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From the Note-book of an Eccentric


A WEEK ago, I stood sole mourner at the grave of my friend Macarthy. He lies in a village churchyard;—not one of those peaceful green plots which seem to speak well for the influence of the bishop's blessing, in which there is some spreading chestnut or yew of age immemorial, that seems to say to the world-weary, "Come and rest under my shadow." No. The churchyard in which Macarthy lies looks not like a Gottes-acker, but a vicar's acre, the profits of which (including the grazing of half-a-dozen sheep) go to eke out the curate's yearly hundred, upon which he supports, or rather diets, the gentility of his wife and ten children. It is a thoroughfare for a materialized population, too entirely preoccupied with the needs of the living to retain an Old Mortality's affectionate care for tomb-stones and epitaphs, or to offer to the graves that terrified veneration which hurries past them after sun-set. They are in the strong grasp of giant Hunger, and fear no shadows. Not one of this plodding generation will long remember Macarthy, "the sick gentleman that lodged

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