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A WTO JIT TO CXKOPATHA.
“I un dying, Egypt, djrlng.” [Sbakapeara
I nm dying, Egypt, dying,
Kl,l the crimson lifo-lido lut,
Ami the dark Plutonian shadow*
Gather on the evening blast,
lid thine unu, oh! queen, support wi,
Hush thy sobs and bow thine ear,
Hearken to the great heart soeicts
Thou, and thou alone, must hear.
Though my scarred and vcteian legion*
Bear their eagles high no more,
And my wrecked and shattered galleys
Strewn dark Actluin’s fatal shore;
Though no glittering guards surround me,
Prompt to do their master's will,
I inuat |>erUh like a Itoman —
Die the great Triumvir still.
J,et not Osar's servile minions
Mock the lion thus laid low;
'Twiim no forman'* hand that alow hitn,
' i'wns Ids own that struck the blow.
Here, then, pillowed on thy bosom,
Ere Id* star fades quite away,
Him who, drunk with thy caresses
Madly Hung a world away 1
Win "il l the liase plebeian ralddo
Karo assail my frameat Home,
Whore the noble s|k.ii.\ Octavia,
Weeps within lo r widowed home,
Beck her—say the gods have told me,
Altars, augurs, circling wings,
That her Mood with, mine commingled
Tdt shall mount the throne of kings.
And for thee, star-eyed Egyptiant
Glorious sorceress of the Nile,
Eight the path to Stygian horrors
With the splendors of thy smilo.
Give the t'aoair crowns and arches,
led Ids brow the laurel twine:
i can scorn the Senate's triumphs,
Triumphing in love like thine.
1 am dying, Egypt, dying;
Hark 1 insulting foeman'acry;
The/ are mining—quick my falchion!
Ixd me front them ere I die.
Ahl no more amid the battle
Shall my heart exulting swell}
Jhiw and Osiris guard (hoc,
Ueonatra! Uomel farewell i
An Extraordinary lfailway Project.
[Billimoro Hun.]
Due of the extraordinary projects,
with which the braiusof modern French
engineers appear to bo teeming, is that
of constructing a railway from the fron
tiers of A lgicra across the desert of Sa
hara to Tiinhuctoo, the great mart of
Soudan, in Central Africa, ft was in
Soudan, in 1806, that Mungo Park, the
once celebrated traveler, was killed on
his second African journey, and it was
in the same region that Clapperton died
during his explorations in 1827. Den
ham. Ottiilie, Lander, Barth, Vogel,
itolihsaiul Nachtigal, have since struck
the Soudan in their travels from vari
ous points, but it has never been thor
oughly explored. What is known of it
is that it is very populous; that it con
tains magnificent rivers, large lakes, and
that except in its southern portion,
where marshes abound, it is extremely
fertile. Hut the heat is oppressive, and
the climate very unhealthy for Europe
ans. The total population is roughly
estimated at fifty millions Its trade
with Europe is carried on by caravans
from Morocco and Algiorsacross the great
desert. The exports consist of attar of
roses, gold dust, gum arahic, indigo,
ivory, ostrich feathers and skins. Of
these, Algiers receives about $7,500,000
worth annually. Its imports, which
nve: age about the same amount, consist
clneiiy df cotton goods, cutlery and
weapons. Tire distance from Algiers
to Tim hue too, across the desert, is about
1,000 miles. It is traversed by the cam
els, which are the beasts of burden of
the caravans, in about four months. The
proposition submitted to the French
Government in the interest of its Alge
rian colony, is to cover this distance with
a railway, which starting from the vil
lage of Appeville, would penetrate
thence 220 miles to the Oasis of Laglio
nat, the last oasis in Algeria before en
tering the desert. From that point the
road would stretch across some 200 miles
of desert to the Oasis of El Goleah, and
thence to the Oasis of Touat, -134 miles
furtlior olt. Exploring parties have al
ready been pushed out as far as El Go
leali, and it is stated that “data have
been obtained in regard to that part of
the desert which separates El Goleah
from Touat.” One-half of the route
may therefore be said to he more or less
perfectly known. The remaining half,
some eight hundred miles, is described
by Gaillie as a Hat country without
water, and ‘ ‘ where the route of the cara
vans is strewn with the skeletons of ani
mals, which no doubt have all died from
thirst.” The cost of constructing the
road is put at $80,000,000; the time oc
cupied in crossing the de-ert, at an ave
rage rate of speed of twenty miles an
hour, would he four days instead of four
months by camels, as now. The project
is a 1.014 one, and if feasible, the doubt
still remains as to whether, on a com
merce of $15,000,000. such an enterprise
would pay.
Hard to Please.
“My dear,” said Mrs. Joblink last
evening, “ when can I go?”
The lady referred to a visit to Califor
nia which she had been contemplating
for nu/iths.
“How soon do you want to go?” in
quired Mr. Joblink, looking up from his
paper, and benevolently gazing through
his spectacles upon the partner of his
wallet.
“Just as soon as ever I can,” replied
the lady eagerly.
“ Let’s sec,” said Joblink. pulling out
his pencil and proceeding to figure.
“ Mebbe in three weeks, Mariar—mebbe
four,” and he continued to figure.
“Four weeks!” murmured Mrs. J., in
a disapjminted undertone.
“Alt, 1 know what'll fix it, Mariar,”
suddenly exclaimed the old gentleman,
tossing aside his paper and pencil. “ I'll
sell my lkdcher. I’m tired o’ paying as
sessments. You can start day after to
morrow P*
Mrs. Joblink burst into tears.
“ land bless me!" cried the bewildered
Joblink. “ What on earth’s the matter,
Mariarf’
“ You - you—oo-00-00 —want me to go
away, you old brute! Hoooo-oo!”
An luAir later an elderly gentleman
might have leen seen in a leading saloon
with bis bat jammed on the back of his
head, and his cravat untied, inviting
all hands up to drink
Life In Sweden.
Writing from Sweden, a correspondent
of the London Times says: Of course,
the whole country is, in a sense, very
poor. That is a natural consequence of
its latitude, as in its physical conforma
tion four-sevenths of its area is covered
with forests. Another seventh is occu
pied by lakes and rivers. Even in the
open spaces the granite constantly crops
up ana defies all husbandry. Only one
seventeenth part la cultivated soil.
There are mines of iron and copper, and
Swedish iron is the best the world pro
duces. There are coal mines which are
now worked at a profit. But no coun
try, even with resources a hundredfold
greater, could he rich which is frost
bound and mostly covered with snow
from October to April every year.
“ What do you do in Winter?” I asked
of a steamer owner the other day. “We
lie up,” was the answer. “ Why don’t
you take to a Winter trade?” I got the
significant reply: “Most other trades
are forced to lie up too.” Of course, a
country which is thus driven to hiberna
tion, like a certain class of animals, can
not he otherwise than a poor country,
and I was not surprised to hear at Goth
enburg that the number of emigrants
to America this year from that port
amounted to nearly thousand. But
in another sense Sweden is by no means
poor. 1 have seen in the last three
weeks at least a dozen small towns. Each
had its school house, its church, its
newspaper, and most of them had their
public garden; the streets were paved
and lighted with oil lamps swung across
as they were in old Baris; the houses,
though mostly of wood, were trim and
neat; no broken windows, or dilapidated
walls, or heaps of refuse offend the eye
as they do in English country districts.
The people were as neat as their houses.
I have not seen half a dozen beggars
since I have beef! in the country. Per
haps some explanation is to he found in
the fact that Sweden is not one of the
great powers of the world. She takes a
tow place in the councils of the nations.
But her army and navy cost her only a
trifle; her taxation is light and her
national debt is trifling (£10,000,000),
and has been solely employed in the con
struction of railways. Finally, all her
children go to school, and over 90 per
cent, of her people can read and write.
There are superstitions in the country
places, hut they mostly come of the
noble North mythology. Children
whose imaginations are fed on such
storiesas that of “ Balder the Beautiful”
may grow up with odd fancies, but I
would not for all that banish such tales
from the nursery.
The Ways of the Small Boy.
[Detroit Free Press.]
The small boy looks on anything else
than a circus tent as a cover to a show
as a base infringement on his vested
rights. The impossibility of keeping a
small boy out of a circus is well known
to every showman in America. All that
the showman can do is to reduce the
number of dead-head small boys to the
minimum. Barnum used to think that
he got off well if only fifty small hoys
came in by the private entrance in a
city the size of Detroit. Theaters are
the special detestation of the amusement
loving street urchin, as he has hardly
any chance of crawlingunder the canvas
there. The boys of New York had, last
week, a hard time of it getting a sight
of the walkers. They are loud in their
denunciations of the managers for having
such an interesting event in Madison
Square Garden instead of in a tent, as it
should have been. Seven boys were ar
rested on Friday for attempting the
“under the canvas” business at the
garden. They lifted the flap of the
metaphorical canvas by taking up the
coal-hole cover and dropping down into
the coal cellar, which opened into the
furnace room. Then they out a hole in
the ceiling and came out under the tiers
of seats. In this way scores of boys got
into the garden before the device was
discovered by the authorities and then
recovered by the carpenters. On the
day mentioned hammering was heard in
the lower regions, and on investigation
the aforesaid seven were industriously
sawing and hammering away at the
obstruction. The place was littered with
dry shavings, and the only light was a
candle, which might at that moment
have upset and enveloped ten thousand
people in flames. The judge evidently
thought boys ought to have a chance to
crawl under the canvas, for he only fined
the tearful lads a dollar each.
A Queer Discovery in a Tree.
During the gale in August last a large
buttonball or sycamore tree was blown
down near the residence of Governor
Douglas, near Middietown, Conn. It
was given to a man who cut it up for
fire-wood. In doing so he found imbed
ded in the trunk, fifty-nine inches in
diameter, an old horseshoe with nails
in one side. It was twenty-two inches
from the bark or outer edge of the tree,
the wood of which is perfectly sound.
The tree is known to be more than one
hundred and thirty years old, and it is
estimated that the shoe has been imbed
ded in it one hundred and ten years.
In ye olden time it was a customary
thing to nail old horseshoes to trees for
hitching horses to, and it is supposed
that this one was nailed there for this
purpose, and that as the tree grew it en
cased the shoe in it. Mr. Douglas’
house formerly belonged to the Mather
family. A brick building used to stand
in tlie corner of the lot where the
Mathers had their office, and ihe pro
bability is that the tree was used as a
hi tchiug-post.
The Jack's Run Colored Debating So
ciety was lately discussing: “ Which is
best for the laboring men. to work for
wages or part of the crop?” An old
uncle spoke the sense of '.lie meeting
when lie said : “Bofe was the best of dev
cv uld only he brung togedder somehow.”
Joining a Circus.
[Virginia iNev.) Chronicle.]
Last evening, after the performance
was over at the circus, a young man
called on Chiarini and said ho wanted to
see him on private business. The old
vgteran took him into his office, and
received him with his usual politeness.
“ I came up all the way from Carson
to see the show, and I’d like to join, ’
said the young man.
“Oh, 1 see,” said the circus man;
“ you are a well-formed, healthy-looking
young fellow, and I like to encourage
such as you.” The youth’s face bright
ened.
“ You don’t chew, smoke or drink, I
hope?”
“Oh, no; honor bright—except soda
and beer.”
“ You must leave off these had habits.
They weaken the muscles and paralize
the nerves. You can soon stop drink
ing, hut your salary will not he large
until you overcome these tendencies. A
little lemonade—circus lemonade —is all
the performers drink. Call at 11 o’clock
to-morrow morning and I will srjfwhat
I can do. You musn’t expect direr SSO
a week, though, at first. We never
pay high salaries until -we know what a
man can do.”
The delighted Carsonite went away,
and this mortkiug wason hand.
Chiarini tqok him to a tent where three
immense Bengal tigers were caged.
Handing him a curry-comb and pair of
shears, lie remarked:
“ Your duties will be comparatively
light at first. _You will go into the cage
and curry the tigers down every morn
ing, and ffbdut once a week cut their
claws; keep ’em down pretty short, so
that when they attack the tiger-tamer,
Mr. Wilson, they won’t lacerate him
much. Sometimes, but not more than
once a month, you may have occasion
to file their teeth. You just throw the
animal on liis hack and hold his head
between your kneesi If he acts rough,
belt him in the nose a few times
Keep belting him until he quiets
down.”
“Haven’t you got any vacancy in the
art department?” asked the young man
from Carson.
“ Is art in your line?” inquired Chiar
ini.
“ Yes,” drawled the young man. “In
the circus I always run with I was al
ways employed to paint the stripes on
the zebra. I killed so many tigers keen
ing’em straight that the boss wouldn’t
let me handle ’em He said 1 used ’em
too rough.”
Chiarini swears that the terror from
Carson shall have the first vacancy.
Deluded by Prayer.
[Now York Herald.]
They have a better way of carrying
out plans of highway robbery in Syria
than in this country. Dr. Jessup, long
a missionary hi that country, tells how,
last winter, four footmen and two horse
men of Arabah, near Shechem, arose
and went forth oy a highway, seeking to
rob tlie passers-by, when suddenly they
met a Moslem of Shechem, riding an
Arab mare worth a hundred pounds.
Said one of the horsemen, “I have a
longing to take that Arab blooded mare.”
His companion replied, “ You can never
take a blooded mare with that old horse
of yours.” The footmen also declared it
impossible to take her. Then the horse
men said, “ Let us have a season of
prayer, for it is now tlie noon hour of
prayer.” The horsemen dismounted; one
of them wrapped his white robe around
his head to seem like an Imam, and they
all stood up to pray, spreading their gar
ments on the ground for prayer rugs.
When, behold, tlie Shechemite Moslem
drew near, and cried out, “ Wait, breth
ren. Peace be upon you! I, too, will
join you in prayer!” So he dismounted
and tied his mare to a tree, and began to
pray with them, when suddenly three of
them sprang upon him, bound him hand
and foot, and threw him upon the
ground. Then they took the mare and
rode away, calling to the Shechemite,
“This is the way we pray; go and tell
what you have seen.” At last accounts
he was going around from place to place
seeking the mare in vain. This discov
ery is not patented, but it ought to bo
A New Delicacy.
Anew Australian delicacy is finding
its way into the London markets in the
shape of dried kangaroo tongues. The
tails and skins of these animals have
long been utilized—the former for mak
ing soup, the latter for leather; and the
recent enormous destruction of kan
garoos has given considerable impetus to
these two trades. Struck by the waste
of food occasioned by the slaughter of so
many thousands of these marsupials,
whose bodies are frequently left to rot
where they have fallen, a Warroo settler
made an experiment in curing the
tongues of some of the slain, and so
highly were they approved that a con
siderable trade has sprung up in this
commodity. The tongues are usually
cured by drying in smoke, like the
Russian reindeer tongues; but a much
better plan is to preserve them in tins
like the sheep and ox tongues received
from America. Tongues lend themselves
to this treatment better than almost any
other portion of an animal, as they stand
the excessive boiling better than beef or
mutton.
Retaining Titles. *
There is a curious sort of modesty pre
vailing lamoiig the owners of great man
sions in London, which induces them to
retain the name of the original owner
even when his successor is ten times as
distinguished. Thus even the Duke of
Wellington was satisfied that his famous
mansion at Hyde Park corner should
contiune to hear the name of Lord Chan
cellor Apsley, its original tenant, al
though it was entirely reconstructed by
the Duke; and Mr. Holford, who owns
the most artistic mansion in London,
built on the site of what was known as
Dorchester House, retains that name.
The Eyes of the Coming Americans.
Dr. ID. F. Lincoln, of Boston,'in a
paper just published on “ School Hy
giene/’ fairly raises the question
whether the Americans are ultimately to
become a near-sighted race. The point
has been raised before, and in
a notable paper read before the New
~ork Academy of Sciences by Dr.
Agnew, a specialist in diseases of the
eye, and by Dr. E. G. Loring and Dr.
R. H. Derby, in remarkable statistical
researches respecting the prevalence of
myopia in the public schools of this and
other cities. Until they are five or six
years of age most natives of the United
States have a normal vision, the ratio of
congenial near-sightedness being mater
ially less here than it is in Germany,
Russia and England. Dr. Erismann,
whose statistics of the disease in St.
Petersburg are the accepted authority,
found, after an examination of 4,358
eyes of pupils in the schools, that the
percentage in the primary classes
was 13.6, and in the advanced
43.3. Dr. Conrad, in Konigs
berg, a German city, found the average
in the primary classes to be 11.1, and in
the higher 62.1. According to Loring
and Derby, the corresponding percent
ages in New York City are 3.5 and 26.28.
That is to say, there ure more than twice
as many near-sighted people in Germany
as there are here, and nearly twice as
many in Russia. These condition ap
ply to cities only. In the rural districts
the exercise of far-sightedness that comes
about by expansion of prospect corrects
the tendency of study to contract the
vision. In village schools the per cent,
of myopia in Germany is only 1.4. The
number of hours of study appears to ex
ercise a direct influence. Erismann
found that among pupils who studied
two hours out of school only seventeen
per one hundred were myopic; while of
those who studied four hours twenty
nine in every one hundred had this de
fect of vision, and of those who studied
six hours more than forty per one hun
dred. Bad light, position tending to
congestion of the brain, and defective
ventilation are, next to study itself,
leading causes. The interesting point,
however, is that near-sightedness, like
other physical peculiarities, when once
fully established in the progenitor, usu
ally appear in the descendants.
A Singular Occurrence.
[San Francisco Bulletin.]
A singular meeting happened in an
employment office in this city a few days
ago. If the conclusion was not so disas
trous, it would strongly flavor of the
romantic. A moral to employment office
clerks might be extracted from the
story. An apparently middle-aged man
applied at the counter one Saturday and
asked for a housekeeper for a bachelor,
wearing a telling smile on his face at the
time. After a moment’s conversation,
he was asked point-blank if he did not
want a wife. His reply was in the
affirmative. He was told to come the
following Monday at sp. m. It hap
pened that a young womap called the
same day, and, after some beating about
the bush, declared she was looking after
a husband. She was requested to come
again the next Monday at 5:30. Every
thing came on serenely Monday after
noon. The two principals came to time
and were directed to an adjoining room.
They had not been there long before
sounds of some disturbance reached the
ears of those in attendance at the office,
and the woman gave vent to a shriek.
One of the assistants went to the door,
and found that matters had progressed
beyond all expectation. The girl held
the man by the hair—at least she thought
she did. An effort to relieve him of some
surplus scalp-covering, instead of per
forming the desired object, drew a wig
from his head, and the fellow appeared
quite a young man. The woman
screamed, “ My brother!” and fell on
the floor in a faint. The two others
united their efforts to resuscitate her,
which in a short time were so successful
that she arose, grasped an ebony ruler
lying on a desk, and struck the clerk a
blow he will not soon forget. She then
1 left the office for parts unknown. The
man, in liis turn, abused the clerk like a
pickpocket, and endeavored to strike
him, but did not meet with much suc
cess. He then departed, leaving the
clerk a sadder, and possibly a wiser man.
Foreign Election Tricks.
Even in imperial Austria, it seems,
they are up to electioneering tricks
which rival the drollest that ate prac
ticed in the freest and easiest parts of
out own land. In Galicia, the two lead
ing parties are Polish and Ruthenian.
At the recent election efforts were made
by both sides to secure the success of
their candidates, and the two principal
hotels on the market-place of Brzezan
were filled with electors who had ar
rived from the country to record tlicir
votes. The Ruthenians, mostly priests
of the United Greek Church, who oc
cupied one of these hotels, determined
to steal a march on tlicir opponents by
going to the place where the election
was to be held at sunrise, in order to win
votes for their side. Accordingly, at
five o’clock in the morning of the poll
ing day, they called the waiter to brush
their clothes and boots. The waiter
came and took away the garments; but,
although the priests waited nearly an
hour, he did not bring them back. They
rang and shouted hut in vain; all the
people of the hotel seemed to be asleep.
At last the priesft began to suspect that
a trick was being played on them. It
became evident that they must either
allow the election to he completed with
out taking part in it, or go barefooted
and without their nether garments to the
voting-place. They chose the second
course; but here, too, their adversaries
were too much for them. Scarcely had
they come out of the hotel when a Polish
policeman came up and threatened to
put them in prison for improper conduct,
if they did not return at once to their
rooms. There was nothing for it but to
go back, and the Poles won the election.
EVERY-DAY SPICERIES.
A CIGARETTE is not nearly so good as :
cigar smoked.
Hamilton countv, Ohio, has had
cooking contest, and a prize has been
awarded to a young woman who prepared
a good dinner in sixty-five minutes.
Another girl cooked a dinner in fifty
four minutes. But it was not good.
A small boy asked his mother, a cer
tain worthy lady of this city, if God
punished everybody that told a lie.
“ Certainly he does,” was the reply.
“You had better look out then, mother,
for I haven’t had that piece of raspberry
pie you promised me two days ago.”
A gentleman passing across the play
ground of a public school was obliged to
complain to the principal, which lie did
thus: “ I have been abused by some ras
cals of this place, and I have come to
acquaint you of it, as I understand you
are the principal.”
When you see a lady running aftQr a
street car, shaking her parasol like mad
and crying frantically, “ Here, here!”
the thought comes that all this trouble
and vexation of spirit might have been
prevented, had she been taught to
whistle on her fino-ors.
Don't you want me to go to the gal
lery and have my picture taken, my
dear?” inquired his wife. The husband
sadly said, “with your hair banged?”
Being answered in the affirmative, he
said, mournfully, “No, no. You do ev
erything you can to break my heart.”—
Modern Argo.
He came in the store and asked if
there was any one there who would help
a poor and honest man, which called out
general laughter and the remark that he
had better not let any honest man hear
him repeat that or it might cause offense.
The ready reply, that there was no dan
ger in that place, earned him a quarter.—
Newark Sunday Call.
Several men lately swam the Missis
sippi river, above New Orleans, on a
wager. A reporter on the race says:
“None of them seemed to be putting
fprth much effort till it was discovered
that an alligator had struck out from
shore as a competitor, and then— well,
every man did his best to keep the alli
gator from carrying off the stakes.”
ONE of the whims of lashlon m tavor
ing stripes is to have the lines perpen
dicular as looked at from the front of
the figure. When the entire dress is dis
posed in striped material, a fancy is
shown for scarf-like eltect, which is pro
duced by placing underneath the pointed
basque a pleated width of rich material,
one solid tint, which is carried in drap
ery form over the hips to the basque ex
tension at the back. Sleeves are now
made of the main fabric of the costume.
When his “best girl” leaves home
for a boarding-school, she promises to
write faithfully, be true as steel, and all
that sort of nonsense. The first letter
is a nice, long one, breathing the very
essence of affectionate tenderness, and is
signed, “ Exclusively your own darling.”
After about six weeks, when the young
men from the neighboring academy have
made their opening calls, she drops him
a note enthusiastically describing the
particular student that she lias fancied,
signing it “ inclusively yours, etc.” He
begins to feel a little queer, all the time
expecting that “ delusively yours ” will
soon be coming; blit it never comes.
The correspondence is finished.
Information for Pensioners.
Under the recent pension act, if a de
ceased soldier was a pensioner at the
time of his death, and at the time had
two children under the age of sixteen
years and left no widow, the the child
ren are entitled to the arrearages of pen
sion under the act. If such a soldier left
a widow, she is entitled to the arrearages
and they are not. If he was not a pen
sioner at the time of his death, neither
she nor they are entitled to a pension
and arrearages, even though he may have
been. His failure to obtain a pension for
himself bars the widow and children.
But if, before his death, he has made
an application for a pension, the widow ,
or children, as the case may be, are en
titled to the pension and arrears, if hi3
application is granted. In other words,
the fact of his death nowise affects an
application, but carries with it the
right to enter an application. The com
missioners say that it is impossible to
give a general decision which will cover
all cases. Almost every question raised
anew and knotty question as to the
construction of statutory law. Out of
this uncertainty there rises much mis
conception. The claimant’s best plan is
to state his or her .case, and patiently
await decision, without relying implic
itly upon what may have, in other cases,
been imperfectly understood.
Wild Cattle and Music.
We have heard it said that caravan
drivers are In the habit of singing to
cheer their over-wearied and groaning
camels. A similar custom, with like ef
fects, is reported of the herders, or
“ cow-boys,” of Texas. A recent traveler
in that state says:
The cow-boys, while tending (mounted
on their wiry mustang ponies) their
Texan cattle, which are almost as wild
as buffiiloes, and as,dangerous to a man
on foot, are accustomed to sing a great
deal to while away the lonely hours!
At night they hobble their ponied?
and, wrapped in a blanket, lie down to
sleep on the prairie, a little way from
the cattle. Sometimes in the night a
thunder-clap or some strange sound will
start up the cattle with wild affright,
and they will snort and paw the earth,
and in a moment a wild rush and stam
pede would commence; but the cow-boys
would spring up, and while they loose
and mount their ponies they commence
singing their old songs.
The cattle, hearing the well-known
and accustomed voices, will soon quiet
down, thinking all is right* and resumfe
their rest again.