THE COURIER. 11 BLONDEL. Within my heart I long have kept A little chamber cleanly swept, Embroidered with a fleur-de-lis, And lintel boughs of redwood-tree; A bed, a book, a crucifix, Two little copper candlesticks With tapers ready for the match The moment I his footfall catch, That when in thought he comes to me He straightway at his ease may be, This guest I love so to allure Blondel, King Richard's troubadour! He often comes, but sings no more tHe says his singing days are o'er!); Still, sweet of tongue and filled with tales Of knights and ladies, bowers and vales, 1 1 c caps our frugal meal with talk Of langue d'oil and langue d'oc, Of Picardy and Aquitaine, Blanche of Castile and Charlemagne, Of menestrel, trouvere, conteur, Mime, histrion, and old harpeur Small wonder that I love him well, King Richard's troubadour, Blondel! Still, as he comes at candle-light And goes before the east is bright, I have no heart to beg him keep Late hour with me when wooed by sleep; But one request I ever make, And ever No for answer take: He will not make the secret mine, What song he sang at Durrenstein! Sleep, troubadour! Enough that thou With that sweet lay didst keep thy vow And link thy name by deathless art With Richard of the Lion Heart! -Clarence Urmy, in September Century. THE WAY OF A SHIP, Prank T. Bullen, author of" The Cruifo of tho Cuchalot,'' etc., tells the roadera of tho Septembor Century of tho "wuyB11 of certain ships ho haB sailed on as mate or foromnsthand. His introduction rune thus: Solomon had, among tho many mighty qualities of mind which bave secured hia high f mint nee ns tho wisest man of tho world, u q attributo which does not always accompany nbundant knowledge, llo whb prompt to udmit his limitations up far as no Know them, frankly nou fully. And among thotn ho confesses to an inability to understand "the way of a ship in tho midst of a soa." It may bo urged that thoro whb littlo to wonder at in this, since tho extaouciea of his position must have precluded his gain ing more than the slightest actual ex- soriencn of seafaring. YetitiB marvel- )iis that he should have mentioned this thing, seemingly simple to a abore- 1 .veil or. which is to all mariners a nystory past finding out. 'No matter iow long a sailor may havo sailed the Boas in ono ship, or how deeply ho may uivo studied the ways of that ship (under all combinations of wind and sou, ie will never bo found to assert thought fully that bo ktowB her altogether. Much more, then, are the myriad idio lynoraBies of all ships unknowable. Kipling has dono more, perhaps, than ny other living writer to point out io.v certain fabrics of man's construc tion bocome invosted with iddividuality )t an unmistakable kind, and of course lo acute an observer could not fail to lotieo how preeminently is this tho Base withehipB. Now, in what follows I seok, as best I iay, to Bhow, by a niggardly handful M instances in my own experience, how he ' personality" of BhipB expresses it olf, and how incomprehensible these lanifoBtations. aro to tho man whose Jsineas it is to Btudy thorn. Even be- iro tho ship has quitted tho place of for birth, yea, while sho is yet a-build- ig, something of this may bo noted, no man will Btudy doopest mathemat al problems, will narfnntlv nnnlv hin rmula, and seo them Hcnnriitnlv em. lied in etoel or timber, bj that by all dinary laws of cause and effoct tho resultant vossol should be a marvol of spocd, stability, and strength. And yet alio is a failure Sho haB all tho vices that tho sailor knows and dreads: crank, slow, loowardly, hnoging in stays, im possible to Bteor satisfactorily. Every man who ovor sails in her carries in hin tonaclous sea-momory, to tho day of his death, vengeful recollections of hor porvorsitiop, and often in tho dog-watch holds foith to his ship matcB in oloquont denunciation of her manifold iniquities long uftr ouo would havo thought her vory namo would bo forgotten. Anothor shipbuilder, innocont of a scintilla of mathomatics, impatient of diugrams, will begin apparently without prepara tion, adding timbor to timbor, and breast-hook to Btom, until out of tho dumb cavern of his mind a ship is ovolvod, his inoxprcesiblo idea mani fested in graceful yet maBsivo ehapo. And that ship will bo all that tho other is not. As if tho spirit of hor builder had somehow been wrought into hor frame, sho behaves with intelligence, and becomes tho delight, tho pride, of thoeo fortunato enough to Brtil in her. LITERATURE. A maid who is cursed with hysterics, A youth that lioforo hor doth grovel, With somo chaporones, servants and preachers, MaUo up tho now popular novel. Tho Poru6er, LANGUAGE OF THE FLAGS. Whiit Tliry Aro KuppoHi'd tn Itonn-fiont In Dentil or Mfc. To "strike the flag" Is to lower the na tional colo'rs In token of submission, says the School Journal. Flags are used ns the symbol of rank anil command, the officers using them being called flag ofllcers. Such flags are square, to dis tinguish them from other banners. A "flag of truce" Is a white flag displayed to an enemy to Indicate a desire for a parley or consultation. The white flat? Is the sign of peace. After a battle par ties from both sides often go out to the field to rescue the wounded or bury the deau, under the protection of a white flag. The red flag Is a sign of defiance, and Is often used by revolutionists. In our service It Is a mark of danger, and shows a vessel to ho receiving or discharging her powder. The black flag Is the sign of piracy. The yellow flag shows a vessel to be at quar antine, and is the sign of contagious dis ease. A flag at half-mast moans mourn ing. Fishing and other vessels return with a flag at half-mast to announce the loss or death of some of the men. Dip ping a flag Is lowering it slightly and then hoisting It again, to salute a vessel or fort. If the President of tho United States goes afloat, tho American flag Is carried In the bows of his barge or hoist ed at the main of the vessel on board of which he Is. !tft "Yh 'Hft EBtSRaM( '' Uwl?T.i wi Hxrfv4WaYWY3lBjfllll'HJ4Bnl. 31t x2sjS,i ' 5 v,11 i 'LBKKKKHB&frrjm -$ijiiiMi A- "' r HARPER'S PERIODICALS Magazine, - $4.00, with Courier, Weekly, - - 4 00, with Courier, Bazar, - - 4.00, with Courier, Literature, - 4.00, with Courier, Round Table, 1.00, with Courier, :B OTHER PERIODICALS SAME CLUBBING RA1E - $4.00 - - 4.00 4.00 - - 4.00 1.00 fA w V & V "Won In Itei;!i!iir Order. The report of Nasrullah Khan's im pression that, as the first race he saw at Epsom was won by the prince of Walea, while on the second the premier was trl umphnnt. they arrange rr.atters In this way on the turf :n this country seems to be borrowed from what actually took place at the races near the monastery In tho Crimea during tho war there. A purse was given by tho executive to be run for by a horse, the property of our French allied. Some fifteen started and finished In strict accordance with their army rank the race being won by tho general, the colonel being second and the major third, but the subalterns no where! London World. Whh Uoiittlni; High. Art Moneypenny, a prisoner In the ifarilsvllle, W. Va., Jail, became sud denly ill tho other night and while the guards were removing him to tho sick room, Leo Samples, awaiting trial for forgery, escaped. As soon as he was missed a posso started In search of him and tho country wns scoured by them, hut tho search was given up. On their way back next morning, Sam ples was espied perched upon the top most limb of a large beech tree. He was ordered down, manacled and taken back to Jail. sv V :v . 0 g$ 4$ Ms oM$ Ms Ms Ms Ms Ms Ms Ms Ms, $ f ff "rr ' -l -rV & 'r -6r tt 6 V '"Z fF W - -s' " THE i Western Club Woman if 4 if if i A magazine devoted to interests i of clubs and I I The Courier For ONE DObbAR and SEVENTY-FIVE cents a year. pjWWWWWWWWWWWWWWJ 4lV "A A'f t A't f JV t A- Deiitlntry In .'MoiiIiiiiii. An actor is In deep trouble in Mis soula, Mont. For work performed by a local dentist ho agreed to give n horse. As the horse was not forth coming, the dentist decoyed the actoi to his office and, while pretending to examine his teeth, jerked out the full Bet and pocketed It. The actor Is now forced to feed himself with soft fodder, with the aid of a spoon. Nebraska State Journal. Deer limit tv; In Aliilnc. There will be good deer hunting In Maine this year. In ninny districts re cently numoeis of the nnlmals have been seen on farms and in fields very close to settlements and villages, which the hunters take to indicate a great plenty of tho game In the woods. A trinity there seems of principles, Which represent and rule created life The love of self, our fellows, and our God. Bailey. X. ' ,..r A 4tiuv2 ( -4-V t A " . ,L.j.jixL tii,'&U.. -.akWaitil.iW&ril Amft t& r,'iT,iit'.iTitfr'ftiflf'.iiir iif-''- t'-'tKdwiiALil. j' .--o;-