City, who has come to a French watering-place and is
under the charge of " Auntie Lib." Here is the story of her doings—she must have been more than three, the age that seems to suit the "two feet ten inches" which she measures on the parquet floor— and a most entertaining story it is. She goes to a bat d'enfants, and flirts outrageously ; she bathes, and dismays the Parisians by the boldness of her swimming and diving ; she does many things, and sees many people, and is always most amusing. The contrast between the child from the West—somewhat of an enfant terrible, it must be allowed—and the conventional little Parisian is highly entertaining. The papers were originally published in the West- minster Gazette, and we are very glad to see them again.