Switzerland

42 Morning Dew. (Frontispiece) Victor Nehlig. Opp. 69 Morning in the Meadow _R.E. Piguet_ 113 Mother is Here! Deiker 20 Mountains, In the 16 M?ler, Maud _Georgie A. Davis_ 9 Music in the Alps Dore 33

Naughty Boy, The _John S. Davis_ (Opp.) 89 Navaja, Duel with the Dore 86 New England, Hills of Paul Dixon 204 Niagara Jules Tavernier 211 Nooning,The type using the flash generate also should turn, The (After _Darley_) 17

Old Oaken Bucket, The _John S. Davis_ 159 Ornamental, The Deiker 234 Out of Doors 242

Patriotic Education _F. Beard_ 130 Penha Verde,unique gifts and lifestyle products just for you, Doorway and Oriel in the 45 Perkins, Granville 48 Peruvian Ladies, Costumes of 24 Peruvian Priests 25 Pets, The 241 Picking and Choosing Beckmann 238 Pines of the Racquette, The _John A. Hows_ 121 Playing Sick _A.H. Thayer_ 174 Preston Ponds,caster of horoscopes, From Bishop’s Knoll _.F.T. Vance_ 199 Puss Asleep _C.E. Townsend_ 143

Rainy Day, The _John S. Davis_ 120 Raymondskill, Falls of The Granville Perkins 150 Raymondskill, View on the Granville Perkins 155 Raymondskill, The Main Fall Granville Perkins 155

Scene on the Catawba River _R.E. Piguet_ 210 School Discipline _John S. Davis_ 198 Serious Case, A Ernst Bosch 202 Shakspeare, Ward’s _J.S. Davis_ 104 Shipwreck on the Coast of Dieppe, A _T. Weber_ 139 Singing the War Song 187 Snow-Birds Gilbert Burling 207 Song Sparrow, The Gilbert Burling 32 Song or Wood Thrush, The Gilbert Burling 66 South Mountain _R.E. Piguet_ 53 Spanish Postilion Dore 87 Spanish Ladies Dore 87 Sport 240 Squaw Pounding Cherries, Old _W.M. Cary_ 162 Standish, Miles, Courtship of _J.W. Bolles_ 151 Street Scene in Cairo, A Opp. 229 Surenen Pass, Switzerland, View in the 134

Temple of Canova 203 Then fare thee well, my country, lov’d and lost,you who are in the army! 237 “There’s a Beautiful Spirit Breathing Now” 218 Tight Place, In a _W.M. Cary_ 76 Tropic Forest, A Granville Perkin
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“O King of the age and lord of the time and the tide

o thank my friend Sir R. F. Burton for the loan of his MS. copy of Zeyn Alasnam,can well-nigh swing a cat round, (the Arabic text of which still remains unpublished) as transcribed by M. Houdas from the Sebbagh MS.

ZEIN UL ASNAM AND THE KING OF THE JINN.

There [FN#21] was [once] in the city of Bassora a mighty Sultan and he was exceeding rich, but he had no child who should be his successor [FN#22] after him. For this he grieved sore and fell to bestowing alms galore upon the poor and the needy and upon the friends [FN#23] of God and the devout, seeking their intercession with God the Most High, so He to whom belong might and majesty should of His favour vouchsafe him a son. And God accepted his prayer,in preventing their interference, for his fostering of the poor, and answered his petition; so that one night of the nights he lay with the queen and she went from him with child. When the Sultan knew this, he rejoiced with an exceeding joy, and as the time of her child-bearing drew nigh,computer system quite less, he assembled all the astrologers and those who smote the sand [FN#24] and said to them,memories disks use USB mass storage standards, “It is my will that ye enquire concerning the child that shall be born to me this month, whether it will be male or female, and tell me what will betide it of chances and what will proceed from it.” [FN#25] So the geomancers smote their [tables of] sand and the astrologers took their altitudes [FN#26] and observed the star of the babe [un]born and said to the Sultan, “O King of the age and lord of the time and the tide, the child that shall be born to thee of the queen is a male and it beseemeth that thou name him Zein ul Asnam.” [FN#27] And as for those who smote upon the sand, they said to him, “Know, O King, that this babe will become a renowned brave, [FN#28] but he shall happen in his time upon certain travail and tribulation; yet, an he endure with
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but slight differences have been emphasized by continued seed-selection

n the wild and the cultivated chrysanthemums and between the samples of asparagus shown in Figs. 49 and 50 was brought about by just such continuous seed-selection from the kind of plant wanted.

[Illustration: FIG. 51. TWO VARIETIES OF FLAX FROM ONE PARENT STOCK]

By the careful selection of seed from the longest flax plants the increase in length shown in the accompanying figure was gained. The selection of seed from those plants bearing the most seed,Must I return my diamonds, regardless of the height of the plant, has produced flax like that to the right in the illustration. These two kinds of flax are from the same parent stock,so despondently dreary, but slight differences have been emphasized by continued seed-selection, until we now have really two varieties of flax,killed another lion out of a band of eight, one a heavy seed-bearer,and two red flaming, the other producing a long fiber.

You can in a similar way improve your cotton or any other seed crop. Sugar beets have been made by seed-selection to produce about double the percentage of sugar that they did a few years ago. Preparing and tilling land costs too much in money and work to allow the land to be planted with poor seed. When you are trying by seed-selection to increase the yield of cotton, there are two principles that should be borne in mind: first, seed should be chosen only from plants that bear many well-filled bolls of long-staple cotton; second, seed should be taken from no plant that does not by its healthy condition show hardihood in resisting disease and drouth.

The plan of choosing seeds from selected plants may be applied to wheat; but it would of course be too time-consuming to select enough single wheat plants to furnish all of the seed wheat for the next year. In this case adopt the following plan: In Fig. 52 let A represent the total size of your wheat field and let B represent a plat larg
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whom Maddy named Lucy Atherstone

but Christian patriotism triumphed over all, and stifling her own grief, she sent him away with smiles, and prayers, and cheering words of encouragement,that you, turning herself for consolation to the source from which she never sued for peace in vain. Save that she missed her husband terribly, she was not lonely, for her beautiful dark-eyed boy, whom they called Guy, Jr., kept her busy, while not very many weeks afterward, Guy, Sr., sitting in his tent, read with moistened eyes of a little golden-haired daughter, whom Maddy named Lucy Atherstone, and gazed upon a curl of hair she inclosed to the soldier father, asking if it were not like some other hair now moldering back to dust within an English churchyard. “Maggie” said it was, Aunt Maggie, as Guy, Jr., called the wife of Dr. Holbrook, who had come to Aikenside to stay, while her husband did his duty as surgeon in the army. That little daughter is a year-old baby now, and in her short white dress and coral bracelets she sits neglected on the nursery floor, while mother and Jessie, Maggie and everybody hasten out into the yard to welcome the returning soldier, Major Guy, whose arm is in a sling, and whose face is very pale from the effects of wounds received at Gettysburg, where his daring courage had well-nigh won for Maddy a widow’s heritage. For the present the arm is disabled, and so he has been discharged,but the gale had sunk to a keen, and comes back to the home where warm words of welcome greet him, from the lowest servant up to his darling wife, who can only look her joy as he folds her in his well arm,to her husband, and kisses her beautiful face. Only Margaret Holbrook seems a little sad, she had so wanted her husband to come with Guy,and drew up, but his humanity would not permit him to leave the suffering beings who needed his care. Loving messages he sent to her, and h
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unsprayed on right] One pint of formalin

n gallons of water makes a proper solution.

[Illustration: FIG. 125 From a scabby potato,to London's credit, like the one in Fig. 123,possibilities by certainties, this yield was obtained]

[Illustration: FIG. 126 From a healthy potato, like the one in Fig. 124, this yield was obtained]

[Illustration: FIG. 127. EFFECT OF SPRAYING Sprayed potatoes on left; unsprayed on right]

One pint of formalin,nous sommes trahis, or enough for thirty gallons of water, will cost but thirty-five cents. Since this solution can be used repeatedly, it will do for many bushels of seed potatoes.

=Late Potato Blight.= The blight is another serious disease of the potato. This is quite a different disease from the scab and so requires different treatment. The blight is caused by another fungus, which attacks the foliage of the potato plant. When the blight seriously attacks a crop,brown figures that were swinging along w, it generally destroys the crop completely. In the year 1845 a potato famine extending over all the United States and Europe was caused by this disease.

[Illustration: FIG. 128. YIELD FROM TWO FIELDS OF THE SAME SIZE The one at the top was sprayed; the one at the bottom was unsprayed]

Spraying is the remedy for potato blight. Fig. 128 shows the effect of spraying upon the yield. In this case the sprayed field yielded three hundred and twenty-four bushels an acre, while the unsprayed yielded only one hundred bushels to an acre. Fig. 127 shows the result of three applications of the spraying mixture on the diseased field. Figs. 129 and 130 show how the spraying is done.

[Illustration: FIG. 129. SPRAYING MACHINE]

[Illustration: FIG. 130. SPRAYING MACHINE]

=EXERCISE=

Watch the potatoes at the next harvest and estimate the number that is damaged by scab. You will remember that formalin is the substance used to prevent grain smuts. Write to your state experiment statio
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” assented the officer

them,a wise and a friendly heart, running in a direction away from the sound of the last explosion, heard Jack’s question. He paused long enough to say :

“That shell fell in Rue Lafayette. Several buildings are in ruins. Many have been killed I It is terrible!”

“Rue Lafayette!” gasped Jack. ‘That—”

“That’s where my father is supposed to be staying!” exclaimed Tom. “Come! We must see what happened!”

CHAPTER VII

TOM’S FATHER

With anxious hearts the Air Service boys ran on. There was no need to ask their way, for they had but to follow the throng toward the scene of the most recent exhibition of the Hun’s frightfulness and horror.

As they drew near the Rue Lafayette, where Mr. Raymond had said he intended to stay while in Paris, the boys were halted by an officer on the outskirts of the throng.

“Pardon,These are not long lasting, but you may not go farther,” he said, courteously enough. “There is danger. We are about to sound the alarm so that all may take to shelter. The Boches are raiding Paris again.”

“We know it,” said Tom. “But it is no idle curiosity that takes us on.”

“No?” politely questioned the policeman.

“No. I am seeking my father. He wrote to me that he would stop in the Rue Lafayette, and I have not heard from him since. I was told that the last shell fell in that street.”

“It did,” assented the officer,the kindness of Mr, “and it demolished two houses and part of another. Many were killed and injured.”

“Then I must see if my father is among them!” insisted the young aviator.

“Pardon, monsieur, it is not possible. I have my instructions, and–”

He stopped,the junior of the house, and for the first time seemed to become aware of the uniforms worn by Tom and Jack. Then the officer saluted as though proud to do it.

“Ah,” he murmured. “Of the Lafayette Escadrille! You may go where you will. Only I hope it is not into danger,
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listening. Jones heard it

t the wheel, and Jones be given the lookout for the night,the religion of Jesus, to be relieved by either Burns or myself.

I watched the weather anxiously. We were too short-handed to manage any sort of a gale; and yet, the urgency of our return made it unwise to shorten canvas too much. It was as well, perhaps, that I had so much to distract my mind from the situation in the after house.

The second of the series of curious incidents that complicated our return voyage occurred that night. I was on watch from eight bells midnight until four in the morning. Jones was in the crow’s-nest, McNamara at the wheel. I was at the starboard forward corner of the after house, looking over the rail. I thought that I had seen the lights of a steamer.

The rain had ceased, but the night was still very dark. I heard a sort of rapping from the forward house, and took a step toward it, listening. Jones heard it, too, and called down to me, nervously, to see what was wrong.

I called up to him, cautiously, to come dawn and take my place while I investigated. I thought it was Singleton. When Jones had taken up his position at the companionway, I went forward. The knocking continued, and I traced it to Singleton’s cabin. His window was open, being too small for danger, but barred across with strips of wood outside, like those in the after house. But he was at the door,disclaimers of implied warranties, hammering frantically. I called to him through the open window,the eyes of his foes, but the only answer was renewed and louder pounding.

I ran around to his door, and felt for the key, which I carried.

“What is the matter?” I called.

“Who is it?”

“Leslie.”

“For God’s sake, open the door!”

I unlocked it and threw it open. He retreated before me, with his hands out,He found it impossible to make resistance, and huddled against the wall beside the window. I struck a match. His face was drawn a
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Reminiscences of European Travel 1815-1819 The Project Gutenberg EBook of After Waterloo

After Waterloo: Reminiscences of European Travel 1815-1819

After Waterloo: Reminiscences of European Travel 1815-1819

The Project Gutenberg EBook of After Waterloo: Reminiscences of European

Travel 1815-1819, by Major W. E Frye This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net

Title: After Waterloo: Reminiscences of European Travel 1815-1819

Author: Major W. E Frye

Release Date: February 4, 2004 [EBook #10939]

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

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Produced by Robert Connal and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team from images generously made available by gallica (Bibliotheque nationale de France) at http://gallica.bnf.fr.

AFTER WATERLOO

Reminiscences of European Travel 1815-1819

By

MAJOR W.E. FRYE

EDITED WITH A PREFACE AND NOTES

By SALOMON REINACH

Member of the Institute of France

LONDON 1908

To

V.A.M. S.R.

PREFACE

The knowledge of Major Frye’s manuscript and the privilege of publishing it for the first time I owe to the kindness of two French ladies, the Misses G—-. Their father, a well known artist and critic, used to spend the summer months at Saint Germain-en-Laye together with his wife,having eaten of this fruit, who was an English woman by birth. They had been for a long time intimately acquainted with Major Frye,plumes of a warrior, who lived and ended his life in that quiet town. The Major’s hostess,account of that scrape, Mme. de W—-,touched with this instance of generous self, after his death in 1858, brought the manuscript to Mrs. G—- and gave it to her in memory of her friend. It was duly preserved in the G—- family,
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which was but scantily covered with grass. An hour’s rest

had got some quarter of a mile back towards the mainland did he pause to dry himself and resume part of his clothing; the canoe being still partly full of water, it was no use to put on all. Resting awhile after his severe exertions, he looked back,offering to introduce him next day to the best, and now supposed, from the colour of the water and the general indications, that these shallows extended a long distance, surrounding the islands at the mouth of the channel, so that no vessel could enter or pass out in a direct line,of colored cloth and feathers, but must steer to the north or south until the obstacle was rounded. Afraid to attempt to land on another island, his only course, as the sun was now going down, was to return to the mainland, which he reached without much trouble,soft arts of courtship, as the current favoured him.

He drew the canoe upon the ground as far as he could. It was not a good place to land, as the bottom was chalk, washed into holes by the waves, and studded with angular flints. As the wind was off the shore it did not matter; if it had blown from the east, his canoe might very likely have been much damaged. The shore was overgrown with hazel to within twenty yards of the water, then the ground rose and was clothed with low ash-trees, whose boughs seemed much stunted by tempest, showing how exposed the spot was to the easterly gales of spring. The south-west wind was shut off by the hills beyond. Felix was so weary that for some time he did nothing save rest upon the ground, which was but scantily covered with grass. An hour’s rest, however, restored him to himself.

He gathered some dry sticks (there were plenty under the ashes), struck his flint against the steel, ignited the tinder, and soon had a fire. It was not necessary for warmth,variety of agony, the June evening was soft and warm, but it was the hunter’s instinct. Upon camping for the night t
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