THE WEST SHORE. 63 SEATTLE HARBOR. Elliott Bay, the short arm of Puget Sound upon which the city of Seattle is situated, is a bountiful land locked harbor, and one of the best on that great inland sea. The pine-covered hills which surround it slope gently down to the water's edge, giving it a fringe of never-fading green, while looking from its entrance across the deep Sound, the snow-mantled peaks of the Olympic Range rise in pleasing contrast Large vessels lie there secure from wind and wave; while steamers reaching every port on the Sound constantly passing in and out; rafts of logs towed in by puffing tugs; vessols loading with coal and lumber; Indian proas darting in and out among the shipping, and the bustle that attends the ar rival and departure of the great ocean steamers, all com bine to enliven the scene. In her possession of such a magnificent harbor, so accessible to vessels from the ocean and so contiguous to great coal deposits, fertile valley lands and immense forests of excellent timber, Seattle has a prize, the value of which she will more fully appreciate when the railroad across the Cascades connects her with the great interior and gives her a direct route to the East Elliott Bay was named in 1792 by Captain George Vancouver, the great English navi gator, who then, for the first time, explored the bays, canals and straits of Puget Sound, and made known to the world the existence and character of that groat arm of the sea which is destined in future years to be such an important factor in the world's commerce. CANADIAN. PACIFIC SCENERY. The scenery along the route of the Canadian Pacific Bailway, especially in the Rocky and Selkirk ranges of mountains and along Eraser River, is characterized by wild and rugged grandeur. After leaving the plains of Manitoba it gradually ascends the slopes of the Rocky Mountains, crossing the summit by the Kicking Horse Pass and thence to the Rogers Pass of the Selkirks. It is through this region of rocky canyons and mountain torrents the -company has yet to build its line. After leaving the Selkirks it crosses the Columbia to Eraser River and follows down that stream nearly to the const This portion of the road is constructed eastward from the Pacifio terminus at Port Moody to a considerable distance above Yale, the only large town on the upper portion of Fraser River. . We present an engraving of the river just above the town of Yale, which, with its swift-rushing current, rocky islands, and towering cliffs, indicates the character of the scenery along the river canyon for many miles. The railroad track hugs the base of the cliffs at the very edge of the water as it follows the windings of the river, frequently darting through a short tunuol in order to pass some cliff of rocks it cannot circumvent At Spuzzum Creek the track passes along the narrow canyon on one side of the foaming torrent while the wagon road follows up the other. The route of the Canadian Pacific across the mountains is nearly that followed by the first white man who crossed the North American continent to the Pacific. In 1793 Alexander Mackenzie, a partner of the Northwest Company, left Fort Chipewyan and crossed the mountains to Eraser River, which he supposed to be the Columbia, and fol lowed it southerly for some distance, and then crossed to the Pacific. This was but one year after Gray entered the mouth of the Columbia, twelve years before Captains Lewis and Clarke followed it from the Rocky Mountains to the sea, and thirteen years before Simon Fraser proved that the stream Mackenzie saw was not that great river, und bestowed his own name upon it REVERIES OF A BACHELOR. BY A CITY OBATR. Blessed bo letters! they are the monitors, they are also tho comforters, and they are the only true heart talkers! Your speech, and thoir speeches, are conven tional; they are moulded by circumstance; they are suggested by the observation, remark and inlluence of the parties to whom the speaking is addressed or by whom it may be overheard. lour truest thought is modifiod half through its utterance by a look, a sign, a smile or a sneer. It iu not individual; it is not integral; it is social and mixod half of you and half of others. It bends, it Bways, it multi plies, it retires anil it ndvonces, as tho talk of others presses, relaxes or quiekons. But it is not so of letters. There you are, with only the Boulless pen, and the snow white, virgin papor. Your soul is measuring itHolf by itself and saying its own say. ings; there are no sneers to modify its utterance no scowl to scare; nothing is present but you and your thought. Utter it then freely; write it down; stamp it; burn it in the ink! There it is, a true Boul-printl Oh, tho glory, the freedom, the passion of a letter! It is worth all tho lip-talk in the world Do you say it is studied, made up, acted, rohoarsod, contrived, artistic? Let me see it then; let me run it over; toll mo ago, sex, circumstance, and I will tell you if it be studied or real if it bo the merest lip-slang put into Words, or heart-talk blazing on the vmwr. I have a little jmckot, not vory largo, tied lip with narrow crinmon ribbon, now Boiled with frequent hand ling, which far into some winter's night I takedown from its nook upon my shelf, and initio, and open, and run ovor, with Buch sorrow and such joy, such fours, and suoh smiles, as I am sure nuiko mo for weeks after a kindor and holier man. There are in this littlo pnvkot letters in the familiar hand of a mother. What gentle admonition; what ten der affection! God hovo morcy on him who outlives tho tears that such admonitions and such affection call up to the eye! There aro others in the budget, in the dolionte and unformod hand of a lovod and lost sister written when she and you were full of gloo and tho best mirth of youthfulness; does it harm you to recall that mirthful ueBS or to trace again, for tho hundredth time, that scrawling postscript at the bottom, with its f ho care fully dotted, and its gigantic f s ho carefully crossed, by tho childish hand of a little brother? I have added latterly to that packet of letters. I almost need a new and longer rililxui; tho old one is get ting too short Not ft few of theso new and cherished letters a former Roverio has brought to mo; not letter of cold praise, saying it wns well (lone, artfully executed, prettily imagined; no such thing; but letters of sym pathy of sympathy which means sympathy. It would bo cold and dastardly work to copy them; I nm too selfish for that It is enough to sny that they, tho kind writers, have seen a heart in the Reverie have felt that it wns real, true. Thoy know it; n secret influonce has told it What matters it pray, if literally thore wan no wife, and no dead child, and no coffin, in the house? Is not feeling, feeling, and heart, heart? Aro not these fancies thronging on my brain, bringing tears to my eyes, bringing joy to my soul, ns living as anything human can bo living? V hat if they have no material type no objective form? All that is crudo; a mero re . auction of ideality to seimo a transformation of the spiritual to the earthy n levelling of soul to matter. Are we not creatures of thought and passion? If