Page:Scribner's Monthly, Volume 12 (May–October 1876).djvu/52

46 Raynor, and with an appearance of the greatest conscientiousness, to correct an error of two feet in the measurements he had given him that morning of an enormous pine tree, in whose prostrate trunk he, Mr. Hamlin, had once found a peaceful, happy tribe of one hundred Indians living. Then lifting his hat with marked politeness to Mrs. Raynor, and totally ignoring the presence of Mr. Raynor's mentor and companion, he leaped lightly into the buggy and drove away. "An entertaining fellow," said Mr. Raynor, glancing after the cloud of dust that flew from the untarrying wheels of Mr. Hamlin's chariot. "And so gentlemanly," smiled Mrs. Raynor. But the journalistic conservator of the public morals of California, in and for the city and county of San Francisco, looked grave, and deprecated even that feeble praise of the departed. "His class are a curse to the country. They hold the law in contempt; they retard by the example of their extravagance the virtues of economy and thrift; they are consumers and not producers; they bring the fair fame of this land into question by those who foolishly take them for a type of the people." "But, dear me," said Mrs. Raynor, pouting, "where your gamblers and bad men are so fascinating, and your honest miners are so dreadfully murderous, and kill people and then sit down to breakfast with you as if nothing had happened, what are you going to do?" The journalist did not immediately reply. In the course of some eloquent remarks, as unexceptionable in morality as in diction, which I regret I have not space to reproduce here, he, however, intimated that there was still an Unfettered Press, which "scintillated" and "shone" and "lashed" and "stung" and "exposed" and "tore away the veil," and became at various times a Palladium and a Watch-tower, and did and was a great many other remarkable things peculiar to an Unfettered Press in a pioneer community, when untrammeled by the enervating conditions of an effete civilization. "And what have they done with the murderer?" asked Mr. Raynor, repressing a slight yawn. "Taken him back to One Horse Gulch half an hour ago. I reckon he'd as lief stayed here," said a bystander. "From the way things are pintin', it looks as if it might be putty lively for him up thar!" "What do you mean?" asked Raynor, curiously. "Well, two or three of them old Vigilantes from Angel's passed yer a minit ago with their rifles, goin' up that way," returned the man, lazily. "Mayn't be nothin' in it, but it looks mighty like—"

"Like what" asked Mr. Raynor, a little nervously. "Lynchin'!" said the man. (To be continued.)

"IF LOVE AND LIFE WERE ONE." MUCH have I mused, if love and life were one, How blest were love! how beautiful were life! That now, so oft, are alien, or at strife; Though each, in bitter wise, makes secret moan Of lamentation knowing well its own ; Each seeking each, yet evermore apart; Here saddest of the twain the loving heart, And there the loveless life. Ah ! thus alone, Existence, .empty of its chief delight, Creeps dully onward to the weary close ; And like some plant shut up in rayless night Love pales and pines, that, in Life's Summer sun Had bloomed and flourished like the garden rose. Would God, I sigh, that love and life were one!