A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF POLITICS, 1. —_-— —— - ee tt a ee - sTEES EDWARD WHELAN] je Public, man speak free.——RURIPIDES. rennin end This is true Liberty, when Free—born Men, having to advise tl erent the momo semeeesegeocenmnemmaseneatti ceases tien tincntiiatnttitceti hada hail iit inti lin ani etna tpetn —— CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAN oF oe ———— ——- D; MONDAY, OCTOBE Gleanings from late Papers. | - - ee pable of descending to commonplace language and of rising ‘above commonplace thoughts. They describe the -* prison /world’’ of an age, or the ‘* hearth life of welass.’’ Vhey have Tae State or [rary.—The London Times of the 31st ult.) something fierce to eay’’ to whoever displeasesthem. ‘The | ,. in a leading article discussing the relations of Napoleon to the | world “ sets its ghastly teeth’’ at their heroes, fralian question, growing out of his agreement to the restoration! in reply “ scow! atthe century,’ ‘clench the fist savagely, , , of the Grand Dukes, but bis refusal to assist them with arms, / and “ fight out their life battle,’’ with other similar contortions. | likes); to Richmond avd the Opera, and Hampton Court and thus sums up (he present position and prospects of Italy : ‘* The duchies may still have to fight for their independence, they have to say, aad say it plainly. They may rely upon it to death, but seemed to for the Emperors have not undertaken to keep the peace among | that a dwarf looks none the taller for standing on his head. young ladies brought up among anemones and al And the Italian Powers. There are many mercennries rea ty far | ee Ed go 122) b iets all these:days ‘ 8 7, bid fai age, service, and one of the dukes is said to havea respectable) Cost or tax Criwean War To Russia.—General Sattler, | oxce _ to the seine cf ice id fair to make an force in his psy. It isjust upon the cards, als», that whensuch | who was intendant of the Russian army, has just publisied in| h — hat | gwseraisy © mabs ind, and really to take a force might be brought to bear, it might be discovered that! the Invalide an account of the provisioning of the Russian | “2° wite that had. been found for him. Whether after the the exiled sovereigns are not withou! a party in their own States. ariny in the late war. It appears from this, that the Russian | farmers daughters and wives he'd lately been in the habit of ‘This, however, will bea very cheap struggle for independence. troops in the Crimea at the commencement of the war amounted seeing, he was in a ductile state for the impression of the Ifthe army of Central Ltaly cannot hold its own against a few to 250,000 men, with 100,000 horses, and those of all the troops | first attractive English girl he met, ‘or! that in truth little bands of mercenaries, we had betrer forget the name of Italy, | for whom the intendance had to furnish provisions during 1855, Vy's violet eyes and animated manners had an attraction even as a geograph c il expression, | were 845,000 men, with 187,360 hores ; and for 1856, 196,973 for us, as men said, something or other made Tom incline Under the protection of this linperia! promise, the course of} mer, with 183,570 horses. The intendance had to contend | towards her. I began to think our plans would . Central [taly to freedom and prosperity seems safe and secure. ! with immense difficulties ; the price of cattle, provender, and all | fruition ool that Vy's livel . P ld be ne CO into ‘The next step is already resolved upon. They hive wnanimously | kinds of necessaries having increased fivefold, and oftentimes | raiUuan, y,8 ively voice yon ; heard ringin desired to weld themselves into one kingdom, whereof Victor! more than tenfold, particularly from the middle sf 1855 until through the rough timbers of Tom 8 unfinished house, an Emmanuel shall be the first sovereign. We cannot conceive | January, 1856.—Jndependence Belge. | that her pretty ways and fascinations would be buried away that, if all chance for Prince Napoleon be pur out of the ques a Se lac te lin the dense shadow of the western woods, as delicate perfuares tion, the French Em yeror Can have any hearty objection to such Remepy ror Smaxy Pox.—It ought to be generally known jand spices were buried away by the extravagant Ezyptians vnamalgamion. ‘This work of the restoration of Italy wil! be. | that the pure bitartrate of potash, cream of Tartar, is an infal-|in the sarcopbagi of their mummies. Willie, of course, if it shall endure, the principal glory of his reign. He wilt] jbie antidote to the variolous fever, The discovery of this im-| wished to know something of the girl he'd fixed on for his natura ly desire that it should be as marked a success, and g'V@\ po-tant fact was made about thirty years ago, by the late Mr. | chum's wife, and to study her character and opinions. to see ag visible a monument to posierity as possible. Piedmont, with | 1 Rose, of Dorking, who ima petition presented tothe House | jf they were likely to ensure Goring’s ha P LO h twenty more duchies amalgamated with it, could offer no object | 9¢ Commons in March, 1856; stated that he had successfully test-| f Vi y ae Oring s happiness ; he was of jr alousy or distrust to France. very often at Vivia’s side, arguing with her, teasing her, ; ed the efficacy of the remedy in more than 3,000 cases of smal! | A : . . ; ; E It is not comprehnesible, cherefore, that any stronger senti-) Pox. With this simple medicinal agent, in combination with |@'awing ler out and being drawn out himself, talking on ment than diplomatic delicacy can induce him to put pr ssare S- avs rhubarb as an adjunct, and a refrigerant mode of treatment, Mr. | Very subject with the brilliance and talent they had in com- upon the King of Sard nia to refuse the territory now proferred to! Rose achieved such a triumph over this hitherto fatal disease as | Mon ; and the cross flashes of their repartee put me uncom- him. Moreover, we now know that this pressure will be entirely | to reduce the death rate to a single exceptional rate —nglish| monly in mind of the shower of fireworks at Cremorne on a of an arguinenta'ive and d'plomatic character. It ssems to us, Paper. there, &s matiers now stand, that Victor Emmanuel cannot r- |) = Ss fuse the offer of th» Duchies. [t would, perhaps, not be pru- Pe a dent definitive'y to accept it. Perhaps it would be more wise { 1 t c r a { ti rt c . 2o assume the overninent provisionally, and thus prevent further ; é ' revolution, and keep out other candidates until the new order vhad plenty of time to mark his quarry, and began to follow of things js consoldated. But, unless some very rash or very THE ROADSIDE INN. | Vivia about in very spooney style. mad course of conduct should occur to mar the prospeet, the ** Well, William, I think you’ve shown good ta:t2 as unity of ftaly is aow secure. We will add that the Emperor AN EPIS@LE. 'commisary,”’ said Tom, one night when we 4 smoking in his a right to say—‘ [o me Italy owes her independence.’ Dear friend, wrapped in your cloak of care, | De Rohan’s chambers, after supper at the Rainbow. “I f ivi hat rey y oi . . y+ Z And striving what the years may win, fagree with you that little Vivia is sometlifnz sti!! more than Turn from your tasks, one moment Spare 2 Taz Ovrsacss on Board tue Stuistaia.—According to War whdtals tinh ie thie, Rendewie lan. \pretty, and ‘pon my life I don’t believe 1 could do better.” the intelligence direet from Alexandria, the shipwreck of the : ‘ J | I thought I saw Willie give a slight start, but he merely Turkish steamer Silistria must be attributed to the negligence ; Said, with his pipe in his mouth. “ Better than what?” and incapac’ty of the captain. When the Egyptian transport “My dear fel came up to the Silistria, the Mussu/mans hastened to save thein- asked Tom. selves first. As for the captain, he was so intent upen pillaging | ‘Tom was always’ singularly the sums of money and the valuables on board that he perished, ‘from his first the victim of the crime. The Mahometan passengers, amoncs' whom gras the famous Commissioner of Jeddah, (Said Pacha), rushed upon the Christian passengers, then beat and robbed them. Ssid Pacha was the first who set the example of that fearful massacre of the Christians, whom the Mussuimans siew for the purpose of appropriating to themselves what the former possessed. J.uckily for the Christians, there were among the ngers twenty-eight Austrian seamen, who armed them- selves in haste with what first came to hand, and they defended give great delight to the innocent as | like the old monarchs, I can’t say, but his ambassador seem- ed io me to take the most of the initiative business, though, |when De Rohan was at the chambers or in court, Goring ip 68 The quaint old house where years agone We feasted with those merry five, Who sleep in peace, while we alone Of all the happy crew survive. low, where the deuce is yo -r memory gone 2?” e about his leves, and passion, a hazel-eyed Licbe, whom we u , : in i buy tuck of, we'd known and hez all about ’em. when The same stiff order round me lies | SOF: NE OR re S known and beard all about ‘em, when ' nfidine w+ oT bY his As when in older days we met ; soul was warmed with the smoke of the good-night pine. ; a : . ‘* Didn't yoa yourself take the matrimonial depart: ; The monster with its glaring eyes, a I 55.298 J argos i Pt aaron department a a , : P ts imy hands, and tell me one of the Lessineham girls was the Still goggles on the mantle yet. rey ? vl 2 g 5°65 5 | best investment I conld make? |. ** More fool 1,’ muttered De Rohan to himself, too low for Tom to hear him. ‘¢+And I think 80, tao,”’ smile .cn.this Lips. iaiil S The ostler with his roguish leer (The same as when you saw him last), Moves round the door, and probes me here With grey memorials of the past. continued Tem with a centente ‘: lye never s20n 2 more amusing little the Christians to the last moment. Nevertheless the number of thing. ond Bhe 6 Eho prestiest Toys fany woman Tknow——” persons killed by the Mussulmans amounts to 77, while the The verses scratched across «< What » sonsible basis fur a deep affection,” said Willie. the pane A thousand banished thoughts recall ; While memories o’er the musing brain In fitful shadows rise and fall. JSS ° ’ : ~ ° witha sneer. ‘* Good heavens, Goring you analyse lier as you : 3 J 7 ] a total number of passengers was 350. The Austrians were the last to get into the transport. at} The shifting of the passengers to the transport, in the midst of a fearful massacre, continued for severa! hours, during which no one of course thought of taking away any of the provisions | on board of the Silistria, so that another calamity, that of famine, threatened the passengers in the transport. Providence tovk | these poor creatures under its protection ; a favourable breez» | night your Scotch stachounds.’ ** That was generally the way you used to lock at women,” said Tom, opening his eyes. « What’s made you so scrapulous fll of a sudden, 1f you've changed i pagsion, Lhaven’t. Idon’t nanderstand all y soul uFiirs, your rapports, and your am jui naissent a is de la sympathie et de Iu diversite—that style’s beyond me. 7 can admire a girl and her foot too; where’s the harm? and can get quite fond enough of her to make her a very good husband, and I do certainly feel myself getting wretchuily spooney about little Vy ; but es to breaking my heart abouta girl, | don’t understand it. Yea, L have died for love as others do; But, praised be God, it was of such a sort That [revived within an bour or so.” For changes too have come and gone, youi And left a darkness in the place, Like shadows that subdue the sun Upon an old familiar face. >* pul weil } iTlt ur, g la fois blew during the whole voyaze, and the transport reached Alex- andria the dry after the eatastrophe. An inquiry was immedi- ately commenced, and the guilty parties will be condemned.— Among the /ast Said Pacha stands at the head af the list. But for his fanaticisin and barbarous cruelty all the passengers would have been saved. It is interesting to know how this in- quiry will end, in which the consuls of all nations who had sudjects on board of the Silistria are taking part. Among those passengers two were Russians, and both have been savec. What opinion, we ask. can Europe have of the Turkish digai- | taries, when one of the most eminent among them, Le who was! recently charged with so importint a mission as the inquiry into | the massacre of the Christiane at Jeddah, is now accused bim- self of havin committed so horrible a erime? one oe Rattwar Acerpent ox ?He Continext.— You may remem- | ber that on the Ist of August a collizion took place on the Ly- | ons and Paris Railway, causing the death of three persons, and | wounding thirty-three, more or less dangerously. Justice took | this affair in hand, and a trial! of al! persons concerned ensued. | The result has been the condemnation of the clef de gare to | two years imprisonment. of one of the assistan's to one years’ imprisonment, and a third ta six months. All of them were | fined 300f., and are liable for the costs, the company beig | held civilly responsible for the results of the dreadful accident. | A Madame Munier was kil'ed ; her husband sued the company, | and obtained 30,000f. damages. This wil! be a terrible warn-4 ing to all careless railiroad employes in France.-—Letler from Paris. And here the innovator bold, Some cruel pranks with time has wrought From you old Lion’s tarnished gold To sights with deeper meaning fraught. — i a oO The rosy wench is weddei now (A change you'd hardly wish to see), With matron cares across her brow, And clamorous faces round her knee Willie busied himself filling his meerschaum, and poked in the Cavendish fiercely. “ Suth a sort will scarcely suit Vivia. I'm afraid she'll waut something a little deeper,” said he, sharply. “ To be analysed like your beagles, and valued a litt!e higher than your crops and sheep, will be scarcely her style.” “Oh, by George! I couldn't be swearing interminable 4 ennsen HA | Gevotion' all on day long to please any girl,” said Tom, in consternation. ‘I'll be very kind to her, and let her do as she likes, and buy as many dresses as she pleases, and all that. I’m sure I can’t say more; but as to violent, vehe- ment, never-dying love, that’s eternally burning and firing away like one of our hot spriags—no! I couldn't. get up that amount of steam for anything, and I never thought to _hear you preach the doctrine, Will. 1 thought your opin‘on | was, that love's all bosh and folly.” Old scenes of fast-reeeding joy, | ate os be mine, but I don’t suppose it’s her's,” said De A heayen of deeper splendour hold ; Rohan, with the pipe in his teeth. pats | The man looks back upon the boy __ “Very likely not,” said Tom, stirring his Toddy,; nowise Wrapped in his morning mists of gold, ‘disturbed by the contemptuous sarcasm with which Willie looked at his once-beloved Orestes. “ Girls are all more or less And grander deems that olden sky ‘romantic—bave sn ideal of a Sir Augastus Amandeviile de Though ae in the ee day, | Vere, and end by marrying plain John Doe or Richard go agar Pee tarp dnaadsi days | Roe, with a good income. Their high-wrought visions come ao ' down before the practical consideration of sett)ements, as l've ‘heard you say many a time, and a girl without tin never ' rejects a man who has‘it.” | 11s ridiculous folly,” interrupted Willie, contemptuously, his eyebrows contracted, and his handsome mouth set. ‘“ The The landlord with his oily laugh, And that old purple breadth of mirth, Lies ‘neath a mis-spelt epitaph In six good feet of honest earth. 8a His widow live With ribbon’d pompand jingking keys, And deals the foamy blessings out ’Mid all her pewter mysteries. O wizard Past ! at thy behest A glory crowns one beggar word, While some long dead and buried jest Leaps up to smite us like a sword. t > Carita, Pousisament ix Paossta —At Brandenburg, in Prussia, a short time 220, a married couple named Voigt, work- people condemned to death for peisoning an cid man named Schade, in order to rob him, were eecuted. As ustal in Prus- sia, the execution tock place in the interior of the prison, mm pre- sence only o! the public prosecator, two surgeons, a clergy M10, and twelve citizens chosen by lot. The woman fainted on be:ng told that her last hour had arrived, and all attemp's to restore | her to consc ousness having failed, she was beheaded in a siate | of insensibility. The husband walked calmly to the ecaffold, | repeating a prayer. The heads of both were struck of by an executioner. After the execution, placards were stuck up over, the town announcing that it had taken piace. for 23 years | there bad been no execution ia the Lowa. tee — —— Dancer 1x Ispia.— Already the arch-enemy of British role in| Northwestern India has taken advantage of the cismissal of the men and their return to Europe, to give his own version of the maneuvre. ludeed, it is probable that the barbarian ts incapable of understanding either the freedom granted to the irdividaal | soldier, or the amazing policy which sdmits the disbanding of an army needéd for the maintenance of our power. Whatever may be the stated belief amongst the surviving leaders of the late mutiny, it seems to be the fact that a public announcement has been issued. declaring that the troops of the Kuropean Guyern- ment ere withdrawn from India in order to serve their country in the European war, intelligence of the hostilities in ftaly having by this time reached the fer East: According to these representations, therefore, the soldiers who are seat some by the force of the official blunder, sre withdrawn by our Govern- ment in order to sustain our power in Europe ; and thus 2 new opening is offered for the hopes of ourenemies in Northwesrern India. On what scale these enemies wil! still have the power of acting, we cannot'say ; but it is a fact alreecy known in this country, thet Lord Clyde has expressed serious aporehensions on the subject; and we believe that he has addressed letters to the authorities both in India and a: home. ~ 02 ee Sraone Wartixe.—The Edinburgh Review says: There ts a schoo! of writers now in existence who appear equally mca Yet, wherefore should I tease the mind With raising ghosts, and nursing ills; Away ! give sorrow to the wind That whistles o’er the Norland hills. But when again I reach the town And buried in its central din, My friend, oar thoughts may wander down To revel in this Roadside Inn. superior intellect, who likes sdciety and adorns it, to play | the part of mingled cook, washerwoman, seamstress, and | maid-of-a:l-work, that a wife in the Bush must be, it really ‘is absurd, Tom ; I don’t think she’s suited to you.” | ©Then why the devil did you recommend her ?” asked Tom, staring at him. “Qh! I didn’t know then what. she was,” said Willie, now coolly leaning back in his chair, with his head against the top of it, so that I couldn't see his face, “ I heard she was a poor clergyman’s daughter, and L natarally supposed she might be used to domestic affairs, and after a hard life at home, teaching her Jittle sisters and brothers, the Bush might have been palatable. But Vivia’s a girl to amuse a drawiug-room, not scour a kitehen. I’ve heard her sag she ! ING HOME FOR A WIFE. ( Continued.) XT ata C We went abont with the girls a good deal: I owed them| some attention as their cousia, and Maude amused me very | much. I had got rather bored with young ladies, but Maude, | whom I remembered when she couldn't speak plain, was another affair, and her face would some times come up ta the smoke of wy Cavendish, and lovk at me 1n court or tn late. supper parties, and over the top of my Times, in an Un- accountable manuner—avaccountuble, at least, to me, who, since a French widow, a very handsome Baronne, had first made love to, and then jilted me at three-and-twenty, had never permitted any woman's face to haunt my mind longer than two minutes. So we went about with em, as I say, a good deal—to the exhibitions, where Vivia and De Robaa criticised the pre-Raphaelites with a sarcastt which it would | ‘ liam have been profitable for those eccentric and misguided gen thoagbt of ail that before you introduced. me 40 ber. where the girls made innocent) too late now, said Tom. tlemen-to hear ; to Epsom, ; ee ee is eae pene ‘bets according to the jockey’s colours, after the curicusand > “ Commissaries should Know. i! ‘their goods wil x and as much use to you, ag her niece.” a ib ~ R ignorant custom of their sex ; to Wyld’s Globe, where Vivia warranting, asked ‘Tom how he could bear to be at the bottom when he ’em ; might be at the top; to Frikell’s where sceptical Willie de- and their heroes |#ghted Vy and disgusted Maude by explaining all the +) tricks (there’s nothing in the world Willie can’t explain if he |We earnestly recommend these. gentlemen to consider what/ Sydenham, and all the places that, to my mind, fatigue one! shouldn’t I have it ?” grand night. Whether Tom meant to be married by proxy, . 17,. 1859, a, and are likely to suit, before they reeommend | and I can’t see why I mayn’t please’ myself in the | matter of my own wife. I haven’t hiad“tiuch fan the last ten years; I may surely have something to‘amuse me now ; |and as for your Dresden shepherdess, Wil}, why, if L can afford Sevres instead of willow pattern, why the deuce | Take care it doesn’t break in your bands, Tom,” said De Rohan, sarcastically, springing up, and frightening his I Skye, who was dreaming of a delicious fat-hunt, in the middle of the room. “ By jove! it’s five o’clock : I think I shall turn you two fellows out, for the sun is staring us in the face, to shame our symposia.” _ But when Tom and'I did turn out, I have a strong sns-. ‘picion tha Willie sat down by himself, and smoked two or three pipes more, instead of going to bed, in a gloomy re- verie, of which the Skye was sole spectator. IV.—-SHOWING WIAT PROGRESS TOM GORING MADE IN HIS SUIT. The season whirled on till whitebait dinners and water parties brought it near its close. The sweet odours of the Thames were beginning to penetrate into the senatorial halls of St. Stephen’s, and its benches were fondly yearning to- wards their preserves and moors, grouse and blackcock, the Pytehelay and the Two Thousand. ‘Tired belles began to think of winding up their town campaign, and commencing fresh manoeuvres in Spanish hats and country simplicity, or, en Amazone, leading the field over staken-bound fences. Very’s and Epitaux’s began to look for a respite, the Ride and the Hing to thin by degrees, fewer carriages to block the way before Howell and James’s, and senators and singers, belles aud ballet-girls, clubs and chaperones, to take breath from their incessant toils. The season was drawing/to a close, and Willie had an invitation to spend August with a ‘Fellow of John’s on his moor, but, for some reason or otber, put eff accepting it. In three weeks or so, the Lessingham girls would be off to their little Norfolk village, to vegetate again among misembryanthemums and Sunday schoojs, and Tom began®to get as hot in parsuitiof Vy, as in arday's pig-sticking. You're sure that, Jike all the rest.of us ig those affairs, De Rohan’s word of advice not to do it, was the surest method to make him want to do it ton times more. . Willie never opened his lips about it again to Goring or me, Sometiincs he’d spend whole evenings in) his chambers, smoking (and reading, I suppose), alone; sometimes he'd come up to St. John’s Wood, and be very kind to. Vivia, tulking bis old brilliant badivage, criticising her etchings, ind tilting with her in bis usual witty. strain ; and sometimes | he'd come, Jooking haughty, cold, and stiltitied, talking only sith my mother or Helen, and, it Vivia addresved bim, cut- |tiog her off short, with more brevity than was exactly con- sistent with courtesy,, or with Willie’s ordimary suave high-breeding. As for niyself{—L may es well confess it at once—I, who ever siuce-that wretched French widow jilied }me, have been as pro -fageinst love as Mahomet professed to } be egaiust: wine--L was let in jor it at iength, Steel onr- selves how we will, we always fall a prey tosomebody inthe end, and aftee three months of fi ting roows, deux temps, tetes-a-tetes in conservatories; whispers in opera-boxes, aud, what was more dangerous still, long quiet mornings in my | mother’s drawing-rocms—I, who ought at four-and+thirty to ’ ; . ‘ -a nd HoOvUvuys Gi Wie Zrand) haye been more on my guard, let that little monkey, Maude, make a fool of me, and, as-1 rowed her one evening on the Thames, by Twickenham, her sofi eyes, or the moonlight, or | the glorious vintage of Champagne that Harrison sings about, | made me talk a good deal of nonsense, I dare say—aonsense, however, to which Maude listened very williogiy—so will- ingly, indeed, that when I went back te Middlo Temple, I, | who ought to have known better, found myself, to my pre- found astonishment, not onlminleve, but evgaged to a girl whom I remembered in long-clothes, or, rather might baye done so, if Lhado’t, to my aunt’s-disgust, refused to look at her in that ugly and uninteresting stage of existenee.. The }morning after J’d been thus inkumanly trapped, I was sitting /on a dormouse beside Maude,whe was pleasing herself with sketching my profile, an operation which progressed but slowly, as she told me it was-quite impossible to do nt if 1 would keep turning my bead round to look ather, Ld been there abont an hour, when Tom came ip tooffer them-an opera-box he had taken. Vivi was leaning back in a low chair, pretending to read Emerson’s “ Orations,” bat-really only playing listlessly with a kitten, and dookiag out of the window. She started every time the door-bel] rang,and | glanced hastily round when the drawing-room door opened. | A shade passed over her face when she saw it was for Tom, whe sat down near her, and began totaik. Now, Tom's a | well-read man enough, and elever too, but, whether the Bush bas kept his mind at s stand-still, there not being Mudies, ‘morning papers and Britith Museums ip that borrid exile “up couttry,” or that, as L often think, Willie’s britliant fencing, ready argument, and general kcowledge, make any- \body else’s conversation seem tame, certain it was, that Vi- via did not) think poor Tom had the same skill in l’art de ,causer as bis friend, _. [was too occupied with my artist beside me to hear their -conversation ; but as Maude darted across the room to the _rescue of the kitten, who was being browbeaten by a cockatoo, \I caught Tom expatiating on the delights (!) of a Bush | existence. | © Especially taking your own flour seven or eight miles to ‘idea of taking out a delicate, accomplished young girl, of|be ground, felling your owa timber before you can have a }house to-live in, growing your own vegetables, and washing }them. with your own hands-~all tliat must be so pleasant,” leried Vy, with a toss of her bead, and a mischievous, dis- | dainful smile, calculated to. make poor Tom much worse than ever. | “Ob! but [’ve done with all that, you kuow,” said Tom, earnestly. “I’ve. got over the bard work, and can enjoy ‘wyself.”” : | “ Enjoyment in the Bush! a gross anomaly !” said Vy. “Yes, enjoy. Do. you think that when my sheep were voted the best in Nelson, and my buiter the fiaest ia the province, that was uo pleasure ?” Vivia made a little noue of contempt: “ Oue I really can’t sympathise with. You didu’t make your sheep nor hates work, and I dare say she knows as much about cook- churn your butter, so 1 can’t see that they brought you ing as that terrier. Her singing, and drawing, and conver-; wany laurels.” sation, and wit, will be so much dead loss iu the backwoods. Of course 1 only speak from interest in your welfare, but 1 wauted a home, to treat him so nenchalantly. must say one of the Dresden shepherdesses off Mrs. Mount-; laughed, for be was a good-aaturea fellow. ‘ Well, if you eagle’s mantelpiece will be as much appreciated ia the Bush, Tom. started. He hada’t. expected penniless eins. - ben be won% see ay, merit im. wy poor butier and sheep, I ean assure you there is enjoyment wthe Bush. Theye’s grand “Ab! well, William, 1 can’t belp it; you should have »scenery-and.good sport-—woods such as you've never s¢en— It’s send when, the woon, shines on the lagsons, with thé Blue crancs wading ia, the low water, and bevons, and teal, and car’ Nankoim birds floating about among the tall cols, you Cu bf