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Collections made In any part of North Caro- jQli: C. F. CAMPBJELI. j MUBTBXESBOBO. W. U j . i ' ' !.- it ' i - i -THE ELEVENTH COMMANDMENT. It is not always sunshine ; In thia bright world of ours ; Sharp thorns and weeds grow thickest Amid the fairest flowers ; In fruits howe'er enticing, Lurk worm-fcpots at the core ; For each one's bread and butter There is a sanded floor. In lustrous silks there's cotton. In flowing tresses rats, Iu ermines, eoft and snowy, i The skins of Thomas cats $ In Hebea form there's whalebone, On Venus' lips carmine, Old boots are thrown in sherry To make Madeira wine. The best of golden butter Is oleomargarine ; The finest of old brandy Is next door to benzine ; The fragrant leaf of Cuba Is cousin to saner-kraut ; To often are the milkman's cans Replenished at the spout. ; - i i If, then, your reputation Proves quite unfit to air. Pray, how then does it differ From most things seeming fair ? And why heap maledictions, Because through me no deubt You broke the 'leventh commandment "Thou shall not be found out!" 7 Taking Her Down. Two girls, both young, and one very beautiful, sat Conversing in a comfort able sitting-room in a mansion at the "West End. The handsomer of the two, Maude Pierson, wore a traveling dress of brown merino, and was 'evidently resting after a journey. In spite of a certain languor born of fatigue, and her unbecoming dress, the girl was undeniably a beauty, of a gor geous brunette type. Her companion, passing pretty, was of the same dark tint, but smaller in figure, and far from possessing Maude's great beauty. "Tell me about everybody," Maude said. "I am fairly hungry for gossip," after vegetating nearly two years in that abominable i place with my aunt. She has left me an ample fortune, however, so the time was not altogether thrown, away.: . ... J ... - ".Dead" cried her companion. fYou are not in mourning, and why, Maudo, you said you were going to Lady Rals ton's this evening." "So I am. ; Aunt Maria has been dead six months, and requested me not to wear black and to return to town in No vember. But, Cora, tell me the news. Who has been the belle of our set since I left?" "You conceited girl I" laughed her friend. "Bah I What is the use of duplicity ? For, between ourselves, I should be an idiot if I did not know I was handsome. How is Lord Frederick Seymour?" "One question at a time, though I can answer these two together. The belle has been the object of Lord Frederick Seymour's special attention since she made her debut last month. Mrs. Hur- sey introduced her. She is a niece, I be lieve, of old Mrs. Mortimrr, who died three years j ago and left her all her money." "But who is she?" "Her name is Worthington Esther Worthington " "Esther Wojrthington," cried Maude, sharply. "What is she like?" "Tall, slender, very fair, with delicate features, and unmistakably a beauty, tv-ho sings exquisitely ; and having been on the continent with Mrs.. Mortimer, speaks two or three modern languages with fluency." "How old?" "About your age, I judge twenty- four or five." Maude broke into a harsh laugh. "Mrs. Mortimer's niece I" she cried. "Well, that is rich! And so young Lord Frederick Seymour is in love with her!" "He is certainly very devoted. Every one thinks thero will be a match.?' "A match !" cried Maude, in another burst of mocking merriment. "Lord Frederick Seympur and Esther Worth ington t Well 1 1 well I I tell you," she said, with a touch of sarcasm in her tones, "it will not be a match !" I will lake her down !" "What do you mean?" "Will this belle be at Lady Ralstoh's this evening?" ! "Probably. But do tell me, Maude, what do you know about her?" "I know enough to cool Lord Fred erick Seymour's ardor," said Maude ; ! "and he shall learn the truth. To think of that girl's daring to move in our set!" "Well, as to that," Cora replied, "being) handsome, accomplished, re fined, and heiress to double your for tune, Maude, I cannot see where the audacity comes in, especially as Mrs. Hurseys has her for a guest, rand we all know how particular she is. The Sey mours themselves are not prouder than the Hurseys." i "You wait until the evening. I sup-J pose the girl thinks nobody here knows her. I'll humble her! She won't attend f.ny more fashionable parties after I've told my story." "But what is your story ?" ; "You'll hear to-night." "Tell me now," said Cora coaxingly. "No. Let me lie down awhile and rest, or I shall look like a ghost this evening.", A very brilliant ghost it would have been to resemble Maude Pierson, as she entered Lady Ralston's salon a few hours later. An evening dress of garnet velvet, cut to display the beautifully rounded shoulders and arms, and trimmed with rich black lace,ornaments of diamonds, and a cluster of white flowers in the jetty braids of hair, ail heightene-l her queenly beauty. i Looking across the crowded rooms, she recognized her rival in a tall, slenr der girl, who wore white lace over peach colored satin, and ornaments oif fretted gold. Lord Frederick Seymoui was already in attendance, apparently, for he was leading this lady to the head of a quadrille just forming, when Maude entered. The sight stimulated anew all the hatred of Esther Worthington that had been aroused by Cora's dej scription. jj A cold-hearted, calculating woman devoted to dress, wealth and luxury j selfish to the heart's core, carrying th smiling face of a belle over a bitter envy of all more fortunate than herself j Maude Pierson had never felt the touchy of womanhood until her heart opened to Lord Frederick Seymour. An orphan, dependent upon an aunt devoted to the frivolities of fashion J Maude's education had been superficial, and an undue; value had been given in! her thoughts to the advantages of birthj position and fortune. j Miss Pierson was very proud of thej blue blood in her own veins; and Maude's success as a belle was as much! a triumph to her aunt as to herself. When the long illness set in that drove Miss Pierson to the seclusion and quiet of a country home, her niece had begun to hope that the attentions of "Lord Fred" were more than those Called for by the ordinary requirements of so ciety. It had been a great blow to her to be - suddenly-whirled --tKa vnrre-v- r London gaiety, to be buried alive in the little town where much of her childhood had passed, under her aunt's care. But she was far too polite to murmur loudly, and when her relative died it was with the firm conviction that all Maude's tender care and attention were dictated by warmest affection. It was singu larly characteristic of Miss Pierson that in her will she stipulated that Maude should return to London six months after her death, and wear no mourning. In one of their last interviews she said to her: "You will soon be twenty-five, Maude, and you shall not bury yourself here next winter. It might ruin your prospects of a good match." i And Maude, secretly exultant, wept copiously as she assured her dear aunt that "society would have no charms for her were she to be deprived of hrr life long companion." Yet the six months dragged wearily when she thought of Lord Frederick Seymour. Would he love her better for her golden charms, or did he know her fortune, after all, was spall compared witn his own princeiv income i iiau a fairer face eclipsed her memory? Caretuliy durmg the long summer did the beautiful brunette cherish her own charms, and gloriously did they repay her care when she burst upon her .old friends, more superbly handsome than ever, at Lady Ralston's reception Esther Worthington. looking at her as she entered the room, turned to her companion, saving, in a low tone: "Is not that Miss Pierson ?" "Yes. Is she not handsome?" "Magnificently so. I can scarcely imagine a more queenly beauty. She was not a very pretty child, dark and thin. Will she recognize me, 1 wonder, as easily as 1 do her?" "You were children when you last met?" "About -twelve years old ; , but we lived near each other for six years be fore that. Will she look down upon me now as scornfully as she did then?" "Hush, you pain me I" was the re- ply. "Try to forget the dark days "Nay, for theyjraake happy ones all the brighter," was the gentle reply. Tinxxr ff vnnr narf.np.r " -JUTV , J V - w For the music of the quadrille sounded in the long room, and attention was re quired to the intricacies through which Miss Worthington and her partner pro posed to lead their set. When it was over, Esther, leaning on her partner's arm, turned to find herself confronting Maude Pierson. With a sweet smile, she extended her hand. "Have you forgotten me?" she asked. "I remember you well,'? was the re ply, in a freezing tone, "and I confess my surprise is very great to meet a charity girl among my friends." "A charity girl!" cried several voices. "You may doubt me," said Maude, w - a - r- i answering them,- "but let Miss Worth ingtori deny, 4f she" can, that she , was takenvffrom a charity school to be the nursery-maid of Mrs. Thurston, my auut'aeousin arid neighbor. Let her deny, f she can, that she did a menial's work ror years in.their. house. She may palm herself off as Mrs. Mortimer's niece upon strangers, but I, knowing her, decline the honor of her acquaint ance." ,? ; . i-v .to The ifsilcate, beautiful Esjher Worfcfa ington grew very pale during this In sulting address, but she drew herself i - - 1 - -..iv- i .-(,-- i ci - ' -..,. i I erect as haughtily as Maude Pierson herself, as that young lady ceased to speak. "All you have said is quite true," she replied, and the only reason for con cealing the facts you now force upon my friends was the request of my dear aunt, Mrs. Mortimer. Mrs. Hursey, Lady Ralston, and several others of those who honor me with their friend ship, know well the family history you force me to relate to our friends here. You will pardon me for obtruding my private affairs upon you; but since Miss Pierson has attacked my veracity 1 must defend it. My parents were mar ried against the wishes of my mother's father, who carried his resentment to the ; grave, and cut my mother oat of his ; will. When I was a babe, my fa ther died, and my mother, ill, feeble and penniless, was taken to the work house where she, too, died. - Her sister, Mrs. Mortimer, was in Canada at the time, and unaware of my existence. "What Miss Pierson has so delicately told you of my childhood is quite true. I was taken from the workhouse to fill a servant's place; but my employers were kind, and I was allowed to attend school in the winter. I think they will testify that if my duties were menial they were faithfully performed. When I was thirteen, my aunt returned home and found me out. Since then I have been her i-charge, and the kindest love Tv as lavished upon me until, at her death, I became the guest of my friend, Mrs. Hursey. I hope you will pardon me for taking up so much of your time ;. and if you desire, with Miss Pierson, to de cline the further acquaintance of a workhouse girl, I can only accept your ioUiou wij"h some regretjor a deceit th a t iXfitny i n accordance with rne wishes of the dead." "Stay K moment," said Lord Frede rick j Seymour, as the friends of the beautiful girl would have. pressed more warmly than ever around her; Uet me speak one word. By the request of Miss Worthington, I have refrained from mentioning the honor she has conferred upon me, and which is the crowning pride; and happiness of my life. When I asked her to become my wife, to give me the priceless treasure of her love, she told me the storv vou have iust heard, and I, too, joined my entreaties to those of her aunt. Not," he added haughtily, "that I valued my future wife the less, but I understood that, even in our society, there are some ig noble! enough to count her early mis fortunes as a shameful fact, and ignore the beauty of character that could keep her noble, pure and true, even in the lowly home to which the misfortunes of her parents condemned her. Miss Worthingtorbwill you take my arm to the conservatory? you are pale and need rest." With an air of tender affection, of fond pride, he led her through the group of friends who spoke warmest words as she passed. Finding her a seat near the fountain, he said, in a low tbnei "1 am glad they all know it, Essie, for a secret is a trou blesome burden." "But, you oh, Fred, if it shames you!' "Hush ! I never honored you so highly, or loved you so fondly, as I did when that girl found insulting taunts answered by your own dignified frank ness, i We will not speak of it again. Rest here till I bring you an ice, and we wijl return to our friends." "Maude," Cora said, as the girls un bound their hair in their own room, be fore retiring, "I don't think your little scene was altogether a success. From the warmth of her friends, when Esther Worthington returned to the drawing- room, ana lora JtrreaencK Seymour 8 (devotion, I really imagine you placed that lady upon a higher pedestal of fa vor than ever, in your amiable endea vor to ake her down" Confidence. All confidence which is not absolute and entire is dangerous. There are few occasions where a man ought either toay s all or conceal all, for, how little soever you have revealed of your secret to a friend, you have already said too tnuch if you think it not safe to make bim privy to all particulars. There is nothing so easy as to be wise for others; a species of prodigality, by-the-byfor such wisdom is wholly wasted. Hath any wronged thee ? Be bravely avenged : slight it, and the work is be gun ; forgive, and it Is finished. He is below himself, that is net above an in jury. Vanity. The condemnation of vanity collapses when we try to answer the plain quei tion, what is vanity? Try to define accurately the various cognate "terms, vanity, conceit, pride, egotism, and their numerous allies, to mark out accu rately their points of resemblance and ( contrast, and then. test your conclusions by appropriate examples.' TabVa' few cases at random 'Here Is ii'iVir .r tin -eaif , for xam pie, who 'says' in Ii?r auto biography that all the distinguished men of her jtime were vain and she does not add that the limits of time.or! sex are a necessary part of the assertion. But was she not vain herself? No, for she formed a singularly rriodest and sound estimate of her own abilities. But again, yes, for she certainly seems to nave consiuerea tnat to one Derson. at least, Miss Martineau was incompar ably the most interesting person in the .v f !.. universe, mat cominggenerations wouio be profoundly interested in he analysis of her charact3r and the genesis of hei work , and also that the merits of her contemporaries might be; accuratel gauged by the extent to which they di or did not sympathize with Harre Martineau, Is not egotism of this kip mere vanity disguised by a superficia air oi impartiality t rake the vanity again, which is revealed so curiousl in trie recently published; letters ;o Balzac. Here it becomes a force whicl leads a man to reckon himself anion the four greatest heroes of his age, ah goes iar to make him what he suppose himself to be. It developed a kind ;o monomania leading to utterj absorption in his own affairs, In his literary ambi tion, and, above all, in calculations as! to the number of francs into: which his genius can be coined. Was t a strength or a weakness? Contrast it with the vanity for many people will call jit vanity of his contemporary Doudan. Doudan'8 letters reveal to us a man of that admirable fineness of intellect so conspicuous in the best Frtrich writers, which may be defined as tlie sublimated essence of common sense. But his ex quisite sensibility was pushed to such; a point as to destroy his fertility, and but for his letters his name would hate been known to hi-fellowsonly through a assin4Eallu8io) of Ste.ijea.ve. Shall we say that Balza vanVy I led him t produce the " Com&meumaine," audi Doudan's humility mide him producer nothing? Then vanity is so far a good and humility -"'rbad 'thin; Or shall we say that this excessive sensi bility is but vanity disgjuiBed?thatja mah who treaiblsfs before, criticism thinks too much of his own importance? The theorv is a common one, and en ables us verbally to condemn vanity m all forms; but it implicitly admits too that vanity may produce diametrically opposite results, and at times co-operate hand in hand with humility. Infuse vanity into such a man as Goldsmith, and it adds a childlike charm to his character; it gives a tinge of 'delightful humor to his writings, and enables his friends to love him the more heartily because they have a right also to pay I "themselves by a little kindly contempt. Make a Byron vain, and half his magni ficent force of mind will bejwasted'by silly efforts to attract the notice of his contemporaries by attackingjthelr be$t feelings and affecting (a superfluous task!) vices which he does not possess. The vanity of a Wordsworth enables him to treat with profound disdain the sneei-s of Edinburgh reviewers, and the' dull indifference of the mass of readers; but it encourages him also to jbecome a literary sloven, to spoil noble thought by grovelling language, and lo subside into supine obstructiveness. Converse ly, the vanity of a Pope makes hirii suffer snspeakable tortures jfrom thfe sting of critics compared to whom Jeffrey was a giant condescend to the meanest artifices to catch the applause Of his contemporaries, and hunger 4hd thirst for the food which Wordsworjth reject! ed with contempt. But it also enables him to become within his own limits the most exquisite of artists in words ; to increase in skill as he increases in years; and to coin phrases fori a distan posterity even out of the most trifling ebullition of passing spite. The vanity of a Milton excites something approach! ing to awe. The vanity of a Congreve excites our rightful contempt.' Vanity seems to be at once the source of the greatest weaknessess and of the greatest achievements. To write a history of vanity would be to write a history o( the greatest men of our race; for soli diers and statesmen have been as vain as poets and artists. Chatham was vain ; Wolfe was vain ; Nelson wb3 childishly vain, and the great Napoleon was as rain as the vainest. Must not lour con-- dem nation of the quality undergo some! modification before we can lay it down as an absolute principle. Cornhill. Bear your own Burdens. I have-the healthiest kind of scorn for a grumbler ! He reminds me of a pig he has got into such a natural habit of grunting that he never does anything else. ' . Never mind displaying your sha low dig- nity,! Jlr. Misanthrope, and spluttering about its ail being very; well for those to talk who have only the bright side of life to bask in ; if they had been plun dered and slandered and lied about and abused; as ;you have been, thev would feel their wrongs as bitterly and learn to hate the world and mankind even as yOU do, ;j ,- Bah :; You're a blockhead, if that's your logic! .. . ' I f. What wotild you thlnk'of vou neigh bor if! he had close' -frrv crack and crevice! of i his hi nisf to the blinding, t u me terjday, a chilling storm of yc nd 8 wears ie will! keep it closed forever, as It will :iever cease to blow and rain any more, ! ! ''I ! i f ilthough td-days warming sunshine falls ipon his rpof, arid the cheering song of i mellcfw breeze and the soft whispering )f invisible hope try vjainly to find a odgemlnt Inside; the darkened windows. This is la big world, and yours must be a worlfl-wide distress concentrated in ne Individual, If " all the world" Is to )lamc for the one little i storm in your )reast. r Is that lferht-hearted lad or lassie interested n your woe, that you Musi needs, force a erloOm upon them y yoiiff cheerless visage? Will it excite heir sympathy ?j What portion of your jorrowlwas occasioned by that little happy.tjhild, playing so innocently on the street with its top or ball or marbles, yiat yiu..leel yourself kick at fits toy arid scow constrained to at his joyous face until you drive away his pleasure nd ;exiter a disposition to give you what you r chly deserve a grand llck- i"g? : j Did it ease the bitterness of your heart, Sid It remove one iota of your trouble. . id it put money in your pocket or restore 1 lost confidence ? Did it better matters? ' r ! Therelarcl times in every life, I guess, frhen thfe human heart is so grieved and sore that even sunshine seems a nainful intrusloi ; but those seasons are sacred to your! elf. Such pain is not to be paraaeu their sil ! and the traces of it that leave nt mark upon the countenance, have a tendency neither to repel nor discouraire. but rather to ennoble and develop fa spirit to endure as well as conquer the ills that come, sooner or later to very one of us. Wmif our.luri comes. bear it .as you 'iriust. b t Dear it Draveiy. As soon ybu be ii to snarl and whine, and blame t is one and that one, and after a while the whole world, you are a mi$eraDie shirking cowara; anu since ypu are uetermlned, oy your lace ana manner,! to make your; friends and f i rv- 1 t-! In n rl oil' m Af o 1 mo o twl Vita i4ij sajt j ( Hduv aii uiui iui iiauy aiiu 1110 Creator, help you bear the burden, why I 'really ido not see why you should not have an funusual burden to bear, and e may keep our heartfelt sympathy r some i one more in need oi it. Not fqr you ere the lines written : " Be stiilf ead heart, and cease repining. Behind the clouds the sun's still shining; Thine is the common fate of all Into eich life some rain must fall, Some &ays be dark and dreary." t i ; ; - Longest Tunnel in America. jFew people know how great an engi neering enterprise is going on in Balti more Coijfnty. For one thing alone, a tunnel sx land four-fifths miles long, 30,510 feet, is. being built underground. fob over four-fifths 1 of the distant e through hard gneiss and granite. Jt will be the longest tunnel in the coun- try, and there wil be only two larger inl j world, M opt Cems, which is eight miles In length, and the St. Goth-. aril noui ia process of; construction. lich is! to! bejnlne and one-quarler w m lea. fact that the water supply tunne s hear enough to the surface to allow 1 of numerous shafts, greatly faciliates fits construction. The jtum.el is a circn twelve feet in diameter, and from tlie Gunpowder River, ex; tends about eight miles from the city, to Lake Montebello, 'the distributing reservoir ,i ii - near i. the i iiarioru turnpike, about one mile and a half from the city, the direc- tion j beiil or twenty degrees west of south, water j "his tunnel will conduct the from! the Gunpowder River to Lake Montebello. Thence a conduit 4,- 120 feet idmg, known as the Clifton tun- 1 i i ne . fromlthe tact that it nasses under a portion pi Ciifton park, 'conducts the water to af point just south of the Hart ford roadj wriere ii enters six mains, each four fet in diameter,, which con vey the w;at4r to the city, a distance of 1,900 feet. The country along the line of the; works is hilly, and the tunnel varies in depth beloiw the surface from 07 to 333fjeti. There arelfifteen shafts in the rnaiiri tunnel, the deepest extend ing 294 fet below the surface. The water rains down from the crevices of tbej rocks, land pours along the bottom ofj the drift, j The Work of the tunnel ing ; is jall done by hand, it being cheaper than the machine-work in a n . , . k r t . drift of such narrw diameter, Heal EstaU Reporter. i i ; ; It is better to spend one's time in ac quiring more know ledge than to waste it m paraqing what one has. , People Ido not lack strength; they lack YfllU-f-Iiugo. hit