cost strips of Spanish cane. The Camarínes, North and South, are the home of the Bicol Indians, supposed to be aborigines of blue blood, while most of the natives are believed to be of Malay of cigar-cases of exquisite workmanship. origin. Rice is the principal product of the They are not made of straw, but of the fine Bicols, and the agricultural implements used of pandanus leaves. by them in tilling their fields are curious and place of the weaving beam, hooks on a primitive. Every family has its own house, wooden bow, in the arch of which the back but as five dollars will build a little bam- of the lath is fitted. Placing her feet boo hut, housekeeping need not be long de- against two pegs in the ground, and bendlayed on that account. Notwithstanding ing her back, she, by means of the bow, the cheapness of construction, the whole stretches the material out straight. A netfamily is crowded into the single room with ting-needle, longer than the breadth of the the passing stranger, thus destroying all web, serves instead of the weaver's shuttle, privacy and decency. Strange to say, the but it can be pushed through only by conyoung girls are particularly cleanly, bathe siderable friction, and not always without often, cleanse their teeth with brushes made breaking the chains of thread. A lath of of the areca-tree, and hide their blushes with hard wood, sharpened like a knife, repreveils of the same material. The poorer peo-sents the trestle, and after every stroke it ple have no other cooking utensils except is placed upon the edge; after which the an earthen pot, while those better off in- comb is pushed forward, a thread put dulge in a few cast-iron pans and dishes. through and struck fast, and so forth. The The ladies' toilet is exceedingly simple. A woman wears a shift of abaca fibre, a gown reaching from the hips to the ankles, a cloth, and a comb. The women seldom marry before attaining the fourteenth year. The Ysarog Mountain rises up in the middle of the Camarínes, and its higher slopes form the dwelling-place of the small body of primitive people called Ygorrotes, who have never been conquered by the Spaniards. These mountain people are simple enough in their industries. Their loom is of the simplest kind. Mr. Jagor saw a woman operating one. The upper end, the chain beam, which consists of a piece of bamboo, is fixed to two bars or posts, and the weaver sits on the ground, and to the two notched ends of a small lath, which supplies the web consisted of threads of the abaca, which were not spun, but tied one to another. The culture of tobacco in the islands has been much hampered by the government monopoly. The Manila cigars, although of fine quality, are hardly as highly esteemed as they used to be. Sugar, hemp, and palmoil are also raised and exported. Large numbers of Chinese have settled in the Philippines, and there, as in California, they are a hard-working and saving race. But the Spanish are very jealous of their success, and, following the "heroic" style of prescription, have undertaken to remedy the matter by massacres. Not less than 35,000 of the children of the Flowery Kingdom are said to have been killed at one time. "AND YOU ARE SITTING, AS OF OLD, BESIDE MY HEARTH-STONE, HEAVENLY MAID!" THE leafless branches snap with cold; The night is still, the winds are laid; And you are sitting, as of old, Beside my hearth-stone, heavenly maid! And brought me gifts of smiles and tears "The blackest cloud that ever lowers," Dear Muse, 'tis twenty years or more Your reticule stuffed full of rhyme. What strange things have befallen, indeed, We've seen pretense with cross and crown, Merit content to pass unknown, And honor scorning public spoils- And once we saw-ah, day of woe!- The blue and gray frocks laid a-row, To shine in splendor evermore. The fiery flood swept hill and plain, Rang slavery's falling chain. With pilgrim staff and sandal-shoon, One time we sought the Old-World shrines : Saw Venice lying in the moon, The Jungfrau and the Apennines; Beheld the Tiber rolling dark, Rent temples, fanes, and gods austere; In English meadows heard the lark That charmed her Shakspeare's ear. What dreams and visions we have had, What tempests we have weathered through! Been rich and poor, and gay and sad, A draught of water from the brook, Children of shade and sun. Though lacking gold, we never stooped Though lacking praise we sometimes drooped, We never asked a soul for praise. The exquisite reward of song Was song-the self-same thrill and glow Which to unfolding flowers belong, And wrens and thrushes know! I tried you once-the day I wed: VOL. LIV.-No. 319.-6 W But you relented, smiled, at last Returned, and, with your tears half dried, "Ah well, she can not take the Past, Though she have all beside!" What gilt-winged hopes have taken flight, Beneath the snows and flowers! We would not wish them back again; For them the endless rest from care, CHAPTER XIII. A WOMAN-HATER. took a large sphere. Of late the AngloSaxon has gone in for civilization with his usual energy, and is eclipsing Italy; therefore his women aspire to larger spheres of intellect and action, beginning in the States, because American women are better educated than English. The advance of women in useful attainments is the most infallible sign in any country of advancing civilization. All this about civilization is my observation, Șir, and not the lawyer's. Now for the lawyer again.-Such being the law of England, the British legislature passed an Act in 1858, the real object of which was tors, not against capable doctresses or doctors. The Act excludes from medical practice all persons whatever, male or female, unless registered in a certain register; and to get upon that register, the person, male or female, must produce a license or diploma, granted by one of the British examining boards specified in a schedule attached to the Act. HEN I reached Great Britain, the right of women to Medicine was in this condition-a learned lawyer explained it carefully to me; I will give you his words. -The unwritten law of every nation admits all mankind, and not the male half only, to the study and practice of medicine and the sale of drugs. In Great Britain this law is called the common law, and is deeply respected. Whatever liberty it allows to men or women is held sacred in our courts, until directly and explicitly withdrawn by some act of the legislature. Under this ancient lib-to protect the public against incapable docerty women have occasionally practiced general medicine and surgery up to the year 1858. But, for centuries, they monopolized, by custom, one branch of practice, the obstetric, and that, together with the occasional treatment of children, and the nursing of both sexes, which is semi-medical, and is their monopoly, seems, on the whole, to have contented them, till late years, when their views were enlarged by wider "Now these examining boards were all education and other causes. But their ab- members of the leading medical schools. If stinence from general practice, like their the legislature had taken the usual precaumonopoly of obstetrics, lay with women tion, and had added a clause compelling those themselves, and not with the law of En-boards to examine worthy applicants, the gland. That law is the same in this respect as the common law of Italy and France; and the constitution of Bologna, where so many doctresses have filled the chairs of medicine and other sciences, makes no more direct provision for female students than does the constitution of any Scotch or En-able trades - union to thrust them out of glish university. The whole thing lay with the women themselves, and with local civilization. Years ago Italy was far more civilized than England; so Italian women Act would have been a sound public measure; but for want of that foresight-and without foresight a lawgiver is an impostor and a public pest-the state robbed women of their old common-law rights with one hand, and with the other enabled a respect their new statutory rights. Unfortunately, the respectable union, to whom the legislature delegated an unconstitutional power they did not claim themselves, of excluding |