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ORIENTAL THEOSOPHY. ART NEWS AND MORE OF CARLILE. …etrug-rles ns a pour po1ea»BB

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MORE OF CARLILE. A OORRKCTIVBI-XIR MR FROtTDE. Oi.,viSoKTHOIIAfl CARLYLE. Edited ^(SkSokiiivISHI^. OOW. Bra. .,i, U..3«3. MaeailUanAto. We do not wonder that Mr. Fronde is sick of tho whole business. Hie LU* el Carlyle will long ho reckoned among tho curiosities of literature for tho recriminations to which it has given nee, tho anarer With which U h.ts filled I bow whom it WBSBZpMtei topleasMUilthewrct.'hedctrcct it hu", had upon the fame of tho hero whom it waa tin- biographer's especial purpose to honor. Pi OtaaOBBBd rc, t iti«at ions oontuiuo io crowd tho peee«| an 1 probably man¬ kind will not hoar the las: of them until .some MM ecrunulous and judicious hinton in writes tho roil lifo of Carlyle for a future generation. At pteBBBl Bnoh a work is impossible, and Carlyle's fiiemlsand mn iving relatives must content- theinsclvcs wah fragmentary publications bearing upon particular points. Tbe selection of letters edit <l ff Mr. Nm- ton nt thc request of Mis. Alexander Carlyle, tue phiioNopher. niece, comes umler this category. The letters are ptaooattfl as nn answer to Mr. Froude, borne of them. if wot all, wero in Mr. Fronde's hands, uud a few extracts fnun them appear in tho Life. " Aim isl everv letter ii the Lifo which I have collated with tho original,'' savs Mr. Norton. "is incorrectly printed, some of thom grossly so." and of the lettets. t«> .ind from Miss Welsh iu par¬ ticular, he rema!ks that they "abound in errors and in unmarked omissions of word», clausen .and eoutences, hy whicri their tone is sometimes croat ly altered." To correct all these blunders would bo lntle loss, laboi than writing a new biography, and Mr. \oi tou onlv oflers a few specimens. It cannot be said that tho infidelities thus c_;*os. d involve Buy gross distortion of tho sen-e of the let- tors; but they are enough le -dun** Mr. Fronde's reckless manner of working, and to confirm th<* general be lef of his iuubisiiy to quote Correctly or to tell a story straight. The chief object, liowever, in printing these early letter*.most of wine i ure now to Um nnb'ic.Is Bot to purity Mr Fm..d Vs text, but to give a pici- Bro of young Car.fl fe ch um ur vny di'lerein from that which is sketched in thc biography, nn-rt even more truthful than that of tho " l.emi- niSOftice-s." lho correspondenc*, extending limn hts nineteenth to his thirty-first year, is prin¬ cipally with his parents, his brothers, bis friend- Johnslone, Mit'hell and Murial*, arni Miss Jane Welsh. It covers Ihe period of his early etrug-rles ns a pour po1ea»BB<i la Edinbnrgti, his first essays in sutnorsiiip. aud tiie b ginning of his carew as a leeOBBM .<! and uot unlrinnrod man of letter ; aod it coses on the eve of Uo marriage. lie wa* already beginning to sutler fr un dysjiep.si.i. Bud in his tunes of torment ho showed MHB0 meet of thai black aud di sp.indent liunmr which m utter life so profoundly atlected not only Ins temp la¬ mont but* his pkttaoapky. The letters, bo-.vever, from first to last, ure those of a man who-* habit¬ ual mond was cheerful, hopeful, and even amiable. Oue cannot help thinking that when ho looked baiek upon tncsi days ho unconsciously trana- mmmWBi to them sn m of th" misery w hi-fi on'y Calton hitor with i sooiled leaper .ind ademor- alisod stomach. We aro apt to remember our youth Oa something brighter tuan it wa-. Carlyle re¬ viewed his ihruizh tho cloud of an unhappy old ago* Tho impress-on m id.-nv these leltera allow¬ ing for moinontarv on breaks ot' dis-atisfuetion, i«> that of a buoyant aud healthy mr uro, sometimes rebellions under BBBaaee na! I ib-ir, hut ujiou th" ivhoc pitient of dradgee , conti lent of its own Bl rein.'Ui. and by BO IBfitBO parma lcd as yet of the wretchedness of life aud the imliecility of mankind. Ho writes to Robert Mitcnell at a moment whou his ulfairs aro going ill: "The oource of that oeaoMorebie aoaatity of com'ort v-fncii 1 eiij.iy m tkeoo turon¦lotonoca is twofold. Fust, thero is lh« hopi of betti r d ivs, which 1 am net yet old and worn Beeag, to hive faitO lum aside 'lins cheerful fooling is combine.! with a portion of tko universal qunliry which wennrselves name fnmuo-s, aiken obetiaaej: the %aaHty which 1 B_ppOOO to be tho fulcrum of all stoical pin!- osopiiv ; and winch,-when the cli-rmer Hope ti is tit teri v feeaahen us. mav afford a amii s»D(Niri in t li1* extreme of wretchedness." At a Inter date he ox poses some of the hardship*) of his life to James .ti,inislone: but ho adds: "It munt bo owned, however, thnt I have no groat reason to complain. OalaaMaffBl the condition of many others, there seems rather cause for gratulation." /ftor describing to his brother A!o\* imlor the rou¬ tine of Ins daily duties as n private tutor and a bookiaol'ior's hack, ho writ's: "This is a laborious lifo, but such a ono as suits mo, and I design persist¬ ing in it. Nothing in tho world gives such scope t*o dieeoii'o it ns idleness, no nia'ter wheller forced or voluntary; a mau had better bo darning Stockings than doing nothing." 8till Later be exclaims to John Carlyle: "(lo on, nty brno Jack! und fear .no Weather. We have imth a sire fig it to wage, but tvo shall conquer nt the l-» -t. TkON BIB 0 any men dow lolling up,.n th" pillow of inglorious sloth, and juli i. g such adventurers as we: but tins pitt) eliall not always endure-tko luzv mtasAntl thc- must sink when WK shall soar." 1 he followiug ex¬ tract from a lotter to Miss Welsh tr. in the sauio Vein: ... I wioh I had not sent yon this great blub¬ bering numskull IV Israeli : his "< a.amities" hive Bunk Baan your spirits, him: traced 'ho whole wot ld Of intellect with the hue of mourning aid despair. 'J he paths of learning seem, in your present mood of tniud, tu lead but tliimi-'h regions of woe and lomoaloilfin and darkness and dead men's hones Hang fienasl.it is all false, if von trike it up rn this light. Ho yon not see that his observation* Can apply only to men in whom genius was more tba want of oonnion qualifies than Ibe BO of uncommon ones; whooe life w.»s embittered not ri much beesBBo they bad itaannetion oadaenei- ilitv, as beomse they lind no; prudence and true moral puru-io los t If ono chose la lareatieata tke kistory of tho first twenty tatt* red blackguards to bo found lying on th» hooch s of tho waieh-'ieuse, or stowing in drunkenness and sqial'-r in the Jerusalem tap-r -om, it would uot be dfticult tu "ante a much moro moving hook on tho "calamities Ot shoemakers" orstreer-portors, or any oilier cia is Of hanrttcraftanion. than ths of I> Israeli's Ol Au b irs. His tho few ill-starred w*re;chea, and the multitude ot ill-behave !, that ar miserab.e, iu all ranks.nnd among writers josi as elsewhere. Literature, I do tiebeve, ha** keener pans enn- poolod wilh it than iilniost any other pursuit; but then it has also fur livelier and nobler pleasuies, tud if you shudder at engaging ni it on those irma, you onght also to envy the stupidity of other neoplo, tnoir insensibility, ttie. taaaaaaeo of their ciicumsiai.cos, wkBtBTOt narrows their sphere of notion, and adds mme staguution to the eui rent of their feelings. IIOBBI are uot the utterances of an incipient mis¬ anthrope, but of an honest, high-spiriNd, hmo late and aspiring youth, whose portrait haa not been truthfully drawn either by himself or bis ch -»en frio.nL Still moro alluring are the traits disclosed in the letters of afleci'on lo his roi.it j ve.. at homo, letters full of sympathy, consideration, natural fervor, BBOOlflokaeoB* a hundred lntleevi- tleiiccs of att.ichmcnt which can uot bo feigned in domestic duty-letters, but flow freely from a warm lieart. His correspondence with Ins father an J mother ls ofion touching; sometimes it is beauti- fnl. while rt is alwavs extremely simple. Little gifis passed between IMinburgh and the home farm. Carlyle vron uevor keppler than BBBB he couid oaye a sovereign fnun ins eainmgsandslip it info B lotter to his mither. He oOBl hm tath'ir oue notable proaent^-a pair of silver-rimmod spectacles ..and tho old man was affected ulmosi u> tears. Iii* letter of thanks, signed "Your loving fait**i-." tiegi us quaintly enough, " Dear sir,"* a form of address which we hare not nut iced in any other epistle io lils situ. " Doti sir, I tuke tay pen in hand to write B kind ot scrawl to you, to tell you wh.at is going ou here. lu tbe first place I must tel I you I would have written you long before tins time to thank you for your kindness manifested to iim by tbe present you eent me. A pair of oliver spec tar Ice lo a thing 1 have often looked at and thought of, 1hi» never ooul il call any of them my own before." Tee letters to aad from Miss Welsh required ex- ceptioaal ooasbleration. Carlyle left written tu etniotlono coooerulng them. .. Hum theta, if ever Xound. Let no third party read them: let uo pnnL imf ot theta, or of any part of them, be ewer thought .f by those who love me." Ma Froude ne-eitUe- lees read them and printed parts of them i snd tttA Morton, being «*»-__. to see whether Mr. J-V-Je kad pr in tea mern oorroctiy, read them again, aad prto to mara Tao kier editor le Boyare in censurmg hie predecessor, kat If Mr. fi. ade di£ wrong is dieregerd Corly Wo' OmmmtmtS WB BB BOB OOO Strnft BXCOtW COB BO BTfOd for Mr. Norton. Tho correction of some of Mr. Fronde', misinterpretations and ratsqnotetlons of this oorrespondenoe, uudortukea In the appendix to the present volume, mav, iodoed, bo iiefondod ns a servloe to the cause of truth, reudored nooossary by the biographer's transgressions i bul this plea does not coyer the pnbMoatlon of other parts, not used by Fronde, even though Mr. Norton hus boen careful to omit tho-ie which had uuy specifically private character. Ho would have done better to omit all. Those which be has given relate prin¬ cipally to the direction of Miss Welsh's readmit, and to literary projects entertained liv her and Car¬ lyle toiri'lvr. They are interesting: but they throw no additional livht upon Carlyle's Tolat'..>_-s wnh his fut me wife or upon tho course ot tho-o busy and comparatively tranquil years whoso fair¬ est OOpOfti we hive just been reviewing. Carlyle's ciiftcisms of books and men nt this period of his lifo wore ox.ire-.se I with a composure and deliberation foreign to his maturer temper; but tiny wero oft n trenchant, and long b.f.ne roached the tige of thirty hu furious extravagance began to show itself, as nn aberra¬ tion, not ns a habit. Omo wo find him declaring that he canld a'niost love Napoleon, and praising "Ins nafiro sense of honesty, tho rude genuine strength of his intellect, his live'y fancy, his sardonic humor," and'* his -simple attachments.** At another time 00 gives a "candid " opinion ab mt Homer, who. he dcc'iir-'s " has h.ri tn-* day -at least ike better part of it; tko BOOB was ti vo and twenty conturies n_o: tho twilight (for ho set in 1*4881 may l.i-t farOBBthOT five and twenty centuries-kal if too must terminate." Soino of the stratnf-st of his remarks however aro upon Goethe. We have boca BOOB-tOBM I to think of Carlyle as an enthusisstic disciple reveal! lg OoffflMM genius IB BB ignorant and unwling Hritish public. Bat in reality his first important work in that entor- iir'-e th:* tum -la'ion of "Wilhelm Meister".was uI'derlakeu as a joh and prosecuted with intense disrelish. Tho b.> 'k disgusted him at the time. Ile reeoifinzed tuudies of tho very highest, most ot! iel eal genius in lt, but " with looria of insipid itv, wliicheven / wonldno' BBTB WIittBB for tko WOT I " He wrote to bis friend JekBOtOBBI "Oootho is tho greatest gpniua that has lived for a century, nd the greatOOt 001 that has lived for three. Ic mid so eau nos fall dawe and worship him ; af other times I could kick linn ont if Hu* ro un." Whm th" translati ni was ta toked. ho declared : " 1 am coi og to writo n liorco preince, dioelaflBla-tall oeaoaro with the literary or ihe Moral in -Tit ol' tho work ; grounding my cairns to rec 4BBBBO0 or toler.ition on tho feet t MM* I OBteae- cn ru; eli e "inc 1 a st ri ki lg p nf r ii! "f Coot ho's urn-I. tin sir:uig.-.t a id in m.my p dats t ie grenlea! now oxta it." Hut his foellapa s i ni u iderwent ¦ gre t cliaigo, aud his preface was not at a 1 like his threat. A le ter Irom Qoethe entirely or->reasie lum. Ho sent it to Miss W.-l,h with tins injunction: "Do you Inri cribe mi copy, and vmir nw tratolattOO of it, in io the alaah leaf of thal ilenaan phut before von lav lt by; tli.it t io BMBO sliei*f mav contain some ira es of Iii'ii w io i I ni isl verier.it'\ and lier whim 1 most lora, ia thu atraagoe. of mi poeeiUe wr ds." After the oempletloa of Ins " Lif<« af Schiller " in 182&, Carlyle wrote to ins brother Jo Ba alettar in winch, for ike Ural time, wo bear a eleo? ring of tho oarage ¦ ni dottaat pride which tbe w 'rid was so"U lo htMW SO weil J anl With tb lo passage our new of the moraine of Caril le's liie mai wall olooe : .-ii I " c Hamil it si en t.y " Bilk", to " ererleoting liimr," or everlasting oblivion. oanng no lol aboBt whet th" despi-u'lle mag ni Bewopaoer and maga¬ zine en ttee iav of lt, or whether thor speak of lt at all. I do find there is BOtBIflg but thll for it : Convtuoe fnaroalf lhat your work it what voa call it, aa noir'r a* ynr loneat niwseoo«old mane it; nmi tm* m in who censures it eitner toils »ou n 'flin*? I hal roo di hoi kn iw before, or tel ts \ou !;o--, both d iv di sorts ol Intelligenoo you «rl fi >n it :. very sim ile matter Mi lulu v"nr pine inti, lucie was a look less wi lit of on optBrn-oKter lui*, one Do I'liineey. for nist-iie,-*, wno wrote a rory ralsat aad bratioh He-new of" eieter"in Iii I outhit! Hagatine, I rent three pegea ol lt one tick div at Biruitnetiam and ¦ nd: " (ero is s m in wbo wri'os ot 'hi"gs whteh li" does rm' rig illy u d'-rsi tn I; I see eleaa over t ie tao of him. and his vuiear suite, and his eoatOBoaplaoA ohlieoophv ; and I will away and rmvu rt ride on [Bada u-.'i lally. and leave fciin io erv in i lie enr* of t ne. nn-rt'on..' So I werit on', and had tnv n«!e a-C'irdingly *. nnd if te (j ii ricey, poor lillie fellow, ttamJt nnvtliiiie of Ins I'-vii'vv, he can pa* if ni ins walotaoai pocket, and think rho trod Meimrina A walerenticism nf Mein trr tot nome'hitig line one) is >o appear fi the February nuuilior, I believe: to this also 1 ho'ie I shall present lho same tolerant spirit. TUE SN on. SKVFFAT. DKFINITIOKH OF RIV. TIIK EVOLDTIOlf OK THK sMiii. By Tih.mv- Si.i: ulam I'm.m. lt.mo, |.p. 1-il Iii 1.nor ai Co. Ur. I'eiay s numf whl h i-n t ii piero of horner, a* tho iimwiry mi -lit ru: pose, but a study in sociology, would bo moro effective if it coatained un exact statement of what be means liv -nib ti >*l iv-sm. A dictiiiiiai-y dei nt'-n is. the vulgarity which BBtt BfBt ility Tliiickomy's definition, a noaa arimltatlon for rnoafl thia s. is better Mr I'cii-y ca ls it, tn bis int'odin linn the de.-ta Int ion Of indivi lti.il i'i nitv due to ;'n uneasy B080Q of nfl -'loril.v. which ls un ati.-.lactory. bei-fl ute a s"nn* nf Inferiority is hy no awaB- icniohic Etoo when' ha caaaiduo thc oaoh ns one wko is un inly anxious to got out of his trtVB oodal place into a Iii-her; anl lui.il y bc derjaree oaobblahBOso t" he "the willin ne s to pay rooper! to what is oo l<rv>wle Iced to be on artificial system that i- maintiiined tor oorla! corm in* nee." Cn or His rte-fattoB which is probably tho booral "f a'l ho liens tin* rertval of RotBaatlrlem in litcr.itm-c. art, sociul phtlooe*ph~ an! Mli ion about the be '-'lnton* of the pr-eanM taatBijf. ns n. whaleoalo muni-esiution of aaobbtehaeoo Thia emin u bo of Uio popular ilcfijitiion of a snub as "Any fellow ymi dnu't like" Il lite lioinniilic movement, whi h in aaete of eztrava aaeea uni errors, was ihe result of a reaeroui and ailrituaUzim impulse. _ to be bi oin: bl. witlun Mr IVi-ry's cate-toiy of Milniity. we know not what wo may not to fin there lu lonkin.' for tim cs of the lurch ii (oratara Mr. IVrr> notkea bobm unions facts Allhoii'.h tiie I n lish dminat ist-*. the Btmllatn thc r-ssiys's of "'Hie Spectator" school, anl the -atii ital poole have caMi ated un almost OOaBtkoe 'aUtlotue of human faults and foibles it is not uni il near our own dav that we can disco*, cr in 1 ngliKh literature any trace of the character now known as thc snob. This, be concludes must he because .-unlis did n*t o ist while distinctions of not tuJ raiiJi wai fi my eb'itlil.hhcl and fr.-uUiy a*" .li <l SiMibbishm-Ks fol 'owed the develotnicni of canine i tal pBBBpoaftJT. when the rich leran to force their way into the drrJeof Ihc BlIakBlBiy Tbe BBBp o s cmwUi of vul:ar hraggtn r an I pr* tome tlurin: Hie nineteenth cen'u-y is ifSflribed in a few li ely iac»?s; «nd Hie _ thor ch OOO with tl e telle t:< n ihat as aiistociuey bas now lost its glnmoiir and popular envy Inui tiansferred its ob .ect fionn the myuteiy of rank to tho t-nn-ihle s leiidois of lunney, snobhLshnese "loses Die tide wlieivby it was related to the a<lniiiasti-ation of lite di inly of lifo, anl becomes 0 p actual wm ¦Inp oi Hie material side of worldly sucact-jj. Mi. ney iMtii-blp is ut boll.un a fmnk afro pl ii ncc ut li.nigs ua they -uv, anl f-aalUMB- ul um rate ia i ii.men 'aha* Hilt whether the Hew snob is hatter or woi-bo Uuj- Ute oM _. a uu(_>u-_u iee da* bate. A RT OUT Ot JAPAN. ROME RI.MAKKMtl.R PIC'lURES. A MUKAM.8A PLAIlK, A story ol Cc.utalUiu in Old Jaii«u. Hy 1--ms Wbui'U-iaiai. itu. pp. xvi., 1K8. Tleku ir A Qa Mr. Weriheiuiba-r's original romance is writti ,i prole.-v-edly ¦ from a Japam-He point ol view,'' uud yet its literary llavor is unmuukabl? tout of ihe Wist. This does not inucb inaner, for its lutorcst is by uo means literary. Tho story lo neittiir Hull luveuted nor well told. It is nth, however in sketches of old Japan..-' cunUnus aud ideas; particularly it shows the hitfb value which the Japuuese uohle placed upon the sword and the honors swarded to Ike BtOOl fOQBQBO ag|l|tn| and wu ure ai-ine.l that it* numeroiiM historical allm-nous ure euiiieiy MUtheaiic. Hut its principal impor- BBBaO ls as a gallery of Japunemi art. It coutuius live fud page lignre pieces drawn and engiared ou copper by au artiat mt Tokiw, who is said to be one of tba best of hm craft in Ja pas j und ia addition to theao plates thara are a-ont asveaty enaraviugs ia relief by a Japanese poreeloln painter. Tba oopper-platee aro remark obie far a Hbo baa whieb gl-ret thea almoola silky surlaoo, aad ia sere-re. Instances, for a strength of expression much nearer to nature than ls usual with Jaosuese artists. Hot the effect of thia work la owing In e large measure to the careful and anlstlo printing We never see anything Uko iton Japai e*e pictures printed in tho empire, or copied hore by photgraplnc methods Irom Japanese prints; for it need hardly be said that Japan has nothing corresponding to the University Plaea '1 he lino pro* work has nlso done wonders for tho rel cf engravings. Those wore drawn not with pen amt ink lint with the brush, yet they are wonderfully delicate and sharp fal outline. They arc not (onlincd to tho direct, lliustra'ion or scenes IB tho ntno*. Stud es of costume. BBB BOOB- deroia- tions. street Mein**, interiors, etc., OtO freely scattered through the text, snd some of Ikon BIB excellent typotof ono branch of tho national OTt Thal is not Irs best side, for it is only in decoration tint the painters ami dranahtsmen of Ji-pac have displnye 1 an exceptional «if'. while in the nit of l'lniinti.in tl) ir development w.is pe rm fin mt *V arrested I aa arehlie period. 8tdl Mr.YVcrthcim- ber's hook i-t a inoit interesting exhibition of this art. nnd we may < ungratul ito ourselves ns well as him thal it hr-.s appeared under the most favorable conditions. _ _ 'HIE LA SI VA its' OE A QUEEN. TMF. SORROWS CiF MARU! AXTOTNFTTT**. LAgrr DATS OT MABII tWtOXBWTTYm aii ni.torlosl Hketch. liv Lord Kunm.h (Jowkr. .-inrill Ito. pp. I*'** Imbi ru limtlioia. In Ibis luxui-iuni'y nnnn_t-d little (xxiii, pnnle on band mtml 99 n f tiper nt tbe I BiviMBity l'n *>¦*. loni l.'onuld (iower hus only compile I uni ar- raqged facto al indy pabltofced in more etakonlt i-toii's hut, he lins dom this cffoctjycly, an baw presented a sketch which will peBBakJp offer some points of m fly to the lenore] reader, al th "ti h it is n.'i fi uiiiicd upon treoh uooarch Tlc toik; of Ita n.iiTrtti a -OBJ be judged limn lin- N Section in tko paefhee, tkat tko Qua n's lila is chiefly n aaariuablo by ahowfng imw a aroa-u wis*'1 caiiy yean wera trifled IhongkUaoaly awny. and who in later Ufo.mool unfortunately for hei family, heisolf mil I- COtlBtf. lu self In politics, where women are ever ui is ciiic.ons. waa miscd tliioui^h aufferinf lo ea licroic level As the timi s of ui\i*i*-ity gathered aroi n i, Halie Ante nelie diepla ed .i patience ob a courage in uapacallojod auffartflga ouch as few aatata uni iii.-ntyis hare equo lei." The exa-ger* alum bete is obvlouOi but the Beat! taral ie true Marie Antoinette^ is ono of tin se taoaa in which rna*actor is beal tooled by ad-etaity. In hot m:sf irti.ne- Um frivolity arhich marred tho yea-o of ber n i B fell away, i'll e i teal hearted woman was leven lcd. who did liol rn oed rfOO lo tl"' "bernie I*- cl*' but showed oevet-he leos un e levi c trial a pati are, dignity, com ooaro aad !.(niiciio.-c which ha a sii rod Ike admiral on id poetenty. She boo leea treated, by tho dotninanl school of innileiii historians, erith aa ahaoet run ocAToxm M-n-riv; uiid it i- wdi to aet beside theil Bweepta* eeosuiea thia sloy af bat unprioonmml and death from tke pea ol a sympathetic bul upoa tic whole pidic.ons si mil nt. Here ere tow i-ea aaB-fi oi the peat i_woluttona_y dreiaa aaore bbo. in* thin this, in wl.i I. 'ii r -rt cl, willi a ump di n .-as .-.ne in teal Ufa th'' heal qualities ,.i one side with the v.-.-ist qm! Mc of Ila other in t.c ti-.-aim bi of the Queen ->. her i**naecutoia brutality uni triviality oocmed t.> to band to hnii i. -rn i one I*, alwaya wavering between ki and contempt tor mea who were equally toofiah inui ii rodoua._ THI. H :..-!' IR Ol t .*> IN ULM TIMER .lin: " is.' .iii ai vi c cs i akim." ¦,. i T.e A.it rr Al til* time when i.ii-i.oi *is m..led Into two toa ii ii*.. ( nv..h. r mu! n.-ii'i ii .* "I-. .iili.oii-'i lin- juiiteri I- ai ir ola IriV.cc 1 o.i.a I le CT I i.O oilier. 111 c >" IC.de ii UW lonou: t .leiunel e** lol ililli. !...¦ --.. 0 c.ili.-r oi tue ino « li-, on penally nf j. vin* a illli'icl to llieir iieitfhniira. Pliny nilli-' iy n a e li.cm- a Iras ii.iine io iii- i-m.-iity so .j .i rsMSl fm MlarialauM UotAt in¦ nd". Ths iiovoni r*. Iii".i ia t h.tn-.ooo i.hi tl him in gre ii st ita, no .'ty la.mo 11 .lion ,ltm mai f.. r- baillie*, o lien fe y v. ii, to dniren, limy Wit* pleicl-1 by pit-en ia oliver .ont guldaa iiv.ti .¦*, n. wBUmtool ¦ om .Hi f.uL, ii.cir -r.i.e-*c.n !"¦'' il" i" « OtUKnt Hi..i ol ibo Bing liiuioa'l la l-ondou going ia stats to at r.ou'n. T.ie Streets ol a Wes linllnu elly inuit it: Ulla lierio II .vm |ir*-*Hr.uli«d it Very pic. llieai|Ue mme Melli. Here K*i...i,.« i.r «i-»ati ii.*-* iii immarna an" . ir.a ele. ..n.l u nu (a.. ... 1 al I...ir nU.I ** |l.llfll**-l,' H-..IHI..I la> l.Klr Ul. ..._> _,lj (-llVuliel'M Ul Un" Ililll'tl1»t H.'l.l C .rill, lit- Will wu Inn tue i.ll.ir, il l.onil.ni in P,,tn co.0.1 .up,.ia 1,,-iu: wini Um.I avliljr cl Ml wi *,HH St ¦ (e. lill li.ilal.ci OwTtf- iriK llieir p.iia-o!» in.l taaw. Ut \ntt«*K I'rliliul Olli lue niiaivili fill 0>i I sn nnslr r ***f *T sa«l dow* amiss inn Simuu* ni iii.* u-¦!'.. -ii teaal dum, ueriui ¦ nani) f-nie n,il w unite* laka i nniiy Bo.aagal stoup!* ol rauawaj 1 ,,\,.i, or lue edi >* 11»rf light ul ..»..lt.- sei Vitnt, unUKiil in ino-»c si steaunB. saaiail with in- '.-« un i mern** iu lin* | lllnr>, SO ii.« n-e ul e.rn mi fi. -I.ly eu: oil. lu ce.i 1 I Ol I Uren Bas prrpct ml «.»r BntOg Waiteil h. i* i.n tiie ituyrinoiM ali Hid jecj.ie; _n ii.i wini .er Hutt tue paapts m.. cu ib« to ir t.*-*\ i**i aalaara IB tl _iiiiii_i ai.imBt D.iirjii.oii njeyiirioiMijiiVBiiio.il *>.*nt ovar wiro .noni tyr.oiun'.i aatl rroal. r-___»aaMhj tacooauaoal pratasie l-al wora lorwarUod hn<l_o i, aim ny t.e *" A' te le-nf ( n.ii| nt ul " ii ... I -in il udmlOmt cc; t.nu ol ine-a.* _i-nil -iucii, rn bo sahautlad la Ibo Kiae. ll .,.|ii..it- tc nive ici li Itu: opinion of lUrtliy i.i UirSO rulers inn ul. tiott w...i ri.pi ie ol ll.i w .* m Bl ort moiiey irmu iu. e-i|u« ny aTary mamu* m iin*ir sowrr. ci ur I.lc.;.ii. tat illili* I'W'ii jo viii pnoKcl. Tn rino lue com.lt) fili*>, HIM t" t»ei*l li IS B -cl. t BO ltd -lion, .1 Hy m> menu* os) linn, in (BOBO tm.'--, .ipi. m. I.i li-tvu teen ipot ¦. Bsaoailsryaaaahlorathaito tae-roeo gioAi ¦lui ol uiahiua utuwoy. a uutmt'l* litsiaaas ui iain ut a .Mr. I.aiwn.a r. vi no curried ou ti.e 'lt ... roaUOaOl rXlur- l.nii. li. t tn jun ne lo lim mr idhi len or (lie ..lin a., il uiSkI tn* sahl that tut ngi»*^h»aa badaa-s hs nn niu«irip|ied tlielli. Ill) W Ul "''lil Out lo lilli .ll .li, I) iu I 71 1. Ill) *' »«M»I- luwad ii), iiiei.itis .t« fit-it ine> wero raissi; sui|Mi roiciM in t..n l-iJit'l lil ni etii "I weather ..r- OOBIprUau io ti iva lill" o<ie nail ol Ineir C4i aju, lo ».,vi* li*-* otlmr; nu », 14.-1 vi lUi'i.o ''.iu-o nun finn-, au i ur-oi an.mica Mi. .-keen. Hie l-e-1. til), !'¦ i"li. In* rctilsOil lu.i..... I,.ma |.e...-nm of X loo per annum om o Hw Ito* ia ..ftlen. lie knj.l . luil.ci'f llau^i't v-a. KluK .illili Uj. li, chmu-a-r/ ,,,, ii-aiiuae ns m. s null rnor.y braoosa Mr. U*«gool aan.i.rt liol a-iili-ie.nl lo l.t in -ri la.ii o it r.U.iif Itvly Un..cr ..li uUatrdMiiSUIp, U) il per on la wi,om .\ir l/i*»llinr u-Aiitui ne uit.i sol. lier mr Bl, .r)'to. nu rn etxmt lo *.c.a.|ii|ili-li ult Imr-aiii. lie wa,-.molli iSfelaB hat rom iii. Hngi***1 abaaaha a«om_rrioii; ami nu iU aotaaiif ui-.-i.oii nm ot t.e ^'uiir ii,. n-ui|i ol har -i t.*r. uorlaruu ina. nu p.nent ..».'¦. n-i't l*> itpponil at Kiaardiuij lu U.8 O,,Ii.i. *' U UH.. ..Illci-.ll. relllull-.il ..1.-4 WiUi lol -...in of uu 1H..-.I tm-, _.r. l.owl.ei niinili laplhtB ** 1>. fmut laWS} ilon'i it'll u.e of tLe lawn I win alu it, mu.I let um ero wi,u daren ..isi ute ll." Airitlu, tim '.overnor of um ii Intina-t, Mr. Kliatt taii.i-11. Iii I7l l-l, we urn iuforiii**d, w_.i SnuU HU llil'iultoili p- r.v.|i,i*iC tiiHt " lin .1el/.¦.^ nil t ,e cl..ret ttoil iir-.mll iui|«nrl«i.i lulu our pm t foi in own u-u mid uciit iiiniierii u.ly dolli rn,up lue i-.n-oi bsadlo" isarrtv t i-1» Baoagh to at *ke ths lalo Mr. i.umuie tara in ins i-r.tvc/ "itu li.e t.n co.le. tor." i tne nr.-Hi u nilen ii i iimi owarn ot oae ttmo hat to ooo le,ul willi Was la ireve.il lim slaVOS !i.ili.'iri_ t.BBOlTOB mt,ni lioui leur ni a iiiiure piiniiuieeni tor a nn.all n.uit, or ll lli'j wele in 1H.V WitT iii eutenril, WIlMIS *.'-n< lli'-m inimiiurt tor tueir »ct. (nu-enuei.tiy amman Bator ..r.tyt'Li a liiiUlsiiUiirUU UnltUiVci lunir roliKloU it H.. iii«> baltatod in » roaarroetiaM, .nd u.ai uiier doath li,ci n.auuid no into llieir OWu inuutry ug.iin, _ul Umx* I,mir Hie nu* we l. Hu In loimsi-ueuo.* oi ttucli u bcllnf Ui .1 limy i uil'-uvore.! lo X|*odi sacu a i>:*,le of allum. AiiuwiitT aaruM Isatooviaiu uoe/iu slarro lu tt.u nm, "c-tiuei om* of tbeir lira, s to ue mt ntl Mint iixn.1 na n |,..ie iwelve tt-el U'-f li, und U.iTlUK mm ito, ir.iii*.*- ali Ins ii«i<rimii lo eoiim form mi luureii roi.mi abnBI tul* Bsa I. tn ano w io tea par eraaiatos I uat thar matu m ettm ut la.lukiUK liin ..c.J leiururd to Ibeir own n.SIIJ. fur tina luau's hood was brie, as tooyal! plaint- taw, aad iiuw wasU pontllilo tue bo ly could oo Without ths 'munt" HUS Biuipie llieoiy wit* .pille ta-Srleol to o.invluee ti em. inui from t-at «isy tue owner eotor lost auotu-sr Biara la lula w»). .l.iiiniicH, Ihfiu entrl to ho the - vrirliedont |'laco on eariu." well lieterveJ Ba na mo, ter. la paint ol fact, ttie ililiaoltui U al llial tune luainly fained llieir livrliliom ny irudiUK willi piratH*", of wnlch au eiioruiiiiu numimr lurtialoii lltuae *ema, makin* rulda 11,01, ueinulmi tug .-¦.,iiit-i. isumii,aad c.rr>iii-r oti luimenos iroaaurs 5 .lam lieu, tliel-n to Spell- lt In deiiiuieinTy. a certain j.ira<« Henry "uur-jan, »m 1 rriiaiis lho Moat aalarprta* lu an.i darimr uiun of Ula nay. Ho nm no u*tty ({nil. t.ul did au work after a myal fiiaun.ii. ||. wnmintimitmml al .-ee lliue _,oiX) limn, Wini 111:1 r.ur, 1 * im,.t .| (iiirlj-llvo roaooto Due of Mo soot oaataras woo tha etti ut idi*.io \, .... in r.tii..lll_. Wlier* IBs WOaOaie hoOotood -.rnoiiute.1 ttl .&0.1HKJ " I lee-t o' elulil," Ue-.lilna mucii rictl Stiifl, eic 'lulu Kenie ii,.11 tcriuniuiwi ula earasraaa ptrats i,y i e.,.,ttlr intuit, wlildi tiaujfhl into au eicbeiiUcr 41MI.0OO"' pieces ol eiflit." 1 e -amt* loo! (livea aome atruinre .letiuia of tbe eartli- <|U_ke lu Jamaica au Jnce 7, lli'.'J. lu uiuoj of lue aieeiiMif Tort iloyal tuere were srierul fuihoiiu of . aler; u lotti luuinta 11 - p Ul. alia tall lulu ll,e level Un I, uovcied eeveial aeltleujeut and Ueairoyetl lumy |.eoi le. One a. tiler bal u a 1 tantallon miuoved half ft lune norn lie pOsoaWhan 11 fornierH atooi. Tart of a 1,..natala, after liavluK mails acverai iea**a, OTOfahollOd aw lune f.nii.iy aii.l CMiil pitrtof u p..«i,iu, mu lyuin u mlle ntl; alni "u lur»,e. tull BMiUBtaiS is quitoswallu*cl up, an in i"« plato wi.ere ii aiooJ tlmie u matt a va-t l..k.*, four ur live le .gitea uv. r." lu all u oul ..OOO people pi rl.-la-'l by It.u .U-Iri.;ma. Uwiiars will nrror reaoaatto allow 1 heir slaves lo lu-come i'i.ri«llai a, ». will tie aneu Irani Um foilowlim: - I took a meat intrre-t lu a oertam al.ve. nuniUu, wbo wauled mUcu ts liecoiua a I'uruUan, and at...ke to Us ¦ ¦mater of lim nlalilalloli nil i.i lin..alf. Hta .ma <rel waa ti.a wereCHinli'i im-e a ( lirlaiian. lin e..u,| 1,,, |,,uv*-r tm .,. ..n,.io<l ual*_v«. sud llius uwunra w.n.lu io»e buid on tuuir siavra. Were tie in lanaaoa to (loan, such a gnp would ur o,.rued, tbut ali lb.- pl,.tiler-, in tue iain wu.od curae bim." \,iy ainn'ilar also ls tbe tales japer or ibu Iiyuai «wlale lu Au'lipia. ti nm willett we niel tim price* M alaves t-> nav« varied fronr *10 tu g lon, - w.ur .mel aoiiuil." -oiue eldi-ri) lawlteaai.il feuijeiunn ol idltir are "t rn* 11 in irnttla." hevi-ral 1 onleaof tue slavs Htbts are ainu a. own tu widen all veiam uaiuuiated to uproot Ibe id.-a thal aiavnry la uol au luatlluliuii b/ Luria* tighl are carefully eliunualrd. SOI AS kXCKPUOS, AFTER ALL. from The RreSttler Herold. Bam Juno painted tn a dlscoaras on patience st Otnat.it the other iiIkIiI and »_!d If there were ons man prvaeut wbo never bad apoken across word to his wife be would aak bim to risa. Br aad br a round-faced, good aatured man suiod up " 1 bank Uod," said Ban, " ihsie'a ons 11,un wbo inner spoke a oroas word to hit wife." livery- budy took a goad look at tha paragon, whan ha broke ths aaapaa with tho aaaiaaB 1 ''Ihavoarl any wtta. Tm a katika hr " ORIENTAL THEOSOPHY. A MES8AOE FROM "THE JIKOOMNO EAST." TIIR VIKWH OP n^llf MOUI.VI CHATTF.lt.Ttt1*. Bnbu Mohiui Cliatterlie is a Hindoo gentleman wini for Oaaaa three years past has resided in Euro po, occupying hlmt-eif rn advancing tho public com¬ prehension of tho objects of study OOflipclacd under tho g-nc-iai BBSd Wf oriental Theosophy. Mr. Moliini has c'inn' to tho Tuite.I Status us I lin gu st of Mr. Arthur Oebhar.l, of tns city, aid it in lu's purpose to spend lim winter here, and Incidentally to toko advantage of what, vcr onporlunitnM ttB thc fBrtheeaaoa of lu.** life work may occur. lu lim cou nto of .in extended conversation with Mr. Mohiui (ho lollo'.Tnig vmws and opinion* Wi i" el cited, and are hare set down lu the belief tint th- leaton"f rta Tbibovbtrill be aaaaowhst interested in id-ias which, apart fr un all con¬ sideration of credibility, ore likely to have Hie rccorinneiidation of nov.ilty for the maj -ri ty. while they represent a current of thought, a stream of tendency, hm tho Gere-Ma would aay, deorf-riaf serious cx.'iiiiin.ition as a sign of the times. Mr. Mental toefleetonMi lama member «>f tho ThBOBBB-ienl Nm-mtv. hut I do not like to c ill my¬ self a ThooHoplmt, b 'crime thu' H HM to imply the po session of absolute knowledge of the truth, w aanea I an merely ¦ seeker. 1% understand my position yon anal ho oeqaaiated with some of tue lu liefs I liold. It appears to me that tho time is iipptnaeliing when the Fast will he called upon o i;c mure to (arnie, a lellgtoBa Ideal t" tho West. You know that nil former spiritual ideals have emanated from the Orient- Christianity came thence, mid when Materialism aud ecclesiastical corruption ho'1 so encrusted the living faith with aapoeatltanB and ritualism .as to obscure its b"ant v nnd destroy its elevating InflnOBOO. ll was again fruin the Kast that the revival of loafBIBg pro- < if' whloh opened tho way for a partial return to ri hight rilli .ll. 1 ion.M'1'r that there'atio hOtWOOU the last and the Weat throng! tho preaanoa of tbe Englioh lo India is one of thc most iinnortaut factors iu lho tntiirn evolution af mankind. lt. ls not that the Koallah have themselves recognized ttunr eppno- tuiiiiies. On tue contrary, they have beOB blind io them. Pnt it is not necessary that the hen who fern rtzes B di-ou'it met with the pollen he gathers from thc towera le hu queel tor hooey shoald real i/i'what otherpnrpoee bo ut aabeornagthea the satisfaction of h i inatinotiYfl impulaaa The En g- Uah iu Imli i have deopioed the ancient people they rovera there, end hire aparaed tho toro af thc V"las, bur tba industry ond tnqaieitivanette of their Bebolan have hoeo tho aringa wht r.tha acred -..i-.l haebeea borne, ead tnoy hive ic lt fall boco ead tbere In alinetiono favorable to ¦ogatuur lion. Once before a great material pe -»er con(|iieted the Root, only to ti d rh** BOOTOO of tts o-.vii tnbjngatlOO ni tin* .vent. Tho Bngtieh poet. Matthew Arnold, baebeoattfatlr deaenb-*d that great trtnaaab «>f .«pu it o.. nial or which malted lo th biri b of the preoenl relteioa of Chrtotead m. Yoe must not think thal beeaaaa I aaa ea Oneatal I am huetiletu i hrietienity. Ifwhal looaorireto Beaaymia loo baaaay etgnineaaee, nins in ibeeadearar ta help forward the reotorettoo "t true Ulmetiaaity to tho u e-t. I shall stir"ii*"* von, however, wb -a I Hav thal n ii" (hr st ni nit v baa ooased to bo prao lead "ie vu under stood in th" We.r, ,*| ul that India alOBO 00 i- i ri io the ho If of trin h tbe study of winch c;in b ri n hack the Weetara nations to tao Path, und orari f n mi iii ci n the na* ural.- tnaeqoences of that Materi- eimtte oarear whieb they ero at pr.:-.mt pursuing 9un mici absorbed i-.i.,-, *. If Chnattonitr haeao fati tailed to hold its own BgnhlOt the Materr-ltsf Science of the (lav: if tni'h is diminishing emaog tho p topto, aod a pan I .-uni philosophy is tabing its place*. If as religion .lec'iiic- tl,** po it of Socalc-m loons up mc,inc- mglr; it is heeoBoe the growth af oqjbbbb amoag the nrleothood ororywheie has made them mere eehoeeof thc world's aolfnieebiBg, and has canoed iheiii ta accent the w rid's apologetic theory that the teaehioga of Christ uro iueapaoio of praeuenl application. lio ant imagine, however, that I regard Chiist- lamtv ns in nnv netige entille<l to exclusive psvCoi- cin .*. I revereaoe it became I bold that then* ts hut ona Kt omul Verity; and Ital all religtono aro ex- ptoaotoaa af th [tiela inda that too aoarea and foiiniaiii-head of tho world's ene ls is co be fouinl. Il is lhere al-o thai the greatest, spiritual philoso- pby k'lowu to the him m race is enshrined in a literataro tbeoooqneetof whteh bethe Wwd wiu be a new and greater Kennis-am e. Von nay say that the old worli!, as you call lt. c.n evolve a doiinnaut Ideal for itself. I answer that it baa never yet shown its capacity for OBOh an evolution. It his owed all it*> spiritual views to tho orien. anti it has failed to derire from those fifta tho beaeflt lober' eui in them boeBBao it has ptooeeJed to naraali aa Ito religion, Instead af aeokiag to t>infy its cai- n tiny. 1 ou .-.ny that (J liri st ia n ty is i n prac 11 ci hie. Il is cettainlv tine th it you have never praettoed it. Uutit la really only imiu.icticahlo bccun.se you havo iiisiln it so. What is the inllienco which opcra'cs uio-at atroagly egalaal the edopttoo iuto roar lireeof tbeGoepel dootriaea I Is it. pot tbe cultivation in ali o fofl of th it maatorfal todivid- nalism which maind-sts eOBStBBtly through the laet Of pOOBOsaioB 1 "The lust of the eyes and tbe pride of life," yoar own oaorod writara put it Whence -prings the great direreity ofeoodlttoaa, the con cm pl Ulon of Which breeds SoolaliOffl I Is lt not thc diicct outgrowth of tue passion of acquisitive¬ ness t Von people ol' the West cannot cuioy lifo unless you aro perpetually increasing your pos¬ sessions. You surround yourselves wilna liixtny the steadily tncraasiug artlliciality of which car¬ nes yon alwavs fillI UPI away fnnn nature, and farther away also tMMI the ind lenee of (Jospul truth. The Brotlierh"> I of Man which Jesus Christ believed in has become utuhiu&able to you, with.your millionaires at one end of the social m ne and your tramps ut the otucr. Yot there ts one country tn tho world wmre lt is still not only thinkable, but yos-ible. and that country is India. Do yon know why this ie eel It is because the venerable creeds of India.and lirahmainsm aud Buddhism are essentially oue religion.have for ages taught, to a spiritually minded und receptive people, the ephemeral character of lito. tho folly and danger of concent raiing the energies upon it, the wisdom and BBBOadtf of holding it always as a temporary possession, the chief value of which consists in the opportunities it affords for doini: good. Tho two hundred and fifty million in¬ habitants of India were uot c minored by the Kng- lish. They Bubmit to the British rulo clnctly because their IBU pOB prevents them from looking upon what ron call liberty or independence as a oapreme Boeeoelty. CnriariBBttyieal one with tho Vc.lantic sacred canons ni teaching that "the Kingdom of Heaven is wilbla you." The conquest Which every hum IB being is bonito 000*9 -*¦*" WBi tho OOB-VBBot of external circumstances or of bil fellow men. It is comprised m the old Cree*, axiom Know thyself.' If ( hrUteiidoiu had renlt.eil thia and had not been misled hythe promptings nf M.11enaU-ni; tho Millennium would nor have BOOOBOd ho fanciliil and vain a dream as it appears to-dav. I i!n not say that even in India the height of tin- HilahMM -md magnanimity cunuionded by the Veilantic dei tniies and t\ pitied no nobly lil the taner aud teachings of Christ, is approached ; but 1 do aay thai ibo people of India aro better adapted, by cycles cf meditation upou tho pure, unsophisti¬ cated prtitliie wofl.i-n-ligion. to accept tho lofty views there inculcated, and that ona mos' nu portaut spiiiluul gani to them coubists in their emancipation from tnat Inst of possession which seems lo ouslave tho West mon' und more. The discontent which takes the fenn of Socialism is the natural result of a view of lifo which gi von anna me impirtaneo toextomats, christianity ami tba Indian rotogtoae alika teeeh the veryeoairarr ot this. Inequality rn social condition ts lu the Wost ibe duel oeaao of poynter aattooaBoaa I do hoi believe, bowen i, in IBO doctrines of ixniHlify ui'held bj the Socialiota Thora is uot, ami tievttr (¦alt br. Cijuullly ll-I .Mdi llIllltUI] Ulnfc-i lu heir view. Kverr mau is diflereut from overy other mun, and bas His individual pr-sfeioneee and aver¬ sions, hu* particular lUjovmeiita, Ins imculiar hal*. its Of thought. Io e,.|i;»,|/.o (UUW-tld coutllf l-'lts, therefore, would oil*' oe to streich all alike upon the bcd of I'ro inites. Tne cxjirritiieiii hus boon at¬ tempted several tinten, and as yon must know lt has invariably failod. Mich failure ia Inevitable, ainoe oo long aa Um We* tr ru tbeory of th* purpose of tit a pro valla wea will con un ne to cultivate acquisitive¬ ness, and tho constant growth of th_ir malarial de- Birea will at oooo stimulate their pursuit ot prop- arty and koop thou diseon tented with oren tbe ut- aoet aaoeooe in oblatumg lt, Wbare, for Inotanoo. is there nn exnmnle of a rich man who thought ho lind amassed enough wealth? The more a Weet- em man eets the more ho wan's, and while your world holds to this principle yon can never be tree from tho fear and danger of Hoctalisiu. But in India KoelBliom is uuposnible. We aro gil POOI there, but it ia boeBBOO we do not desire to be rich. Hnmunitv is so constituted that as a rule men obtain tlmt which they o'nve for molt earn¬ estly. In Ihe West material no* "salons aro sought; la the Ka t spiritual OBltgBtonaWBt '1'ho reoullis 1I1.it the West has riches and the Kast ideas. Jut in tn ( anti-it live thc Materialist life long without saflertoB fr uu ti. Pmooooiag » na'ure which ls at least halt spiritual tho dept ration of a pure relig¬ ious ideal pmso is .ils cnn. Perm ri ion t progress de¬ mands such an idem, and with ur it the utmost ad- raneooof aealtoBOttotoBoeaaa only toad to hasten tho advent of tbat reign of force which must e_- ? iugiiish civilisation, rho onee-at teadeneieo are In the d rec jon of that danger. It has hedi horne io Bpon bm thei the tioae ie ripe tot ina introduc¬ tion to tim \\c-i nf til*- Kahtan wiealnee-ieiiBlen whieh is fandataealaily oae with true fhrletieaity, When I 'lav.* leen oohed if I de .ire to convert Ku- ropo to Rodd n-tii or Br ilunarisin, I have always a ul, " Ne i whai 1 desire is to eon earl I liriatoadom to ( liristtariiry."* Bray do not flunk, however, thal I regard myself as an aiiosflo or that I not mv ai ii forward as oa oat raditod ropieeiBtouie of lu¬ ll ea thoo rbi or feeling, My ambition is to help a little in thal ""''('"-sowing work which the Thee* -onfi eal -o.-iety bas began* toaoaaat in hinging abenl thai better andeestaadiag nf ibo Kast winch BoqeaiBtanao with itaieligion and philosophy alone cnn snppiv. The I beoeetthtoal Pneiet-bag boos misconceived ciiitsi h-rubly «iid this is partly due to a mistake. a* least I lt ink il so.in the initial movement. In o der t" taleroo! tho West great stress wss laid on the minor phenomo'ia of aeoolt BOBOBOn I* was thought that, the presentation of th-»se wonders wonld eonvlnee thiaktog mea ihat the subject deaea tod atteattoa. Un fortunately, tho flrsteftect ¦ as (o attract tho kind af peoulo who care only for the thiiumatiirgy and notning for the doctrina PfOOOBtlr those wornlr-scekers, finding that the put nose of the society was not fhe production of p.ii -n mi ina, but th" atadv of ancient, religions and philosophic* mainly, fell away, and then a more Borton* a id spiritual element came to the front. At present f io beguiling ol a f..r more intelligent aad thorough eta mn ation of the litenfure "f India t i,ni ha- brea attempted before is being made. Iii Eng and, I'lrnce, <;e; many mid Italy groups of atuiteuta have beet orsaalaeda and ibaoo are ptxss- i-iu tbeir researches steadily* lt I 'iaveanv part in the nioM'tnent it is simply that of au occasional od- i in ! interpretor; rbaeo aro points in in-lian philosophy and litor-ituro which reiuire the light oiily derivable from in hen ted national aoprehen- smn for their BBderetaadiaa*, and such points I om sometimes able to clear up fur vTeetorn minda I ave ben urged to-dead ut maha bow aad annatatod traoelatlooa of some of Ihe more Imaortantof the Eaatero sacred books, such fur ineiaace ea I 'te B inavad-gita. It isnossih.a that may do ooeaathlng of the kind if no more Competent limul DBM be f. und. ot cotir-c sue i an a'tt'inpt as I have outlined to br og tosether tl"* Bael and tba West, and to modi¬ fy tue Hat-en iii sm of the lormer with the spiritual¬ ism of iii" lotti r. must bo a work of lime, lam led to (""ie tba! ii will u lunately succeed beennee I am taught hy tte ina-HTs who e lui utile disciple I am that t ie pr groan af the race is over upward laud on w ri rd. ami "c au*-c a cnn tin nance nf Matcnal- Httcc.vili/ittoii ii-, us preoeat lines must if un* check (lend :n BlOBBier end retrogression. As to I be existence ol triune masters ti ive no liing tn say, nive ihat I believein then, md with reason which saiisfi<-atnvoalf lt i< nut advisable to sneak of. or to insist un rt the reoognltfoa of, the Mahatmas, however, before rn. *.* ivVi-in) wholly nnproprireii bv training and edaeatioq to oomorohoaa, mnrb lc-,- accept, rho vu-,' BoheOBO of kuowlfdgo et which they ure the O'totodlaoo aad tIto icu hers. Nor can tiy ont thing of mv relations w.th ill ni borood ho state neill that I may be icgarded ns a cheli. Iii my personal con¬ cerns, however, the public cm rake no inten-.!. ind ttu-v are lo hot unite* uiitiiip-irtauf. .Such little -lii.'iiihcriiico ns be ongs to imo grows entirely out . 1 my l.letitllic inoii ivi'Ii iloclrmoit mi 1 views most nell iii> probably Miraag-t to tim Western in¬ tel I genee. lt ia todiwdpat* tiiis strangeness, and rofamiliaiiae tho world with tm'hs it eight to make ita own, tint the Thaoonphioal society has been ea'ablished, and to nds work, which I ond 'I hers consider very Important) 1 am doing what 1 nan. The possibility of uniting the 1'a-t and weat ta the acceptance of the I fairareal Ifeligion appears to me so fraaabi with grant reealtethat Itu a duty tn forthoi tr. lb" tir l rttep toward such an accord nanni be the de.-.nug away of oalaappreheaetoa on hoth sides, and the dora >nitralioa of th** real Iden* 'it v of iii g-.nnine religion. VV hon I add that he Universal Ito.igloo requires from no Christian the rejection of any Gospel tetchlne, but only the re- rmnci iti-iii nf those nrtr'sric accretions winch have deformed aad overlaid 'ii" doetnaeeof the Founder. \ mi univ conclude that my outlook is not so fantas- tto and extravagant ea witboat tins explanation it nugal appear. It de-erveo to be noted, also, that tin- imiteai ions of Weetara prooeiodaooB to toke new il.ns lri rn In>lia ure mora numerous thau von Would oappooB lad "io instance tbe Transcen- lc-it.it lasveasonl ta your eooatry. Emerson and h's school bo-rowed fr'-elv fTOin tho lore of the Rust, aod tho froctl'ylng force ni their conceptions they owed to India. Coining down t-o tint present nine I timi a powerful current of thought iu (Jor- inittiv, and I reeoeoleo many fatmliiir ideas in it. f>0 imniirv ] e irn that this is the phiiosophv of ttohnoenheuei: hal whee I read Schopenhauer I ire b'hind him thn wisdom o' the Ve J as. Ho indeed has twisted and distorted the truth thus derived, for he has attempted the impossible feat *t so,-*, in | (ind and Mammon at the ame time, A Working anion of Materialism and .Spiritualism is nut of thc qnee-ion. Schopenhauer has only ene- reeded, by forem-r these incompatible elements togoiber, m producing that negation of all souud thought which vu call Pessimism. To understand tho Indian religion there mnst bo x capacity to perceive aptritu-al truth of some kind, bal the Matenallat phiiosophv of rho ago eppeara to lack thts capacity, ^vuna ead Makaba -fm to theearth-boand vision syaouyma for annihilation. lins i because thev are the sv ninds of a 'om of JXiatoflOO so tar tr m-x tullin-: human experience that rrily the tilomioatod stunt eau realize, and ivenil bat dim'v. the subtle refine n"ot of lire in- rolveid. Bat it ie indeed trne that tie philosophy .f India is r,s ti mb broader and more oomprehea- dve thaa Western plnlotophy us the cosmology of the !>¦ lent Bl brooder and more comprehensive than Western co-mologv. Vmu men ol science, with llieir scorn of intuition il mel hods, have tmd them- sclvesdown to thc exploration ol' the lit'lecorner il Ibo uni verse upon whieh they are planted. The result is tba insularity, n-'rrowrie-ts and tutellectual bigotry winch cn raeterlae Weetara scientific re- .earch. Indisposition to acknowledge Indebted- less, moreover, was never the accompaniment of a <fr<ni_er dispiHiti m to borrow. After furnishing ,'otirscie tritic store from Baatota depots.nay. after idonting in m.inv cris's an Kastern terminology ivlnci perpetu illy exposes the origin of the ideas md discoveries you have appropriated, your sagest lava Balthar tho grace nor consistency to admit li<it Indian learning mav have a value of its »wn. Ono Knglish scholar. Professor Max Mil!tor. has, t is true, very handsomely acknowledged the leht Eurone owes to tho Kast, and I wish li is book. What Iudia Can Teacu UV' c mid be geucrally .ead. lhat lo a fair beginBiaeof a liberal move- neut which I hope Wi11 tarred wider fhe present of- orts to breakdown the harriers between the two -Bgiooi and enrtob the West wah the spiritual reaanrea of tho Fast. lam amemberofthe BrahaM Som.ij, ns well asa pember of the 1'heosophic il Society. My ancestor, -auminohun ttoy, was eon*«picii"iislv associated with he un lenient.' Its influence has declined of late roora, but the spirit which Informed it was truly livine. The gr-at spiritual movement of the fut- tre will be one aiming at theBbBB-iontoOBt of all lectjinan distinctions, the elimination ot spurious ¦mbro'deties iioin al! creeds ami the union of all rho are ool atrophied bj! .Materialism in the wor- liip of one (Jed. ot whose essence is alt humanity, md the glory of whose divinity may be aband be ne humblest son ol Ada a who has learned to walk iv the new light, lo quote oue of your Western mets, Matthew Arnold, I aud those who think with BO d' sire to " Wlist "titi of -ttrcTiirth td lett, employ, 'Hits emt bi help munn (i*i> tomato* man oftftuught and jos Li/ring mankind aiittin." TUE FLAW IS "JIM TIIE PEMlAS." from The WKitetoll P.eriexv. Lady Mowktoii has batt given tier views sbont the .i in inc** in. ii teni vt mi h ted oo amah ciiu !,!,, iu the play of "Jim the Penman.*** Lady Mouoktaa aanot anderatand theoMevdoas thal bavebooe rotted oa m. -con-, and "*.piiiins timi Um toms B a utan who fmiu oro. practice bas beeooM snob aa adopt lu tho lasttattoaal i niil-A riling that lt bat bet niuo almost a jia-ssiou with itiu. a BOOOBd nature. He ls trapped by sn at Ioho in uticcr UiouglitleH*ncss~ln lue w-tntouuess if Idleness he Imitates her haud. lr toeo not euet bim a thodght lb-does ti tn the careless tens unil st-eitnry ot Ins own hons*, with n lot of plca-iitnl 1,-opie ahoiit iimi. tlc ks emptoylnganidlo mouient-iiay, l,c:i.-t ii.-., ll ls Idling pootBvelj niling* He siuilcs as ho .-ili'lt-1: it. All ini_i*(|Hit<- 'rac ¦»'" tor no Hie forger lo ooaeamed. jut how about tho louuediate acqnleocanoo "t a nifo lo ctrlnir her h'lstinnd forge her nstue to a check which thc heniuiil there gi tea it\wt) iu enanty I Aud would Ute rue-its who tue w.»t« lung lho ni. uleui puss il by wtUiout tine.King tt ile-liti lo eompaiB the slgimlures I Mr 'barlas loti'uf bu u|sui a clever poial OOO siiitlcieutly .uni* lo lei the plot procecit. hut vt hi ii tl is exiNt-ttal its laokaom is at once apparent, sud certitinly Lady Monok* OB'S tlieorv Ue IO Un lecllliiile rui.l liitlut illness ls liol ati- ulMtblO wi" u 'ho tinto iiinl circumstance of the WfgBSJ ne aamaadaaooe- uus Lits. Tal* lite la Ulta rn iruuliiml nett, V her-»--lieliii o * i-atltrr or a U_. Tboalilp will ti lt tt*r alay tmt meat. Bul drl vea. of OBOBf rook, lu tomi. Alt ifnmtntMp in rain wa try. Wa caiiiuit Itaep tier (takdlly lim Ju.l nm rortunu . wlail may Blow Th* raaaarB <lrlT*u to and tra. .et, oom* but Lots oe bsar-l, Oar heart* with plaaaura .tor'A, M* Storm oauuTerwhelm. BBU bmw* la vaia Tho harrioan* W btu bo U ot tts holst. ART NEWS AND COMMENTS. THE WEEK IR ART CUCUM, MUM OP TUB VXIUBITIO.Ng.-.OM* NF.W P-UVRBM .AnTNIWS Kl Hi wu cu.-. The autumn exhibition at the Americnn Art 0allrr1»n will be opened lo the pu hilo on Tueaday. There win be a «* private new ¦ to-morrow, which will gr, « ion- way toward deriding the ijnrstion whether a strone exhibition of new painting* ran be maintair.ed in the. autumn. It hos been claimed, with the Acade-oy an illustration, that a really good exhibition is itnpo* .ibid ot this ses»on. On tho other hand, the exhibition at the American dsllertes may hare attracted p.int- inR., which would Bthoe-ataa have, rained tho averaae ol the exhibition st tbs Academy. It ls said that ths former exhibition will be one of excellent quality, tM il this proves trne it goes ta show thsf the Academy ne longer represents American art. In this matter of organizing exhibitions sn association of artists hi certain of a iavorsbie predisposition on the ps rt of those who concern themselves with art. and a bmnne-i*** tirm has ol itself no especial claim upon anyboi.y'i sympathies. But if the bah-MM firm hoids tho stronger exhibitions tho tact roust bo recognize!. The artists themselves control the aituation. lt is lor them to choose whether their beat pictures shall go to the Academy or the American Art Oallenee. 1. mt apnng they preferred the latter. Tho only changes at the Academy this sntumn have been the a.Irondoon ol an unusual amount ot inferior work by new painters, and extreme modesty on the part ct some ot the veterans. Little discrimination has been exercised eittier in accepting or hanging the pictures. I'.«-..1,1 >- a kindly desire to give as many artists as possible chances for sales has had something to do with this, but lt ia hardly to be supposed that tbe National Academy is to becoms merely a salesroom. There are plenty ot people who will buy poor pictures, but tho Academy ought not te be inadi* their rall vms*-point. The op<n ng of other spring and autumn exhibitions may not be .nternle.l mr OOatoeetttoa-j but comparisons aro inevitable. There aro iuany wbo would welcome nn Academy oxliih Hob noteworthy tor something more than thc ntintls-r nf ¦ salable'' pictures, sud who would be glad to l.sik to the Academy lor the very best work of American artists, young and old. There ls plenty of good work done bv American painters, but only now snd then is it placed fairly before the nuhlio. Tbere is no lack of exhibitions, lint thara are many people who have neither the timo nor patience to bant oat one good picture anton: a icore or more which are not worth a scoond glance. lita nmctoon poor paintings leave tho stronger im¬ pression. A really woll-chimcn collection of .tine, icm I'Otures, good throughout, is a cincr'te positive fact ind invariably make*, its mark. The Clarke exhibit-on i lew years nineo did more than halt a do/cu \_udciiiy inhibitions toward convincing lojolllgoal people tbat lhere aro artists ot talent hero aa well aa in Frauen. \iu.-r;eati exhibitions at the L'uiou Lea /uo Club and dsewhere have furnished observant visitors abundant ¦wasons for faith in Amencau art. Next month soother American exhibition will be held at the l'nion league Club, aud it it is as well selected as the last, ii will to Hire o! generous appreciation. The intluence of meritorious exhibitions is helpful to every artist of ability, aud it ia only by tho exercise ol some ito manon ihat tho charlatan* and bopcltaa wirukuiui who attach themselves io art as to every prole-.*, on jan bo given their proper place beforo the public, i * might cause smaller exhibitions snd OOBBllOrOOtoltot » time, but it would create a .feeing of intelligent respect for <Vmerican art whieh is not alway* BpfOBonl now, and In tho long run the artists who li recognition would bo the gainers. Mr. ifcUaus will issue between 0.01)0 and 8,000 cartis ni" invitation to the exhibition ol Kewiii.tti li * .* Gilder." Invitations will he sent io tha Ofttoto ot tho city and to those who are Oapoetollj inf r* ll i After the tirst two .* privato views " tbe painting will remain for a time in the Schtris TJaUeiy, \r!icr.* it ni ty be seen by those who apply tor oar la a! ¦ although it is possible that thc mininer ol upp ., may make nonie limitatiou ii BOOaaiJ, Tat.ro will bs uo ndttiLssioii tee. Tho*-** nho cure tor art will not lsd to apjif-ciaie both the worth ot Bool lg a ; tim Ingh rank and tho dl.:nih\'d niauuer in it this opportunity is pBBOOBOBO*. A portrait snd a few otber paintings br H. Kmilo Kenon! have been placed upon et hunt.on in Ibe gallery it Mctitra. Keichuid Sc Co. The portrait, whicD was ibawn in the Salon a tevt poota -ni.ee, leneoaoato m ooii,1-bearded tuan in il irk velvet coal -ill u- tn aa jiioou.strnuied attitude betide a table, exauiiinog a miali picture which is held ia both bandit. Tbe taco ind tne surroutiuinga in tv ha taheo lor those ol oo irtiat or an enthusiaetic amateur, lhere are pieces of tmo-a-brac upi n ttie table, bchiud wh di is a pu jpoit an easel, and there are various drapoiieo a ire never Butlered to becotne ts. Collup cu..US. I ho portrait, then-tore, is -.ouidluug much itio.e BBBhM-MM than a simple likeness, lt is a picture. This do*-* not mean the old style ot pictorial portraits in winch ht nen stand holding roils ot tn inti-cript in om- hand, tim >flier resting upon a pile oi pouderous volumes, (he J.ckgroiuia a row of Ul irule c,. ri.him and Mi A curtains, ir in the case of the warrior, who ia usually i.t tinl.i, .; itnliy "* at atteutiaiu," a v.i-ia ol' bailie otoaaa Hags an.l jayunet tips. M. aOBOBf bea paiuled Ins sabpMrt BBBtd lert'ectly natural euri-oun ling*, mid these are p..*- leuted with such oowplislioil will thal tho il ition is a pleasure. Fhe gem tl, rnd.iv-ta.-.-il liiettanto himself in sure of tho OjoiaolBatio (atonal Toui uoii-|irole*tsiouai hebol-iers wi.icu is 'irawn out jy an expressive exhibition ot character 0800 lilias. Ibo lace is that ol a relined epic ii'-rn, it !..v r of joautitul things, whose prosaat ipu-t 0B| ij tm-nt io readily shared uv the speoCatar, lt is BMOB lo have un le a likrness so iatorostlBg, Hore >vnr, itu* pi.ti.e will be sure to rece'vo Irom a'ti-i- OB approval tv mea they could not bave koola-fol upon mauv ot tho p<ir- .r.nU by foreign, especially by Eagllsh, arruts wine. nave been painted iu this c.uiturv within the la**t lew icitra. Tbio pieturo io ia genaro! edarirahlj li.'-uioa- zed. anil n** potOa wuh one .aaeaB-MB bobootvo toast proper relations. Tins OXOOpttoo is lite stoleollo 0MB :ne ta'ile with tbe glitter ot light upon il* paltMBBi lurtaee. It 09-tradao Itaolf, naaMio aoouad t¦. t tad dreertoc tho ero tiooi tao fara, Itohigl ari ition ta probably tatoadad to oaboretaeta thapiri .* aeiow, but it uiav evidently bc * tooaddewa* mitt ul\ au age. Lise where the values aretrieai.il tho icene has plenty ol atOBOOpheta Tho .rawing io faa I, Hie hoad tiruilv iu 9'lelled and tue w.trui iii -th co. .rnrg V uot over-uoite ; indeed, Ihe flesh painting i* ext* y truthttil throughout and there ia no waxiness or aastiness. The ptojarr e ratolas ao shorp. oroggi ** i .'¦jiitraeu, bul the excellent rosalia have bean atto 1 iv cl.-ver painting, a oooinrohoBOiOB "t tha kapai if values, aud a con-idersble tact in esprosO nf .hnnti t.-r. As M. i.'nout h.u beeu know ri to li- ..... / ut a painter ot marines and shore scenes, ttiia portrait s more toMaeetaag t Lau thc ac, .cup my mg pura s. tue, a ntii.lY ol'ligates uyou tho seri.bur", lo OBI I mre marka bio. Auother, a head, recalling OOO >¦! tretou's banda, tre-itcd slightly in tbe Boolloo Lepaga rein, ts attractive in its wav. and the'turd pi plate .'.nev s decided abdity iu laBBOOBpO p Huting, At the Acalemv exhibition nearly seventy paintings lave beonooM for $11*-.ow. The picture* boMmb flOO andover areas follows: - Did Music." i. \v. Usynard, iAOO: ".Hounds,'' H. U, Poora, f.104); ' (onie. Gentle Spring," .M. K. land, $__..*i ; . A-.luina Flowers," I'eruv .«or:in, f"_Til>; .. l-o,>kin_ lor I'ajia,"" VI. Kouzee, f3.riO; * Tomato.'s,'' J. ll. Uosion, 0lUO| .A ChafBriag Ketirition," J. M. Isaacs, 11901 ** Ino Last Days ot I'ompeii," Kita F. I'ell, ^S5; .* Alter a Day's Kain," J. Alden Weir, *Ji450 ; ¦ Bundown," J. O. Ivfi-r, $12a; .*. I-ow Tide," A. T. lliicher, f.:."*.0| 4 Flowers," II. S. liuekhout, IAOO; ¦ Bv the Hoad*, tide," Burr H. Nichols, #400; "A Tease,' ll. K. Dixon, *150: "The Hashish hmoUera,'' V. (I. Utopeftoa; "Oood Luck," l.veil Carr, f:i(x»; . Laudacape witn Cattle," J. W. Candear. 18601 'Late Autumu on the Moore," T. C. 8tc<*le, e'-CO; ' ,v Breea of Loiters," U. M. Arnold. *l;-n | " Si. 1.1* ng Milk," C. C. Curran, hlUtfj " Hhiatog l'p." W V. lliiiny, $17.*i ; .* A Misty Dav,' T. C. Sterne, ftMl 1 A City Fairyland," F. C. llass.tm. *t*:*7.*>; " A New- -aig.and Stllilv." I'ruce ('tillie. -s4(KJ; . Attt-rnoon.' Bf, Morgan, *"-'-50; " lu the Kileheii,'' C. C. Curran, !_00: - An ldvl,' Leon Moi.ni, |K0l m Motiung IliaU,' Arthur Vitrtou, §900; *" Spring." V. Marne- tall. 412-jO; " Dreaming," C. M. Mcllucnnv, B4ABA Hie Librarian." Amy Crarv, ^115; ¦ Mooul'ghi. K A*. Iteuson, ^100, and ** Ia*1 ot the Ketun,'." Il H. Cellogfi !r~00. Tbe prices given are those ot tho nantogaa Ihe BaaMtoatoa Hatt'.o Mouumeut Asaoci.UiDO, vhose deliher.tle progrens haa called torih t ri'Kfiius n some cases dae to uuervatod motives, has a>tvaut*-*d inoiber a.ep. A bill approiirutiii^ -pl .',"00 ior ibo ,ur, ii..se of land anana baa aaoaaoBool oho aaa Mb enioval ot adJaeoBI b-aUdtoja h*w pas«ed hoth uou-ieo it tho N trmoiii Legislature. Ibe design tor the BB0aB| neut adopted iu a\u,usi, l^^.>, ha.-* 1 totuewhat iu eeoerdaaeo alth »ugac»lioas made bf ik« two artist BOOieon "t the a-seueiaiion. Mr. Dim L Warner, ot this ctv. and Mr. Thomas Alten. ot Ho.toa. " Kurthei nioiliilc.iioti ot the design ts conterupbtteJ but iU general char^ter ot a lotty »a.l iu i- . structure, il ie oa-umsd. will not ha.changed." IB sits selected is 00 toa brow oi a uul nt U-oauLigioa (entro. '~"nA 'efl above tho rtvsr. voiv near lb* .tin A the ¦ old Conltuenial nlorebouae." s.i.i.,, delay hs* beea oaiiscd bv the neceasity ol aecurinji au !., nil Urue grouuda about the site and removing obstiud baiihliiigs. No* that an appropnatloa hot m obt-woeo any detlcieuoy wdl he made up by priv* ltlHtrahiy ami lho hill o-earod u a -iiiuho* m.nun r lor the momiuieut-. sa soon aa tho two ooiumiaatona htvag tbe matter lu charge deoide upon tho prauimal deVai'** Thai* should be uu occasion lot turthvr delay the H.BMtoBi aeh .. Amartoau Aitt," lu Ital second number oontlnues Balure lo fulfil tho promUe of tba proapeetiu. It con}*mt Mle whieh tolatoroottaa alto &«._.*__¦ ^,238 oana! trade jtobooatwa. .v ag mm it IB talOB Si
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Page 1: ORIENTAL THEOSOPHY. ART NEWS AND MORE OF CARLILE. …etrug-rles ns a pour po1ea»BB

MORE OF CARLILE.A OORRKCTIVBI-XIR MR FROtTDE.

Oi.,viSoKTHOIIAfl CARLYLE. Edited

^(SkSokiiivISHI^. OOW. Bra.

.,i, U..3«3. MaeailUanAto.We do not wonder that Mr. Fronde is sick of tho

whole business. Hie LU* el Carlyle will long ho

reckoned among tho curiosities of literature for tho

recriminations to which it has given nee, tho anarer

With which U h.ts filled I bow whom it WBSBZpMteitopleasMUilthewrct.'hedctrcct it hu", had upon

the fame of tho hero whom it waa tin- biographer'sespecial purpose to honor. Pi OtaaOBBBd rc, t iti«at ions

oontuiuo io crowd tho peee«| an 1 probably man¬

kind will not hoar the las: of them until .some MM

ecrunulous and judicious hinton in writes tho roil

lifo of Carlyle for a future generation. At pteBBBlBnoh a work is impossible, and Carlyle's fiiemlsandmn iving relatives must content- theinsclvcs wah

fragmentary publications bearing upon particularpoints. Tbe selection of letters edit <l ff Mr. Nm-

ton nt thc request of Mis. Alexander Carlyle, tue

phiioNopher. niece, comes umler this category.The letters are ptaooattfl as nn answer to

Mr. Froude, borne of them. if wot

all, wero in Mr. Fronde's hands, uuda few extracts fnun them appear intho Life. " Aim isl everv letter ii the Lifo which Ihave collated with tho original,'' savs Mr. Norton.

"is incorrectly printed, some of thom grossly so."and of the lettets. t«> .ind from Miss Welsh iu par¬

ticular, he rema!ks that they "abound in errors

and in unmarked omissions of word», clausen .andeoutences, hy whicri their tone is sometimes croat lyaltered." To correct all these blunders would bo

lntle loss, laboi than writing a new biography, and

Mr. \oi tou onlv oflers a few specimens. It cannotbe said that tho infidelities thus c_;*os. d involve

Buy gross distortion of tho sen-e of the let-tors; but they are enough le -dun** Mr.Fronde's reckless manner of working, and to

confirm th<* general be lef of his iuubisiiy to quoteCorrectly or to tell a story straight.The chief object, liowever, in printing these early

letter*.most of wine i ure now to Um nnb'ic.IsBot to purity Mr Fm..d Vs text, but to give a pici-Bro of young Car.fl fe ch um ur vny di'lereinfrom that which is sketched in thc biography, nn-rt

even more truthful than that of tho " l.emi-

niSOftice-s." lho correspondenc*, extending limn

hts nineteenth to his thirty-first year, is prin¬cipally with his parents, his brothers, bisfriend- Johnslone, Mit'hell and Murial*, arni Miss

Jane Welsh. It covers Ihe period of his earlyetrug-rles ns a pour po1ea»BB<i la Edinbnrgti,his first essays in sutnorsiiip. aud tiie b ginning of

his carew as a leeOBBM .<! and uot unlrinnrod man

of letter ; aod it coses on the eve of Uo marriage.

lie wa* already beginning to sutler fr un dysjiep.si.i.Bud in his tunes of torment ho showed MHB0 meetof thai black aud di sp.indent liunmr which m utter

life so profoundly atlected not only Ins temp la¬

mont but* his pkttaoapky. The letters, bo-.vever,from first to last, ure those of a man who-* habit¬ual mond was cheerful, hopeful, and even amiable.Oue cannot help thinking that when ho looked

baiek upon tncsi days ho unconsciously trana-mmmWBi to them sn m of th" misery w hi-fion'y Calton hitor with i sooiled leaper .ind ademor-alisod stomach. We aro apt to remember our youthOa something brighter tuan it wa-. Carlyle re¬

viewed his ihruizh tho cloud of an unhappy oldago* Tho impress-on m id.-nv these leltera allow¬

ing for moinontarv on breaks ot' dis-atisfuetion, i«>

that of a buoyant aud healthy mr uro, sometimes

rebellions under BBBaaee na! I ib-ir, hut ujiou th"ivhoc pitient of dradgee , conti lent of its own

Bl rein.'Ui. and by BO IBfitBO parma lcd as yet of thewretchedness of life aud the imliecility ofmankind. Ho writes to Robert Mitcnell at a

moment whou his ulfairs aro going ill: "Theoource of that oeaoMorebie aoaatity of com'ortv-fncii 1 eiij.iy m tkeoo turon¦lotonoca is twofold.Fust, thero is lh« hopi of betti r d ivs, which 1 amnet yet old and worn Beeag, to hive faitO lumaside 'lins cheerful fooling is combine.! with a

portion oftko universal qunliry which wennrselvesname fnmuo-s, aiken obetiaaej: the %aaHty which1 B_ppOOO to be tho fulcrum of all stoical pin!-osopiiv ; and winch,-when the cli-rmer Hope ti is

tit teri v feeaahen us. mav afford a amii s»D(Niri int li1* extreme of wretchedness." At a Inter date he

ox poses some of the hardship*) of his life to James.ti,inislone: but ho adds: "It munt bo

owned, however, thnt I have no groat reason to

complain. OalaaMaffBl the condition of manyothers, there seems rather cause for gratulation."/ftor describing to his brother A!o\* imlor the rou¬

tine of Ins daily duties as n private tutor and a

bookiaol'ior's hack, ho writ's: "This is a laboriouslifo, but such a ono as suits mo, and I design persist¬ing in it. Nothing in tho world gives such scope t*o

dieeoii'o it ns idleness, no nia'ter wheller forced or

voluntary; a mau had better bo darning

Stockings than doing nothing." 8tillLater be exclaims to John Carlyle:"(lo on, nty brno Jack! und fear .no

Weather. We have imth a sire fig it to wage, buttvo shall conquer nt the l-» -t. TkON BIB 0 any men

dow lolling up,.n th" pillow of inglorious sloth, andjuli i. g such adventurers as we: but tins pitt)eliall not always endure-tko luzv mtasAntl thc-must sink when WK shall soar." 1 he followiug ex¬

tract from a lotter to Miss Welsh tr. in the sauio

Vein:... I wioh I had not sent yon this great blub¬

bering numskull IV Israeli : his "< a.amities" hiveBunk Baan your spirits, him: traced 'ho whole wot ldOf intellect with the hue of mourning aid despair.'J he paths of learning seem, in your present moodof tniud, tu lead but tliimi-'h regions of woe andlomoaloilfin and darkness and dead men's honesHang fienasl.it is all false, if von trike it up rnthis light. Ho yon not see that his observation*Can apply only to men in whom genius was more

tba want of oonnion qualifies than Ibe BOof uncommon ones; whooe life w.»s embittered not

ri much beesBBo they bad itaannetion oadaenei-ilitv, as beomse they lind no; prudence and true

moral puru-io los t If ono chose la lareatieata tkekistory of tho first twenty tatt* red blackguards tobo found lying on th» hooch s of tho waieh-'ieuse,or stowing in drunkenness and sqial'-r in theJerusalem tap-r -om, it would uot be dfticult tu"ante a much moro moving hook on tho "calamitiesOt shoemakers" orstreer-portors, or any oilier cia is

Of hanrttcraftanion. than ths of I> Israeli's OlAu b irs. His tho few ill-starred w*re;chea, and themultitude ot ill-behave !, that ar miserab.e, iu allranks.nnd among writers josi as elsewhere.Literature, I do tiebeve, ha** keener pans enn-

poolod wilh it than iilniost any other pursuit; butthen it has also fur livelier and nobler pleasuies,

tud if you shudder at engaging ni it on thoseirma, you onght also to envy the stupidity of

other neoplo, tnoir insensibility, ttie. taaaaaaeo oftheir ciicumsiai.cos, wkBtBTOt narrows their sphereof notion, and adds mme staguution to the eui rentof their feelings.IIOBBI are uot the utterances of an incipient mis¬

anthrope, but of an honest, high-spiriNd, hmo

late and aspiring youth, whose portraithaa not been truthfully drawn either by himselfor bis ch -»en frio.nL Still moro alluring are the traitsdisclosed in the letters of afleci'on lo his roi.it j ve..at homo, letters full of sympathy, consideration,natural fervor, BBOOlflokaeoB* a hundred lntleevi-tleiiccs of att.ichmcnt which can uot bo feigned in

domestic duty-letters, but flow freely from a warmlieart. His correspondence with Ins father an Jmother ls ofion touching; sometimes it is beauti-fnl. while rt is alwavs extremely simple. Littlegifis passed between IMinburgh and the home farm.Carlyle vron uevor keppler than BBBB he couidoaye a sovereign fnun ins eainmgsandslip it infoB lotter to his mither. He oOBl hm tath'ir ouenotable proaent^-a pair of silver-rimmod spectacles..and tho old man was affected ulmosi u> tears. Iii*letter of thanks, signed "Your loving fait**i-." tiegi usquaintly enough, " Dear sir,"* a form of addresswhich we hare not nut iced in any other epistle io

lils situ. " Doti sir, I tuke tay pen in hand to writeB kind ot scrawl to you, to tell you wh.at is goingou here. lu tbe first place I must tel I you I wouldhave written you long before tins time to thankyou for your kindness manifested to iim bytbe present you eent me. A pair of oliver spec tar Icelo a thing 1 have often looked at and thought of,1hi» never ooul il call any of them my own before."Tee letters to aad from Miss Welsh required ex-

ceptioaal ooasbleration. Carlyle left written tuetniotlono coooerulng them. .. Hum theta, if everXound. Let no third party read them: let uo pnnLimf ot theta, or of any part of them, be ewer thought.f by those who love me." Ma Froude ne-eitUe-lees read them and printed parts of them i sndtttA Morton, being «*»-__. to see whether Mr.J-V-Je kad printea mern oorroctiy, readthem again, aad prtoto mara Taokier editor le Boyare in censurmg hie predecessor,kat If Mr. fi.ade di£ wrong is dieregerd CorlyWo'OmmmtmtS WB BB BOB OOO Strnft BXCOtW COB BO BTfOd

for Mr. Norton. Tho correction of some of Mr.

Fronde', misinterpretations and ratsqnotetlons of

this oorrespondenoe, uudortukea In the appendixto the present volume, mav, iodoed, bo iiefondod ns

a servloe to the cause of truth, reudored nooossary

by the biographer's transgressions i bul this pleadoes not coyer the pnbMoatlon of other parts, not

used by Fronde, even though Mr. Norton hus boencareful to omit tho-ie which had uuy specificallyprivate character. Ho would have done betterto omit all. Those which be has given relate prin¬

cipally to the direction of Miss Welsh's readmit,and to literary projects entertained liv her and Car¬lyle toiri'lvr. They are interesting: but theythrow no additional livht upon Carlyle's Tolat'..>_-swnh his fut me wife or upon tho course ot tho-obusy and comparatively tranquil years whoso fair¬est OOpOfti we hive just been reviewing.Carlyle's ciiftcisms of books and men nt this

period of his lifo wore ox.ire-.se I with a composureand deliberation foreign to his maturer temper;but tiny wero oft n trenchant, and longb.f.ne h« roached the tige of thirty hu furiousextravagance began to show itself, as nn aberra¬tion, not ns a habit. Omo wo find him declaringthat he canld a'niost love Napoleon, and praising"Ins nafiro sense of honesty, tho rude genuinestrength of his intellect, his live'y fancy, hissardonic humor," and'* his -simple attachments.**At another time 00 gives a "candid " opinion ab mt

Homer, who. he dcc'iir-'s " has h.ri tn-* day -at leastike better part of it; tko BOOB was ti vo and twentyconturies n_o: tho twilight (for ho set in 1*4881 mayl.i-t farOBBthOT five and twenty centuries-kal iftoo must terminate." Soino of the stratnf-stof his remarks however aro upon Goethe.We have boca BOOB-tOBM I to think of Carlyle as

an enthusisstic disciple reveal! lg OoffflMM geniusIB BB ignorant and unwling Hritish public. Batin reality his first important work in that entor-iir'-e th:* tum -la'ion of "Wilhelm Meister".wasuI'derlakeu as a joh and prosecuted with intensedisrelish. Tho b.> 'k disgusted him at the time.Ile reeoifinzed tuudies of tho very highest, mostot! iel eal genius in lt, but " with looria of insipid itv,wliicheven / wonldno' BBTBWIittBB for tkoWOT I "

He wrote to bis friend JekBOtOBBI "Ooothois tho greatest gpniua that has lived fora century, nd the greatOOt 001 that haslived for three. Ic mid so eau nos fall dawe andworship him ; af other times I could kick linn ontif Hu* ro un." Whm th" translati ni was tatoked.ho declared :

" 1 am coi og to writo n liorco preince,dioelaflBla-tall oeaoaro with the literary or iheMoral in -Tit ol' tho work ; grounding my cairns to

rec 4BBBBO0 or toler.ition on tho feet t MM* I OBteae-cn ru; eli e"inc 1 a st ri ki lg p nf r ii! "f Coot ho's urn-I.tin sir:uig.-.t a id in m.my p dats t ie grenlea! now

oxta it." Hut his foellapa s i ni u iderwent ¦ gre t

cliaigo, aud his preface was not ata 1 like his threat. A le ter IromQoethe entirely or->reasie lum. Ho sent itto Miss W.-l,h with tins injunction: "Do youInri cribe mi copy, and vmir nw tratolattOO ofit, in io the alaah leaf of thal ilenaan phut beforevon lav lt by; tli.it t io BMBO sliei*f mav containsome ira es of Iii'ii w io i I ni isl verier.it'\ and lierwhim 1 most lora, ia thu atraagoe. of mi poeeiUewr ds."After the oempletloa of Ins " Lif<« af Schiller " in

182&, Carlyle wrote to ins brother JoBa alettarin winch, for ike Ural time, wo bear a eleo? ring oftho oarage ¦ ni dottaat pride which tbe w 'rid was

so"U lo htMW SO weil J anl With tb lo passage our

new of the moraineof Caril le's liie mai wall olooe :

.-ii I "c Hamil it si en t.y " Bilk", to " ererleoting

liimr," or everlasting oblivion. oanng no lol aboBtwhet th" despi-u'lle mag ni Bewopaoer and maga¬zine en ttee iav of lt, or whether thor speak oflt at all. I do find there is BOtBIflg but thllfor it : Convtuoe fnaroalf lhat your work it whatvoa call it, aa noir'r a* ynr loneat niwseoo«oldmane it; nmi tm* m in who censures it eitner toils»ou n 'flin*? I hal roo di hoi kn iw before, or tel ts\ou !;o--, both d iv di sorts ol Intelligenoo you«rl fi >n it :. very sim ile matter Mi lulu v"nr pineinti, lucie was a look less wi lit of on optBrn-oKterlui*, one Do I'liineey. for nist-iie,-*, wno wrote arory ralsat aad bratioh He-new of" eieter"in

Iii I outhit! Hagatine, I rent three pegea ol lt onetick div at Biruitnetiam and ¦ nd: " (ero is s m inwbo wri'os ot 'hi"gs whteh li" does rm' rig illy ud'-rsi tn I; I see eleaa over t ie tao of him. and hisvuiear suite, and his eoatOBoaplaoA ohlieoophv ;and I will away and rmvu rt ride on [Bada u-.'i lally.and leave fciin io erv in i lie enr* of t ne. nn-rt'on..' So

I werit on', and had tnv n«!e a-C'irdingly *. nnd ifte (j ii ricey, poor lillie fellow, ttamJt nnvtliiiie of

Ins I'-vii'vv, he can pa* if ni ins walotaoai pocket,and think rho trod Meimrina A walerenticismnf Mein trr tot nome'hitig line one) is >o appear fi theFebruary nuuilior, I believe: to this also 1 ho'ie Ishall present lho same tolerant spirit.

TUE SN on.

SKVFFAT. DKFINITIOKH OF RIV.TIIK EVOLDTIOlf OK THK sMiii. By Tih.mv- Si.i:

ulam I'm.m. lt.mo, |.p. 1-il Iii 1.nor ai Co.

Ur. I'eiay s numf whl h i-n t ii piero of horner,a* tho iimwiry mi -lit ru: pose, but a study in

sociology, would bo moro effective if it coatainedun exact statement of what be means liv -nibti >*l iv-sm. A dictiiiiiai-y dei nt'-n is. the vulgaritywhich BBtt BfBt ility Tliiickomy's definition, a

noaa arimltatlon for rnoafl thia s. is better MrI'cii-y ca ls it, tn bis int'odin linn the de.-ta Int ion

Of indivi lti.il i'i nitv due to ;'n uneasy B080Q ofnfl -'loril.v. which ls un ati.-.lactory. bei-fl ute a

s"nn* nf Inferiority is hy no awaB- icniohic Etoowhen' ha caaaiduo thc oaoh ns one wko is un inlyanxious to got out of his trtVB oodal place into a

Iii-her; anl lui.il y bc derjaree oaobblahBOso t" he"the willin ne s to pay rooper! to what is ool<rv>wle Iced to be on artificial system that i-maintiiined tor oorla! corm in* nee." Cn or Hisrte-fattoB which is probably tho booral "f a'l holiens tin* rertval of RotBaatlrlem in litcr.itm-c.art, sociul phtlooe*ph~ an! Mli ion about the be'-'lnton* of the pr-eanM taatBijf. ns n. whaleoalomuni-esiution of aaobbtehaeoo Thia emin u boof Uio popular ilcfijitiion of a snub as "Any fellowymi dnu't like" Il lite lioinniilic movement,whi h in aaete of eztrava aaeea uni errors, was

ihe result of a reaeroui and ailrituaUzim impulse._ to be bi oin: bl. witlun Mr IVi-ry's cate-toiy ofMilniity. we know not what wo may notto fin there lu lonkin.' for tim cs of the lurchii (oratara Mr. IVrr> notkea bobm unions factsAllhoii'.h tiie I n lish dminat ist-*. the Btmllatnthc r-ssiys's of "'Hie Spectator" school, anl the-atii ital poole have caMi ated un almost OOaBtkoe'aUtlotue of human faults and foibles it is notuni il near our own dav that we can disco*, cr in1 ngliKh literature any trace of the character nowknown as thc snob. This, be concludes must hebecause .-unlis did n*t o ist while distinctions ofnot tuJ raiiJi wai fi my eb'itlil.hhcl and fr.-uUiya*" .li <l SiMibbishm-Ks fol 'owed the develotnicniof canine i tal pBBBpoaftJT. when the rich leran toforce their way into the drrJeof Ihc BlIakBlBiyTbe BBBp o s cmwUi of vul:ar hraggtn r an I pr*

tome tlurin: Hie nineteenth cen'u-y is ifSflribedin a few li ely iac»?s; «nd Hie _ thor ch OOO withtl e telle t:< n ihat as aiistociuey bas now lost itsglnmoiir and popular envy Inui tiansferred its ob.ect fionn the myuteiy of rank to tho t-nn-ihles leiidois of lunney, snobhLshnese "loses Die tidewlieivby it was related to the a<lniiiasti-ation oflite di inly of lifo, anl becomes 0 p actual wm

¦Inp oi Hie material side of worldly sucact-jj.Mi. ney iMtii-blp is ut boll.un a fmnk afro pl ii ncc

ut li.nigs ua they -uv, anl f-aalUMB- ul um rate

ia i ii.men 'aha* Hilt whether the Hew snob ishatter or woi-bo Uuj- Ute oM _. a uu(_>u-_u iee da*

bate.

A RTOUT Ot JAPAN.

ROME RI.MAKKMtl.R PIC'lURES.A MUKAM.8A PLAIlK, A story ol Cc.utalUiu in Old

Jaii«u. Hy 1--ms Wbui'U-iaiai. itu. pp. xvi.,1K8. Tleku ir A Qa

Mr. Weriheiuiba-r's original romance is writti ,i

prole.-v-edly ¦ from a Japam-He point ol view,'' uudyet its literary llavor is unmuukabl? tout of iheWist. This does not inucb inaner, for its lutorcstis by uo means literary. Tho story lo neittiir Hullluveuted nor well told. It is nth, however in

sketches of old Japan..-' cunUnus aud ideas;particularly it shows the hitfb value which the

Japuuese uohle placed upon the sword and thehonors swarded to Ike BtOOl fOQBQBO ag|l|tn| andwu ure ai-ine.l that it* numeroiiM historical allm-nousure euiiieiy MUtheaiic. Hut its principal impor-BBBaO ls as a gallery of Japunemi art. It coutuiuslive fud page lignre pieces drawn and engiared ou

copper by au artiat mt Tokiw, who is said to be oneof tba best of hm craft in Ja pas j und ia addition totheao plates thara are a-ont asveaty enaraviugsia relief by a Japanese poreeloln painter. Tbaoopper-platee aro remark obie far a Hbo baa whiebgl-ret thea almoola silky surlaoo, aad ia sere-re.

Instances, for a strength of expression much nearer

to nature than ls usual with Jaosuese artists. Hotthe effect of thia work la owing In e large measureto the careful and anlstlo printing We never see

anything Uko iton Japai e*e pictures printed in thoempire, or copied hore by photgraplnc methods Irom

Japanese prints; for it need hardly be said that

Japan has nothing corresponding to the UniversityPlaea '1 he lino pro* work has nlso done wondersfor tho rel cf engravings. Those wore drawn not

with pen amt ink lint with the brush, yet they are

wonderfully delicate and sharp fal outline. Theyarc not (onlincd to tho direct, lliustra'ion or scenes

IB tho ntno*. Stud es of costume. BBBBOOB- deroia-

tions. street Mein**, interiors, etc., OtO freelyscattered through the text, snd some of Ikon BIB

excellent typotof ono branch of tho national OTtThal is not Irs best side, for it is only in decorationtint the painters ami dranahtsmen of Ji-pac have

displnye 1 an exceptional «if'. while in the nit of

l'lniinti.in tl) ir development w.is pe rm fin mt *V

arrested I aa arehlie period. 8tdl Mr.YVcrthcim-ber's hook i-t a inoit interesting exhibition of this

art. nnd we may < ungratul ito ourselves ns well as

him thal it hr-.s appeared under the most favorableconditions.

_ _

'HIE LA SI VA its' OE A QUEEN.TMF. SORROWS CiF MARU! AXTOTNFTTT**.

LAgrr DATS OT MABII tWtOXBWTTYm aii ni.torloslHketch. liv Lord Kunm.h (Jowkr. .-inrill Ito. pp. I*'**Imbi ru limtlioia.

In Ibis luxui-iuni'y nnnn_t-d little (xxiii, pnnleon band mtml 99 n f tiper nt tbe I BiviMBity l'n *>¦*.

loni l.'onuld (iower hus only compile I uni ar-

raqged facto al indy pabltofced in more etakonlti-toii's hut, he lins dom this cffoctjycly, an

baw presented a sketch which will peBBakJp offersome points of m fly to the lenore] reader, alth "ti h it is n.'i fi uiiiicd upon treoh uooarch Tlctoik; of Ita n.iiTrtti a -OBJ be judged limn lin- NSection in tko paefhee, tkat tko Qua n's lila is

chiefly n aaariuablo by ahowfng imw a aroa-uwis*'1 caiiy yean wera trifled IhongkUaoaly awny.and who in later Ufo.mool unfortunately for heifamily, heisolf mil I- COtlBtf.lu self In politics, where women are ever ui isciiic.ons. waa miscd tliioui^h aufferinf lo ealicroic level As the timi s of ui\i*i*-ity gatheredaroi n i, Halie Ante nelie diepla ed .i patience oba courage in uapacallojod auffartflga ouch as fewaatata uni iii.-ntyis hare equo lei." The exa-ger*alum bete is obvlouOi but the Beat! taral ie trueMarie Antoinette^ is ono of tin se taoaa in whichrna*actor is beal tooled by ad-etaity. In hotm:sf irti.ne- Um frivolity arhich marred tho yea-oof ber n i B fell away, i'll e i teal hearted woman

was leven lcd. who did liol rn oed rfOO lo tl"'"bernie I*- cl*' but showed oevet-he leos un e

levi c trial a pati are, dignity, com ooaro aad!.(niiciio.-c which ha a sii rod Ike admiral on idpoetenty. She boo leea treated, by tho dotninanlschool of innileiii historians, erith aa ahaoet run

ocAToxm M-n-riv; uiid it i- wdi to aet beside theilBweepta* eeosuiea thia sloy af bat unprioonmmland death from tke pea ol a sympathetic bul upoatic whole pidic.ons si mil nt. Here ere tow i-eaaaB-fi oi the peat i_woluttona_y dreiaa aaore bbo.in* thin this, in wl.i I. 'ii r -rt cl, willi a

umpdi n .-as .-.ne in teal Ufa th'' heal qualities,.i one side with the v.-.-ist qm! Mc of Ila otherin t.c ti-.-aim bi of the Queen ->. her i**naecutoiabrutality uni triviality oocmed t.> to band tohnii i. -rn i one I*, alwaya wavering between kiand contempt tor mea who were equally toofiahinui ii rodoua._

THI. H :..-!' IROl t .*> IN ULM TIMER.lin: " is.' .iii ai vi c cs i akim."

¦,. i T.e A.it rrAl til* time when i.ii-i.oi *is m..led Into two toa

ii ii*.. ( nv..h. r mu! n.-ii'i ii .* "I-. .iili.oii-'i lin- juiiteriI- ai ir ola IriV.cc 1 o.i.a I le CT I i.O oilier. 111 c >"IC.de ii UW lonou: t .leiunel e** lol ililli. !...¦ --..

0 c.ili.-r oi tue ino « li-, on penally nf j. vin* a

illli'icl to llieir iieitfhniira. Pliny nilli-' iy n a e li.cm-

a Iras ii.iine io iii- i-m.-iity so .j .i rsMSl fm MlarialauMUotAt in¦ nd". Ths iiovoni r*. Iii".i ia t h.tn-.ooo i.hitlhim in gre ii st ita, no .'ty la.mo 11 .lion ,ltm mai f.. r-

baillie*, o lien fe y v. ii, to dniren, limy Wit* pleicl-1by pit-en ia oliver .ont guldaa iiv.ti .¦*, n. wBUmtool ¦ om.Hi f.uL, ii.cir -r.i.e-*c.n !"¦'' il" i" « OtUKntHi..i ol ibo Bing liiuioa'l la l-ondou going ia stats to atr.ou'n.T.ie Streets ol a Wes linllnu elly inuit it: Ulla lierio

II .vm |ir*-*Hr.uli«d it Very pic. llieai|Ue mme Melli. HereK*i...i,.« i.r «i-»ati i» ii.*-* iii immarna an" . ir.a ele. ..n.l u nu(a.. ... 1 al I...ir nU.I ** |l.llfll**-l,' H-..IHI..I la> l.Klr Ul. ..._>

_,lj (-llVuliel'M Ul Un" Ililll'tl1»t H.'l.l C .rill, lit- Will wu Inn

tue i.ll.ir, il l.onil.ni in P,,tn co.0.1 .up,.ia 1,,-iu: wini

Um.I avliljr cl Ml wi *,HH St ¦ .¦ (e. lill li.ilal.ci OwTtf-iriK llieir p.iia-o!» in.l taaw. Ut \ntt«*K I'rliliul Olli lue

niiaivili fill 0>i Isn nnslr r ***f *T sa«l dow* amiss inn

Simuu* ni iii.* u-¦!'.. -ii teaal dum, ueriui ¦ nani) f-nien,il w unite* laka i nniiy Bo.aagal stoup!* ol rauawaj1 ,,\,.i, or lue edi >* 11»rf light ul ..»..lt.- sei Vitnt, unUKiilin ino-»c si steaunB. saaiail with in- '.-« un i mern** iulin* | lllnr>, SO ii.« n-e ul e.rn mi fi. -I.ly eu: oil.

lu ce.i 1 I Ol I Uren Bas prrpct ml «.»r BntOg Waiteilh. i* i.n tiie ituyrinoiM ali Hid jecj.ie; _n ii.i wini .er

Hutt tue paapts m.. cu ib« to ir t.*-*\ i**i aalaara IB tl_iiiiii_i ai.imBt D.iirjii.oii njeyiirioiMijiiVBiiio.il *>.*ntovar wiro .noni tyr.oiun'.i aatl rroal. r-___»aaMhjtacooauaoal pratasie l-al wora lorwarUod h» hn<l_o i,aim ny t.e *" A' te le-nf ( n.ii| nt ul "

ii ... I -in il udmlOmtcc; t.nu ol ine-a.* _i-nil -iucii, rn bo sahautlad la Ibo Kiae.ll .,.|ii..it- tc nive ici li Itu: opinion of lUrtliy i.i UirSOrulers inn ul. tiott w...i ri.pi ie ol ll.i w .* m Bl ort

moiiey irmu iu. e-i|u« ny aTary mamu* m iin*ir sowrr.ci ur I.lc.;.ii. tat illili* I'W'ii jo viii pnoKcl. Tn rino

lue com.lt) fili*>, HIM t" t»ei*l li IS B -cl. t BO ltd -lion, .1

Hy m> menu* os) linn, in (BOBO tm.'--, .ipi. m. I.i li-tvuteen ipot ¦. Bsaoailsryaaaahlorathaito tae-roeo gioAi¦lui ol uiahiua utuwoy. a uutmt'l* litsiaaas ui iain ut a.Mr. I.aiwn.a r. vi no curried ou ti.e 'lt ... roaUOaOl rXlur-l.nii. li. t tn jun ne lo lim mr idhi len or (lie ..lin a., il uiSkItn* sahl that tut ngi»*^h»aa badaa-s hs nn niu«irip|iedtlielli. Ill) W Ul "''lil Out lo lilli .ll .li, I) iu I 71 1. Ill) *' »«M»I-luwad ii), iiiei.itis .t« fit-it u» ine> wero raissi; sui|MiroiciM in t..n l-iJit'l lil ni etii "I weather ..r- OOBIprUauio ti iva lill" o< ie nail ol Ineir C4i aju, lo ».,vi* li*-* otlmr; nu

», 14.-1 vi lUi'i.o ''.iu-o nun finn-, au i ur-oi an.mica Mi..-keen. Hie l-e-1. til), !'¦ i"li. In* rctilsOil lu.i..... I,.ma|.e...-nm of X loo per annum om o Hw Ito* ia ..ftlen. lieknj.l . luil.ci'f llau^i't v-a. KluK .illili Uj. li, chmu-a-r/,,,, ii-aiiuae ns m. s null rnor.y braoosa Mr. U*«goolaan.i.rt liol a-iili-ie.nl lo l.t in -ri la.ii o it r.U.iif Itvly Un..cr..li uUatrdMiiSUIp, U) il per on la wi,om .\ir l/i*»llinru-Aiitui ne uit.i sol. lier mr Bl, .r)'to. nu rn etxmt lo*.c.a.|ii|ili-li ult Imr-aiii. lie wa,-.molli iSfelaB hat romiii. Hngi***1 abaaaha a«om_rrioii; ami nu iU aotaaiifui-.-i.oii nm ot t.e ^'uiir ii,. n-ui|i ol har -i t.*r. uorlaruuina. nu p.nent ..».'¦. n-i't l*> itpponil at Kiaardiuij lu U.8O,,Ii.i. *' U UH.. ..Illci-.ll. relllull-.il ..1.-4 WiUi lol -...in of uu1H..-.I tm-, _.r. l.owl.ei niinili laplhtB ** 1>. fmut laWS}ilon'i it'll u.e of tLe lawn I win alu it, mu.I let um erowi,u daren ..isi ute ll." Airitlu, tim '.overnor of umii Intina-t, Mr. Kliatt taii.i-11. Iii I7l l-l, we urn iuforiii**d,w_.i SnuU HU llil'iultoili p- r.v.|i,i*iC tiiHt " lin .1el/.¦.^ nil t ,ecl..ret ttoil iir-.mll iui|«nrl«i.i lulu our pm t foi in own u-umid uciit iiiniierii u.ly dolli rn,up lue i-.n-oi bsadlo"isarrtv t i-1» Baoagh to at *ke ths lalo Mr. i.umuie tarain ins i-r.tvc/ "itu li.e t.n co.le. tor."

i tne nr.-Hi u nilen ii i iimi owarn ot oae ttmo hat to ooole,ul willi Was la ireve.il lim slaVOS !i.ili.'iri_ t.BBOlTOBmt,ni lioui leur ni a iiiiure piiniiuieeni tor a nn.all n.uit,or ll lli'j wele in 1H.V WitT iii eutenril, WIlMIS *.'-n< lli'-minimiiurt tor tueir »ct. (nu-enuei.tiy amman Bator..r.tyt'Li a liiiUlsiiUiirUU UnltUiVci lunir roliKloU it H..iii«> baltatod in » roaarroetiaM, .nd u.ai uiier doathli,ci n.auuid no into llieir OWu inuutry ug.iin, _ul Umx*I,mir Hie nu* we l. Hu In loimsi-ueuo.* oi ttucli u bcllnfUi .1 limy i uil'-uvore.! lo X|*odi sacu a i>:*,le of allum.AiiuwiitT aaruM Isatooviaiu uoe/iu slarro lu tt.u nm,"c-tiuei om* of tbeir lira, s to ue mt ntl Mint iixn.1 na n|,..ie iwelve tt-el U'-f li, und U.iTlUK mm ito, ir.iii*.*- ali Insii«i<rimii lo eoiim form mi luureii roi.mi abnBI tul* Bsa I.tn anow io tea par eraaiatos I uat thar matu m ettm utla.lukiUK liin ..c.J leiururd to Ibeir own n.SIIJ. fur tinaluau's hood was brie, as tooyal! plaint- taw, aad iiuwwasU pontllilo tue bo ly could oo Without ths 'munt"HUS Biuipie llieoiy wit* .pille ta-Srleol to o.invluee ti em.inui from t-at «isy tue owner eotor lost auotu-sr Biara lalula w»).

.l.iiiniicH, Ihfiu entrl to ho the - vrirliedont |'laco oneariu." well lieterveJ Ba namo, ter. la paint ol fact, ttieililiaoltui U al llial tune luainly fained llieir livrliliomny irudiUK willi piratH*", of wnlch au eiioruiiiiu numimrlurtialoii lltuae *ema, makin* rulda 11,01, ueinulmi tug.-¦.,iiit-i. isumii,aad c.rr>iii-r oti luimenos iroaaurs 5.lam lieu, tliel-n to Spell- lt In deiiiuieinTy. a certainj.ira<« Henry "uur-jan, »m 1 rriiaiis lho Moat aalarprta*lu an.i darimr uiun of Ula nay. Ho nm no u*tty ({nil.t.ul did au work after a myal fiiaun.ii. ||. wnmintimitmmlal .-ee lliue _,oiX) limn, Wini 111:1 r.ur, 1 * im,.t .| (iiirlj-llvoroaooto Due of Mo soot oaataras woo tha etti ut idi*.io\, .... in r.tii..lll_. Wlier* IBs WOaOaie hoOotood -.rnoiiute.1ttl .&0.1HKJ " I lee-t o' elulil," Ue-.lilna mucii rictl Stiifl,eic 'lulu Kenie ii,.11 tcriuniuiwi ula earasraaa ptratsi,y i e.,.,ttlr intuit, wlildi tiaujfhl into au eicbeiiUcr41MI.0OO"' pieces ol eiflit."

1 e -amt* loo! (livea aome atruinre .letiuia of tbe eartli-<|U_ke lu Jamaica au Jnce 7, lli'.'J. lu uiuoj of lueaieeiiMif Tort iloyal tuere were srierul fuihoiiu of. aler; u lotti luuinta 11 - p Ul. alia tall lulu ll,e levelUn I, uovcied eeveial aeltleujeut and Ueairoyetl lumy|.eoi le. One a. tiler bal u a 1 tantallon miuoved half ftlune norn lie pOsoaWhan 11 fornierH atooi. Tart of a1,..natala, after liavluK mails acverai iea**a, OTOfahollOdaw lune f.nii.iy aii.l CMiil pitrtof u p..«i,iu, mu lyuin umlle ntl; alni "u lur»,e. tull BMiUBtaiS is quitoswallu*clup, an in i"« plato wi.ere ii aiooJ tlmie u matt a va-tl..k.*, four ur live le .gitea uv. r." lu all u oul ..OOOpeople pi rl.-la-'l by It.u .U-Iri.;ma.Uwiiars will nrror reaoaatto allow 1 heir slaves lo

lu-come i'i.ri«llai a, ». will tie aneu Irani Um foilowlim:- I took a meat intrre-t lu a oertam al.ve. nuniUu, wbo

wauled mUcu ts liecoiua a I'uruUan, and at...ke to Us¦¦mater of lim nlalilalloli nil i.i lin..alf. Hta .ma <rel waati.a wereCHinli'i im-e a ( lirlaiian. lin e..u,| 1,,, |,,uv*-r tm.,. ..n,.io<l ual*_v«. sud llius uwunra w.n.lu io»e buid ontuuir siavra. Were tie in lanaaoa to (loan, such a gnpwould ur o,.rued, tbut ali lb.- pl,.tiler-, in tue iain wu.odcurae bim."\,iy ainn'ilar also ls tbe tales japer or ibu Iiyuai

«wlale lu Au'lipia. ti nm willett we niel tim price* Malaves t-> nav« varied fronr *10 tu g lon, - w.ur .melaoiiuil." -oiue eldi-ri) lawlteaai.il feuijeiunn ol idltir are"t rn* 11 in irnttla." hevi-ral 1 onleaof tue slavs Htbts areainu a. own tu widen all veiam uaiuuiated to uproot Ibeid.-a thal aiavnry la uol au luatlluliuii b/ Luria* tighl arecarefully eliunualrd.

SOI AS kXCKPUOS, AFTER ALL.from The RreSttler Herold.

Bam Juno painted tn a dlscoaras on patience st Otnat.itthe other iiIkIiI and »_!d If there were ons man prvaeutwbo never bad apoken across word to his wife be wouldaak bim to risa. Br aad br a round-faced, good aaturedman suiod up " 1 bank Uod," said Ban, " ihsie'a ons11,un wbo inner spoke a oroas word to hit wife." livery-budy took a goad look at tha paragon, whan ha broke thsaaapaa with tho aaaiaaB 1 ''Ihavoarl any wtta. Tm akatikahr "

ORIENTAL THEOSOPHY.A MES8AOE FROM "THE JIKOOMNO EAST."

TIIR VIKWH OP n^llf MOUI.VI CHATTF.lt.Ttt1*.Bnbu Mohiui Cliatterlie is a Hindoo gentleman

wini for Oaaaa three years past has resided in Euro po,

occupying hlmt-eif rn advancing tho public com¬

prehension of tho objects of study OOflipclacdunder tho g-nc-iai BBSd Wf oriental Theosophy. Mr.Moliini has c'inn' to tho Tuite.I Status us I lin gu st

of Mr. Arthur Oebhar.l, of tns city, aid it in lu's

purpose to spend lim winter here, and Incidentallyto toko advantage of what, vcr onporlunitnM ttBthc fBrtheeaaoa of lu.** life work may occur.

lu lim counto of .in extended conversation with

Mr. Mohiui (ho lollo'.Tnig vmws and opinion* Wi i"

el cited, and are hare set down lu the belieftint th- leaton"f rta Tbibovbtrill be aaaaowhstinterested in id-ias which, apart fr un all con¬

sideration of credibility, ore likely to have Hie

rccorinneiidation of nov.ilty for the maj -ri ty. while

they represent a current of thought, a stream of

tendency, hm tho Gere-Ma would aay, deorf-riafserious cx.'iiiiin.ition as a sign of the times.

Mr. Mental toefleetonMi lama member «>f thoThBOBBB-ienl Nm-mtv. hut I do not like to c ill my¬self a ThooHoplmt, b 'crime thu' H HM to imply the

po session of absolute knowledge of the truth,w aanea I an merely ¦ seeker. 1% understand myposition yon analho oeqaaiated with some of tue

lu liefs I liold. It appears to me that tho time is

iipptnaeliing when the Fast will he called upono i;c mure to (arnie, a lellgtoBa Ideal t" tho West.You know that nil former spiritual ideals haveemanated from the Orient- Christianity came

thence, mid when Materialism aud ecclesiasticalcorruption ho'1 so encrusted the living faith withaapoeatltanB and ritualism .as to obscure its b"ant v

nnd destroy its elevating InflnOBOO. ll was againfruin the Kast that the revival of loafBIBg pro-

< if' whlohopened tho way for a partial returnto ri hight rilli .ll.

1 ion.M'1'r that there'atio hOtWOOU the last andthe Weat throng! tho preaanoa of tbe Englioh loIndia is one of thc most iinnortaut factors iu lhotntiirn evolution af mankind. lt. ls not that theKoallah have themselves recognized ttunr eppno-tuiiiiies. On tue contrary, they have beOB blind io

them. Pnt it is not necessary that the hen whofern rtzes B di-ou'it met with the pollen he gathersfrom thc towera le hu queel tor hooey shoald reali/i'what otherpnrpoee bo ut aabeornagthea thesatisfaction of h i inatinotiYfl impulaaa The Eng-Uah iu Imli i have deopioed the ancient people theyrovera there, end hire aparaed tho toro af thcV"las, bur tba industry ond tnqaieitivanette oftheir Bebolan have hoeo tho aringa wht r.thaacred -..i-.l haebeea borne, ead tnoy hive ic lt fallboco ead tbere In alinetiono favorable to ¦ogatuurlion.Once before a great material pe -»er con(|iieted the

Root, only to ti d rh** BOOTOO of tts o-.vii tnbjngatlOOni tin* .vent. Tho Bngtieh poet. Matthew Arnold,baebeoattfatlr deaenb-*d that great trtnaaab «>f

.«pu it o.. nial or which malted lo th biri b of thepreoenl relteioa of Chrtotead m. Yoe must not

think thal beeaaaa I aaa ea Oneatal I am huetiletui hrietienity. Ifwhal looaorireto Beaaymia loobaaaay etgnineaaee, nins in ibeeadearar ta helpforward the reotorettoo "t true Ulmetiaaity to thou e-t. I shall stir"ii*"* von, however, wb -a I Hav thaln ii" (hr st ni nit v baa ooased to bo prao lead "ie vu

understood in th" We.r, ,*| ul that India alOBO 00 i-

i ri iotheho If of trin h tbe study of winch c;in b ri n

hack the Weetara nations to tao Path, und orarifn mi iii ci n the na* ural.- tnaeqoences of that Materi-eimtte oarear whieb they ero at pr.:-.mt pursuing9un mici absorbed i-.i.,-, *.

If Chnattonitr haeao fati tailed to hold its own

BgnhlOt the Materr-ltsf Science of the (lav: if tni'his diminishing emaog tho p topto, aod a pan I.-uni philosophy is tabing its place*. If as religion.lec'iiic- tl,** po it of Socalc-m loons up mc,inc-

mglr; it is heeoBoe the growth af oqjbbbb amoag

the nrleothood ororywheie has made them mere

eehoeeof thc world's aolfnieebiBg, and has canoediheiii ta accent the w rid's apologetic theory thatthe teaehioga of Christ uro iueapaoio of praeuenlapplication.

lio ant imagine, however, that I regard Chiist-lamtv ns in nnv netige entille<l to exclusive psvCoi-cin .*. I revereaoe it became I bold that then* ts hutona Kt omul Verity; and Ital all religtono aro ex-

ptoaotoaa af th [tiela inda that too aoarea andfoiiniaiii-head of tho world's ene ls is co be fouinl.

Il is lhere al-o thai the greatest, spiritual philoso-pby k'lowu to the him m race is enshrined in a

literataro tbeoooqneetof whteh bethe Wwd wiu bea new and greater Kennis-am e. Von nay say that theold worli!, as you call lt. c.n evolve a doiinnautIdeal for itself. I answer that it baa never yetshown its capacity for OBOh an evolution. It hisowed all it*> spiritual views to tho orien. anti it hasfailed to derire from those fifta tho beaeflt lober'eui in them boeBBao it has ptooeeJed to naraali aaIto religion, Instead af aeokiag to t>infy its cai-

n tiny. 1 ou .-.ny that (J liri st ia n ty is i n prac 11 ci hie.

Il is cettainlv tine th it you have never praettoedit. Uutit lareally only imiu.icticahlo bccun.se youhavo iiisiln it so. What is the inllienco which

opcra'cs uio-at atroagly egalaal the edopttoo iuto

roar lireeof tbeGoepel dootriaea I Is it. pot tbecultivation in ali o fofl of th it maatorfal todivid-nalism which maind-sts eOBStBBtly through the

laet Of pOOBOsaioB 1 "The lust of the eyes and

tbe pride of life," yoar own oaorod writara put itWhence -prings the great direreityofeoodlttoaa,thecon cm pl Ulon of Which breeds SoolaliOffl I Is lt not

thc diicct outgrowth of tue passion of acquisitive¬ness t Von people ol' the West cannot cuioy lifounless you aro perpetually increasing your pos¬

sessions. You surround yourselves wilna liixtnythe steadily tncraasiug artlliciality of which car¬

nes yon alwavs fillIUPI away fnnn nature, and

farther away also tMMI the ind lenee of (Jospultruth. The Brotlierh"> I of Man which Jesus

Christ believed in has become utuhiu&able to you,

with.your millionaires at one end of the social

m ne and your tramps ut the otucr. Yot there ts

one country tn tho world wmre lt is still not onlythinkable, but yos-ible. and that country is India.

Doyon know why this ie eel It is because thevenerable creeds of India.and lirahmainsm aud

Buddhism are essentially oue religion.have for

ages taught, to a spiritually minded und receptive

people, the ephemeral character of lito. tho follyand danger of concent raiing the energies upon

it, the wisdom and BBBOadtf of holding it alwaysas a temporary possession, the chief value

of which consists in the opportunities it affords for

doini: good. Tho two hundred and fifty million in¬

habitants of India were uot c minored by the Kng-lish. They Bubmit to the British rulo clnctlybecause their IBU pOB prevents them from lookingupon what ron call liberty or independence as a

oapreme Boeeoelty. CnriariBBttyieal one with thoVc.lantic sacred canons ni teaching that "the

Kingdom of Heaven is wilbla you." The conquestWhich every hum IB being is bonito 000*9 -*¦*" WBi tho

OOB-VBBot of external circumstances or of bil fellow

men. It is comprised m the old Cree*, axiom

'¦ Know thyself.' If ( hrUteiidoiu had renlt.eil

thia and had not been misled hythe promptings nfM.11enaU-ni; tho Millennium would nor have BOOOBOdho fanciliil and vain a dream as it appears to-dav.

I i!n not say that even in India the height of tin-

HilahMM -md magnanimity cunuionded by theVeilantic dei tniies and t\ pitied no nobly lil thetaner aud teachings of Christ, is approached ; but

1 do aay thai ibo people of India aro better adapted,by cycles cf meditation upou tho pure, unsophisti¬cated prtitliie wofl.i-n-ligion. to accept tho loftyviews there inculcated, and that ona mos' nu

portaut spiiiluul gani to them coubists in their

emancipation from tnat Inst of possession whichseems lo ouslave tho West mon' und more.

The discontent which takes the fenn of Socialismis the natural result of a view of lifo which gi von

anna me impirtaneo toextomats, christianity amitba Indian rotogtoae alika teeeh the veryeoairarrot this. Inequality rn social condition ts lu theWost ibe duel oeaao of poynter aattooaBoaa I dohoi believe, bowen i, in IBO doctrines of ixniHlifyui'held bj the Socialiota Thora is uot, ami tievttr(¦alt br. Cijuullly ll-I .Mdi llIllltUI] Ulnfc-i lu heir

view. Kverr mau is diflereut from overy other

mun, and bas His individual pr-sfeioneee and aver¬sions, hu* particular lUjovmeiita, Ins imculiar hal*.its Of thought. Io e,.|i;»,|/.o (UUW-tld coutllf l-'lts,

therefore, would oil*' oe to streich all alike uponthe bcd of I'ro inites. Tne cxjirritiieiii hus boon at¬tempted several tinten, and as yon must know lt hasinvariably failod. Mich failure ia Inevitable, ainoeoo long aa Um We* tr ru tbeory of th* purpose of tit a

provalla wea will con unne to cultivate acquisitive¬ness, and tho constant growth of th_ir malarial de-Birea will at oooo stimulate their pursuit ot prop-arty and koop thou diseon tented with oren tbe ut-aoet aaoeooe in oblatumg lt, Wbare, for Inotanoo.

is there nn exnmnle of a rich man who thoughtho lind amassed enough wealth? The more a Weet-em man eets the more ho wan's, and while yourworld holds to this principle yon can never be treefrom tho fear and danger of Hoctalisiu.But in India KoelBliom is uuposnible. We aro

gil POOI there, but it ia boeBBOO we do not desire tobe rich. Hnmunitv is so constituted that as a rulemen obtain tlmt which they o'nve for molt earn¬

estly. In Ihe West material no* "salons aro sought;la the Ka t spiritual OBltgBtonaWBt '1'ho reoullis1I1.it the West has riches and the Kast ideas. Jutin tn ( anti-it live thc Materialist life long withoutsaflertoB fr uu ti. Pmooooiag » na'ure which ls atleast halt spiritual tho dept ration of a pure relig¬ious ideal pmso is .ils cnn. Perm ri ion t progress de¬mands such an idem, and with ur it the utmost ad-raneooof aealtoBOttotoBoeaaa only toad to hastentho advent of tbat reign of force which must e_-? iugiiish civilisation, rho onee-at teadeneieo areIn the d rec jon of that danger. It has hedi horneio Bpon bm thei the tioae ie ripe tot ina introduc¬tion to tim \\c-i nf til*- Kahtan wiealnee-ieiiBlenwhieh is fandataealaily oae with true fhrletieaity,When I 'lav.* leen oohed if I de .ire to convert Ku-ropo to Rodd n-tii or Br ilunarisin, I have alwaysa ul, " Ne i whai 1 desire is to eonearl I liriatoadomto ( liristtariiry."* Bray do not flunk, however,thal I regard myself as an aiiosflo or that I not mvai ii forward as oa oat raditod ropieeiBtouie of lu¬ll ea thoo rbi or feeling, My ambition is to help alittle in thal ""''('"-sowing work which the Thee*-onfi eal -o.-iety bas began* toaoaaat in hingingabenl thai better andeestaadiag nf ibo Kast winchBoqeaiBtanao with itaieligion and philosophy alonecnn snppiv.The I beoeetthtoal Pneiet-bag boos misconceived

ciiitsi h-rubly «iid this is partly due to a mistake.a* least I lt ink il so.in the initial movement. Ino der t" taleroo! tho West great stress wss laid onthe minor phenomo'ia of aeoolt BOBOBOn I* wasthought that, the presentation of th-»se wonderswonld eonvlnee thiaktog mea ihat the subjectdeaea tod atteattoa. Un fortunately, tho flrsteftect¦ as (o attract tho kind af peoulo who care only forthe thiiumatiirgy and notning for the doctrinaPfOOOBtlr those wornlr-scekers, finding that theput nose of the society was not fhe production ofp.ii -n mi ina, but th" atadv of ancient, religions andphilosophic* mainly, fell away, and then a moreBorton* a id spiritual element came to the front. Atpresent f io beguiling ol a f..r more intelligent aadthorough eta mn ation of the litenfure "f Indiat i,ni ha- brea attempted before is being made.Iii Eng and, I'lrnce, <;e; many mid Italy groups ofatuiteuta have beet orsaalaeda and ibaoo are ptxss-i-iu tbeir researches steadily* lt I 'iaveanv part in

the nioM'tnent it is simply that of au occasional od-i in ! interpretor; rbaeo aro points in in-lian

philosophy and litor-ituro which reiuire the lightoiily derivable from in hen ted national aoprehen-smn for their BBderetaadiaa*, and suchpoints I om sometimes able to clear upfur vTeetorn minda I ave ben urged to-dead utmaha bow aad annatatod traoelatlooa of some ofIhe more Imaortantof the Eaatero sacred books,such fur ineiaace ea I 'te B inavad-gita. It isnossih.athat may do ooeaathlng of the kind if no moreCompetent limul DBM be f. und.ot cotir-c sue i an a'tt'inpt as I have outlined to

br og tosether tl"* Bael and tba West, and to modi¬fy tue Hat-en iii sm of the lormer with the spiritual¬ism of iii" lotti r. must bo a work of lime, lam ledto (""ie tba! ii will u lunately succeed beennee Iam taught hy tte ina-HTs who e lui utile disciple Iam that t ie pr groan af the race is over upwardlaud on w ri rd. ami "c au*-c a cnn tin nance nf Matcnal-Httcc.vili/ittoii ii-, us preoeat lines must if un*

check (lend :n BlOBBier end retrogression. As toI beexistence ol triune masters ti ive no liing tn say,nive ihat I believein then, md with reason whichsaiisfi<-atnvoalf lt i< nut advisable to sneak of. orto insist un rt the reoognltfoa of, the Mahatmas,however, before rn. *.* ivVi-in) wholly nnproprireiibv training and edaeatioq to oomorohoaa, mnrblc-,- accept, rho vu-,' BoheOBO of kuowlfdgo et whichthey ure the O'totodlaoo aad tIto icu hers. Nor can

tiy ont thing of mv relations w.th ill ni boroodho state neill that I may be icgarded

ns a cheli. Iii my personal con¬cerns, however, the public cm rake no inten-.!.ind ttu-v are lo hot unite* uiitiiip-irtauf. .Such little-lii.'iiihcriiico ns be ongs to imo grows entirely out. 1 my l.letitllic inoii ivi'Ii iloclrmoit mi 1 views most

nell iii> probably Miraag-t to tim Western in¬tel I genee. lt ia todiwdpat* tiiis strangeness, androfamiliaiiae tho world with tm'hs it eight tomake ita own, tint the Thaoonphioal society hasbeen ea'ablished, and to nds work, which I ond'I hers consider very Important) 1 am doing what 1nan.The possibility of uniting the 1'a-t and weat ta

the acceptance of the I fairareal Ifeligion appearsto me so fraaabi with grant reealtethat Itu a dutytn forthoi tr. lb" tir l rttep toward such an accordnanni be the de.-.nug away of oalaappreheaetoa on

hoth sides, and the dora >nitralioa of th** real Iden*'it v of iii g-.nnine religion. VV hon I add that heUniversal Ito.igloo requires from no Christian therejection of any Gospel tetchlne, but only the re-rmnci iti-iii nf those nrtr'sric accretions winch havedeformed aad overlaid 'ii" doetnaeeof the Founder.\ mi univ conclude that my outlook is not so fantas-tto and extravagant ea witboat tins explanationit nugal appear. It de-erveo to be noted, also, thattin- imiteai ions of Weetara prooeiodaooB totokenewil.ns lri rn In>lia ure mora numerous thau vonWould oappooB lad "io instance tbe Transcen-lc-it.it lasveasonl ta your eooatry. Emerson andh's school bo-rowed fr'-elv fTOin tho lore of theRust, aod tho froctl'ylng force ni their conceptionsthey owed to India. Coining down t-o tint presentnine I timi a powerful current of thought iu (Jor-inittiv, and I reeoeoleo many fatmliiir ideas in it.f>0 imniirv ] e irn that this is the phiiosophv ofttohnoenheuei: hal whee I read Schopenhauer Iire b'hind him thn wisdom o' the Ve J as. Hoindeed has twisted and distorted the truth thusderived, for he has attempted the impossible feat*t so,-*, in | (ind and Mammon at the ame time, AWorking anion of Materialism and .Spiritualism isnut of thc qnee-ion. Schopenhauer has only ene-reeded, by forem-r these incompatible elementstogoiber, m producing that negation of all souudthought which vu call Pessimism.To understand tho Indian religion there mnst bo

x capacity to perceive aptritu-al truth of some kind,bal the Matenallat phiiosophv of rho ago eppearato lack thts capacity, ^vuna ead Makaba -fm totheearth-boand vision syaouyma for annihilation.lins i because thev are the sv ninds of a 'om ofJXiatoflOO so tar tr m-x tullin-: human experiencethat rrily the tilomioatod stunt eau realize, andivenil bat dim'v. the subtle refine n"ot of lire in-rolveid. Bat it ie indeed trne that tie philosophy.f India is r,s ti mb broader and more oomprehea-dve thaa Western plnlotophy us the cosmology ofthe !>¦ lent Bl brooderand more comprehensive thanWestern co-mologv. Vmu men ol science, withllieir scorn of intuition il mel hods, have tmd them-sclvesdown to thc exploration ol' the lit'lecorneril Ibo uni verse upon whieh they are planted. Theresult is tba insularity, n-'rrowrie-ts and tutellectualbigotry winch cn raeterlae Weetara scientific re-.earch. Indisposition to acknowledge Indebted-less, moreover, was never the accompaniment of a<fr<ni_er dispiHiti m to borrow. After furnishing,'otirscie tritic store from Baatota depots.nay. afteridonting in m.inv cris's an Kastern terminologyivlnci perpetu illy exposes the origin of the ideasmd discoveries you have appropriated, your sagestlava Balthar tho grace nor consistency to admitli<it Indian learning mav have a value of its»wn.Ono Knglish scholar. Professor Max Mil!tor. has,

t is true, very handsomely acknowledged theleht Eurone owes to tho Kast, and I wish li is book.What Iudia Can Teacu UV' c mid be geucrally

.ead. lhat lo a fair beginBiaeof a liberal move-neut which I hopeWi11 tarred wider fhe present of-orts to breakdown the harriers between the two-Bgiooi and enrtob the West wah the spiritualreaanrea of tho Fast.lam amemberofthe BrahaM Som.ij, ns well asa

pember of the 1'heosophic il Society. My ancestor,-auminohun ttoy, was eon*«picii"iislv associated withhe un lenient.' Its influence has declined of lateroora, but the spirit which Informed it was trulylivine. The gr-at spiritual movement of the fut-tre will be one aiming at theBbBB-iontoOBt of alllectjinan distinctions, the elimination ot spurious¦mbro'deties iioin al! creeds ami the union of allrho are ool atrophied bj! .Materialism in the wor-

liip of one (Jed. ot whose essence is alt humanity,md the glory of whose divinity may be aband bene humblest son ol Ada a who has learned to walkiv the new light, lo quote oue of your Westernmets, Matthew Arnold, I aud those who think withBO d' sire to

" Wlist "titi of -ttrcTiirth td lett, employ,'Hits emt bi help munn

(i*i> tomato* man oftftuught and josLi/ring mankind aiittin."

TUE FLAW IS "JIM TIIE PEMlAS."from The WKitetoll P.eriexv.

Lady Mowktoii has batt given tier views sbont the.i in inc** in. ii teni vt mi h ted oo amah ciiu!,!,, iu the play of "Jim the Penman.*** Lady Mouoktaaaanot anderatand theoMevdoas thal bavebooe rotted oam. -con-, and "*.piiiins timi Um toms B a utan who fmiuoro. practice bas beeooM snob aa adopt lu tho lasttattoaali niil-A riling that lt bat bet niuo almost a jia-ssiou withitiu. a BOOOBd nature. He ls trapped by sn atIoho in uticcr UiouglitleH*ncss~ln lue w-tntouuessif Idleness he Imitates her haud. lrtoeo not euet bim a thodght lb-does ti tn the carelesstens unil st-eitnry ot Ins own hons*, with n lot of plca-iitnl1,-opie ahoiit iimi. tlc ks emptoylnganidlo mouient-iiay,l,c:i.-t ii.-., ll ls Idling pootBvelj niling* He siuilcs as ho.-ili'lt-1: it.All ini_i*(|Hit<- 'rac ¦»'" tor no Hie forger lo ooaeamed.

jut how about tho louuediate acqnleocanoo "t a nifo loctrlnir her h'lstinnd forge her nstue to a check which thcheniuiil there gi tea it\wt) iu enanty I Aud would Uterue-its who tue w.»t« lung lho ni. uleui puss il by wtUiouttine.King tt ile-liti lo eompaiB the slgimlures I Mr'barlas loti'uf bu u|sui a clever poial OOO siiitlcieutly.uni* lo lei the plot procecit. hut vt hi ii tl is exiNt-ttal itslaokaom is at once apparent, sud certitinly Lady Monok*OB'S tlieorv Ue IO Un lecllliiile rui.l liitlut illness ls liol ati-ulMtblO wi" u 'ho tinto iiinl circumstance of the WfgBSJne aamaadaaooe-

uus Lits.Tal* lite la Ulta rn iruuliiml nett,V her-»--lieliii o * i-atltrr or a U_.Tboalilp will ti lt tt*r alay tmt meat.Bul drl vea. of OBOBf rook, lu tomi.

Alt ifnmtntMp in rain wa try.Wa caiiiuit Itaep tier (takdllylim Ju.l nm rortunu . wlail may BlowTh* raaaarB <lrlT*u to and tra.

.et, oom* but Lots oe bsar-l,Oar heart* with plaaaura .tor'A,M* Storm oauuTerwhelm.

BBU bmw* la vaiaTho harrioan*

W btu bo U ot tts holst.

ART NEWS AND COMMENTS.THE WEEK IR ART CUCUM,

MUM OP TUB VXIUBITIO.Ng.-.OM* NF.W P-UVRBM.AnTNIWS Kl Hi wu cu.-.

The autumn exhibition at the Americnn Art 0allrr1»nwill be opened lo the pu hilo on Tueaday. There winbe a «* private new ¦ to-morrow, which will gr, « ion-way toward deriding the ijnrstion whether a stroneexhibition of new painting* ran be maintair.ed in the.autumn. It hos been claimed, with the Acade-oy a»

an illustration, that a really good exhibition is itnpo*.ibid ot this ses»on. On tho other hand, the exhibitionat the American dsllertes may hare attracted p.int-inR., which would Bthoe-ataa have, rained tho averaae olthe exhibition st tbs Academy. It ls said that thsformer exhibition will be one of excellent quality, tMil this proves trne it goes ta show thsf the Academy ne

longer represents American art. In this matter oforganizing exhibitions sn association of artists hicertain of a iavorsbie predisposition on the ps rt ofthose who concern themselves with art. and a bmnne-i***tirm has ol itself no especial claim upon anyboi.y'isympathies. But if the bah-MM firm hoids thostronger exhibitions tho tact roust bo recognize!. Theartists themselves control the aituation. lt is lor themto choose whether their beat pictures shall go to theAcademy or the American Art Oallenee. 1. mt apnngthey preferred the latter. Tho only changes at the

Academy this sntumn have been the a.Irondoon ol an

unusual amount ot inferior work by new painters, andextreme modesty on the part ct some ot the veterans.

Little discrimination has been exercised eittier in

accepting or hanging the pictures. I'.«-..1,1 >- a kindlydesire to give as many artists as possible chances forsales has had something to do with this, but lt ia hardlyto be supposed that tbe National Academy is to becoms

merely a salesroom. There are plenty ot people whowill buy poor pictures, but tho Academy ought not te

be inadi* their rall vms*-point. The op<n ng of other

spring and autumn exhibitions may not be .nternle.l mr

OOatoeetttoa-j but comparisons aro inevitable. Therearo iuany wbo would welcome nn Academy oxliih Hobnoteworthy tor something more than thc ntintls-r nf¦ salable'' pictures, sud who would be glad to l.sik to

the Academy lor the very best work of Americanartists, young and old.

There ls plenty of good work done bv American

painters, but only now snd then is it placed fairlybefore the nuhlio. Tbere is no lack of exhibitions,lint thara are many people who have neither the timo

nor patience to bant oat one good picture anton: a

icore or more which are not worth a scoond glance.lita nmctoon poor paintings leave tho stronger im¬

pression. A really woll-chimcn collection of .tine, icm

I'Otures, good throughout, is a cincr'te positive fact

ind invariably make*, its mark. The Clarke exhibit-on

i lew years nineo did more than halt a do/cu \_udciiiyinhibitions toward convincing lojolllgoal people tbatlhere aro artists ot talent hero aa well aa in Frauen.\iu.-r;eati exhibitions at the L'uiou Lea /uo Club anddsewhere have furnished observant visitors abundant¦wasons for faith in Amencau art. Next month sootherAmerican exhibition will be held at the l'nion leagueClub, aud it it is as well selected as the last, ii will toHire o! generous appreciation. The intluence of

meritorious exhibitions is helpful to every artist ofability, aud it ia only by tho exercise ol some itomanon ihat tho charlatan* and bopcltaa wirukuiuiwho attach themselves io art as to every prole-.*, on

jan bo given their proper place beforo the public, i *

might cause smaller exhibitions snd OOBBllOrOOtoltot» time, but it would create a .feeing of intelligentrespect for <Vmerican art whieh is not alway* BpfOBonlnow, and In tho long run the artists who li

recognition would bo the gainers.

Mr. ifcUaus will issue between 0.01)0 and 8,000cartis ni" invitation to the exhibition ol Kewiii.tti li *

.* Gilder." Invitations will he sent io tha Ofttoto ot thocity and to those who are Oapoetollj inf r* ll iAfter the tirst two .* privato views " tbe painting willremain for a time in the Schtris TJaUeiy, \r!icr.* it ni tybe seen by those who apply tor oar la a! ¦

although it is possible that thc mininer ol upp .,

may make nonie limitatiou ii BOOaaiJ, Tat.ro will bs

uo ndttiLssioii tee. Tho*-** nho cure tor art will not lsdto apjif-ciaie both the worth ot Bool lg a ;tim Ingh rank and tho dl.:nih\'d niauuer in it

this opportunity is pBBOOBOBO*.A portrait snd a few otber paintings br H. Kmilo

Kenon! have been placed upon et hunt.on in Ibe galleryit Mctitra. Keichuid Sc Co. The portrait, whicD wasibawn in the Salon a tevt poota -ni.ee, leneoaoato mooii,1-bearded tuan in il irk velvet coal -ill u- tn aa

jiioou.strnuied attitude betide a table, exauiiinog a

miali picture which is held ia both bandit. Tbe tacoind tne surroutiuinga in tv ha taheo lor those ol ooirtiat or an enthusiaetic amateur, lhere are pieces oftmo-a-brac upi n ttie table, bchiud whdi is a pujpoit an easel, and there are various drapoiieo aire never Butlered to becotne ts. Collup cu..US. I hoportrait, then-tore, is -.ouidluug much itio.e BBBhM-MMthan a simple likeness, lt is a picture. This do*-* notmean the old style ot pictorial portraits in winch ht

nen stand holding roils ot tn inti-cript in om- hand, tim>flier resting upon a pile oi pouderous volumes, (heJ.ckgroiuia a row of Ul irule c,. ri.him and Mi A curtains,ir in the case of the warrior, who ia usually i.t tinl.i, .;

itnliy "* at atteutiaiu," a v.i-ia ol' bailie otoaaa Hags an.ljayunet tips. M. aOBOBf bea paiuled Ins sabpMrt BBBtdlert'ectly natural euri-oun ling*, mid these are p..*-leuted with such oowplislioil will thal thoil ition is a pleasure. Fhe gem tl, rnd.iv-ta.-.-illiiettanto himself in sure of tho OjoiaolBatio (atonalToui uoii-|irole*tsiouai hebol-iers wi.icu is 'irawn outjy an expressive exhibition ot character 0800 lilias.Ibo lace is that ol a relined epic ii'-rn, it !..v r ofjoautitul things, whose prosaat ipu-t 0B| ij tm-nt ioreadily shared uv the speoCatar, lt is BMOB lo haveun le a likrness so iatorostlBg, Hore >vnr, itu* pi.ti.ewill be sure to rece'vo Irom a'ti-i- OB approval tv mea

they could not bave koola-fol upon mauv ot tho p<ir-.r.nU by foreign, especially by Eagllsh, arruts wine.

nave been painted iu this c.uiturv within the la**t lew

icitra. Tbio pieturo io ia genaro! edarirahlj li.'-uioa-zed. anil n** potOa wuh one .aaeaB-MB bobootvo toastproper relations. Tins OXOOpttoo is lite stoleollo 0MB:ne ta'ile with tbe glitter ot light upon il* paltMBBilurtaee. It 09-tradao Itaolf, naaMio .» aoouad t¦. t

tad dreertoc tho ero tiooi tao fara, Itohigl ariition taprobably tatoadad to oaboretaeta thapiri .*

aeiow, but it uiav evidently bc * tooaddewa* mittul\ au age. Lise where the values aretrieai.il thoicene has plenty ol atOBOOpheta Tho .rawing io faa I,Hie hoad tiruilv iu 9'lelled and tue w.trui iii -th co. .rnrgV uot over-uoite ; indeed, Ihe flesh painting i* ext*

y truthttil throughout and there ia no waxiness or

aastiness. The ptojarr e ratolas ao shorp. oroggi ** i.'¦jiitraeu, bul the excellent rosalia have bean atto 1iv cl.-ver painting, a oooinrohoBOiOB "t tha kapaiif values, aud a con-idersble tact in esprosO nf.hnnti t.-r. As M. i.'nout h.u beeu know ri to li- ..... /

ut a painter ot marines and shore scenes, ttiia portraits more toMaeetaag tLau thc ac, .cup my mg pura s.

tue, a ntii.lY ol'ligates uyou tho seri.bur", lo OBI Imremarka bio. Auother, a head, recalling OOO >¦!tretou's banda, tre-itcd slightly in tbe Boolloo Lepagarein, ts attractive in its wav. and the'turd piplate.'.nev s decided abdity iu laBBOOBpO p Huting,

At the Acalemv exhibition nearly seventy paintingslave beonooM for $11*-.ow. The picture* boMmbflOO andover areas follows: - Did Music." i. \v.

Usynard, iAOO: ".Hounds,'' H. U, Poora, f.104);' (onie. Gentle Spring," .M. K. land, $__..*i ; . A-.luina

Flowers," I'eruv .«or:in, f"_Til>; .. l-o,>kin_ lor I'ajia,""VI. Kouzee, f3.riO; * Tomato.'s,'' J. ll. Uosion, 0lUO|.A ChafBriag Ketirition," J. M. Isaacs, 11901 ** InoLast Days ot I'ompeii," Kita F. I'ell, ^S5; .* Alter a

Day's Kain," J. Alden Weir, *Ji450 ; ¦ Bundown," J. O.Ivfi-r, $12a; .*. I-ow Tide," A. T. lliicher, f.:."*.0|4 Flowers," II. S. liuekhout, IAOO; ¦ Bv the Hoad*,tide," Burr H. Nichols, #400; "A Tease,' ll. K.Dixon, *150: "The Hashish hmoUera,'' V. (I.

Utopeftoa; "Oood Luck," l.veil Carr, f:i(x»;. Laudacape witn Cattle," J. W. Candear. 18601'Late Autumu on the Moore," T. C. 8tc<*le, e'-CO;' ,v Breea of Loiters," U. M. Arnold. *l;-n | " Si. 1.1*

ng Milk," C. C. Curran, hlUtfj " Hhiatog l'p." W V.lliiiny, $17.*i ; .* A Misty Dav,' T. C. Sterne, ftMl1 A City Fairyland," F. C. llass.tm. *t*:*7.*>; " A New-

-aig.and Stllilv." I'ruce ('tillie. -s4(KJ; . Attt-rnoon.'Bf, Morgan, *"-'-50; " lu the Kileheii,'' C. C. Curran,!_00: - An ldvl,' Leon Moi.ni, |K0l m MotiungIliaU,' Arthur Vitrtou, §900; *" Spring." V. Marne-tall. 412-jO; " Dreaming," C. M. Mcllucnnv, B4ABAHie Librarian." Amy Crarv, ^115; ¦ Mooul'ghi. K

A*. Iteuson, ^100, and ** Ia*1 ot the Ketun,'." Il H.

Cellogfi !r~00. Tbe prices given are those ot tho

nantogaaIhe BaaMtoatoa Hatt'.o Mouumeut Asaoci.UiDO,

vhose deliher.tle progrens haa called torih t ri'Kfiius

n some cases dae to uuervatod motives, has a>tvaut*-*dinoiber a.ep. A bill approiirutiii^ -pl .',"00 ior ibo,ur, ii..se of land anana baa aaoaaoBool oho aaa Mbenioval ot adJaeoBI b-aUdtoja h*w pas«ed hoth uou-ieo

it tho N trmoiii Legislature. Ibe design tor the BB0aB|neut adopted iu a\u,usi, l^^.>, ha.-* 1

totuewhat iu eeoerdaaeo alth »ugac»lioas made bf ik«

two artist BOOieon "t the a-seueiaiion. Mr. Dim L

Warner, ot this ctv. and Mr. Thomas Alten. ot Ho.toa." Kurthei nioiliilc.iioti ot the design ts conterupbtteJbut iU general char^ter ot a lotty »a.l iu i- .

structure, il ie oa-umsd. will not ha.changed." IB

sits selected is 00 toa brow oi a uul nt U-oauLigioa(entro. '~"nA 'efl above tho rtvsr. voiv near lb* .tin A

the ¦ old Conltuenial nlorebouae." s.i.i.,, delay hs*

beea oaiiscd bv the neceasity ol aecurinji au !., ,« nil

Urue grouuda about the site and removing obstiud

baiihliiigs. No* that an appropnatloa hot m

obt-woeo any detlcieuoy wdl he made up by priv*ltlHtrahiy ami lho hill o-earod u a -iiiuho* m.nun r lor

the momiuieut-. sa soon aa tho two ooiumiaatona htvagtbe matter lu charge deoide upon tho prauimal deVai'**Thai* should be uu occasion lot turthvr delaythe H.BMtoBi aeh

.. Amartoau Aitt," lu Ital second number oontlnues

Balure lo fulfil tho promUe of tba proapeetiu. It con}*mtMle whieh tolatoroottaa alto &«._.*__¦ ^,238

oana! tradejtobooatwa.

.v ag

mm

it IBtalOB

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