CHARLOTTE MESSENGER. VOL. I. NO. 50. A SONG OF WAKING. The maple hnds are red, are red, The robin’s call is sweet; The blue sky floats above thy head, The violets kiss thy feet. The sun paints emeralds on the spray And sapphires on the lake ; A million wings unfold to-day, • A million dowers awake. Their starry cups the cowslips lift To catch the golden Tight, And like a spirit fresh from si The cherry tree is white. The innocent looks up with eyes That know no deeper shade Than falls from wings of butterflies Too fair to make afraid. With long, green raiment blown and wet The willows, hand in hand, X«an low to teach the rivulet What trees may understand Os murmurous tune and idle dance, With broken rhymes whose flow A poet’s ear shall catch, perchance, A score of miles below. Across the sky to fairy realm There sails adoudboin ship; A wind sprite standeth at the helm, With laughter on his lip ; The melting masts are tipped with gold* The broidered penuons stream ; The vessel beareth in her hold The lading of a dream. It is the hour to rend thy chains. The bloesom time of 6ouls. Yield all the rest to care and pains : To-day delighc controls. Gird on thy glory and thy pride, For growth is of the sun. Expand thy wings what e’er betide, The summer is begun. —Katherine Lee Bates. A WHITE HEART DIAMOND. Mr. Peter Pinto was perhaps one of the most enthusiastic of modern collectors. Far be it Irom us to convey the im pression that he went around with a pencil ami a pocketbook bulging full of papers in behalf of gas companies and’ cheap coal associations. On the contrary, he despised trade and all its plebeian concomitants. He kept a genealogical tree, and prided himself on bejng distantly related to some one or other who had come over in the Mayflower, and having a cousin who had once known Longfellow, the poet. He read, studied high art and devoted himself to the dream-world of the ideal. His lloors were carpeted with tiger skins, dimly splendid draperies hung on his walls and shut out what little sunshine filtered through the mediaeval glass of his stained windows. • He de lighted in moldy folios, rare editions, grinning Chinese idols and masses of charmingly ugly Eastern lac iuer work. Hut the taste which had the strong est possession of his soul, and which dragged most persistently at his purse strings, was one for precious stones. “ If it hadn't been for that, I should iiave been a ricli man long ago,” sighed Mr. Pinto. “Os course 1 can’t indulge in it, as I should like—no man could, unless he had the income of a duke. But I can aspire—l can aspire!” _ And as Mr. Peter Pinto had in herited a snug little fortune from his father, and fallen heir to the united savings of several maiden aunts, he had been enabled to prosecute his caprice in no contemptible degree. He owned an Eastern opal, a black pearl, a pair of unapproacliablv-tinted topazes, several peculiarly-shaped tur quoises and an agate with a human face distinctly massed in its outlines. He kept his treasures locked in velvet lined i ases within the iron jaws of a tremendous fireproof safe, and prowled around the jewelry stores, pawnshops and second-hand repositories with a perseverance worthy of Bruce’s spider. And when he became meditative and inclined to lie confidential he would say: “ I think if once I could gain pos session of this white heart diamond I should be quite—quite happy !” But the white heart diamond had to all appearance been with Irawn from circulation. It was known only by rumor. It had retired somewhere into conventual seclusion, an t with un paralleled modesty de link'd to re appear. That there hail once been a white heart diamond was proved by the Con versation of grizzle-headed old lapi daries, who hail grown crooked by long sitting over magnifying glasses, and the tales of retired jewelers who had made their fortunes long ago. From all accounts it was a stone of medium size, but rare color and fire— a stone which was a veritable General George Washington diamonds —a stone whoee renown had eVen CHARLOTTE, MECKLENBURG CO., N. C., JUNE 30, 1883. reached foreign parts and achieved the dignity of an especial article in the Lapidaries’ Journal of Vienna. And to Mr. Peter Pinto the white heart diamond represented the roe's egg of Aladdin’s palace! Until one day an old workman in precious stones beckoned him into the den where he was cutting sapphires with a whirling little wheel, which sung like a NRrhonicul bumblebee at its work. “ I’ve heerd of it,” said he. “ Of—” gasped Mr. Pinto. “Os the white heart diamond!” said the workman. “No!” shouted the collector, breath lessly. “As true as you live,” nodded the old man. “ I always knowed it was in the,Jorgensen family. Couldn’t ha’ got out o’ it, don’t you see ? But I never found out afore yesterday as there was an old lady—Mi.-s Mehitable Jorgen sen—a second cousin of old Jan Jor gensen’s daughter, livin’, up in the Catskills. There was some old-fash ioned sleeve-buttons come in to be mended yesterday, with ‘J. ,I.’ on ’em. Bless your heart! I could have told old Jen’s twisted initials anywhere. Didn't have no monograms in them days, you know. Niece left 'em. A pretty girl, with red cheeks. I’m to send ’em back by mail when they’re done.” Mr. Pinto drew a long breath. “ I’ll go tj the Catskills at once, said he. “Fair and softly, fair and softly!” said old Caleb Grinder. “The white heart diamond was always shy game. Mind you don’t frighten it!” “ I shall know how to behave,” said Mr. Pinto, with dignity. “Theaddress, Grinder, if you please.” And so, clad like unto the inevitable sketching tourist who infests all the wildernesses within a hundrel miles of New York, Mr. Peter Pinto “put money in his purse” and started for the cottage in the Catslfltts, resolved to approach the subject with the most cautious winds and turnings of diplo matic skill. . Miss Jorgensen was a tall, crooked woman of fifty, with scant, iron-gray hair v a forbidding visage, and eyes as sharp and keen as those of a hawk. Hetty, her niece—Mehitable, junior, as the old lady called her—was plump and pink-checked, with hair of real poet’s gold, and a laugh like the chirp of a blackbird. "Oh, yes,” said Hetty, with the ut most frankness, “ aunty will be glad to take a boarder. Only, pleaseryou may transact all the business with me. Aunty belongs to a fine old family— I’m only related on the mother’s side —and it hurts her pride to think of keeping hoarders. So, if you would make believe to he a visitor it would be a great accommodation, and no harm done. We can only spare the little garret bedroom; but there’s a fine view, and you will find everything very clean.” And thus to his unmitigated sur prise and amazement Mr. Pinto found himself at last under the same roof with the white heart diamond. Os coursq there was a certain out ward show to be kept up. Mr. Pinto was obliged to spend much of his time in the woods making meaningless at tempts at sketching, while his heart yearned after the mystic jewel. He strove vainly for something like eonfidential intimacy with his host: ss; but in v4iin—Miss Jorgensen froze him. (She kept him at ceremonial' arm’s-length. Hetty was social, smiling, always ready to talk, but Miss Jorgensen never forgot that she belonged to afamily. Until, one day, an inspiration seized upon our hero. “ By jove I” he profanely exclaimed, “I’ll.marry the old woman, if there isn't any other way to get at the white heart diamond 1” But that evening as he came in a little later than usual, with the purple twilight glowing in the horizon, and a score of whip-poor-wills singing in the glen, he met Hetty at the gate. She started and colored like a rose bud, and, murmuring some trivial excuse, flitted away. Mr. Pinto stooped and picked up a flower which she had dropped. “ Hello!” he said to himself; “this complicates matters. Little Hetty is in love with me I" It was not such an unpleasant idea; but, of course, it could not he enter tained for a single momint. The white heart diamond was his soul's sweetheart. The wiiite heart diamond only was the treasure on width he was bent. * Accidentally, as it seemed, but in reality from a carefully-laid train of associations, the conversation turned on jewels that evening, as Miss Jor- gensen sat knitting by the lamp, and Hetty was picking oyer blackberries ! for the morrow’s jam, in the outer parch. j “Talking of diamonds,” said Miss Jorgensen, fortifying herself with a pinch of snuff—Mr. Pinto hated snuff i —“there’s a very valuable Siam in our ! family, which—” “ Aunt,” said Harks lrom the walls, like from an emery wheel After night the tornado clou-1 i< invariably luminous—often not per ceived in the daytime—and a wave like flame on the earth confronts the cl ud-spot as it sweeps forward on the surface of the ground. 1 interpret these facts to say that this luminosity, these sparks and flames, are electricity, and hence that tbe whole phenomenon is an electric one. —Professor J. U. Ties.