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mewhat repay the pain it has cost in writing. Trench's fine sonnet was a great favourite of my mother's-- "To leave unseen so many a glorious sight, To leave so many lands unvisited, To leave so many books unread, Unrealized so many visions bright;-- Oh! wretched yet inevitable spite Of our short span, and we must yield our breath, And wrap us in the unfeeling coil of death, So much remaining of unproved delight, But hush, my soul, and vain regrets be still'd; Find rest in Him Who is the complement Of whatsoe'er transcends our mortal doom, Of broken hope and frustrated intent; In the clear vision and aspect of Whom All wishes and all longings are fulfill'd." FOOTNOTES: [Footnote 2: "Such is the lost of the beautiful upon earth."--_Wallenstein's Tod_.] TALES OF THE KHOJA.[3] (_Adapted from the Turkish._) INTRODUCTION. "O my children!" said the story-teller, "do you indeed desire amusement by the words of my lips? Then shut your mouths, that the noise you make may be abated, and I may hear myself speak; and open your ears, that you may be entertained by the tales that I shall tell you. Shut your mouths and open your ears, I say, and you will, without doubt, receive pleasure from what I shall have to relate of Khoja Nasr-ed-Deen-Effendi. "This Khoja was not altogether a wise man, nor precisely a fool, nor entirely a knave. "It is true, O children, that his wisdom was flecked with folly, but what saith the proverb? 'No one so wise but he has some folly to spare.' Moreover, in his foolishness there was often a hidden meaning, as a letter is hid in a basket of dates--not for every eye. "As to his knaveries, they were few, and more humorous than injurious. Though be it far from me, O children, as a man of years and probity, to defend the conduct of the Khoja to the Jew money-lender. "What about the Jew money-lender, do you ask? "This is the tale." _Tale_ 1.--The Khoja and the Nine Hundred and Ninety-nine Pieces of Gold. This Khoja was very poor. One day, wishing for a piece of gold, he corrected himself, saying: "It costs no more to wish for a thousand pieces than for one. I wish for a thousand gold pieces." And he repeated aloud--"I wish for a thousand pieces of gold. _I would not accept one less._" Now it so happened that he was overheard by a certain covetous Jew money-lender. This man was of a malicious disposi
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FOOTNOTES