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When the sexton came to announce the | dignitaries played a steady, sound, orthodox preparations were complete, he found game. The Bishop bore a run of ill luck like these clerical worthies deep in their game, a Christian and a bishop, but when (after the using the coffin as their table. We hope diplomatist had puzzled him by a false card) the Count lost the game by not returning his the sexton surprised them as much as another sexton did a curate at his first trump, the excellent prelate looked as if about funeral, when he walked up to him with to bring the rubber to a conclusion as he once brought a controversy with an Archbishop, the appalling announcement," Please, sir, namely, by the bestowal of his blessing; which the corpse's father wishes to speak to the Archbishop, apparently apprehensive of you." its acting by the rule of contraries, earnestly entreated him to take back.

Here is another grim story about whist related by Mr. Raikes in his diary respecting the father of the late lamented Mr. George Payne.

Mr. Raikes writes:

The bishop was sometimes apt not only to bless but to pray for his adversaries, and the boldest of his enemies trembled

One evening I went into Watiers' Club, where I found Mr. George Payne waiting to make a rubber at whist; others soon arrived, and the play began. Nothing remarkable passed except that Mr. Payne was anxious to continue the game; and though we played till four or five o'clock, seemed disappointed at the party breaking up. I went home to bed, and soon after ten o'clock my servant Chap-What, so soon, love?" mán came into my room to tell me that Mr. Payne had been that morning shot in a duel on Putney Heath. Thus he had been purposely playing all the night in order to pass the time till he was summoned into eternity, and certainly no one could have told by his manner that he had such an awful prospect in view,

when he went metaphorically on his knees with "Let us pray for our erring brother." The bishop was rather formidable. Once, after dinner, he kept glancing at Mrs. Phillpotts as a signal for retiring, but the moment she saw and began to move, the bishop gallantly rushed to the door and opened it, with a tender remonstrance,

cal amusement.

Whist was formerly a well-known cleriGood Bishop Bathurst of Norwich always had his nightly rubber. So in the last years of his life did Keble, the author of "The Christian Year." Of course Mr. Trollope's Archdeacon Grantley was a proficient in the game. Mr. Hayward gives an amusing account of the sufferings of the Bishop of Exeter when coupled with a partner ignorant of the sublime laws of whist. The only excuse a partner can have for not returning a trump is either that he has not got one, or apoplexy. Charles Lever truly states that the last trump in a partner's hand is a source of great danger, as he is apt to stop one's long suit, particularly if he

follows Theodore Hook's directions to

whist-players, which he learnt from the address of a leader of a brass band to his followers, "Whenever in doubt, trumpit." My Hayward writes:

its irreverent members, to be rather too
The Athenæum is thought, by some of
full of the episcopal element. Some phi-
losopher had a theory that night is occa-
sioned, not by the absence of light, but by
the presence of certain black stars. So
the ecclesiastical element imparts a rather
sombre atmosphere to the club. When
the United Service Club is under repair,
its members sometimes seek refuge in
the Athenæum, and then, we are told, the
club is filled with hirsute warriors cursing
short service, and speaking most irrever-
ently of the "grand old man."
Athenæum visits the United Service, it
imparts an ecclesiastical character to the
club. Once, the first night that the Athe-
næum members arrived there, an aged
warrior descended the stairs at midnight
and went to the stand for his umbrella.
It had vanished, and a thunderstorm was
going on.

When the

"Gone," roared out the ferocious veteran, "of course it is gone; this comes of letting in those d-d bishops."

We have not space to notice Mr. Hayward's article on the "Art of Dining." He is great on the French cuisine, but we do not think anything can beat Lord Sefton's idea of a dinner, namely, "Turtle soup, a chicken turbot, a haunch of venWe have seen short whist played by a num-ison, and an apricot tart."

ber of the episcopal body, and a very eminent Mr. Hayward wrote much about wine, one, the venerable Bishop of Exeter (Phill- but he was too great an admirer of claret. potts); our adversary being the late Dean of He speaks most irreverently of that grandSt. Paul's (Milman); the other an American diplomatist (Mason), and his partner, a dis-est of drinks, champagne, which he styles When Mr. Coke gave tinguished foreigner (Strzelecki), whose whist grog mousseux. was hardly on a par with his scientific acquire- some claret at his audit dinner, he asked ments and social popularity. The two Church | one of his farmers how he liked it. The

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answer was, "It is all very well, squire, cut deeply into the side of a hill, and but I get no forrader." We are told that seamed with little pebbly courses, made one of the last dinner parties which Mr. by the streams of rain which had poured Hayward attended went off rather flatly across it on their downward way. The owing to the absence of a beaker of “dry, "hillside faced the west, and, standing on but not too dry. Champagne improves this ledge as on a balcony, one might look and even enlarges the memory. We are down into a valley where cattle were feedafraid that our venerated leader, Sir Staf-ing in the pastures, and where a full and ford Northcote, is a claret-drinker, for in spite of all opportunities he never seems to get any "forrader."

Mr. Hayward never attempts fine writing, but there is the most solid information to be derived from some of his articles. His essays are filled with good stories, and the perusers of them will be delighted to read how Sydney Smith said if Lady Davy, who was very brown, had tumbled into a pond, she would have changed it into toast and water; how the shrewd Duke of Queensberry said, "I tremble for every event where women are concerned, they are all so excessively wrong-headed." How when Mrs. Beecher-Stowe, after her unfounded attack on Lord Byron, returned the money she received for her book to her publishers, an American editor observed that as she had begun an imitation of Judas Iscariot, he hoped she would complete the parallel. How Sydney Smith's favorite story, which haunted him for weeks, was the account of the tame magpie flying into a church, alighting on the desk, seizing hold of the sermon; the parson resisting, a terrific combat ensued, all the congregation being in favor of the magpie. A judge once told a law student if he wished for success in his profession he must read Coke on Littleton once- twice thrice in a year. There are many young aspirants to magazine writing, and we really think if they wish for improvement they cannot do better than read over again and again the pleasant essays of Abraham Hayward.

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softly flowing river turned the wheel of a distant mill, and slipped quietly under the arched bridge of the lower road. Sometimes in summer the water lay gleaming, like a curved blade, in the midst of the warm, green meadows, but on this late October day it was misty and wan, and light vapors veiled the pale globe of the declining sun. Looking upward from the valley, a broad slope of ploughed land rose above the road, and the prospect ended in a hedge, a gate, through whose bars one saw the sky, and a thin line of dusky, redtrunked firs. But from the road itself there was nothing to be seen in this direction except a steep bank. This bank was crowned with hawthorn bushes, and here and there a stubborn, stunted oak, which held its dry, brown leaves persistently, as some oaks do. With every passing breath of wind there was a crisp rustling overhead.

This bit of road lay deserted in the faint yellow gleams. But for a wisp of straw, caught on an overhanging twig, and some cart-tracks, which marked the passage of a load, one might have fancied that the pale sun had risen, and now was about to set, without having seen a single wayfarer upon it. But there were four coming towards it, and, slowly as two of them might travel, they would yet reach it while the sunlight lasted. The little stage was to have its actors that afternoon.

First there appeared a man's figure on the crest of the hill. He swung himself over the gate, and came with eager strides down the field, till he reached the hedge which divided it from the road. There he stopped, consulted his watch, and sheltering himself behind one of the little oaks, he rested one knee on a mossy stump, and thus, half standing, half kneeling, he waited. The attitude was picturesque, and so was the man. He had bright, grey-blue eyes, hair and moustache brown, with a touch of reddish gold, a quick, animated face, and a smiling mouth. It was easy to see that he was sanguine and fearless, and on admirable terms with himself and the world in general. He was young, and he was pleasant to look at, and, though he could hardly have dressed with a view to occupying that

precise position, his brown velvet coat | lightly trodden way must be retraced, and was undeniably in the happiest harmony with the tree against which he leaned, and the withered foliage above his head.

time was short. But even as he faced it he turned for one last glance at the spot where she had stood. And there, like colored jewels on the dull earth, lay a bunch of hips, orange and glowing scarlet, which she had unawares let fall. In a moment he was down on the road, had caught up his prize, and almost as quickly had pulled himself up again, and was standing behind the sheltering tree while he fastened it in his coat. And when he had secured it, it seemed, after all, as if he had needed just that touch of soft, bright color, and would not have been completely himself without it.

To wait there, with his eyes fixed on that unfrequented way, hardly seemed a promising pastime. But the young fellow was either lucky or wise. He had not been there more than five minutes by his watch, when a girl turned the corner, and came, with down-bent head, slowly sauntering along the road below him. His clasping hand on the rough oak bark shifted slightly, to allow him to lean a little further and gain a wider range, though he was careful to keep in the shelter of his tree and the hawthorn hedge. "Barbara's gift," he said to himself, A few steps brought the girl exactly oppo- looking down at it. "I'll tell her of it one site his hiding-place. There she paused. of these days, when the poor things are She sauntered because her hands and dead and dry! No, that they never shall eyes were occupied, and she took no heed be!" He quickened his pace. “They shall of the way she went. She paused be- live, at any rate, for me. It would not be cause her occupation became so engross amiss for a sonnet. 'Love's Gleaning' ing that she forgot to take another step. yes, or 'Love's Alms,"" and before the She wore long, loose gloves, to guard her hands and wrists, and as she came she had pulled autumn leaves of briony and bramble, and brier sprays, with their bunches of glowing hips. These she was gathering together and arranging, partly that they might be easier to carry, and partly to justify her pleasure in their beauty by setting it off to the best advantage. As she completed her task, a tuft of yellow leaves on the bank beside her caught her eye. She stretched her hand to gather it, and the man above looked straight down into her unconscious, up-sical words floated on the evening air, and turned face.

young fellow's eyes rose the dainty vision of a creamy, faintly ribbed page, with strong yet delicately cut Roman type and slim italics. Though not a line of it was written, he could vaguely see that sonnet in which his rosy spoil should be enshrined. He could even see Barbara reading it, on some future day, while he added the commentary, which was not for the world in general, but for Barbara. It became clearer to him as he hurried on, striking across the fields to reach his destination more directly. Snatches of mu

he quickened his pace unconsciously as if in actual pursuit. To the east the sky grew cold and blue, and the moon, pearl white, but as yet not luminous, swam. above him as he walked.

She was not more than eighteen or nineteen, and by a touch of innocent shy ness in her glances and movements she might have been judged to be still young. er. She was slight and dark, with a soft, So the poet went in quest of rhymes, loose cloud of dusky hair, and a face, not and Barbara, strolling onward, looked for flower-like in its charm, but with a health-leaves and berries. She had not gone far ful beauty more akin to her own autumn berries ripe, clear-skinned, and sweet. As she looked up, with red lips parted, it was hardly wonderful that the lips of the man in ambush, breathlessly silent though he was, made answer with a smile. She plucked the yellow leaves and turned away, and he suffered his breath to escape softly in a sigh. Yet he was smiling still at the pretty picture of that innocent face held up to him.

It was all over in a minute. She had come and gone, and he stood up, still cautiously, lest she should return, and looked at the broad brown slope down which he had come so eagerly. Every step of that

when she spied some more, better, of course, than any she had already gath ered. This time they were on the lower bank which sloped steeply downward to a muddy ditch. Barbara looked at them longingly, decided that they were attain. able, and put her nosegay down on the damp grass that she might have both hands free for her enterprise.

She was certain she could get them. She leaned forward, her finger-tips almost brushed them, when a man's footsteps, close beside her, startled her into consciousness of an undignified position, and she sprang back to firmer ground. But a thin chain she wore had caught on a

thorny spray. It snapped, and a little gold cross dropped from it, and lay, rather more than half-way down, among the briers and withered leaves. She snatched at the dangling chain, and stood flushed and disconcerted, trying to appear absorbed in the landscape, and unconscious of the passer-by who had done the mischief. If only he would pass by as quickly as possible, and leave her to regain her treasure and gather her berries!

But the steps hesitated, halted, and there was a pause an immense pause during which Barbara kept her eyes fixed on a particular spot in the meadow below. It appeared to her that the eyes of the unknown man were fixed on the back of her head, and the sensation was intolerable. After a moment, however, he spoke, and broke the spell. It was a gentleman's voice, she perceived, but a little forced and hard, as if the words cost him something of an effort.

"II beg your pardon, but can I be of any service? I think you dropped something - ah! a little cross." He

came to her side. get it for you?"

"Will you allow me to

Barbara went through the form of glancing at him, but she did not meet his eyes. "Thank you," she said, "but I needn't trouble you, really." And she returned to her pensive contemplation of that spot where the meadow grass grew somewhat more rankly tufted.

She was familiar, in novels, with heroes and heroines who were not precisely beautiful, yet possessed a nameless and allconquering charm. Perhaps for that very reason she was slow to recognize good looks where this charm was absent. The tall young fellow who stood a few steps away, gazing with knitted brows at the little wilderness of briers, was really very handsome, but he was not certain of the fact. Beauty should not be self-conscious, but it should not despondently question its own existence. This man seemed to be accustomed to a chilly, ungenial atmosphere, to be numbed and repressed, to lack fire. Barbara fancied that if he touched her his hand would be cold.

In point of actual features he was decidedly the superior of the young fellow who was climbing the hillside, but the pleasant color and grace were altogether wanting. Yet he was not exactly awkward. Neither was he ill-dressed, though his clothes did not seem to express his individuality, except perhaps by the fact that they were black and grey. Any attempt at description falls naturally into cold negatives, and the scarlet autumn berries which were just a jewel-like brightness in the first picture would have been a strange and vivid contrast in the second.

His momentary hesitation on the brink of his venture was not in reality indecision, but the watchful distrust produced by a conviction that circumstances were He paused again before speaking. It hostile. He wished to take them all into seemed to Barbara that this young man account. Having briefly considered the did nothing but pause. "I don't think position of the cross, and the steepness of you can get it, he said, looking at the the bank, he stepped boldly down. In brambles. "I really don't think you can." less than half a second the treacherous If Barbara had frankly uttered her in-earth had betrayed him; his foot slipped, most sentiments she would have said, "Great idiot - no not if you don't go away!" But, as it was, she colored yet more in her shyness, and stooped to pick up her nosegay from the ground. He had been within an inch of treading on it.

"Oh, I beg your pardon!" he exclaimed, starting back."How clumsy of

me!"

Something in his tone disarmed her. She feared that she had been ungracious, and moreover she was a little doubtful whether she would not find it difficult to regain her trinket without his help. "You haven't done any harm," she said. Then, glancing downward, "Well, if you will be so kind."

The new-comer surveyed the situation so intently that Barbara took the opportunity of surveying him.

he fell on his back, and slid down the short incline to the muddy ditch at the bottom, losing his hat by the way.

Barbara, above him, uttered a silvery little "Oh!" of dismay and surprise. She was not accustomed to a man who failed in what he undertook.

The victim of the little accident was grimly silent. With a scrambling effort he recovered his footing and lost it again. A second attempt was more successful; he secured the cross, clambered up, and restored it to its owner, turning away from her thanks to pick up his hat, which luckily lay within easy reach. Barbara did not know which way to look. She was painfully, burningly conscious of his evil plight. His boots were coated with mire, his face was darkly flushed and seamed with a couple of brier scratches, a bit of dead leaf was sticking in his hair, and

"Oh," thought Barbara, "he cannot possi- | sounded a little more dignified than bly know how muddy his back is!”

She stood, turning the little cross in her fingers. "Thank you very much," she said nervously. "I should never have got it for myself.'

"Are you quite sure?" he asked, with bitter distinctness. "I think you would have managed it much better."

"mud" or "dirt," and that he might not mind it quite so much.) "Please let me brush it off for you." She looked up at him with a pleading glance and produced a filmy little feminine handkerchief. He eyed her, drawing back. "No!" he ejaculated; and then, more mildly, No, thank you. I can manage. No, thank you."

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"I wish

"I'm sure I would rather not try." She dared not raise her eyes to his face, but she saw that he wore no glove, and that the thorns had torn his hand. He was winding his handkerchief round it, and the blood started through the white folds. "Oh, you have hurt yourself!" she ex-gazing at them in unconcealed surprise. claimed. He answered only with an impatient gesture of negation.

"How am I to thank you?" she asked despairingly.

"Don't you think the less said the bet

"Barbara began, but she said no more, for the expression of his face changed so suddenly that she looked over her shoulder to discover the cause. A gentleman stood a few steps away, A small, neat, black-clothed gentleman, with bright grey eyes and white hair and whiskers, who wore a very tall hat and carried a smart little cane.

"Uncle!" the girl exclaimed, and her

ter, at any rate for me?" he replied, pick-uplifted hand dropped loosely by her ing a piece of bramble from his sleeve, and side. glancing aside, as if to permit her to go

her way with no more words.

"I

But Barbara held her ground. should have been sorry to lose that cross. I — I prize it very much."

"Then I am sorry to have given you an absurd association with it."

"Please don't talk like that. I shall remember your kindness," said the girl hurriedly. She felt as if she must add something more. "I always fancy my cross is a kind of what do you call those things that bring good luck?"

"Amulet? Talisman?"

"Yes, a talisman," she repeated, with a little nod. "It belonged to my god. mother. I was named after her. She died before I was a year old, but I have heard my mother say she was the most beautiful woman she ever saw. Oh, I should hate to lose it!"

"Would your luck go with it?" He smiled as he asked the question, and the smile was like a momentary illumination, revealing the habitual melancholy of his mouth.

"Perhaps," said Barbara.

"Well, you would not have lost it this afternoon, as it was quite conspicuously visibie," he rejoined.

By this time he had brushed his hat, and, passing his hand over his short waves of dark hair, had found and removed the bit of leaf which had distressed Barbara. She advanced a step, perhaps emboldened a little by that passing smile. "Oh, I beg your pardon," she said, "but when you slipped you got some earth on your coat." (She fancied that "earth

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CHAPTER II.

AN UNEXPECTED INVITATION.

THE old gentleman's face would have been a mere note of interrogation, but for a hint of chilly displeasure in its questioning. The young people answered with blushes. The word was the same for both, but the fact was curiously different. The color that sprang to Barbara's cheek was light and swift as flame, while the man at her side reddened slowly, as if with the rising of a dark and sullen tide, till the lines across his face were angrily swollen. The bandage, loosely wound round his hand, showed the wet stains, and the new-comer's bright gaze, travelling downwards, rested on it for a moment, and then passed on to the muddy boots and trousers.

"Uncle," said Barbara, "I dropped my gold cross, and this gentleman was so kind as to get it back for me."

"It was nothing I was very glad to be of any service, but it isn't worth mentioning," the stranger protested, again with a rough edge of effort in his tone.

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"On the contrary," said the old gentleman, I fear my niece has given you a great deal of trouble. I am sure we are both of us exceedingly obliged to you for your kindness." He emphasized his thanks with a neat little bow. To the young man's angry fancy it seemed that his glance swept the landscape, as if he sought some perilous precipice, which might account for the display of mud and wounds.

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