Drcemser 10, -— THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND ee TECH 
had been raised in Fra ce dur ing th st 45 years by bl this time so increased, that 
MM. Vibert, Tatay, Har — phy Prevost, Lacharme, | cottage could accommodate aaa ere — 1 
other p rofes- | of mh a d e mine - to go viva "i th the work | 
Mar- | din gy apartment to Jet, w 
ers, 
995 
ich had been used a: 
ings o 
so 
he | growing ambitious they desired to have latur 
delivered to ther 
f 
hen, 
solv a bd g x ce 
not mere ely the power to achieve 
but the will to labour per gn and perseveringly. 
Hence energy o may M MA to be the vi ery 
entral power o 3 Pk acter n—in a word, it ìs 
the Man himself, iti pon . to his every action, 
and soul to every effort. True hope is based on a 
‘od de is s hope ES — es the sed 3 
b 
; and then it was that the sion 
tolife. Ther 
is a eraldic motto on a broken be » Battle 
‘Abbe ey, dioe p ma force," which 1 t be the 
motto of every man's life. 
des said, 
ficiently numerous to — - a rieh — of | became acquainted with their proceedings. A par rty of hearted,’ says the son of kd There is mynd ry no 
extraordin: Roses, and they inclu I AR them wai ited upon him, for t of i blessing equal b. Rvon 
Raglan, General l 8 inot, Duchess of Ni an introducto: ory pP ori ge r, as they ex- | if fail in his efforts, it will be a gr pes satisfaction 
Evéq ue de Nim s Chaix, and others of 2 pressed it, ig € alk to them a bit; » aires the to him to enjoy the co nsciousness of h ving done hi 
crimson section of iia rere, cm oe : request xA a modes statement of what t * —2 done | best. In humble Ls ignes - be more cheering and 
varieties the lectur rer eeded to subjec and wha kg A re doing. He could SA 1 to be} beautiful than ombeting EU by 
ult i ‘of the t touched by the te "à helping spirit whie they } patience, 0 e in VR integrity, w nh when 
on loam, sand, clay, chalk, and peat, with hinte on pon had displayed ; and, thoug h entertaining but slight} his feet are bleeding and his limbs fail 
selection of 125 that a e rds of | w: alks x apo his ome A 
well n improvi — of unsuitable soils. He then encouragement, honestly and wm e tered, mig! * Meri e wishes and desires but -—' a sort of 
trea of th An is 8 pirit he > 
2 ^ onn ‘modes ‘of W the cpi | addressed them on more than on one "occasion, citing | Eoabodied in act and deed. The e good "pu rpose once 
gets Ge e ng other stoc cks. what — men h e, f d must be — out with alacrity, and without 
method of striking f what each might, er or les e, do for swerving. In many walks of life drudgery s and toil 
ofa rape buds | hi ; and latins out that their happiness and ‘aust be eee 1 s the necessary discipline 
et to be taken ab the unie season — in — same | well-being as individuals in after life must Mr ily | of life Hugh Miller says the only school in which he 
ner as for budding on the Briar, — is — half| depend mainly upon themselves— Tun ro was ——— taught was ‘that world-wide eet in 
ee wood, [Pa bu "e x whi h. ^" d not started. The} gent self-culture, self-disciplin and, which toil and hardship are the severe but noble 
leaf was not to b oved ; was the — to be above all, on that honest and N He who allows his application. to. falter, or or 
taken mt ot the shield, 1 but acy y bud with its attached | of individual duty, which is the glory of manly 
wood, bark, and leaf, was to be planted in pure sand character. to o Vltinafe failure. Let any task de poete as a 
vdeo a “iti peat under it for the first roots to work 
b In this way 
mate en uld be multiplied rapidly. The Rector 
of Hornsey Mech, a vote of thanks, which was 
carried by acclamation. 
Roya Hortic F IRE — The first 
public winter Exhibition o of this Society took place on 
da, 
the 
November if : advisable.” 
t of "E DN hemums was h 
iety is Resa *to hold an Tshitition in 
eae a awe» 
eld at the 
but Dublin as RER so Ae an 
improvement in à ihe culture of this beautiful flower has 
taken place that it was thought u — 5 air ha orm] s 
ablic from sharing the t treat of seein 
g ge nerally, a more pact exibition oi 
ien themums could not have be -— essed; but 
we cannot omit to particularise tho dares 
gardens of the Vice- Regal vue M: ae 
A i 
M 
e. «foa 
at the 
Smith, and 
E latter 
6 inches | 
firs 
ere quite a s NA do 
in diameter Acs p an entire shee 
prize was gen Chief s 
theargeiow 
sedkindeHernione er Versailles 
Nelegan obtained | a 
sam £ for 2 but many pee id 
f praise e splendi 
sionally in leis 
hours vd business, the "fésdits of such reading, obser 
ived t 
ited d 
was nothing in ig g 
h E 1 " 
ty and cheerfalness. 
original in this ve which Proverb 
of Solomon, and possibly: qui 
— wend "though the py may tare — it was 
—— 
The habit 
11 tively 
easy in time, Tike every other habit. Thus even men 
d uths 
Mere ergy and resolution; and, reaching 
nhood, they vit nt or ed in various directions into the 
won where —— Ay em now occupy positions of | F 
t and usefulnes 
= “Phe der perio nterest having 
— from which he had | 
note down occa 
an 
mal i this way | inj 
been attracted to ie: 9 — of Self- Hep, he was ac- 
will accomplish much, if they will m ines 
i2 enol d fatig ably to one thin tim 
well Buxton placed his c But 
ette iier application; realising the scriptural 
injunction, * «T, ver thy h: ndeth todo, doit with 
all thy might ;’ f attri his 
and ri 
remarkable success in life to his practice of cons! 
aown occa. 
meh 
evi suiting moments, after the 
z “Nothing that i is of real worth e can 
vation, experience of life, as he conce 0 bear 
b os 
ret 
sult is the work before 
ves his ie th b chiefly 
n ow 
| to at active striving ‘of hw E 1.7 Med A 
and it 
Mr 
Bic. n the necessity of self- “help, or as some would 
call it walt nr relia ance; he then describes some of the most | 
ROW 
| made pos ossible, An intense anticipation irer trans- 
ee 
posee pene of — À . inventors or 
producers, ong who 
Hargreaves, pe on, Bo P 
the text of his third chapter is Geni 
subject h A sixth 
YR with the rewards shape 
of ad eee oe 
fine e specime ens o f Anni, Pears rs The cut flowers 
were not so abundan! m other occasions, I 
ore; 
us is patience, a sible, chie 
a young 
France." 
forms possibility into reality ; bea d 
often but precursors of peat w 
apable of performing. On the contrary, 
he timid and 8 vt y impos- 
"Trench ofca, that. he a | 
French 
the 
meter rag ere ; for he d 
uished commander, ee end ho Bd x M r 
< 
Hi 
Ba 
and some few seemed disappoin 
those who went fo see * flowers the exhibition was 
A. M. 
all that Tg 
Y 
Sm 
but to| 
Notices of Books. 
by at "^ Illustrations of Character and Con- 
m. Smiles. 12mo. Murray. Pp. 343. 
Mr. Smi iles showed 
her, 
In the volume or 
he "T sain, e the same Mud of t The 
5 of th e work is so we ell! told by the defin, that we 
give it in 
“ Some 15 years since, the author was requested to 
deliver an address before the — of some evening 
classes, which had been formed in a northern town for 
satu improvement, under the. following circa 
_ “Two c or three nae men of the humblest rank 
t same sturd 
re us vid a hamm 
iant consequences ak thd Blow, ved it. Every one who is interested in education p 
Finally he pages close with an g of this b 
We are sure that every reader will peruse Mr. relin f Jer carrying into Effect the Act 22 and 
iles's t fate v s with the sam rf oni est as ourselves. z^ 23 Vict. * the Establi. ofa Reserve of 
iade unexceptionable ; his ject of the deepest co Royal Naval Volunteers, Eyre and Spottiswoode. 
2 10 all; 2 = illustrations. and examples — | — 
h singular fe h Not withstanding am crowded | In a pamph ges G in 
— t find room for an extract great detail every the — n for 
chapter on energy and co — v wii ch we ring at all times and under any cireumstances an 
tik uin fully j justify the opinion just 555 — supply of s for — The 
There is a ost parts ikry 
thoroughly characteristic of t eu 
believe neither in idols nor demons,’ said. he, * 
sole trust in my own strength of body and soul,’ 
ancient crest of a pickaxe with eod 2 of S I 
will find a "n or oa 5 - ression of the 
indepe ^i Tree materialism, 
Pos e diis y ngs the descendants of the 
pgs . Indeed no could be more ‘characteristic 
. In the exclusion of soldiers, lit, and const — 
y 
e | he remain ve. 
| every six months, and mu not — in voyages likely 
h an annua! 
he p een mythology 
Am is character i isseen in 
a test as th 
matters ; 
in which a 
me measure e inferre 
hit off in a single phrase 
the inhabitants of a particular z district, in w * a Tes 
w his : 23 ttle and b Ar nk 
an wields a h tes 
TEY aj i 
ed. Thus nt F rench man 
0 
e, of maki 
e must go throug 
ime — in passing to and 
e reckoned as of the 
di to 
|ti 
| w 
ae — 
TON e the 
bes en school at 
you 
capital you 
may inves 
e fine and just Sprit oe of — sing the | 
| 
in case of a sud 
accurate and thoughtful observer; end eE nagy use 
ar of the same 1 
d to the 
garden ou — ; Y the 
classes Were then held in 
e open air, round a little 
. and confers a value 
which they cultivate. As — 
„Tant vaut l'homme, tant v. 
en that gives strength to 
evi upon the very soil 
French proverb has it : 
octets —— wt sums, and gave forth the 
the weather was fine, 
£4 tnit $ 
Coast Guard Servi 
" . Ges nebecar th 
— bo 
resolu 
worthy r objecte being the foundation of all true 
Ene 
When 
the lh E doni, until a late hour, panging 
round the he door of the hut like a clus uster of bees 
PE a TR 
fom their slates, and disperse them for the evening 
us inter, with its cold nights, was drawing near, a 
pu what were they to do for —— — add 
and | disappoii 
| enient that is 
tion in the “pursuit of 
e great- 
ree 
and | kn 
service the m 
trust vr ie bes read MA rem —— 
own t most of their 
The Lo ow of the Past : the Rifle for * Future 
isa ante pen from the Cambridge Chronicle 
125 published at its office. The writer strongly advo- 
