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not only that which she would | hasty judgment, with the promise of herself have correctly and distinctly dis- something beautiful to come. The ashtinguished as "butcher's meat."

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The house was very empty and desolate after all the din and bustle. The furniture had faded in the quarter of a century and more which had elapsed since Harry Erskine furnished his drawing room for his bride. That had not been a good period for furniture, according to our present lights, and everything looked dingy and faded. The few cosy articles with which the late tenants had changed its character had been removed; the ornaments and prettinesses were all gone. The gay, limp old chintzes, the faded car pet, the walls in sad want of renewal, obtruded themselves even upon the accustomed eye of Rolls. The nest might be cleared, but it looked a somewhat forlorn and empty nest. He stood upon the threshold of the drawing-room, contemplating it mournfully. A little of that cheeney and nonsense" which he had been highly indignant with Mrs. Barring ton for bringing, would have been of the greatest consequence now to brighten the walls; and a shawl or a hat thrown on a chair, which had called forth from old Rolls many a grumble in the past, would have appeared to him now something like a sign of humanity in the desert. But all that was over, and the old servant, painfully sensible of the difference in the aspect of the place, began to grow afraid of its effect upon the young master. If, after all, John should not be "struck with" his home! if, terrible to think of, he might prefer some house "in the south" to Dalrulzian! But it's no possible," said Rolls to himself. He made a survey of all the rooms in the new anxiety that dawned upon him. The library was better; there were a good many books on the shelves, and it had not to Rolls the air of desertion the other rooms had. He lighted a fire in it, though it was the first week in May, and took great pains to restore by it an air of comfort and habitation. Then he took a walk down the avenue in order to make a critical examination of the house from a little distance, to see how it would look to the new comer. And Rolls could not but think it a most creditable-looking house. The firtrees on the top of the hill threw up their sombre fan of foliage against the sky; the birches were breathing forth a spring sweetness the thin young foliage softly washed in with that tenderest of greens against the darker background, seemed to appeal to the spectator, forbidding any

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trees were backward no doubt, but they are always backward. In the wood the primroses were appearing in great clusters, and the parterres under the terrace were gay with the same. Rolls took comfort as he gazed. The avenue was all green, the leaves in some sunny corners quite shaken out of their husks, in all bursting hopefully. "It's a bonnie place," Rolls said to himself, with a sigh of excitement and anxiety. Bauby, who shared his feelings in a softened, fat, comfortable way of her own, was standing in the doorway, with her little shawl pinned over her broad chest, and a great white apron blazing in the light of the morning sun. She had a round face, like a full moon, and a quantity of yellow hair smoothed under the white cap, which was decorously tied under her chin. She did not take any of the dignity of a housekeeper-cook upon her, but she was a comfortable creature to behold, folding her round arms, with the sleeves rolled up a little, and looking out with a slight curve, like a shadow of the pucker on her brother's brows, in her freckled forehead. She was ready to cry for joy when Mr. John appeared, just as she had cried for sorrow when the Barringtons went away. Neither of these effusions of sentiment would disturb her greatly, but they were quite genuine all the same. Rolls felt that the whiteness of her apron and the good-humor of her face lit up the seriousness of the house. He began to give her her instructions as he advanced across the open space at the top of the avenue. "Bauby," he said, "when ye hear the wheels ye'll come, and the lasses with you; and Andrew, he can stand behind; and me, naturally I'll be in the front: and we'll have no whingeing, if you please, but the best curtsey you can make, and We're glad to see you home, sir,' or something cheery like that. He's been long away, and he was but a boy when he went. We'll have to take care that he gets a good impression of his ain_house." "That's true," said Bauby. “Tammas,

I've heard of them that after a long ab sence have just taken a kind o' scunner

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"Hold your tongue with your nonsense. A scunner at Dalrulzian!" cried Rolls; but the word sank into the depths of his heart. A scunner - for we scorn a footnote-is a sudden sickening and disgust with an object not necessarily disagreable

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a sort of fantastic prejudice, which

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there is no struggling against. But Rolls | times he stopped to ask the way to Dal. repeated his directions, and would not allow himself to entertain such a fear.

rulzian out of pure pleasure in the question; for he never lost sight of that line of fir-trees against the horizon, which indicated his native hill; but after he had put this question once or twice, it must be added that young Erskine's satisfaction in it failed a little. He ceased to feel the excitement of his incognito, the pleasure of entering his dominions like a young prince in disguise. The imagination of the women at the village doors, the chance passengers on the way, were not occupied with the return of John Erskine; they were much more disposed to think and talk of the others who had no right, it seemed to him, to occupy their thoughts.

"Dalrulzian! you'll find nobody there the day," said a countryman whom he overtook and accosted on the road. "The family's away this morning, and a great loss they will be to the countryside."

"The family!" said John, and he felt that his tone was querulous in spite of himself. "I did not understand that there was a family."

"Ay was there, and one that will be missed sore; both gentle and simple will miss them. Not the real family, but as good, or maybe better," the man said, with a little emphasis, as if he meant offence, and knew who his questioner was.

It was not, however, with any sound of wheels, triumphal or otherwise, that young Erskine approached his father's house. It was all new and strange to him; the hills- the broad and wealthy carses through which he had passed the noble Firth, half sea half river, which he had crossed over in his way, - all appeared to him like landscapes in a dream, places he had seen before, though he could not tell how or when. It was afternoon when he reached Dunearn, which was the nearest place of any importance. He had chosen to stop there instead of at the little country station a few miles further on, which was proper for Dalrulzian. This caprice had moved him, much in the same way as a prince has sometimes been moved to wander about incognito, and glean the opinions of his public as to his own character and proceedings. Princes in fiction are fond of this diversion; why not a young Scotch laird just coming into his kingdom, whose person was quite unknown to his future vassals? It amused and gently excited him to think of thus arriving unknown, and finding out with what eyes he was looked upon; for he had very little doubt that he was important enough to be discussed and talked of, and that the opinions of the people would throw a great deal of light to him upon the circumstances and peculiarities of the place. He was curious about everything, the little grey Scotch town, clinging to its hillside the freshness of the spring "The laird is what they call in Ireland an color the width of the wistful blue sky, absentee," said his companion. "We're banked and flecked with white clouds, and no minding muckle in Scotland if they're never free, with all its brightness, from a absentees or no; they can please themsels. suspicion of possible rain. He thought But there's nae family of the Erskines he recollected them all like things he had nothing but a young lad; and the cornel seen in a dream; and that sense of trav- that's had the house was a fine, hearty, elling incognito and arriving without any weel-spoken man, with a good word for warning in the midst of a little world, all everybody; and the ladies very kind, and eagerly looking for his arrival, but which pleasant, and neighbor-like. Young Ersshould be innocently deceived by his un-kine must be a young laird past the ordipretending appearance, tickled his fancy nar if he can fill their place." greatly. He was five-and-twenty, and "But, so far as I understand, the estate ought to have known better; but there belongs to him, does it not?" Erskine was something in the circumstances asked, with an involuntary sharpness in which justified his excitement. He his voice. skimmed lightly along the quiet country "Oh ay, it belongs to him; that makes road, saying to himself that he thought he but sma' difference. Ye're no bound to remembered the few clusters of houses be a fine fellow," said the roadside phithat were visible here and there, one of losopher, with great calmness, "because them only big enough to be called a vil-ye're the laird of a bit sma' country lage, where there was "a merchant's" shop, repository of every kind of ware, and a blacksmith's smithy. Two or three

The young man reddened in spite of himself. This was not the kind of popu lar report which in his incognito he had hoped to hear.

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"Is it such a small place?" cried the poor young prince incognito, appalled by

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"You must excuse me as a stranger," he said, "if I don't quite know what side you regard as the right side."

this revelation. He felt almost childishly | clared with so much certainty to be. It
annoyed and mortified. His companion pleased him at least to find that they had
eyed him with a cool, half-satirical gaze. character enough to have traditionary pol-
"You're maybe a friend of the young tics at all.
man? Na, I'm saying nae ill of the place
nor of him. Dalrulzian's a fine little
property, and a' in good order, thanks to
auld Monypenny in Dunearn. Maybe
you're from Dunearn? It's a place that
thinks muckle of itself; but nae doubt it
would seem but a poor bit town to you
coming from the south?"

"How do you know I come from the south?" said John.

"Oh, I ken the cut of ye fine," said the man. "I'm no easy deceived. And I daur to say you could tell us something about this new laird. There's different opinions about him. Some thinks him a lad with brains, that could be put up for the county and spite the earl. I've no great objection mysel to the earl or his opinions, but to tak' another man's nominee, if he was an angel out of heaven, is little credit to an enlightened constituency. So there's been twa-three words. You'll no know if he has ony turn for politics, or if he's a clever lad, or

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"You don't seem to mind what his politics are," said the unwary young man.

His new friend gave him another keen glance. "The Erskines," he answered quietly, "are a' on the right side.”

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His friend looked at him with a sarcastic gaze- -a look John felt which set him down not only as devoid of ordinary intelligence, but of common feeling. "It's clear to see you are not of that way of thinking," he said.

As he uttered this contemptuous verdict they came opposite to a gate, guarded by a pretty thatched cottage which did duty for a lodge. John felt his heart give a jump, notwithstanding the abashed yet amused sensation with which he felt himself put down. It was the gate of Dalrulzian: he remembered it as if he had left it yesterday. A woman came to the gate and looked out, shielding her eyes with her hand from the level afternoon sun that shone into them. "Have you seen anything of our young master, John Tamson?" she said. "I'm aye thinking it's him every sound I hear."

"There's the road,” said the rural politician, briefly addressing John; then he turned to the woman at the gate. "If it's no him, I reckon it's a friend. Ye had better pit your questions here," he said.

"John Thomson," said John, with some vague gleam of recollection. "Are you. one of the farmers?" The man looked at him with angry, the woman with astonished, eyes.

"My freend," said John Thomson indignantly, "I wouldna wonder but you have plenty of book-learning; but you're an ignorant young fop for a' that, if you were twenty times the laird's freend.” John for his part was too much startled and amused to be angry. "Am I an ignorant young fop?" he said. "Well, it is possible—but why in this particular case

"

Now John Erskine was aware that he did not himself possess political opinions sufficiently strenuous to be acknowledged by either side. He agreed sometimes with one party, sometimes with another, which, politically speaking, is the most untenable of all positions. And so ignorant was he of the immediate traditions of his family, that he could not divine which was the right side on which the Erskines were sure to be. It was not a question upon which his mother could have informed him. As Mr. Kingsford's wife, an orthodox Church of England clergywoman, she was, of course, soundly Conservative, and thought she hated everything that called itself Liberal-which word she devoutly believed to include all kinds of radical, revolutionary, and atheistical sentiments. John himself had been a good Tory too when he was at Eton, but at Oxford had veered considerably, running at one time into extreme opinions on the other side, then veering back, and finally settling into a hopeless eclectic, who by turns sympathized with everybody, but agreed wholly with nobody. "I like nae such jokes," said John Still it was whimsical not even to know Tamson angrily; and he went off swing. the side on which the Erskines were de-ing down the road at a great pace. John

"Noo, noo," said the woman, who left the lodge, coming forward with her hands spread out, and a tone of anxious conciliation. "Dear bless me! what are you bickering about? He's no a farmer, but he's just as decent a man - nobody better thought of for miles about. And John Tamson, I'm astonished at you! Can you no let the young gentleman have his joke without taking offence like this, that was never meent?"

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stood looking after him for a moment had known. It led instead up the slope greatly perplexed. The man did not touch his hat nor the woman curtsey as they certainly would have done at Milton Magna. He passed her mechanically without thinking of her, and went in at his own gate - not thinking of that either, though it was an event in his life. This little occurrence had given an impulse in another direction to his thoughts.

But the woman of the lodge called after him. She had made a slightly surprised objection to his entrance, which he did not notice in his preoccupation. "Sir, sir!" she cried-"you're welcome to walk up the avenue, which is a bonny walk; but you'll find nobody in the house. The young laird, if it was him you was wanting to see, is expected every minute; but there's no signs of him as yet and he canna come now till the four o'clock train."

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"Thank you. I'll walk up the avenue,' said John, and then he turned back. "Why did you think I was making a joke? and why was your friend offended when I asked if he was one of the farmers? it was no insult, I hope."

"He's a very decent man, sir," said the woman.; "but I wouldna just take it upon me to say that he was my freend."

"That's not the question!" cried John, exasperated and he felt some gibe about Scotch caution trembling on the tip of his tongue; but he remembered in time that he was himself a Scot and among his own people, and he held that unruly member still.

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of the hill, through shrubberies which were not more than copsewood in some places, and under lightly arching trees not grand enough or thick enough to afford continuous shade. And yet it was sweet in the brightness of the spring tints, the half-clothed branches relieved against that variable yet smiling sky, the birds in full-throated chorus, singing welcome with a hundred voices, no nightingales there, but whole tribes of the "mavis and the merle," north-country birds and kindly. His heart and mind were touched alike with that half-pathetic pleasure, that mixture of vague recollections and forgetfulness, with which we meet the half-remembered faces, and put out our hands to meet the grasp of old friends still faithful though scarcely known. A shadow of the childish delight with which he had once explored these scanty yet fresh and friendly woods came breathing about him: "The winds came to me from the fields of sleep." He felt himself like two people: one, a happy boy at home, familiar with every corner; the other a man, a spectator, sympathetically excited, faltering upon the forgotten way, wondering what lay round the next curve of the road. It was the strangest blending of the known and the unknown.

But when John Erskine came suddenly, as he turned the corner of that great group of ash-trees, in sight of his house, these vague sensations, which were full of sweetness, came to an end with a sharp jar and shock of the real. DalrulWeel, sir," said the woman, "if ye zian was a fact of the most solid dimenwill ken-but, bless me! it's easy to see sions, and dispersed in a moment all his for yourself. The farmers about here are dreams. He felt himself come down just as well put on and mounted and a' suddenly through the magical air, with a that as you are. John Tamson! he's a sensation of falling, with his feet upon very decent man, as good as any of them the common soil. So that was his home! - but he's just the joiner after a', and a He felt in a moment that he remembered cotter's son. He thought you were mak-it perfectly, that there had never been ing a fool of him, and he's not a man to be made a fool o'. We're no so civil-like - nor maybe so humble-minded, for anything I can tell- -as the English, sir. Baith the cornel and his lady used to tell me that."

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any illusions about it in his mind, - that he had known all along every line of it, every step of the gables, the number of the little windows, the slopes of the gray roof. But it is impossible to describe the keen sense of disenchantment which went It was with a mixture of irritation and through his mind as he said this to him. amusement that John pursued his way self. It was not only that the solid reality after this little encounter. And an un- dispersed his vision, but that it afforded comfortable sensation, a chill, seemed to a measure by which to judge himself and creep over his mind, and arrest his pleas- his fortunes, till now vaguely and pleas urable expectations as he went on. The antly exaggerated in his eyes. It is sel avenue was not so fine a thing as its name dom indeed that the dim image of what implied. It was not lined with noble was great and splendid to us in our childtrees, nor did it sweep across a green hood does not seem ludicrously exaggeruniverse of parks and lawns like many heated when we compare it with the reality.

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He who had felt himself a young prince | a stranger in so unworthy an occupation.
He put down his basket and glanced at
his shirt-sleeves with confusion. "I was
expecting nobody," he said in his own de-
fence. "And wha may ye be," he added,
"that comes into the mansion-house of
Dalrulzian without speering permission,
or ringing a bell, or chapping at a door?"
John smiled at the old man's perplexity,
but said nothing. "You'll be a friend of
our young master's?" he said tentatively;
then after an interval, in a voice with a
quiver in it, "You're no meaning, sir, that
you're the laird himself?"
"For want of a better," said John,
amused in spite of himself.
"And you're
old Rolls.

in disguise, approaching his domains in-
cognito, in order to enjoy at his leisure the
incense of universal interest, curiosity,
and expectation! John Erskine blushed
crimson though nobody saw him, as he
stood alone at the corner of his own
avenue and recognized the mistake he
had made, and his own unimportance, and
all the folly of his simple over-estimate.
Fortunately, indeed, he had brought no-
body with him to share in the glories of
his entry upon his kingdom. He thanked
heaven for that, with a gasp of horror at
the thought of the crowning ridicule he
had escaped. It was quite hard enough
to get over the first startling sensation of
reality alone.

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And yet it was the same house upon which the Barringtons had looked back so affectionately a few hours before which the county regarded with approval, and which was visited by the best families. It would be hard to say what its young master had expected, a dreamcastle, a habitation graceful and stately, a something built out of clouds, not out of old Scotch rubble-work and gray stone. It was not looking its best, it must be added. The corps du logis lay in gloom, thrown into shade by the projecting rustic gable, upon the other side of which the setting sun still played; the yellowish walls, discolored here and there by damp, had no light upon them to throw a fictitious glow over their imperfections. The door stood open, showing the hall with its faded fittings, gloomy and unattractive, and, what was more, deserted, as if the house had been abandoned to dreariness and decay not so much as a dog to give some sign of life. When the young man, rousing himself with an effort, shook off the stupor of his disappointment and vexation, and went on to the open door, his foot on the gravel seemed to wake a hundred unaccustomed echoes; and nobody appeared. He walked in unchallenged, unwelcomed, going from room to room, finding all equally desolate. Was there ever a more dismal coming home? When he reached the library, where a little fire was burning, this token of human life quite went to the young fellow's heart. He was standing on the hearth very gloomy, gazing wistfully at the portrait of a gentleman in a periwig over the mantelpiece, when the door was pushed open, and old Rolls appeared with his coat off carrying a basket of wood. Rolls was as much startled as his master was disappointed, and he was vexed to be seen by

I should have known you any. where. Shake hands, man, and say you're glad to see me. It's like a house of the dead."

"It

"Na, sir, no such things; there's no death here. Lord bless us! wha was to think you would come in stealing like a thief in the night, as the Bible says?" said Rolls, aggrieved. He felt that it was he who was the injured person. was all settled how you were to be received as soon as the wheels were heard in the avenue, -me on the steps, and the women behind, and Andrew, household, to wit. If there's any want of respect, it's your ain fault. And if you'll just go back to the avenue now and give us warning, I'll cry up the women in a moment," the old servant said.

- the haill

From The Spectator.

RALPH WALDO EMERSON.

THE great American thinker, who has been so often compared to Carlyle, and who in some respects resembles, whilst in many more he is profoundly different from him, and who has so soon followed him to the grave, will be remembered much longer, we believe, for the singular insight of his literary judgments, than for that transcendental philosophy for which he was once famous. It is remarkable enough that Carlyle and Emerson both had in them that imaginative gift which made them aim at poetry, and both that incapacity for rhythm or music which rendered their regular verses too rugged, and too much possessed with the sense of effort, to sink as verse should sink into the hearts of men. Carlyle's verse is like the heavy rumble of a van without springs; Emerson's, which now and then reaches something of the sweetness of poetry,

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