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about whom it is formed. Yet so predominantly do we form harsh, unfavorable judgments of others before knowledge and experience, that a "prejudice," or judgment before knowledge and not grounded on evidence, is almost always taken to signify an unfavorable anticipation about one; and "prejudicial" has actually acquired a secondary meaning of anything which is mischievous or injurious.

6. Full, too, of instruction and warning is our present employ ment of the word "libertine." It signified, according to its earliest use in French and English, a speculative free-thinker in matters of religion, and in the theory of morals, or, it might be, of government. But, as by a sure process free-thinking does and will end in free-acting, —as he who cast-off the one yoke will cast off the other, so a "libertine came, in two or three generations, to signify a profligate.

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7. There is much, too, that we may learn from looking a little closely at the word "passion." We sometimes think of the "passionate "man as a man of strong will, and of real though ungoverned energy. But this word declares to us most plainly the contrary; for it, as a very solemn9 use of it declares, means properly" suffering; " and a passionate man is not a man doing something, but one suffering something to be done on him.

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8. When, then, a man or child is "in a passion," this is no coming out in him of a strong will, of a real energy, but rather the proof that, for the time at least, he has no will, no energy; ne is suffering, not doing, suffering his anger, or what other evil temper it may be, to lord over him without control." Let no one, then, think of passion as a sign of strength.

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1. THERE are vast harvests of historic lore garnered often in single words; there are continually great facts of history which they at once declare and preserve. If you turn to a map of Spain, you will take note, at its southern point and running out into the Straits of Gibraltar, of a prom'ontory, which from its position is admirably adapted for commanding the entrance of the Mediterranean Sea, and watching the exit and entrance of all ships.

2. A fortress stands upon this promontory, called now, as it was also called in the times of the Moorish domination in Spain, Tari'fa;" the name, indeed, is of Moorish origin. It was the

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custom of the Moors to watch from this point all merchantships going into or coming out of the Midland Sea; and, issuing from this stronghold, to levy duties according to a fixed scale on all merchandise passing in and out of the straits; and this was called, from the place where it was levied, “tarifa," or "tariff;" and in this way we have acquired the word.

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3. It is a signal evidence of the conservative powers of language, that we may oftentimes trace in speech the records of customs and states of society which have now passed so entirely away as to survive nowhere else but in these words alone. example, a "stipulation," or agreement, is so called, as many are strong to affirm, from "stip'ula," a straw, because it once was usual, when one person passed over landed property to another, that a straw from the land, as a pledge or representative of the property transferred, should be handed from the seller to the buyer, which afterward was commonly preserved with or inserted in the title-deeds.

4. Whenever we speak of arithmetic as the science of "calculation," we in fact allude to that rudimental period of the science of numbers when pebbles (cal'culi) were used, as now among savages they often are, to facilitate the practice of counting. In "library" we preserve a record of the fact that books were once written on the bark (liber) of trees.

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5. No one now believes in astrology; yet we seem to affirm as much in language; for we speak of a person as "jovial," or "săt'urnine," or "mercurial;' jovial," as being born under the planet Jupiter or Jove; "saturnine," as born under the planet Sat'urn; and "mercurial," that is, light-hearted, as those born under the planet Mercury were accounted to be.

6. With how lively an interest shall we discover words to be of closest kin which we had never considered till now but as entire strangers to one another! What a real increase will it be in our acquaintance with and mastery of English, to become aware of such relationship! Thus "heaven " is only the perfect of "to heave;" and is so called because it is "heaved or "heaven" up, being properly the sky as it is raised aloft. The "smith" has his name from the sturdy blows that he "smites" upon the anvil; "wrong" is the perfect participle of "to wring," that which one has wrung or wrested from the right.

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7. The "brunt" of the battle is the "heat" of the battle, where it "burns" the most fiercely. Haft," as of a knife, is properly only the participle perfect of "to have," that whereby you "have or hold it. Or, take two or three nouns adjective: 'strong" is the participle past of " to string;" a "strong" man means no more than one whose sinews are firmly "strring.'

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The "left" hand, as distinguished from the right, is the hand which we "leave;" inasmuch as for twenty times we use the right hand, we do not once employ the left; and it obtains its name from being "left" unused so often. "Wild" is the participle past of "to will;" a "wild" horse is a "willed" or selfwilled horse, one that has never been tamed, or taught to submit its will to the will of another; and so with a man.

8. Do not suffer words to pass you by which at once provoke and promise to reward inquiry. Here is "conscience," a solemn word, if there be such in the world. This word is from the Latin words "con," with, and "scirë," to know. But what does that "con" intend? "Conscience" is not merely that which I know, but that which I know with some one else; for this prefix cannot, as I think, be esteemed super'fluous, or taken to imply merely that which I know with or to myself. That other knower whom the word implies is God, his law making itse.f known and felt in the heart.

9. What a lesson the word "diligence" contains! How profitable is it for every one of us to be reminded,

as we are98 reminded when we make ourselves aware of its derivation from 'diligo," to love, that the only secret of true industry in our work is love of that work!

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10. These illustrations are amply enough to justify what I have asserted of the existence of a moral element in words. Must we not own, then, that there is a wondrous and mysterious world, of which we may hitherto have taken too little account, around us and about us; and may there not be a deeper meaning than hitherto we have attached to it lying in that solemn declaration, "By thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned " 159

R. C. TRENCH.

XLVII. THE STREAM THAT WAS MADE TO WORK.

1. THAT stream which runs through my garden gushes from the side of a furze-covered hill. For a long time it was a happy little stream; it traversed meadows where all sorts of lovely wild-flowers bathed and mirrored themselves in its waters; then it entered my garden, and there I was ready to receive it. I had prepared green banks for it; on its edge and in its very bed I had planted those flowers which all over the world love to bloom on the banks and in the bosom of pure streams.

2. It flowed through my garden, murmuring its plaintive song; then, fragrant with my flowers, it left the garden, crossed

another meadow, and flung itself into the sea, over the precipitous sides of a cliff which it covered with foam. It was a happy stream; it had literally nothing to do beyond what I have said, to flow, to bubble, to look limpid, to murmur amid flowers and sweet per'fumes. But the world is ever jealous of the happiness of gentle indolence.

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3. One day my brother Eugene, and Savage, the clever engineer, were talking together on the banks of the stream, and to a certain degree abusing it. There," said my brother, "is a fine good-for-nothing stream for you, forsooth! winding and dawdling about, dancing in the sunsh... and revelling in the grass, instead of working and paying for the place it takes up, as an honest stream should. Could it not be made to grind coffee or pepper?"-" Or tools?" added Savage. "Or to saw boards ?" said my brother. I trembled for the stream, and broke off the conversation, complaining that they were trampling on my forgetme-not bed. Alas! it was against these two alone that I could protect the devoted streamlet.

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4. Before long there came into our neighborhood a man whom I noticed more than once hanging about the spot where the stream empties itself into the sea. The fellow, I plainly saw, was neither seeking for rhymes nor indulging in reveries upon its banks; he was not lulling thought to rest with the gentle murmur of its waters. 66 My good friend," he was saying to the stream, "there you are, idling and meandering about, singing to your heart's content, while I am working and wearing myself out. I don't see why you should not help me a bit; as yet you know nothing of the work to be done, but I will soon show you. You will soon know how to set about it. You must find it dull to stay in this way, doing nothing; it would be a change for you to make files or grind knives."

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5. Very soon' 138 wheels of all kinds were brought to the poor stream. From that day forward it has worked and turned a great wheel, which turns a little wheel, which turns a grindstone: it still sings, but no longer the same gently-monot'onous song in its peaceful melancholy. Its song is loud and angry now; it leaps and froths and works now, - it grinds knives! It still crosses the meadow, and my garden, and the next meadow; but there the man is on the watch for it, to make it work. I have done the only thing I could do for it. I have dug a new bed for it in my garden, so that it may idle longer there, and leave me a little later; but, for all that, it must go at last and grind knives. Poor stream! thou didst not sufficiently conceal thy happiness in obscurity;-thou hast murmured too audibly thy gentle music.

FROM THE FRENCH OF ALPHONSE KARR.

XLVIII. A RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW.

1. O, WHEN I was a tiny boy,

My days and nights were full of joy,
My mates were blithe and kind!
No wonder that I sometimes sigh,
And dash the tear-drop from my eye,
To cast a look behind!

2 A hoop was an eternal round
Of pleasure. In those days I found
A top a joyous thing;

But now those past delights I drop;
My head, alas! is all my top,

And careful thoughts the string!

3. My kite,131 how fast and far it flew ! Whilst I, a sort of Franklin, drew

My pleasure from the sky!

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"T was papered o'er with studious themes,The tasks I wrote, my present dreams Will never soar so high!

4. My joys are wingless all and dead;
My dumps are made of more than lead
My flights soon find a fall.

My fears prevail, my fancies droop,
Joy never cometh with a hoop,
And seldom with a call!

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