passed into the hands of J. S. Mill, the latter removed
the rent of land from among the elements of cost, leaving wages and
interest.[7]
While many points of detail will appear in the following pages, it will
be found necessary to trace the relations of the two great accounts of
value, the “philosophical” and the “empirical,” in the writings of every
economist hereafter considered. | |
But Mabel was busy examining a watercolour sketch on the wall, and did
not notice her cousin's question. "This is very pretty," she said—"I am
so fond of drawing and painting. Is it yours?"
"No, that is one of Julia's. Nothing of mine will ever be worth
framing, I am afraid, for I like music best, and care very little for
sketching. But I am glad you like it, for it will give Mr. Gibson so
much pleasure to teach you."
"Oh, shall I really have lessons in painting too?" exclaimed Mabel.
And then she seated herself in a low luxurious chair by the fire, and
gave herself up to the enjoyment of her surroundings, while Isabel went
to ask that tea might be brought up to their own room.
While they were at tea, the two girls chatted over their plans for the
future, during which Mabel learned that her uncle filled a large share
of his younger daughter's heart. That it was for "papa" that Isabel
took so much pains with her music, because to hear her play often
soothed him when he came home tired of an evening, and his wife and
elder daughter were out.
"It rests him more than anything when he is very much worried," said
Isabel; "and sometimes when I play, as I often do, in a minor key, it
helps him to go to sleep."
Mabel looked as though she thought this a very poor compliment—a very
questionable aim to study music for. And she began to think her cousin
must be a poor insignificant little thing to be satisfied with such a
result. "I don't think that would quite please me," she said aloud.
"But if it was the only thing you could do for your father, you would
not think so," said Isabel quickly. "You see, I don't know anything
about being useful. Cook knows just what he likes for dinner, so I
cannot help that way, and the upper housemaid sews on all the buttons
neater than I could, so there is nothing else left for me to do."
"No, I suppose not," said Mabel in a pitying tone, "but still I think
we ought to have an aim in life, and to aim high."
"I am afraid I have not thought much about such things," said Isabel
with something of a sigh, "but papa said you would be able to help me | |
mind, became his bold self again. He set his eyes fiercely on the
shining form, and although his limbs still shook from the internal
holocaust he spoke bravely.
"Curse these hell-haunted dungeons where a man cannot even die in
peace! And curse your chattering, woman--if woman you are! If I had
but freedom and a sword----"
"Pity, O Duar! I never gave pity to anyone else, and the feeling of it
is strange. You, who could have all the kingdoms of the world--yes, and
of other worlds--and all you want is a sword!"
"With a sword I cut my own kingdom!" boasted Duar, undaunted. "With a
sword I could cut your throat!"
"Poor Duar, housing a spirit too great for himself! Do you ever dream
you are not as other men? That once, long ago, you were one of the
Masters? I trailed you across time, O little man----"
"Little man!" exploded the fuming barbarian, his rage bursting all
mental bonds and carrying away his power of coherent speech in a red
torrent of madness.
"Losing the world and caring naught," said she of the light. "Losing a
kingdom and caring naught. Losing liberty--all for the sake of the Rose
of Gaon!"
The prisoner ceased to rattle his chains in his frenzy. With great
gulps of the foul air he stifled the madness in his blood.
"How did you know that?" he whispered harshly. "How did you know what
only I, the only living man on earth, had knowledge of?"
The figure smiled at him. "The only living--yes. But I am Shar, who
knows everything save the knowledge locked in your spirit that belongs
to another greater than common men, the knowledge of the high priest
you once were and which you do not know you possess." | |
raised, and the smaller vessel rose and fell softly upon it for an
instant as it crept along.
"_Hoo-o-o-o-ooh!_" That would be the Boston turbine.
"Starboard a hair, Sims!"
"Starboard, sir!"
"_Hoo-o-o-o-ooh!_"
A dripping gray shape with phosphorescent rows of dim lights along her
decks forged by, high over the port rail.
"_Wh-a-a-a-h!_" a seagoing tug spoke astern, and in a moment she
wallowed by out of sight on the port side.
Here and there all over the Sound, vessels were blaring and tooting
their warnings and giving their answers as they forged up and down the
channel and crossed between Connecticut and the Long Island shore.
The rum-runner's captain craned farther out and strained his ears as he
exactly placed the nearest of them. The dank fog was congealing on his
oilskins and dripping from his face. He straightened up and groped for | |
[15] Darwin seemed unable to speak of Lamarck without
contempt or derision. Certainly he was not familiar
with Lamarck’s writings in the French, and
attributed to that naturalist certain erroneous
ideas for which he was not responsible. Also, it
would seem that Darwin failed to make allowances for
Lamarck’s insuperable handicaps, and his position
as a pioneer, and therefore adopted an attitude of
unjustified antagonism.
[16] “Darwinism,” or “The Darwinian Theory” refers to the
theory of natural selection, and the sub-theory of
sexual selection, ~not~ to the theory or concept of
organic evolution.
[17] This conclusion was probably unjustified; his
observation covered too short a period to mean a
great deal. | |
‘Undoubtedly. Lady Frances could help a man very much in politics if
she chose. She might help you--but it must be in her own way. She is
interested in you already.’
‘Of course she’s all for Party. She says I must join her Party, or else
there is no chance.’
‘You’ve heard that before, haven’t you? Well, there is no chance
outside the grooves; I am certain of it.’
‘Anyhow, I won’t join a party. I went in an Independent Member, and
I’ll continue an Independent Member. Nothing whatever shall induce me
to join the rank and file of Party, to run about and say what I am
told to say--nothing, mind you. Not even to get the assistance of that
woman.’
He spoke with the determination of approaching submission. His words
had a forced ring in them; their exaggeration showed weakness. He was
under temptation. | |
[14] “Mammifers” = mammals; that is, animals which suckle
their young.
[15] Darwin seemed unable to speak of Lamarck without
contempt or derision. Certainly he was not familiar
with Lamarck’s writings in the French, and
attributed to that naturalist certain erroneous
ideas for which he was not responsible. Also, it
would seem that Darwin failed to make allowances for
Lamarck’s insuperable handicaps, and his position
as a pioneer, and therefore adopted an attitude of
unjustified antagonism.
[16] “Darwinism,” or “The Darwinian Theory” refers to the
theory of natural selection, and the sub-theory of
sexual selection, ~not~ to the theory or concept of
organic evolution.
[17] This conclusion was probably unjustified; his
observation covered too short a period to mean a
great deal.
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF EVOLUTION *** | |
well enough to see his own reflection in the lid of a Huntley & Palmer’s
biscuit tin—the only looking-glass then in his possession, as he had lost
most of his things through a recent act of incendiarism.
We were delighted to catch sight of the hills that lie round Hoima, the
capital of Bunyoro, on the seventh day. Mr. Lloyd, who had been Mr.
Fisher’s fellow-worker in Toro, and chaperon to the party from England of
which I had formed part, came scorching down on his bicycle to meet us,
with a large following of natives who had come to greet “their father.”
In the year 1895 Mr. Fisher had visited these people, who, up to that
time, had never heard of Christianity, and in 1898 was located at Hoima
in order to establish a European Station. Then the country was in the
grasp of famine; the people, from the King down to his peasant subjects,
came each day to the European teacher and his two Baganda assistants
begging food. Through the generosity of friends in England and Uganda,
a fund was organized, and with presents in kind from the Christians in
Uganda and Toro, hundreds of the Bunyoro were saved from starvation. With
the return of the rains, the famine terminated, but this time of trouble
had created and cemented a confidence between the natives and missionary,
who learned to know them then better than if he had lived years in the
country at the time of its prosperity. The King, his brothers, sister,
and several of the leading chiefs, became sincere inquirers after
Christianity, and ultimately acknowledged their faith in public baptism. | |
_Field Infirmary, near Petersburg, Va.,
June 24, 1864._
When I wrote to you two days ago I said appearances indicated that we
were about to have a fight. Sure enough, about half an hour after I had
finished writing the battle began. Our division was engaged. McGowan’s
Brigade did not suffer much. It supported Wright’s Georgia Brigade
of Anderson’s Division, and, as the men were not engaged, they had
the privilege of lying down. Consequently most of the missiles passed
over them. The brigade lost only thirty or forty, and the Thirteenth
Regiment had but one killed and two wounded.
We were very successful. It is estimated that we killed and wounded
about two thousand. We captured about the same number and four cannon.
Our loss was about four hundred. We are still in our old position.
There was heavy cannonading this morning on our extreme left. If there
was any musketry, it was too far for me to hear it. Just as I began to
write this letter I had two wounded men to come in. They were hurt by a
shell early this morning.
I had my third mess of beans yesterday, and a big one it was too. I
shall have rather a poor dinner to-day--only bread, meat and coffee. We
have been getting enough coffee and sugar to have it twice a day ever
since I got back from home in April.
The weather is becoming very warm and we need rain. It will soon be too
hot for military operations. | |
an' a holler further."
The farmers in this section had once been wont to measure distance by
sound and the expression still lingered, even though meaningless to a
modern generation.
The route was more direct than it sounded. It was not a waste of
time to listen to the directions for they ensured a through journey
once the car started, which it did with a suddenness and swiftness
that left the farmer gazing with amazement. One statement he had
made impressed every man in the car. From the top of that knob to
which the timber-land route would lead them, they would descend
almost direct to the Simpkins' dock--the place designated by the
kidnappers for Wayne to bring the money demanded for the ransom of
his child.
Wayne and the Chief simultaneously looked at their watches. | |
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officer reached for a memo pad.
“Very well then, Galladay,” he sighed. “I’ll recommend that you be
attached to this new air-force group. They’ll need some one to teach
machine gunnery. But get this! They’ll assign you to that job and keep
you on the ground for the duration of the war. Serve you right, too.”
“Keep me on the ground?” grinned Sergeant Galladay. “Sure they
will--like hell! Once I get set with that outfit I’ll be flying every
ship they’ve got!” He snorted contemptuously. “Too old to fly! Say,
colonel, just give you and me twenty men from the old C Company and we
could swab up a whole regiment of these here young whipper-snappers
they’re recruiting nowadays.”
* * * * *
Sergeant Horatio Galladay thrust his head out of the door of the armory
shack of the --th Marine Aviation Group, Ardres, France, just as a
bombing squadron, returning from a daylight raid on the submarine base
at Ostend, swept downward over the row of French poplars which lined the
north end of the drome.
“Four, five, six, seven,” Sergeant Galladay counted the returning planes
as their wheels touched the field. “All present and accounted for.
That’s good.”
For eighteen months now he had watched the planes--not these particular
planes, but ships varying from the old Canadian-rigged, Hispano-powered
J. N. training planes and tricky, tail-heavy “Tommies” to these
Liberty-motored De Haviland bombers; and always he got the same thrill, | |
you and me. Jist driftin’ and driftin’----”
“Well, gol dang it, Magpie,” sez I, “that’s th’ only reasonable way fer
uh poor man to git depth. Uh course if yuh think we’ll hit it any sooner
by sinkin’ uh shaft, why----”
“Ike Harper,” states Magpie, sort uh lofty like, “yuh got uh soul like
uh packburrow. All yuh knows is to eat and work. Yore thoughts don’t
soar higher than th’ top of th’ table. I’m sorry fer yuh, Ike, ’cause uh
feller uh yore plebian tastes can’t appreciate life. This life we’re
follerin’ leads but to an unmarked grave. Don’t yuh ever git th’ soul
hunger a-tall, Ike?”
“Mebby not soul hunger,” I replies, “but I’ve been out of beans and
bacon fer two days now.”
Magpie plumb ignores this last, and ruminates deep.
“Ike,” sez he after while, “there ain’t much use askin’, but did yuh
ever figger any on th’ wimmen question?”
I replies sort a offhand-like that I oncet knowed uh squaw down Yuma
way, but I never finished th’ romantic discourse ’cause Magpie looks me
over with th’ same look in his eyes that he had jist before I starts
wearin’ fresh meat on my right eye once.
“Mr. Harper, I asked yuh that question thinkin’ that perhaps yuh had uh
tiny spark uh mentality on top of yore neck, but I finds that I’m all
wrong. I grieves for yuh, Ike.”
I swallers my chew tryin’ to make uh snigger sound like uh yawn, but
Magpie don’t notice and keeps on ramblin’ in th’ same vein.
“Ike, didn’t yuh ever think about comin’ home at night and find uh
pretty wife waitin’ supper for yuh. One with eyes th’ color of th’ deep
places in Sawtooth Lake and hair like th’ sunset on th’ Medicine peaks. | |
Something white bubbled up above it, checked its fall. Lazily it drifted
down. The balloon struck the ground four hundred feet below. Before the
parachute had come to earth, Kisner and Welkfurn rode frantically along
a road toward where it would come down....
Six minutes later they were lifting Conway carefully into the car.
Nearer dead than alive, he fainted as they put him in.
* * * * *
Late that evening Conway--the altitude-record holder of the world--and
Kisner and Welkfurn sat before a roaring fire in the club. The
balloonist was slightly pale, and was weakened from exposure. He should
have been in bed recuperating, but his excitement had not waned, and he
was not sleepy. From time to time he sucked deep breaths of air
hungrily, held them in his lungs, and let them go.
“Can’t explain it all,” he said. “Can’t see how it happened.”
“What’s the last thing you remember?” Kisner asked.
“That clock! I saw three entries on my log, all the same! It woke me up
a little, scared me. After that I don’t recall what happened. Must have
been out on my feet; don’t recall a thing.
“How I pulled the rip-cord of the balloon I can’t see. When I came to,
we were coming down like a brick--she hadn’t parachuted normally at all.
I saw the cloth of the bag rolled up in a ball in the top of the
netting, just enough to slow us up a little. By the time I got my mind
working, we must have been down low--I didn’t see the altimeter. Just
remember thinking: ‘Big boy, you gotta jump!’ Had a hard time getting
out, too; just did make it. Kept thinking, ‘Must be awful near the
ground. Hurry! Hurry!’ Well, you saw me come over the side.”
“Good thing she _didn’t_ parachute just right up there,” Kisner pointed
out. “Your oxygen tanks were empty--if you hadn’t come down fast, you’d
have died before the balloon got down where the air was dense enough
that you could breathe!” He puzzled the matter a moment, shook his head.
“Don’t see how you did it, Con.”
“Well see what I put on the log when I was up there,” Conway said
tiredly. “Say, Welk, you run over and get it--get the log. We’ll have a
look at it.” | |
It was Saturday afternoon before they could drag themselves off the | |
Laura was startled, offended. Marcie had no right to say such a thing.
“What do you mean?” she said.
“Your dress,” Marcie said, nodding at it.
Laura looked down at it. Beebo had dragged it over the bathroom floor
and the dirt, together with a hasty pressing job, made her look like
she’d been through a scuffle. “Marcie,” she said, trying to control her
voice, and not sure when she started talking what she was going to say,
“Marcie, I didn’t sleep with Jack.”
Marcie turned her eyes down to the book she was holding, and her
expression said, Tell me another one. “With who, then?” she said.
Laura pressed her lips together and sat down on Marcie’s bed. _I won’t
yell at her_, she told herself. _I can’t take the chance. I’d say the
truth, I’d blurt it out by mistake._ “Marcie, I just ended up down in
the Village.”
“Did you wander around all night?”
“No. No.” She looked down at the floor. “Well, I—”
“You what?” Marcie looked at her.
“Marcie, I _didn’t_ spend the night with Jack.” Her voice begged for
understanding.
“Jack has friends.”
Even in her mounting irritation Laura sensed jealousy and it thrilled
her. “Yes, Jack has friends. And they aren’t all men.”
“Don’t tell me you spent the night with a girl. Ha! That’s even better.
You just hang around with anybody who’s handy, don’t you.”
“You aren’t very choosy yourself, Marcie.”
“Only with Burr!” Marcie flashed angrily. “I only sleep with Burr. And I
was _married_ to him. Besides, I haven’t let him touch me for weeks.
You’ve never been married, not to Jack or anybody else.” | |
In the days of the Chinese pilgrims there was a great stone pillar which
had been erected by King Asōka; but it had been struck by lightning,
and lay on the ground when they saw it, split in the middle. The pillar
with a perfectly preserved inscription by King Asōka stands close to the
temple. But the most striking proof of all is in the name Lumbini, or
Lummini, which is preserved to this day as Rummin Dei, the initial R of
Sanscrit being changed into L in the Magadhi language of the inscription.
So he who visits the Rummin Dei to-day knows of a certainty that he is
standing on the very spot where some twenty-five centuries ago Prince
Siddartha was born—he who was to found a religion which, above all
others, has, so far as numbers go, dominated mankind. For his disciples
have, indeed, been “as the stars of heaven and as the sand which is upon
the seashore.”
The years went on and the child grew in grace and beauty of mind and
body. His teachers were amazed at the precocity of his knowledge and
wisdom. Learning seemed to come to him by instinct, until at last one
of his masters said to him: “It is thou that art the Guru, not I.” His
stature and strength were phenomenal, qualities upon which tradition was
not slack in embroidering. Was he not sixteen, some say eighteen, feet
tall, and did he not toss a dead elephant over a moat with as great ease
as an ordinary strong man would fling a cat across a ditch?
But with all this he was a child of moods. At an age when other children
are careless of aught save their toys and their games, he would lose
himself in the solitude of the forests and remain wrapped in thought,
deep in meditation. The king, his father, who watched him narrowly,
perceived this, and felt that it boded no good for his own dynastic
ambition. He thought of the prophecy of the soothsayers, and had a
premonition that his son’s greatness would be spiritual rather than
temporal. He foresaw that, however much he might try to turn the boy’s | |
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further breach of discipline.
By May 8th, the column was able to resume its march. The route was to
the south, skirting the region of the forests, which Stanley with his
present party would not have dared to face, as the Egyptians seemed
to have very vague notions about the journey. Besides, there was the
question of food, which would prevent a company of 1500 people from
attempting a passage through a district where caravans of only 200 or
300 had sometimes narrowly escaped perishing with hunger. Nevertheless,
though much has been said to the contrary, Stanley never regretted
that he went to Emin’s relief by way of the Aruwimi, instead of from
Zanzibar through the Masai country. This may be seen from the following
extract from a letter that he wrote to Sir William Mackinnon:--
“By-the-bye, Emin Pasha said it was very lucky I did not approach him
from the east by way of the Masai and Ukedo, or Langgo as he calls it.
The Langgo land is a great waterless desert for the most part. Even if
we had been able to pierce through the Wakedi, it is doubtful if the
want of food and water had not annihilated the expedition.... Now that
we know the Ituri so well, I feel convinced that we could not have
chosen a better route.”
All the district extending southwards to the Muta Nzigé has recently
fallen under the sovereignty of Kabrega, the rapacious potentate of | |
first opportunity. Godolphin sat apart from the talkers playing a quiet
game at ecarte. Constance’s eyes stole ever and anon to his countenance;
and when she turned at length away with a sigh, she saw that Radclyffe’s
deep and inscrutable gaze was bent upon her, and the proud countess
blushed, although she scarce knew why.
CHAPTER LVIII.
THE EMPIRE OF TIME AND OF LOVE.--THE PROUD CONSTANCE GROWN WEARY AND
HUMBLE.--AN ORDEAL.
About this time the fine constitution of Lady Erpingham began to feel
the effects of that life which, at once idle and busy, is the most
exhausting of all. She suffered under no absolute illness; she was free
from actual pain; but a fever crept over her at night, and a languid
debility succeeded it the next day. She was melancholy and dejected;
tears came into her eyes without a cause; a sudden noise made her
tremble; her nerves were shaken,--terrible disease, which marks a new
epoch in life, which is the first token that our youth is about to leave
us!
It is in sickness that we feel our true reliance on others, especially
if it is of that vague and not dangerous character when those around
us are not ashamed or roused into attendance; when the care, and the
soothing, and the vigilance, are the result of that sympathy which true
and deep love only feels. This thought broke upon Constance as she sat
alone one morning in that mood when books cannot amuse, nor music lull,
nor luxury soothe--the mood of an aching memory and a spiritless frame. | |
had been put away, for the views to be obtained then were of too much
sameness to attract Joe or Blake, “it would never happen, and I hope it
never does; but if it did it would make a wonderful picture; would it
not?” he asked.
“What are you talking about?” asked Blake.
“The Gatun Dam,” was the answer. “If ever it was blown up by dynamite
it would make a wonderful scene.”
“Too wonderful,” said Joe grimly. “It would be a terrible crime against
civilization to destroy this great canal.”
“Yes, it would be a great crime,” agreed the Spaniard in a low voice.
A little later he went to his stateroom on the tug, and Blake and Joe
remained on deck.
“Queer sort of a chap; isn’t he?” said Joe.
“He sure is--rather deep,” agreed his chum.
“Are you boys going into the jungle?” asked the tug captain that
afternoon.
“Yes, we want to get a few views showing life in the woods,” answered
Blake. “Why?”
“Well, the reason I asked is that I can take you to the mouth of the
Chagres River and from there you won’t have so much trouble penetrating
into the interior. So if you’re going--”
“I think we had better go; don’t you?” asked Blake of his chum.
“Surely, yes. We might get some fine pictures. They’ll go well with the
Canal, anyhow; really a sort of part of the series we’re taking.”
“All right, then, I’ll leave you in the jungle,” the captain said.
A day or so later, stops having been made to permit the boys to film | |
stories that had started, but the people who were still interested
said it was just because the bank didn’t want any fuss or
scandal--and the rest had forgotten: that is, they’d forgotten what
had happened, but they remembered that somehow I just wasn’t a young
fellow to be trusted----”
Hemmick paused and laughed again, still without enjoyment, but
bitterly, uncomprehendingly, and with a profound helplessness.
“So, you see, that’s why I didn’t go to Cincinnati,” he said slowly;
“my mother was alive then, and this was a pretty bad blow to her. She
had an idea--one of those old-fashioned Southern ideas that stick in
people’s heads down here--that somehow I ought to stay here in town
and prove myself honest. She had it on her mind, and she wouldn’t
hear of my going. She said that the day I went ’d be the day she’d
die. So I sort of had to stay till I’d got back my--my reputation.”
“How long did that take?” asked Abercrombie quietly.
“About--ten years.”
“Oh----”
“Ten years,” repeated Hemmick, staring out into the gathering
darkness. “This is a little town you see: I say ten years because it
was about ten years when the last reference to it came to my ears.
But I was married long before that; had a kid. Cincinnati was out of
my mind by that time.”
“Of course,” agreed Abercrombie.
They were both silent for a moment--then Hemmick added apologetically:
“That was sort of a long story, and I don’t know if it could have
interested you much. But you asked me----”
“It _did_ interest me,” answered Abercrombie politely. “It interested
me tremendously. It interested me much more than I thought it would.”
It occurred to Hemmick that he himself had never realized what a
curious, rounded tale it was. He saw dimly now that what had seemed
to him only a fragment, a grotesque interlude was really significant,
complete. It was an interesting story; it was the story upon which
turned the failure of his life. Abercrombie’s voice broke in upon his
thoughts. | |
“You’re ice all right,” she nodded, “but you’ve got to cut out this
cheap pilfering, otherwise you’re liable to spoil a real big thing and
I can’t afford to see it spoilt. If you want a share of big money
you’ve got to come in with people who are working big--do you get
that?”
“I get it,” said Thalia, “and who are your collaborators?”
Miss Macroy did not recognise the term but answered discreetly:
“There’s a gentleman I know----”
“Say ‘man’,” said Thalia. “Gentleman always reminds me of a tailor’s
ad.”
“Well, a man if you like,” said the patient Miss Macroy. “He’s a
friend of mine and he’s been watching you for a week or two, and he
thinks you’re the kind of clever girl who might make a lot of money
without trouble. I told him about the other affair and he wants to see
you.”
“Another admirer?” asked Thalia Drummond with a lift of her perfect | |
“I think so, Mr. Ives-Pope,” answered the Inspector. “Well, sir, thank
you for your courtesy. And now we must be going—lots of work to do.
Coming, Henry?”
Five minutes later Queen, Ellery and District Attorney Sampson were
striding side by side down Riverside Drive toward 72nd Street,
earnestly discussing the events of the morning.
“I’m glad that line of investigation is cleared up with no result,”
said Sampson dreamily. “By the Lord Harry, I admire that girl’s pluck,
Q!”
“Good child,” said the Inspector. “What do you think, Ellery?” he asked
suddenly, turning on his son, who was walking along staring at the
River. | |
and the different manner in which the two had accepted her decision the
night before.
Helen had been delighted, enthusiastic, but, Ruth could not help
feeling, a wee bit envious. For where is the girl, even one engaged and
in love, who does not in her heart cherish an ambition to be a movie
star? But on the whole Helen had been very satisfactory, had kissed her
chum and hugged her and predicted great things for her future.
Tom had been different. This time he had not even attempted to hide his
disapproval, his wretched jealousy, she thought resentfully. Had Mr.
Hammond understood the reason for Tom’s detached, glum mood? She
wondered, and finally decided that he could not very well have helped
doing so.
Well, defiantly, she would have to learn to go ahead and do as she
thought best whether Tom approved or not. Why should she care, anyway?
But even at the moment she knew that she cared very, very much indeed
what Tom thought.
“If he would only be sensible! If he would only behave himself!” she
whispered to herself.
At this period Ruth fell asleep and awoke a scant two hours later to
find the sun shining in the window.
Even then she did not feel tired. Her chief worry was lest she had
overslept. She got up, looked at her wrist watch, and reached for her
clothes all in the same instant.
A chuckle from the bed made her turn toward it. Helen was awake,
regarding her with lazy, laughing eyes.
“Good morning, Star,” said the young lady, adding whimsically: “How does
it feel?”
Ruth went over and sat down on the side of the bed, putting a cold hand
over Helen’s warm one. | |
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me home."
She folded her tiny hands, closed her tired eyes and, while her soft
lips murmured their pathetic appeal, drifted off into the land of
dreams.
Stephen, comforted by the thought of a guardian angel, was already
asleep.
CHAPTER III
MARIA FINDS A COMPANION
"Lo, children are an heritage of the Lord."--Ps. cxxvii, 3
Peter Grimes was exceedingly pleased with the success which had
attended his quest for farm labor. His meeting with the young man
from whom he had received little Mollie was wholly accidental but it
insured a steady income for the future. For the time being, the
ugly-dispositioned farmer was inclined to permit the little girl
house privileges such as he deemed worthy of a well-paying guest. He
had not planned to bring a girl into the establishment. Girls were
useless and troublesome and no good at hog-raising. But the regular
income offered by the young man he had encountered driving along the
old, little-used road leading to the farm was too tempting to be
refused. Upon acceptance of the child, Peter gave a post-office
address to which remittances might be sent and the two men exchanged
promises of secrecy.
"I doan want no one knowin' I got young-uns on the place," explained
Peter. "Them big-heads thet passed thet law agin lettin' hawgs run
in th' woods ain't past interferin' with what a man does on his own
lan'. I doan want no agents a-comin' up hyar a-rootin' 'round."
The mustached individual in the buggy, who gave his name as Bailey,
expressed much pleasure at hearing such sentiments. He agreed with
Peter heartily. A man's house was his castle, he declared, and no
one had a right to interfere with what he did there. He had a
perfect right to house a dozen children if he so desired.
All the way home Peter pondered that statement. He had started out | |
hearing, understood. America was there, to fight side by side with
them, to suffer with them, to die with them, that the cause of liberty
for which Lafayette had fought on two continents might live. The world
war had menaced the United States in its sacred institution of freedom,
and the United States had met the challenge, and had come to fight for
that which is dearer than life--honor, and right, and justice.
CHAPTER III
WHAT THE GREAT WAR REALLY MEANS
The history of the human race has been the history of man’s struggle
toward freedom. Because certain nations have seen the light sooner
than others, they have been the object of attack by these others,
primarily because the rulers of the latter have been shrewd enough
to see that revolution is contagious. A free neighbor threatens the
existence of a monarch who derives his power from the force with which
he has surrounded himself and from the blindness of his own people. A
free neighbor is therefore a menace to autocracy, and something to be
crushed.
When the people of France, inspired by the example of the United |
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