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Then, as a lily bowed with rain

Leaps shedding it, she shed her pain,

And towering looked where men, like grain
Storm humbled, bent upon the plain;

Whilst over her the cold night air
Throbbed with some awful pulse of prayer,
As, bending low, with reverent care,
She kissed the good knight's raiment fair.
When as she trembling rose again,
And felt no more in heart and brain
The weary weight of sin and pain,
For him that healed she looked in vain;
And from the starry heavens immense
Unto her soul with penitence

Came as if felt by some new sense

The noise of wings departing thence.

S. WEIR MITCHELL.

A REMINISCENCE OF EXHIBITION DAY.

"WELL

WELL no," the boy said, "the thing didn't go off exactly as I expected. You see, I was the sixth boy in the class, that was next to the head when the class formed left in front, and I was pretty near the first boy called on to declaim. I had got a good ready and it was a fine piece too."

And the boy sighed as he paused to lift a segment out of a green apple, and placed it where it would do the most good for the cholera doctor. We asked what piece it was.

"Spartacus to the Gladiators,"" he said. "I got it all by heart, and used to go clear out to the Cascade to rehearse. Old Fitch"-Mr. Fitch was the boy's pre

ceptor and one of the finest educators in the State-" he taught me all the gestures and inflections, and said I was going to take them all down."

"Excel your competitors?" we asked.

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"Yes," he said, "and the way it went off was bad. You see, I didn't feel easy in my Sunday clothes on a week day, to begin with. And my collar was too tight and my necktie was too blue, and I was in a hurry to get off early, and so I only blacked the toes of my boots, and left the heels as red as a concert ticket, and the crowd there was in the school-house, everybody in their good clothes and everybody looking solemn as Monday morning. When my name was called something came up in my throat as big as a football. I couldn't swallow it and I couldn't spit it out, and when I got up on the platform-did you ever see a million heads without any bodies?"

We felt ashamed of our limited experience while we confessed that we could not recall having witnessed such a phenomenon.

"I never did till then," the boy went on, "but they were there, for a fact, and I began to remember when these heads danced round and round the room that I had been forgetting my piece in the last five minutes just as fast as I ever forgot to fix the kindling wood at night. But I commenced. I got along with 'It had been a day of triumph at Capua,' and 'Lentilius returning with victorious eagles,' and all that, well enough, but when I got on into the heavy business, I was left, sure. If Spartacus had talked to the gladiators as I did, they would have thought he was drunk and hustled him off to bed. It was awful. I stumbled along until I came to Ye stand here now like giants as ye are. The

strength of brass is in your rugged sinews, but to-morrow some Roman Adonis, breathing sweet perfume from his curling locks shall with his dainty fingers, pat your red brawn and bet his sesterces upon your blood."

66

That was excellent, capital," we said, applauding, for the boy had growled off the last sentence like a first heavy villain.

"Oh yes, is it though?" he said, with some asperity. "Well that's the way I was going to say it that Friday, but what I did was, "The strength of brass is in your rugged sinews, but to-morrow afternoon (you see I got thinking of a base-ball match) some Doman Aronis, breathing sweet perfumery from his curly socks, will pat your bed-room and bet his sister sees your blood."

"Did they laugh?" we asked.

"Oh, no!" he replied, with an inflection that type won't take. "Oh, no; they never smiled again; they didn't. It was when I got down a little that they felt bad. When he says, 'If ye are beasts then stand here waiting like fat oxen for the butcher's knife.' I told them, ' If ye be cat fattle, then wait here standing like a butcher for the carving knife.' And I got worse, until it came to this, 'Oh, Rome, Rome, thou hast been a tender mother to me. Thou has taught the poor, timid shepherd boy, who never knew a harsher tone than a flute note, to gaze into the glaring eyeballs of the fierce Numidian lion, even as a boy upon a laughing girl. Thou hast taught him to drive the sword through rugged links of mail and brass, and warm it in the marrow of his foe!"

66 'Bravo!"

"Stop," he said, sententiously; "I didn't say it just that way. I said, 'Oh Rome, thou has ten a binder mother to me. Thou has taught the poor boy, who never

knew a sheep note to glare into the laughing ear of a fierce Numidian eyeball even as a lyin' boy at a girl. Thou hast taught him to mail his ragged brass through swords of link, and marry it in the warmer of his foe.'" "And then?" we asked.

"I cried," he said, "and went down. Everybody was cryin'. They all had their faces in their handkerchiefs or behind their fans, and were shaking so that it nearly jarred the school-house."

"You should practice elocution during vacation," we suggested; "and you will not fail again." He bolted the rest of the green apple, threw his bare feet up in the air, and walked around on his hands in little circles. "Don't have no speakin' in vacation," he said.

And we knew that, boy like, he was going to let the day and morrow take care each of its own evils; and we wondered, as we came away, how many fathers would recognize their own boys in the hero of this sketch, and if dear old Fitch, the oldest boy, with the clearest head and tenderest heart we ever knew, would remember him. R. J. BURDETTE.

THE BLIND LAMB.

WAS summer and softly the ocean

TWA

Sang, sparkling in light and heat,

And over the water and over the land
The warm south wind blew sweet.

And the children played in the sunshine
And shouted and scampered in glee

O'er the grassy slopes, or the weed-strewn beach,
Or rocked on the dreaming sea.

They had roamed the whole bright morning,

The troop of merry boys,

And in they flocked at noontide
With a clamor of joyful noise.

And they bore among them gently
A wee lamb, white as snow,
And "O mamma, mamma, he's blind
He can't tell where to go!

"And we found him lost and lonely,
And we brought him home to you,
And we're going to feed and care for him,"
Cried the eager little crew.

"Look how he falls on everything!"

And they set him on his feet,

And aimlessly he wandered

With a low and mournful bleat.

Some sign of pity he seemed to ask,
And he strove to draw more near
When he felt the touch of a human hand,
Or a kind voice reach his ear.

They tethered him in a grassy space

Hard by the garden gate,

And with sweet fresh milk they fed him,

And cared for him early and late.

But as the golden days went on,

Forgetful the children grew,

They wearied of tending the poor blind lamb,

No longer a plaything new,

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