nnnnnnnnnnnnfl LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. REBECCA'S JOURNAL; OR, HOW WE MADE THE Winter Beautiful Z- BY MRS. MARY LANSING. OF COA/^-. Wash: tAG-^: PHILADELPHIA : McCali.a & Stavely, Printers, Nos. 237-9 Dock Street. 1876. -p^- .»l^ i^%'' Entered According to Act of Congress, 1876, by MRS. MARY LANSING, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington. REBECCA'S JOURNAL; OR, HOW WE MADE THE WINTER BEAUTIFUL. BY MRS. MARY LANSING. " The purpose for which I write, is that I may show that we ought to value little joys more than great ones; the night-s?own more than the dress-coat; that PJutus' heaps are worth less than his handfuls ; the plum than tiie penny for a rainy day, and that not great, but little good-haps can make us happy. That we may find refreshment in all thintcs, in the warmth of our rooms, and of our night-caps ; in our pillows; in mere Apostles day, and in the evening moral tale of wives."— Jean Paul Richter. Chapter I. HALLOW-EVE AND ELF-LAND. October 21. Yesterday was one of the most disenchanted days of my life, but on looking out this morning, all nature was so bright and smiling, I said, a la Eugenie deGuer in ^ "It is impossible but that something pleasant must happen to- day," and here comes this letter, in sweetest harmony with the mellow Octo- ber glory. Banks of the Kanawha, West Virginia. Dear Cotjsin Rebecca: Harry goes to Brooklyn, most unexpectedly this even- ing. Return with him, we pray I We will gather together all our hearts can prompt, and power execute to make you happy. Our beautiful country house is just finished, and Titania could not have chosen a more beautiful dell in w^hich to drop it. The Kanawha winding by our door ; the blue mountains in the dis- tance, and the nearer hill-sides bathed in amethyst. Harry is busy superintending the mining interests most of the day, while we amuse ourselves with books and papers and magazines, of which we have abundant store, and in drawing, paint- ing, writing, riding, boating, rambling, scrambling, and tongue-races, and dainty bits of work of both the useful and orna- mental sort, &c., &c., &c. All the house- hold say, " If Rebecca were but here, our cup of contentment would be full, " It is sweeter even than our home upon the Hudson in the olden time. Gomel come! come! You need no preparation. We live so entirely a la Diogene, there is no need of variety of apparel, or for its being a la mode. Come, darling, come. Ever devotedly, in greatest haste, Kate Montgomery. October 30. After a pleasant journey, good Cousin Harry and myself reached this home, nestled down on the bank of the Kanawha, and received sweetest wel- come. The house was alight from garret to basement, and sent out streams of beckoning invitation. Far away we saw the beacon lights, and felt them steal into our hearts like warmth and cheer. Plainly as uttered words they said, "They are coming I coming I coming I We are watching ! watching I watch- ing I For there are no other footfalls, wake such music in our halls, bo we've lighted every taper, that away through the night-vapor, they may read the glow- ing story in these golden rays of glory." As we neared the approach, a chorus of dear, familiar voices reached us, chaunt- ing in glad accord, " Welcome! welcomel welcome!" and we seemed borne on the wings of sound to the door, where the dear ones clapped their hands, jumped up and down in childish fashion, and danced for joy. Yery merry was the supper, one spicy jest seemed to " tip the wink of invitation " to another, and stories of old friends and homes passed from lip to lip. The weariness of the long journey was forgotten, as we burn- ed the " midnight oil " together. Yerily have they chosen a lovely spot whereon to set up their tabernacle. A sense of coming rest and refreshment is borne to me on every breeze, — of sweet repose and quiet, as if we had come away from the great Babel, to be soothed in the kind arms of dear Mother Nature. My room is dainty enough for a sylph, with its soft, flowing, muslin curtains, looped with rose colored ribbons. A car- pet of white ground, with bunches of delicate flowers sprinkled in graceful pro- fusion everywhere. Walls tinted couleur de rose, and the tasteful little appoint- ments made by loving hands of the same sweet hue. From the window where I write, thou see'st, dear Familiar, the gliding water, the glorious mountains, fleecy clouds float- ing on the upper sea of blessedness, and the hazy atmosphere of the season mel- lowing and softening all. Here do I trust to pour into thy listening ear many a pleasant story. This the first page to the most restful chapter of my life. In Brooklyn without these friends, who since my orphanage have become part and parcel of my life, I felt enveloped in such an atmosphere of loneliness, it seem- ed it must be palpable, and cold, and chilling to all who saw me. As I entered these doors, it fell from me as a garment, and I "put on my singing robes again." Here, there is no repression, no misap- prehension. Here, as a friend said, one seems to " take off the flesh, and sit in the soul." The air is instinct with the realization of life having been given for a blessed purpose. Of the dear G-od having made all things beautiful from which He would have us draw out all the joy and glory that we can. Not for idle pleasure do they live, these blessed friends of mine, but for the attainment each moment of all the culture and acquirement and growth that they may. Cousin Harry is a man of rare culture, and his bonnie Kate, a very miracle of grace and beauty, " never opening her mouth without drop- ping pearls," while her rare accomplish- ments in music and drawing are a daily joy and charm. The dear Aunt Kuth, whose deep love for me has "its root in my dear dead mother's grave, '^ seemeth ever fair as an angel, and is enthroned as one, within the home. Her beautiful sil- ver hair curls lovingly about her face, as if it felt the delicious "serenity and peace- fulness that abides there in ever undis- turbed beauty. A smile seems ever trembling upon her lip, while the sweet beams of her eyes are as an ever new revelation. Majestic and stately in bear- ing, she has been from childhood to my imagination a born Queen, and often have I wondered what her life-story can have been, that she is not crowned and sceptred in some home, instead of treading life's path alone. Alone, yet not alone, for everywhere her presence is hailed as blessed. We all love to have sunbeams come creeping into our dwellings, and she is so kind as to say, no mother was ever more blessed in her daughters than she in her nieces, of whom in this small house- hold she numbers three, beside Kate and myself. Alice, a fair-haired maiden of eighteen ; Theodora, a brunette, twency- three or four, and Constance, nineteen, plain, but highly cultured. Nor must we forget the children. Arthur, a bright, noble boy of sixteen ; Max and Guy, boys of nine and ten, and the sylph-like Utile maidens, Kathie and Margie, of six and eight. We shall be entirely dependent upon each other for society, except we make an occasional escapade to the lifteen miles distant city, and now and then, they tell me, agreeable calls from three or four cultured gentlemen, who, like Harry, have left their accustomed city habits to brin^' their well-trained energies to the develop- ment of these wondrous mines. For some this would seem a dreary outlook for the long winter closing in, but to us, if we cannot make the winter beautiful, we feel we must be poor indeed in resources, and the burden of my song to you, dear Jour- nal, will be, how we make it beautiful and useful, and rich to each and all. October 31st. It is late, dear Journal, but as no kind spirit has come to anoint my eyelids with the dews of sleep, I will e'en pour into thy faithful bosom the story of the evening. The day was mostly spent in disposing my belongings, in a manner best adapted to the needs and comfort of a winter lurking place, and after a cosy dish of tea, we were gathered eufamille in the charming salon,, when a ring at the door (which in country homes, where calls are few, wakens a sense of ex- pectancy through the house, until an- 6 swered) surprised us, and still more sur- prised were we, when the gentlemen from the Glen came in. As our one resource for society outside ourselves, you can im- agine dear Faithful, I looked eagerly for a first impression. Mr. Montague, tall, and very elegant, black hair and eyes. Mr. Graham, medium height, brown hair and eyes, with peculiarly pleasing address. Mr. Carlton, fair as the "fair-haired Harold" of old, of most agreeable pres- ence. Mr. Mortimer most distingue, in height, and form and feature, with an ever vary- ing expression of face, at every ripple of thought passing over him. After the first courtesies of introduc- tion, Mr. Graham remarked, " AVe found it dull, keeping bachelor's hall on All Hal- low Eve, and could not resist the tempta- tion of coming, Mrs. Montgomery, to pass it in your bower of fair ladies." "We were wondering before 3^ our en- trance, how we might suitably keep the time without a single Carpet Knight," she replied. "Perhaps the inspiration came from you, for with one accord, when trying to settl3 ourselves for the evening, we ex- claimed, Halloween here, is like ' the play of Hamlet, with ' Hamlet left out. ' Let us sally forth, like the Good Knight San Mancho iu search of adventures on this 'night to be observed,' and here we are, on the qui vive for a peep into futurity, searching there for theDulcineaswho hold our threads of destiny." "We will do our spiriting gently," re- sponded Mrs. Montgomery, " that there may be nothing too Quixotic in the search." " Saw you any fairies ?" asked eager Alice, "beneath the moon's pale beams as you came hither ward ?" "None," responded Mr. Montague, " though as we came along the winding banks of the Kanawha, we felt its roman- tic nooks were just the ones where fairies light, but it was scarcely the witching hour." "In my rides," said Constance, "I have singled out many spots as favorite and fitting haunts for fairies, and to-mor- row propose visiting them to look for fair}^ foot-prints." "Let us go! Let us all go !" we ex- claimed in full chorus. " Where you lead we'll follow, but it must be in the early dawning before the dew is off", or the sun will efface the trace of their lightsome trippings." "With the 'first glance that breaks from morning's eyes,' I will be ready," said Constance. "Provided," said Mr. Carlton, "the Elfin folk do not cast such spells and charms about us upon this night, as to bewitch us too thoroughly." "No provisos allowed." exclaimed Mrs. Montgomery, ' ' even though ridden by witches, good knights are undismayed. The glaive has been cast down, you can but pick it up, but the charmed moments fly. Now, shut your eyes, and haad in hand go to the garden gate, the path is straight, so you need not fail, and reach- ing down with eyes tight closed, pull each a stock of cabbage, and bring them in to me." Merrily all clasped hands, and passed through the door leading into the garden, with Mr. Montgomery in front as pilot, and to see fair play, while our fair hostess went to order the oatmeal cakes and but- ter, which are the indispensable delecta- bilities of a Halloween supper. " A spell of silence, I cast over you all," said our leader, and silently we followed the sound of his footsteps down the broad path. "Xow pull, one and all, the first stock you meet with, without moving an eyelid." Gaily we laughed, as in pantomimic eagerness, w^e stooped and pulled the pro- phetic kail, and bore it triumphantly into the house, where dear auntie, with her ever ready sense of nice proprieties, had cleared the ample library table, and cov- ered it with a cloth, from which the earth and roots could easily be shaken, after shadowing forth our destinies. "Blink not an eye," she said, "till you have ranged yourselves about the table, and deposited the homely prophets." Opening our eyes, a peal of laughter, like the chiming of joy-bells rang out, as the uncouth shapes with loose earth cling- ing about them, appeared resting in front of each. "Aunt Ruth must be the sibyl to read these leaves of destiny," said Kate, " while Harry and I station ourselves at either end, and watch the working of the charm." " I will pass round the table in order," smilingly said Auntie. ''Theodora, yours is tall and straight, and speaks of a knight like the goodly cedar. No earth clings to the root, showing him * lord of his learn- ing,' and no wealth beside." ' ' Mr. Montague, yours too, is tall and straight, betokening a stately Queen of Hearts, and the mass of earth about it, speaks of solid charms." "Mr. Graham, yours is short, and an abundance of what the French call ' matter,' hangs about its stock." " Alice, yours too is short, and encum- bered with the ' embarrassment of riches, ' so we can hardly see its shape." " Rebecca's tall as the ' Evergreen Pine,' 'Gaily it spreads and broadly doth grow,' while enough of Mother Earth adheres to promise competence and com- fort." " Mr. Carlton, yours is graceful and shapely, the most perfect one of all, but nothing of the 'earth, earthy,' clings about its fibres." "Constance, yours is gnarled and 8 twisted, but full of strength, of fine pro- portions, and laden with earth." "Mr. Mortimer, last but not least, yours is a mass of delicate fibres, fine almost as frrapo tendrils, each earth cov- ered as with a coating of moss." " In every one there lurks a fairy, who thread by thread is spinning out the woof of destiny for each. From each I break a tiny hi:, as a talisman, and bid these fair ladies encase them in morocco, at the first interlude of leisure, that each may bear them with them, in memory of this haunted hour, bidding you guard and keep them as the devotee an Amulet." '•Bind mine with blue, I pray," cried Mr. Montague, " in token of true blue de- votion to my ' Queen of Hearts.' " "And this with 'celestial rosy red,'" said Mr. Graham, "as the hue of mine." "Mine with Opaline, in token of the concentration of all hues in the fairy sprite the sibyl pledged to me," exclaimed Mr. Carlton. "I choose," said Mr. Mortimer, "a Yiolet Shrine for my Amulet, for there I lay the purple of my heart and life." " And girls yours should be bound in green, as you must ' wear the willow, ' till your good Knights appear," cried cousin Harry. Soon workboxcs were opened, and rib- bons and bits of morocco produced, Aunlie and Kate profiering to do double duty, in covering two a piece with the green, while we each, took one of the cavaliers' to enshrine. " Say a charm, say a charm, over mine. Miss Eebecca, as you draw the thread in and out," said Mr. Mortimer. ' ' I once saw a company of fair ^uns in a cloister, covering Agnus Dei's. They enshrined holy words in dainty covers for the good of the soul, 3'ou for our hearts," said Mr. Montague. "I shall w^ear mine next my heart," said Mr. Carlton, ' ' and no ' sparkle of fine love ' shall ever penetrate it until it come from the fairy-like little sweetheart promised me." "I too will bind mine upon my breast," cried Mr. Graham, ''and when the good fairy fulfills the pledge, will carve it on my crest." Thus words fell trippingly from the tongue, until the Amulets were finished, when Aunt Kuth in sibyl fashion, said over them a murmured charm and spell, and bestowed each on the rightful owner. "Xow, burn the nuts," called Kate, leading the way into the Dining Saloii, where a bright fire was blazing. " Each select two nuts from the heaped dish upon the table, name, and lay upon the table, name, and lay upon the fire, and as they burn quietly together, or start from beside one another, the course and issue of the wooing shall be." Casting them in two and two, named for a lad and lassie, we watch for the moment of divination, when, lo, all burst together, and in a general conflagration seemed all to burn, and start, and crack at once. '' The spell is broken, the lights burn blue," said Auntie, "the faries love not 'twice told tales,' though 'thrice the brindle cat has mewed,' they will not come again." "Let us be content," said Constance, "and sing a Hallow-Eve chant, in honor of their visit." Gathering about the piano, in rich, full chorus, they sang, "as if to breathe were music," the fitting Vy^ords : "The Autumn's fairy gold turns pale, It freezes ; but no frost of earth The seasons of the soul can blight. Here bloom at once a Spriug of mirth, A iSummer-tide of joy to-night : Though days grow short, the fire's a sun, Tliat will not set without our leave, Our hearts are glowiug every-one, In the beams of Hallow-Eve ! And sure this is a fairy hour That lets tlie ghostly world retrieve, A little while its ancient powei:, In right of Hallow-Eve ; Much joy an 1 pain have cause more vain, 'i ban ours of Hallov/-Eve ! Come then ! let none look sourly grave, Nor croak this niizht in rusty talk ! Let cares take fliii:ht before our stave, As ghosts at crowing of the cock ! How many things that are indeed Mere ghosts and shadows men believe. The sole, true suliptance ! men, whose creed Despisrs Hallow-Eve, Without one Hallow-Eve, Or time like Hallow-Eve, Of loving mirth — how great the dearth, Is theirs — dear Hallow-Eve ! " " The oatmeal cakes are smoking on the table," Kate cheerily called as the last note died awa^-, and laughable was the zest and relish with which the " bonny cakes of Scotland " were devoured by those who fain would mingle with the Elfin folk. Merry quips and cranks of wit flavored and saucecl our well-buttered cakes, 'till Auntie closed the bannock banquet by saying, "If you are to brush the dew from the heather in the morning, you had better seek your pillows. Fairies never yet were seen by dull and weary eyes," and suiting the action to the word, she began handing one and another their scat- tered belongiugs, in her sweet, helpful way, while Harry almost forcibly detained the "captive Knights," as guests, pledg- ing himself to sound a reveille, and have the steeds equipped at the fitting moment, adding gayly in his rich recitative, " The night is Hallow E'en, my friends, The morn is Hallow Day, And gin ye dare your true love win, Ye surely here must stay. " The night is good Hallow E'en, When fairy folk will ride, And they that wad their true love win, At our house they maun bide." The guests at his bidding, mounting the stairs, caught up the strain in re- sponse, and sang — 10 " The morn is Hallow E'en n'c^ht, The Ellin Court will ride, Through En2:land and thro' all Scotland, And"th rough the warld wide. Oh, they beyin at sky sett in, Ride a' the evening tide." I ought to be sleeping, dear Familiar, but spirits, white, blue, and gray, all are whispering and throwing pictures, as from magic lanterns on my brain, of fig- ures tall as evergreen pines. What charm will exorcise them ? I will lay me down, and see if they can force their way into dreamland, and " tickle my nose while I sleep." iS^ovember 1st. It has been a golden day, dear Journal, written as with a sun- beam. Early in the dewy morning we were cap-a-pie for adventure. Theodora and Mr. Montague leading off at full gallop, followed by Constance and Mr. Graham, Alice and Mr. Carlton, Mr. Mortimer and myself. '' A draught of more sparkling, exhila- rating November was never quaffed, " said I, as we rode on at a brisk canter. " The morning is most fitting for such an escapade," said my chevalier. "All nature is beautiful, as if under a spell of enchantment." " Surely no spirit of evil dare walk abroad in such holy time, 'J I returned. " The fairy folk, whose trippings we are seeking to discover at this unwonted hour, may not rank us among spirits of good," he replied, " though it seemeth all fair things must love to welcome spirits suchfis those that make an Eden of Montgomery House." " It is a beautiful Home, ' ' said I ; " and like going down from dusty streets into a temple, to enter and breathe its atmos- phere, and watch the ' daily beauty ' of the lives of its high priest and priestess." "Aye, verily is it, and now they have gathered such an array of vestal virgins to keep the holj flame alight upon its altar, our brotherhood will ofcen bow at its shrine, craving to assist at ceremonies such as those of yesternight," was his gallant rejoinder. "I doubt not you will find them ever hospitably inclined. They ' welcome the coming,' and 'speed the parting guest,' with a rare grace and courtesy. And the occasions for ceremonials are not infre- quent, as the faithful observance of holi- days holds a high place in their home creed. Every birthday, name-day, wedding-day, and kindred anniversary is a red4etter day in their calendar, and celebrated duly as those prescribed and set apart by the Church and world," said I. "It is a charming custom, and wins my admiration," said he. " It is a wise bit of philosophy, too," I rejoined. "If, as some modern Solomon hath it, the secret of accomplishing any- thing by j|pi"d work, is the knowing when and how to recreate, the more holidays the better, surely." 11 "Yes," was his reply, "the utilitarian spirit is overreaching itself, and crippling its own energies, by blindness to the need in our nature of divertissement and change." " There was never truer word spoken," I returned eagerly, " and then these dear home festivals draw out and cultivate the sweetest sympathies and instincts of our being, and bind families together with cords stronger and more enduring than those of iron." "Aye," was his response, and an ex- pression of tender seriousness overspread his fine face ; " I see, it carries friendship to its noontide point, and gives the rivet of eternity." Our horses had relaxed their pace, in harmony with the gradually deepening tone of our conversation, and we were entirely oblivious of the space increasing between us and our companions, until aroused by a merry shout, and Mr. Carl- ton's gay voice declaring us "spell bound." As we reached the party, who halted to await us, Mr. Graham said, " I was remonstrating with Miss Con- stance upon bringing us out upon so weird an errand, as we missed you, and am more than ever convinced it was an un- canny thing to do, to be out before the cock-crowing to spy out the secrets of fairydom, for had we not broken the charm by our voices, some will-o'-the-wisp had soon beguiled you into an enchanted cas- tle. Keep close hereaiucr, for I feel the presence in the air of unseen Calibans on the watch for fair Mirandas." Mr. Carlton exclaimed — " I begin to feel e'rie, by all the hokey pokeys. Puck and his train have anointed my eyes !" "And my ears," cried Mr. Montague ; "fori hear the sound of the elf-knight blowing his horn !" "I 'dreamed a drearie dream,' last night," said Mr. Mortimer. " I knew it I I knew it !" exclaimed Mr. Graham ; " it was a warning ; if w^e had not called, he would have been carried away by the fairies to the castle of the King of Elf-Land." " Who knows but he is even now under the spell ?" asked I possessed by the mer- riest mood, and gaily I sang the rounde- lay— " I am the Queen of fair Elf-Land, That am hither come to visit thee. This is the road to fair Elf-Land, Where thou and I this uig-ht maun gang-. But, mortals, ye maun hold 3'our tongue, Whatever ye may hear or see. For, if you speak word in Elfln Land, Ye'Il ne'er get back to your ain countrie, A' the blude that's shed on earth, Rins throug-li the springs o' that countrie." "Angels and ministers of grace defend us I I hear their bridles ring !" said Mr. Montague, as we spurred our horses into 12 their swiftest pace, and went twinkling o'er the green, singing — " Over hill, over dale, Throuo:li busli, through briar, Over park, over pale. Through flood, through tire, I do wauder everywhere." As we drew rein beneath a greenwood tree, exhilarated by our brisk gallop, Mr. Mortimer, with his courtly accent, said — "It were easy, Miss Rebecca, for me to make it? a part of my credo, that you were indeed a fairy sent here to seek dew- drops, ' and hang a pearl in every cow- slip's ear,' and I should not be surprised to see you ' creep into an acorn cup, and hide you there !' " "Let me return the dainty flattery," I said. ' ' I could believe you had the power to put a ' girdle round the earth in forty minutes.'" "Everything strengthens my belief, for verily this is the very ' bank whereon the wild thyme grew,' on that midsummer night so long ago. ' Come, now, a roundel and a fairy song !' " And merrily we sang catch after catch, refrain and melody, till the remainder of the party coming up, Mr. Graham ex- claimed — " It smells of fairies. Look here ; I see the rings, and charmed circles where they 'featlyfoot it here and there,' it is but our coming has put them to flight." " We have had no time to look for elves, or nymphs, while spurring on to seek you," said Mr. Carlton. "As amends, you should reveal what you have seen, and heard, and felt." " Oh I oh I indeed, a thousand pardons," cried I, blushing, as the consciousness of the chase I had led them, under the do- minion of the wild spirit of fun, flashed over me, " it was a fit of ' very midsum- mer madness' in iJsovember. "Would that it might last all through life," said a voice so tremulously tender at my ear, as to make my own tremble in response, as feigning not to hear I said in a merry way, to the others, "your visual orbs are not sufliciently purged from film to see old fairyland's miraculous show. Fearing it might be so, I brought the poet's rhyme to call it up, with little thought of myself enacting the part of Culprit Fay." Drawing from the pocket of my habit, Drake's charming creation, I proposed dismounting, and encamping, while one and another "lent to the rhyme of the poet the music of their voice." Soon we were ranged in a mystic circle, on one of the loveliest banks ever beheld. Wild flowers springing everywhere, of gorgeous hues, in each of wiiiich might lurk a sprite. Graceful trees, fit homes for Dryads, as the silvery streams for nymphs, while in the distance the many- hued rocky hillsides seemed the very hid- ing-places for tricksy trolls. The harmony of word and scene was perfect, and the very atmosphere seemed in sympathy with us. Mr. Montague read the first nine 13 verses. Then Mr. Carlton took up the strain, and carried us dreamily aloui^with him nine canlos more, ^Yhe^ Mr. Grab am took the bock lor the next nine, aud Mr. Mortimer finished. The iniiuence of the sacred nine was complete. ^N'ever did the exquisite poem seem so beautiful, and at the close, some moments passed in un- broken silence. At length Theodora said, " This wonderful creation has rendered the walk upon the Hudson, that occa- sioned it, memorable forever. I always bless the frhosts of Paulding and Irving, as well as Drake, often as I think of it. Hereaiter I shall also associate with it the memory of this hour. It will be like one of those pictures of Jean Paul, surround- ed by floating clouds, all of which are angels' faces, but so soft and shadowy, they must be sought for to be perceived." "Yes," said Mr, Montague, "this group will be as much a part of the poem now, as the cherubs are a part of the pic- ture of the Madonna de San Sisto." "The second 'Culprit Fay ' will live longer in my memory even than the first," said the voice at my ear. In my confusion, lest my wild spirits had led me too far, and precious little maiden modesty should be imputed to poor Ilebecca, I had sat silent as a sphinx, and now, hurriedly taking the book from Mr. Mortimer, I said, springing to my feet, "'The cock has crowed, and the Fays are gone. ' Breakfast awaits us at Montgomery House, let us mount and away.^" Alice followed my action, saying, " I am ready, Mr. Carlton," and as he ^lifted her lighily to her saddle, I heard him say, " We will away, but never shall I forget the joys of fairy ground." Soon " light to the crouper the fair la- dies were swung," and we were briskly re- tracing our steps, drinking in exhilaration with every breath, until almost intoxicated with joy. Keeping together, and calling to one another and jesting, 'till we reached the open door, where stood our host and hostess, drawn to the spot by the clatter- ing of hoofs upon the carriage drive. Cousin Harry called out merrily — '* By tho pricking: of my thumbs, Something wicked this way comes, Open locks, whoever knocks." With eager voices, one and all told gayly the story of the ride, quite unspar- ing of the "Culprit Fay," who now, as she sits here quietly writing, fears the mad spirit of fun has led her to do things unmaidenly and forward. Here, in my little book, I find a hare- bell gathered from the bank whereon we sat. Why, why, poor foolish heart, did it quicken thy pulsation to find the tiny blossom ? Mr. Montgomery insisted on the gentle- men remaining through the da}', as it was a Hol3'-day, and going with us to the lit- tle Church close by, for the service of All 14 Saiuis' Day, which as licensed Lay Eead- er, he read himself. It has ever been to me one of the sweetest feasts of the year, and never more sweet than to-day. Cousin Kate in our absence, had not only wreath- ed the parlor with autumn-leaves gath- ered and prepared for this special service, but had trimmed the altar and font, and chancel, and very lovely they looked — their ripe loveliness speaking eloquently of the dear ones ''ripe for heaven," in whose memory we kept the Feast. In the afternoon, as we sat in the salon ^ Cousin Harry read to us Bishop Coxe's beautiful poem on " Halloween. " We en- joyed every word of the wonderful vision, and could not cease marveling it was not more widely circulated. Our good knights remained until the evening was far spent, and as I sit writing here, dear Familiar, so much has been crowded into the day — I have lived so f\ist during its passage — its events seem to form so large and inseparable a part of life, I can hardly credit your witness, that but one short day has passed since last I sat here, writing up " this chase of my- self." 15 CHAPTER II. November 5th. This has been a very sweet day, dear Familiar, in my " Calen- dar of Experiences." It being dear aun- tie's birthday, and wishing to make as much of a festival of it as possible, we persuaded her to accompany Cousin Harry in an escapade to town. As soon as she was safely smuggled away, we gathered in council in her sanctum to do honor to the occasion. I came armed with a huge pile of yellow paper, between each leaf of which were pressed graceful ferns, gathered last summertime for winter use. Dear aun- tie's love for these woodland pets, amounts almost to a passion, and has become pro- verbial, so that we often call her, "Our Lady of the Ferns." She was in my mind when I gathered the dainty trea- sures, selecting them as she had taught me when a child, with the greatest care, " Discard all that are not absolutely per- fect," was her motto, handed down as an inheritance for gatherers of this ' ' most eesthetic of plants." Day by day I had thought of her as I turned them, and changed the papers, during the process of drying, which had been so successfully accomplished that they had lost neither grace nor hue. In the hurried packing for flitting hitherward, the first thing laid into my trunk was this pile of fer^i papers, over which I had placed quite ingeniously, I thought, a thin, smooth board, that ex- actly fitted into the trunk, which kept them firm as possible, so that when un- earthed this morning, not a leaflet or frond was curled or injured. " The par- tial wood-gods overpaid my love." I came in bearing them aloft in triumph, saying, " Behold, my oflfering !" Various were the expressions of admiration as I unfolded the leaves and drew from their hiding places the darlings, for all were dear fern-lovers, and aided in arranging them in vases, and pinning them in va- rious shapes and ways upon the wall. As we worked we were transported to the " Flowery aromatic hollows," and mossy honey -pots, of the "memory peopled locality, ' ' where they gre w, and inhaled the odor of the odorous turf. One picture, very dear, of a young sister, long since sleeping beneath the ferias, was wreathed with deli- cate sprays of maiden hair. Another of a brother called when life was ripest, with long sprays of the climbing fern, "noth- ing'but leaves," at first, it had climbed and climbed towards the light, until sur- mounting the beautiful spray of leaves, the long spire of flowers grew. We knew there was a whole volume of poetry hidden beneath the leaves, and that all the sweet 16 thoughts and fancies, born of the sun and dew would be le.ojible to the dear auntie's eyes as if on printed page. Like Thoreau, she has " an out of doors heart," and is a constant friend to flowers, and ferns, and mosses. Long years she has been learning to read the book of nature, and so perfect is the harmony established between her soul and mother nature's, it is like a new revelation to hear her unfold the sacred sympathies and secrets, written on leaves and flowers, hill-sides, clouds and streams. On the table I left a little slip of birch-bark, on which I had inscribed, Pray take these little sprays, Of graceful woodlaud ferns, In honor of the day, With many e:lad returns. All summer long they grew, lu wood nook far away, Nursed by the sun and dew, To grace this Holiday. Constance unfolded her hidden offering of exquisitely preserved autumn leaves, of most wondrous dyes and shades. Some woven into designs, others loose, of choi- cest color and form, which, with great skill and taste she fastened upon the window panes, until they had the effect of beautifully stained glass. Cousin Kate had copied a charming sketch of the old home, which cousin Harry had framed deftly with carvings daintily wrought with his own fingers. Alice had a beautiful pot of primroses, in lull blooming, and Theodora a luxuri- ant cape jessamine, for which she had been caring at the house of one of the de- pendents, lest its tell-tale fragrance should betray her, if stored away ever so jealous- ly within the house. The room seemed like a perfect tabernacle, and was fragrant as a conservatory. Oar hearts sang joy- ously within our bosoms, as we felt the language of the whole would be beautiful and touching as a poem to her " whom we delight to honor," revealing the in- cense rising from the censers of our souls. Mrs. Montgomery dispatched a note to the Knights of Halloween, bidding them to a birthday supper, without saying in whose honor. We wreathed the salon and dining- room with blossoms of the madeira vine. It was so nearly time for it to wither, Cousin Kate had the loaded vines cut down, and great baskets of trailing branches covered with the delicate fra- grant blooms brought in, and all exer- cised their taste in arranging them in most artistic ways. By putting the ends of the long stems in bottles of water, hidden behind pictures, cornices, mirrors, book-cases, &c., they will bloom freshly and fragrantly for six and eight weeks, and there is no end to the graceful and varied ways in which they can be gar- landed and trailed about. I would j^ou could get a peep into the "flower-bap- tized room." The "Olympus of the establishment." You must know the 17 house is built after a fashion rare to see. This grand salon runs entirely through the house from side to side, each end all glass, like a magnified bow window, in which all sorts of rare leaf-plants, vines and perpetual bloomers grow in vases and baskets and boxes. The walls are lined with book-cases and cabinets, and the large tables, chairs and sofas, seem always "^to be in exactly the right place. The front door opens into a hall in the centre of the house, running to the salon^ with a drawing-room upon one side and music-room upon the other. This last furnished with the lightest possible furniture, straw and cane and willow and genre materials, with no cushions to in- jure sound. Tiled floor, windows ar- ranged with reference to lights, upon the *' silent companions for life," upon the walls, for though there are pictures every- where within the house, here is where the gems, "the most do congregate." Another hall with folding doors like the front, opens directly on the opposite side of the salon from the front hall. The dining-room on one side, and Cousin Kate's room upon the other with bou- doirs and study opening out of it, and children's rooms in rear of both sides of the hall, so that for their own immediate family there is no climbing of stairs. A delightful hall runs the length of the second story, giving charming rooms on either side, where each of us have set up our own tabernacle, with guest chambers in the rear. Everything moves as if by magic in the house — everything done, and yet you do not see it done. The moving of the springs and the machinery are out of sight. Like Herder's wife. Cousin Kate performs all the duties of life as cheerfully, gracefully, and faithfully, as if she had never learned the alphabet of literature, music and painting. Just before sunset, the dear Queen of the festival came. It was good to see the freshness and joy with which she detailed the pleasures of her trip, and better still, the tears of joy in her soft eyes, when she descended from her sanctum, saying, "One is never too old to be remembered and beloved." It brought to mind the words of " rare Ben Jonson." " As she goes, all hearts do duty, unto her beauty. " It comes to me now that I have entirely forgotten the children's oflferings. She certainly would not have done so. Each gave of their chief treasures. Arthur, a beatiful Oriole, of most exquisite form and plumage, most dexterously preserved and stuffed, an art into which he has promised to induct me this winter. Max, a lovely butterfly, the choicest of his col- lection ; and Guy, a tiny shell,^ suspended over her mirror, eloquent of his tastes, as the " sea shell far-removed that murmurs of its own." Kathie had a collection of pressed flowers, gathered in explorations about the Kanawha, — Margie, of Mosses. Each offering, so suggestive of the donor, that all mosses, and flowers, and shells, 18 and butterflies, and birds, would be dearer and holier from that hour. Hereafter could she see a shell, and not think of Guy, a butterfly, and not remember Max, a bird, and forget Arthur, a flower, with- out remembering Kathie, a moss, without green memories of Margie ? It was Guy's birthday, too, and he had been looking forward to it for weeks, as to an epoch in his life, a new era in exist- ence, as if to step into another year was the entering into another room in fairy- land. Just as the word was given to " stir the fire, and close the shutters fast, let fall the curtains, wheel the sofa round," we heard on the lawn, the "prancing and pawing " of the steeds of the glen, and the good knights four appeared on the scene. Isolation from old associations makes very strong the cords linking us to these few friends in the wilds, and gives us a glimpse of the sentiment binding pioneers and new settlers together, until a commu- nity of interests, and mutual dependence in the settlement takes the place and fills the void made by the absence of the old neighborly sympathies and knowledge of each other, wrought out by life-long intimacies, grafted on to inherited friend- ships and loves. An interest in each other, unknown among the numberless resources of large acquaintance, and the manifold claims of society, is inspired by our very circumstances aside from the congenialities that anywhere would have made us a most concordant club. Some persons would have been wholly unclub- bable, even here. Those who rather " club their loneliness than make society for each other," as Curtis says, but among our clubbists are none that are not clubbable, none that club not bright and kindly thoughts. After the accustomed interchanges of, " Is it well ? Is it well wiih thee ? Is it well with the child?" we were ushered into the supper-room, where the "bub- bling and loud hissing urn threw up a steamy column, and the cups that cheer, but not inebriate," waited on each. The centerpiece of the table was a beautifully iced cake, with a huge wax candle burning in the centre, and ten (of smaller size, but still large) tapers, encir- cling the circumference ; a pretty German custom, the central light, symbolizing the light of life and the circle of lights the years of the pilgrimage. All congratula- ted the manly boy on the completion of his first decade, and at the close of the banquet, it was proposed that each should give him a sentiment. The father rising, said, reverently, " May his light so shine before men, that they may see his good works and glorify our Father which is in Heaven." All touched their glasses to their lips as if uttering an Amen to a prayer. The mother then gave, "May his path be the path of the just, shining more and more unto the perfect day." 19 Auntie, "May his candle never be hid under a bushel." Mr. Montague, " May he be a great light in the world." Theodora, " And his ' shadow never be less I'" Mr. Carlton, " In his honor, may his native city some day be illuminated." Alice, ""And everywhere welcoming lights shine out as beacons for him." Mr. Graham, " May he live to see ten times ten candles burning round his birth- day cake." To which Constance echoed, "Maybe never be snuffed out." Mr. Mortimer, " How far those little candles throw their rays — so may his good deeds in a naughty world." I, Rebecca, ' ' May every hair of his head be a wax-candle to light him into glory." After we were snutrly established in the parlor, Guy's birthday gifts were exam- ined. A small microscope, his very own, proclaiming independence of father's and Arthur's larger ones ; a small cabinet for his shells, and some delicate instruments for investigations, and mounting speci- mens. These, with books upon his speciality, made his heart overflow with gladness. There is no dreariness in his outlook upon the long winter. Has he not his beloved shells as unfailing resources at all times ? Friends may fail, but their interest never. The days will be only all too short for his busy plans and projects. " Blessed is the man that has a hobby," said Mr. Mortimer. "Yes indeed," replied Mr. Montgom- ery, "Finding our pastime in such pur- suits, renders us independent of all outside circumstances. There is always a sacred place where we can retire, and forget whatever there may be to annoy." Mr. Montague said, " I was struck this morning with a remark of the great D'Israeli, ' to have always some secret darling id^a to which we can have re- course amid the noise and nonsense in the world, and which never foils to touch us in the most exquisite manner, is an art of happiness that fortune cannot deprive us of.' " Mrs. Montgomery replied, "If the world of Mothers could but realize the value of interesting employment to children, the earth would soon become a very Faradise to them. Instead of, 'Don't do that,' if they would say, 'Do this,' their cares would be decreased in the ratio of the in- crease of the children's happiness." Mr. Montgomery added, "As the years go on, scientific and artistic recreation become still more valuable. The ' inter- vals of business ' must be attended to, as rigidly as business itself. They are the moments open to most temptation. If some enlivening, and absorbing, occupa- tion awaited young men in their studios or dens, many would be kept from the scenes of temptation with which towns and cities abound. Having nothing agreeable to engage them, they wander oil' in pursuit of soraetliing to dissipate their ermui. A writer upon this subject says, ' Were the world empty, were it a silent barren waste, without a tree, or a blade of grass, there might possibly be an excuse for ennu% but overflowing as it does with the most beautiful curiosities, nothing is so utterly indefensible as to let a single waking hour die blank. Thanks be to God, as soon as a man desires to seek, he is enabled to find, directly he feels his heart and mind swell with a great desire, he finds the world ready and will- ing to supply him.' " "" Please Harry," said Auntie, " get the book and read the rest of the passage." " Most willingly," he replied, " ' Even though busily engaged throughout the day, in commercial or domestic avocations, the dolce far niente^ which our poor weariness is so apt to plead in the even- ing, and which no wise man ever refuses to listen to altogether, is a principle only to be admitted under the protest that the proper rest for man is change of occupa- tion; there are few kinds of business which fatigue both body and mind at once ; while one toils, the other almost necessarily reposes ; when the one ceases work, nature rules that the other shall be fitted to begin, and that is a rare case in- deed where either body or mind is de- barred all opportunity of healthful and useful occupation when its turn to work comes on. Man is not so imperfectly con- stituted, nor is the world so defectively framed, as for him to be constrained to look for pastime and relaxation anywhere but in change from one improving em- ployment to another ; it may be questioned whether the sweetness of home can ever be truly enjoyed where the leading recrea- tion does not take the shape of some intelligent and pretty pursuit, such as the formation of an herbarium, or the use of the microscope or pencil. Boys would not incessantly be in mischief and trouble, were they encouraged to study natural history ; girls would be far livelier and more companionable, and also enjoy better health, were they trained to fixed habits of mental employment. The de- light of a single hour of recreation in art or science outweighs a whole lifetime of mere frivolities. Before the picture of this delight, could it be brought home to him, the mere trifler would sink in dis- may. Finding our pastime in such pur- suits, we render ourselves independent of the casualties of time and place, and secure an arbor of our own, where none can molest.' " ' While our leisure is honored and agreeably occupied by such pursuits, materials are acquired also for that most invaluable of the Fine Arts, the art of conversa.tion, destitute of which, no family or social circle can be thoroughly happy. Not that mere dry scientific facts of them- selves can serve its purposes, because the 21 best, most living part of conversation is emotional, imaginative, bird-like. More- over the richest conversation may be and often is wholly independent of such facts. But where brothers and sisters have each their tale to tell of something curious or interesting seen in the day's progress, and have a common interest in each other's discoveries and acquisitions, the imagina- tion soon finds wing, and the heart soon warms. To learn how to talk, let people learn how to do something, and get those about them to do the same.' '' ' No one can sharpen his intellectual faculties, or widen the range of his know- ledge, without becoming more skillful and successful in the business or profession in which he is engaged. Whatever tends to cheer the understanding in leisure mo- ments, so fiir from being in antagonism to business thought's, is complimentary to them, and gives them zest.' " ''la teaching," says the good Jean Paul, "accustom the boy to regard his faiure, not as a path from pleasures, though innocent, to other pleasures ; nor even as a gleaning, from spring time to harvest, of flowers and fruits, but as a time in which he must execute some long plan , let him aim at a long course of activdn — not of pleasure." Then he shows how privileged is such a course : ''That man is happy, for instance, who devotes his life to the cultivation of an island, to the discovery of one that is lost, or to the extent of the ocean. I would rather be the court gardener who watches and protects an Aloe for fifteen years, until at last it opens to him the heaven of its blossom, than the prince who is hasti- ly called to look at the opened heaven. The writer of a dictionary rises every morning, like the sun, to move past some little star in his zodiac ; a new letter is to him a new-year's festival, the conclu- sion of an old one, a harvest home. Bodily health as well as spiritual depends upon work." " Grindon has said much that is true and beautiful," continued Cousin Harry, "in his work, entitled 'Life, its Nature, Varieties, and Phenomena,' and if you would like, gentlemen, you can take it with you to the glen. It will be a fine tonic to brace you for the long winter in the wilderness." Accepting it gladly, the conversation drifted on delightfully. The book form- ing the key-note, and supplying ample texts, while, in honor of the birth-night, we examined Guy's precious treasures, in bottles and out of bottles, on slides under microscope, and in trays and so forth. After the juveniles had retired, Mrs. Montgomery said, " You have tasted but one drop of our festival goblet to-night. It is the birth-feast of another also." " So I shrewdly suspected," replied Mr. Mortimer. " How shall we know whom to honor?" asked Mr. Montague. A basket of fruit stood on the table — 22 oranges, lemons and apples — and auntie pointing to it playfully said, in sibylline fashion, " That basket can reveal the secret, significantly representing in its mingling of the sweet and the acid, the one whom for the day you must delight to honor. Add together the figures (in the right way) which number the different kinds of fruit, and you have the number of the years. Guess right, and I will tell you." All tried in various ways, provoking great merriment, by the ingenious twist- ing of stubborn figures. My turn coming last, I had solved it in my mind, with One, Two, Three, as the varieties of fruit. Two and Three, — Five, and One — Fifty- One, and said, trippingly. Adding the numbers Without any blunders In all kinds of ways, The term of the days Of your pilgrimage, I shrewdly presage Are Fifty and One, Years of shade and of sun, Three and Two, Five, Is the way to contrive By adding the One To reckon your suns, Say, am I right, Or strangely bedight ? *' So, all your divining-rods have failed, " exclaimed auntie. "It is Fifty and Six, Two apples, and Three lemons, giving the Five, and oranges Six — Fifty-Six." Just then a beautiful box of flowers, that had traveled from the banks of the Hudson, to give her birth-day greeting, arrived, and an envelope from another dear one, containing this little impromptu, which she lent me to copy in your faithful bosom : Bring forth some some tuneful instrument, And strike a measure sweet, And raise aloft a pleasure tent, For such a birthday meet ! With birthday love and birthday kiss, And loving, fond caress. Encircle her, that she may miss Old friends and kindred less. We know her thoughts are wand'ring back To Home's dear, birth-notch'd Tree, Countina: the birthdays on the track, Like Beads on Kosary ! Each pressure on the beaded string, Like touch of magic, calls Faces and forms, and circling rings Of Love that never falls. The first are shining all as gold, The next, of tender blue ; And now the gray, for tears have roll'd And. paled the sapphire hue. Then let the strain be soft and low, Of those that hailed her birth ; Her heart, in its sad overflow, Counts more in heaven than earth. But flowers still come from far-oflF homes. And gifts to crown the day. And loving prayers with each hour blend, And blessings with each ray. Love round her every footstep springs, Waking the wish to sing. And thread my memory on the string Of unforgotten things. 23 A tender seriousness pervaded the at- mosphere, all were so touched with the remembering love, and the stranger guests betrayed their gentle instincts in their courteous expressions of gratulation and good wishes, and of gratitude for being bidden to participate in so beautiful a Feast, intuitively recognizing the dear Auntie as the angel of the circle, dispens- ing gladness as from an overflowing foun- tain, and imparting good to all with whom she came in contact. No palette ever held colors sufficiently delicate to delineate the exquisitely varying shades of beauty her character displays. Every event and surrounding in life. Acting as a prism to reflect her rainbow- tinted excellence. Truly we are blessed above all blessing in having such an Auntie. GOD long spare lier, long '■' bear up the weight of her gray ]>airs, and blunt the arrow that brings ihem rest." Some one remarking upon her unvarying, infectious cheerfulness, ^he quoted, in reply, Fox's memorable words to his wife, applying them to us. With rare grace and courtesy : " Of years I have now a half century past, Ami none of the fifty so blest as the last, How it happens my troubles thus daily should cease, [increase, And uiy happiness thus ■with my years should You alouecan explain, who alone are the cause." Truly can it be said of her, " Her life is an open book, whose pages can be turned without finding a single blot. " Her tongue seemed to have received inspiration from the occasion, and flowed on in silvery sweetness, recounting her beautiful birth- days. Even from the far past, her father having early inscribed upon her memory St. Augustine's word and belief, that '' it is every man's bounden duty solemnly to keep his birthday. " Threaded upon life's string they gleamed out like pearls and precious stones upon her sight, as retro- spectively she cast a backward glance. Milestones upon Life's Journey, Notches on Time's Tally Stick, she called them. Few are the dear ones remaining of those who kept the day as a Festival in bygone years, and so often has she been called to weep by her desolate hearth, that her heart numbers more dear ones in heaven than upon earth, and very touching was her quotation of Irving's beautiful words, " If we made no new friends in our journey of life, we should in time be destitute.'' Soon after, she repeated Moore's Apostro- phe ; and I am sure we can never read it without the sweet cadences of her voice coming back to us, and surrounding them as an atmosphere : " My birthday? — what a different sound, That wor 1 had in my youthful ears. And how, each time the day comes round, Less and less white its mark appears. When first our scanty years are told, It seems like pastime to grow old, And, as Youth counts the shining links, That Time around him binds so fast, Pleased with the task, he little thinks, How hard that chain will press at last." I wish, dear Journal, the smile about 24 her mouth, and the dreamy pensiveness of her eyes, as she ceased repeatini^, could "extend to my paper, and there still be visible." There are looks and tones which we could wish to immortal- ize, so instinct with pow^er and life are they. As if that moment had gathered and condensed the whole of life, and its essence and result, and fruition, took on form and substance, that could be seen I and felt and comprehended, revealed as ; we shall be in that day when we shall ; "■know even as we are known " — and the j emancipated soul shall stand in spiritual beauty. When the work ot the Great Re- finer and the purifying of the crucible, the chiseling, and carving, and moulding of experiences, the work of the sua and shade, the inner and outer discipline, and the influences human and divine, have all done their work upon us. Oh ! how blessed, if like her we shall be found in that day to have been wrought upon, and purified till the Divine Purifier can see His face in us, as does the refiner and purifier of silver. I think I shall never forget that glimpse I caught of her soul, and shall ever be the better for it. A treasured memory rooted within us, is as a blessed companion elevating and en- nobling thought — exhaling a soothing, refreshing fragrance that permeates our very being. Daily am I more impressed with a sense of the manner in which we act and react upon one another, often i quoting Miss Wade's memorable words, I in which a life's experience is compressed. In our course through life we shall meet the people who are coming to meet ks, from many strange places, and by many strange roads, and what is set to us to do to them, and what it is set to them to do to us, will all be done." " You may be sure that there are men and women al- ready on the road, who have their busi- ness to do with you, and who will do it. Of a certainty they will do it. They may be coming hundreds and thousands of miles over the sea there, they may be close at hand now, they may be coming for anythiug you know, or anything that you can do, to prevent it, from the very vilest sweepmgs of this very town." Have I come here, thinkest thou, dear Familiar, beckoned by any subtle, mys- terious influence or agency ? Was there something of this undefined character in the sudden thrill of heart of which I was conscious, when, during the delicious Sonatas with which Constance closed the evening, Mr. Mortimer came to ray side and said, '"' Miss Rebecca, we Knights of the Glen, as you dubbed us, remain in a state of amaze, as if the Castle of Alad- din had by the touch of a wand sprung up in the wilderness, when least expected, and enchanted princesses wakened to life, and as if we ourselves were within the ring of enchantment, living over a second edition of the Arabian Nights, wishing that instead of a " thousand ancl one nights," there might be as man}- as 25 the days of our pilgrimage, though I know i not whether the others have discovered Schehezerade. | A call for attention and silence from Mr. Montgomery, interrupted the gallant speech, and we all lent our ears to "■ Mine Host.'' "Our good friends," said he, "have come hither with a deep plot laid, whether in memoriam of the ever-to-be-remem- bered 5th of November Gunpowder Plot, or no, "the deponent saith not," but the day seemeth favorable to plotting both of the Guy Fawkes sort, and the kindly. They have just unfolded their deep laid plans deputing me to reveal them, and bespeak a gentle hearing. This day week, being the anniversary of the opening of their Bachelor's Hall, the Spinsters of Spinster Hall, with the Pater and Mater Familias thereof, are bidden to kee^) the anniver- sary with them, and launch them safely upon the sea of another year." The proposition was received with ac- clamation, and in the exuberance of my delight, I called out, " Oh, let us come, and be received in costume, that the evening be an evening to be remembered, a day set apart, with nothing of the ordi- nary about it." This, too, was received with applause and amid merry anticipations and chal- lenges, the adieus and good-nights were said, but not without the Black Knight (Mr. Mortimer) finding the fitting moment in which to whisper, "I shall discover Schehezerade in whatever costume she chooses to disguise herself." Why do I remember and ponder thus over his words? What are they to me ? " What's Hecu- ba to me, or I to Hecuba ?" 26 CHAPTER III. November 13th. It is past the hour, dear Journal, of "nights dark arch the key-stone," so that I must write my date 13th, though my story is of the 12th. Our eagerly anticipated reception is over, ex- cept as it stands out in memory as a fade- less pleasure. The influence of ihc "witch- ing'hour" is on me, and as I cannot sleep, I will unburthen my little basket of the marvelous before "I lay me down to rest." Very blithely busy were we in prepar- ing for the costume party. As there was no antique dress to be obtained, our brains and strength and time were fully occupied for the week in suggesting and arranging fancy modern dress, and the re- sults would have gained the approval of a Court of Taste. It was a success, so we are fully repaid for all broken backs and aching heads. It must be confessed, however, that I look and feel very like a sunflower nipped by the hoar frost, now that it is all over. The disguises were perfect, and " made the fun grow furious fast," as we " tripped the light fantastic toe " incognito. Mrs. Montgomery appeared as Queen Bess, in purple velvet train, trimmed with ermine, boddice embroidered with pearls (alias wax-beads) , high ruff and crown of brilliants (albeit not of the first water), and she did queen it right royally. Theodora in full Indian costume, and no graceful, nimble footed forest maiden ever looked prettier than she. Alice, as Bohemian girl, in short white silk skirt, scarlet boddice and headgear, with flowing white veil, very becoming and picturesque. Constance, as Hinda, in oriental story, dress blue silk, short skirt, overdress and veil, with the Persian Rose woven in and out prettily. And I, Rebecca, as Fortune Teller, in scarlet cloak, short, striped green skirt, black stockings and slippers, with red lacings and bows, hat with black and red feathers, dancing and singing roundelays, such as "I can tell of the future ; I cau tell of the past ; I can tell of the gold that's too bright to last ; I can tell of the maiden whose bonny bright een, are the loveliest and sweetest that ever were seen." You would have wondered how and where, in a village like this, the costumes could have been procured. The gentlemen had exercised their wits quite as ingeniously and cleverly. Mr. Montgomery was a King, " every inch a kins." 27 On entering we were received by a superb rov/hatan (Mr. Montague), a sul- tan, whom I afterwards recognized as the '' saxon haired laddie," Mr. Graham. A Count (Mr. Carlton), a perfect bur- lesque, and a Brigand (Mr. Mortimer), who looked magniticent, with strikingly characteristic dress and ornaments. The Great Mogul received us with pro- found salaams and genuflexions, and ''more than oriental scrupulosity," con- vulsing us with laughter, while the Count overwhelmed us with the most exagger- ated attentions possible in Sir Fopling. Powhatan never for a moment forgot his sublime dignity, or laconic, poetic speech, and was truly a study, while the Brigand was bewitchingly magnificent enough to have bewitched half the girls in Christen- dom, commanding admiration and en- chaining attention irresistibly. Their serene Highnesses were soon en- throned in chairs of state, with the Great Mogul as royal guest at their right hand, and the royal company gathered at the royal feet, and paid court industriously to their majesties and each other. "Why come my pale brothers," ex- claimed Powhatan, with majestic mourn- fulness, "from the land of the morning, crossing the big rivers, to cut down our forests and dig caves in our hunting grounds. The prints of our moccasins are wiped away from the valley of the Kenawha. Where of old we chased the deer and sang our bold war songs the great forests arc hewn down, and the sound of your hammers resound." "Come with us, and we will do thee good," responded His Highness. "Dry your tears, and with the spirit with which you followed the war-path, follow us in our excavations and mines, and we will teach you the arts and blessings of civil- ization and true happiness." " Can the broken harp-string give forth music?" he returned, "or water spilled upon the earth be gathered ? No, the heart of the Bed Man is broken ; never more can its strings vibrate with pl^^as- ure. The blood of^his brothers has been spilled, not a drop of my blood courses through the veins of any. I shall pass away as the mist before the sun. I come only to ask to lay my weary bones in yon- der mound, and to beg you to hold it sacred as you hope to sleep near the graves of your kindred." " We will share with you our milk and meal," pleaded his highness, " if you will tarry and learn of us. We will be your brothers." "Can a tree that is dead put forth green leaves," was his mournful re- ply, " can it blossom, and bear fruit, and be again a nesting place for birds. No, Powhatan longs to depart. He makes no new friends, but follows after his loved ones to the happy hunting grounds. Would you have him cover himself with ruffles like a woman, or adorn himself like yonder popinjay. No, no, Powhatan 28 has stood through a long life, proud of the form the Great Spirit gave him, deck- ing himself but with the war paint and feathers that strike terror to the heart of his foes. He would feel doubly down- trodden, were his limbs fettered with tight garments, and he were manacled at throat and wrist, as is he, tiptoeing like a silly maiden, instead of treading the tread of a brave. Ko, 'An unwilling maiden makes an unhappy wigwam,' and so doth an unwilling guest. 1 am a blazed pine, in a clearing of the pale faces. My race has gone from the valley and hill-sides, I am alone, and there is none to mourn for Powhatan, no, not one !" "We would clip not a feather from the dying eagle, but let him gaze as it pleased him, on the rising or the setting sun," said the high and mighty Sultan, with great impressment. "Never before have I seen the red man of the forest, and I count myself blessed, in being able to say to my people, ' I have seen Powhatan, tall as a stately cedar, with an eye that can look on the sun in its strength, and a hand that hath not a tremor, though four score winters have bleached his locks. ' I pray thee tell us a tale of thy braves, that I may bear it over the seas to the sons and daughters of the Sun, who are my children in the land of the East." " First, tell the last of his race, if thy children are free, if their faces are pale. If they roam in the forests. If they have strong hearts or weak, and if they are oppressed by the pale faces ?" "We are not of the race of our pale brothers," replied the Mogul, "nor are we oppressed by them. Our skins are dark. Our blood is warm as you see, and ' wild as the accents of lovers farewells, are the hearts which we bear, and the tales which we tell. ' Many of our child- ren roam the deserts, and live in tents, under the blue dome of the sky, but many have learned it is good to build houses, and wrap themselves in garments, and cease from following the wild beasts to their lair." "1 will listen to thee. Great Chief," said Powhatan, with great earnestness, " Do not the sons of the desert pine and wither like plants uprooted from the warm earth, when you transplant them into your cold towns and cities ?" " Some can no more be tamed than the wild beast of the dingle," was the reply. " They cannot breathe in the close air of towns. Such we bid go free as the birds and the sunbeams. Each man ' according to his gifts.'" "I am of the same race," said the dark-eyed Hinda, "and the swift, warm blood coursing through my veins, throbs with sympathy, and beats in unison with thine. Sit, sit thee down, poor weary one, I will watch over you, and care for you, and when worn, I will sing to you some of the songs of the desert, fresh as 29 the breezes thai blow through the forest. Stay I stay ! and live and die with us !" "I will sing songs of the forest," said th3 young Indian maiden, ''I am not of thy tribe, but my fathers have hunted with thine, for the deer and the bison. They have smoked together the pipe of peace. I have found kindness in the home of the pale face. I have drank of their cup, and ate of their bread, and been to them as a daughter. Let me tell thee a tale of my tribe, that will be in thy ear, as the song of the wild bird on the dear forest branches," and laying her hand in his, he went his way with her, with the air of a not unwilling captive, and long did their speech seem sweet to each other, and when the merry piping began none '' chased the hours with flying feet," more trippingly than they. Hiuda and his serene Highness found oriental springs of poetry opened be- tween them, and wandering here and there, and sometimes reclining in oriental fashion in the umbrageous shade of the great arm chairs, their voices flowed in an unbroken stream of silvery accents, whose tone and manner was of the clime of the East. They too, when the sound of the viol broke in upon the evening, obeyed the call, as if to dance were nature. The pretty Bohemian Girl and Sir Fopling gave up their spicy " wit combats," at the sound, to tread merry measures, as did the fierce, captivating Brisand and the little Fortune-teller, with her gypsy basket of prophetic rhymes ui> on her arm. Great sport had we the even- ing previous, scribbUng these same rhymes en famille, and there seemed no end to the gay conceits and fancies we so merrily berhymed, for sibylline distribu- tion. The King and Queen applauded gra- ciously our "stately steppings," and be- stowed their smiling favors on us. Dance after dance with interchange of partners, made the scene picturesque and bright as the phantasies of a dream, causing an ex- hilaration of spirits, unrivaled but by children in their unalloyed glee. We seemed a "companie " that had never felt care, or wept a tear, or known a sorrow. The announcement of supper was the prelude to still gayer bursts of merri- ment, sauced with gracious ceremony. Indeed, so charming were the bachelor appointments, and so in accordance with good taste, as to draw forth exclama- tions of Hercules with the distaff*, as we pictured them directing the skillet and gridiron and descanting upon their merits. His Royal Highness proposed instituting a new Order of the Gridiron, a la King John, the "pudding-eating monarch," who was so fond of Jack Pudding as to institute him Knight of the Gridiron, and give him a gridiron of gold, the ensign of the order, hoping that after ingratitude would never make them take upon their lips the proverb this first knight com- posed— "iSTot a word of the pudding." 30 They certainly resembled Jack in having their '"budget full of puns, connundrums, canawitchets, not to forget the quibbles and fly-traps, at which the king laughed till his sides crackt," as Dr. Arbuthnot tells us in one of his charming "Fric- asees.'' The occasion was fertile in mirth and merriment, and many a spicy •jiiot and racy jeu cVesprit were laid away in memory for future enjoyment. Often, in quiet moments, there is a res- urrection of such memories, in all their tirst freshness and piquancy, and the laugh comes back to our lips as at first. These will often be rolled under the tongue as sweet morsels, while we relish and taste them over, drop by drop, mor- sel by morsel. The " all's over," which happens to all fetes, flashed sadly on our consciousness when their majesties sounded the " note of farewell," and we regretfully took it up and passed out into the beautiful " Throu2:h the slowly mellowing avenues, And solitary passes of the wood." The prettiest scenes are too sacred to be repeated even in your ear, dear Fa- miliar. When the dashing brigand crossed the little fortune-teller's hand with silver, and asked her to read the stars for him, calling her thereafter the sibyl of his fate, and after the merry peeps into futurity wpre ended, letting her peep into his past, and wander through the fields of his childhood and foUow the steps of his boy- hood even into the dreams of manhood, handing her on parting a precious copy of a precious poem as a keepsake. On one of the ambrosial nights the Ettrick Shep- herd said, "Few things in this weary world sae delightful as keepsakes I Kor do they ever, to my heart, at least, nor to my een, ever lose their tender, their powerful charm. For what is a keepsake but a material memorial o' a spiritual happenins' ? Something sub- stantial through whose instrumentality the shadowy past may resettle on the present, — till a bit metal, or a bit jewel, or a bit lock o' hair, or a bit painted paper, shall suddenly bring the tears into your startled and softened een, by a dear, delightful, overwhelming image of Life in Death." To which Kit Korth answereth : " Of all keepsakes, memorials, relics, most tenderly, most devoutly, James, do I love a little lock of hair I and, oh I when the head it beautified has long mouldered in the dust, how spiritual seems the un- dying glossiness of the sole remaining ringlet! All else gone to nothing, save and except that soft, smooth, burnished, golden and glorious fragment of the ap- pareling that once hung in clouds and sunshine over an angel's brow ! Next to a lock of hair, James, is a brooch, or a ring that has been worn by a beloved friend." Shepherd — "Or something of one's 31 own writing, a poem, perhaps ; for there's something unco affectionate in manu- scripp." These words have been running through my brain in the long hour I have spent dreaming over this bit of manuscript. Shall I copy it for you ? Ah ! yes, if true to the compact of confiding to this secret chamber all that saddens and gladdens me. THE MYSTERY OF REMINISCENCE. Who and what gave to me the wish to woo thee? Still, lip to lip, to cling for aye unto thee? Who made thy glances to my soul the link ? Who made me burn thy vf ry breath to drink ? My life in thine to sink ? As from the conqueror's unresisted glaive, Flies without strife, subdued, the ready slave, So when to life's unguarded foot I see Thy gaze draw near and near triumphantly, Yields not my soul to thee ? Why from its lord doth thus my soul depart ? Is it because its native home thou art ? Or were they brothers in the days of yore ? Twin-bound, and in the links they bore Sigh to be bound once more ? Were once our beings blent and intertwining ? And therefore still my heart for thee is pining 1 Knew we the light of some extinguished sun ? The joys remote of a bright realm undone, Where once our souls were one ? Yes, it is so ! And thou wert bound to me In the long vanished hours eternally ; In the dark, troubled tablets which enroll The Past — my Muse behold this blessed scroll, •' One with thy love — my soul." Oh, yes ! I learned in awe, when gazing there, How once, one bright inseparate life we were, How once, one glorious essence, as a god, Unmeasured space, our chainless footsteps trod, All Nature our abode. Round us, in waters of delight, for ever Voluptuously flowed the heavenly nectar river. We were the master of the soul of things. And where the sunshine bathed Truth's mountain sprinijs, Quivered our glancing wings. Weep for the godlike life we lost afar. Weep ! thou and I, its shattered fragments are, And still the unconquered yearning we retain, Sigh to restore the rapture and the reign, And grow divine again. And therefore came to me the wish to woo thee, Still lip to lip to cling for aye unto thee, This made thy glances to my soul the link. This made me burn thy very breath to drink, My life in thine to sink. Thou too, — Ah ! there thy gaze upon me dwells, And thy young blush the tender answer tells, Yes, with the dear relation still we thrill. Both lives — tho' exiles from the homeward hill. One life, all glowing still. How beautiful is the Platonic notion that souls were united in a former state, and their yearning is ever for reunion. And how beautifully this little thing illus- trates the idea. How seldom, among all the friends we have, and real friends, too, if we may judge by their kindness, do we really meet with one that we wish to take to our hearts? What is that mystic link that unites some persons? Thoughts of whom create warm, living feeling in us. 32 Not the calm complacence with which we look upon those ia whom we have confi- dence, whose characters inspire us with respect, but a lively, moving interest, as if the soul would go forth from its clay tenement to embrace a kindred spirit. In your sphere, dear Familiar, do there ever come upon you momentary impressions, as if from the far distant past? 80 dimmed in their long passage that you can attach to them no definite shape, moving upon the mind as shadows across the water. A look, a word, or perhaps a strain of music, calls it up, and while we are in- quiring, *' Whence this undefined yet strong association," it is gone never to be recalled. I have thought that perhaps these may be remembrances of things seen and felt in infancy, and therefore shadowy and fleeting. I must ask the good giver of the poem if he has ever ex- perienced anything of this sort? I should like to know if this is peculiar to me. I do not believe it is. Perhaps I cannot express myself with clearness. It is im- possible for me to find just the words I want, but if he has ever had any of these crotchets in his head, he will understand me. I once mentioned this thing to an acquaintance of fine mind and education. She opened her eyes in astonishment at my vagaries, as I have no doubt she thought them, and could not say she had ever had any impressions of whose origin she was ignorant. Blessed satisfaction ! But I am not satisfied, and I rejoice in it. I will not give up all the mysterious though fleeting shapes and sounds of beauty that come to me. All the yearn- ing to know whence they come, and whether in the far-off eternity they will be always with me. I would not give up these lor the profoundest satisfaction. Visions of beauty that come to me in the dark night, when sleep flies from me. Hopes bright and joyful as immortality, that light up the deepest night, and make me feel so rich, richer iar than many who lie down to quiet slum- bers, and rise up in the enjoyment of home and wealth and every other bless- ing. That in my soul there burns a light, steady, bright, ever becoming steadier, brighter, thanks be to Him who has in His infinite grace appointed me to such a portion. A portion of which I am more unworthy than it is possible for words to describe or heart to conceive. Yes, I must talk to the Black Knight of this. I have such a certainty when with him that he will know just what is right, what is true, what is good. I feel as I imagine the flower feels when the sun shines upon it, and the beams not only steal into its heart and warm it, but under its influence the leaves unfold, one by one, until the most secret hidden ones at the heart's core open to the rays. He not only pours out from his fullness, but draws out from me thoughts and feelings I never before ventured to put into words. Why is it? In what consists his power? Has 33 he obtained my being's key, and thereby unlocks the secret chambers of my soul? Can it be the key is Love? I, who have enrolled myself in the Calendar of Women sufficient unto themselves ; who have adopted the famous mot of Marguerite of Austria, '' In fortune, or misfortune, there shall be one woman strong of heart." Am I surrendering the citadel at the first storming? Have a care ! have a care, Rebecca ! I find it necessary to say for the first time. A strange feeling comes over me in his presence. A subtle, indefinable sense of intoxicating sweetness in the air, as if I were coming under the influence of some soft spell or charm. Is it because he too feels the same that he gave me this poem? I will treat it as if it were but a question of philosophy, with no possible personal application or interpretation. I will ask him to tell me of Plato's reasonings upon it ; and that he may see that I do not think them peculiar to la helle passion, or that they necessarily have their origin in Love, I will speak of Bishop Tegner's allusion to such impressions in " The Children of the Lord's Supper," when he says : " Son of Eternity, fettered in Time, and an Ex- ile, the SiDirit Tugs at liis chains evermore, and struggles like flame ever upward, Still he i-c'calls, with emotion, his Father's mani- fold mansions, Thinks of the land of his Fathers', where blos- somed more freshly the flowers, Shone a more beautiful sun, and he played with the winired angels, Then grows the earth too narrow, too close, and homesick for heaven, Longs the wanderer again, and the Spirit's longings are worship." Of course, dear Familiar, it was but as a text for philosophical disquisition at our next meeting, he threw this pebble into my stream of thought, that, true to our resolve to make the winter beautiful as possible to each other, we might have somewhat to discuss, and let our thoughts play in widening circles round. 34 CHAPTER lY. November 30th— St. Andrew's Day. In acceptance of a standing invitation from the High Priestess of our Home Altar, to dine always with us on Saints' Days, and High Days, the Knights of the Glen were with us to-day. Indeed, the Black Knight graciously said they could most truthfully take upon their lips the words of Charles the V. concerning Flor- ence, " It is too great a pleasure to be partaken of except upon holy days." "We always read in memory of Dickens his Christmas stories year by year," said Mrs. Montgomery. "There are just five weeks in each of which to read one of the seasonable carols. Will you not join our Readings, gentlemen, on each Thursday evening?" The tryst was made with eager joy, and all the more busily flew the fingers and played the fancies. We talked of marvelous carvings, and marbles, for holy purposes set apart. Time spent upon them, is surely consecrated time, adding something to the beauty of His service and worship, who has given the sense of beauty in form and color. It led on to graver themes, and the Black Knight likened life to " a great canvass given us by the good God to cover with shapes and hues. As we will, it shines with light and beauty, or reflects hard, dimmed and blurred shades, defaced with distorted lineSo If we realized each act was dip- ping the brush into some color on the pallette, and laying it on in true or devia- ting line, how much more carefully should we live. How much more harmonious in tone and liae the picture on the rapidly filling canvass would be." The others said many beautiful things, but my memory seems to have become like a sieve, through which everything sifts, except the pearls which drop from his lips. It must not be, and now that the Advent season is coming on, the time for new beginniugs, which are the life of faith, I must turn a new leaf, and look steadfastly upon other things. Shall I fly ? Invent some excuse, and go back to the old loneliness again ! ]Sl'o, I will fight the battle bravely. I should lose my own self-respect, fall out with my- self, which is the saddest falling out of any, did I do so. I will stay and re- solutely bid my heart be true unto xtself. I will throw myself into the Christmas work, and in the Christmas spirit forget myself, and bar out the dangerous thoughts that have been invidiously creep- ing into my life. Are there others also feeling this V It had not before occurred to me, but silting here, unfolding the leaves of daily living, it seems we have been growing more apart of late, and that may have caused dear Aunt Ruth's re- mark this evening to Cousin Harry, which I accidentally overheard. "One would think it was tSt. Valentine's Day, instead of St. Andrew's." Are we pairing off? Growing thoughtless of her and the fam- ily, under the influence of enchanters. Is there genuine feeUng underneath Con- stance's merry quips and jests concerning her " Saxon-hair'd Laddie ?" She seemed the very impersonation of mischief this afternoon, perched upon an arm of tbo sofa, with dancing eyes, and cheeks dim- pled with smiles, in melo-dramatic fashion, declaring herself "stricken to the heart with a sparkle of fine love." Ever and anon descending from her pedestal to make an escapade across the room to work off the exuberance of spirits. Ah ! but she is a merry-hearted child, grace- ful as a dancing fawn, of a sparkling wit, and pleasant fancy, which lights up her plain face, and makes it one of the pleasautest sights the eye can rest upon. She has accepted the advice of the mother in Frederika Bremer's " Home," to her daughter Petrea, the unfortunate pos- sessor of a particularly homely nose, after she had been vainly endeavoring to tor- ture it into shape. " Do as one of my friends did," said the mother. "She made herself so beloved that her nose was beloved too. Her friends declared that they saw nothing so gladly as her nose as it came in at the door." The same wise-hearted mother, who called another of her children, ''Thou beloved plain child," early to reconcile her to her fate. Constance, using her wit as a foil, by her merry sayings con- cerning her homeliness, converts it into an attraction. Telling of the peaceful time coming in the future, when the '■' bloom of ugliness" will be past. Laugh- ing endlessly over the depth and bright- ness of her cerulean orbs, her rotund visage, her nose — than which, she avers Hogarth never drew more comical curves — her ringlets of red, &c. Mr. Graham sits like one entranced beneath her wiles. And now that I think of it, Alice and Mr. Carlton seem to be playing the role of Beatrice and Benedict. Constance rallies her on His Serene Highness, but I had thought of it only as one of her merry volleys before. No tender signs appear in the celestial atmosphere surrounding Theodora and Mr. Montague. They are thrown together perforce, and take infinite delight in drawing out the resources oi' their fine minds for each other's delecta- tion. Their atmosphere is that of pure intellect, cloudless, clear, serene, untouch- ed by the "soft, auroral light of love." Our queenly Theodora,, how beautiful she is, and how beautifully she comes out, as her mind rubs against the flint of his, causing each to give off" sparks and scintil- lations brilliant and beautiful. They have strong sympathies in tastes scientific, and never weary of talkiuj< together. Is our sober spinsterhood transformed into a ''Court of Love?" Has Cupid drawn his bow of Love at a venture, and pene- trated our cloister ? I am dazed, " clean daft," at the tliought. I, for one, Re- becca will not yield. To-morrow night, at the reading, I will do my little best to make the conversation general, — the ball tossing from hand to hand. December 1st. The tirst of a train of busy days. Meditating being very sys- tematic, we have laid out a plan of occu- pation for the Advent season, that by economy of moments we may fashion with our own fairy fingers gitts for all, beside aiding the children, and as "labors of love" always bring their own reward, I found myself singing merrily over the window box of pine cones and genre treasures for winter gardening, I was fashioning, as if the touches were set to music, again and again repeating to my- self a bit of rare wisdom gathered long ago, by experience proven true : '' What God may hereafter require of you, you must not give yourself the least trouble about. Everything He gives you to do, you must do as well as ever you can, and that is the best possible preparation for what He may want you to do next. If people would but do what they have to do, they would always find themselves ready for what came next." When the evening came, the round table was filled in due season. The Christ- mas Carol duly divided into portions for the readers, and most thoroughly enjoyed. Ghosts of Christmas past, Christmas present, and Christmas to come, are crowding the brains of each, I doubt not, this midnight hour. Truly has one of its admirers said: " If any individual story ever warmed a Christmas hearth, it was ' The Christmas Carol ;' if ever solitary old self was converted by a book, and made to be merry and childlike at that season, 'when its' blessed Founder was Himself a Child,' it was by that. Think of all we owe it, the happy hours it has made us pass. It seems to me a national benefit, and to every man and woman who reads it, a personal kindness." This the Black Knight repeated, as he turned the last page lingeringly. To which Cousin Harry replied, "Lord Jeffrey wrote of it : ' Blessings on your kind heart, my dear Dickens ; and may it always be as full and as light, as it is kind, and a fountain of kindness to all within reach of its beatings.' " "Hood's tribute to it," said Theodora, "I have thought the prettiest printed one. Poor, dear, laughter-loving Hood, I never think of him without a blessing. He said : ' It is impossible to read it without a glowing bosom and burning cheeks, be- tween love and shame for our kind, with perhaps a little touch of misgiving, whether we are not personally open, a crack or so, to the reproach of Words- 37 T7orth. The world is too much with us, early and late, getting and spending."* *' I class Dickens," said Cousin Harry, " among the great Eel'ormers of the world. There is nothing of the book- making spirit, which permeates so many ofour modern literary eftorts, in his works. Each one is the outgrowth of a compelling desire to ameliorate some wrong. What appeal, however passionate against the Beadle system could have burned into as many hearts, as poor Oliver Twist's cry of 'More, more,' in his moving story V How many reports of school abuses would have been required to draw the attention of the great public to them, as did the story of Squeers Treacle in 'Nicholas Nickleby.' What visiting committees could have made as telling an expose of the mysteries of Chancery, as the story of the 'Circumlocution Office,' and the ' How not to do it,' in the case of ' Jarn- dyce vs. Jarndyce,' in 'Bleak House.' ^\ndsoone laight go through the whole with the like catechism." "It is one secret of their marvelous power," replied Mr. Montague. '^The btrong purpose for which they were writ- ten is felt in every line. Twenty years ago Daniel Webster said that Dickens had already done more to ameliorate the condition of the English poor than all the statesmen Great Britain had sent into Patliament. What arguments against the debtor laws could be framed as convin- cing as the storv of ' The Marshalsea ' in ' Little DorriuV'" "Another secret of his power," said Cousin Kate, "is his wonderful insight into the hearts of high and low, his talent for finding such ' unexplored romantic nooks in the uulikeliest natures,' draw- ing out the hidden poetry and ' unwritten music ' in their lives." " The names are Legion," said Theo- dora, " of those who could truthfully take upon their li^js and echo back, Landor's first message to Dickens: ' Tell him he has drawn from me more tears aud more smiles than are remaining to me for all the rest of the world, real or ideal.' " His characters are so real and living — they come to be real acquaintances, and excite not only warm interest, but differ- ent degrees of friendship and love, so that one parts w^ith them as from friends, long- ing with intensity to follow them in their journey aud learn of their future. I think of the Peggottys as living still in Austra- lia, with the Micawbers, and the thrill in my heart when Peggotty came back to visit Mas'r Davy and Agnes in the Lon- don Home, was like the great joy of wel- coming a long lost friend. "There is always a great heart beating through his stories," said Auntie. '* One feels the blood circulating through them. I liked his describing his purpose ; ' To have been to dwell on the romantic side of familiar things.' " " One could wish some of the pictures 38 in the third volume of ' Foster's Life,' " said Theodora, ''had been unsketched, but it contains much that is intensely in- teresting and deligiitful. Do you remem- ber his saying : 'Dickens had his creations always by his side. They were living, speaking companions. AVith them he was everywhere thorouuhly identified. He laughed and wept with them. Was as much elated by their fun, as cast down by their grief, and brought to the consid- eration of them a belief in their reality, as well as in the influences they were meant to exercise, which in every circum- stance sustained him.' " ''I remember," said Mr. Graham, "reading a letter of Dickens to Lady IMessington, in which he says: 'I shut myself up for one month,, close and tight, Over my little Christmas ,book, 'The Chimes.' All my affections and passions got twined and knotted up in it, and I become as hagirard as a murderer long before I wrote 'The End.' " Thus the pleasant stream of talk flowed on until we said, "Good-Night." To-morrow we are to take advantage of the new fallen snow for a sleigh-ride to town. Ghostly presences have chased away all mundane thoughts. 1 will to bed, and sleep will come with sweet refresh- ment. Often when settling down to quiet dreams I take upon my lips Hood's cry — " Oh ? pity the wretches who wake ! For they must be wretched who cannot sleep, When (jod Himself draws the curtain." December 2d. A white day in my calendar I Perfect I though now my pen moves to the " music of wailing winds and wintry storm." Our escapade over, we are quite willing to say, "Wail on, moan, sigh, shriek," only, if there should be some poor, tired, homeless wanderer out in the storm, God shield and have mercy I There was never a merrier companie than that close packed in the capacious sleigh, that bore us into town to-day. The steeds carried themselves gallantly, as if spirit and speed were infused into them by the inspiring bells, the crisp creaking of the snow beneath their feet, the exhilarating atmosphere, and m-rry voices ringing out upon the air. They certainly seemed in perfect sympathy wititi us, making a " harmonious whole.' " All were in gayest spirits. We sang — we. laughed. We talked. Told stories. Recited poems. In fact let our full hearts overflow with their very excess of glad- ness. In town we provided ourselves with boxes and bundles of Christmas materials redolent of all good and gra- cious things, and re-seated ourselves with- out a chilled member for the homeward drive. We talked of gems and cyphers. Talis- mans and omens. Coincidences and red- letter days, till we each seemed unfolding the most secret and subtle tastes of our nature. The Black Knight said t6e month of October had always been the 39 one most auspicious to him. Where- UjjOQ each told of the days and seasons that nio»t did seem to smile or frown upon their destinies, unveilinor the hid- den vein 'of superstition that, though scarcely acknowledged, runs deep through our natures. We named our favorite flowers, and stars, and gems, and names, and gave the sacred reasons. Recounted the anniversaries nearest and dearest in our heart-calendars. Told dreams, recited poems, and capp'd verses. " The golden hours on angel wings flew o'er us," and so sorry were we to see the rein drawn, to turn into the home avenue, I exclaim- ed, remember Home Tooke's paradox of the road, "" Turn to the left, and you are sure*to go right." The horses had already obeyed the ribbons, and we were dashing up the approach in grand style, exhilara- ted as if the air were wine. In the evening it was proposed we should gather up the bouquet of the ride, and preserve it in amber. Form as it were a little mythology of our own, by arranging in order against each one's name, the tastes and loves and fancies avowed. So we fell to work with pencils and pens and paper. As the saints gather up the good thoughts and deeds of the day to present as^ a bouqaet to God at night, so did we attempt to gather up these blossoms of the ride, as a bouquet to embalm in memory's casket. To be taken out in the future, " In mer^oriam," and gazed upon tenderly, as upon flowers in a herbal. Alice said she feared the comparison would prove too truthful, they would in- deed be but scentless, faded ghosts of themselves, xikc the most carefully pressed treasures. His Serene Highness (Mr. Carlton) said, "Nay, these are too steeped in sweetness. ' Like the vase in which roses have once been distill'd, you may break, you ma}'- ruin the vase if you will, but the scent ol the roses will hang round it still.'" "It will be well worth while to make the efibrt to embalm it, even should it prove scentless," said Theodora, "re- membering the saying of thePersian poet, ' A rose-leaf is never in the way.' " "Yes," said her 'mirror of knight- hood,' Mr. Montague, "At the risk of its being but a 'paper nosegay,' let us try." "Oh! ye faithless ones," exclaimed 'The Saxon-haired laddie,' "Have you no ' Hope-colored ribbons, ' with which to bind your blossoms, that you thus yield room to fear?" " The senses of the heart are exquisite- ly fine,' said I, "its eye and ear are quick to catch impressions, and these little souvenirs, if we have the skill to bind them up, may be messengers of beauty, and do heart service, long after we are ' stricken with eld.' " "Your picture is touching. Miss Re- 40 becca," said the Black Knight. "Look on this picture, and on that. To-da}', the gayest of the young ; to-morrow, taking out the yellow records, to warm our time- chilled souls, with Yule Logs of the Heart." " Kay, nay, you shall not laugh," said dear Aunt Kuth *, "Longfellow's words are as wise as poetic, when he sings : ' Childliood is the bough where slumbered, Buds iiud blossoms many numbered, Age, that bough with snows encumbered; (xather, then, each flower that blows, While the young heart overflows, To adorn that tent of snows.' " "Ah, 3^es !" said merry Constance, trag- ically folding her hands across her breast, and uplifting her 'cerulean orbs,' "I already make pilgrimages to my ' Cloister of Memories,' for comfort, though verily is it a ' Cloister in the De- sert.' " "Seriously, Miss Rattle-pate," said Auntie, "the days may come, when the moments devoted to gathering and pre- serving bouquets, such as you propose to- night, will seem to you, and be counted by you, as so many alms." "Consistency thou art a jewel," ex- claimed Constance, "only yesterday, Auntie, you sang to me — ' Day by day, the promise reads, Daily strength for daily iieeds, Cast foreboding fears away, Take the mauua of to-day.' " "Will you never be serious. Merry Heart," returned Auntie. "That is true philosophy, and militates not against treasuring up the aroma of 'romance days ' against the time when your ' earth- ly neighborship ' shall be passed." " I have a precious old ' tear-bottle,' " said the irrepressible, " exhumed from the dust of Pompeii. If I could but possess one for smiles ; oh I for a smile-bottle against the day Auntie prophesies, when I shall ' sit like Philomel all day, with my breast against a thorn.' " "The gods forbid," said "tlie Saxon- haired laddie," "you shall give the first touch to the smile-bottle of the evening, and so christen the eflbrt to preserve our ' radiant matutinal romance. ' Against your name, record the idiosyncrasies of taste and nature confessed this morn- ing." "As well try to gather the exhaled breath of flowers. One would indeed need the patience of Job, who should try to gather up the idle nothings that fall from the tripping tongue of the little maiden. If you want a ' written smile ' you must write it yourself. As the children say, ' If you want any more you must sing it yourself.' " " The charmed moments fly I" replied her persistent cavalier ; " the pen is pois- ed in air, awaiting your touch." " Indeed I am in earnest," she replied. " Charles Lamb says : 'Some brains will endure but one skimming, ' and mine are 41 akin to those. Kot that I am in ' dissym- pathy ' with the movement," she said, with mocking tone and gesture ; " but I cannot live a poem and write it, too. Of my powers to serve you in this way I am ' faithless, hopeless, charityless. ' What- ever I might indite would be entirely de- void of romantic flavor. Indeed, we are all such 'modest, crimson, wee-tipped flowers.' I propose Cousin Harry shall play the scribe, and save our blushes, while all pour into his inkstand fragrant hieroglyphs. ' Little and often soon fills the pouch,' saith the homely proverb." With mock ceremony, '"Mine Host" was installed in the Chair of State, which honor he accepted with due genuflexions and graciousness, heading the perfumed '"A Smile Bottle." Several mottoes were suggested, among which were recorded, "Folly is sweet in its season ;" "A little folly now and then is relished by the wisest men;" "Folly sauced with discretion ;" " Haunted by a choir of glorious ghosts, '^ and "Pebbles from the stream of remembrance." A more gleesome hour never sent out echoes for remembrance than passed over us, a? we gathered up the jewels of the ride, and set them down " in gold on last- ing pillars." Such wat-combats^ conver- sational figurants, and "rhymes at ran- dom flung," as might have made "a looker on in Yenice," believe us a joy in- toxicated group. Finally the palimpsest was covered with characters, to which " memory, gen- tle pilgrim, holds the key," whose breath will make them stand out in lines over the merry sleigh-ride, in the years to come. I had almost forgotten to tell you, dear gossip, that Cousin Harry after his in- stallation entered upon the duties of his ofiice with, " I suppose it is parliamentary for me to appoint my own assistant. I therefore nominate my ' better half ' as chatechizer,knowing with a perfect knowl- edge her rare gifts in that role." The nomination was received with accla- mation, and the time-honored cry of " Worthy, worthy, she is worthy !" The position was graciously accepted by the graceful Hostess, whose beautiful image I would I could portray in words, that she might rise before you, dear Familiar, in her dear, proper person. Tall, grace- ful, of most rare and gracious dignity, exqusitely chiselled features, and deli- cious voice, every article of dress in per- fect taste. Indeed, it would seem to break her Being's law to have anything inelegant or unartistic about her. Ail her belongings bear the legible inscrip- tion, " I belong to a lady." Her influence over those with whom she is brought in contact is remarkable — an induence I have often heard acknowledged years after it was exercised, as thrilling through the whole of after life. It is one of the 1 ambitions of her life to be a helper to 42 every one she meets. I remember years ago hearing her say, when rallied upon puzzling indefatigably over some intri- cate fancy stitch, and mastering it, "I never neglect an opportunity of learning anything that may touch a spring by which I may gain influence. These homely, simple interests are often an *Open Sesame ' to quiet natures." I always forget everything when launch- ed upon the sea of her perfections, and now have nearly lost the '' thread of my discourse." "According to the rules of the Order of Chivalry," she said, "we will com- mence with the Fair ones. As it would be odious to ' choose among goddesses, ' I will take you in the order in which you are sitting." "Theodora, confess thy chosen Flower, and why thou lovest it V" While at the 'Bound Table," dear Ke- positorium, I thought to append my copy of the" Smile Bottle' to these sheets for your delectation, but as I finished transcribing, the sometime Brigand, as ever the "mir- ror of courtesy," drew off a fair copy for my treasuring, and possessed himself of the one I had. Here it is produced in the highest style of art — edition de luxe — too precious to be laid with commonplaces. The little record looks so demure and quiet, one would hardly imagine it the child of such madly, merry hours. To other eyes it may be as vapid and flavor- less as last year's violets, but with us each little word touches a secret spring within, which vibrates with sweet harmony. As I look at it, the whole scene rises as if called up by magic wand, and not only the panorama of the roadside and land- scape, but the very tones and smiles come back that " made the dear scene of en- chantment more dear." Instead of ap- pending the keepsake, I will try and give you a pen-and-ink sketch of the scene at the Round Table, though fearing all the fun and sparkle will have effervesced. 43 CHAPTEK V. Theodora in her queenly, self-]Oossessed, reposelul way answered. (It was well she led the way, as we caught her spirit, and gathered our wits by the time our turn came.) '' The liose is fairest in my sight. I love it for its form, aod varying hues and fragrance. For its language — love — and for its sweet associations. Poets have embalmed it. Painters immortal- ized it. I love to think of it as having given name to the Holy Land, where Solo- mon sang its praises, as the word Syria appears to be derived from a beautiful and delicate rose, for which the country has always been famous. If I wero to tell a story, and had bright wings of fancy and imagination with which to enchant my listeners with visions of delight, I should lay the scene in one of the gardens of the Nile, where the roses are unequal- ed ; where mattresses are made of their petals for persons of rank to repose upon ; where it is said the celebrated princsss Nourmahal caused an entire caoal to be tilled with rose-water, upon which she took her pleasure with the Great Mogul. I share that pleasure often as the faintest breath of the attar of rose floats round me. For it was the sun's influence dis- engaging the essential oil of the rose from the water, and causing it to float upon the surface, that led to its discovery. And of all sweet odors, suggestive of all things fair, from white kid gloves to tender sen- timents, this subtle scent is most deli- cious. Forgiven be the folly that led to so gracious a gift. I cannot believe Cleo- patra wholly bad, when she found plea- sure in having the royal apartments cov- ered deep with rose-leaves, nor the dying Triumvir, when he begged her to cover his tomb with roses. I give willing cre- dence when fabulous writers account for the delicious perfume of the rose, by tell- ing us that love at a feast of Olympus, in the midst of a light and lively dance, overturned with a stroke of his wing, a cup of nectar, which precious liquor fall- ing on the rose embalmed it with that heavenly fragrance which it still retains. I listen not unwillingly, detecting 'the soul of goodness in things evil,' to the Mussulman's belief, that the rose sprang from the sweat of Mahomet, and honor the feeling that will not suff'er a rose-leaf to lie upon the ground, nor permit any one to tread upon this sacred flower. "Were I ever to commit the absurdity of falling in or out of love, I would adopt the floral language of the East. The presenting of a rose-bud with thorns and leaves should be understood to express 44 both fear and hope. If the thorns were taken ofi' before returned, it should signi- fy that one had everything to hope. If the leaves were stripped off that the re- ceiver had everything to fear. I cherish the Persian belief that there is a peculiar sympathy between the rose and the nightingale, and as peculiar an antipathy between the rose and the beetle. I like the Turkish custom of sculpturing a rose on the monument of all ladies who die unmarried, and as the funeral train passes scattering multitudes of them from the windows. '^ Therefore you see the singular appro- priateness of a spinster vowed and sworn, playing the role of nightingale, aud lav- ishing her affections upon the queenly flower. A rose without thorns or leaves is my crest. Nothing to fear or hope, ex- cept what cometh from the heart of the rose. Ijf ever my wings of fancy grow, a feast of roses only will they spread. Long ago ' I flung away all ambition, ' except the daily strife of living the life of a rose, shedding sweetness in its own little sphere, living and dead. Pledged in life and in death to the Hose of Sharon, Sub Rosa Crux." "Write," said Mrs. Montgomery, 'The rose of the Kanawha loveth the rose, and chooseth it for her crest. In years of the future, kind friends, when you wish to visit the Rose, you will find her in a rose-planted cottage, encircled with hedges of roses, with some rosy cogno- men, as the surroundings may warrant — Rosenhayn, Rosenvik, or the like. Roses climbing in at the windows and doors, and blooming on all the tables iand chairs, with that delicate odor of the rose about her, which always accompanied and per- vaded like an atmosphere the heroine of Frederika Bremer's home," which will guide you unerringly to her shrine. May lifd be all couleur de rose to our ' Queen of the Roses.'" "Alice, we wait for your choice, and reasons for the love that is in you," called La Dame Chatelaine. " Yiolets, dear, for their beauty and as- sociation. Loved in the time of child- hood, when I sought them by the mossy nooks and in the merry wild -woods, chaunting, 'Yiolets, Yiolets, open your eyes I' and in later days, when I have lain hour after hour on * banks of Yio- lets,' to the present, when their sight awakens a sense of joy that brings tears to my eyes. The scent of the wild-wood violet is indescribably sweet to me, and is the atmosphere I would have surround me, wherever I may be. Like Theodora, I bless the perfumer's art that has taught the distillation of the very soul of this flower. Its breath carries me as on in- visible wings to the old 'mossy honey pots,' where I have dreamed the violet dreams of my life. They lose fragrance and simplicity by transplantation to gar- dens, but when transformed by the arts of the florist into Pansies, rich and rare, 45 they still have a human look about them, aud I always feel as if looking into a face, when gaziug into their eyes. ''There's Pansies, that's for thought.' They love best to nestle in quiet, shady places, under a shadow which they love, and I find myself ever in sympathy with them." "Write, the violet loveth the violet. May she find a ^ mossy stone ' on which to rest, beneath a shadow which she loves, and her life be passed near banks of vio- lets." "Constance, we wait your choice, and the logic thereof." "The Sunflower," she demurely an- swered, ignoring all consciousness of the shout with which the announcement was greeted. " It was all golden glory in my childhood. I cannot see one now without transportation to the dear old kitchen- garden, where they raised their stately heads like sentinels, in lines straight and regular as the line of poplar trees before the house. Visions of chickens, peculiar chickens of an excellent savor, even shanghais, graceful withal, that did daily peep of gridirons, and ripening sunflower seeds rise on my admiring sight, while my mouth waters with expectant relish. Children of the sun, with crowns of gold upon their heads. All golden, like the yellow hair of mermaids aud my own. "A fellow feeling makes us wondrous kind," and from it may have sprung my love for them and mermaids. My favor- ite song, in which I make the night owl shriek with envy, is that which compares my young heart to the ' Sunflower that turns on its god when He sets, the same face that it turned when he rose.' Then I would have the goods the gods provide packed close as 'seeds in sunflowers.' In the touching spirit of the Russians, re- member me by sunflowers !" " Write Sunflower agaiust Constance's name I May tlie side the sun shines on ever be hers I Her home Sunny side, and all the gifts brought forth by the Sun I" After the merry words called forth by her sallies were ended, to attempt serving which, has the effect of " wit fried in steaks," our Catechist brought us to order with, "Rebecca, what will your song be to-night?" "Of Lilies! I love the whole family and tribe. Dearest and best the Lily of the Yale— 'Our Lady's Belli' Cherish- ing especial fondness for the Day Lily, Lenten Lilies, Ascension Lilies, and Lil- ies of the Pond, with full meed of admi- ration for the stately Lilies of Japan. Madonnas and Angels appear ever to my thought with lilies in their hands, and I look for the good Angels of life and death to come wuth lilies for life and death's an- nunciation. Spotless and pure, one can imagine them blooming in the celestial country without change or transfigura- tion. The Lily texts of the Bible are my chosen ones. 'The Lily among thorns'.' 'Feed in the gardens and to gather Lilies ;' 'I am the Lily of the 46 Valley ;' ' His lips like lilies, droppino; sweet smelling mj^rrhl' 'He feedeth among the lilies ;' ' Consider the lilies how they grow, they toil not, they spin not ; and yet I say unto you, that Solo- mon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.' " " Write Lilies against Eebecca's name. Unstained and pure as the Lily may she ever be. As the priestesses of Isis wore lily wreaths, so may we see her in the lighted temple of home crowned with lilies, a home fair as the corolla of a water lily where the Indian Cupid has his abode." "We would all turn Lotus Eaters for her sake, I am sure," said Mr. Mortimer. "Mr. Montague, your favorite flower, and why," saidCousin Kate. "Iv}', if I may be allowed to consider plant or leaf as synonym for flower. A wall covered with Ivy. An Ivy covered Church, or house are inexpressibly beau- titul to me. There is sentiment in its way of creeping over old ruins, clinging so tenaciously to whatever its tendrils twine about. A tenderness like that of a yearning heart, in its eager hiding of un- sightly places, and flaws, and rifts. A truthful earnestness and devotion in its loving purpose, that wins not only love and admiration, but solid, honest, respect and honor. Like the beautifully becom- ing robe of Charity it adorns w^hatever it veils, and retains its beauty through all the shocks and chills of time, bright. fresh, green, and enduring. ' Oh ! a rare old plant is the Ivy Green, creeping where no life is seen.' An Ivy Leaf, in its chaste, true, severe beauty be my chosen. " "Write, ' The Ivy Green,' against Mr. Montague's name. May he pass his days in the shade of an Ivy covered home, and a true love creep in and out of his life, iu- separate from its windings. Unlike the Ivy only, in never clinging round a worth- less thing." "Mr. Graham, you have the floor." " I love best a little flower that comes in the spring time, in deep wood nooks, but little known. Bearing a stupendous name, for on such ' Latin thorns ' do bo- tanists love to hang our simple flowers. Don't laugh, when I name Pyxidanthera Barbulata. Never have I neard what we call a 'common name,' a 'pet name,' given the woodland beauty. It grows like a trailing moss. Its leafage exquis- itely beautiful and delicate. In blossom- time it blossoms into myriads of won- drously delicate, star-like white flowers. Forming long wreaths of white and green, which can scarcely be thrown together in any way that is not beautiful, and yet capable of most artistic arrangement. I looked for it vainly in our woods last spring, and imported some at once, as I miss it as one misses the greeting of a friend. Spring is scarcely spring to me, without its good-morrow after the winter, any more than a home is home, with its dearest member away. It is Christmas 47 without the Holly Branch ; Easter with- out its flowers. I feel always like giving it the child's greeting, 'Good-morning, you are looking as pretty as ever, ' adding, ' What have you and I been dreaming the long winter through V Purity, faith- fulness, and beauty are its dower. I carry a sketch of one of its clusters with me, as I would the face of a friend. It is one of my mentors. If anything but truth would have passed current at the confessional, I should have named another, to avoid the laugh I feared would greet its high sound- ing name." So saying, he took from a sacred fold in his note-book, a lovely little sketch of the woodland darling, for our admiration. It was a stranger to all, and received cor- dial interest and homage. Cousin Kate asking the privilege of copying it. "Write Pyxidanthera Barbulata, as Mr. Graham's flower. May it thrive wherever he goes, and flowers as pure, and beautiful bloom in his heart's gar- den." "Mr. Carlton, we wait your confession!" "Mignonette, meaning literally Little Darling, is indeed my darling. Its breath is as the breath of my chfldhood, and comes blended subtly with the odor of iievv-mown hay from the meadow-land of youth. It carries me as upon odorous ])ini()ns to the mignonette bed from which I chose the first ofierings of the morning to the beautiful mother, who«e favorite flower it was, and who day and night, summer and winter, wore it in her bosom, keeping a fresh window-box growing through all the frost and cold. It was an avowal of passion in my young days to present to a little girl a sprig of mignon- ette to wear in her gossamer hat. Home could not be home to me, were not the odor of mignonette floating through it, like a cloud of incense." " Write Mignonette against Mr. Carl- ton's name. May he find his mignonette and the fragrant home of his dreams." Mr. Mortimer, last, but not least !" '' 'Trailing Arbutus ' " — ' In mine eye,' the sweetest flower that blows. The darling of the spring. I look forward to going 'Arbutusing,' as in childish par- lance it is termed, with the relish of a child. I love to push aside the coarse, thick green leaves that cover and shield it so perfectly, that it contrives to put forth its tiny buds and blossoms before the ice is melted on the hills. I feel as I discover the hidden treasures, as if I had found my youth again, and the smiles that made life glad and beautiful, smiled up to me again. I endorse Beecher fully when he says, ' It is the sweetest flower that opens to the northern sky. It is con- tent, though lying upon the very ground. It braves the coldest winters. All the summers cannot elaborate a perfume so sweet as that which seems to have been born of the very winter. It is like the breath of love. The pure white ard pink blossoms, in sweet clusters, lie hidden un- 48 der leaves or grass, and often under un- timely snows. Blessings on thee ! Thou art the fairest, most modest, and sweetest- breathed of all our flowers. ' It has a voice foe me, and like Mr. Graham, I carry its image wherever I go, though instead of wearing it upon my heart, it hangs upon my wall. ' Blest be the art that can immortalize. The art that baffles time's decay,' and makes this picture a silent partner for life, with the Trailing Arbu- iQS verse below it. " ' Walk life's dark path, they seem to say, With love's diviue forekuo\vin2:. That where man sees but withered leaves God sees the sweet flowers growiu