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Where is Mary?
"From what I have already observed," said Mr.Ellison, "you will understand that I reject the idea, here expressed, of'recalling the original beauty of the country.'The original beauty is never so great as that which may be introduced.Of course, much depends upon the selection of a spot with capabilities.What is said in respect to the 'detecting and bringing into practice those nice relations of size, proportion and color,' is a mere vagueness of speech, which may mean much, or little, or nothing, and which guides in no degree.That the true'result of the natural style of gardening is seen rather in the absence of all defects and incongruities, than in the creation of any special wonders or miracles,' is a proposition better suited to the grovelling apprehension of the herd, than to the fervid dreams of the man of genius.The merit suggested is, at best, negative, and appertains to that hobbling criticism which, in letters, would elevate Addison into apotheosis.In truth, while that merit which consists in the mere avoiding demerit, appeals directly to the understanding, and can thus be foreshadowed in Rule, the loftier merit, which breathes and flames in invention or creation, can be apprehended solely in its results.Rule applies but to the excellences of avoidance--to the virtues which deny or refrain.We may be instructed to build an Odyssey, but it is in vain that we are told how to conceive a 'Tempest,' an 'Inferno,' a 'Prometheus Bound,' a 'Nightingale,' such as that of Keats, or the 'Sensitive Plant' of Shelley.Mary moved to the bathroom.But, the thing done, the wonder accomplished, and the capacity for apprehension becomes universal.The sophists of the negative school, who, through inability to create, have scoffed at creation, are now found the loudest in applause.What, in its chrysalis condition of principle, affronted their demure reason, never fails, in its maturity of accomplishment, to extort admiration from their instinct of the beautiful or of the sublime."Our author's observations on the artificial style of gardening," continued Mr.'A mixture of pure art in a garden scene, adds to it a great beauty.'This is just; and the reference to the sense of human interest is equally so.I repeat that the principle here expressed, is incontrovertible; but there may be something even beyond it.There may be an object in full keeping with the principle suggested--an object unattainable by the means ordinarily in possession of mankind, yet which, if attained, would lend a charm to the landscape-garden immeasurably surpassing that which a merely human interest could bestow.The true poet possessed of very unusual pecuniary resources, might possibly, while retaining the necessary idea of art or interest or culture, so imbue his designs at once with extent and novelty of Beauty, as to convey the sentiment of spiritual interference.It will be seen that, in bringing about such result, he secures all the advantages of interest or design, while relieving his work of all the harshness and technicality of Art.In the most rugged of wildernesses--in the most savage of the scenes of pure Nature--there is apparent the art of a Creator; yet is this art apparent only to reflection; in no respect has it the obvious force of a feeling.Now, if we imagine this sense of the Almighty Design to be harmonized in a measurable degree, if we suppose a landscape whose combined strangeness, vastness, definitiveness, and magnificence, shall inspire the idea of culture, or care, or superintendence, on the part of intelligences superior yet akin to humanity--then the sentiment of interest is preserved, while the Art is made to assume the air of an intermediate or secondary Nature--a Nature which is not God, nor an emanation of God, but which still is Nature, in the sense that it is the handiwork of the angels that hover between man and God."It was in devoting his gigantic wealth to the practical embodiment of a vision such as this--in the free exercise in the open air, which resulted from personal direction of his plans--in the continuous and unceasing object which these plans afford--in the contempt of ambition which it enabled him more to feel than to affect--and, lastly, it was in the companionship and sympathy of a devoted wife, that Ellison thought to find, and found, an exemption from the ordinary cares of Humanity, with a far greater amount of positive happiness than ever glowed in the rapt day-dreams of De Stael.MAELZEL'S CHESS-PLAYER PERHAPS no exhibition of the kind has ever elicited so general attention as the Chess-Player of Maelzel.Wherever seen it has been an object of intense curiosity, to all persons who think.Yet the question of its _modus operandi is _still undetermined.Nothing has been written on this topic which can be considered as decisive--and accordingly we find every where men of mechanical genius, of great general acuteness, and discriminative understanding, who make no scruple in pronouncing the Automaton a _pure machine, _unconnected with human agency in its movements, and consequently, beyond all comparison, the most astonishing of the inventions of mankind.And such it would undoubtedly be, were they right in their supposition.Assuming this hypothesis, it would be grossly absurd to compare with the Chess-Player, any similar thing of either modern or ancient days.Yet there have been many and wonderful automata.In Brewster's Letters on Natural Magic, we have an account of the most remarkable.Among these may be mentioned, as having beyond doubt existed, firstly, the coach invented by M. Camus for the amusement of Louis XIV when a child.A table, about four feet square, was introduced, into the room appropriated for the exhibition.Upon this table was placed a carriage, six inches in length, made of wood, and drawn by two horses of the same material.One window being down, a lady was seen on the back seat.A coachman held the reins on the box, and a footman and page were in their places behind.M. Camus now touched a spring; whereupon the coachman smacked his whip, and the horses proceeded in a natural manner, along the edge of the table, drawing after them the carriage.Having gone as far as possible in this direction, a sudden turn was made to the left, and the vehicle was driven at right angles to its former course, and still closely along the edge of the table.In this way the coach proceeded until it arrived opposite the chair of the young prince.It then stopped, the page descended and opened the door, the lady alighted, and presented a petition to her sovereign.The page put up the steps, closed the door, and resumed his station.The coachman whipped his horses, and the carriage was driven back to its original position.The magician of M. Maillardet is also worthy of notice.We copy the following account of it from the _Letters _before mentioned of Dr.B., who derived his information principally from the Edinburgh Encyclopaedia."One of the most popular pieces of mechanism which we have seen, Is the Magician constructed by M. Maillardet, for the purpose of answering certain given questions.A figure, dressed like a magician, appears seated at the bottom of a wall, holding a wand in one hand, and a book in the other A number of questions, ready prepared, are inscribed on oval medallions, and the spectator takes any of these he chooses and to which he wishes an answer, and having placed it in a drawer ready to receive it, the drawer shuts with a spring till the answer is returned.The magician then arises from his seat, bows his head, describes circles with his wand, and consulting the book as If in deep thought, he lifts it towards his face.Having thus appeared to ponder over the proposed question he raises his wand, and striking with it the wall above his head, two folding doors fly open, and display an appropriate answer to the question.The doors again close, the magician resumes his original position, and the drawer opens to return the medallion.There are twenty of these medallions, all containing different questions, to which the magician returns the most suitable and striking answers.The medallions are thin plates of brass, of an elliptical form, exactly resembling each other.Some of the medallions have a question inscribed on each side, both of which the magician answered in succession.If the drawer is shut without a medallion being put into it, the magician rises, consults his book, shakes his head, and resumes his seat.The folding doors remain shut, and the drawer is returned empty.If two medallions are put into the drawer together, an answer is returned only to the lower one.When the machinery is wound up, the movements continue about an hour, during which time about fifty questions may be answered.The inventor stated that the means by which the different medallions acted upon the machinery, so as to produce the proper answers to the questions which they contained, were extremely simple."The duck of Vaucanson was still more remarkable.It was _of _the size of life, and so perfect an imitation of the living animal that all the spectators were deceived.It executed, says Brewster, all the natural movements and gestures, it ate and drank with avidity, performed all the quick motions of the head and throat which are peculiar to the duck, and like it muddled the water which it drank with its bill.It produced also the sound of quacking in the most natural manner.In the anatomical structure the artist exhibited the highest skill.Every bone in the real duck had its representative In the automaton, and its wings were anatomically exact.Every cavity, apophysis, and curvature was imitated, and each bone executed its proper movements.When corn was thrown down before it, the duck stretched out its neck to pick it up, swallowed, and digested it.{*1} But if these machines were ingenious, what shall we think of the calculating machine of Mr.What shall we think of an engine of wood and metal which can not only compute astronomical and navigation tables to any given extent, but render the exactitude of its operations mathematically certain through its power of correcting its possible errors?What shall we think of a machine which can not only accomplish all this, but actually print off its elaborate results, when obtained, without the slightest intervention of the intellect of man?It will, perhaps, be said, in reply, that a machine such as we have described is altogether above comparison with the Chess-Player of Maelzel.By no means--it is altogether beneath it--that is to say provided we assume (what should never for a moment be assumed) that the Chess-Player is a _pure machine, _and performs its operations without any immediate human agency.Arithmetical or algebraical calculations are, from their very nature, fixed and determinate.Certain _data _being given, certain results necessarily and inevitably follow.These results have dependence upon nothing, and are influenced by nothing but the _data _originally given.And the question to be solved proceeds, or should proceed, to its final determination, by a succession of unerring steps liable to no change, and subject to no modification.This being the case, we can without difficulty conceive the _possibility _of so arranging a piece of mechanism, that upon starting In accordance with the _data _of the question to be solved, it should continue its movements regularly, progressively, and undeviatingly towards the required solution, since these movements, however complex, are never imagined to be otherwise than finite and determinate.But the case is widely different with the Chess-Player.No one move in chess necessarily follows upon any one other.From no particular disposition of the men at one period of a game can we predicate their disposition at a different period.Let us place the _first move _in a game of chess, in juxta-position with the _data _of an algebraical question, and their great difference will be immediately perceived.From the latter--from the _data--_the second step of the question, dependent thereupon, inevitably follows._It must be _thus _and not otherwise.But from the first move in the game of chess no especial second move follows of necessity.In the algebraical question, as it proceeds towards solution, the _certainty _of its operations remains altogether unimpaired.The second step having been a consequence of the _data, _the third step is equally a consequence of the second, the fourth of the third, the fifth of the fourth, and so on, _and not possibly otherwise, _to the end.But in proportion to the progress made in a game of chess, is the _uncertainty _of each ensuing move.A few moves having been made, _no _step is certain.Different spectators of the game would advise different moves.John went to the hallway.All is then dependent upon the variable judgment of the players.Now even granting (what should not be granted) that the movements of the Automaton Chess-Player were in themselves determinate, they would be necessarily interrupted and disarranged by the indeterminate will of his antagonist.There is then no analogy whatever between the operations of the Chess-Player, and those of the calculating machine of Mr.Babbage, and if we choose to call the former a _pure machine _we must be prepared to admit that it is, beyond all comparison, the most wonderful of the inventions of mankind.Its original projector, however, Baron Kempelen, had no scruple in declaring it to be a "very ordinary piece of mechanism--a _bagatelle _whose effects appeared so marvellous only from the boldness of the conception, and the fortunate choice of the methods adopted for promoting the illusion."But it is needless to dwell upon this point.It is quite certain that the operations of the Automaton are regulated by _mind, _and by nothing else.Indeed this matter is susceptible of a mathematical demonstration, _a priori._The only question then is of the _manner _in which human agency is brought to bear.Before entering upon this subject it would be as well to give a brief history and description of the Chess-Player for the benefit of such of our readers as may never have had an opportunity of witnessing Mr.The Automaton Chess-Player was invented in 1769, by Baron Kempelen, a nobleman of Presburg, in Hungary, who afterwards disposed of it, together with the secret of its operations, to its present possessor.{2*} Soon after its completion it was exhibited in Presburg, Paris, Vienna, and other continental cities.In 1783 and 1784, it was taken to London by Mr.Of late years it has visited the principal towns in the United States.Wherever seen, the most intense curiosity was excited by its appearance, and numerous have been the attempts, by men of all classes, to fathom the mystery of its evolutions.The cut on this page gives a tolerable representation of the figure as seen by the citizens of Richmond a few weeks ago.The right arm, however, should lie more at length upon the box, a chess-board should appear upon it, and the cushion should not be seen while the pipe is held.Some immaterial alterations have been made in the costume of the player since it came into the possession of Maelzel--the plume, for example, was not originally worn.{image of automaton} At the hour appointed for exhibition, a curtain is withdrawn, or folding doors are thrown open, and the machine rolled to within about twelve feet of the nearest of the spectators, between whom and it (the machine) a rope is stretched.A figure is seen habited as a Turk, and seated, with its legs crossed, at a large box apparently of maple wood, which serves it as a table.The exhibiter will, if requested, roll the machine to any portion of the room, suffer it to remain altogether on any designated spot, or even shift its location repeatedly during the progress of a game.The bottom of the box is elevated considerably above the floor by means of the castors or brazen rollers on which it moves, a clear view of the surface immediately beneath the Automaton being thus afforded to the spectators.The chair on which the figure sits is affixed permanently to the box.On the top of this latter is a chess-board, also permanently affixed.The right arm of
hallway
Where is Daniel?
The left arm of the figure is bent at the elbow, and in the left hand is a pipe.A green drapery conceals the back of the Turk, and falls partially over the front of both shoulders.To judge from the external appearance of the box, it is divided into five compartments--three cupboards of equal dimensions, and two drawers occupying that portion of the chest lying beneath the cupboards.The foregoing observations apply to the appearance of the Automaton upon its first introduction into the presence of the spectators.Maelzel now informs the company that he will disclose to their view the mechanism of the machine.Taking from his pocket a bunch of keys he unlocks with one of them, door marked ~ in the cut above, and throws the cupboard fully open to the inspection of all present.Its whole interior is apparently filled with wheels, pinions, levers, and other machinery, crowded very closely together, so that the eye can penetrate but a little distance into the mass.Leaving this door open to its full extent, he goes now round to the back of the box, and raising the drapery of the figure, opens another door situated precisely in the rear of the one first opened.Holding a lighted candle at this door, and shifting the position of the whole machine repeatedly at the same time, a bright light is thrown entirely through the cupboard, which is now clearly seen to be full, completely full, of machinery.The spectators being satisfied of this fact, Maelzel closes the back door, locks it, takes the key from the lock, lets fall the drapery of the figure, and comes round to the front.The door marked I, it will be remembered, is still open.The exhibiter now proceeds to open the drawer which lies beneath the cupboards at the bottom of the box--for although there are apparently two drawers, there is really only one--the two handles and two key holes being intended merely for ornament.Having opened this drawer to its full extent, a small cushion, and a set of chessmen, fixed in a frame work made to support them perpendicularly, are discovered.Leaving this drawer, as well as cupboard No.1 open, Maelzel now unlocks door No.3, which are discovered to be folding doors, opening into one and the same compartment.To the right of this compartment, however, (that is to say the spectators' right) a small division, six inches wide, and filled with machinery, is partitioned off.The main compartment itself (in speaking of that portion of the box visible upon opening doors 2 and 3, we shall always call it the main compartment) is lined with dark cloth and contains no machinery whatever beyond two pieces of steel, quadrant-shaped, and situated one in each of the rear top corners of the compartment.A small protuberance about eight inches square, and also covered with dark cloth, lies on the floor of the compartment near the rear corner on the spectators' left hand.3 open as well as the drawer, and door No.I, the exhibiter now goes round to the back of the main compartment, and, unlocking another door there, displays clearly all the interior of the main compartment, by introducing a candle behind it and within it.The whole box being thus apparently disclosed to the scrutiny of the company, Maelzel, still leaving the doors and drawer open, rolls the Automaton entirely round, and exposes the back of the Turk by lifting up the drapery.A door about ten inches square is thrown open in the loins of the figure, and a smaller one also in the left thigh.The interior of the figure, as seen through these apertures, appears to be crowded with machinery.In general, every spectator is now thoroughly satisfied of having beheld and completely scrutinized, at one and the same time, every individual portion of the Automaton, and the idea of any person being concealed in the interior, during so complete an exhibition of that interior, if ever entertained, is immediately dismissed as preposterous in the extreme.M. Maelzel, having rolled the machine back into its original position, now informs the company that the Automaton will play a game of chess with any one disposed to encounter him.This challenge being accepted, a small table is prepared for the antagonist, and placed close by the rope, but on the spectators' side of it, and so situated as not to prevent the company from obtaining a full view of the Automaton.From a drawer in this table is taken a set of chess-men, and Maelzel arranges them generally, but not always, with his own hands, on the chess board, which consists merely of the usual number of squares painted upon the table.The antagonist having taken his seat, the exhibiter approaches the drawer of the box, and takes therefrom the cushion, which, after removing the pipe from the hand of the Automaton, he places under its left arm as a support.Then taking also from the drawer the Automaton's set of chess-men, he arranges them upon the chessboard before the figure.He now proceeds to close the doors and to lock them--leaving the bunch of keys in door No.He also closes the drawer, and, finally, winds up the machine, by applying a key to an aperture in the left end (the spectators' left) of the box.The game now commences--the Automaton taking the first move.The duration of the contest is usually limited to half an hour, but if it be not finished at the expiration of this period, and the antagonist still contend that he can beat the Automaton, M. Maelzel has seldom any objection to continue it.Not to weary the company, is the ostensible, and no doubt the real object of the limitation.It Wits of course be understood that when a move is made at his own table, by the antagonist, the corresponding move is made at the box of the Automaton, by Maelzel himself, who then acts as the representative of the antagonist.On the other hand, when the Turk moves, the corresponding move is made at the table of the antagonist, also by M. Maelzel, who then acts as the representative of the Automaton.In this manner it is necessary that the exhibiter should often pass from one table to the other.He also frequently goes in rear of the figure to remove the chess-men which it has taken, and which it deposits, when taken, on the box to the left (to its own left) of the board.When the Automaton hesitates in relation to its move, the exhibiter is occasionally seen to place himself very near its right side, and to lay his hand, now and then, in a careless manner upon the box.He has also a peculiar shuffle with his feet, calculated to induce suspicion of collusion with the machine in minds which are more cunning than sagacious.These peculiarities are, no doubt, mere mannerisms of M. Maelzel, or, if he is aware of them at all, he puts them in practice with a view of exciting in the spectators a false idea of the pure mechanism in the Automaton.All the movements of the arm are at right angles.In this manner, the hand (which is gloved and bent in a natural way,) being brought directly above the piece to be moved, descends finally upon it, the fingers receiving it, in most cases, without difficulty.Occasionally, however, when the piece is not precisely in its proper situation, the Automaton fails in his attempt at seizing it.Mary moved to the bathroom.When this occurs, no second effort is made, but the arm continues its movement in the direction originally intended, precisely as if the piece were in the fingers.John went to the hallway.Having thus designated the spot whither the move should have been made, the arm returns to its cushion, and Maelzel performs the evolution which the Automaton pointed out.At every movement of the figure machinery is heard in motion.During the progress of the game, the figure now and then rolls its eyes, as if surveying the board, moves its head, and pronounces the word _echec _(check) when necessary.{*3} If a false move be made by his antagonist, he raps briskly on the box with the fingers of his right hand, shakes his head roughly, and replacing the piece falsely moved, in its former situation, assumes the next move himself.Upon beating the game, he waves his head with an air of triumph, looks round complacently upon the spectators, and drawing his left arm farther back than usual, suffers his fingers alone to rest upon the cushion.In general, the Turk is victorious--once or twice he has been beaten.The game being ended, Maelzel will again if desired, exhibit the mechanism of the box, in the same manner as before.The machine is then rolled back, and a curtain hides it from the view of the company.There have been many attempts at solving the mystery of the Automaton.The most general opinion in relation to it, an opinion too not unfrequently adopted by men who should have known better, was, as we have before said, that no immediate human agency was employed--in other words, that the machine was purely a machine and nothing else.Many, however maintained that the exhibiter himself regulated the movements of the figure by mechanical means operating through the feet of the box.Of the first of these opinions we shall say nothing at present more than we have already said.In relation to the second it is only necessary to repeat what we have before stated, that the machine is rolled about on castors, and will, at the request of a spectator, be moved to and fro to any portion of the room, even during the progress of a game.The supposition of the magnet is also untenable--for if a magnet were the agent, any other magnet in the pocket of a spectator would disarrange the entire mechanism.The exhibiter, however, will suffer the most powerful loadstone to remain even upon the box during the whole of the exhibition.The first attempt at a written explanation of the secret, at least the first attempt of which we ourselves have any knowledge, was made in a large pamphlet printed at Paris in 1785.The author's hypothesis amounted to this--that a dwarf actuated the machine.This dwarf he supposed to conceal himself during the opening of the box by thrusting his legs into two hollow cylinders, which were represented to be (but which are not) among the machinery in the cupboard No.I, while his body was out of the box entirely, and covered by the drapery of the Turk.When the doors were shut, the dwarf was enabled to bring his body within the box--the noise produced by some portion of the machinery allowing him to do so unheard, and also to close the door by which he entered.The interior of the automaton being then exhibited, and no person discovered, the spectators, says the author of this pamphlet, are satisfied that no one is within any portion of the machine.This whole hypothesis was too obviously absurd to require comment, or refutation, and accordingly we find that it attracted very little attention.Daniel went back to the hallway.In 1789 a book was published at Dresden by M. I. F. Freyhere in which another endeavor was made to unravel the mystery.Freyhere's book was a pretty large one, and copiously illustrated by engravings.His supposition was that "a well-taught boy very thin and tall of his age (sufficiently so that he could be concealed in a drawer almost immediately under the chess-board") played the game of chess and effected all the evolutions of the Automaton.This idea, although even more silly than that of the Parisian author, met with a better reception, and was in some measure believed to be the true solution of the wonder, until the inventor put an end to the discussion by suffering a close examination of the top of the box.These bizarre attempts at explanation were followed by others equally bizarre.Of late years however, an anonymous writer, by a course of reasoning exceedingly unphilosophical, has contrived to blunder upon a plausible solution--although we cannot consider it altogether the true one.His Essay was first published in a Baltimore weekly paper, was illustrated by cuts, and was entitled "An attempt to analyze the Automaton Chess-Player of M.This Essay we suppose to have been the original of the _pamphlet to _which Sir David Brewster alludes in his letters on Natural Magic, and which he has no hesitation in declaring a thorough and satisfactory explanation.The _results _of the analysis are undoubtedly, in the main, just; but we can only account for Brewster's pronouncing the Essay a thorough and satisfactory explanation, by supposing him to have bestowed upon it a very cursory and inattentive perusal.In the compendium of the Essay, made use of in the Letters on Natural Magic, it is quite impossible to arrive at any distinct conclusion in regard to the adequacy or inadequacy of the analysis, on account of the gross misarrangement and deficiency of the letters of reference employed.The same fault is to be found in the "Attempt &c.," as we originally saw it.The solution consists in a series of minute explanations, (accompanied by wood-cuts, the whole occupying many pages) in which the object is to show the _possibility _of _so shifting the partitions _of the box, as to allow a human being, concealed in the interior, to move portions of his body from one part of the box to another, during the exhibition of the mechanism--thus eluding the scrutiny of the spectators.There can be no doubt, as we have before observed, and as we will presently endeavor to show, that the principle, or rather the result, of this solution is the true one.Some person is concealed in the box during the whole time of exhibiting the interior.We object, however, to the whole verbose description of the _manner _in which the partitions are shifted, to accommodate the movements of the person concealed.We object to it as a mere theory assumed in the first place, and to which circumstances are afterwards made to adapt themselves.It was not, and could not have been, arrived at by any inductive reasoning.In whatever way the shifting is managed, it is of course concealed at every step from observation.To show that certain movements might possibly be effected in a certain way, is very far from showing that they are actually so effected.There may be an infinity of other methods by which the same results may be obtained.The probability of the one assumed proving the correct one is then as unity to infinity.But, in reality, this particular point, the shifting of the partitions, is of no consequence whatever.Sandra moved to the garden.It was altogether unnecessary to devote seven or eight pages for the purpose of proving what no one in his senses would deny--viz: that the wonderful mechanical genius of Baron Kempelen could invent the necessary means for shutting a door or slipping aside a pannel, with a human agent too at his service in actual contact with the pannel or the door, and the whole operations carried on, as the author of the Essay himself shows, and as we shall attempt to show more fully hereafter, entirely out of reach of the observation of the spectators.In attempting ourselves an explanation of the Automaton, we will, in the first place, endeavor to show how its operations are effected, and afterwards describe, as briefly as possible, the nature of the _observations _from which we have deduced our result.It will be necessary for a proper understanding of the subject, that we repeat here in a few words, the routine adopted by the exhibiter in disclosing the interior of the box--a routine from which he _never _deviates in any material particular.In the first place he opens the door No.I. Leaving this open, he goes round to the rear of the box, and opens a door precisely at the back of door No.I. To this back door he holds a lighted candle.He then _closes the back door, _locks it, and, coming round to the front, opens the drawer to its full extent.This done, he opens the doors No.3, (the folding doors) and displays the interior of the main compartment.Leaving open the main compartment, the drawer, and the front door of cupboard No.I, he now goes to the rear again, and throws open the back door of the main compartment.In shutting up the box no particular order is observed, except that the folding doors are always closed before the drawer.Now, let us suppose that when the machine is first rolled into the presence of the spectators, a man is already within it.His body is
hallway
Where is Daniel?
(the rear portion of which machinery is so contrived as to slip _en masse, _from the main compartment to the cupboard No.I, as occasion may require,) and his legs lie at full length in the main compartment.When Maelzel opens the door No.I, the man within is not in any danger of discovery, for the keenest eye cannot penetrate more than about two inches into the darkness within.But the case is otherwise when the back door of the cupboard No.A bright light then pervades the cupboard, and the body of the man would be discovered if it were there.The putting the key in the lock of the back door was a signal on hearing which the person concealed brought his body forward to an angle as acute as possible--throwing it altogether, or nearly so, into the main compartment.This, however, is a painful position, and cannot be long maintained.Accordingly we find that Maelzel _closes the back door._This being done, there is no reason why the body of the man may not resume its former situation--for the cupboard is again so dark as to defy scrutiny.Mary moved to the bathroom.The drawer is now opened, and the legs of the person within drop down behind it in the space it formerly occupied.John went to the hallway.{*4} There is, consequently, now no longer any part of the man in the main compartment--his body being behind the machinery in cupboard No.1, and his legs in the space occupied by the drawer.The exhibiter, therefore, finds himself at liberty to display the main compartment.This he does--opening both its back and front doors--and no person Is discovered.The spectators are now satisfied that the whole of the box is exposed to view--and exposed too, all portions of it at one and the same time.They neither see the space behind the drawer, nor the interior of cupboard No.1--the front door of which latter the exhibiter virtually shuts in shutting its back door.Maelzel, having now rolled the machine around, lifted up the drapery of the Turk, opened the doors in his back and thigh, and shown his trunk to be full of machinery, brings the whole back into its original position, and closes the doors.The man within is now at liberty to move about.He gets up into the body of the Turk just so high as to bring his eyes above the level of the chess-board.It is very probable that he seats himself upon the little square block or protuberance which is seen in a corner of the main compartment when the doors are open.In this position he sees the chess-board through the bosom of the Turk which is of gauze.Daniel went back to the hallway.Bringing his right arm across his breast he actuates the little machinery necessary to guide the left arm and the fingers of the figure.This machinery is situated just beneath the left shoulder of the Turk, and is consequently easily reached by the right hand of the man concealed, if we suppose his right arm brought across the breast.The motions of the head and eyes, and of the right arm of the figure, as well as the sound _echec _are produced by other mechanism in the interior, and actuated at will by the man within.The whole of this mechanism--that is to say all the mechanism essential to the machine--is most probably contained within the little cupboard (of about six inches in breadth) partitioned off at the right (the spectators' right) of the main compartment.In this analysis of the operations of the Automaton, we have purposely avoided any allusion to the manner in which the partitions are shifted, and it will now be readily comprehended that this point is a matter of no importance, since, by mechanism within the ability of any common carpenter, it might be effected in an infinity of different ways, and since we have shown that, however performed, it is performed out of the view of the spectators.Our result is founded upon the following _observations _taken during frequent visits to the exhibition of Maelzel.{*5} I. The moves of the Turk are not made at regular intervals of time, but accommodate themselves to the moves of the antagonist--although this point (of regularity) so important in all kinds of mechanical contrivance, might have been readily brought about by limiting the time allowed for the moves of the antagonist.For example, if this limit were three minutes, the moves of the Automaton might be made at any given intervals longer than three minutes.The fact then of irregularity, when regularity might have been so easily attained, goes to prove that regularity is unimportant to the action of the Automaton--in other words, that the Automaton is not a _pure machine._ 2.Now this loss of the sense of proportion in human affairs, Sir, is a very bad sign, and a well-nigh infallible indicator of nerve-strain and general overpressure.But I find a yet more unmistakable evidence in support of my contention in the extraordinary emotional sensibility revealed by these headlines whenever some unfortunate person has been sentenced to death for the most commonplace murder.There is clearly a profound conviction that the jury who heard the evidence, the judge who pronounced their verdict of guilty, the only possible conclusion they could reasonable come to, and the HOME SECRETARY who found himself unable to recommend a reprieve, were, one and all, engaged in a cold-blooded conspiracy against a perfectly innocent man.The convict has said to himself, and that seems to be considered sufficient.And so, night after night, the authors of these headlines harrow themselves by announcing such items as "Blank protests his innocence to his Solicitor.""Distressing Scene on the Scaffold."Consider the strain of all these alterations of hope and despair, repeated time after time, and almost invariably without even the consolation of deferring the fate of their _protege_ by a single hour!Is it not too much for the strongest constitution to endure?a service which the society has no right to demand from any of its members?Yes, Sir, whether these devoted servants of the public know it or not, they are running a most frightful risk; the word which hangs above their heads may fall at any moment.Suppose, for example--and it is surely not wholly an imaginary danger I foresee--suppose that some day some event should happen somewhere of real and serious importance.Have they left themselves any epithet in reserve capable of expressing their sensations at all adequately?They have not; they have squandered participles and adjectives in such reckless profusion that they will discover they are reduced to the condition of inarticulate bankrupts; and, speaking as a medical man, acute cerebral congestion would be the very least result that I should anticipate.Or the determining shock might come from more trivial causes.For instance, we might lose a distinguished statesman, or an ironclad, at the very moment when a football match was decided, or when the professional tipster attached to their particular journal published his "finals."Think of the mental conflict before determining the relative importance of these events, and awarding one or the other its proper prominence on the posters; and then ask yourself, Sir, whether it is an ordeal that any human being of an impressionable, excitable temperament should be required to undergo.What precise remedy should be adopted I do not profess to point out.Perhaps some one of the numerous leagues established to protect adult citizens against themselves might take the matter up, and insist upon these contents-bills being set up for the future in smaller type and with epithets of a more temperate order.Perhaps Parliament or the London County Council might be asked to interfere.All that is not within my province, Sir, but this I do say: unless some measures are taken _soon_, the heavy responsibility will be upon us of having permitted a small but deserving class of our fellow-creatures to hurry themselves into premature mental decay by the pernicious and unwholesome nature of their employment.I am, Sir, Your obedient servant, HIPPOCRATES HELLEBORE, M.D., F.R.C.P.* * * * * [Illustration: VERY HARD LINES._Young Farmer_ (_pulling up at urgent appeal of Pedestrian_).WHY, I THOUGHT YOU WERE LIVING WITH CAPTAIN ADDLEPATE AS COACHMAN?"_Tim._ "SO I WAS, SOR; BUT 'TWASN'T A FAIR BARGIN.SHURE WE WAS NEVER TO GET THRUNK BOTH AT WANCE, SOR!""WELL, THAT SEEMS FAIR ENOUGH, ANYWAY."_Tim._ "BUT, BEGORRA, SOR, THE CAPTIN WAS THRUNK THE WHOLE BLISSID TOIME!"]* * * * * The Rev.Sandra moved to the garden.GEE, Vicar of Windsor, is now installed Canon of St._Prosit!_ Our best wish for him is that, when he is going to give an exceedingly good sermon, may this particular Gee not discover that he is a little hoarse.* * * * * [Illustration: MIGHT HAVE BEEN SAID OTHERWISE!_He_ (_to elderly Young Lady, after a long Waltz_)."YOU MUST HAVE BEEN A SPLENDID DANCER!"]* * * * * "OH, THE MISTLETOE BOUGH!"(_A New Seasonable Song to an old Seasonable Tune._) The mistletoe hung on the brave old oak, The sickle went clinketing stroke upon stroke; The lads and the lasses were blithe and gay, And gambolled in Old Father Christmas's way.Old Christmas held high with a joyous pride The berried branch dear unto damsel and bride; For its silvery berries they seemed to be The stars of that goodly companie."Let her be a New Woman, but never a bride!The old custom's approval I trace In red lip and blue eye upon every face.'Tis the way of the maid, 'tis the way of the man.'Tis also 'the way of a man with a maid,' For Cupid's barter's the oldest trade.""They are seeking to-day every new fangled way; Some tell us that wooing has had its day.In the highest, the lowest, the loneliest lot, The gleam of Love's berry makes one bright spot.And years may fly, as they will fly, fast, But one good old custom at least shall last; And when Christmas appears still the maids will cry:-- 'See!the Old Man bears the Love-berry on high!'"he cried, and he waved his sickle.fortune changes, and fashion's fickle; And youth grows mannish, and manhood old, And red lips wither, warm hearts grow cold: But whenever I come, midst the Yuletide snows, 'Tis not Spring's lily, or Summer's rose Young men and maidens demand, I trow.But old Winter's white-berried Kissing-bough.""For lilies wither, and roses pale, But the Kissing-bough keeps up the old, old tale.John moved to the office.And dull were the world should the old tale cease!Be it kiss of passion, or kiss of peace, The meaning when lip unto lip is laid Is goodwill on earth to man, and maid.That's Yule's best lesson, good friends I vow, So reck ye the rede of the Mistletoe Bough!"So they gather around him with laugh and joke, 'Neath the spreading boughs of that brave old oak, Which hath shelter for all, from the English rose To the whitest snow-bell from Canada's snows, Or hot India's lotus-bud dainty and sweet.But the cry of them all, as in mirth they meet Old Father Christmas, as ever, so now, Is "Hands all round 'neath the Mistletoe Bough!"Our brave, bonny Mistletoe Bough!!!* * * * * [Illustration: "OH, THE MISTLETOE BOUGH!"WITH ALL THEIR NEW-FANGLED NOTIONS, HERE'S ONE OLD CUSTOM ALL AGREE IN KEEPING UP!"]* * * * * CURIOUS ACCIDENT TO MRS.Strolling through Pimlico the other day Mrs.R. was attracted by evidence of a sale by auction going forward in one of the residences in that desirable quarter.Having half an hour to spare she thought she would look in."I was quite surprised," she writes to her son, "when I entered the room to see a gentleman standing in a pulpit which I knew was Mr.PIPCHOSE, leastway, his whiskers were not so mutton-choppy; but I could not mistake him, though meeting him only once at tea at Mrs.BROWN'S where he was very pressing with the muffins.He looked at me in just the same meaning way as when he said, 'Mrs.won't you take another piece of sugar, though as I know it's carrying coals to Newcastle?'I'm not above recognising my friends, wherever I meet them, and gave him a friendly nod, and before I knew where I was, I found I had bought for L3 9_s._ 6_d._ a wool mattress; a pair of tongs (rather bent); a barometer (with the quicksilver missing); a small iron bedstead; a set of tea-things (mostly cracked); an armchair, and a sofa warranted hair-stuffed, but certainly having only three legs.PIPCHOSE at all, as I might have known if I had taken another look at his whiskers, but only a forward auctioneer."* * * * * "The Chinese Government," observed the _City Times_ last week, "is seeking new channels for money."Decidedly China is in straits, and will soon be apparently quite at sea.* * * * * TO MELENDA.(_A Repentance in Triolets._) I swore to you, dear, there was mistletoe there, Though I knew all the time there was none.As I stole a sweet kiss from you out on the stair I swore to you, dear, there was mistletoe there.I have plenty of sins on my soul, dear, to bear, But at least I've confessed now to one.I swore to you, dear, there was mistletoe there Though I knew all the time there was none.I never will do it again, And please am I fully forgiven?In the future from falsehood I mean to refrain.I never will do it again, But look at yourself in your glass to explain Why to mistletoe tale I was driven.I never will do it again, And please am I fully forgiven?There's an answer you'll send if you're thoroughly kind, That will make me feel free from all blame.I hope you'll be glad, dear MELENDA, to find There's an answer you'll send if you're thoroughly kind.It's this, "Though the mistletoe was but a blind, Still with none I'd have done just the same."Sandra journeyed to the bathroom._There_'s the answer you'll send if you're thoroughly kind That will make me feel free from all blame.[Illustration] * * *
office
Where is Daniel?
No better collection of books as a Christmas present for anyone with a regard to a future of literary enjoyment.Nos omnesne laudamus Nimmo?Et respondit Echo: "Immo."I don't go to a Westminster Play for nothing quoth the Baron;" though he added _sotto voce_, "Yes I do though, as I'm a guest."* * * * * FIRST IMPRESSIONS.[Illustration] Genoa in November.Put on thin suit, drink my _cafe au lait_ by open window, and stroll out into beautiful Genoa, basking in the sunshine._Dejeuner_ in the garden of a restaurant, among the old palaces.Think of all the poor people in London.Wonder if anyone is having a frugal lunch at the funny little open-air restaurant in Hyde Park.Mary moved to the bathroom.Lemonade and a bath bun in a fog.In Venice there are so many Germans that one might as well be in Germany.Sitting out on the Piazza, one hears incessantly their monotonous, guttural chatter, always in the same tone of voice, without inflections, without emotion, and, worst of all, without end.Watched at the hotel _table d'hote_ a German lady sitting between two German gentlemen.One man talked loudly without ceasing, mouth full or mouth empty, from soup to dessert.The other man, rather older and feebler, also talked without ceasing, but he could not equal the other's noise; he only added to it.As for the lady, her lips moved all the time; one could imagine the _ja wohl_, the _ach, so?_ the _ja, ja, ja_, but one could not hear a word.At Florence, at Milan, on the Lakes it is the same.If by chance one hears a Frenchman speak, his charming language sounds more vivacious and melodious than ever before.So it is good to be in Genoa, where even the best hotel is kept by Italians.Apparently every other good hotel in Italy is kept by HERR SCHMIDT, or HERR WEBER, or HERR SOMETHINGOROTHER, and all the servants are German also.There is one hotel in Genoa kept by a German.All night long there are whistles, screams, bangs, rumblings, bumps, roars, and other sounds from trains, ships, and tramways.All day long there is the same noise, only more of it.But the Germans do not mind; they talk just the same, and they make each other hear through it all.Charming place, Genoa, with a town hall that is the gayest imaginable.Marble staircases, vestibules adorned with palms, beautiful little gardens, at all sorts of levels, outside the windows of the various offices.If the town rates in Genoa are paid at the Town Hall, the paying of them must be almost pleasant.One would go with that horrible demand note, if that is used also in Italy, and fancy that one was arriving at a ball.The palm-decorated entrance looks just like it.It only needs a lady rate collector, such as one hears of in England, and one surely, in whatever manner the Italians may say it, would beg the charming signora to give one the honour and pleasure of a dance, and scribble her name on the programme--I mean the demand note.And no doubt, the Italian officials being leisurely and the space being ample, one could find time for a waltz in the intervals of rate paying, or at least sit it out in one of the delightful little gardens of this ideal Palazzo Municipale.And so farewell to sunny Genoa, and off to Turin.German hotel again, German proprietor, German servants.Solitary German visitor drinking his morning coffee.The hotels of Turin are not crowded; he and I are alone.John went to the hallway.He must talk his awful language to someone.He shan't talk it to me, for I will pretend I do not understand even one word.The considerate proprietor, thoughtful of his countryman's needs, enters; he stands by the visitor's table, and the talk begins.When it ends I cannot say, for I leave them, well started and in good voice, and hear, as I think, their sweetly melodious phrases for the last time in Italy.There is not much more of Italy now, for here is the Mont Cenis tunnel.Daniel went back to the hallway.Farewell, beautiful country, beautiful pictures, beautiful language!There is someone leaning out of the next carriage window.No doubt he is also saddened; he is speaking to others inside, his voice is cheerful, he is evidently trying not to give way to despair.Now I hear what he says, "_Da werde ich ein Glas Bier trinken, ja, ja, ja!_" A FIRST IMPRESSIONIST.* * * * * WANTED!a Perfect Cure for the incompatibility of Judges' sentences.* * * * * [Illustration: PREHISTORIC PEEPS.DURING A CONSIDERABLE PORTION OF THE YEAR THE SKATING WAS EXCELLENT, AND WAS MUCH ENJOYED BY ALL CLASSES.]* * * * * [Illustration: INDEX] Ad Jovem Pluvium, 263 Afterpart a la L. C. C.(An), 302 "After the Health Congress is over," 71 Airs Resumptive, 45, 66, 83, 165, 205 All my Eye!258 "All up with the Empire," 183 Alpine Railway (An), 95 Amare, O!263 Anglo-Russian Echo (An), 95 Another Man's Ears, 165 Apple of Discord (The), 39 Art of Naval Platitude (The), 216 As we like it, 25 At Last!18 At the Westminster Play, 303 "Automatic" Conscience (The), 147 "Auxiliary Assistance" in the Provinces, 105 Awful Outlook (An), 177 "Awkward Customer" (An), 210 Ballade of Imitations, 11 Ballade of Three Volumes (A), 39 Ballade to Order, 298 "B. and S."at the Savoy (A), 292 Bank Holiday Dream-Book (The), 57 Battle of the Budget (The), 3 Bayard and Bobby, 201 Beauties of Bologna, 215 Betting Man on Cricket (A), 65 Blue Gardenia (The), 185 Bowl me no more!155 British Lions, 185 Broken China, 192 Bygones, 85 Cabby's Answers, 5 Cant _v._ Cant, 207 Certain Cure (A), 145 "Challenge" (The), 219 Chief Mourner (The), 222 Chronicles of a Rural Parish (The), 217, 237, 250, 263, 265, 288, 299 Clerical Question for Exeter (A), 183 Clio at Salcombe, 215 "Clubs!77 Coincidence's Long Arm, 167 Complaint of the Modern Lover, 167 Compliments of the Season, 301 Copperation at Winser (The), 46 "Copy," 297 Corean Cock-fight (The), 54 Counting Noses, 257 Counting the Catch, 90 Crossed!Sandra moved to the garden.251 Cryptogrammatist Wanted, 72 Curios for the Cricketing Exhibition, 298 Curious Accident to Mrs.John moved to the office.R., 336 Curse (The), 118 Dangerous Doctrine, 120 Day of Small Things (The), 213, 255 Day's Ride, a Law's Romance (A), 155 Decadent Guys (The), 225 Demi-French Octave (A), 47 Diary of a Duck, 274 Dilemma of the Headless Spectre, 213 Ditto to Mr.Courtney, 83 Diurnal Feminine (The), 13 Dog on his Day (A), 302 Dog's Meet, 118 Don't "Come unto these Yellow Sands"!Sandra journeyed to the bathroom.114 Doom of the Minor Poets (The), 251 Eastward Ho!63 Ejaculations, 141 Embarras de Richesses, 87 End of the Opera Season (The), 57 Engagement (An), 264 English as she is Crammed, 292 Essence of Parliament, 11, 23, 35, 48, 59, 71, 84, 95, 108 "Evicted Tenants," 42 Extract (An), 281 Fancy Portrait, 15 Farewell to McGladstone, 46 Fashion and Felony, 232 Femina Dux Facti, 221 "Finest English," 113 Finishing Touches, 221 First Impressions, 192, 204, 238, 252, 264, 273, 287, 289, 309 Fizz and Fuss, 298 Fly Route to Castles in the Air, 83 Following Footsteps, 125 Fool's Vade Mecum (The), 273 For Arms or Alms?Mary moved to the hallway.162 "Fourth R" (The), 243 Fragment of a Police "Report d'Arthur," 177 Friend in Need (A), 30 From the Birmingham Festival, 186 Future Fame, 203 Gaiety "Sans-Gene," 9 Gay Widow Courted (A), 221 General Literary Review Company (Limited), 168 Generosity under Difficulties, 291 Gilbert and Carr-icature, 240 Gismonda, 233 Good News, 121 "Good Time coming" (A), 27 Good Wishes, 36 Gossip without Words, 189 "Grand National" Trust (The), 47 Guesses at Goodwood, 37 Hanwellia's Answer, 179 Hardy Annual at Henley, 15 Hawarden Pastoral (A), 96 Haymarket Heroine (The), 241 Helmholtz, 141 Henley Notes, 22 Herrick on Rational Dress, 147 Hint for the Alpine Season, 74 Hopeless Case (A), 135 Hopeless Quest (A), 206 House-Agent's Dream (The), 270 How it will be done hereafter, 89 Ichabod, 253 If not, why not?169 "I'm getting a Big Girl now!"171 Improved and Improving Dialogues, 269 Inconvenienced Traveller's Phrase-Book, 82, 125 Infant Phenomenon (The), 291 In Memoriam, 102; Comte de Paris, 126 In Nuce, 159 In Paris out of the Season, 133 In Praise of Boys, 107 Ins and Outs, 213 Inter-University Football, 285 In the Museum, 141 In Three Volumes, 101 Invasion of Woman (The), 145 Is the Bar a Profitable Profession?109 <DW61> the Giant-Killer, 150 John Bull a la Russe, 264 John Walter, 232 "Judgment of 'Parish'" (The), 267 "Justice as she is Spoken in France," 75 Ladas!141 La Femme de Claude, 42 Latest Great Yacht-Race, 29 Latest Parliamentary Betting, 25 Latest War Intelligence, 276 Law of the (Social) Jungle (The), 111 Lay of the Explorer (The), 33 Lay of the Vigilant (The), 204 Lessons in Laughter, 174 Letters from a Debutante, 168, 180, 183 Letters to a Debutante, 229 Lex Talionis, 141 Light in Darkness, 162 Lines by a Lazy Body, 120 Lines in Pleasant Places, 21, 49, 74, 131, 153 Lines to a Lady, 253 Links (The), 213 Literary Intelligence, 121 Little Ah Sid, 183 Little Flirtation (A), 147 Little Holiday (A), 69 "Little too Previous!"Daniel travelled to the office.(A), 102 "Living Pictures," 197 Local Colour, 210 London Bicyclists, 49 Lord Ormont's Mate and Matey's Aminta, 37, 57, 61 Lord Rosebery in the North, 159 Lost in London, 285 "Lost Rings," 149 Love's Labour Not Lost, 279 Lowered!71 Lower Education of Women (The), 11 Lunnon Twang (The), 159 "Lying Low," 294 Lyre and Lancet, 4, 16, 28, 40, 52, 64, 76, 88, 100, 112, 124, 136, 148, 160, 172, 184, 196, 208, 220, 239, 244, 256, 268, 280 Making of a Man (The), 293 Making the Running with the Derby Winner, 169 "Man in Armour" to the Multitude, 228 March of Civilisation (The), 61 Mary Jones, 285 "Matrimonial Obedience," 179 Matron's Hiss (The), 178 Mayen-aisy-now!233 Mayennaise _v._ Mayonnaise, 203, 209 Message from Mars (The), 81 Midsummer Day-Dream (A), 30 Minx (The), 33 Moan from Mitcham (A), 135 Mobilised Mandarin (The), 141 Modern Madame (A), 27 Modern Mangers, 183 Modern Society Play (The), 285 Modern Tragedy (A), 93 Morbidezza, 204 More Ornamental than Useful, 73 More She-Notes, 249, 276 Morgenlied, 145 "Moving about in Worlds not realised," 192 "Mowing them Down!"Punch on Billiards, 238 Mr.Punch on Peeler Piper, 135 Mr.Punch to Two Noble Sportsmen, 22 Mrs.Prowlina Pry, 195 Much Ado about Nothing, 279 Muddy Milan, 171 Music with a Future (The), 251 "Mutes and Liquids," 121 New Air (The), 87 New and Old, 241 New Candidate (The), 209 New Departure (A), 216 New Fashion (The), 167 New Heroine (The), 293 New Honours, 276 New Lamps for Old, 137 New Man (The), 167 New Nectar (The), 286 New Newness (The), 84 New Party (The), 18 News from Norwich, 131 Next War (The), 94 Noble Half-Hundred!94 Noblesse Oblige, 1, 75 "Nobody Looking!"246 Nomine Tantum, 21 Nominis Umbra, 253 Notices to Correspondents, 286 Not Master of himself though China fall, 74 Novelist's Vade Mecum (The), 261 Novelties in Gastronomy, 251 O. B. C.(Limited) (The), 177 Ode for the Marriage Season, 131, 142 Ode on a Distant Partridge, 138 Ode on Sacrifice, 49 Ode to Ixion, 82 Of Vain Colours, 288 "Oh, the Mistletoe Bough!"306 "Oh, you Wicked Story!"99 "Old Offender" (An), 282 Old Three-Vol., 63 Oliver Wendell Holmes, 191 Ollendorfian, 258 On a Clumsy Cricketer, 106 One Man One Job, 297 On the War in the East, 133 Operatic Notes, 17 Origin of the Blush-Rose, 206 Our
bathroom
Where is Sandra?
119 Oxford and Yale, 48 Oyster and the Sparrow (The), 93 Page from "Rosebery's History of the Commonwealth," 106 Partially Unreported Dialogue, 11 Pat the Patriot, 215 Perils of a Jesting Premier (The), 298 "Personally Conducted," 51 Phalse Note on George the Fourth, 204 Phosphorescence in Art, 24 Pier of the Empire (A), 189 Pious Lyncher's Creed (The), 120 Plague of Poets (The), 121 Plaint of the Unwilling Peer (The), 82 Polite Guide to the Civil Service (The), 207, 227, 234 Political Conference, 231 Polychrome English, 193 Possible Developments, 203 Princely Offer (A), 144 Professor of the Period (The), 153 Puff and a Blow (A), 21 Pullman Car (The), 107 Punch to the New Attorney-General, 205 "Putting his Foot in it," 78 Queer Queries, 83, 101, 107, 117, 246, 297 Question and Answer, 135 Ranelagh in Rain, 47 Rational Dress, 101 Reading between the Lines, 305 Reflections, 167 Remnants, 63 "Rhymes," 109 Rhyme to Rosebery, 96 Rider's Vade Mecum (The), 51 Riverside Lament (A), 25 Robert and Grinnidge, 94 Robert and Unifikashun, 281 Robert Louis Stevenson, 303 Robert on Amerrycans, 120 Robert on the Wonderful Bridge again, 9 Robert's Picter, 145 Robert's Sollem Adwise, 217 "Room for a Big One!"99 Royal Welsh Bard (The), 86 Rubenstein, 255 Rule, "Britannia," 33 Runner Nuisance (The), 125 Sapphics on Traffic, 117 Saturday Pops, 71 School-Board Apple-Pie (The), 219 Scott on the New Woman, 73 Sea-Fairies (The), 122 Sea-quence of Sonnets (A), 153 Seasons (The), 274 Sitting on Our Senate, 106 Sequel to the Story of Ung (A), 300 Seven Ages of Rosebery (The), 165 "Shaky!"270 Silly Seasoning, 110 Slight Adaptation (A), 228 Slow and not quite Sure, 165 Snubbed Professional's Vade Mecum, 289 Society for the Advancement of Literature, 89 Soft Answer (A), 11 Song for the Slogger (A), 117 Song of the Impecunious Bard, 131 Song of the Leaders (The), 201 Song of the Twentieth Century (A), 22 Songs of the Streets, 5, 16 Sounding the Antitoxin, 274 Sport for Ratepayers, 49 State Aid for Matrimony, 13 St.Leger Coincidence (A), 135 Suggested Addendum (A), 126 Sunday Lecture Case (The), 285 Tale of a Vote (The), 201 Tale of Two Telegrams (The), 97 Talk a la Mode de Londres, 261 Talk in Court, 22 Teddie the Tiler, 192 Tempora Mutantur, 131 "Terrible in his Anger!"159 Terrible Transformation (A), 145 Thanks to the "Bystander," 133 That Advanced Woman!142 Those Lancers, 303 "Three Cheers for the Emperor," 297 Three Christmas Greetings, 301 Tips, 144 To a Lady, 294 To Althea in Church, 145 To Althea in the Stalls, 33 To Amanda, 180 To a Philanthropist, 105 To a Pretty Unknown, 192 To a Scorcher, 142 To a Surrey Hostess, 85 To a Would-be Authoress, 93 To a Would-be Despot, 215 To a Venetian Policeman, 195 To a Veteran Champion, 83 "To be taken as read," 77 To Dorothy, 108 To Hanwellia from Earlswood, 137 To her Mother, 120 To Lettina, 209 To Melenda, 309 To Molly, 229 To my Beef Tea, 77 To Philadelphia, 302 To Sentiment, 144 To the Oxford Cricket Captain, 17 Touching Appeal (A), 234 Tree with Variegated Leaves, 277 "Tripping Merrily," 143 Triumph of the School Board (A), 265 True Glory, 276 Truisms of Life (The), 287, 293 Trust to be Trusted (A), 149 Two "General" Favourites, 203 Two Ways of Auditing, 206 Unrest!Mary moved to the bathroom.174 Vacuous Time (The), 119 Vade Mecum for the Naval Manoevres, 37 Vagabond Verses, 219 Venetian Flower-Sellers, 191 Verse and Choral Summing-up, 203 Verses to the Weather Maiden, 93 "Vested Interests," 186 Village Blacksmith (The), 282 "Vive la Republique!"6 Voice from "the Upper Suckles" (A), 85 Volunteer's Vade Mecum (The), 25 Vote of Thanks (A), 65 Voyage of Alfred (The), 113 Waiting their Turn, 18 War Cry (The), 54 Wet-Willow, 107 What's in a Name, indeed?47 What we may expect soon, 27 Wheel and Whoa!137 Where are you going, revolting Maid?198 Where to go, 82 Whims of Amphitryon (The), 245 Whither Away?9 "Wigs on the Green!"John went to the hallway.126 "Winding'em up," 198 With Kind Regards, 277 Words to the Wise Women, 275 Ye Gentlemen of Holland, 78 Yellow Age (The), 66 Yellow Riding-Habit (The), 94 Yet another Memoir of Napoleon, 13 Young Pretender (The), 138 Yule Gretynge (A), 300 LARGE ENGRAVINGS.Daniel went back to the hallway.259 "Awkward Customer" (An), 211 Chief Mourner (The), 223 Corean Cockfight (The), 55 Counting the Catch, 91 Don't "Come unto these Yellow Sands"!115 "Evicted Tenants," 43 "For Example!"Sandra moved to the garden.163 "Friend in Need----" (A), 31 <DW61> the Giant-killer, 151 "Little too Previous!"(A), 103 "Lying Low," 295 "Mowing them Down!"John moved to the office.247 "Oh, the Mistletoe Bough!"Sandra journeyed to the bathroom.67 "Old Offender" (An), 283 "Putting his Foot in it," 79 "Shaky!"271 Touching Appeal (A), 235 Unrest!175 "Vested Interests," 187 "Vive la Republique!"Mary moved to the hallway.7 Waiting their Turn, 19 "Wigs on the Green," 127 "Winding'em up!"199 Young Pretender (The), 139 SMALL ENGRAVINGS.Admiral and his Beard, 275 Ambiguous Invitation to the Major, 251 Andrew dividing the Orange, 49 Animals' Stroll in the Zoo, 81 'Arry and Grass Seeds at Bisley, 29 'Arry and Li Hung Chang's Feather, 180 'Arry and the "Brighton A's," 231 'Arry introducing 'Arriet to Bill, 193 'Arry on the Lords and the Ladies, 261 'Arry photographed on Horseback, 75 Art Critic and Child's Sketch, 6 Baby and Grandpapa's Microscope, 234 Bad Dancer's Opinion of Girls, 22 Bishop and Boating Clergyman, 215 Boy's Mamma who Snores, 126 Boy who Lost all his Buttons, 286 British Farmer and Ceres, 134 British Farmer's Luck turning, 26 Broken Venus of Milo, 11 Brown's "pretty Flat," 232 Bullet-proof Coat for Pet Dog, 41 Caddie's Idea of Excitement (A), 59 Change of Name at Marriage, 167 Chick-a-leary Cochin, 201 Child Patient and Hospital Nurse, 102 Civilisation and War in the East, 62 Climbing the Araucaria, 303 Clubber's Club, 157 Coachman well known at West End, 42 Colonel's Nephew's Man-Servant, 155 "Constant Reader" writing to Papers, 209 Contrasted Couples at Sea-side, 114 Country Lady and Major Visitor, 198 Cow Stamp on the Butter, 74 Cromwell and the Statues, 98 Curate at an Otter-hunt, 39 Curate sings "The Brigand's Revenge," 283 Cyclist startling Fox-hunter, 304 Dancing Ostrich (The), 165 Discussing a Beastly Book, 227 Engagement Ring weights the Boat, 53 Epicure to his Love (An), 181 Eton Boy and the Floods, 253 Fat Diner's Hungry Acquaintance, 297 Fisherman's Empty Flask, 73 Fond Wife and the Stupid Paper, 82 Forgetting whom he took into Dinner, 210 French Lady and our Artist's Wife, 30 German Emperor's Song (The), 178 Giving Hunting Mare her Head, 267 Gladstone and the Microscope, 254 Gladstone and the "Twelfth," 61 Gladstonius sings to Roseberius, 230 Golfers playing Spillikins, 27 Grandma's Friend of Forty Years ago, 150 Gutter Children and Cheap Gloves, 121 Hair-dressing Room in the Commons, 202 Harcourt as "Old Kaspar," 2 Harcourt's Bills personally conducted, 50 Hippopotamus Policeman, 141 Hodge and the Apple of Power, 266 Housewife and Lazy Tramp, 15 Hunter's Seedy Tale (A), 171 Hunting Party at a Deep Brook, 279 Infant's Contempt of Court, 13 Invalid and her Lady Visitor, 57 Invalided Weather-Girl, 107 Irish Chamber of Horrors, 166 Irish Jarvey and the Scenery, 24 <DW61> Lectures on the Art of War, 290 Johnny and Pills in a Pear, 65 Jones not Dining anywhere, 36 Jones's Handsome Umbrella, 87 Justin McCarthy's Anger, 158 Juveniles discussing Hats in Church, 138 Keeper's Dog's Force of Habit, 301 Keeper's Remark on Strong Birds, 147 Kitchen Improvements in the House, 214 Ladies "at Home" to Visitors, 246 Lady Vocalist's Small Chest (A), 277 Laureateship Apple of Discord (The), 38 Little Ah Sid and the Butterfly Bee, 182 Little Boy and "'Maginations," 207 Little Girls and Fairy Tale, 5 Little Girl and Five-days' Foal, 69 Little Girl and German Doctor, 191 Little Girl's Matrimonial "Hint," 107 Little Girl's Message to Shoemaker, 144 London Boy and J.'s Knickerbockers, 71 London Passenger and Paris Porters, 119 London Schoolgirl and little Friend, 273 Major's Cheap Burgundy, 94 Mamma and Missie's Age, 78 Master discharging his Coachman, 142 Maud's Country Cousin on Horseback, 21 Miss Golightly and her Partner, 153 Miss Grace at a Golf Match, 159 Miss Roland's Two Hansoms, 258 Miss Unified London's Toys, 170 Mr.'s Flirtation with Miss C., 146 Mr.Daniel travelled to the office.Punch at White Lodge, 1 Mr.John went back to the garden.Simpkin's Misquotation at Dinner, 54 Mrs.Jinks on the effect of Liqueurs, 263 Mrs.Pry entering the Empire, 194 Mrs.Weaver and the New Chimes, 238 Music blending with Conversation, 18 Nervous Amateur and Stage Fright, 118 Nervous Youth and a Clever Beauty, 174 New Lord Chief Justice and Punch, 14 Newly-Upholstered Room (A), 186 "New Woman" Rabbit-Shooter, 111 Norfolk Bathers' Scotch Friend, 156 Nothing stops a Hard-mouthed Grey, 51 Old Crossing-Sweeper's Obstinacy, 83 Old Lady of Threadneedle Street's Gold, 86 Orlando and Rosalind Cycling, 25 Ostentatiously Good Fences, 219 Parliamentary Flying Machine, 217 Parliamentary Swimming-Bath, 58 Pat and the Kicking Horse, 255 "Perambulators not admitted," 131 Police making way for Perambulator, 45 Postman and Nursery-Maids, 63 Prehistoric Cricket-Match (A), 34 Prehistoric Dragon-shooting, 262 Prehistoric Football Match (A), 190 Prehistoric Henley Regatta, 10 Prehistoric Highland Stalking, 154 Prehistoric Lord Mayor's Show, 226 Prehistoric Naval Manoeuvres, 70 Prehistoric Seaside Resort, 130 Prehistoric Skating, 310 Professor and Atlas Omnibuses, 287 Punch and the Prince on Muscovy, 278 Punch and the Sirens, 122 Pupil Farmer thrown on his Head, 243 Putting O'Flaherty into a Novel, 298 Rat-tailed Hunter in the Rain, 195 Reduced Noblemen in Disguise, 110 Result of Sal's Re-marrying, 105 Rosebery as Bob Acres, 218 Row at the Schoolboard (The), 242 Rugby Footballer at a Dance, 270 Schoolboy and Tragedian, 123 Scotch Landlady on Salmon-poaching, 299 Scotchman threatens to go to Law, 265 Scotch Parishioner and Whisky, 250 Scotch Tourists in Search of Dinner, 183 Shopping, not Buying, 245 Short 'Arry and Long Alf, 149 "Shot Over" Pony (A), 237 Sea-Lion Ashore (The), 177 Seven Miles from Peebles, 95 Snapdragon Galop (The), 302 Society Crush at Hyde Park Corner, 3 Stork as he might have been (The), 213 Stout Citizen and Irish Beggar, 229 Swell compliments Splendid Dancer, 306 Swells discussing Behaviour, 185 Swell's Opinion about Stout Ladies, 162 Swell suffering from Insomnia, 203 Taking Lady's Skirt for 'Bus Apron, 291 Temperance Enthusiast and Boatman, 274 Three Lovers, 90 Tommy and his Aunt's Age, 179 Two or Three Nice Americans, 66 Two Sons passing Examinations, 289 Vicar's Daughter on Snoring, 294 Volunteer Sentry and Rustic, 249 Vulgar Boy and little Dog's Tail, 285 Yokel's Impression of London, 106 Washing St.John moved to the bedroom.Paul's suggested, 206 Winning Jockey and Irish Stable-boy, 99 Young Couple residing in Hill Street, 222 Young Farmer and Groom, 305 Young Lady's Ball Presents, 97 * * * * * [Illustration: FINIS] * * * * * LONDON: BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO., LIMITED.PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS
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1 29.908 S.E.3.5 2 .912 S.E.3.5 3 .915 S.E.3.5 4 .917 S.E.2.5 5 .914 S.E.2.5 6 .913 E.S.E.2.5 7 .909 S.E.2.5 8 .899 E.S.E.9 .886 S.E.10 .878 E. by S.11 .869 E..860 E.1 .852 E.3.5 2 .853 E.3.5 3 .848 E.3.2 4 .834 E.5 .817 E.N.E.6 29.808 E.N.E.7 .810 N.E.8 .812 N.E.3.5 9 .812 N.E.3.5 10 .806 N.E.3.5 11 .795 E.N.E.3.5 12 .784 E.N.E.Sandra travelled to the office.3.5 18th August.1 29.779 E. by N.3.5 2 .771 E. by N.3.2 3 .762 E. by N.3.2 4 .758 E. by N.3.2 5 .751 E. by N.3.5 6 .740 N.E.3.5 7 .721 N.E.8 .696 N.E.4.5 9 29.666 N.E.10 .640 N.E.5.2 11 .612 N.E..581 N.E.6.5 1 .548 N.E.2 .526 N.E.6.5 3 .50 N.7.5 4 .482 N. by E.5 .459 N.E.7.5 6 .435 N.E.7 .421 N.E.8 .411 N.E.9 .408 N.E.10 .405 N.E.8.5 11 .401 N.E.Sandra went to the bathroom.8.7 12 .375 N.E.8.7 19th August.1 29.306 N.E.5.7 2 .319 N. by E.3 .335 N. by E.4 .351 N.7.5 5 .364 N.7.2 6 .376 N.7.2 7 .383 N. by W.6.5 8 .376 N. by W.7.2 9 .361 N.N.W.7.7 10 .347 N.N.W.11 29.324 N.W..295 N.W.1 .268 N.W.7.7 2 .252 N.W.7.5 3 .238 N.W.7.7 4 .223 N.W.7.7 5 .220 W. by N.6 .221 W. by N.7 .225 W. by N.8 .229 W. by N.8.5 9 .233 W.8.5 10 .243 W.8.5 11 .256 W.8.5 12 .282 W. by S.1 29.351 W. by S.2 .363 W. by S.3 .375 W. by S.4 .413 W. by S.5 .437 W.S.W.7.5 6 .457 S.W.7 .457 S.W.8 .471 S.W.9 .489 S.W.6.5 10 .505 S.W.6.5 11 .512 S.W..515 S.W.6.5 The barometric readings are corrected to the freezing-point density of the atmosphere, as also to the level of the ocean, and are further reduced by comparison with the Standard Barometer at the New Observatory.They are also relieved of a source of error arising from the regular decline for each day of the barometer, as evidenced by the observations made during June and July, 1858, in mean latitude 23 deg.52' N., mean longitude 119 deg.12' E. This downward tendency will be apparent from the following readings for each hour:--for 1h.- 0.018, noon - 0.015, 1h.These quantities are to be read as implying that when added to or deducted from those supplied by actual observations, they result in the quantities already assigned as the corrected averages for the day.The direction as well as strength of the wind are copied from the averages as calculated by the Commodore from the ship's log, the meteorological journals and the daily postings made by the Commodore himself.* * * * * According to the delineation of the path of the cyclone, as prepared from the observations recorded, the following table, already referred to, gives the approximative distance of the ship at stated points from such central path, as compared with that deduced from barometrical observations, allowing for the differences already mentioned.In the case of the wind-pressure, the average is deduced from the mean of successive observations taken every hour, and for the most part divided into intervals of three hours each.Distance pressure.according to curve.1 17th August 4 A.M.336 29.915 in.336 2 " " noon.297 .860 0.055 300 3 18th " midnight.265 .783 .132 257 4 " " 6 A.M.230 .736 .178 233 5 " " 9 A.M.205 .667 .248 205 6 " " 6 P.M.153 .438 .477 153 7 19th " 3 A.M.140 .335 .580 138 8 " " 5 A.M.148 .364 .551 142 9 " "
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146 .373 .542 143 10 " " noon.125 .296 .619 130 11 " " 3 P.M.123 .238 .677 122 12 " " 6 P.M.134 .222 .693 138 13 " " 9 P.M.148 .235 .680 144 14 20th " midnight.183 .296 .619 183 15 " " 6 A.M.Sandra travelled to the office.313 .450 .465 313 The minimum pressure according to the curve would be 28.975, but must actually have been less.According to the strict reading it would result that all radii before reaching the point where nearest the central path, as also all those in the same half-circle after such central line has been crossed, should have the same value, whatever the direction, which if rigidly asserted cannot be correct, since the motion of a cyclone is truly circular only in the immediate vicinity of its central point.As that point is receded from, the motion becomes more or less elliptical, as is attested by the barometric differences, which had the cyclone been a true circle in all its parts ought to be similar for similar distances.Sandra went to the bathroom.This it is admitted is not the case, as the barometric pressure shows a marked decline in the earlier part of a cyclone the more rapidly the central line is approached, just as it rises again once that line has been passed.For this reason the distances as assigned upon a line of curves deduced from the foregoing observations must be too great, especially those which are calculated at right angles to the path of the typhoon, because perpendiculars drawn at right angles to the varying directions of the wind must intersect each other at points more distant than the actual central point of the cyclone itself.* * * * * To the foregoing may be appended a few extracts recounting the damage done by the great typhoon of 27th July, 1862, from which some idea may be formed of the tremendous violence and destructive effects of this description of atmospheric agency._From London and China Telegraph, 29th Sept., 1862._ "A dreadful typhoon occurred at Canton on 27th July, 1862.The destruction of life and property is immense, the loss of life in the city and neighbourhood being estimated at about forty thousand.In the telegram which was received a few days ago announcing this event, a query was placed, and very reasonably, after the number stated; but the press state that as far as inquiries have been made at present it is probably correct.The loss of life has chiefly occurred amongst the junk population, and the fine new fleet of forty Imperial junks, intended for the Yang-tse-kiang, has been destroyed.The water rose till the streets of Honam had three feet in them, but the buildings suffered less than might have been expected; some two or three hundred feet of the granite wall at Shameen was washed away, and blocks of stone were driven about as if they had been billets of wood; houses in the city had also been blown down, and trees rooted up; the rice crops have suffered severely; and the total damage may be estimated in millions of dollars.Gaillard, an American Missionary, was killed by the falling in of his house; and the residences of the Rev.Bonney and Piercey were thrown down, a large junk having been driven up against them.At Whampoa the docks were all flooded, while the workshops attached were unroofed and otherwise injured.From the _China Mail_, which gives a long and graphic description of this disastrous visitation, we extract the following:--'The British brig _Mexicana_ capsized in Hall and Co.'s dock, and lies on her beam-ends; the British ship _Dewa Gungadhur_ is lying on her side in Gow and Co.'s dock; the British steamer _Antelope_, in the Chinese dock at the corner of Junk River, has her bow run up over the head of the dock, and her stern at an angle of thirty degrees into it; the British steamer _Bombay Castle_ was washed off the blocks in Couper's wooden dock, and was scuttled by her captain to save her from being floated out of the dock; the American ship _Washington_ is aground, blocking up the entrance to the Chinese dock in Junk River; the American ship _Jacob Bell_ and British barque _Cannata_ are high on a mud flat, dry at low water--the latter making water, and discharging her cargo; the new British steamer _Whampoa_ broke from her moorings and went ashore, but has since been got off without injury.Several chops sunk, and five of the foreign Customs' inspectors were drowned.Bamboo-town is entirely destroyed, the water having flooded it to the depth of six feet, and swept off a great number of its inhabitants.It is greatly to be feared that the disasters among the shipping outside will prove something frightful, and that many vessels now anxiously expected have either been driven on the rocks and gone to pieces or have foundered at sea.Already, it will have been observed, one dismasted vessel, the Danish brig _Hercules_, has come in; and more may be looked for in the course of the next fortnight.The _Iskandershah_ is on shore in the river, close to Tiger Island, a little above the Bogue.'One writer says the city looks just as it did after the bombardment by Admiral Seymour, and that there has not been such a typhoon since 1832."The typhoon which visited Canton so severely also committed great ravages at the port of Macao.Many junks were sunk or driven ashore, and their crews drowned.The _Chilo_, a British ship engaged in the rice trade, went ashore, and is a total wreck; and another vessel was also reported lost.The wharves have suffered severely, and houses were blown down.A letter, dated 28th July, says:--'Yesterday morning a very strong typhoon did a great deal of damage here.The new sea wall on the Praia Grande stood it well, except in one place; but the old one, which has stood so many typhoons before, is now nearly entirely broken down; also Messrs.Some houses have come down, and trees on the Praia and other places have lost nearly all their branches.The British barque _Chilo_ got ashore outside, and has parted amidships; about 100 piculs copper cash have been saved from her cargo.The steamer _Syce_ is ashore in the inner harbour, but without damage.A good many junks and boats have capsized or been dismasted, and a great many lives lost.The appearance of the Praia Grande after the typhoon was really astonishing.We had a very short notice or indication of a typhoon.On Saturday night the wind commenced to blow from N.E., but not before Sunday morning, about a quarter past four, did the barometer go down, and it stood at 8 A.M.it was blowing hardest from S.W., and caused the greatest damage.'"_The following reprint (by permission) from the columns of the "Spectator" of 11th Oct.and 25th Oct., 1862, conveys so accurate an idea of the achievements of the gallant and lamented Burke and Wills, and of the mismanagement that led to their disastrous fate, that no apology is needed for inserting it here._ THE AUSTRALIAN EXPLORING EXPEDITION OF 1860.[159] (_Spectator, 11th and 25th Oct., 1862._) "Those who are interested--and who is not?--in the history of the latest and most successful of Australian exploring expeditions will find the principal materials requisite for the satisfaction of their curiosity in the small volume now before us.The special interest attaching to this particular expedition lies in the striking contrast which it presents between the perfect success of its leaders and their melancholy end.Having accomplished their arduous task of traversing the Australian continent from south to north, Messrs.Burke and Wills returned to their starting-point, only to find that the depot which they had established there had been abandoned by their companions less than twelve hours before their arrival.Utterly broken down by privation and fatigue, and disappointed of the succour on which they had confidently relied, they were unable to traverse the comparatively trifling distance which separated them from the settled districts, and, after some weeks of hopeless wandering, they were literally starved to death when almost within sight of aid.The story of these few weeks, as contained in the scanty records left by Messrs.Burke and Wills, and in the statement made by their sole surviving companion, is one of the most touching narratives of human fortitude that we have ever met with.The feeling of sympathy, almost painful in its intensity, which it necessarily excites, is immediately followed by a desire to ascertain the precise quarter in which the gross neglect which alone could have rendered such a catastrophe possible can justly be charged.It is to this point that we propose mainly to direct the remarks which we have to make on Mr.Mary went to the bedroom.Jackson's volume; and we shall recapitulate the history of the expedition only so far as is absolutely necessary to render our observations generally intelligible."The exploring party left Melbourne on August 20, 1860.It was accompanied by a number of camels, which had been imported for the purpose, on the supposition that these animals would be peculiarly fitted to bear the privations incidental to such a journey.Landells, who had charge of the camels, was second in command; and the third officer was Mr.William John Wills, who also acted as astronomical and meteorological observer to the expedition.On September 23 they reached Menindie, on the Darling river, about 400 miles from Melbourne.Landells, in consequence of some disagreement with Mr.Burke, resigned his post; and Dr.Beckler, the medical officer to the expedition, declined to go any further.Hereupon Burke appointed Wills in Landells' place, and divided his party, leaving one section at Menindie, in charge of Beckler, while he, with Wills and six others, pushed on, on October 19, for Cooper's Creek, about 400 miles further north, under the guidance of one Wright, a man acquainted with the country, whom he met with on the spot.On October 31, when about half-way between Menindie and Cooper's Creek, Burke appointed Wright third officer, and sent him back to the Darling, with instructions to bring up the remainder of the party and stores to Cooper's Creek without delay.He then pushed on, and reached the Creek on November 11.He remained here about a month, and then again divided his party.Three men, six camels, and twelve horses were left at the depot on the Creek, under the command of Mr.Brahe, whose instructions were to remain till Burke's return, or until he was forced to retreat by want of provisions.Burke started on December 16, taking with him Wills, King, and Gray, six camels, one horse, and provisions for three months, which was the time he expected to be absent; but he told Brahe that he might be away four months, or even more.On February 11, 1861, he reached a point only a few miles from the shore of the Gulf of Carpentaria, and thus accomplished his mission of entirely crossing the Australian Continent from south to north.He at once retraced his steps, and arrived at the depot in Cooper's Creek on April 21, accompanied by Wills and King, Gray having died a few days before.They found that Brahe had quitted his post that very morning, and started for the Darling, leaving some provisions buried at the foot of a tree, on which he had cut an inscription indicating the fact.The exhausted explorers debated what they had best do.Wills and King wished to make for Menindie; but Burke, thinking that, weak as they were, it was hopeless to try to overtake Brahe, decided to push for the nearest settled districts of South Australia, distant about 150 miles.This they did on April 23, having left a note in Brahe's _cache_, but without adding anything to his inscription on the tree, or leaving any distinct intimation that they had ever been there.They were so weak that they could not advance more than five or six miles a day; their camels knocked up, their provisions ran short; and, finally, Burke died on July 1st, Wills having succumbed a day or two earlier.King, the sole survivor, fell in with the natives, who treated him kindly; and he was rescued on September 15th by a party sent from Melbourne in search of him, under the guidance of Mr.Wright, and see how he carried out the instructions given him by his chief.Burke, as we have already said, sent him back to Menindie on October 31, 1860; and he reached that place on November 5.Here, in the teeth of Burke's orders to bring the rest of the party on to Cooper's Creek _without delay_, he remained inactive until January 26, 1861, when he appears to have moved northward.He never, however, got further than Bullo, a place about sixty miles south of Cooper's Creek, where Mr.Brahe fell in with him on April 29, and at once placed himself under his orders.Two days later Wright left Bullo, and moved a few miles further south, "not seeing the utility of pushing on the depot to Cooper's Creek for the purpose of remaining there the few weeks their stores would last."On May 3, at Brahe's suggestion, Wright and he returned to the depot on Cooper's Creek, taking no stores with them.They remained there a quarter of an hour, did not examine the _cache_, and then, seeing no signs of Burke having been there, rejoined the rest of their party, and made their way back to the Darling, whence Brahe at once proceeded to Melbourne.On hearing his report, the Exploration Committee lost no time in despatching the relief party, under Mr.Daniel moved to the hallway.Howitt, which, as we have already said, discovered King in the following September."After the foregoing brief summary of the facts of the case, the reader will probably have but little difficulty in coming to the conclusion that the death of Messrs.Burke and Wills was, in great measure, owing to Mr.Wright's having so unaccountably neglected to obey the distinct instructions of his chief.Jackson, indeed, holds that no one but Wright was at all to blame in the matter.Nay, he even goes so far as to accuse Wright of having wilfully and deliberately left the leaders of the expedition to a fate which he must have known would be the natural result of his inaction.'Can any reasonable person,' he asks, 'doubt that Wright knew perfectly well the exact nature of his instructions, and foresaw the disastrous consequences almost certain to ensue should they be disregarded.'This very serious charge is based upon a passage in a despatch from Mr.Wright to the Exploration Committee at Melbourne, dated Dec.19th, in which he says:--'As I have every reason to believe that Mr.Burke has pushed on from Cooper's Creek, relying upon finding the depot stores at that water-course upon his return, there is room for the most serious apprehensions as to the safety of himself and party, should he find that he has miscalculated.'
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This passage seems at least to prove that Wright had fully comprehended both the meaning and the object of the instructions he had received, _to return to Menindie, and bring up the stores as rapidly as possible to Cooper's Creek_.In the teeth of these positive orders he remained at Menindie no less than eighty-two days, from Nov.26th, 1861, doing literally nothing at all.There was, as far as we can see, nothing to prevent him from reaching Cooper's Creek with a portion of the stores before the end of 1860.The distance from Menindie to the Creek is about 400 miles, and Mr.Burke had traversed it without difficulty in twenty-three days.When Burke left Cooper's Creek on December 16th, he was in daily expectation of Wright's arrival.Had this reasonable expectation been fulfilled, there would then have been no reason why Brahe should not have remained at the depot for six months, or even a longer time.Wright appears to have spent a considerable portion of the time which he wasted at Menindie in making trips to see his wife and family, who were at a station about twenty-one miles off, being troubled with fears that they would not get safely and comfortably to Adelaide, whither he wished to send them.The explanation by which he subsequently endeavoured to account for his delay was anything but satisfactory.In the despatch already referred to, dated Dec.29th, he alleged that he 'delayed starting merely because the camels left behind by Mr.Brahe were too few in number, and too inferior in carrying powers, to carry out a really serviceable quantity of provisions.'When, however, he was examined by the Commissioners appointed to inquire into the affair, he stated that he remained at Menindie because he was waiting for the confirmation of his appointment as third officer.When pressed to reconcile these two statements, and reminded that, unless he could do so satisfactorily, he 'stood in an awkward position before the Commission,' he made no reply.When at last he did set out from Menindie, we have seen that he advanced no further than Bullo, where he was joined by Brahe on April 29th.In explanation of this circumstance, he urges that Burke had left Menindie at a favourable season, when water was abundant; while when he started the advance of summer had dried up all the water-courses, and the ravages of scurvy had reduced the effective strength of his party to an alarming extent.Sandra travelled to the office.This statement is, no doubt, substantially true; but we need hardly observe that it rather aggravates than extenuates his offence.Since he was well acquainted with the country, and knew that the advance of summer would immensely increase the difficulty of traversing it, he is all the more inexcusable for not having attempted the journey before the hot weather set in.When, after having been joined by Brahe, he paid a final visit to Cooper's Creek, the careless manner in which he conducted the search almost drives us to the conclusion that he was completely indifferent to its result.It was at Brahe's suggestion that he went back at all.Then though both he and Brahe were mounted, and were accompanied by a spare pack-horse, he did not, although the contingency of finding Burke's party was the sole object of his journey, attempt to provide for it by taking with him any stores of any kind.On reaching the depot, he stayed there only a quarter of an hour, and then, having failed in that time to discover any trace of Burke's party, at once turned his back on the Creek.It is scarcely possible to imagine how, under such circumstances, he could have omitted to examine the _cache_ made by Brahe a few days before, in which case he would have discovered that Burke's party had returned to the Creek, and would have learnt the direction in which they had gone.When questioned on this point by the Commissioners, he replied that he had noticed traces of natives about the place, and feared that if he disturbed the ground where the stores were hid they would see that something was buried there, and would plunder the _cache_.He 'had not the presence of mind,' he went on, to add any mark of his own to the inscription which Brahe had cut upon the tree.He seems, in fact, to have been thoroughly sick of the whole business, and to have thought of nothing but getting back to the settled districts with all possible speed."We must now inquire what amount of blame can be fairly attached to Mr.Brahe, whose departure from Cooper's Creek was the immediate cause of the melancholy end of Messrs.Sandra went to the bathroom.He appears to have received instructions to remain at the Creek until the return of Burke's party, or, at any rate, until the failure of his provisions obliged him to retreat.Burke fixed three months as the probable duration of his absence; but Wills seems to have impressed upon Brahe that it was quite possible they might have been away for at least four months.Brahe did actually remain there more than four months--from December 16th to April 21st;--but he left before he was absolutely compelled to do so.Even supposing him not to have overrated the supply of provisions necessary to carry his party back to the Darling, he could clearly have remained until he had consumed the stores which he left behind him at the Creek.But we must not forget that he was placed in a very difficult position.One of his companions was dangerously ill, and had for some time beset him with entreaties to return to Menindie; and all his party seem to have thought it very doubtful whether Burke would return that way at all.In Brahe's diary, on April 18th, we find the entry, 'There is no probability of Mr.Here the observation suggests itself that, had this been his real conviction, there was no occasion for him to deprive himself of the stores which he left behind him.Jackson points out that the letter left by Brahe in the _cache_ at the Creek did not give a true account of the condition of his party.In it Brahe said that they were all quite well except one, and that the camels and horses were in good working condition.It was this intelligence which induced Burke to decide to make a push for South Australia.Had he known that Brahe's party, both men and beasts, were really in a weak and exhausted state, as the slowness of their rate of progression appears to prove, he would probably have decided to follow in their track.Since Brahe was under Wright's command at the time of their final return to Cooper's Creek, the lamentable carelessness which, as we have already said, was displayed on that occasion, cannot fairly be laid to his charge.It is almost impossible for us, with the full knowledge of all the circumstances which we now possess, not to allow our judgment to be influenced by the fact that, if Brahe had postponed his departure for a few hours only, the melancholy catastrophe would not have occurred.If, however, we wish to judge him fairly, we must not forget that this is a fact of which, at the time of his departure, he was necessarily ignorant.On the whole, we are inclined to agree with the verdict pronounced in his case by the Commissioners who were appointed to inquire into the affair.'His decision,' they say, 'was most unfortunate; but we believe he acted from a conscientious desire to discharge his duty, and we are confident that the painful reflection that twenty-four hours' further perseverance would have made him the rescuer of the explorers, and gained for himself the praise and approbation of all, must be of itself an agonizing thought, without the addition of censure he might feel himself undeserving of.'"We have now to inquire into the manner in which Mr.Burke discharged his duties as leader of the expedition, with a view of ascertaining whether its melancholy termination can, in any degree, be traced to any fault, whether of omission or of commission, on his part.If we are willing to submit ourselves absolutely to Mr.Jackson's guidance, we may, indeed, spare ourselves this trouble; for he asserts most distinctly that Mr.Burke invariably did what was best under existing circumstances, and that he never neglected any precaution which could tend in any way to bring his undertaking to a successful issue.Jackson comes forward as the avowed advocate of Mr.Burke; and, while we are not one whit behind him in enthusiastic admiration for the energy and self-devotion displayed by his hero, we must not allow our respect for these qualities to blind us to any defects which we think we can detect in the conduct of the expedition.The report of the Commission, appointed by the Victorian Government to inquire into the circumstances connected with the death of Burke and Wills, finds fault with Burke on several points, which we will proceed to consider in detail.In the first place, it pronounces that Burke acted'most injudiciously' in dividing his party at Menindie.We are not sure that we can entirely concur in this verdict.We do not see any evidence that Burke intended the depot at Menindie to be a permanent one.On the contrary, it seems clear that he intended it to have been transferred bodily to Cooper's Creek.On his arrival at Menindie, Dr.Beckler's refusal to proceed further placed him in an awkward position.As Beckler had no objection to remain at Menindie, Burke resolved to make his services available as far as possible, and left him there with a section of the party in charge of the heavier stores, while he himself pushed on towards Cooper's Creek under the guidance of Mr.The division of the party did not in any way <DW44> or imperil Burke's arrival at Cooper's Creek; and he seems to have looked forward to the union of all his forces at that place before he proceeded further.As soon as he was convinced that Wright was worthy of confidence, he appointed him third officer of the expedition, and sent him back to bring the remainder of the party to Cooper's Creek without delay, at the same time accepting Beckler's resignation, and relieving him from any further charge.We cannot therefore see that the division of the party at Menindie was directly productive of any evil consequences, nor would any harm have resulted from it, but for Wright's flagrant neglect of the instructions of his chief.In the next place, the report pronounces that 'it was an error of judgment on the part of Mr.Wright to an important command in the expedition, without a previous personal knowledge of him.'Mary went to the bedroom.On this point we think there is good ground for the censure of the Commission.That Burke was, as it were, driven into a corner by the resignation of Landells and Beckler is quite true; but it is difficult to imagine that he should not have been able (supposing him to possess any insight into character at all) to detect, during the time that he and Wright were together, some indication of the gross incompetence which the latter subsequently displayed.Jackson endeavours to shift the blame from Mr.Burke's shoulders to those of the Exploration Committee, by observing that the Committee knew of Wright's appointment by Dec.3, and so had plenty of time, if they had had any objection to him, to replace him by some one else.What objection could the Committee possibly have to a man whose name they had never heard before that moment?Clearly they are not to blame for relying upon the judgment of the leader whom they had selected, and confirming his appointment of a man who he assured them 'was well qualified for the post, and bore the very highest character.'Whatever blame may attach to the selection of Mr.Wright for a post of trust must rest entirely upon Mr.Burke for finally departing from Cooper's Creek before the arrival of the depot party from Menindie, and for undertaking so extended a journey with an insufficient supply of provisions.On both these points there is something to be said in Mr.As regards the first, his conduct was the natural result of his misplaced confidence in Wright, combined with the consideration that the success of his journey depended in great measure upon the rapidity with which it was prosecuted.With respect to the second, we must remember that on an expedition of this kind, when the carrying power is limited, and every ounce of weight has to be considered, it is almost as important to exclude everything that is superfluous as it is to leave behind nothing that is strictly necessary.Burke was guilty of an error in judgment, in underrating the time which the journey from Cooper's Creek to Carpentaria was likely to require.Daniel moved to the hallway.Finally, the Commissioners draw attention to the fact that it does not appear that Burke kept any regular journal, or that he gave written instructions to his officers.'Had he,' they observe on this point--and we fully concur in their remark--'performed these essential portions of the duties of a leader, many of the calamities of the expedition might have been averted, and little or no room would have been left for doubt in judging of the conduct of those subordinates, who pleaded unsatisfactory and contradictory verbal orders and statements.'"We are unable, the reader will perceive, to concur in Mr.Jackson's repeatedly expressed opinion, that there are no grounds whatever for any of the censures which the Commissioners found it their duty to pronounce on some points connected with Mr.The fact is, that after a careful consideration of all the circumstances of the case, we incline to the conclusion that Mr.Burke did not possess the qualifications necessary for the successful leadership of such an enterprise; and that, consequently, some blame must rest with the Exploration Committee, who selected a comparatively unfit person for a position of such responsibility and importance.We appreciate and admire, as enthusiastically as Mr.John went to the garden.Jackson himself can possibly do, the courage and self-devotion displayed by Mr.Burke; but we cannot forget that gallantry and daring are not the only qualities required in the leader of an exploring expedition through an unknown and difficult country.The choice of the Committee was, we believe, mainly dictated by the consideration that Mr.John travelled to the office.Burke had, while employed in the police-force of the colony, shown himself to be possessed of a considerable talent for organization, and of no little aptitude for command.Gustavus and the Winter-King were his Brothers-in-law; Gustavus wedded to his Sister, he to Winter-King's.His relations to Poland, feudal superior of Preussen, were delicate; and Gustavus was in deadly quarrel with Poland.And then Gustavus's sudden laying-hold of Pommern, which had just escaped from Wallenstein and the Kaiser?It must be granted, poor George Wilhelm's case demanded circumspectness.One can forgive him for declining the Bohemian-King speculation, though his Uncle of Jagerndorf and his Cousins of Liegnitz were so hearty and forward in it.Pardonable in him to decline the Bohemian speculation;--though surely it is very sad that he found himself so short of "butter and firewood" when the poor Ex-King, and his young Wife, then in a specially interesting state, came to take shelter with him![Solltl _(Geschichte des Dreissigjahrigen Krieges,_--a trivial modern Book) gives a notable memorial from the Brandenburg RATHS, concerning these their difficulties of housekeeping.Their real object, we perceive, was to get rid of a Guest so dangerous as the Ex-King, under Ban of the Empire, had now become.]But when Gustavus landed, and flung out upon the winds such a banner as that of his,--truly it was required of a Protestant Governor of men to be able to read said banner in a certain degree.A Governor, not too IMperfect, would have recognized this Gustavus, what his purposes and likelihoods were; the feeling would have been, checked by due circumspectness: "Up, my men, let us follow this man; let us live and die in the Cause this man goes for!Live otherwise with honor, or die otherwise with honor, we cannot, in the pass things have come to!"--And thus, at the very worst, Brandenburg would have had only one class of enemies to ravage it; and might have escaped with, arithmetically speaking, HALF the harrying it got in that long Business.But Protestant Germany--sad shame to it, which proved lasting sorrow as well--was all alike torpid; Brandenburg not an exceptional case.No Prince stood up as beseemed: or only one, and he not a great one; Landg
office
Where is John?
Wilhelm of Hessen all along;--and a few wild hands, Christian of Brunswick, Christian of Anhalt, Johann George of Jagerndorf, who stormed out tumultuously at first, but were soon blown away by the Tilly-Wallenstein TRADE-WINDS and regulated armaments:--the rest sat still, and tried all they could to keep out of harm's way.The "Evangelical Union" did a great deal of manifestoing, pathetic, indignant and other; held solemn Meetings at Heilbronn, old Sir Henry Wotton going as Ambassador to them; but never got any redress.Had the Evangelical Union shut up its inkhorns sooner; girt on its fighting-tools when the time came, and done some little execution with them then, instead of none at all,--we may fancy the Evangelical Union would have better discharged its function.It might have saved immense wretchedness to Germany.In fact, had there been no better Protestantism than that of Germany, all was over with Protestantism; and Max of Bavaria, with fanatical Ferdinand II.Sandra travelled to the office.as Kaiser over him, and Father Lammerlein at his right hand and Father Hyacinth at his left, had got their own sweet way in this world.But Protestant Germany was not Protestant Europe, after all.Over seas there dwelt and reigned a certain King in Sweden; there farmed, and walked musing by the shores of the Ouse in Huntingdonshire, a certain man;--there was a Gustav Adolf over seas, an Oliver Cromwell over seas; and "a company of poor men" were found capable of taking Lucifer by the beard,--who accordingly, with his Lammerleins, Hyacinths, Habernfeldts and others, was forced to withdraw, after a tough struggle!-- Chapter XVI.-- THIRTY-YEARS WAR.The enormous Thirty-Years War, most intricate of modern Occurrences in the domain of Dryasdust, divides itself, after some unravelling, into Three principal Acts or Epochs; in all of which, one after the other, our Kurfurst had an interest mounting progressively, but continuing to be a passive interest.Act FIRST goes from 1620 to 1624; and might be entitled "The Bohemian King Made and Demolished."Personally the Bohemian King was soon demolished.His Kingship may be said to have gone off by explosion; by one Fight, namely, done on the Weissenberg near Prag (Sunday, 8th November, 1620), while he sat at dinner in the City, the boom of the cannon coming in with interest upon his high guests and him.He had to run, in hot haste, that night, leaving many of his important papers,--and becomes a Winter-King.Winter-King's account was soon settled.But the extirpating of his Adherents, and capturing of his Hereditary Lands, Palatinate and Upper-Palatinate, took three years more.Hard fighting for the Palatinate; Tilly and Company against the "Evangelical-Union Troops, and the English under Sir Horace Vere."Evangelical-Union Troops, though marching about there, under an Uncle of our Kurfurst (Margraf Joachim Ernst, that lucky Anspach Uncle, founder of "the Line"), who professed some skill in soldiering, were a mere Picture of an Army; would only "observe," and would not fight at all.So that the whole fighting fell to Sir Horace and his poor handful of English; of whose grim posture "in Frankendale" [Frankenthal, a little Town in the Palatinate, N.W.and other Strongholds, for months long, there is talk enough in the old English History-Books.Then there were certain stern War-Captains, who rallied from the Weissenberg Defeat:--Christian of Brunswick, the chief of them, titular Bishop of Halberstadt, a high-flown, fiery young fellow, of terrible fighting gifts; he flamed up considerably, with "the Queen of Bohemia's glove stuck in his Hat:" "Bright Lady, it shall stick there, till I get you your own again, or die!"[1621-1623, age not yet twenty-five; died (by poison), 1626, having again become supremely important just then._"Gottes Freund, der Pfaffen Feind_ (God's Friend, Priests' Foe);" _"Alles fur Ruhm und Ihr (All for Glory and Her,"_--the bright Elizabeth, become Ex-Queen), were mottoes of his.--Buddaus IN VOCE (i.Christian of Brunswick, George of Jagerndorf (our Kurfurst's Uncle), Count Mansfeldt and others, made stormy fight once and again, hanging upon this central "Frankendale" Business, till they and it became hopeless.For the Kaiser and his Jesuits were not in doubt; a Kaiser very proud, unscrupulous; now clearly superior in force,--and all along of great superiority in fraud.Christian of Brunswick, Johann George and Mansfeldt were got rid of: Christian by poison; Johann George and Mansfeldt by other methods,--chiefly by playing upon poor King James of England, and leading him by the long nose he was found to have.The Palatinate became the Kaiser's for the time being; Upper Palatinate (OBER-PFALZ) Duke Max of Bavaria, lying contiguous to it, had easily taken."Incorporate the Ober-Pfalz with your Bavaria," said the Kaiser, "you, illustrious, thrice-serviceable Max!And let Lammerlein and Hyacinth, with their Gospel of Ignatius, loose upon it.Nay, as a still richer reward, be yours the forfeited KUR (Electorship) of this mad Kur-Pfalz, or Winter-King.Sandra went to the bathroom.I will hold his Rhine-Lands, his UNTER-PFALZ: his Electorship and OBER-PFALZ, I say, are yours, Duke, henceforth KURFURST Maximilian!"[Kohler, _Reichs-Historie,_ p.Which was a hard saying in the ears of Brandenburg, Saxony and the other Five, and of the Reich in general; but they had all to comply, after wincing.For the Kaiser proceeded with a high hand.He had put the Ex-King under Ban of the Empire (never asking "the Empire" about it); put his Three principal Adherents, Johann George of Jagerndorf one of them, Prince Christian of Anhalt (once captain at the Siege of Juliers) another, likewise under Ban of the Empire; [22d Jan.and in short had flung about, and was flinging, his thunder-bolts in a very Olympian manner.Under all which, what could Brandenburg and the others do; but whimper some trembling protest, "Clear against Law!"The Evangelical Union did not now any more than formerly draw out its fighting-tools.Mary went to the bedroom.In fact, the Evangelical Union now fairly dissolved itself; melted into a deliquium of terror under these thunder-bolts that were flying, and was no more heard of in the world.-- SECOND ACT, OR EPOCH, 1624-1629.A SECOND UNCLE PUT TO THE BAN, AND POMMERN SNATCHED AWAY.Except in the "NETHER-SAXON CIRCLE" (distant Northwest region, with its Hanover, Mecklenburg, with its rich Hamburgs, Lubecks, Magdeburgs, all Protestant, and abutting on the Protestant North), trembling Germany lay ridden over as the Kaiser willed.Foreign League got up by France, King James, Christian IV.of Denmark (James's Brother-in-law, with whom he had such "drinking" in Somerset House, long ago, on Christian's visit hither [Old Histories of James I.)]), went to water, or worse.Only the "Nether-Saxon Circle" showed some life; was levying an army; and had appointed Christian of Brunswick its Captain, till he was got poisoned;--upon which the drinking King of Denmark took the command.Act SECOND goes from 1624 to 1627 or even 1629; and contains drunken Christian's Exploits.Which were unfortunate, almost to the ruin of Denmark itself, as well as of the Nether-Saxon Circle;--till in the latter of these years he slightly rallied, and got a supportable Peace granted him (Peace of Lubeck, 1629); after which he sits quiet, contemplative, with an evil eye upon Sweden now and then.The beatings he got, in quite regular succession, from Tilly and Consorts, are not worth mentioning: the only thing one now remembers of him is his alarming accident on the ramparts of Hameln, just at the opening of these Campaigns.At Hameln, which was to be a strong post, drunken Christian rode out once, on a summer afternoon (1624), to see that the ramparts were all right, or getting all right;--and tumbled, horse and self (self in liquor, it is thought), in an ominous alarming manner.Taken up for dead;--nay some of the vague Histories seem to think he was really dead:--but he lived to be often beaten after that, and had many moist years more.Our Kurfurst had another Uncle put to the Ban in this Second Act,--Christian Wilhelm Archbishop of Magdeburg, "for assisting the Danish King;" nor was Ban all the ruin that fell on this poor Archbishop.What could an unfortunate Kurfurst do, but tremble and obey?There was still a worse smart got by our poor Kurfurst out of Act Second; the glaring injustice done him in Pommern.Does the reader remember that scene in the High Church of Stettin a hundred and fifty years ago?How the Burgermeister threw sword and helmet into the grave of the last Duke of Pommern-Stettin there; and a forward Citizen picked them out again in favor of a Collateral Branch?Never since, any more than then, could Brandenburg get Pommern according to claim.Collateral Branch, in spite of Friedrich Ironteeth, in spite even of Albert Achilles and some fighting of his; contrived, by pleading at the Diets and stirring up noise, to maintain its pretensions: and Treaties without end ensued, as usual; Treaties refreshed and new-signed by every Successor of Albert, to a wearisome degree.The sum of which always was: "Pommern does actual homage to Brandenburg; vassal of Brandenburg;--and falls home to it, if the now Extant Line go extinct."Daniel moved to the hallway.Nay there is an ERBVERBRUDERUNG (Heritage-Fraternity) over and above, established this long time, and wearisomely renewed at every new Accession.Hundreds of Treaties, oppressive to think of:--and now the last Duke, old Bogislaus, is here, without hope of children; and the fruit of all that haggling, actual Pommern to wit, will at last fall home?John went to the garden.For the Kaiser having so triumphantly swept off the Winter-King, and Christian IV.in the rear of him, and got Germany ready for converting to Orthodoxy,--wished now to have some hold of the Seaboard, thereby to punish Denmark; nay thereby, as is hoped, to extend the blessings of Orthodoxy into England, Sweden, Holland, and the other Heretic States, in due time.This is the Kaiser's fixed wish, rising to the rank of hope now and then: all Europe shall become <DW7> again by the help of God and the Devil.So the Kaiser, on hardly any pretext, seized Mecklenburg from the Proprietors,--"Traitors, how durst you join Danish Christian?"Duke of Mecklenburg, "Admiral of the EAST SEA (Baltic);" and set to "building ships of war in Rostock,"--his plans going far.[Kohler, _Reichs-Historie,_ pp, 524, 525.]John travelled to the office.This done, he seized Pommern, which also is a fine Sea-country,--stirring up Max of Bavaria to make some idle pretence to Pommern, that so the Kaiser might seize it "in sequestration till decided on."Under which hard treatment, George Wilhelm had to sit sad and silent,--though the Stralsunders would not.Hence the world-famous Siege of Stralsund (1628); fierce Wallenstein declaring, "I will have the Town, if it hung by a chain from Heaven;" but finding he could not get it; owing to the Swedish succor, to the stubborn temper prevalent among the Townsfolk, and also greatly to the rains and peat-bogs.A second Uncle of George Wilhelm's, that unlucky Archbishop of Magdeburg above mentioned, the Kaiser, once more by his own arbitrary will, put under Ban of the Empire, in this Second Act: "Traitor, how durst you join with the Danes?"The result of which was Tilly's Sack of Magdeburg (10-12th May, 1631), a transaction never forgettable by mankind.--As for Pommern, Gustav Adolf, on his intervening in these matters, landed there: Pommern was now seized by Gustav Adolf, as a landing-place and place-of-arms, indispensable for Sweden in the present emergency; and was so held thenceforth.Pommern will not fall to George Wilhelm at this time.THIRD ACT, AND WHAT THE KURFURST SUFFERED IN IT.And now we are at Act THIRD:--Landing of Gustav Adolf "in the Isle of Usedom, 24th June, 1630," and onward for Eighteen Years till the Peace of Westphalia, in 1648;--on which, as probably better known to the reader, we will not here go into details.In this Third Act too, George Wilhelm followed his old scheme, peace at any price;--as shy of Gustav as he had been of other Champions of the Cause; and except complaining, petitioning and manifestoing, studiously did nothing.Poor man, it was his fate to stand in the range of these huge collisions,--Bridge of Dessau, Siege of Stralsund, Sack of Magdeburg, Battle of Leipzig,--where the Titans were bowling rocks at one another; and he hoped, by dexterous skipping, to escape share of the game.Daniel journeyed to the bedroom.To keep well with his Kaiser,--and such a Kaiser to Germany and to him,--this, for George Wilhelm, was always the first commandment.If the Kaiser confiscate your Uncles, against law; seize your Pommern; rob you on the public highways,--George Wilhelm, even in such case, is full of dubitations.Nay his Prime-Minister, one Schwartzenberg, a Catholic, an Austrian Official at one time,--Progenitor of the Austrian Schwartzenbergs that now are,--was secretly in the Kaiser's interest, and is even thought to have been in the Kaiser's pay, all along.Gustav, at his first landing, had seized Pommern, and swept it clear of Austrians, for himself and for his own wants; not too regardful of George Wilhelm's claims on it.He cleared out Frankfurt-on-Oder, Custrin and other Brandenburg Towns, in a similar manner,--by cannon and storm, when needful;--drove the Imperialists and Tilly forth of these countries.Advancing, next year, to save Magdeburg, now shrieking under Tilly's bombardment, Gustav insisted on having, if not some bond of union from his Brother-in-law of Brandenburg, at least the temporary cession of two Places of War for himself, Spandau and Custrin, indispensable in any farther operation.Which cession Kurfurst George Wilhelm, though giving all his prayers to the Good Cause, could by no means grant.Daniel travelled to the hallway.Gustav had to insist, with more and more emphasis; advancing at last, with military menace, upon Berlin itself.He was met by George Wilhelm and his Council, "in the woods of Copenick," short way to the
hallway
Where is Daniel?
[_OEvres de Frederic le Grand_ (Berlin, 1846-1856 et seqq.: _Memoires de Brandebourg_), i.For the rest, Friedrich's Account of the Transaction is very loose and scanty: see Pauli (iv.For many hours so; round the inflexible Gustav,--who was there like a fixed milestone, and to all questions and comers had only one answer!--_"Que faire; ils ont des canons?Sandra travelled to the office."_ This was the 3d May, 1631.This probably is about the nadir-point of the Brandenburg-Hohenzollern History.The little Friedrich, who became Frederick the Great, in writing of it, has a certain grim banter in his tone; and looks rather with mockery on the perplexities of his poor Ancestor, so fatally ignorant of the time of day it had now become.On the whole, George Wilhelm did what is to be called nothing, in the Thirty-Years War; his function was only that of suffering.He followed always the bad lead of Johann George, Elector of Saxony; a man of no strength, devoutness or adequate human worth; who proved, on these negative grounds, and without flagrancy of positive badness, an unspeakable curse to Germany.Not till the Kaiser fulminated forth his Restitution-Edict, and showed he was in earnest about it (1629-1631), "Restore to our Holy Church what you have taken from her since the Peace of Passau!"--could this Johann George prevail upon himself to join Sweden, or even to do other than hate it for reasons he saw.Seized by the throat in this manner, and ordered to DELIVER, Kur-Sachsen did, and Brandenburg along with him, make Treaty with the Swede.[8th February, 1631 (Kohler, _Reichs-Historie,_ pp.in consequence of which they two, some months after, by way of co-operating with Gustav on his great march Vienna-ward, sent an invading force into Bohemia, Brandenburg contributing some poor 3,000 to it; who took Prag, and some other open Towns; but "did almost nothing there," say the Histories, "except dine and drink."It is clear enough they were instantly scattered home [October, 1633 (Stenzel, i.Sandra went to the bathroom.at the first glimpse of Wallenstein dawning on the horizon again in those parts.Gustav having vanished (Field of Lutzen, 6th November, 1632 [Pauli, iv.]), Oxenstiern, with his high attitude, and "Presidency" of the "Union of Heilbronn," was rather an offence to Kur-Sachsen, who used to be foremost man on such occasions.Kur-Sachsen broke away again; made his Peace of Prag, [1635, 20th May (Stenzel, i.Mary went to the bedroom.whom Brandenburg again followed; Brandenburg and gradually all the others, except the noble Wilhelm of Hessen-Cassel alone.Miserable Peace; bit of Chaos clouted up, and done over with Official varnish;--which proved to be the signal for continuing the War beyond visible limits, and rendering peace impossible.After this, George Wilhelm retires from the scene; lives in Custrin mainly; mere miserable days, which shall be invisible to us.He died in 1640; and, except producing an active brave Son very unlike himself, did nothing considerable in the world._"Que faire; ils ont des canons!"_ Among the innumerable sanguinary tusslings of this War are counted Three great Battles, Leipzig, Lutzen, Nordlingen.Under one great Captain, Swedish Gustav, and the two or three other considerable Captains, who appeared in it, high passages of furious valor, of fine strategy and tactic, are on record.But on the whole, the grand weapon in it, and towards the latter times the exclusive one, was Hunger.The opposing Armies tried to starve one another; at lowest, tried each not to starve.Each trying to eat the country, or at any rate to leave nothing eatable in it: what that will mean for the country, we may consider.As the Armies too frequently, and the Kaiser's Armies habitually, lived without commissariat, often enough without pay, all horrors of war and of being a seat of war, that have been since heard of, are poor to those then practised.The detail of which is still horrible to read.Germany, in all eatable quarters of it, had to undergo the process;--tortured, torn to pieces, wrecked, and brayed as in a mortar under the iron mace of war.[Curious incidental details of the state it was reduced to, in the Rhine and Danube Countries, turn up in the Earl of Arundel and Surrey's TRAVELS ("Arundel of the Marbles") as _Ambassador Extraordinary to the Emperor Ferdinando II.in 1636_ (a small Volume, or Pamphlet, London, 1637).]Brandenburg saw its towns sieged and sacked, its country populations driven to despair, by the one party and the other.Three times,--first in the Wallenstein Mecklenburg period, while fire and sword were the weapons, and again, twice over, in the ultimate stages of the struggle, when starvation had become the method--Brandenburg fell to be the principal theatre of conflict, where all forms of the dismal were at their height.In 1638, three years after that precious "Peace of Prag," the Swedes (Banier VERSUS Gallas) starving out the Imperialists in those Northwestern parts, the ravages of the starving Gallas and his Imperialists excelled all precedent; and the "famine about Tangermunde had risen so high that men ate human flesh, nay human creatures ate their own children."Daniel moved to the hallway._"Que faire; ils ont des canons!_" Chapter XVII.-- DUCHY OF JAGERNDORF.This unfortunate George Wilhelm failed in getting Pommern when due; Pommern, firmly held by the Swedes, was far from him.But that was not the only loss of territory he had.Jagerndorf,--we have heard of Johann George of Jagerndorf, Uncle of this George Wilhelm, how old Joachim Friedrich put him into Jagerndorf, long since, when it fell home to the Electoral House.Jagerndorf is now lost; Johann George is under REICHS-ACHT (Ban of Empire), ever since the Winter-King's explosion, and the thunder-bolts that followed; and wanders landless;--nay he is long since dead, and has six feet of earth for a territory, far away in Transylvania, or the RIESEN-GEBIRGE (Giant Mountains) somewhere.DUKE OF JAGERNDORF, ELECTOR'S UNCLE, IS PUT UNDER BAN.Johann George, a frank-hearted valiant man, concerning whom only good actions, and no bad one, are on record, had notable troubles in the world; bad troubles to begin with, and worse to end in.He was second Son of Kurfurst Joachim Friedrich, who had meant him for the Church.[1577-1624: Rentsch, p.John went to the garden.The young fellow was Coadjutor of Strasburg, almost from the time of getting into short-clothes.He was then, still very young, elected Bishop there (1592); Bishop of Strasburg,--but only by the Protestant part of the Canons; the Catholic part, unable to submit longer, and thinking it a good time for revolt against a Protestant population and obstinately heterodox majority, elected another Bishop,--one "Karl of the House of Lorraine;" and there came to be dispute, and came even to be fighting needed.Fighting; which prudent Papa would not enter into, except faintly at second-hand, through the Anspach Cousins, or others that were in the humor.John travelled to the office.Troublesome times for the young man; which lasted a dozen years or more.At last a Bargain was made (1604); Protestant and Catholic Canons splitting the difference in some way; and the House of Lorraine paying Johann George a great deal of money to go home again.[_OEuvres completes de Voltaire,_ 97 vols.(Paris, 1825-1832), xxxiii.284.--Kohler (_Reichs-Historie,_ p.Daniel journeyed to the bedroom.487) gives the authentic particulars.]Poor Johann George came out of it in that way; not second-best, think several.He was then (1606) put into Jagerndorf, which had just fallen vacant; our excellent fat friend, George Friedrich of Anspach, Administrator of Preussen, having lately died, and left it vacant, as we saw.George Friedrich's death yielded fine apanages, three of them in all: FIRST Anspach, SECOND, Baireuth, and this THIRD of Jagerndorf for a still younger Brother.There was still a fourth younger Brother, Uncle of George Wilhelm; Archbishop of Magdeburg this one; who also, as we have seen, got into REICHS-ACHT, into deep trouble in the Thirty-Years War.He was in Tilly's thrice-murderous Storm of Magdeburg (10th May, 1631); was captured, tumbled about by the wild soldiery, and nearly killed there.Poor man, with his mitre and rochets left in such a state!In the end he even became CATHOLIC,--from conviction, as was evident, and bewilderment of mind;--and lived in Austria on a pension; occasionally publishing polemical pamphlets.[1587; 1628; 1665 (Rentsch, pp.-- As to Johann George, he much repaired and beautified the Castle of Jagerndorf, says Rentsch: but he unfortunately went ahead into the Winter-King's adventure; which, in that sad battle of the Weissenberg, made total shipwreck of itself, drawing Johann George and much else along with it.Johann George was straightway tyrannously put to the Ban, forfeited of life and lands: [22d January, 1621 (Kohler, _Reichs-Historie,_ p.518: and rectify Hubner, t.Johann George disowned the said Ban; stood out fiercely for self and Winter-King; and did good fighting in the Silesian strongholds and mountain-passes: but was forced to seek temporary shelter in SIEBENBURGEN (Transylvania); and died far away, in a year or two (1624), while returning to try it again.Sleeps, I think, in the "Jablunka Pass;" the dumb Giant-Mountains (RIESEN-GEBIRGE) shrouding up his sad shipwreck and him.Daniel travelled to the hallway.Jagerndorf was thus seized by Ferdinand II.of the House of Hapsburg; and though it was contrary to all law that the Kaiser should keep it,--poor Johann George having left Sons very innocent of treason, and Brothers, and an Electoral.Nephew, very innocent,--to whom, by old compacts and new, the Heritage in defect of him was to fall,--neither Kaiser Ferdinand II.nor any Kaiser would let go the hold; but kept Jagerndorf fast clenched, deaf to all pleadings, and monitions of gods or men.Till at length, in the fourth generation afterwards, one "Friedrich the Second," not unknown to us,--a sharp little man, little in stature, but large in faculty and renown, who is now called "Frederick the Great,"--clutched hold of the Imperial fist (so to speak), seizing his opportunity in 1740; and so wrenched and twisted said close fist, that not only Jagerndorf dropped out of it, but the whole of Silesia along with Jagerndorf, there being other claims withal.And the account was at last settled, with compound interest,--as in fact such accounts are sure to be, one way or other.John went to the bedroom.And so we leave Johann George among the dumb Giant-Mountains again.-- FRIEDRICH WILHELM, THE GREAT KURFURST, ELEVENTH OF THE SERIES.John travelled to the office.Brandenburg had again sunk very low under the Tenth Elector, in the unutterable troubles of the times.But it was gloriously raised up again by his Son Friedrich Wilhelm, who succeeded in 1640.This is he whom they call the "Great Elector (GROSSE KURFURST);" of whom there is much writing and celebrating in Prussian Books.As for the epithet, it is not uncommon among petty German populations, and many times does not mean too much: thus Max of Bavaria, with his Jesuit Lambkins and Hyacinths, is, by Bavarians, called "Maximilian the Great."Friedrich Wilhelm, both by his intrinsic qualities and the success he met with, deserves it better than most.His success, if we look where he started and where he ended, was beyond that of any other man in his day.He found Brandenburg annihilated, and he left Brandenburg sound and flourishing; a great country, or already on the way towards greatness.Undoubtedly a most rapid, clear-eyed, active man.There was a stroke in him swift as lightning, well-aimed mostly, and of a respectable weight, withal; which shattered asunder a whole world of impediments for him, by assiduous repetition of it for fifty years.[1620; 1640; 1688.]There hardly ever came to sovereign power a young man of twenty under more distressing, hopeless-looking circumstances.Political significance Brandenburg had none; a mere Protestant appendage dragged about by a <DW7> Kaiser.His Father's Prime-Minister, as we have seen, was in the interest of his enemies; not Brandenburg's servant, but Austria's.The very Commandants of his Fortresses, Commandant of Spandau more especially, refused to obey Friedrich Wilhelm, on his accession; "were bound to obey the Kaiser in the first place."He had to proceed softly as well as swiftly; with the most delicate hand to get him of Spandau by the collar, and put him under lock-and-key, him as a warning to others.For twenty years past, Brandenburg had been scoured by hostile armies, which, especially the Kaiser's part of which, committed outrages new in human history.In a year or two hence, Brandenburg became again the theatre of business; Austrian Gallas advancing thither again (1644), with intent "to shut up Torstenson and his Swedes in Jutland," where they had been chastising old Christian IV., now meddlesome again, for the last time, and never a good neighbor to Sweden.Gallas could by no means do what he intended: on the contrary, he had to run from Torstenson, what feet could do; was hunted, he and his MERODE-BRUDER (beautiful inventors of the "Marauding" Art), "till they pretty much all died (CREPERTIN)," says Kohler.[_Reichs-Historie,_ p.No great loss to society, the death of these Artists: but we can fancy what their life, and especially what the process of their dying, may have cost poor Brandenburg again!-- Friedrich Wilhelm's aim, in this as in other emergencies, was sun-clear to himself, but for most part dim to everybody else.He had to walk very warily, Sweden on one hand of him, suspicious Kaiser on the other; he had to wear semblances, to be ready with evasive words; and advance noiselessly by many circuits.More delicate operation could not be imagined.With extraordinary talent, diligence and felicity the young man wound himself out of this first fatal position: got those foreign Armies pushed out of his Country, and kept them out.His first concern had been to find some vestige of revenue, to put that upon a clear footing; and by loans or otherwise to scrape a little ready money together.
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On the strength of which a small body of soldiers could be collected about him, and drilled into real ability to fight and obey.This as a basis: on this followed all manner of things: freedom from Swedish-Austrian invasions, as the first thing.He was himself, as appeared by and by, a fighter of the first quality, when it came to that: but never was willing to fight if he could help it.Preferred rather to shift, manoeuvre and negotiate; which he did in a most vigilant, adroit and masterly manner.But by degrees he had grown to have, and could maintain it, an Army of 24,000 men: among the best troops then in being.With or without his will, he was in all the great Wars of his time,--the time of Louis XIV., who kindled Europe four times over, thrice in our Kurfurst's day.The Kurfurst's Dominions, a long straggling country, reaching from Memel to Wesel, could hardly keep out of the way of any war that might rise.He made himself available, never against the good cause of Protestantism and German Freedom, yet always in the place and way where his own best advantage was to be had.had often much need of him: still oftener, and more pressingly, had Kaiser Leopold, the little Gentleman "in scarlet stockings, with a red feather in his hat," whom Mr.Savage used to see majestically walking about, with Austrian lip that said nothing at all.[_A Compleat History of Germany,_ by Mr.Savage (8vo, London, 1702), p.Prefixed to the volume is the Portrait of a solid Gentleman of forty: gloomily polite, with ample wig and cravat,--in all likelihood some studious subaltern Diplomatist in the Succession War.His little Book is very lean and barren: but faithfully compiled,--and might have some illumination in it, where utter darkness is so prevalent.Most likely, Addison picked his story of the _Siege of Weinsberg_ ("Women carrying out their Husbands on their back,"--one of his best SPECTATORS) out of this poor Book.]His 24,000 excellent fighting-men, thrown in at the right time, were often a thing that could turn the balance in great questions.They required to be allowed for at a high rate,--which he well knew how to adjust himself for exacting and securing always.WHAT BECAME OF POMMERN AT THE PEACE; FINAL GLANCE INTO CLEVE-JULICH.When the Peace of Westphalia (1648) concluded that Thirty-Years Conflagration, and swept the ashes of it into order again, Friedrich Wilhelm's right to Pommern was admitted by everybody: and well insisted on by himself: but right had to yield to reason of state, and he could not get it.The Swedes insisted on their expenses: the Swedes held Pommern, had all along held it,--in pawn, they said, for their expenses.Nothing for it but to give the Swedes the better half of Pommern.FORE-Pommern (so they call it, "Swedish Pomerania" thenceforth), which lies next the Sea: this, with some Towns and cuttings over and above, was Sweden's share: Friedrich Wilhelm had to put up with HINDER-Pommern, docked furthermore of the Town of Stettin, and of other valuable cuttings, in favor of Sweden.Much to Friedrich Wilhelm's grief and just anger, could he have helped it.They gave him Three secularized Bishoprics, Magdeburg, Halberstadt, Minden, with other small remnants, for compensation; and he had to be content with these for the present.But he never gave up the idea of Pommern: much of the effort of his life was spent upon recovering Fore-Pommern: thrice-eager upon that, whenever lawful opportunity offered.To no purpose then: he never could recover Swedish Pommern; only his late descendants, and that by slowish degrees, could recover it all.Readers remember that Burgermeister of Stettin, with the helmet and sword flung into the grave and picked out again:--and can judge whether Brandenburg got its good luck quite by lying in bed!-- Once, and once only, he had a voluntary purpose towards War, and it remained a purpose only.Soon after the Peace of Westphalia, old Pfalz-Neuburg, the same who got the slap on the face, went into tyrannous proceedings against the Protestant part of his subjects in Julich-Cleve: who called to Friedrich Wilhelm for help.Friedrich Wilhelm, a zealous Protestant, made remonstrances, retaliations: ere long the thought struck him, "Suppose, backed by the Dutch, we threw out this fantastic old gentleman, his Papistries, and pretended claims and self, clear out of it?"This was Friedrich Wilhelm's thought; and he suddenly marched troops into the Territory, with that view.But Europe was in alarm, the Dutch grew faint: Friedrich Wilhelm saw it would not do.He had a conference with old Pfalz-Neuburg: "Young gentleman, we remember how your Grandfather made free with us and our august countenance!Nevertheless we--" In fine, the "statistic of Treaties" was increased by One: and there the matter rested till calmer times.In 1666, as already said, an effective Partition of these litigated Territories was accomplished: Prussia to have the Duchy of Cleve-Proper, the Counties of Mark and Ravensburg, with other Patches and Pertinents: Neuburg, what was the better share, to have Julich Duchy and Berg Duchy.Furthermore, if either of the Lines failed, in no sort was a collateral to be admitted: but Brandenburg was to inherit Neuburg, or Neuburg Brandenburg, as the case might be.A clear Bargain this at last: and in the times that had come, it proved executable so far.But if the reader fancies the Lawsuit was at last out in this way, he will be a simple reader!In the days of our little Fritz, the Line of Pfalz-Neuburg was evidently ending: but that Brandenburg and not a collateral should succeed it, there lay the quarrel,--open still, as if it had never been shut: and we shall hear enough about it!-- THE GREAT KURFURST'S WARS: WHAT HE ACHIEVED IN WAR AND PEACE.Friedrich Wilhelm's first actual appearance in War, Polish-Swedish War (1655-1660), was involuntary in the highest degree: forced upon him for the sake of his Preussen, which bade fair to be lost or ruined, without blame of his or its.Nevertheless, here too he made his benefit of the affair.The big King of Sweden had a standing quarrel with his big Cousin of Poland, which broke out into hot War; little Preussen lay between them, and was like to be crushed in the collision.Swedish King was Karl Gustav, Christina's Cousin, Charles Twelfth's Grandfather; a great and mighty man, lion of the North in his time: Polish King was one John Casimir; chivalrous enough, and with clouds of forward Polish chivalry about him, glittering with barbaric gold.Ralph wanted to keep a clear slate, and here was a bad break, right at the threshold of his new railroad career.All he thought of, however, were the delays, all he cared for at this particular moment was to get back to the main tracks on his way for Bridgeport, with a chance to make up lost time.A sudden vague suspicion flashing through his mind added to his mental disquietude: was there a plot to purposely <DW36> or delay his train, so that he would be defeated in his efforts to make a record run?"What's this tangle, Fairbanks?"shouted out the conductor sharply, as he arrived breathless and excited at the side of the cab.His name was Danforth, and he was a model employee of long experience, always very neat and dressy in appearance and exact and systematic in his work.Any break in routine nettled him, and he spoke quite censuringly to the young engineer, whom, however, he liked greatly."Any damage?--I see," muttered the conductor, going forward a few steps and surveying the scratched, bruised face of the locomotive."There's a gondola derailed and a derrick smashed where we struck," reported Ralph."I acted on my duplicate orders, Mr.Danforth," he added earnestly, "and had the clear signal almost until I passed it and shot the siding.""I don't understand it at all," remarked the conductor in a troubled and irritated way."You had the clear signal, you say?""Back slowly, we'll see the station man about this."The conductor mounted to the cab step, and No.As they neared the end of the siding the train was again halted.All down its length heads were thrust from coach windows.There was some excitement and alarm, but the discipline of the train hands and the young engineer's provision had prevented any semblance of panic.The conductor, lantern in hand, ran across the tracks to the station.Ralph saw him engaged in vigorous conversation with the man on duty there.The conductor had taken out a memorandum book and was jotting down something.The station man with excited gestures ran inside the depot, and the signal turned to clear tracks."I should think the conductor would give us an inkling of how all this came about.""Oh, we'll learn soon enough," said Ralph."There will have to be an official report on this."Guess I'll go back and worm out an explanation," spoke Clark.As Clark left the cab on one side Fogg came up on the other.He had been looking over the front of the locomotive.Ralph noticed that he did not seem to have suffered any damage from his wild jump beyond a slight shaking up.He was wet and spattered to the waist, however, and had lost his cap.Lemuel Fogg's eyes wore a frightened, shifty expression as he stepped to the tender.His face was wretchedly pale, his hands trembled as he proceeded to pile in the coal.Every vestige of unsteadiness and maudlin bravado was gone.He resembled a man who had gazed upon some unexpected danger, and there was a half guiltiness in his manner as if he was responsible for the impending mishap.The fireman did not speak a word, and Ralph considered that it was no time for discussion or explanations.The injury to the locomotive was comparatively slight, and with a somewhat worried glance at the clock and schedule card the young railroader focussed all his ability and attention upon making up for lost time.Soon Ralph was so engrossed in his work that he forgot the fireman, young Clark, the accident, everything except that he was driving a mighty steel steed in a race against time, with either the winning post or defeat in view.There was a rare pride in the thought that upon him depended a new railway record.There was a fascinating exhilaration in observing the new king of the road gain steadily half a mile, one mile, two miles, overlapping lost time.A smile of joy crossed the face of the young engineer, a great aspiration of relief and triumph escaped his lips as No.They were twenty-one minutes ahead of time.Fogg," shouted Ralph across to the fireman's seat, "you're a brick!"It was the first word that had passed between them since the mishap at the siding, but many a grateful glance had the young engineer cast at his helper.It seemed as if the shake-up at Plympton had shaken all the nonsense out of Lemuel Fogg.Before that it had been evident to Ralph that the fireman was doing all he could to queer the run.He had been slow in firing and then had choked the furnace.His movements had been suspicious and then alarming to Ralph, but since leaving Plympton he had acted like a different person.Ralph knew from practical experience what good firing was, and he had to admit that Fogg had outdone himself in the splendid run of the last one hundred miles.He was therefore fully in earnest when he enthusiastically designated his erratic helper as a "brick."It was hard for Fogg to come out from his grumpiness and cross-grained malice quickly.Half resentful, half shamed, he cast a furtive, sullen look at Ralph.he muttered, "it isn't any brick that did it--it was the briquettes.""Them," and with contemptuous indifference Fogg pointed to a coarse sack lying among the coal."Why, yes, I heard about that," said Ralph quickly.Full of pitch, oil and sulphur, I understand.They say they urge up the fire."They are great steam makers, and no question," observed Fogg."Won't do for a regular thing, though."insinuated Ralph attentively, glad to rouse his grouchy helper from his morose mood."Used right along, they'd burn out any crown sheet.Mary went to the bedroom.What's more, wait till you come to clean up--the whole furnace will be choked with cinders.""I see," nodded Ralph, and just then they rounded near Macon for a fifteen minutes wait.As Fogg went outside with oil can and waste roll, Mervin Clark came into the cab."Glad to get back where it's home like," he sang out in his chirp, brisk way."Say, Engineer Fairbanks, that monument of brass buttons and gold cap braid is the limit.why, he works on springs and you have to touch a button to make him act.I had to chum with the brakeman to find out what's up."inquired Ralph a trifle uneasily.The conductor has been writing a ten-page report on the collision.It's funny, but the station man at Plympton----" "New man, isn't he?""Just transferred to Plympton yesterday mornin'," explained Clark."Well, he swears that your front signals were special at the curves and flashed green just as you neared the semaphore.""That's what the conductor says, too," said Clark.he told the station agent and challenged him to find green lights on No.He says he knew a special was on the list, but being new to this part of the road he acted on Rule 23 when he saw the green lights.He sticks to that, says that he will positively swear to it.He says he knows some one will be slated, but it won't be him.""He says Rule 23 doesn't apply, as the white lights prove.If there was any trickery or any mistake, then it's up to the fireman, not to the engineer."At that moment, happening to glance past Clark, the young engineer caught sight of Lemuel Fogg.The latter, half crouching near a drive wheel, was listening intently.The torch he carried illuminated a pale, twitching face.His eyes were filled with a craven fear, and Ralph tried to imagine what was passing through his mind.There was something mysterious about Fogg's actions, yet Ralph accepted the theory of the conductor that the station man had made a careless blunder or was color blind."You see, it isn't that the smash up amounts to much," explained Clark, "but it might have, see?"John journeyed to the bathroom."Yes, I see," replied Ralph thoughtfully."Then again," continued Clark, "the conductor says that it delayed a test run, and there's a scratched locomotive and a busted construction car.""I'm thankful that no one was hurt," said Ralph earnestly.When the next start was made, Fogg was taciturn and gloomy-looking, but attended strictly to his duty.Ralph voted him to be a capital fireman when he wanted to be.As an hour after midnight they spurted past Hopeville forty minutes to the good, he could not help shouting over a delighted word of commendation to Fogg."I said you were a brick, Mr."You're more than that--you're a wonder."It looked as if he was half minded to come out of his shell and give some gracious response, but instantly the old sullenness settled down over his face, accompanied by a gloomy manner that Ralph could not analyze.He half believed, however, that Fogg
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"Maybe he is genuinely sorry for his tantrums," reflected Ralph, "and maybe our narrow escape at the siding has sobered him into common sense."What the glum and gruff fireman lacked of comradeship, the young passenger made up in jolly good cheer.He found opportunity to tell Ralph several rattling good stories, full of incident and humor, of his amateur railroad experiences, and the time was whiled away pleasantly for these two acquaintances.Ralph could not repress a grand, satisfied expression of exultation as No.999 glided gracefully into the depot at Bridgeport, over forty-seven minutes ahead of time.The station master and the assistant superintendent of the division came up to the cab instantly, the latter with his watch in his hand."Worth waiting for, this, Fairbanks," he called out cheerily--he was well acquainted with the young railroader, for Ralph had fired freights to this point over the Great Northern once regularly for several weeks."I'll send in a bouncing good report with lots of pleasure.""You have, Fairbanks," returned the official commendingly."Only, don't lay any stress on my part of it," said Ralph."Any engineer could run such a superb monarch of the rail as No.If you don't tell them how much the experiment depended on our good friend, Fogg, here, I will have to, that's all."His eyes had a momentary pleased expression, and he glanced at Ralph, really grateful.He almost made a move as if to heartily shake the hand of his unselfish champion."You're too modest, Fairbanks," laughed the assistant superintendent, "but we'll boost Fogg, just as he deserves.It's been a hard, anxious run, I'll warrant.We've got a relief crew coming, so you can get to bed just as soon as you like."The passenger coaches were soon emptied of the through passengers.A local engineer, fireman and brakeman took charge of the train to switch the China & Japan Mail car over to another track, ready to hitch on to the Overland express, soon to arrive, sidetrack the other coaches, and take No.CHAPTER IV A WARNING Ralph doffed his working clothes, washed up at the tender spigot, and joined Clark, who stood waiting for him on the platform.Fogg, without tidying up, in a sort of tired, indifferent way was already some distance down the platform."Six-fifteen to-night, Mr.spoke Ralph, more to say something than anything else."That's right," returned Fogg curtly."Griscom directed me to a neat, quiet lodging house," added Ralph."Can't--got some friends waiting for me," responded the fireman.Ralph followed him seriously and sadly with his eyes.Fogg was making for Railroad Row, with its red saloon signs, and Ralph felt sorry for him."See here," spoke Clark, as they walked along together, "headed for a bunk, I suppose?""John Griscom, that's our veteran engineer, and a rare good friend of mine, told me about a cheap, comfortable lodging house to put up at.It's some distance from the depot, but I believe I shall go there.""I've been in some of those railroad men's hotels yonder, and they're not very high toned--nor clean.""Got to sleep, I suppose, so, if I'm not too much of a bore and it's pleasing to you, I'll try the place your friend recommends."Within half-an-hour both tired lads tumbled into their beds in rooms adjoining in a private house about half a mile from the depot.Ralph stretched himself luxuriously, as he rested after the turmoil and labor of what he considered the most arduous day in his railroad career.The young engineer awoke with the bright sun shining in his face and was out of bed in a jiffy.These lay-over days had always been prized by the young railroader, and he planned to put the present one to good use.He went to the closed door communicating with the next room and tapped on it.he hailed briskly, "time to get up," then, no response coming, he opened the door to find the apartment deserted."An early bird, it seems," observed Ralph.John Griscom had told Ralph all about the house he was in, and the young engineer soon located the bathroom and took a vigorous cold plunge that made him feel equal to the task of running a double-header special.Ralph had just dressed when Marvin Clark came bustling into the room."You didn't take a two hundred mile run, or you wouldn't be up for four," challenged Ralph."Guess that's so," admitted Clark."A dandy--wheat cakes with honey, prime country sausages and Mocha, all for twenty cents.""We'll take air line for that right away."Clark chattered like a magpie as they proceeded to the street.It was evident that he had taken a great fancy to Ralph.For the son of a wealthy railroad magnate, Clark was decidedly democratic.The one subject he seemed glad to avoid was any reference to his direct family and friends.He was full of life, and Ralph found him very entertaining.Some bad breaks in grammar showed, indeed, that he had not amounted to much at school.Some of his adventures also suggested that the presence and power of money had not always been at his command.Ralph noticed some inconsistencies in his stories here and there, but Clark rattled on so fast and jumped so briskly from one subject to another, that it was hard work to check him up.As they reached the porch of the house Clark gave Ralph a deterring touch with his hand."I want to find out something before we go out into the street," and the speaker glided down the walk to the gate, peered down the street, and then beckoned to his companion."They're still there, though," he added, his tones quite impressive.Mary went to the bedroom."Just dally at the gate here and take a look past the next street corner--near where there's an alley, see?"questioned Ralph, following his companion's direction."Yes, that gang of hoodlums," responded Clark bluntly, "for that is what they are.""We're not, but they may become interested in us.""Mightily, if I don't mistake my cue," asserted Clark."You are pretty mysterious," hinted Ralph, half-smiling.They don't know me, and I don't know them."John journeyed to the bathroom."Not much acquainted at Bridgeport, eh?"I've laid over here several times when I was firing on the fast freight.I know a few railroad men, that's all.""Then I'm the first one to enlighten you.When I went out to find a restaurant I passed that crowd you see.I noticed that they drew together and scanned me pretty closely.Then I heard one of them say, 'That's not Fairbanks.'Sandra journeyed to the hallway.'Yes, it is, didn't he come out of the place we're watching?''Aw, let up,' spoke a third voice.'Billy Bouncer will know, and we don't want to spoil his game."That's strange," said Ralph musingly."What are you going to do about it?""Oh, I'm not at all alarmed," replied Ralph, "barely interested, that's all.We'll walk by the crowd and see if they won't throw some further light on the subject.""Tell you, Fairbanks," said Clark quite seriously, "I'm putting two and two together.""Well," laughed Ralph, "that makes four--go ahead."That crowd, as I said, for some reason is laying for you.They have been put up to it by some one.You know, you told me incidentally that you had some enemies on account of the big boost you've got in the service.You said, too, that your friend, Engineer Griscom, warned you on just that point.I haven't said much so far, but the actions of that grouch fireman of yours, Fogg, looked decidedly queer and suspicious to me."He had his own ideas on the subject, but did not feel warranted in fully expressing them."I believe that Fogg started out on your run yesterday to queer it.Why he changed tactics later, I can't tell.Maybe he was scared by the smash-up on the siding.Anyhow, I never saw such mortal malice in the face of any man as that I saw in his when I came aboard No.This crowd down the street is evidently after you.Some one has put them up to it.""Oh, you can't mean Fogg!""I can't believe that he would plot against me that far," declared Ralph."A malicious enemy will do anything to reach his ends," said Clark."Doesn't he want you knocked out?What would suit his plans better than to have you so mauled and battered, that you couldn't show up for the return trip to Stanley Junction this afternoon?"I certainly shall not show the white feather by going out of my way," replied Ralph."Well, if that's your disposition, I'm at your call if they tackle us," announced Clark.They proceeded down the street, and Ralph as they advanced had a good view of the crowd, which, according to the views of his companion, was laying in wait for him.There were about fifteen of them, ranging from selfish-faced lads of ten or so up to big, hulking fellows of twenty.They represented the average city gang of idlers and hoodlums.They were hanging around the entrance to the alley as if waiting for some mischief to turn up.Ralph noticed a rustling among them as he was observed.He fancied one or two of them pointed at him, but there was no further indication of belligerent attention as he and Clark approached nearer to the crowd."I fancy Billy Bouncer, whoever he is, hasn't arrived yet," observed Clark.Just then one of the mob set up a shout.he hailed, and some additional jeers went up from his fellows.Their attention seemed directed across the street, and Ralph and Clark glanced thither.CHAPTER V AT BAY A queer-looking boy about eighteen years of age was proceeding slowly down the pavement.He was stockily built, and had an unusually massive head and great broad shoulders.He was a boy who would be remarked about almost anywhere.His hair was long, and this gave him a somewhat leonine aspect.The hat of this boy was pushed far back on his head, and his eyes were fixed and his attention apparently deeply absorbed upon an object he held in his hand.This was a thin wooden rod with two cardboard wheels attached to it.These he would blow, causing them to revolve rapidly.Then he would study their gyrations critically, wait till they had run down, and then repeat the maneuver.His side coat pockets were bulging, one with a lot of papers.From the other protruded what seemed to be a part of a toy, or some real mechanical device having also wheels in its construction."Well, there's a queer make-up!""He is certainly eccentric in his appearance," said Ralph."No, what he can be," corrected Clark, "for he's an odd genius of some kind, I'll wager."The object of their interest and curiosity had heard the derisive hail from across the street.He halted dead short, stared around him like a person abruptly aroused from a dream, traced the call to its source, thrust the device with which he had been experimenting into his pocket, and fixing his eyes on his mockers, started across the street.The hoodlum crowd nudged one another, blinked, winked, and looked as if expecting developments of some fun.The object of their derision looked them over in a calculating fashion."No, Wheels--it was the birdies calling you!""You sort of suggest something, somehow," drawled the lad in an abstracted, groping way.Ah, perhaps I've made a memorandum of it."Finally he unearthed a card which seemed to be all written over, and he ran his eye down this.The crowd chuckled at the profound solemnity of his manner."H'm," observed the boy designated as "Wheels."No, that's for an uptown call.'Buy Drummond on Superheated Steam.'you young villain, I remember you well enough now," and with an activity which could scarcely be anticipated from so easy-going an individual, Wheels made a dive for a big hulking fellow on the edge of the crowd.He chased him a few feet, and planted a kick that lifted the yelling hoodlum a foot from the ground.Then, calmly taking out a pencil, he crossed off the memorandum--"Kick Jim Scroggins"--gave the crowd a warning glance, and proceeded coolly down the sidewalk, resuming his occupation with the contrivance he had placed in his pocket.A sight of the massive arms and sledge hammer fists of the young giant they had derided, and his prompt measures with one of their cronies, dissuaded them from any warlike move.commented Clark in an exultant undertone, and he fairly leaned against his companion in a paroxysm of uncontrollable laughter.Say Engineer Fairbanks, I don't know who that fellow Wheels is, but I'd be interested and proud to make his acquaintance.Now steam up and air brake ready, while we pass the crossing!""Passing the crossing," as Clark designated it, proved, however, to be no difficult proceeding.The crowd of hoodlums had got a set-back from the boy with the piston-rod arm, it seemed.They scanned Ralph and Clark keenly as they passed by, but made no attempt to either hail or halt them."We've run the gauntlet this time," remarked Clark.The vigilant companion of the young engineer was glancing over his shoulder as he made this sudden and forcible remark."Say," replied Clark, edging close to Ralph, "just take a careless backward look, will you?About half the square down on the opposite side of the street you'll see Fogg."inquired Clark, as Ralph followed out the suggestion he had made.He had made out Fogg as Clark had described.The fireman was walking along in the direction they were proceeding.There was something stealthy and sinister in the way in which he kept close to the buildings lining the sidewalk."That's four times I've noticed Fogg in this vicinity this morning," reported Clark."I discovered him opposite the lodging house when I first came out this morning.When I came back he was skulking in an open entry, next door.When we left the house together I saw him a block away, standing behind a tree."I can't understand his motive," said Ralph thoughtfully."It's no theory at all, it's a dead certainty," insisted Clark."Your fireman and that gang of hoodlums hitch together in some way, you mark my words.I'm hungry as a bear, and here's the restaurant."It was a neat and inviting place, and with appetizing zeal the two boys entered and seated themselves at a table and gave their order for wheat cakes with honey and prime country sausages.Just as the waiter brought in the steaming meal, Clark, whose face was toward the street, said: "Fogg just passed by, and there goes the crowd of boys.I'm thinking they'll give us a chance to settle our meal, Engineer Fairbanks!""All right," responded Ralph quietly, "if that's the first task of the day, we'll be in trim to tackle it with this fine meal as a foundation."Their youthful, healthy appetites made a feast of the repast.Clark doubled his order, and Ralph did full credit to all the things set before him."I was thinking," he remarked, as they paid their checks at the cashier's counter, "that we might put in the day looking around the town.""Why, yes," assented his companion approvingly, "that is, if you're going to let me keep with you.""You seem to think I may need a guardian."John journeyed to the garden."I've got nothing to do but put in the time, and get a signed voucher from you that I did so in actual railroad service and in good company," explained Clark."I think I will go back to Stanley Junction on your return run, if it can be arranged.""It is arranged already, if you say so," said Ralph."We seem to get on together pretty well, and I'm glad to have you with me.""
bathroom
Where is John?
"There's some moving picture shows in town here, open after ten o'clock, and there's a mechanics' library with quite a museum of railroad contrivances.We've got time to take it all in.Unless that crowd stops us, we'll start the merry program rolling.No one in sight," the youth continued, as they stepped into the street and he glanced its length in both directions."Have the enemy deserted the field, or are they lying in ambush for us?"They linked arms and sauntered down the pavement.They had proceeded nearly two squares, when, passing an alley, both halted summarily.here's business, I guess," said Clark, and he and Ralph scanned closely the group they had passed just before the breakfast meal.The hoodlum gang had suddenly appeared from the alleyway, and forming a circle, surrounded them.He was a rowdy-looking chunk of a fellow, and the swing of his body, the look on his face and the expression in his eyes showed that he delighted in thinking himself a "tough customer."Backed by his comrades, who looked vicious and expectant, he marched straight up to Ralph, who did not flinch a particle.Mary went to the bedroom."You look like Fairbanks to me--Fairbanks, the engineer," he observed, fixing a glance upon Ralph meant to dismay."Yes, that is my name," said Ralph quietly."Well," asserted the big fellow, "I've been looking for you, and I'm going to whip the life out of you."CHAPTER VI FOUR MEDALS Marvin Clark stepped promptly forward at the announcement of the overgrown lout, who had signified his intention of whipping the young engineer of No.Clark had told Ralph that athletics was his strong forte.He looked it as he squared firmly before the bully."Going to wallop somebody, are you?""Watch the system-cylinder"--and the speaker gave to his arms a rotary motion so rapid that it was fairly dizzying, "or piston rods," and one fist met the bulging breast of the fellow with a force that sent him reeling backwards several feet.you keep out of this, if you don't want to be massacreed!"spoke a voice at Clark's elbow, and he was seized by several of the rowdy crowd and forced back from the side of Ralph.shouted Clark, and he cleared a circle about him with a vigorous sweep of his arms."Don't you mix in a fair fight, then," warned a big fellow in the crowd, threateningly."Ah, it's going to be a fair fight, is it?""I'll see to it that it is," remarked Clark briefly.The fellow he had dazed with his rapid-fire display of muscle had regained his poise, and was now again facing the young engineer.he demanded, hunching up his shoulders and staring viciously at Ralph."I am, and don't you forget it.John journeyed to the bathroom.I happen to have got a tip from my uncle, John Evans, of Stanley Junction."I do," announced Ralph bluntly, "and if you are as mean a specimen of a boy as he is of a man, I'm sorry for you."roared the young ruffian, raising his fists."I do, and it's mighty dirty, I can tell you."I guess you don't know who I am.Champion, see?--light-weight champion of this burg, and I wear four medals, and here they are," and Bouncer threw back his coat and vauntingly displayed four gleaming silver discs pinned to his vest."If you had four more, big as cartwheels, I don't see how I would be interested," observed Ralph.yelled Bouncer, hopping mad at failing to dazzle this new opponent with an acquisition that had awed his juvenile cohorts and admirers."Why, I'll grind you to powder!With this Bouncer threw off his coat, and there was a scuffle among his minions to secure the honor of holding it."I don't intend to strip," remarked Ralph, "and I don't want to strike you, but you've got to open a way for myself and my friend to go about our business, or I'll knock you down.""You'll----Fellows, hear him!"shrieked Bouncer, dancing from foot to foot.The young engineer saw that it was impossible to evade a fight.The allusion of Bouncer to Jim Evans was enlightening.It explained the animus of the present attack.If Lemuel Fogg had been bent on queering the special record run to Bridgeport out of jealousy, Evans, a former boon companion of the fireman, had it in for Ralph on a more malicious basis.The young railroader knew that Evans was capable of any meanness or cruelty to pay him back for causing his arrest as an incendiary during the recent railroad strike on the Great Northern.There was no doubt but what Evans had advised his graceless nephew of the intended visit of Ralph to Bridgeport.During the strike Evans had maimed railroad men and had been guilty of many other cruel acts of vandalism.Ralph doubted not that the plan was to have his precious nephew "do" him in a way that he would not be able to make the return trip with No.The young engineer was no pugilist, but he knew how to defend himself, and he very quickly estimated the real fighting caliber of his antagonist.He saw at a glance that Billy Bouncer was made up of bluff and bluster and show.The hoodlum made a great ado of posing and exercising his fists in a scientific way.He was so stuck up over some medal awards at amateur boxing shows, that he was wasting time in displaying his "style."demanded Bouncer, doing a quickstep and making a picturesque feint at his opponent."Wow, when I've eaten you up, maybe!""Since you will have it, then," observed Ralph quietly, "take that for a starter."Sandra journeyed to the hallway.The young engineer struck out once--only once, but he had calculated the delivery and effect of the blow to a nicety.There was a thud as his fist landed under the jaw of the bully, so quickly and so unexpectedly that the latter did not have time to put up so much as a pretense of a protection.Back went Billy Bouncer, his teeth rattling, and down went Billy Bouncer on a backward slide.He snatched the arm of his new acquaintance and tried to force his way to the alley opening.Thus they proceeded a few feet, but only a few.A hush had fallen over Bouncer's friends, at the amazing sight of their redoubtable champion gone down in inglorious defeat, but only for a moment.One of the largest boys in the group rallied the disorganized mob.Ralph pulled, or rather forced his companion back against two steps with an iron railing, leading to the little platform of the alley door of a building fronting on the street."No show making a break," he continued in rapid tones.At the call of their new leader, the crowd to its last member whipped out their weapons.They were made of some hard substance like lead, and incased in leather.They were attached to the wrist by a long loop, which enabled their possessors to strike a person at long range, the object of the attack having no chance to resist or defend himself."Grab the railing," ordered Clark, whom Ralph was beginning to recognize as a quick-witted fellow in an emergency."Now then, keep side by side--any tactics to hold them at bay or drive them off."The two friends had secured quite a tactical position, and they proceeded to make the most of it.John journeyed to the garden.The mob with angry yells made for them direct.They jostled one another in their eager malice to strike a blow.They crowded close to the steps, and their ugly weapons shot out from all directions.One of the weapons landed on Ralph's hand grasping the iron railing, and quite numbed and almost crippled it.A fellow used his weapon as a missile, on purpose or by mistake.At all events, it whirled from his hand through the air, and striking Clark's cheek, laid it open with quite a ghastly wound.Clark reached over and snatched a slungshot from the grasp of another of the assaulting party.He handed it quickly to his companion."Use it for all it's worth," he suggested rapidly."Don't let them down us, or we're goners."As he spoke, Clark, nettled with pain, balanced himself on the railing and sent both feet flying into the faces of the onpressing mob.These tactics were wholly unexpected by the enemy.One of their number went reeling back, his nose nearly flattened to his face.Half-a-dozen of his cohorts sprang up the steps.They managed to grab Ralph's feet.Ralph realized that if he ever got down into the midst of that surging mob, or under their feet, it would be all over with him.gasped Clark with a startled stare down the alley.The heart of the young engineer sank somewhat as he followed the direction of his companion's glance.Sure enough, the fireman of No.999 had put in an appearance on the scene.He was bareheaded, and he looked wild and uncanny.Somewhere he had picked up a long round clothes pole or the handle to some street worker's outfit.With this he was making direct for the crowd surrounding Ralph and Clark.Just then a slungshot blow drove the latter to his knees.Two of the crowd tried to kick at his face.Ralph was nerved up to desperate action now.He caught the uplifted foot of one of the vandals and sent him toppling.The other he knocked flat with his fist, but overpowering numbers massed for a headlong rush on the beleaguered refugees.Half blinded by a blow dealt between the eyes by a hurling slungshot, the young engineer could discern a break in the program, the appearance of a new element that startled and astonished him.He had expected to see the furious Fogg join the mob and aid them in finishing up their dastardly work.Instead, like some madman, Fogg had waded into the ranks of the group, swinging his formidable weapon like a flail.It rose, it fell, it swayed from side to side, and its execution was terrific.The fireman mowed down the amazed and scattering forces of Billy Bouncer as if they were rows of tenpins.He knocked them flat, and then he kicked them.And, in many ways that will suggest themselves to the reader who has mastered the contents of the earlier chapters of this book, the phenomena of Dynamic Thought in the case of the Atoms, and Particles, may be, and are duplicated in the case of Individual Minds of Men.The reader will see, readily, that this theory of Dynamic Thought, and the facts noted in the consideration thereof, give an intelligent explanation for the respective phenomena of Hypnotism, Mesmerism, Suggestion, Thought-transference, Telepathy, etc., as well as of Mental Healing, Magnetic Healing, etc., all of which are manifestations of "Dynamic Thought."Not only do we see, as Prentice Mulford said, that "Thoughts are Things," but we may see "_just why_" they are Things.And we may see and understand the laws of their production and operation.This theory of Dynamic Thought will throw light into many dark corners, and make plain many "hard sayings" that have perplexed you in the past.The writer believes that it gives us the key to many of the great Riddles of Life.It is no ephemeral thing, doomed to "die a-borning."It will be taken up by others and polished, and added to, and shaped, and "decorated"--but the fundamental principles will stand the stress of Time and Men.It may be laughed at at first, not only by the "man on the street," but also by the scientists.But it will outlive this, and in time will come to its own--perhaps long after the writer and the book have been forgotten.This must be so--for the idea of "Dynamic Thought" underlies the entire Universe, and is the cause of all phenomena.Not only is all that we see as Life and Mind, and Substance illustrations of the Law, but even that which lies back of these things must evidence the same Law.Is it too daring a conception to hazard the thought that perhaps the Universe itself is _the result of the Dynamic Thought of The Infinite_?Oh, Dynamic Thought, we see in thee the instrument by which all Form and Shape are created, changed and destroyed--we see in thee the source of all Energy, Force and Motion--we see thee Always--present and Everywhere--present, and always in Action.Verily, thou art Life in Action.Thou art the embodiment of Action and Motion, of which Zittel hath said: "Wherever our eyes dwell on the Universe; whithersoever we are carried in the flight of thought, everywhere we find Motion."John journeyed to the bathroom.Suns, planets, worlds, bodies, atoms, and particles, move, and act at thy bidding.Amidst all the change of Substance--among the play of Forces--and among and amidst all that results therefrom--there art thou, unchanged, and constant.As though fresh from the hand of The Infinite, thou hast maintained thy vigor and strength, and power, throughout the aeons of Time.And, likewise, Space has no terrors for thee, for thou hath mastered it.Thou art a symbol of the Power of The Infinite--thou art Its message to doubting Man!Let us close this book with the thought of the Greatness of this Thing that we call Dynamic Thought--which, great as it is, is but as the shadow of the Absolute Power of The Infinite One, which is the Causeless Cause, and the Causer of Causes.And in thus parting company, reader, let us murmur the words of the German poet, who has sung: "Dost thou ask for rest?See then how foolish is thy desire; the stern yoke of motion holds in harness the whole Universe."Nowhere in this age canst thou ever find rest, and no power can deliver thee from the doom of Activity."Rest is not to be found either in heaven or on earth, and from death and dying break forth new growth,--new birth."All the life of Nature is an ocean of Activity; following on her footsteps, without ceasing, thou must march forward with the whole."Even the dark portal of death gives thee no rest, and out of thy coffin will spring blossoms of a new life."SUCCESS-THOUGHT The desire of every reader is to get, hot from his pen, all that a progressive writer has to say.Readers of this book will be interested in knowing that Mr.William Walker Atkinson is on the regular editorial staff of THE SEGNOGRAM, and that the choicest of his "I Can and I Will" preachments are appearing in each issue of that magazine.THE SEGNOGRAM is a monthly magazine for Success-Thought Thinkers and Readers.It has one mission to fill--the upbuilding--the betterment of man.Sandra journeyed to the garden.It has no time to quarrel with any creed, sect, doctrine or belief.The Law of Love is its controlling influence--it has none other.To read it is to be imbued with its high teachings.It is a Success Magazine that teaches how to win Success without preaching about it.It believes in doing things, because in doing things we win Success.Do you want to join our circle of thousands of Success readers?Do you want to get the cream of Success--thought?Keep to the front by keeping in touch with Mr.A. Victor Segno and H.M.The price of the magazine is 50 cents a year, five cents the copy.Write for sample copy if you never have seen it.ADDRESS The Segnogram Publishing Co.TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: Obvious typos and printer errors have been corrected without comment.In addition to obvious errors, the following changes have been made: Page 17: Missing word "are" was added to the phrase, "And he believes that there are Beings in existence...." Page 86: Missing word "the" was added to the phrase, "... one of the Atoms of our molecule...." Page 100: Missing

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