look at, which make long converging lines
 down the street, and burn steadily; for there
 is not a breath of wind abroad. Afar off—up
 in the clouds—he sees the fiery letters F.W.,
 standing for Friedrich Wilhelm, written in the
 air, but which he knows to be attached to the
 highest pinnacle of the Great Dom.
Much pleased with what he has witnessed,
he turns his steps once more to the
 gardens, whence float already strains of soft
 music. Here, too, he finds an extempore
 effort at illumination, very pleasing and
 effective; the coloured lanterns abounding
 in all directions—being hung in festoons,
 shrouded in bushes, and swinging from every
 available twig and branch. While, from the
 Resident's bow-window, streams rich
effulgence of light—plain token that royal Friedrich
was even now in the drawing-room—all
 the respectabilities are gathered below in the
 gardens, promenading; but are chiefly
clustered round a group of some sixty or seventy
 singing-men, with scraps of music in their
 hands—societies of Liedertafel, Concordia,
 and Orphea, all fused into one for this great
 night. Notable societies, too, that have
perigrinated in foreign countries, and have won
 fame, and medailles d'honneur, and yards of
 ribbon, and Heaven knows what beside. The
 musik-corps of the royal twenty-eighth
infanterie regiment shall lend their aid during
 singing intervals; discoursing music of
 Wagner, Mendelssohn, and Meyerbeer, with
 excellent effect. Meantime, figures—one
particularly, a tall, czar-like personage: king's
 brother, says one of the crowd—are to be
 seen looking forth from the blaze of light in
 the bow-window. The singing-men draw
 closer together, and in a few seconds have
 sent abroad upon the night a soft abendlied,
 or even-song, with a most bewitching burden
 of Gute Nacht! Gute Nacht! Wondrous
 enchanters are these singing-men, with
 strange power over their voice: now hushing
 them in curious lulls, now sending them
 abroad with startling power and effect. At
 one moment the stranger thinks he must be
 listening to rich swelling organ tones in a
 cathedral aisle, at the next, that musik-corps
 of the royal twenty-eighth must of a surety
 have begun to play, so metallic have grown
 the chords: all, however, eventually resolving
into mellifluous melody of Gute Nacht!
 Gute Nacht! bearing it home to their couches,
 chaunting it softly as they go along.
Yet has it failed utterly to draw royal
 Friedrich to the window. Stately dames and
 czar-like personage have come and hearkened
 gratefully, and wait for more. All save royal
 Friedrich; who makes no sign. Who shall
 say whether he be in that bright atmosphere
 at all, or still down in the banquet-room with
 the Resident, busy over those tapering silver-
topped flasks before mentioned. But,
however that may be, the singing-men bestir
 themselves valiantly, and the musik-corps of
 the royal twenty-eighth are not behind-hand
 with Tannhauser's selection and Sommernacht's
Dream. And so runs on the lightest
 hour the hapless money-bound has spent since
 care overtook him.
But there is other festivity in petto. A night
 or so more, and the town shall give a fête or
 bal paré in the Great White Chamber before
 mentioned, to townfolk of every degree and
 quality. All shall be welcome, from Madame
 down to suburban Couturière—from M. le
 Maire to Coiffeur's unctuous foreman. For
 all that, they shall be very merry, and enjoy
 themselves exceedingly. Even the money-
bound thinks he will be present too, just to
 keep up his failing spirits.
It has a gay and glittering aspect, the
 Great White Chamber, lighted up with many
 chandeliers, and just beginning to be thinly
 peopled at the early hour of eight o'clock.
 Exceedingly pretty the prospect looking
 down the room, with its rich, painted ceiling
 overhead, and the lights reflected back from
 the dark, shining floor. Enthusiasts might
 sorrowfully bethink them of the days of Le
 Jeu, and fancy the palmy time again with that
 warm, cozy chamber hard by, under shaded
 lamps playing on a waste of green baize and
 velvet cushioning, the exciting pastime going
 forward, to the music of Croupier's
monotonous chaunting.
Prodigious efforts have the kur-comitè been
making to lend grace to the festival. Thus
 the stranger, leaning carelessly against the
 snow-white pillar, sees, afar off, a very bower
 of green trees, behind which are cunningly
 shrouded the musicians; whence, as from a
 grove, are wafted soft sounds all the night
 long. Hard by, in a convenient chamber,
 are symptoms of an abundant supper, with
 store of cooling ice preparations for
 wearied Terpsichoreans, but subject, alas!
 to certain fiscal regulations, suggesting
 doubts as to whether café-keeper below may
 not have deeper interest in such recurring
 festivity.
By and by, he takes note of the quality of
 the invited, as they promenade to and fro
 seeking partners for the contre danse. For
 the men, he is constrained to admit that they
 are plainly of the coiffeur species—at which
 conclusion point certain little eccentricities
 of costume, which it certainly does seem
 strange the kur-comitè should tolerate. It
 does seem a little exceptional to behold an
 individual arrayed in plover tint nether
garment, with a white beaver under his arm,
 standing moodily, and surveying the company
 with the air of a blazé lion, yet not without
 a certain dignity; for he bore his beaver, as
 though it were chapeau bras, most courtly,
 and might be seen hereafter in the dance,
 deporting himself with singular grace and
 agility. In what category to range him—
how many degrees above or below the coiffeur
 species—would be utterly beyond the stranger's
powers of thought. Every élégant there
 present has, also, his coat buttoned tight to
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