CHAPTER XLIV.

MeanwhileMrs. Smithers had begun proceedings for obtaining the property willed her by Mr. Mullen. The days which followed at Mullen House were gloomy ones. Mr. Wentworth came down only to spend the larger part of his time and strength in cursing and fuming, which added little to the comfort of his client or her niece. To Ease, leaving the homestead could not be what it was to her aunt, who had no life apart from its theatrical stateliness. But Miss Mullen was too energetic to fold her hands. In less than a week from the time Mrs. Smithers put in a claim for the property, Miss Tabitha announced that she had made arrangements to take up her abode with a cousin residing in Boston.

"But what am I to do?" Ease asked in dismay.

"I was wondering this morning what you intended," her aunt said coolly. "As you have been the means of our losing all we have, I supposed you must have some plans. I hope you won't disgrace the family. If your father hadn't been a spendthrift, you'd have as much as I have to live on."

The sisters had each inherited a small property from their mother, and upon this Miss Tabitha had now todepend. Mrs. Apthorpe's portion had been expended in the last illness of her husband, who lingered between life and death five tedious years, during which Mr. Mullen had refused the slightest aid to his heart-broken daughter.

In these dark days, when Miss Tabitha was showing a spirit equally hard, Ease turned for comfort to Will Sanford. Accustomed to lean upon others, she found his presence and help a necessity. He had but one solution for her difficulties,—that of matrimony.

"But we are not even engaged," Ease protested.

"Oh! it isn't necessary to be engaged before you are married," he answered. "That can be attended to afterward quite as well."

Still, to marry on nothing a year is a delicate matter; and Will consulted his father in his perplexity.

"Married?" the doctor said. "What have you to live on?"

The son drew from his pocket a handful of silver, which he eyed doubtfully.

"That is about the extent of my available capital."

"Not a very substantial basis upon which to acquire a family," his father said.

"I wish," exclaimed Will, rattling the coins he held, "that I had as much money as I could lift; and oh, wouldn't I lift!"

"No doubt," Dr. Sanford assented grimly. "But you haven't; and it takes money to support a wife. Young love is delightful company, but a great eater."

"But there are two sides to the question," said Will. "Ease must be thought of. That old tabby-cat Tabithahas deserted her, and I can't stand by and see her turned out of house and home. And there's no other way I can help her. I might go to teaching school to support myself; but in the long-run I can make more at my profession. Now, will you lend me the money I need till I can pay my way?"

"My dear boy, debt is a pestilence which walketh at noonday, and doesn't lie quiet at night, nor let you."

"But I must endure that rather than let Ease suffer."

"But don't fancy I should forgive you the debt."

"I should hope not," Will said, unconsciously drawing himself up. "I didn't mean to beg a living."

"That strikes fire," his father said, laughing. "I think you had better arrange the matter with Ease as soon as you can, and have things settled. I am proud of your choice too."

"I"—Will began; but, instead of speech, he wrung his father's hand, and was off for Mullen House.

Themarriage of Will and Ease was naturally a quiet one. Wedding Ease with the certainty of hard work before him, and with the consciousness of taking up a man's burdens, Will was thoughtful and grave. He was full of a serious joy, and, as Patty declared, began already to look older and more sedate. Regret as he might the loss to his bride of her old home, he secretly experienced a virile joy that their fortunes were to be of his own carving.

"My boy," Dr. Sanford said to him upon the eve of his wedding-day, "make two agreements with your wife the day you marry, and stick to them,—never to cry over spilt milk, and never to cross a bridge till you come to it. That takes care of the past and the future; and, if you cannot bear the present together, you had better separate."

Bathalina, too, had her word to say.

"I approve of your bein' married," she said. "Some folks don't take no stock in folks gettin' married so young; but I believe in it. Then you ain't so much older than your children that they treat you as if you was their grand-dad; but they're kind of company for you. Now, when you get to be an oldman, you may have a son as old as or older than yourself to stick by you. I always believed in folks bein' married young myself."

The ceremony took place at the Episcopal church, which the Mullens had for years attended, and was wholly free from display.

"God bless you!" Dr. Sanford greeted the newly-wedded pair as they stepped over the threshold of his home. "May you never be less in love than now!"

On the following day Miss Mullen flitted from Montfield like the last-remaining bittern, and established herself with her maiden cousin in Boston, where she gradually recovered her normal condition, and posed before a circle of select if somewhat antiquated people, among whom she soon came to feel perfectly at home.

Meanwhile life in Montfield went on much as usual. Tom Putnam endeavored vainly to come to an understanding with Patty. She resolutely avoided him, except on a single occasion. As Ease and Patty sat sewing one day, conversation turned on Mrs. Toxteth's masquerade.

"Do you know," Ease said, "I never found out what you wore? Emily Purdy told me beforehand that you were going in a man's dress, but of course I didn't believe that."

"Emily Purdy!" exclaimed Patty.

In an instant the whole matter was clear to her, and she saw how Putnam had obtained his knowledge of her costume. The following day she met thelawyer on the street, and stopped him with a little gesture of the hand.

"It is hardly worth while to bother you with apologies," she said; "but I shall respect myself a trifle more if I tell you that I have discovered how you knew of my masquerade-dress, and I beg your pardon for so misjudging you."

"You do not need to apologize," said he eagerly. "It is I who should"—

"Not at all," she interrupted. "Good-morning."

And she walked swiftly away.

For the rest of our friends, Burleigh continually urged upon Flossy the desirability of a speedy marriage; Clarence Toxteth had taken his wounded heart, or vanity, to Europe; Mrs. Smithers took possession of Mullen House; and December brooded in a sulky, rainy mood over the land.

"A green Christmas," Mrs. Sanford said, "makes a full churchyard. I knew we'd have a mild fall when the 21st of September was so mild. Don't you remember, mother? The wind was south-west, and the day very warm."

"The weather has truly been very warm this season," replied grandmother Sanford.

"I think it must be the weather," continued Mrs. Sanford, "that ails Bathalina. She isn't worth any thing for work now: all she'll do is the heavy talking and light lifting. She seems to lay up her husband's death against the doctor. But, as I told her, Peter wouldn't respond to the medicine; and what could Charles do?"

"I know of only one thing Bathalina is good for now," Patty remarked. "She'd make a very ornamental figure in a lunatic-asylum, with her long widow's veil."

"She is certainly crazy enough," put in Flossy. "She told me last night that Noah must have been familiar with the Bible, because he gave his sons names out of it, and that that showed how old the Bible was."

"There comes Will with the letters," Ease said, running to meet him.

"It's as good as eating perennial wedding-cake to see Ease and Will," Flossy laughed. "They are those two souls, you know, that have only a single thought."

"Young married couples," Patty returned somewhat cynically, "are apt to be so foolish that a single thought is quite as much as they can get up between them."

"You are getting misanthropical," Flossy said. "It isn't becoming. And, so saying, she went to stir up the young couple to see—Oh, here you are!"

"Here's a letter for Patty," Will said: "I think it is from Hazard Breck."

The letter which he put into his sister's hands was written in a bold, somewhat boyish hand, which always seemed to Patty very like Hazard himself. It was as follows:—

Dear Patty,—I don't know as I ought to write to you as I am going to, but I am sure you are too much my friend not to understand that I mean right. I want your help; and, to make things clear, I must tell you something. You know that Smithers woman who has got possession of Mullen House, andI dare say you have heard folks blame uncle Tom for taking so much care of her. He has always treated her better than she deserved. When her daughter ran away, she came after him to help find her; but they lost all trace till now. I am mixing things all up, for I hate to tell you the truth: it must come, though. You know well enough what father was, and—think how hard it is for me to tell you, Patty, and you'll excuse my writing this—Mrs. Smithers always said that this girl, her daughter, was my half-sister. Father asked uncle Tom, on his death-bed, to take care of the two; and she's had an income out of his pocket. The man with whom Alice Smithers ran away from Samoset has left her, and somehow or other she has got here. She met me on the street, and begged for a bit of bread. She is sick and penniless, and promises, that, if her mother will let her come home, she will behave. Mrs. Smithers only answers her letters by threats of vengeance if she dares go to Mullen House. I can't write to uncle Tom; for Mrs. Smithers hates him for having tried to make her behave decently, and, now that she is independent, she will do nothing for him. Cannot you do something, Patty, to help this poor girl? She looks half dead, and she has always been delicate.I am too troubled about this to write about any thing else; but I hope you will have a very merry Christmas and a happy New Year.Very truly yours,Hazard Breck.

Dear Patty,—I don't know as I ought to write to you as I am going to, but I am sure you are too much my friend not to understand that I mean right. I want your help; and, to make things clear, I must tell you something. You know that Smithers woman who has got possession of Mullen House, andI dare say you have heard folks blame uncle Tom for taking so much care of her. He has always treated her better than she deserved. When her daughter ran away, she came after him to help find her; but they lost all trace till now. I am mixing things all up, for I hate to tell you the truth: it must come, though. You know well enough what father was, and—think how hard it is for me to tell you, Patty, and you'll excuse my writing this—Mrs. Smithers always said that this girl, her daughter, was my half-sister. Father asked uncle Tom, on his death-bed, to take care of the two; and she's had an income out of his pocket. The man with whom Alice Smithers ran away from Samoset has left her, and somehow or other she has got here. She met me on the street, and begged for a bit of bread. She is sick and penniless, and promises, that, if her mother will let her come home, she will behave. Mrs. Smithers only answers her letters by threats of vengeance if she dares go to Mullen House. I can't write to uncle Tom; for Mrs. Smithers hates him for having tried to make her behave decently, and, now that she is independent, she will do nothing for him. Cannot you do something, Patty, to help this poor girl? She looks half dead, and she has always been delicate.

I am too troubled about this to write about any thing else; but I hope you will have a very merry Christmas and a happy New Year.

Very truly yours,Hazard Breck.

Patty read this letter carefully twice. Then she started up.

"I am going down to the brook for rose-hips to put about the Christmas-cake," she said.

Pattywent out of the house, and across the orchard. The grass over which she took her way was wet with the cold fog that made the air chill. Everywhere the trees and bushes were loaded with crystal drops upon which no sun shone to make them glitter. The fields were faded, and blotched with patches of gray and brown, and a frost-bitten green. Patty had thrown over her shoulders a long cloak, which covered her from head to feet; and as she walked through the fields she might have passed for the spirit of the sombre weather.

Along the margin of the brook which separated the fields of the Putnam place from Dr. Sanford's possessions, the wild roses grew in profusion, and left so many of their scarlet hips behind them, that the birds had not been able to devour the half. Patty moved along among the leafless shrubs, her cloak catching upon the briers, and her fingers suffering not unfrequently from the same sharp cause, while she gathered the rose-hips for which she had come. The brook, which was quite free from ice, and somewhat swollen by rain, gurgled and murmured past her. The drops shook down upon her from the dripping branches, sothat by the time she reached Black-Clear Eddy her cloak was pretty thoroughly wet.

She had not been here since the night she threw her ring into the pool. Remembering how clear was the water, she leaned over to see if she could discover the trinket. Looking carefully for some time, she fancied that her eye caught the gleam of gold. Kneeling upon the wet margin of the brook, she bent down, and assured herself that she indeed saw the ring lodged in a tuft of water-grass. Instantly she longed to recover it. She began to bare her arm, and then paused, laughing at her own folly. The pool was something like eight feet deep, and there seemed no way for her to get possession of the ring but by the use of a hook and line. She ruthlessly sacrificed her handkerchief, tearing it into strips; and, fastening a bent hair-pin to the end of this improvised line, with a pebble for a sinker, she began to angle.

"'Simple Simon went a-fishing,'"

"'Simple Simon went a-fishing,'"

she sang to herself,

"'For to catch a whale:All the water that he hadWas'"—

"'For to catch a whale:All the water that he hadWas'"—

"In Black-Clear Eddy apparently," the voice of Tom Putnam said close behind her.

So absorbed had she been, that she had not heard him approach. She sprang up quickly, and faced him.

"I wish you a Merry Christmas!" he continued, before she could speak.

"Thank you!" she answered. "I wish you many. How came you here?"

"In the simplest way in the world. I walked."

"But people do not usually go strolling about wet fields in such weather as this."

"Oh! you mean to ask why I came here. I was going over to pay your grandmother her pension for the month—and to see you."

"I am flattered," Patty said, "by even so secondary a remembrance."

She turned her face towards home, and began slowly to walk in that direction, as if expecting him to follow. Every time she encountered her lover, she found it more difficult to retain her self-possession. So completely was she now occupied in schooling herself, that to Putnam she seemed absent and distant.

"Wait," he said, as she turned from him. "You are leaving your rosebuds."

"Thank you!" she returned, taking them from him.

Their hands touched, and both were conscious of a thrill.

"What have I done to offend you?" he burst out. "Why do you avoid me, Patty?"

"Do I?" she asked, fixing her eyes upon the faded grass.

"You know you do. If I have done any thing wrong, any thing that offends you, it was at worst a sin of ignorance, and I sincerely beg your pardon. It is Christmas time, and you cannot better observe it than by a general amnesty."

"Will a general amnesty satisfy you, then?" sheasked, teasing a tuft of the withered aftermath with her foot.

Patty understood little her own mood. She desired intensely to be reconciled to her lover; but she was tormented by a secret feeling, that, if he loved her as she wished to be loved, his passion would break down all obstacles. She could endure a lukewarm affection better from any man in the world than from him. To give a sign of her own tenderness, to meet his advances half way, would leave her unsatisfied, even though it resulted in that understanding for which she so ardently longed. She wished to be seized, to be conquered by a passion so powerful as to break down all barriers, to sweep away all hinderances. Hazard's letter, too, had affected her strongly. She had never really believed her lover guilty of any tangible offence, but with a woman's inconsistency had secretly required him to prove his purity. Now that she understood the nature of his relations with Mrs. Smithers, and found here one more proof of his unselfishness, she felt herself contemptible for ever allowing a shadow of doubt to cross her mind. Her feelings were a wild mixture, and instinctively she waited to prove the strength of her lover's passion and its power over her. She stood there in the misty light, knowing that Putnam thought her trifling with him, and angry that he permitted her to do so.

"Is a general amnesty all you desire?" she asked again, as he remained silent.

"If it is the best you have to give," he said coldly. "Still I may perhaps be pardoned if I ask why Ineed the grace of an amnesty at all. What is my offence?"

"Who accused you of any?" she queried evasively.

"Is it a sin of omission, or of commission?" he persisted.

"Nowadays we seem only to talk in conundrums of great moral import," she said. "It doesn't seem to me to amount to much."

Her companion looked at her as might at the sphinx one whom that monster gave the choice between guessing her riddle, and being devoured. A sense of irritation struggled with his love. He felt at once the annoyance of one who is trifled with, and the strong tenderness of his regard for this slender woman before him. He came a step nearer to her.

"Does any thing seem to you to amount to much?" he demanded. "I think sometimes that you are only half human. You draw men on to love you, and then give only mockery in return."

"If there were only a rock in the middle of Black-Clear Eddy," Patty returned, with an affectation of the utmost deliberation, "I would certainly get a harp, and play the Loreley."

She raised her eyes as she spoke, and they met his. For an instant the two regarded each other as if each strove for mastery in that long, deep glance. Then she turned away once more.

"We had better go to the house," she said. "The grass is very wet."

He took a long stride towards her, and caught her by the arms, looking full into her face.

"You shall love me!" he exclaimed in a voice intense with feeling. "Youmustlove me! I will have you, Patty, in spite of yourself."

A look of defiance flashed upon him from the dark eyes, but it faded into one of gladness. She freed herself gently from his grasp, and moved on. But at the first step she turned back; and, lifting one of his hands in both of her own, she kissed it.

"I do love you," she said in a low voice. "I think I have loved you always."

Then she found herself half smothered in his arms.

There are few threads which need further gathering up. Mrs. Smithers persistently refused to receive her daughter, and the girl soon died from poverty and heart-break. A late remorse seized the unhappy mother, who made Mullen House the scene of disgraceful orgies, until an overdose of opium put an end to her ill-regulated life. In process of time, by a train of circumstances which need not be related here, Mullen House came into the possession of young Dr. Sanford and his wife: Ease thus returned again to the home of her ancestors. But all this was long after the April day upon which Patty and her cousin Flossy were both united to the men they had chosen. "Giant Blunderbore and the Princess Thumbling," Will called Mr. and Mrs. Blood; but the giant was so bewildered with happiness, that he shook the joker's hand cordially, and thanked him for his good wishes.

Patty and her husband walked home across thebridge over the brook, on whose banks the grass was already green, and the alder-tassels golden.

"Let us look in the eddy," the bride said. "We might see that ring."

For answer, her husband lifted her hand, and showed her, embedded in the midst of her wedding-ring, the golden thread she had thrown in the pool.

"It is symbolical," he said with a happy smile. "It signifies how my life is enclosed in yours."

She answered him with a look.

Finis.

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FAVORITE AUTHORS.A Companion-Book of Prose and Poetry. With Steel Portraits. 1 vol. 12mo. Full gilt. Cloth, $2.00. Half-calf, $4.00. Morocco antique, $5.00.HOUSEHOLD FRIENDSfor Every Season. 10 Steel Portraits. 1 vol. 12mo. Full gilt. Cloth, $2.00. Half-calf, $4.00. Morocco antique, $5.00.GOOD COMPANY FOR EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR.With Steel Portraits. 1 vol. 12mo. Full gilt. Cloth, $2.00. Half-calf, $4.00. Morocco antique, $5.00.

FAVORITE AUTHORS.A Companion-Book of Prose and Poetry. With Steel Portraits. 1 vol. 12mo. Full gilt. Cloth, $2.00. Half-calf, $4.00. Morocco antique, $5.00.

HOUSEHOLD FRIENDSfor Every Season. 10 Steel Portraits. 1 vol. 12mo. Full gilt. Cloth, $2.00. Half-calf, $4.00. Morocco antique, $5.00.

GOOD COMPANY FOR EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR.With Steel Portraits. 1 vol. 12mo. Full gilt. Cloth, $2.00. Half-calf, $4.00. Morocco antique, $5.00.

FORBES'S(Archibald) Glimpses through the Cannon-Smoke. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.00.

GARDNER'S(E. C.) Homes, and How to Make Them; or, Hints on Locating and Building a House. In Letters between an Architect and a Family Man seeking a House. 30 Illustrations. 1 vol. Square 12mo. $1.50.

GARDNER'SHome Interiors. Illustrated with 62 Plates designed by the Author. 1 vol. Square 12mo. $1.50.

GARDNER'SIllustrated Homes. Illustrated with 51 Plates designed by the Author. 1 vol. Square 12mo. $1.50.

GOETHE'SFaust. Translated into English Prose byA. Hayward. 1 vol. 16mo. $1.25.

GREENOUGH'S(Mrs. Richard) Mary Magdalene: a Poem. In unique London binding. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50.

HALE'S(Lucretia P.) The Peterkin Papers. 8 Illustrations. 1 vol. 16mo. $1.00.

HALL'S(G. Stanley, Ph.D.) Aspects of German Culture. A Volume of Essays and Criticisms. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50.

HARTING'S(James Edmund, F.L.S., F.Z.S.) British Animals Extinct within Historic Times. With Some Account of British Wild White Cattle. Illustrated. 1 vol. 8vo. Gilt top. $4.50.

HARTT'S(Professor C. F.) Geology and Physical Geography of Brazil. (As ascertained during the Agassiz-Thayer Expedition.) With Maps and 72 Illustrations. 1 vol. 8vo. $5.00.In preparation.

HAYWARD'S(Almira L.) The Birthday Book of American Poets. 1 vol. 18mo. Full gilt. $1.00.HELIOTYPE GALLERIES.Elegant quarto volumes, richly stamped in gold and colors, with Descriptive Text and full-page Heliotype Engravings.GEMS OF THE DRESDEN GALLERY.20 Heliotype Reproductions, with Descriptions. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.THE GOETHE GALLERY.21 Heliotypes, from the Original Drawings byWilhelm von Kaulbach. With Explanatory Text. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.ENGRAVINGS FROM LANDSEER.20 full-page Heliotypes. With a Biography of Sir Edwin Landseer. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.STUDIES FROM RAPHAEL.24 choice Heliotypes from Raphael's celebrated Paintings. With Text byM. T. B. Emeric-David, of the Institute of France. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.THE TITIAN GALLERY.20 large Heliotypes of Titian'schef-d'œuvres. With Biography of the Artist. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.TOSCHI'S ENGRAVINGS, from Frescos by Correggio and Parmegiano. 24 Heliotypes. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.THE GALLERY OF GREAT COMPOSERS.Fine Portraits of Bach, Handel, Gluck, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Von Weber, Mendelssohn, Schuman, Meyerbeer, and Wagner. Biographical Notices byRimbault. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.HOWITT'S(Mary) Mabel on Midsummer Day: a Story of the Olden Time. With 12 Silhouette Illustrations byHelen M. Hinds. 1 vol. Oblong 4to. $1.50.HUNNEWELL'S(J. F.) Bibliography of Charlestown, Mass., and Bunker Hill. 1 vol. 8vo. Illustrated. $2.00.IRVING'S WORKS.Spuyten-Duyvil Edition.12 vols. Large 12mo. Carefully printed on laid tinted paper. 900 pages in each volume, and a frontispiece. The final revisions and corrections of the author. Half-calf. $40.00 a set.KEENE'S(Charles) Our People. 400 Pictures fromPunch. 1 vol. 4to. Full gilt. $5.00.KENDRICK'S(Professor A. C.) Our Poetical Favorites. First, Second, and Third Series. 3 vols. 12mo. In cloth, per vol., $2.00. Half-calf, per vol., $4.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, per vol., $5.00.Sold separately or in sets.KING'S(Clarence) Mountaineering in the Sierra Nevada. 1 vol. 12mo. With Maps. Revised and Enlarged Edition. $2.00.

HAYWARD'S(Almira L.) The Birthday Book of American Poets. 1 vol. 18mo. Full gilt. $1.00.

HELIOTYPE GALLERIES.Elegant quarto volumes, richly stamped in gold and colors, with Descriptive Text and full-page Heliotype Engravings.

GEMS OF THE DRESDEN GALLERY.20 Heliotype Reproductions, with Descriptions. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.THE GOETHE GALLERY.21 Heliotypes, from the Original Drawings byWilhelm von Kaulbach. With Explanatory Text. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.ENGRAVINGS FROM LANDSEER.20 full-page Heliotypes. With a Biography of Sir Edwin Landseer. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.STUDIES FROM RAPHAEL.24 choice Heliotypes from Raphael's celebrated Paintings. With Text byM. T. B. Emeric-David, of the Institute of France. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.THE TITIAN GALLERY.20 large Heliotypes of Titian'schef-d'œuvres. With Biography of the Artist. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.TOSCHI'S ENGRAVINGS, from Frescos by Correggio and Parmegiano. 24 Heliotypes. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.THE GALLERY OF GREAT COMPOSERS.Fine Portraits of Bach, Handel, Gluck, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Von Weber, Mendelssohn, Schuman, Meyerbeer, and Wagner. Biographical Notices byRimbault. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.

GEMS OF THE DRESDEN GALLERY.20 Heliotype Reproductions, with Descriptions. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.

THE GOETHE GALLERY.21 Heliotypes, from the Original Drawings byWilhelm von Kaulbach. With Explanatory Text. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.

ENGRAVINGS FROM LANDSEER.20 full-page Heliotypes. With a Biography of Sir Edwin Landseer. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.

STUDIES FROM RAPHAEL.24 choice Heliotypes from Raphael's celebrated Paintings. With Text byM. T. B. Emeric-David, of the Institute of France. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.

THE TITIAN GALLERY.20 large Heliotypes of Titian'schef-d'œuvres. With Biography of the Artist. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.

TOSCHI'S ENGRAVINGS, from Frescos by Correggio and Parmegiano. 24 Heliotypes. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.

THE GALLERY OF GREAT COMPOSERS.Fine Portraits of Bach, Handel, Gluck, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Von Weber, Mendelssohn, Schuman, Meyerbeer, and Wagner. Biographical Notices byRimbault. 4to. Full gilt. $7.50.

HOWITT'S(Mary) Mabel on Midsummer Day: a Story of the Olden Time. With 12 Silhouette Illustrations byHelen M. Hinds. 1 vol. Oblong 4to. $1.50.

HUNNEWELL'S(J. F.) Bibliography of Charlestown, Mass., and Bunker Hill. 1 vol. 8vo. Illustrated. $2.00.

IRVING'S WORKS.Spuyten-Duyvil Edition.12 vols. Large 12mo. Carefully printed on laid tinted paper. 900 pages in each volume, and a frontispiece. The final revisions and corrections of the author. Half-calf. $40.00 a set.

KEENE'S(Charles) Our People. 400 Pictures fromPunch. 1 vol. 4to. Full gilt. $5.00.

KENDRICK'S(Professor A. C.) Our Poetical Favorites. First, Second, and Third Series. 3 vols. 12mo. In cloth, per vol., $2.00. Half-calf, per vol., $4.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, per vol., $5.00.Sold separately or in sets.

KING'S(Clarence) Mountaineering in the Sierra Nevada. 1 vol. 12mo. With Maps. Revised and Enlarged Edition. $2.00.

LESSON IN LOVE(A). Vol. II. of the Round-Robin Series of anonymous novels.In the Press.LONGFELLOW'S(H. W.) Poems. Illustrated Family Edition. Full gilt. Elegantly stamped. 1 vol. 8vo. Cloth, $2.50. Half-calf, $5.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $7.50.MEREDITH'S(Owen) Lucile. With 24 Illustrations byGeorge Du Maurier. 1 vol. 8vo. Cloth, $5.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $9.00.NAMELESS NOBLEMAN(A). Vol. I. of the Round-Robin Series of novels. 16mo. $1.00.NARJOUX'S(Felix) Journey of an Architect in the North-west of Europe. Fully illustrated. 1 vol. 8vo. $2.00.O'BRIEN'STales, &c. SeeWinter.OSGOOD'S AMERICAN GUIDE-BOOKS:NEW ENGLAND.With 17 Maps and Plans. 1 vol. 16mo. Flexible cloth. $1.50.THE MIDDLE STATES.With 22 Maps and Plans. 1 vol. 16mo. Flexible cloth. $1.50.THE MARITIME PROVINCES.With 9 Maps and Plans. 1 vol. 16mo. Flexible cloth. $1.50.THE WHITE MOUNTAINS.With 6 Maps and 6 Panoramas. 1 vol. 16mo. Flexible cloth. $1.50.PERCY'S(Townsend) A Dictionary of the Stage.In the Press.PERKINS'S(F. B.) Congressional District Vote Map of the United States. In cloth case. 50 cents.PRESTON'S(Miss Harriet W.) The Georgics of Vergil. 1 vol. 18mo. $1.00.POE'S(Edgar Allan) Select Works, Poetical and Prose. Household Edition. With Portrait. 1 vol. 12mo. Cloth, $2.00. Half-calf, $4.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $5.00.POE'SPoetical Works. Diamond Edition. 1 vol. 18mo. Cloth, $1.00. Half-calf, $2.25. Morocco antique, $3.00. Tree-calf, $3.50.PUTNAM'S(J. Pickering) The Open Fireplace in all Ages. With 269 Illustrations. 1 vol. 12mo. $2.00.RENAN'S(Ernest) English Conferences. Rome and Christianity: Marcus Aurelius. Translated byClara Erskine Clement. 1 vol. 16mo. 75 cents.

LESSON IN LOVE(A). Vol. II. of the Round-Robin Series of anonymous novels.In the Press.

LONGFELLOW'S(H. W.) Poems. Illustrated Family Edition. Full gilt. Elegantly stamped. 1 vol. 8vo. Cloth, $2.50. Half-calf, $5.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $7.50.

MEREDITH'S(Owen) Lucile. With 24 Illustrations byGeorge Du Maurier. 1 vol. 8vo. Cloth, $5.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $9.00.

NAMELESS NOBLEMAN(A). Vol. I. of the Round-Robin Series of novels. 16mo. $1.00.

NARJOUX'S(Felix) Journey of an Architect in the North-west of Europe. Fully illustrated. 1 vol. 8vo. $2.00.

O'BRIEN'STales, &c. SeeWinter.

OSGOOD'S AMERICAN GUIDE-BOOKS:

NEW ENGLAND.With 17 Maps and Plans. 1 vol. 16mo. Flexible cloth. $1.50.THE MIDDLE STATES.With 22 Maps and Plans. 1 vol. 16mo. Flexible cloth. $1.50.THE MARITIME PROVINCES.With 9 Maps and Plans. 1 vol. 16mo. Flexible cloth. $1.50.THE WHITE MOUNTAINS.With 6 Maps and 6 Panoramas. 1 vol. 16mo. Flexible cloth. $1.50.

NEW ENGLAND.With 17 Maps and Plans. 1 vol. 16mo. Flexible cloth. $1.50.

THE MIDDLE STATES.With 22 Maps and Plans. 1 vol. 16mo. Flexible cloth. $1.50.

THE MARITIME PROVINCES.With 9 Maps and Plans. 1 vol. 16mo. Flexible cloth. $1.50.

THE WHITE MOUNTAINS.With 6 Maps and 6 Panoramas. 1 vol. 16mo. Flexible cloth. $1.50.

PERCY'S(Townsend) A Dictionary of the Stage.In the Press.

PERKINS'S(F. B.) Congressional District Vote Map of the United States. In cloth case. 50 cents.

PRESTON'S(Miss Harriet W.) The Georgics of Vergil. 1 vol. 18mo. $1.00.

POE'S(Edgar Allan) Select Works, Poetical and Prose. Household Edition. With Portrait. 1 vol. 12mo. Cloth, $2.00. Half-calf, $4.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $5.00.

POE'SPoetical Works. Diamond Edition. 1 vol. 18mo. Cloth, $1.00. Half-calf, $2.25. Morocco antique, $3.00. Tree-calf, $3.50.

PUTNAM'S(J. Pickering) The Open Fireplace in all Ages. With 269 Illustrations. 1 vol. 12mo. $2.00.

RENAN'S(Ernest) English Conferences. Rome and Christianity: Marcus Aurelius. Translated byClara Erskine Clement. 1 vol. 16mo. 75 cents.

ROUND-ROBIN SERIES(The). A new series of original anonymous novels by the best writers, begun in the spring of 1881. Each novel is complete in one volume. 16mo. $1.00. The first volume,A Nameless Nobleman, is now ready. The second,A Lesson in Love, is in the press.SARGENT'S(Mrs. John T.) Sketches and Reminiscences of the Radical Club. Illustrated. 1 vol. 12mo. Cloth, $2.00. Full gilt, $2.50. Half-calf, $4.00.SENSIER'S(Alfred) Jean-François Millet: Peasant and Painter. Translated byHelena de Kay. With Illustrations. 1 vol. Square 8vo. $3.00.SHAKESPEARE'S WORKS.Handy-Volume Edition. 13 vols. Illustrated. 32mo. In neat box. Cloth, $7.50. Morocco antique, $15.00.SHALER(Professor N. S.) andDAVIS'S(Wm. M.) Illustrations of the Earth's Surface. Part I. Glaciers. Copiously illustrated with Heliotypes. Large folio.SHEDD'S(Mrs. Julia A.) Famous Painters and Paintings. With 18 full-page Heliotypes. 1 vol. 12mo. $3.00.In preparation.SHERRATT'S(R. J.) The Elements of Hand-Railing. 38 Plates. Small folio. $2.00.SIKES'S(Wirt) British Goblins, Welsh Folk-Lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends, and Traditions. Illustrated. 1 vol. 8vo. Bound in gold and black. Gilt top. $4.00.SPOONER(Samuel) andCLEMENT'S(Mrs. Clara Erskine) A Biographical History of the Fine Arts.In preparation.SWEETSER'S(M. F.) Artist-Biographies. Illustrated with 12 Heliotypes in each volume. 5 vols. 16mo. Cloth. $1.50 each.Vol. I. Raphael, Leonardo da Vinci, Michael Angelo.Vol. II. Titian, Guido Reni, Claude Lorraine.Vol. III. Sir Joshua Reynolds, Turner, Landseer.Vol. IV. Dürer, Rembrandt, Van Dyck.Vol. V. Fra Angelico, Murillo, Allston.The set, in cloth, 5 vols., $7.50. Half-calf, $15.00. Tree-calf, $25.00. The same are also published in smaller volumes, one biography in each. 15 vols. 18mo. Per vol., 50 cents.SYMONDS'S(John Addington) New and Old: A Volume of Verse. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50.TENNYSON'S(Alfred) A Dream of Fair Women. 40 Illustrations. Arabesque binding. 1 vol. 4to. $5.00. In Morocco antique or tree-calf, $9.00.TENNYSON'SBallads and other Poems. Author's Edition, with Portrait. 1 vol. 16mo. 50 cents.

ROUND-ROBIN SERIES(The). A new series of original anonymous novels by the best writers, begun in the spring of 1881. Each novel is complete in one volume. 16mo. $1.00. The first volume,A Nameless Nobleman, is now ready. The second,A Lesson in Love, is in the press.

SARGENT'S(Mrs. John T.) Sketches and Reminiscences of the Radical Club. Illustrated. 1 vol. 12mo. Cloth, $2.00. Full gilt, $2.50. Half-calf, $4.00.

SENSIER'S(Alfred) Jean-François Millet: Peasant and Painter. Translated byHelena de Kay. With Illustrations. 1 vol. Square 8vo. $3.00.

SHAKESPEARE'S WORKS.Handy-Volume Edition. 13 vols. Illustrated. 32mo. In neat box. Cloth, $7.50. Morocco antique, $15.00.

SHALER(Professor N. S.) andDAVIS'S(Wm. M.) Illustrations of the Earth's Surface. Part I. Glaciers. Copiously illustrated with Heliotypes. Large folio.

SHEDD'S(Mrs. Julia A.) Famous Painters and Paintings. With 18 full-page Heliotypes. 1 vol. 12mo. $3.00.In preparation.

SHERRATT'S(R. J.) The Elements of Hand-Railing. 38 Plates. Small folio. $2.00.

SIKES'S(Wirt) British Goblins, Welsh Folk-Lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends, and Traditions. Illustrated. 1 vol. 8vo. Bound in gold and black. Gilt top. $4.00.

SPOONER(Samuel) andCLEMENT'S(Mrs. Clara Erskine) A Biographical History of the Fine Arts.In preparation.

SWEETSER'S(M. F.) Artist-Biographies. Illustrated with 12 Heliotypes in each volume. 5 vols. 16mo. Cloth. $1.50 each.

Vol. I. Raphael, Leonardo da Vinci, Michael Angelo.Vol. II. Titian, Guido Reni, Claude Lorraine.Vol. III. Sir Joshua Reynolds, Turner, Landseer.Vol. IV. Dürer, Rembrandt, Van Dyck.Vol. V. Fra Angelico, Murillo, Allston.

Vol. I. Raphael, Leonardo da Vinci, Michael Angelo.Vol. II. Titian, Guido Reni, Claude Lorraine.Vol. III. Sir Joshua Reynolds, Turner, Landseer.Vol. IV. Dürer, Rembrandt, Van Dyck.Vol. V. Fra Angelico, Murillo, Allston.

The set, in cloth, 5 vols., $7.50. Half-calf, $15.00. Tree-calf, $25.00. The same are also published in smaller volumes, one biography in each. 15 vols. 18mo. Per vol., 50 cents.

SYMONDS'S(John Addington) New and Old: A Volume of Verse. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50.

TENNYSON'S(Alfred) A Dream of Fair Women. 40 Illustrations. Arabesque binding. 1 vol. 4to. $5.00. In Morocco antique or tree-calf, $9.00.

TENNYSON'SBallads and other Poems. Author's Edition, with Portrait. 1 vol. 16mo. 50 cents.

TENNYSON'S(Alfred) Poems. Illustrated Family Edition. Full gilt. Elegantly stamped. 1 vol. 8vo. $2.50. Half-calf, $5.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $7.50.TOWNSEND'S(S. Nugent) Our Indian Summer in the Far West. Illustrated with full-page Photographs of Scenes in Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, &c. 1 vol. 4to. $25.00.UPTON'S(George P.) Woman in Music. With Heliotype Illustrations. 1 vol. 12mo. $2.00. Half-calf, $4.00.VIOLLET-LE-DUC'S(E.-E.) Discourses on Architecture. Translated byHenry Van Brunt. With 18 large Plates and 110 Woodcuts. 1 vol. 8vo. $5.00.VIOLLET-LE-DUC'SDiscourses on Architecture. Vol. II.Nearly ready.VIOLLET-LE-DUC'SThe Story of a House. Illustrated with 62 Plates and Cuts. 1 vol. 12mo. $2.00.VIOLLET-LE-DUC'SThe Habitations of Man in all Ages. With 103 Illustrations. 1 vol. 12mo. $2.00.VIOLLET-LE-DUC'SAnnals of a Fortress. With 85 Illustrations. 1 vol. 12mo. $2.00.WARE'S(Professor William R.) Modern Perspective. For Architects, Artists, and Draughtsmen. 1 vol. 12mo.In the Press.WHIST, American or Standard. By G. W. P. Second Edition revised. 1 vol. 16mo. $1.00.WHITTIER'S(John G.) Poems. Illustrated Family Edition. Full gilt. Elegantly stamped. 1 vol. 8vo. $2.50. Half-calf, $5.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $7.50.WINCKELMANN'S(John) The History of Ancient Art. Translated byDr. G. H. Lodge. 78 Copper-plate Engravings. 2 vols. 8vo. Cloth, $9.00. Half-calf, $18.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $25.00.WINCKELMANN'SThe Same.Large-paper Edition. Large 4to. $30.00.Only 100 copies printed.WINTER'S(William) Poems. New Revised Edition. 1 vol. 16mo. Cloth, $1.50. Half-calf, $3.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $4.00.WINTER'SThe Trip to England. With full-page Illustrations byJoseph Jefferson. 1 vol. 16mo. $2.00. Half-calf, $4.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $5.00.WINTER'SThe Life, Stories, and Poems of John Brougham. Edited byW. Winter. 1 vol. 12mo. Illustrated. $2.00.WINTER'SFitz-James O'Brien's Tales, Sketches, and Poems. Edited byW. Winter. 1 vol. 12mo. Illustrated. $2.00.

TENNYSON'S(Alfred) Poems. Illustrated Family Edition. Full gilt. Elegantly stamped. 1 vol. 8vo. $2.50. Half-calf, $5.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $7.50.

TOWNSEND'S(S. Nugent) Our Indian Summer in the Far West. Illustrated with full-page Photographs of Scenes in Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, &c. 1 vol. 4to. $25.00.

UPTON'S(George P.) Woman in Music. With Heliotype Illustrations. 1 vol. 12mo. $2.00. Half-calf, $4.00.

VIOLLET-LE-DUC'S(E.-E.) Discourses on Architecture. Translated byHenry Van Brunt. With 18 large Plates and 110 Woodcuts. 1 vol. 8vo. $5.00.

VIOLLET-LE-DUC'SDiscourses on Architecture. Vol. II.Nearly ready.

VIOLLET-LE-DUC'SThe Story of a House. Illustrated with 62 Plates and Cuts. 1 vol. 12mo. $2.00.

VIOLLET-LE-DUC'SThe Habitations of Man in all Ages. With 103 Illustrations. 1 vol. 12mo. $2.00.

VIOLLET-LE-DUC'SAnnals of a Fortress. With 85 Illustrations. 1 vol. 12mo. $2.00.

WARE'S(Professor William R.) Modern Perspective. For Architects, Artists, and Draughtsmen. 1 vol. 12mo.In the Press.

WHIST, American or Standard. By G. W. P. Second Edition revised. 1 vol. 16mo. $1.00.

WHITTIER'S(John G.) Poems. Illustrated Family Edition. Full gilt. Elegantly stamped. 1 vol. 8vo. $2.50. Half-calf, $5.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $7.50.

WINCKELMANN'S(John) The History of Ancient Art. Translated byDr. G. H. Lodge. 78 Copper-plate Engravings. 2 vols. 8vo. Cloth, $9.00. Half-calf, $18.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $25.00.

WINCKELMANN'SThe Same.Large-paper Edition. Large 4to. $30.00.Only 100 copies printed.

WINTER'S(William) Poems. New Revised Edition. 1 vol. 16mo. Cloth, $1.50. Half-calf, $3.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $4.00.

WINTER'SThe Trip to England. With full-page Illustrations byJoseph Jefferson. 1 vol. 16mo. $2.00. Half-calf, $4.00. Morocco antique or tree-calf, $5.00.

WINTER'SThe Life, Stories, and Poems of John Brougham. Edited byW. Winter. 1 vol. 12mo. Illustrated. $2.00.

WINTER'SFitz-James O'Brien's Tales, Sketches, and Poems. Edited byW. Winter. 1 vol. 12mo. Illustrated. $2.00.

A Volume of Short Stories. ByRose Terry Cooke. In dainty and elegant binding. 400 pages, 12 stories. Price $1.50.

A Volume of Short Stories. ByRose Terry Cooke. In dainty and elegant binding. 400 pages, 12 stories. Price $1.50.

"Masterpieces it would be hard to match in any literature."—New-York Express."A pleasanter variety of good reading has seldom been enclosed by one pair of covers."—Cincinnati Gazette."Certainly no ordinary novel illustrates a greater variety of types, or illustrates them better, than this single group of short stories,—less than half the number in the book,—and in no recent novel of New-England life are individuals more graphically portrayed.... Truly a work of rare literary excellence. It offers even to novel-readers a larger return of interest than most novels do."—New-York Evening Post.

"Masterpieces it would be hard to match in any literature."—New-York Express.

"A pleasanter variety of good reading has seldom been enclosed by one pair of covers."—Cincinnati Gazette.

"Certainly no ordinary novel illustrates a greater variety of types, or illustrates them better, than this single group of short stories,—less than half the number in the book,—and in no recent novel of New-England life are individuals more graphically portrayed.... Truly a work of rare literary excellence. It offers even to novel-readers a larger return of interest than most novels do."—New-York Evening Post.

THE POEMS OF WILLIAM WINTER.One volume 16mo. Price $1.50.

THE POEMS OF WILLIAM WINTER.One volume 16mo. Price $1.50.

"There is a charm, a grace, in Mr. Winter's love-verse, which distinguishes it from the great body of modern love-verse, and which, if it reminds us of any thing, reminds us of Carew and Lovelace and Sedley at their best. It is fresh, simple, and exceedingly lovely."—New-York Mail.

"There is a charm, a grace, in Mr. Winter's love-verse, which distinguishes it from the great body of modern love-verse, and which, if it reminds us of any thing, reminds us of Carew and Lovelace and Sedley at their best. It is fresh, simple, and exceedingly lovely."—New-York Mail.

A TRIP TO ENGLAND.One volume 16mo. With full-page illustrations byJoseph Jefferson. Price $2.00.

A TRIP TO ENGLAND.One volume 16mo. With full-page illustrations byJoseph Jefferson. Price $2.00.

"Here is England in a drop of honey; here is the poetic side of the England that lies in the American imagination. If you cannot go and see for yourself, here is a vicar who has felt truly picturesque and romantic England, and in a few words, with a very few suggestive touches, shows you the kind of pleasure that awaits you in English streets and in the English landscape."—G. W. Curtis,in Harper's Magazine.

"Here is England in a drop of honey; here is the poetic side of the England that lies in the American imagination. If you cannot go and see for yourself, here is a vicar who has felt truly picturesque and romantic England, and in a few words, with a very few suggestive touches, shows you the kind of pleasure that awaits you in English streets and in the English landscape."—G. W. Curtis,in Harper's Magazine.

ByNora Perry. One volume, 16mo. $1.00.

This latest contribution of Miss Perry to American literature includes ten of her choicest stories, in which the loves and lovers of New England are portrayed with grace and insight. These stories are written in a light and animated manner, with felicitous bits of description, subtle interpretations of feminine nature, and with natural and pleasing, though unexpected,dénouements.

This latest contribution of Miss Perry to American literature includes ten of her choicest stories, in which the loves and lovers of New England are portrayed with grace and insight. These stories are written in a light and animated manner, with felicitous bits of description, subtle interpretations of feminine nature, and with natural and pleasing, though unexpected,dénouements.

ByWilliam D. Howells. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50.

Sold by all booksellers. Sent postpaid, on receipt of price, by the Publishers,

JAMES R. OSGOOD & CO., Boston.

Back Cover

TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE:Obvious printer errors have been corrected. Otherwise, the author's original spelling, punctuation and hyphenation have been left intact.

TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE:

Obvious printer errors have been corrected. Otherwise, the author's original spelling, punctuation and hyphenation have been left intact.


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