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POETRY.-The Way by which He led thee, 2.

London Review,

Macmillan's Magazine,
Saturday Review,
Chambers's Journal,

66

Examiner,

66

PAGE

3

5

14

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26

28

31

35

40

Macmillan's Magazine,
Philadelphia Press,
Athenæum,

45

47

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Little Shoes and Stockings, 2. The Brave at Home, 2. The Invisible Armies, 25. The Comet, 1861, 25.

SHORT ARTICLES.-New Relic of Columbus, 13. Accident on Mont Blanc, 15. Heraldic Jeu D'Esprit, 21. Death of Atkinson, the Traveller, 27. Bishop Taylor, 27. Wolsey's Repentance, 30. Auctumnalia, 34. Wine Corks, 44. Cannon, 47.

IN PRESS.

POEMS Didactic, Descriptive, Sentimental and Lyric. Illustrated by Darley and others, and accompanied by Autobiographic and other Notes. By T. H. STOCKTON, Chaplain to Congress. [Only 1,000 copies are printing. Price, single copy, cloth, $1.00; half calf or half morocco, $1.50. For $5.00, six copies cloth, or four half calf or half morocco. Address T. II. Slockton, Box 1717, Philadelphia, Pa. Subscribers at a distance will be supplied by mail free of postage. We hope that this small edition of a handsome volume by our respected friend and relative, may be immediately taken up. The Autobiographic Notes ought to be especially interesting-as his experience has been long and varied.— Living Age.]

PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BY

LITTELL, SON, & CO., BOSTON.

For Six Dollars a year, in advance, remitted directly to the Publishers, the LIVING AGE will be punctually forwarded free of postage.

Complete sets of the First Series, in thirty-six volumes, and of the Second Series, in twenty volumes, handsomely bound, packed in neat boxes, and delivered in all the principal cities, free of expense of freight, are for sale at two dollars a volume.

ANY VOLUME may be had separately, at two dollars, bound, or a dollar and a half in numbers.

ANY NUMBER may be had for 13 cents; and it is well worth while for subscribers or purchasers to complete any broken volumes they may have, and thus greatly enhance their value.

THE WAY BY WHICH HE LED THEE.

WHEN we reach a quiet dwelling
On the strong, eternal hills,
And our praise to Him is swelling
Who the vast creation fills;
When the paths of prayer and duty,
And affliction, all are trod,
And we wake, and see the beauty
Of our Saviour and our God:-
With the light of resurrection,

When our changèd bodies glow,
And we gain the full perfection
Of the bliss begun below;
When the life that flesh obscureth

In each radiant form shall shine,
And the joy that aye endureth
Flashes forth in beams divine :—

While we have the palms of glory
Through the long eternal years,
Shall we e'er forget the story

Of our mortal griefs and fears?
Shall we e'er forget the sadness

And the clouds that hung so dim, When our hearts are filled with gladness, And our tears are dried by him?

Shall the memory be banished

Of his kindness and his care, When the wants and woes are vanished Which he loved to soothe and share? All the way by which he led us,

All the grievings which he bore; All the patient love he taught us, Shall we think of them no more? Yes! we surely shall remember

How he quickened us from death—
How he fanned the dying ember

With his spirit's glowing breath:
We shall read the tender meaning
Of the sorrows and alarms,
As we trod the desert, leaning
On his everlasting arms.

And his rest will be the dearer

When we think of weary ways,
And his light will seem the clearer
As we muse on cloudy days.
Oh, 'twill be a glorious morrow
To a dark and stormy day!
We shall recollect our sorrow,

As the dreams that pass away.

LITTLE SHOES AND STOCKINGS.

LITTLE shoes and stockings!
What a tale ye speak,
Of the swollen eyelid,

And the tear-wet cheek!

Of the nightly vigil,
And the daily prayer;
Of the buried darling,
Present everywhere.

Brightly plaided stockings,
Of the finest wool;
Rounded feet and dainty,
Each, a stocking full;
Tiny shoes of crimson,
Shoes that nevermore
Will awaken echoes,
From the toy-strewn floor.
Not the wealth of Indies,
Could your worth eclipse,
Priceless little treasures,
Pressed to whitened lips;
As the mother nurses,
From the world apart,
Leaning on the arrow
That has pierced her heart,
Head of flaxen ringlets;
Eyes of heaven's blue,
Parted mouth-a rosebud-
Pearls, just peeping through;
Soft arms softly twining
Round her neck at eve,
Little shoes and stockings,

These the dreams ye weave.
Weave her yet another

Of the world of bliss, Let the stricken mother

Turn away from this; Bid her dream believing Little feet await, Watching for her passing Through the pearly gate.

-Congregational Herald.

THE BRAVE AT HOME.

BY T. BUCHANAN READ. THE maid who binds her warrior's sash, With smile that well her pain dissembles, The while beneath her drooping lash

One starry teardrop hangs and trembles. Though Heaven alone records the tear, And Fame shall never know her story, Her heart has shed a drop as dear

As ever dewed the field of glory. The wife who girds her husband's sword, 'Mid little ones who weep or wonder, And bravely speaks the cheering word, What though her heart be rent asunderDoomed nightly in her dreams to hear The bolts of war around him rattle, Hath shed as sacred blood as e'er

Was poured upon the plain of battle! The mother who conceals her grief,

While to her breast her son she presses, Then breathes a few brave words and brief, Kissing the patriot brow she blesses, With no one but her secret God,

To know the pain that weighs upon her, Sheds holy blood as e'er the sod

Received on Freedom's field of honor!

From The London Review.

that very many of the educated and refined, THE WEAKNESS OF GIANTS. as well as larger numbers who have coarser MYTHOLOGY, tradition, and history agree tastes, see a substratum of goodness under in the fact that giants, though strong in the evil thing, and defend it as not without body, are weak in mind; and that nature, its advantages in keeping up among the which does so much for them in respect of people a love of fair play, in discouraging or thews and sinews, is, for the most part, rendering impossible amongst us the use of niggardly to them in the matter of brains. the knife or the stiletto, and above all things Their brute force is not equalled by their in imprinting upon the whole course and intellect; and the biggest and most formida- current of an Englishman's character a conbly pretentious of them are continually rep-viction of the base cowardice of " hitting a resented as falling easy victims to the skill man when he is down." or cunning of comparatively small antago- Without entering upon that question at nists. Samson was but a poor creature- all, and recognizing to the fullest extent the if he were not a positive idiot; and great brutality of the late fight between Hurst Goliath of Gath, fell easily before nimble and Mace, for the greatly coveted belt of little David. The Jotuns, in Norse my- the championship, we cannot but read the thology, were, with all their tremendous details of the struggle with a certain sort of strength, very easily circumvented by strip- admiration for the "pluck," as well as the lings-and even by children; and the skill of the little man, who so effectually famous achievements of the universally defeated the big one. Hurst, the possessor popular and highly esteemed Jack-sur- of the belt, which he had won some months named the Giant-Killer-have no other moral than to show how infinitely superior to the mere bodily force of the hugest monsters in human form are the skill, patience, address, and pertinacity, that are given to smaller people, in order to keep true the balances of nature, and rescue the world from oppression. When a giant becomes the friend of a dwarf, it is only that he may have the advantage of the little man's intel-versary, and that that one blow would fell a lect; and the dwarf generally ends by making himself, as he ought to be, the ruler and governor of his bulky associate. It is an old, and all but universal instinct, which has contributed largely to the delight of men in all parts of the world, and given them treasures of poetry and romance, which have gone on accumulating from the earliest ages to our own.

ago at the close of a short fight, by a single and all but accidental blow, stood nearly six feet three inches in height, and weighed sixteen stonc. Mace, his antagonist, was but five feet eight inches in height, and weighed only ten stone and a half. It was known by the friends and backers of the giant, that he had but to strike one blow to make an end of the battle, if not of his ad

stronger man than Mace, as effectually as a child's hand would fell a ninepin. Mace, if not his friends and backers, was precisely of the same conviction, and never lost heart, or doubted the issue, even when Hurst, to add to his other advantages, acquired the right of choosing his corner, and stood with his own back to the sun, and the light full in the face of his adversary.

The fight for the championship of Eng- After a little preliminary sparring to feel land, which took place on Tuesday last in his way, "Mace," says the graphic account an island in the river Medway, safe from of an eye-witness, "began the fight with the interference of a police that was doubt- a terrific blow, which completely closed less instructed not to be "too" zealous in Hurst's eye, and seemed to make his bulky the performance of its duty, was in itself a frame tremble to his very feet. Before the very disgusting business. Yet, in its re- first round, which lasted nearly twelve minsults, it was so remarkable a proof of the utes, was over, Hurst was half smothered in old wisdom of the world, as represented to his own blood, and his face so gashed, that, us by the traditions of every age and race, as far as appearances went, Mace might as to justify the journalist in commenting have been assaulting him with a razor. upon it. Most people of education look Hurst knew evidently nothing of boxing, upon pugilism with dislike, and some even and his antagonist therefore merely drew with abhorrence; but it cannot be denied aside with the most perfect sang-froid from

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