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LONDON:

ROGERSON AND TUXFORD, PRINTERS,

265, STRAND.

INDEX.

NOVELS, ROMANCES, TALES, &c.

About Abyssinia: By the author of "The Com-, LEAVES FOR THE LITTLE ONES

moner's Daughter": 281

Alpine and Polar Plants: By Harland Coultas: 144
Among the Lochs: 53

Birds, Curious Things about: By F. H. Stauffer: 158
Born to Sorrow: 1, 57, 169
Bryant : 126

Can(n)ons for Critics: By C. Holland Kidder: 9
Cantor's Daughter, The: By Auber Forestier: 257
Childhood: 63

Colonel's Ward, The: By A. A.: 33, 72, 119, 188
Correspondents, Answers to: 56, 112, 168, 224, 280,
336

Durham Cathedral: 232

Fine Arts, Relating to the: By M. C.: 92

Funeral Fashions: By Mrs. Caroline A. White: 89

Health Question, The: 65

Charlie's Holiday: By Nettie Carlisle : 104
Kindly Jem: By Ada M. Kennicott: 325
Milly's Dream: By Eden Rexford: 155
Nellie's Pets: By J. E. M'C.: 214
Slater Knapp: By Virginia F. Townsend: 278
Squirrel Fanny By Cousin Vara: 157
The Pet Canary: By a Young Mother: 50
LIBRARY TABLE-

Apocryphal Gospels: By P. H. Cowper: 222
Cookery Book, The New: By Annie Bowman:
331

Englishwoman's Review: 111, 273
Laboratory, The: 111

Life-boat, The: 332

Oddfellow's Quarterly: 162, 272

Penny Poems: By Owen Howell: 52
The Hawk: 52, 110, 161, 222

Lina: 197

Low Life in the East: 294

Horace Carew; or the Heir of Sairmouth Castle: 12, Madeleine: By Percy Vere: 113

83, 132, 296, 247

How shall the Bed be placed? 115

Indian Railway Station, At an: By Luxe : 185

Influence of Woman: By Hon. Dan. Webster: 164

In Memoriam: Mrs. Abdy: 105

In the Jungle: By Luxe: 268

LADY'S PAGE

Baby's Shoe in Crochet: 168

Case for Threaded Needles: 277

Crochet Circle: 55

Crochet Flowers-Scarlet Geranium: 223

Crochet Net for a Nightcap: 223

Mems of the Month: 47, 100, 165, 275, 334
Miriam Gilbert's Sorrow: 70

Mrs. Brumby's Lodgers: By Wilmot Buxton : 40
Musical Audiences: By E. Hiscock Malcolm: 323
My Photograph: By R. H. E.: 107

NEW MUSIC

Beautiful England: 335

I'll be all smiles to-night: 335

New Year's Day, A, at the Chinchas: By S. A.
Emery: 307

Observations on Horseback in America: Bog and
Rain in the Mountains-Water-Spouts: 215

Imitation Coral Sleeve Ornaments for a Baby Old Age: By Grindon: 38

106

Infant's Crochet Bib with Sleeves: 106

Knitted Artificial Flowers: Michaelmas Daisy: 277

Knitted Fringe: 333

Netted Nightcap: 168

Rosette Crochet Cover, &c.: 333

Paddle your own Canoe: By the author of "If
Only," "And Yet," &c.: 245

Paris Correspondent, Our; 98, 153, 212, 270, 329
Passion for Display, The: 187
Personal Influence: 274

Pictor Ignotus: 19

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Angels, The Two (From the German of E. Geibel): Mowers tossed the Hay: By Elizabeth Townbridge:

By Ada: 244

Arctic Vision, An: By F. B. H.: 146

Napier

Children, The: By Charles Dickinson : 18
Cleopatra (A Fragment): By Frederick
Broome: 130
Country Visits; or, Five o'clock Tea: By R. E.
Thackeray: 187

Deserted House, The: By Eben Rexford: 143
Down the Autumn Valleys: By Agues Leotard: 176
Dream-land: By Frederick Napier Broome : 195
Dream-land: By Mary Leonard: 325
Easy Lessons: By Phoebe Cary: 328

64

Never put off: 146

Over the River: By Miss Priest: 39

Poet, The: By Frederick Napier Broome: 285

Receipt for a Head: By R. E. Thackeray : 69 Robin's Return: 298

Roses from the Harem: By Mrs. Abdy: 64

Society and Solitude: By Mrs. Abdy: 8 Song: By J. Baskerville: 18

Imitation of Goldsmith: By the late James Edmis. Summer-day Rhyme, A.: By Eben Rexford: 315

ton: 244

Lines: By Ada Trevanion: 176

Lola By Frederick Napier Broome: 266

Lost Galleon, The: By Frank Bret Harte: 284 Loved Twice: By Ada Trevanion: 315

Tell him: By Elizabeth Townbridge: 236

Vigil, A: By Ada Trevanion: 267

Whispered Words: By Ada Trevanion: 131

Love's Contradictions: By Elizabeth Townbridge: 39 Wish, A: By Ada Trevanion: 11

Manassas: 299

Witness, The Sure: By Alice Carey: 244 Womanhood's Crown: By Agnes Leotard: 131

Printed by Rogersou and Tuxford, 265, Strand, London.

BORN TO SORROW.

CHAP. XXVI.

"HOW SHOULD I GREET THEE?"

66

Has not the reader often shuddered at the receipt of a telegraphic message? They always seem ill-boding, these notes enclosed in their yellow envelope. Something sudden has occurred, and there is not time to write," is the first thought, as the receipt is being signed, and then " omne ignotum pro horrifico." With men of business, the case of course is different. -Jones, on 'Change, opens his telegram with the calmest air; for he expects to find nothing of greater importance in it than that consols have fallen, or that Smith is coming to dine, or something of that kind. I must confess that I can never behold one of those smart, sharp little officials approach my door without secret misgiving, and am heartily well pleased when he passes my roof-tree and leaves his fateful message

further on.

Ella Grantley had been making up her mind for the worst these few last days; not that she had any great inkling of the Derby project, but she could not in reason close her eyes to the fact that Grantley had been what he would call dropping his money pretty freely" of late times, and that if things kept on long in this way ultimate ruin must be the result.

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wife, ill-treats her, insults her by his known and open preference for other women, wounds her feelings by the associates he tries to make her own. But then "she would have him-she

has herself to thank for it!" Yes, but then she would have him when love was young, and the happy spring-tide of life blooming, for a pair of careless foolish lovers, when the deceit and black nature of the man lay slumbering for a while, lulled into repose by the magic enchantment of love. It suited the man to conceal all the darker traits of his character, and appear all "He is a persmiles and amiability. So it is. fect brute to her; but she would have him!" is the moral appended to many a fable of married misery. Despite the warnings of her friends, the tears of her family, the reasonings of prudence itself, she would have him." And having made the great, irretrievable mistake-having clouded over a whole lifetime by the error of a

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few hours-she must needs be content and shape herself to her lot, and live it out till merciful Providence take the bane of her existence from her, and she be free to choose once more.

Ella has at last summoned courage to open the telegram, and the contents verify all her forebodings. The ruin of a life summed up in a few short words: She was

getting almost resigned to trouble now (one gets accustomed to this kind of thing in time), and the wife who the first time her husband got drunk since marriage nearly broke her heart with shame and grief, as the years roll on and habit begets indifference, picks her husband out of the gutter or puts him to bed with the utmost coolness, and never troubles her mind with any further thought, except the hope that the graceless one has not spent all the week's wages at the "Blue Elephant." So true it is

that

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"DEAR ELLA,-Peep o' Day lost the Derby. Am done for. Must leave England."

It had come at last, then, what she had been expecting through all the weary months-ruin and disgrace, flight from all that was near and dear in England, and a lawless, suspicious existence at some foreign watering-place-kindly refuge for those, such as had beaten the Constable in the proverbial race! A life to be spent amongst the black-leg roué friends of her husband-the wife of a gambler, probably obliged to exert all her attractions to lure young men with money to their house; so that they might It was a horrible future to look to; yet she become an easy prey to Grantley and the hawks. could hope for no other, unless merciful Death released her.

"Tell Mr. Dalton he may come up," she said, faintly, to the footman, who still waited: and she quite astonished herself by the coolness with which she said it, and the careless disregard

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