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the first two are colorless, the peroxide of the latter is a light brown, and imparts to white goods a buff or nankeen color, which in many cases affects, to a considerable extent, the color of the cloth, a circumstance which must also be attended to by the dy er. Indeed, the principal part of all dyeing operations is the proper choice and application of mordants, there being a chemical union between them and the coloring matter; a new substance is formed, not only differing in properties but differing in color from any of the originals; consequent ly, a very little alteration in the strength or quality of a mordant gives a decided alteration in the shade of color. However, it gives the dyer a much wider field for variety of shades; at the same time a less number of coloring substances is required; as, for example, logwood alone gives no color to cotton worthy the name of a dye; yet by the judicious application of a few different kinds of mordants, all the shades from a French white to a violet-from a lavender to a purple-from a blue to a lilac-and from a slate to a black, are obtained from this substance."

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If a white piece of cotton be put through a dilute solution of chloride of tin (red spirits,) and from this put through a weak decoction of logwood, the coloring matter of the wood will be immediately precipitated, changing its hue to a violet color, very little of it combining with the cloth, and probably very unequally; but if the piece be thoroughly washed from the chloride of tin previous to putting into the logwood, the coloring matter of the wood will combine with the cloth, or rather the metallic base which is on the cloth; and provided the logwood solution corresponds with the strength of the mordant, the liquor will be left colorless; but the piece will be a light brownish shade.If a little of the chloride of tin be now added to the liquor, its effects upon the logwood will be the same as if the piece had been put into it without being washed, but with this difference, that the coloring matter is in combination with the clo h, upon which it is not only changed to a violet color, but is rendered insoluble in water, and sufficiently permanent to constitute a dye. The substances thus added to the colored liquor to change and fix the colors are termed alterants, in the technical language of the dye-house raising: because it brightens the color. terants and mordants are often spoken of as two distinct substances; but the only distinction is the mode of applying them. In some instances distinct substances are used. In the process detailed above, a little alum would do as well as the tin; or if a particular bluish shade were wanted, a little pyrolignite of alumina; but in almost all cases the mordant may also be the alterant."

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Having stated these general facts, the work proceeds with an historical and minute detail of the different mordants and their effects as discovered down to the present time, and proceeds with the most approved method of dyeing each color. In relation to Turkeyred, we have the following:

"In 1808, Reber, at Mariakirch, furnished the finest yarns of this dye, and M. Koechlin became celebrated for his Turkey-red cloth. This gentleman has immortalised his name in the annals of calico printing, by the discovery which he made in 1811. It consists in printing upon Turkey-red, or any dyed color, some pow erful acid, and then immersing the cloth in a solution of chloride of lime. Neither of these agents singly affects the color, but those parts which have received the acid, on being plunged in chloride of lime, are speedily deprived of their dye, and made white by the acid of the liberated chlorine. This is one of the beautiful facts in the chemistry of calico printing,

"For this process a patent was obtained in England, by Mr. James Thomson, of Primrose, near Clitheroe, in the year 1813; and the same gentleman, in 1816, took out a second patent for a very useful and happy modification of the principle of the former one, namely, for combining with the acid some mordant, or metallic oxide, capable, after the colors were removed, of having imparted to it some other color. This laid the foundation of that series of processes, in which the chromic acid and its combination have since been employed with such great success."

We are necessarily confined to short extracts on the different branches; but we extract the following interesting sketches of the origin of some dyes; first, in relation to Lac-dye.

"Stick-lac is produced by the puncture of a peculiar female insect, called coccus lacca or ficus, upon the branches of several plants, which grow in Siam, Assam. Pegu, Bengal and Malabar. The twig becomes thereby incrusted with a reddish mammelated resin, having a crystalline-looking fracture. The female lac insect is of the size of a louse; red, round, flat, with 12 abdominal circles, a bifurcated tail, antenna, and six claws, half the length of the body. The male is twice the above size, and has four wings; there is one of them to 5000 females. In November or December the young brood makes its escape from the eggs, lying beneath the dead body of the mother; they crawl about a little way, and fasten themselves to the bark of the shrubs. About this period the branches

often swarm to such a degree with this vermin, that they seem covered with a red dust; in this case, they are apt to dry up, by being exhausted of their juices. Many of these insects, however, become the prey of others, or are carried off by the feet of birds, to which they attach themselves, and are transplanted to other trees. They soon produce smail nipple-like in crustations upon the twigs, their bodies being apparently glued, by means of a transparent liquor, which goes on increasing to the end of March, so as to form a cellular texture. At this time, the animal resembles a small oval bag, without life, of the size of cochineal. At the commencement, a beautiful red liquor only is perceived, after wards eggs make their appearance; and in October or November, when the red liquor gets exhausted, 20 or 30 young ones bore a hole through the back of their mother, and come forth. The empty cells remain upon the branches. These are composed of the milky juice of the plant, which serves as nourishment to the insects, and which is afterwards transformed or ela borated into the red coloring matter that is found mixed with the resin, but in greater quantity in the bodies of the insects, in their eggs, and still more copiously in the red liquor secreted for feeding the young. After the brood escapes, the cell contain much less coloring matter.On this account, the branches should be broken off before this happens, and dried in the sun. In the East Indies this operation is performed twice in the year; the first time in March, the second in October. The twigs incrusted with the radiated cellular substance constitute the stick-lac of commerce. It is a red color, more or less deep, nearly transparent, and hard, with a brilliant conchoidal fracture. The sticklac of Siam is the best."

Next in relation to indigo we have a curious historical anecdote, beautifully illustrative of the manner in which government protection has aided manufacture.

"Of the early history of indigo little is known, neither is it known when it was first used as a dye-stuff. The Greeks and

Romans used it as a paint, under the name of Indicum. Its value, as a dye-stuff, was not known in Europe till nearly the close of the sixteenth century, when it was imported fromIndia by the Dutch; but English legislators, for a long time, prohibited its use in Great Britain under severe penalties. These prohibitions continued in force till the reign of Charles II., and the reason consisted in its being considered a corrosive substance, and capable of destroying the fibres of cloth, and therefore calculated to injure the character of the dyers. This opinion, no doubt, sprung from the strong and interested opposition given to its use by the cultivators of the woad, which was then regarded as an important branch of national industry.*”

After describing some chemical operations, the work proceeds :

"Some practical dyer may indeed be inclined to ask, what those already noticed have to do with dyeing? We are sorry that with respect to some of them, we cannot give any satisfactory answer to the question; but the same question was asked, when chemists first intimated that chromic acid produced yellow salts when combined with lead; yet this simple hint has completely revolutionized various departments of dyeing, as we shall have occasion to notice, when we come to treat of the mineral coloring matters in next chap ter; and the action of chromic acid upon indigo, as already observed, has been both a source of annoyance and advantage to the dyer. Previous to the use of alkaline substances with the salts of lead, dyers seldom could get an evenly chrome green; the chromic acid being set at liberty acted upon the indigo which was upon the yarn, destroying in part the blue color, after which the green was all light yellow blotches.These annoyances are still felt where the with an alkali is not practised. But this new process of working the lead solution same action of chromic acid upon indigo has been taken advantage of by calico printers, when they want a white pattern on a blue ground. The pattern is printed upon the cloth with the oxide of a metal which yields its oxygen easily to other substances, such as copper and zine; the

"When Indigo was first introduced, only a small quantity was added to the woad, by which the latter was much improved; more was afterwards gradually used, and at last, the quantity became so large, that the small admixture of woad served only to revive the fermentation of the indigo. Germany thus lost a production by which farmers, merchants, carriers and others acquired great riches. In consequence of the sales of woad being so much injured, a prohibition was issued against the use of indigo by Saxony, in the year 1650. In the year 1652, Duke Ernest, the Pious, caused a proposal to be made to the diet by his envoy, that indigo should be entirely banished from the empire, and that an exclusive privilege should be granted to those who dyed with woad. This was followed by an imperial prohibition of indigo, on the 21st of April, 1654, which was enforced with the greatest severity in his dominions. The same was done in France; but in the well-known edict of 1669, in which Colbert separated the superior from the inferior dyers, it was stated that indigo should be used without woad; and in 1737, dyers were left at liberty to use indigo alone, or to employ a mixture of indigo and woad."

1846.]

goods are afterwards dyed blue by passing them through the vat; but the parts upon which these metallic salts are printed, resist the dye, by a process which will be presently described, so that the piece, when finished, is a blue ground with a white pattern."

We have made extracts as far as our limits will allow, in order to illustrate the varied and interesting matter contained in the volume. We have, however, not alluded to the chapters descriptive of the late inventions in the machinery for imparting colors to designs. We have before stated that it is only very recently that more than one color could be imparted by one operation. Chapter IV. contains a description of a machine patented in 1843, for printing five or more colors at once, by a most ingenious method. When we reflect upon the results of science, the multitudinous elements called from all

quarters of the world, and combined
with wonderful skill, according to the
learned experience and triumphant ge-
nius of the citizens of all countries
the heart sickens at the gross folly
what should lead legislatures to suppose
that those results are in any degree to
be attributed to the absurd restrictions
imposed by them on trade. The true
encouragement to manufacture is the
spread of knowledge. Our author has
well remarked in his preface as fol-

lows:

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who achieve the distinction of
Dyers
good workmen are accustomed to estimate
their abilities by the contrast which exists
between themselves and the newly initiat-
ed journeyman; they rarely or never con-
template the wide field which lies unim-
proved if not unexplored before them.-
Indeed, some of them are so injudicious as
to boast of their capabilities, their expert-
ness and their knowledge; and it is not
uncommon for such to indulge in petty
jealousies, and to endeavor to conceal the
secret of their mode of producing a certain
result. Follies of this sort have not been
confined to journeymen; an employer has
been known to complain that his work-
men are inefficient, when at the same time
he was stealing, as it were, from one part
of the dye-house to another with the very
materials which it is their business to un-
derstand and use, in covered vessels, lest
some one should learn what is the nature
of the process whereby he produces,
through their labor, a desired result. He
thus exacts of them the advantages of

knowledge, while doing his best to retain
them in ignorance. While such narrow
views are prevalent we may regret, but
cannot wonder, that years have been spent
-we should rather say wasted-in per-
severing and costly efforts to discover what
was long before well known to all who
thoroughly understood the scientific prin-
This same ignorance of
ciples of the art.
workmen the dupes of a class of impudent
principles often renders both masters and
at so much apiece."
knaves, who hawk about valuable secrets

Nothing can be more true; and at the same time, he asks Congress to protect him against others that do know the The day for those follies is The "obsolete."

secret.

rapidly becoming
time will come, when manufactures
will be pursued for the mere sake of the
pursuit, as chemistry is now studied
philosophically.

The advance of manufactures does
not exist in the creating of monopolies
with large capital, that may deal out
small wages to a dependent class of
created by the concentration of large
workmen, while the lucrative offices

joint stock capital form the means of providing for the needy relatives of incannot be paid by a fair business. The fluential directors, at salaries which large profits necessary to the support of the expensive establishments of the rived from the labor of many persons, chartered corporations can only be dein the same manner in which splendid governments are supported only by the excessive taxation inflicted upon an Dissemunrepresented population. The question arises, are they necessary? and

common sense answers, no.

inate knowledge among the people, and, throwing the trade open, give the industrious with small capitals a chance The spirit of these monopolies is opequal to that of corporate monopolies. posed to advance in science, because with every improvement their large investments in machinery, &c., become depreciated, and their profits endangered. On the other hand, where the genius and enterprise of individuals have free scope in all the subdivisions of the different branches of the business, the whole improves with an accelerated movement. The new invencome promptly to profit by the success tions supersede the old, and the public of the individual.

THE BROKEN HEART.

A TALE OF HISPANIOLA.

BY S. ANNA LEWIS, AUTHOR OF "RECORDS OF THE HEART."

I.

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FULL many a tale of wo is thine, Bright Island of the Southern Sea, Of vows that should have been divine, And woman's speechless agonyThe pangs of sorrow's ruthless dartsThe hecatombs of trusting Hearts: Thou hast no mighty names in songNo famed recorders of thy wrongNo Tweed-no storied Helicon

Colossus-neither Moslem Pile, Nor gilded Temple of the Sun,

CANTO I.

To consecrate thy name, bright Isle !— Thou hast nor classic memories,

Nor border songs of ladies fair,

Nor spirit-stirring Chivalries;

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But thou hast Records of Despair,

And tales of deep, enduring Love,
As ever minstrel's fancy wove.

II.

Oh! what is there like that deep grief,
That finds, nor seeks on earth relief!
That stands from sympathy apart,
Unto its own fond broodings wed,
Feeding upon the writhing heart,

As the Promethean Vulture fed!
'Tis as the Aspic's poisonous stings-
Piercing into the heart's fine strings- [ing,
The loathsome death-worm o'er us creep-
Ere we within the tomb are sleeping.

III.

The zephyrs sleep in Nieva's Vale-
On wave and wold each rougher gale-
While every ear along the grove
Bends down to drink the notes of Love,
And the low warblings of Despair,
That on the balmy evening rise
Like diapasons of sweet sighs.
The minstrel is a maiden fair,
With delicately moulded form,

As ere was wrought by Grecian Master Dark eyes through which the soul beams

warm

A cheek of purest alabaster

A step, once in her native dells
Far lighter than the young Gazelle's-
A smile with more than Hebe's spell-
A voice soft as the Syren's shell,
Or tones, to Hourie's harp-strings given,
To welcome warriors brave to Heaven.
She wears the wandering Gipsy's dress,

She sweeps the wandering Gipsy's luteBut those who gaze on her distress

Sorrow so eloquently mute, Know they behold no Gipsy maid, In those habiliments arrayed. The tiny foot her garb exposes, And crimson slipper close enclosesHer fairy hand and jewelled fingersHer brow, where pensive beauty lingersHer modest mien and movement free, Betray too well her high degree.

IV.

Beneath the solemn Yew all day
She pours some melancholy lay,
Nor raises once her pensive eye
To greet the lingerers passing by ;-
Nor heeds the needful, glittering pelf,

That at her fairy feet they throw,-
Her thoughts seem never bent on self,

She only thinks and sings of wo-
Of sighs, and tears, and slighted troth-

Stern Fate's irrevocable darts, [wrath-
And woman's worth, and wrong, and
Love's faithless vows and broken hearts-
These best befit her mournful lute,
Which on all other themes is mute.

Young dark eyed maidens from the hill
Come down and sit by moonlit rill-
Hidalgos from rich domicil
Linger along the balmy lea,
To list her love born minstrelsy;
And when on violet bed reposing-
Kind slumber her soft eyelids closing
They slowly, solemuly draw near,
And pitying view the sleepless tear,
That o'er her cheek unbidden flows
From the perennial fount of woes.
Kind-hearted damsels seek her there,
And bid her to their cots repair-

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Three weary years have rolled away
Since first they heard that pensive lay,
Yet none know from what shores she came,
Or why, or what may be her name-
They only gather from her song,
That she hath loved and suffered wrong.
Some deem she came from Spanish lands,
And others from Ausonian strands
Opine that she hath followed over
The dangerous sea for some faithless lover.
Some ween Count Gamba, to whose gate
At midnight she is seen to go,

And weep, and murmur strains of wo,
Hath some part in the maiden's fate;
And some frown on this foul suspicion,
And prate about her low condition,
As lofty souls could only be

Found clad in garbs of high degree.

Some guess she is the Spirit pale,
Of maiden murdered in that vale,
By a false lover long ago;-

They guess, and guess-yet nothing know.

VI.

When vesper bells are tolling loud,
She seeks the Temple with the crowd,
And strives to chant the holy creed-
To count aright each amber bead,
But rightly never can succeed-
Why wander thus her thoughts away,
When to the Virgin she would pray?
Why steals her eye to Gamba's seat?
Why hangs it on his lady sweet?
The crystal tear
Why glistens through her lashes jet

When he is near.

Like dew-drops on the violet?
And steals adown her cheek unbid,
Then slides along the drooping lid,
As if it sought from the dark fount,

Where it so long had been confined,
Above the troubled brim to mount,

Some clime of sunnier light to find?
She's ever at Confessional,

Yet lingers-falters in the hall,

And turns away without confessing,
As something on her soul were pressing,
Which she would tell to Priest nor Heaven,
Tho' sure by both to be forgiven.

'Tis eve-soft lies the Indian sky,

CANTO 11.

Not as this cold, bleak, Northern clime
E'en in its most congenial time
Of summer melting melody,
But with one golden gush of light,

As Heaven had centered all its smiles
Within those soft aerial isles,
To luminate the sultry night,
When languid Beauty wanders forth

To breathe the breezy, balmy air,-
Arouse her ivory limbs from sloth,
And decorate her raven hair

With pearly flowers,
From fragrant bowers,
Which ever bud and blossom there,
And smile beneath seraphic care.
Fond echo sleeps on rock and hill,
The nightingale's sweet voice is still
Beside the silent, silver rill-

No breath awakes the drowsy palm,
And all, save Sorrow's breast, is calm;
Or the wild, beating hearts of lovers,
Who silently along the glades,
Await beneath the leafy covers

The footsteps of responding maids,
To breathe to them a last farewell,
Or plight the vows they love so well.

Oh! if there 're moments in this life
When guardian Angels hover nigh,
And banish Sorrow, Pain, Fear, Strife-
Fill the breast with stainless Purity—
When to the longing soul is given
A foretaste of the bliss of Heaven,-
It is when young hearts pure and high,
Meet under Heaven's approving eye,
Afar in some sequestered grove,

Or by some soothing water-fall,

And blend thought, fancy, feeling-all-
In the Omnipotence of Love.

And wan the mournful maiden now
Across the balmy valley flies,
The cold, damp dew upon her brow,

The hot tears trickling from her eyes-
The last that Fate can ever wring
From her young bosom's troubled spring.
Swift 'neath the blooming myrtle she
Glides onward o'er the moonlit sea-
By many a Mausoleum speeds,
And tomb, amidst the tuneful reeds,
Yet falters not-she feels no dread
When in the presence of the dead—
Alas! what awe have sepulchres
For hearts that have been dead for years—
Dead unto all external things-
Dead unto Hope's sweet offerings,

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