March, 1880. 74 THE WEST SHORE. BE HAPP AS YOU CAN. Thin life If not all Bunshine, Nor l It yet til showers, But Btorma end calms alternate, Aa thorna among the flowera; And while weaeek the roeea, The thorna full oft wu ecau, Htlll let ua, thouirh they wound ua, lie happy aa we can. 1 run life haa heavy croaeee Aa well aa Joye to ahare, And griefe and dlaappointmenta Which you and I timet hear; Yea, If ntiafortune'e lava Kutomha hoie'a doaroal plan, Let ua, with what la left ua, lie happy aa wo can. The aum of our enjoimoiit la nuulo of 1 11 m thlnira, And oft the hroaileat riven Are fonhed from amalltiet apringa; Tly trcaaurlug up amall waters, Tho rlvera reach their aiiaua, Bo we ittcreaae our ploaeuree. Kujnylng all we can. There may ho burning doeerta Through which our hearta miut go, But there are groeu oaaea, Where iilceaaiit lm trcea irrow. And If we may not follow Tho jialha our hearta would plan, Let ua make all around ua Aa happy aa we can. Perchance we may not climb with Ambition, to Ita goal, Hi ill, let ua auawer "Preaont," When duty calla the roll. And whal'er our apitolntment, Hi nothing leea than man, Ami cheerful in aubmiaalon, lie happy aa we can. THK ESTHETICS OK LABOR. Labor ia not all drudgery. Some of its phases are of the moat elevated character. Some of its conceptions rile above the lower grade of sturdy toil iuto the realma of sublimity. Some of its production attain tho moat exiuiaite perfection, It doea not alwaya cling to the absolute of neoes altyi it reachea at timea to the aecompliahment of man'a beatitude. It ia not alwaya a delver; it aaaumea when roquiaito the embodiment of tho highott portraiture of excellence. It viaita the toller in dreami of marvoloua felicity and presents to linn visions of i-iichaiitiiiu loveliness. It beara him from the harah discipline of oarth to the aoothiug freedom of celestial liberty. Under ita leathetic iurliienoe he ia no longer a being of lloah and blood; ho ia tranaformod to an angel of light, and leaving hit toil strained muscles and thoughta upon earth ho aoara into the realms in ecstatic nnaa anil naruiiiiiiuua re- poao. In momenta like thia the materiali.a tiun of hia wildeat droaina givoa to hia follow men tuch daasling glrama of auiernal bliaa, or auoh proofs of beiiolioial utility, ai thoy had never before experienced, and npunt to them a wide expanae wherein la ever to bo fouuil i aolaoe for the harah fatigue of atrenuoua toil In proof of thia, tho delineationa upon tho can vaa of the idoaliatiu actitinienta of the world' moat renowned painters; or tho creation from tho quarry's rough block of the entrancing lorma of boauty by tho hamla of aoulptora o: ronnwni or tho aoulstirnug thoughta of th poet's moat barmonioiit enug; or the swaying in fluenoe of the orator'a exciting and well bal aaoed worda; or the almoet vital machinery which the inventor haa commanded into ox- latonoe aa the alava to perform taaka of utility for mankind) each and all, and even more than have been mentioned, can be cited without ap prehoneion of rebuttal. In the lone oabin of the solitary laborer where only dreoiation anil privation are evinced, than hanga upon the rough and emoke-dimmed wall the artiat't little aketch of a aunny land- aoaiie, in which tho thadnwa of llowera and foliage fall lightly upon the bosom of the un rippled atream. Aa he looka upon tho picture hia aombsr home seems lighted by gleams from the view balore him, ami waltetl by niemorv baok to by -gone hours, hit soul rejoiooa awhile ia the glad presence of loved ones never to be forgotten. Iu the scantily apportioned home of the daily toiler there reats upon a little shelf a plaster copy of tome form of loveliness, which erst the sculptor's hand had wrought from inanimate marble. In the contemplation of this portrayal of beauty, he forgets his own rough life and this delineation of attractiveness holds him awhile entranced. Upon the soiled table of tho over-worked man lb.. tic. tho poot's volume with ita ennnblinif and soothing lines of sympathetic thought. In the rnyminic worua aim uwavwai " ho finds repose from his weariness and a balm for his sorrows and his griefs. With his day s task pcrtormed ana lingering on his homeward way, the artisan finds his very being stirred to its inmost depths and lifted out of this sphere of muscular exertion, as he listens to tho eloquence of the orator whone sentences fall upon his ear. In the din of tho factory there ever rues a pean to the honor of labor in the hum of the tireless anil faithfully-working machine. Wher ever the son of toil or even the slave of idleness may chanoe to be, there are to be found irrefuta ble proofa of the (esthetics of labor, for the producers of all these harmonious results have Man and arc diligent workers. What other of luman efforts save those of labor could pro duco these wondrous effects; could awaken sen sations of such pure unalloyed delight, or arouse the better moods of soul life, that under the harsh pressure of the vicissitudes of existence were suppressed and forced into apathetic luietude? In tho wido field of labor there are those whoso destiny is to delve and struggle, while others of their fellow workmen find their allot ted taaka iu the higher piano of icsthetio produc tions, whose harmony and elegance are intended to soothe, elevate and adorn their seemingly less gifted brethren. There iB a grandeur iu labor which elevates it at timea to the higher grade of true icsthoticism, Minintj and Scien tific l'rcas. Lahikh Wkaiiyinu ok Monoiikams. The whirligig of fashion is bringing round an old- hionod decoration, which has its merits. .adies aro wearying of monograniB, and are adopting emblems and mottoes. Tho 14th and early Kith centuries were the time when mottoes and fanciful emblems flourished most abundant ly. Ilosiilea his hereditary bearingB, every knight had some emblems of fantasy, and everv any her symbol which might bo changeil at pleasure. When theso were embroidered on dresses the effect was quaint and variegated, ami gave each costumo a kind of nrigiualitv 1 ariaians havo re-diHcovered this, and birds, ami mottoes aro embroidered all over drosses. A woll-graced (and well-puffed) actress who is the reverso of stout in figure, appeared lately with tho device 01 ravens on her array. Her rival, who ia not abut, observed that " where the skoleton is, tho ravens are gathered together." BWMiowi are more common than the somber bird of tho Danish hannorpcrhapa to indicate that the wearer mtonda " living, living south' Hold awallowa aro worn on a blue satin ground. inougn a naturalist might prefer to reverae colore. lAdiee ol taahion. if the fashion nro mils, will soon look aa nuaitit aa did JacuueTino do la( 1 range in her costumo embroidered with pink eagles and black ducks, or Anne of Boll una, with the crowned ostrich. JUDGING WOMEN BY THEIR DRESS. Mrs. Harbert has in the Inter-Ocean a stirring protest against the modern style of " society journalism," which measures ita heroines wholly by the styles of their costumes. We quote : In the name of womanhood, we protest, and ttin onlro of Imnnoiin oirlhnnd wo hnr V - 1UI WIC pw """" a1 17 6 1 v jb "w editors of our representative journals to put a premium upon something in the world beside dry goods. Not much of a compliment to a beauty when the " Boul-full eyes " even are surpassed by " a faultlessly artistic toilet of black satin, embroi dered in rosebuds and pansies and sprays of filmy green, and a white opera hat, whose hints of color matched the flowers, and evening gloveB completed a toilet whose beauty attracted one like some rare picture." So long as women are content to be judged only by the amount of expensive dry goods they wear, so long will they receive such criticism as the following, which appears in a recent popular book : " For is it not, let me ask you to take, for instance, a man's sublime faculty of reason ing and lonical comprehension far more wonder ful that a reasoning man should have the same parents as a woman, than that they should both have the same parents aa a monkey ?" And just so long aa our women make no protest against thus being described and valued as so much lace or so many yards of velvet, will thinking men , . ,V , i r . 1 1 I i T t dare to address mum in uie ioiiowiug su.uu, i quote from a recent publication : "In girl, however pretty, wnai is mere to interest a man, if he reads nothing in her face from night to night but that she is getting daily more worn aud jaded in the search for a rich husband? Or even, to go a step higher, in the unthinking, uncultivated flirt, so common in every class of society what is there in her that a man will not soon discover to be insipid and wearying 7 But give her one genuine, one disinterested taste, and all iB changed. Try to win for your selves one taste of a truer and deeper sort. Study Wordsworth and some parts of Shelley; open out your sympathies, by their aid, in just one direction. Learn to love the sea and the woods and the wild flowers, with all their infinite changes of scent and color and sound, the purple moor, the mountain stream, the roll ing mists, the wild smell of the heather. Let these things grow to 'haunt you like a passion,' and then, by and by, go and look in the looking-glass, and study your own face. Hasn t some new look, child, come into your eyes and given them expression, a something thoy wanted before 7 Aye, more and moro, dear girl friends, to-day intoxicated, enervated by the strange passion for dreas, begin to study humanity; determine to do some ono thing toward making life brighter A . . , Tt II 1L! ,1 ior inner people, n it is notning more man amusing a little, restless, disappointed child, and get in the habit of sometimes studying the old gold aud crimson, the lovely rose and TllK MrrRlc Systkm. It mav not lie cener ally known that wo have, in tho niekol fivo cent piece of our coinage, a key to tho tables of linear meaaurea and of weights, Tho diameter of thia coin ia two ctntimettrn, and ita weiuht ia live yrumriwa. rive 01 mem placed in a row will, ol oourae, give the length of tho decimett and two ol them will weigh a iltcayrammt. Aa tho tihtitrr ia a culile mtter, tho key to the measure of length ia also the key to measures of capacity. Any person, tnereloro, who is fortu eaewwaw i' wn a nvo-ccni nickle, may carry in hia pocket the entire metric system of nuigtiia nun uicajuica. dreamy blue, or the pearl-tinted gray of God s sunset clouds; lift your eyes just above the shop windows, and honor the young woman whose conversation ia filled with pearls of thought and rubies ot wit and diamonda of sugggeation, and then shall you have filed ono claim to a place in tho record ot America s true women. We have just tossed aside a recent number of one of the most influential journals of the East, twelve pages of which are tilled with what pur ports to be a record of " American society, past and preaont." Ixing lists of names are given of women in JNew ork, Philadelphia, Washing ton, Cincinnati and Louiaville, who are to be handed down to posterity aa famous for what ? For their helpfulness to the age in which they lived ? For patriotic endeavor f For earn eat work for the future t For an unselfish hoapitality 7 For having developed and con secrated to friends their beat gifts of songs or conversation ? No I but for the quality of the dry goods they wore.