FROM A NEW ENGLAND HILLSIDE. log 



parts of the &quot;Amours de Voyage,&quot; and 

 &quot;Dipsychus.&quot; There is a resonance, a lilt 

 in his language, as in the accumulation of 

 Scotch names in 



Wherefore in Badenoch then, far away, in 



Lochaber, Lochiel, in 

 Knoydart, Moydart, Morrer, Ardgower, and 



Ardnamurchan, 



but there is more than the resonance and 

 the lilting. And as the scribe reads the 

 familiar words, again the mountain fades 

 away, and he is a boy once more, reading 

 aloud on a long carriage journey &quot;The 

 Bothie of Toper-na-Fuosich,&quot; as it was first 

 called, his heart even then filled and swell 

 ing with its music, and its suggestions of 

 another and far different world, and a life 

 covered with the glamour of romance. 



MAY 17, 1891. 



