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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction, Vol. 10, Issue 268, August 11, 1827, by Various
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction, Vol. 10,
+Issue 268, August 11, 1827
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 9, 2003 [eBook #10026]
+
+Language: English
+
+Chatacter set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE,
+AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION, VOL. 10, ISSUE 268, AUGUST 11, 1827***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram and Project Gutenberg Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustration.
+ See 10026-h.htm or 10026-h.zip:
+ (http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/1/0/0/2/10026/10026-h/10026-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/1/0/0/2/10026/10026-h/10026-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. 10, No. 268.] SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1827. [PRICE 2d.
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+HOSPITAL OF ST. THOMAS, CANTERBURY.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+The subject of the above engraving claims the attention of the
+antiquarian researcher, not as the lofty sculptured mansion of our
+monastic progenitors, or the towering castle of the feudatory baton, for
+never has the voice of boisterous revelry, or the tones of the solemn
+organ, echoed along its vaulted roof; a humbler but not less interesting
+trait marks its history. It was here that the zealous pilgrim, strong in
+bigot faith, rested his weary limbs, when the inspiring name of Becket
+led him from the rustic simplicity of his native home, to view the spot
+where Becket fell, and to murmur his pious supplication at the shrine of
+the murdered Saint; how often has his toil-worn frame been sheltered
+beneath that hospitable roof; imagination can even portray him entering
+the area of yon pointed arch, leaning on his slender staff--perhaps some
+wanderer from a foreign land.
+
+The hospital of St. Thomas the Martyr of Eastbridge, is situated on the
+King's-bridge, in the hundred of Westgate, Canterbury, and was built by
+Becket, but for what purpose is unknown. However, after the
+assassination of its founder, the resort of individuals being constant
+to his shrine, the building was used for the lodgment of the pilgrims.
+For many years no especial statutes were enacted, nor any definite rules
+laid down for the treatment of pilgrims, till the see devolved to the
+jurisdiction of Stratford, who, in 15th Edward III. drew up certain
+ordinances, as also a code of regulations expressly to be acted on; he
+appointed a master in priest's orders, under whose guidance a secular
+chaplain officiated; it was also observed that every pilgrim in health
+should have but one night's lodging to the cost of fourpence; that
+applicants weak and infirm were to be preferred to those of sounder
+constitutions, and that women "upwards of forty" should attend to the
+bedding, and administer medicines to the sick.
+
+This institution survived the general suppression of monasteries and
+buildings of its cast, during the reigns of Henry VIII. and the sixth
+Edward; and after alternately grading from the possession of private
+families to that of brothers belonging to the establishment, it was at
+last finally appropriated to the instruction of the rising generation,
+whose parents are exempt from giving any gratuity to the preceptor of
+their children.
+
+Its present appearance is ancient, but not possessing any of those magic
+features which render the mansions of our majores so grand and
+magnificently solemn; a hall and chapel of imposing neatness and
+simplicity are still in good condition, but several of the
+apartments are dilapidated in part, and during a wet season admit the
+aqueous fluid through the chinks and fissures of their venerable walls.
+
+SAGITTARIUS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+THE LECTURER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MINOR AFFECTIONS OF THE BRAIN.
+
+
+Pain _in the head_ may arise from very different causes, and is
+variously seated. It has had a number of different appellations bestowed
+upon it, according to its particular character. I need not observe that
+headach is a general attendant of all inflammatory states of the brain,
+whether in the form of _phrenitis, hydrocephalus acutus_, or _idiopathic
+fever;_ though with some exceptions in regard to all of them, as I
+before showed you. It is often also said to be a symptom of other
+diseases, of parts remotely situated; as of the _stomach_, more
+especially; whence the term _sick headach_, the stomach being supposed
+to be the part first or principally affected, and the headach
+symptomatic of this. I am confident, however, that in a majority of
+instances the reverse is the case, the affection of the head being the
+cause of the disorder of the stomach. It is no proof to the contrary,
+that _vomiting_ often relieves the headach, for vomiting is capable of
+relieving a great number of other diseases, as well as those of the
+brain, upon the principle of _counter-irritation_. The stomach may be
+disordered by nauseating medicines, up to the degree of full vomiting,
+without any headach taking place; but the brain hardly ever suffers,
+either from injury or disease, without the stomach having its functions
+impaired, or in a greater or less degree disturbed: thus a blow on the
+head immediately produces vomiting; and, at the outset of various
+inflammatory affections of the brain, as _fever_ and _hydrocephalus_,
+nausea and vomiting are almost never-failing symptoms. It is not denied,
+that _headach_ may be produced through the medium of the stomach; but
+seldom, unless there is previously disease in the head, or at least a
+strong predisposition to it. In persons habitually subject to headach,
+the arteries of the brain become so irritable, that the slightest cause
+of disturbance, either _mental_ or _bodily_, will suffice to bring on a
+paroxysm.
+
+The _occasional_ or _exciting causes of headach_, then, are principally
+these:--
+
+1. _Emotions of mind_, as fear, terror, and agitation of spirits; yet
+these will sometimes take off headach when present at the time.
+
+2. Whatever either increases or disorders the general circulation, and
+especially all causes that increase the action of the cerebral arteries,
+or, as it is usually though improperly expressed, which occasion a
+determination of blood to the head. Of the former kind are violent
+exercise, and external heat applied to the surface generally, as by a
+heated atmosphere or the _hot bath_; of the latter, the direct
+application of heat to the head; falls or blows, occasioning a shock to
+the brain; stooping; intense thinking; intoxicating drinks, and other
+narcotic substances. These last, however, as well as _mental emotions_,
+often relieve a paroxysm of headach, though they favour its return
+afterwards.
+
+3. A disordered state of the stomach, of which a vomiting of _bile_ may
+be one symptom, is also to be ranked among the _occasional causes_ of
+_headach_.
+
+These _occasional causes_ do not in general produce their effect, unless
+where a _predisposition_ to the disease exists. This predisposition is
+often hereditary, or it may be acquired by long-protracted study and
+habits of intoxication.--_Dr. Clutterbuck's Lectures on the Diseases of
+the Nervous System_.
+
+
+HYDROPHOBIA.
+
+
+There is no cure for this disease when once the symptoms show
+themselves. A variety of remedies have from time to time been advertised
+by quacks. The "Ormskirk Medicine," at one time, was much in vogue; it
+had its day, but it did not cure the disease, nor, as far as I know, did
+it mitigate any of its symptoms. With regard to the affection of the
+mind itself in this disease, it does not appear that the patients are
+deprived of reason; some have merely, by the dint of resolution,
+conquered the dread of water, though they never could conquer the
+convulsive motions which the contact of liquids occasioned; while this
+resolution has been of no avail, for the convulsions and other symptoms
+increasing, have almost always destroyed the unhappy sufferers.
+--_Abernethy's Lectures_.
+
+
+EFFECTS OF KINDNESS ON THE SICK.
+
+
+Under all circumstances, man is a poor and pitiable being, when stricken
+down by disease. Sickened and subdued, his very lineaments have a voice
+which calls for commiseration and assistance. Celsus says, that knowing
+two physicians equally intelligent, he should prefer the one who was his
+friend, for the obvious reason that he would feel a deeper interest in
+his welfare. Kindness composes, and harshness disturbs the mind, and
+each produces correspondent effects upon the body. A tone, a look, may
+save or destroy life in extremely delicate cases. Whatever may be the
+prognosis given to friends, in all febrile cases, the most confident and
+consoling language about the ultimate recovery should be used to the
+sick, as prophecies not unfrequently contribute to bring about the event
+foretold, by making people feel, or think, or act, differently from what
+they otherwise would have done. Again, in chronic cases, as time is
+required for their cure, by explaining to the patient this fact, we
+maintain his confidence, we keep his mind easy, and thus gain a fair
+opportunity for the operation of regimen or remedies; in short, the
+judicious physician, like the Roman general, Fabius, conquers through
+delay, by cutting off the supplies, and wearing out the strength of the
+enemy. In large cities, where the mind is so much overwrought in the
+various schemes of private ambition, or of public business, anxiety is
+very frequently the grand opposing circumstance to recovery; so that
+while the causes which produced it are allowed to operate, mere medical
+prescription is of no avail. The effects of this anxiety are visible in
+the pallid face and wasted body. But if the patient be possessed of
+philosophy enough to forego his harassing pursuits; if he have not, from
+the contact and cares of the world, lost his relish for the simple and
+sublime scenes of nature, a removal into the country is of the utmost
+efficacy. The deformity and conflict of the moral world are exchanged
+for the beauty and calm of the physical world; and surrounded by all the
+poetry of earth and heaven, the mind regains its peace, and the health,
+as if by magic, is perfectly restored.--_Dr. Armstrong's Lectures_.
+
+
+DIET.
+
+
+Experience has taught us that the nature of our food is not a matter of
+indifference to the respiratory organs. Diseased lungs are exasperated
+by a certain diet, and pacified by one of an opposite kind. The
+celebrated diver, Mr. Spalding, observed, that whenever he used a diet
+of animal food, or drank spirituous liquors, he consumed in a much
+shorter period the oxygen of the atmospheric air in his diving-bell; and
+he therefore, on such occasions, confined himself to vegetable diet. He
+also found the same effect to arise from the use of fermented liquors,
+and he accordingly restricted himself to the potation of simple water.
+The truth of these results is confirmed by the habits of the Indian
+pearl-divers, who always abstain from every alimentary stimulus previous
+to their descent into the ocean.--_Dr. Paris on Diet._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+THE MONTHS
+
+
+The season has now advanced to full maturity. The corn is yielding to
+the sickle, the husbandmen,
+
+ "By whose tough labours, and rough hands,"
+
+our barns are stored with grain, are at their toils, and when nature is
+despoiled of her riches and beauty, will, with glad and joyous heart,
+celebrate the annual festival of
+
+
+THE HARVEST HOME.
+
+BY CORNELIUS WEBBE.
+
+
+ Hark! the ripe and hoary rye
+ Waving white and billowy,
+ Gives a husky rustle, as
+ Fitful breezes fluttering pass.
+ See the brown and bending wheat,
+ By its posture seems to meet
+ The harvest's sickle, as it gleams
+ Like the crescent moon in streams,
+ Brown with shade and night that run
+ Under shores and forests dun.
+
+ Lusty Labour, with tired stoop,
+ Levels low, at every swoop,
+ Armfuls of ripe-coloured corn,
+ Yellow as the hair of morn;
+ And his helpers track him close,
+ Laying it in even rows,
+ On the furrow's stubbly ridge;
+ Nearer to the poppied hedge.
+ Some who tend on him that reaps
+ Fastest, pile it into heaps;
+ And the little gleaners follow
+ Them again, with whoop and halloo
+ When they find a hand of ears
+ More than falls to their compeers.
+
+ Ripening in the dog-star's ray,
+ Some, too early mown, doth lay;
+ Some in graceful shocks doth stand
+ Nodding farewell to the land
+ That did give it life and birth;
+ Some is borne, with shout and mirth,
+ Drooping o'er the groaning wain.
+ Through the deep embowered lane;
+ And the happy cottaged poor,
+ Hail it, as it glooms their door,
+ With a glad, unselfish cry,
+ Though they'll buy it bitterly.
+
+ And the old are in the sun,
+ Seeing that the work is done
+ As it was when age was young;
+ And the harvest song is sung;
+ And the quaint and jocund tale
+ Takes the stint-key from the ale,
+ And as free and fast it runs
+ As a June rill from the sun's
+ Dry and ever-drinking mouth:--
+ Mirth doth alway feel a drowth.
+ Butt and barrel ceaseless flow
+ Fast as cans can come and go;
+ One with emptied measures comes
+ Drumming them with tuneful thumbs;
+ One reels field-ward, not quite sober,
+ With two cans of ripe October,
+ Some of last year's brewing, kept
+ Till the corn of this is reaped.
+
+ Now 'tis eve, and done all labour,
+ And to merry pipe and tabor,
+ Or to some cracked viol strummed
+ With vile skill, or table drummed
+ To the tune of some brisk measure,
+ Wont to stir the pulse to pleasure,
+ Men and maidens timely beat
+ The ringing ground with frolic feet;
+ And the laugh and jest go round
+ Till all mirth in noise is drowned.
+
+_Literary Souvenir_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ARMORIAL BEARINGS AT CROYDON PALACE.
+
+(_To the Editor of the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Sir,--In No. 266 of the Mirror, _Sagittarius_ wishes to know the name of
+the person whose armorial bearings are emblazoned at Croydon palace.
+
+From the blazon he has given, it is rather difficult to find out; but I
+should think they are meant for those of king Richard II. Impaled on the
+dexter side with those of his patron saint, Edward the Confessor.
+Bearings that may be seen in divers places at Westminster Hall, rebuilt
+by that monarch.[1]
+
+ [1] Vide MIRROR, p. 98, Vol. iii.
+
+I have subjoined the _proper_ blazon of the arms, which is _azure_, a
+cross patonce between _five_ martlets _or_, impaling France and England
+quarterly, 1st. and 4th. azure three fleurs de lis. 2nd. _or_, 2nd and
+3rd Gules, 3 lions passant guardant in pale, or.
+
+The supporting of the arms with angels, &c. was a favourite device of
+Richard, as may be seen in divers antiquarian and topographical works.
+
+It is probable the hall of Croydon palace was built during the reign of
+Richard, which will account for his arms being placed there.
+
+I am, &c.
+
+C. F.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+DEATH OF MR. CANNING.
+
+
+The lamentable and sudden death of the Right Hon. George Canning has
+produced a general sensation throughout this country. At the opening of
+the present year our nation deplored the loss of a prince endeared to
+the people by his honest worth--but a short interval has elapsed and
+again the country is plunged in sorrow for the loss of one of its most
+zealous supporters--one of its chiefest ornaments--one of its staunchest
+friends--and one of its most eloquent and talented statesmen! The life
+of the late George Canning furnishes much matter for meditation and
+thought. From it much may be learnt. He was a genius, in the most
+unlimited sense of the word; and his intellectual endowments were
+commanding and imperative. Of humble origin he had to contend with
+innumerable difficulties, consequent to his station in life,--and
+although his talents, which were of the first order, befitted him for
+the first rank in society, that rank he did not attain until the scene
+of this world was about to be closed for ever from him. It may be said
+of this eminent man, that he owed nothing to patronage--his _talents_
+directed him to his elevated station, and to his intellectual
+superiority homage was made,--not to the man.
+
+But, in other respects, the loss of Mr. Canning is a national
+bereavement. He was one of the master-spirits of the age. His very name
+was distinguished--for he has added to the literature of his country--by
+his writings and his eloquence he has stimulated the march of mind; he
+has seconded the exertions of liberal friends to the improvements of the
+uneducated, and he has patronized the useful as well as the fine arts,
+philosophy and science, of his country. To expatiate at greater length
+would be superfluous, as we have in another place recorded our humble
+tribute to his general character.[2] We have now, therefore, merely to
+put together the melancholy facts connected with his death, and which
+will convey to another generation a just sense of the value, in our
+time, attached to a noble and exalted genius. The just and elegant
+laconism of Byron, by substituting the _past_ for the _present_ tense,
+may now be adopted as a faithful and brief summary of what _was_ George
+Canning.
+
+ [2] Biographical Memoir of Mr. Canning, with a Portrait, MIRROR,
+ Vol. iv.
+
+"Canning _was_ a genius, almost an universal one:--an orator, a wit, a
+poet, and a statesman."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The king, with his usual quickness, was the first to perceive the
+dangerous state of Mr. Canning. We understand, that almost immediately
+after he had quitted him, on Monday, his majesty observed to sir William
+Knighton, that Mr. Canning appeared very unwell, and that he was in
+great alarm for him. On Tuesday, sir William repaired to town, at the
+express command of his majesty, to see Mr. Canning. At the interview
+with him, at the Treasury, Sir William made particular inquiries into
+the state of his health. Mr. Canning was then troubled with a cough, and
+he observed to Sir William that he almost felt as if he were an old man;
+that he was much weakened; but had no idea of there being anything
+dangerous in his condition, and that he trusted that rest and retirement
+would set him to rights. Sir William sent Dr. Maton to Mr. Canning, and
+on parting with him, he observed that, as he should not leave town until
+Wednesday morning, he would call on him, at Chiswick, on his way home to
+Windsor. Sir William found Mr. Canning in bed, at Chiswick. He asked him
+if he felt any pain in his side? Mr. Canning answered he had felt a pain
+in his side for some days, and on endeavouring to lie on his side, the
+pain was so acute that he was unable to do so. Sir William then inquired
+if he felt any pain in his shoulder? He said he had been for some time
+affected by rheumatic pains in the shoulder. Sir William told him that
+the pain did not arise from rheumatism, but from a diseased liver, and
+he immediately sent for the three physicians, who remained with him, and
+were to the last unremitting in their attentions.
+
+The disease continued to make rapid progress, in spite of all that the
+first medical skill could do to baffle it, watching every turn it took,
+and applying, on the instant, every remedy likely to subdue its
+virulence, and mitigate his sufferings.
+
+On the following Sunday, August 5, bulletins were issued, stating that
+Mr. Canning was in most imminent danger. The most painful interest was
+excited in the public mind by subsequent announcements of his alarming
+state, and on Wednesday morning, the following melancholy intelligence
+reached town:--
+
+_Chiswick, Wednesday, August_, 8, 1827, (A. M.)
+
+Mr. Canning expired this morning, without pain, at ten minutes before
+four o'clock.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+MISCELLANIES.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BLACK BEARD.
+
+
+There are few persons who reside on the Atlantic ocean and rivers of
+North America who are not familiar with the name of Black Beard, whom
+traditionary history represents as a pirate, who acquired immense wealth
+in his predatory voyages, and was accustomed to bury his treasures in
+the banks of creeks and rivers. For a period as low down as the American
+revolution, it was common for the ignorant and credulous to dig along
+these banks in search of hidden treasures; and impostors found an ample
+basis in these current rumours for schemes of delusion. Black Beard,
+though tradition says a great deal more of him than is true, was yet a
+real person, who acquired no small fame by his maritime exploits during
+the first part of the eighteenth century. Among many authentic and
+recorded particulars concerning him, the following account of his death
+may gratify curiosity:--
+
+From the nature of Black Beard's position in a sloop of little draught
+of water, on a coast abounding with creeks, and remarkable for the
+number and intricacy of its shoals, with which he had made himself
+intimately acquainted, it was deemed impossible to approach him in
+vessels of any force. Two hired sloops were therefore manned from the
+Pearl and Lime frigates, in the Chesapeake, and put under the command of
+Lieutenant Maynard, with instructions to hunt down and destroy this
+pirate wherever he should be found. On the 17th of November, in the year
+1718, this force sailed from James River, and in the evening of the 21st
+came to an inlet in North Carolina, where Black Beard was discovered at
+a distance, lying in wait for his prey. The sudden appearance of an
+enemy, preparing to attack him, occasioned some surprise; but his sloop
+mounting several guns, and being manned with twenty-five of his
+desperate followers, he determined to make a resolute defence; and,
+having prepared his vessel over night for action, sat down to his
+bottle, stimulating his spirits to that pitch of frenzy by which only he
+could rescue himself in a contest for his life. The navigation of the
+inlet was so difficult, that Maynard's sloops were repeatedly grounded
+in their approach, and the pirate, with his experience of the soundings,
+possessed considerable advantage in manoeuvring, which enabled him for
+some time to maintain a running fight. His vessel, however, in her turn,
+having at length grounded, and the close engagement becoming now
+inevitable, he reserved her guns to pour in a destructive fire on the
+sloops as they advanced to board him. This he so successfully executed,
+that twenty-nine men of Maynard's small number were either killed or
+wounded by the first broadside, and one of the sloops for a time
+disabled. But notwithstanding this severe loss, the lieutenant
+persevered in his resolution to grapple with his enemy, or perish in the
+attempt. Observing that his own sloop, which was still fit for action,
+drew more water than the pirate's, he ordered all her ballast to be
+thrown out, and, directing his men to conceal themselves between decks,
+took the helm in person, and steered directly aboard of his antagonist,
+who continued inextricably fixed on the shoal. This desperate wretch,
+previously aware of his danger, and determined never to expiate his
+crimes in the hands of justice, had posted one of his banditti, with a
+lighted match, over his powder-magazine, to blow up his vessel in the
+last extremity. Luckily in this design he was disappointed by his own
+ardour and want of circumspection; for, as Maynard approached, having
+begun the encounter at close quarters, by throwing upon his antagonist a
+number of hand-grenadoes of his own composition, which produced only a
+thick smoke, and conceiving that, from their destructive agency, the
+sloop's deck had, been completely cleared, he leaped over her bows,
+followed by twelve of his men, and advanced upon the lieutenant, who was
+the only person then in view; but the men instantly springing up to the
+relief of their commander, who was now furiously beset, and in imminent
+danger of his life, a violent contest ensued. Black Beard, after seeing
+the greater part of his men destroyed at his side, and receiving himself
+repeated wounds, at length, stepping back to cock, a pistol, fainted
+with the loss of blood, and expired on the spot. Maynard completed his
+victory, by securing the remainder of these desperate wretches, who were
+compelled to sue for mercy, and a short respite from a less honourable
+death at the hands of the executioner.
+
+
+ISLANDS PRODUCED BY INSECTS.
+
+
+The whole group of the _Thousand Islands_, and indeed the greater part
+of all those whose surfaces are flat, in the neighbourhood of the
+equator, owe their origin to the labours of that order of marine worms
+which Linnaeus has arranged under the name of _Zoophyta_. These little
+animals, in a most surprising manner, construct their calcareous
+habitations, under an infinite variety of forms, yet with that order and
+regularity, each after its own manner, which to the minute inquirer, is
+so discernable in every part of the creation. But, although the eye may
+be convinced of the fact, it is difficult for the human mind to conceive
+the possibility of insects so small being endued with the power, much
+less of being furnished in their own bodies with the materials of
+constructing the immense fabrics which, in almost every part of the
+Eastern and Pacific Oceans lying between the tropics, are met with in
+the shape of detached rocks, or reefs of great extent, just even with
+the surface, or islands already clothed with plants, whose bases are
+fixed at the bottom of the sea, several hundred feet in depth, where
+light and heat, so very essential to animal life, if not excluded, are
+sparingly received and feebly felt. Thousands of such rocks, and reefs,
+and islands, are known to exist in the eastern ocean, within, and even
+beyond, the limits of the tropics. The eastern coast of New Holland is
+almost wholly girt with reefs and islands of coral rock, rising
+perpendicularly from the bottom of the abyss. Captain Kent, of the
+Buffalo, speaking of a coral reef of many miles in extent, on the
+south-west coast of New Caledonia, observes, that "it is level with the
+water's edge, and towards the sea, as steep to as a wall of a house;
+that he sounded frequently within twice the ship's length of it with a
+line of one hundred and fifty fathoms, or nine hundred feet, without
+being able to reach the bottom." How wonderful, how inconceivable, that
+such stupendous fabrics should rise into existence from the silent but
+incessant, and almost imperceptible, labours of such insignificant
+worms!
+
+To buy books, as some do who make no use of them, only because they were
+published by an eminent printer, is much as if a man should buy clothes
+that did not fit him, only because they were made by some famous
+tailor.--_Pope_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TO MY BROTHER, ON HIS LEAVING ENGLAND.
+
+By The Author of "Ahab."
+
+(_For the Mirror._)
+
+
+ Wherever your fortune may lead you to roam,
+ Forget not, young exile, the land of your home;
+ Let it ever be present to memory's eye,
+ 'Tis the place where the bones of your fore-father's lie.
+ Let the thought of it ever your comforter be,
+ For no spot on this earth like your home can you see.
+
+ The fields where you rove may be more fresh and fair,
+ More splendid the sun, and more fragrant the air,
+ More lovely the flowers, more refreshing the breeze,
+ More tranquil the waters, more fruitful the trees.
+ But home after all things--that dear little spot,
+ Tho' it be but a desert can ne'er be forgot.
+
+ In the thoughts of the day, and the dreams of the night,
+ On your eyes like the kiss of your mother 'twill light,
+ Then the mist will disperse which long absence has spread.
+ And the paths you have trodden again you shall tread.
+ Then farewell, young exile, wherever you roam,
+ Oh! dear as your honour, your life, be your home.
+
+J.H.S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+RETROSPECTIVE GLEANINGS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ORDERS FOR HOUSEHOLD SERVANTS IN 1566.
+
+
+ _Orders for Household Servantes; first deuised by John
+ Haryngton, in the yeare 1566, and renewed by John Haryngton,
+ sonne of the saide John, in the yeare 1592: The saide John, the
+ sonne, being then high shrieve of the county of Somerset._
+
+ Imprimis, That no servant bee absent from praier, at morning or
+ euening, without a lawfull excuse, to be alleged within one day
+ after, vppon paine to forfeit for eury tyme 2d.
+
+ II. Item, That none swear any othe, vppon paine for every othe
+ 1d.
+
+ III. Item, That no man leaue any doore open that he findeth
+ shut, without theare bee cause, vppon paine for euery time 1d.
+
+ IV. Item, That none of the men be in bed, from our Lady-day to
+ Michaelmas, after 6 of the clock in the morning; nor out of his
+ bed after 10 of the clock at night; nor, from Michaemas till
+ our Lady-day, in bed after 7 in the morning, nor out after 9 at
+ night, without reasonable cause, on paine of 2d.
+
+ V. That no man's bed bee vnmade, nor fire or candle-box
+ vnclean, after 8 of the clock in the morning, on paine of 1d.
+
+ VI. Item, That no one commit any nuisance within either of the
+ courts, vppon paine of 1d.
+
+ VII. Item, That no man teach any of the children any vnhonest
+ speeche, or evil word, or othe, on paine of 4d.
+
+ VIII. Item, That no man waite at the table without a trencher
+ in his hand, except it be vppon some good cause, on paine of
+ Id.
+
+ IX. Item, That no man appointed to waite at my table be absent
+ that meale, without reasonable cause, on paine of 1d.
+
+ X. Item, If any man breake a glasse, hee shall aunswer the
+ price thereof out of his wages; and, if it bee not known who
+ breake it, the buttler shall pay for it on paine of 12d.
+
+ XI. Item, The table must bee couered halfe an houer before 11
+ at dinner, and 6 at supper, or before, on paine of 2d.
+
+ XII. Item, That meate bee readie at 11, or before, at dinner;
+ and 6, or before, at supper, on paine of 6d.
+
+ XIII. Item, That none be absent, without leaue or good cause,
+ the whole day, or any part of it, on paine of 4d.
+
+ XIV. Item, That no man strike his fellow, on paine of loss of
+ seruice; nor reuile or threaten, or prouoke another to strike,
+ on paine of 12d.
+
+ XV. Item, That no man come to the kitchen without reasonable
+ cause, on paine of 1d. and the cook likewyse to forfeit 1d.
+
+ XVI. Item, That none toy with the maids, on paine of 4d.
+
+ XVII. That no man weare foule shirt on Sunday, nor broken hose
+ or shooes, or dublett without buttons, on paine of 1d.
+
+ XVIII. Item, That, when any strainger goeth hence, the chamber
+ be drest vp againe within 4 howrs after, on paine of 1d.
+
+ XIX. Item, That the hall bee made cleane euery day, by eight in
+ the winter, and seauen in the sommer, on paine of him that
+ should do it to forfeit 1d.
+
+ XX. That the cowrt-gate bee shutt each meale, and not opened
+ during dinner and supper, without just cause, on paine the
+ porter to forfet for euery time, 1d.
+
+ XXI. Item, That all stayrs in the house, and other rooms that
+ neede shall require, bee made cleane on Fryday after dinner, on
+ paine of forfeyture of euery on whome it shall belong vnto, 3d.
+
+ All which sommes shall be duly paide each quarter-day out of
+ their wages, and bestowed on the poore, or other godly vse.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+THE NOVELIST.
+
+No. CVII.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE WOOD KING.
+
+_By Miss Emma Roberts_.
+
+
+Already the pile of heaped-up fagots reached above the low roof of his
+hut; but Carl Scheffler still continued lopping off branches, and
+binding fresh bundles together, almost unconscious that the sun had set,
+and that the labours of the day being over, the neighbouring peasants
+were hastening to the skittle-ground to pass away an hour in sport. The
+wood-cutter's hut was perched upon an eminence a little out of the
+public path; but he heard the merry songs of his comrades as they
+proceeded gaily to the place of rendezvous, at the Golden Stag in the
+village below. Many of his intimate acquaintance paused as they
+approached the corner of the road nearest to his hut, and the wild wood
+rang with their loud halloes; but the call, which in other times had
+been echoed by the woodman's glad voice, was now unanswered; he busied
+himself with his work; his brow darkened as the joyous sounds came over
+his ear; he threw aside his hatchet, resumed, it again, and again
+casting it from him, exclaimed, "Why, let them go, I will not carry this
+chafed and wounded spirit to their revels; my hand is not steady enough
+for a bowling-match; and since Linda will doubtless choose a richer
+partner, I have no heart for the dance."
+
+It was easy to perceive that Carl Scheffler was smarting under a recent
+disappointment: he had borne up bravely against the misfortunes which,
+from a state of comparative affluence, had reduced him to depend upon
+his own arm for subsistence, fondly trusting that ere long his prospects
+would amend; and that, at the return of the Count of Holberg to his
+ancestorial dominions, he should obtain a forester's place, and be
+enabled to claim the hand of Linda Von Kleist, to whom, in happier
+times, he had been betrothed. But these dreams had vanished; the count's
+bailiff having seen Linda, the flower of the hamlet, became his rival,
+and consequently his enemy: he had bestowed the office promised to Carl
+upon another; and Linda's father ungratefully withdrawing the consent
+given when the lover's affairs were in a more flourishing condition, had
+forbidden him the house. Buoyed up with the hope that Linda would remain
+faithful, and by her unabated attachment console him under the pressure
+of his calamities, Carl did not at first give way to despair; but Linda
+was too obedient, or perchance too indifferent, to disobey her father's
+commands. He sought her at the accustomed spot--she came not, sent not:
+he hovered round her residence, and if chance favoured him with a
+glimpse of his beloved, it was only to add to his misery, for she
+withdrew hastily from his sight. A rumour of the intended marriage of
+his perjured mistress reached his ears, and, struck to the soul, he
+endeavoured, by manual labour, to exhaust his strength and banish the
+recollection of his misery. He toiled all day in feverish desperation;
+and now that there was no more to be done, sat down to ponder over his
+altered prospects. The bailiff possessed the ear of his master, and it
+was useless to hope that the count would repair the injustice committed
+by so trusted a servant. The situation which above all others he had
+coveted, which would have given him the free range of the forest, the
+jovial hunter's life which suited his daring spirit, delighting in the
+perils of the chase, and, above all, a home for Linda, was lost, and for
+ever; henceforward he must relinquish all expectation of regaining the
+station which the misfortunes that had brought his parents to the grave
+had deprived him of, and be content to earn a sordid meal by bending his
+back to burthens befitting the brute creation alone; to hew wood, and to
+bear it to the neighbouring towns; to delve the ground at the bidding of
+a master, and to perform the offices of a menial hireling. "At least not
+here," cried the wretched young man, "not in the face of all my former
+friends; there is a refuge left where I may hide my sorrows and my
+wrongs. Fair earth, and thou fair sky, I gaze upon you for the last
+time; buried from the face of day in the centre of the deepest mine,
+I'll spend the remnant of my life unpitied and unknown." Determined to
+execute this resolution on the instant, Carl hastily collected such
+parts of his slender property as were portable; and having completed his
+arrangements, prepared to cross the Brocken, and shaped his course
+towards the Rammelsburg. The last rich gleam of crimson had faded from
+the sky; but there was light enough in the summer night to guide him on
+his way. A few bright and beautiful stars gemmed the wide concave of
+heaven; the air was soft and balmy, scarcely agitating the leaves of the
+forest trees; the fragrance-weeping limes gave out their richest scent,
+and the gentle gush of fountains, and the tricklings of the mountain
+springs, came in music on the ear; and had the traveller been more at
+ease, the calm and tranquil scene must have diffused its soothing
+influence over his heart. Carl, disregarding every thing save his own
+melancholy destiny, strode along almost choked by bitter thought, and so
+little heedful of the road, that he soon became involved in thickets
+whose paths were unknown to him; he looked up to the heavens, and
+shaping his course by one of the stars, was somewhat surprised to find
+himself still involved in the impenetrable mazes of the wood. Compelled
+to give more attention than heretofore to his route, he once or twice
+thought that he distinguished a human figure moving through the darkness
+of the forest. At first, not disposed to fall in with a companion, he
+remained silent, lest the person, whoever he might be, should choose to
+enter into conversation with him; then not quite certain whether he was
+right in his conjecture--for upon casting a second glance upon the
+object which attracted him, he more than once discovered it to be some
+stunted trunk or fantastic tree--he became anxious to ascertain whether
+he was in reality, alone, or if some other midnight wanderer trod the
+waste, and he looked narrowly around; all was still, silent, and
+solitary; and fancying that he had been deceived by the flitting shadows
+of the night, he was again relapsing into his former reverie, when he
+became aware of the presence of a man dressed in the garb of a forester,
+and having his cap wreathed with a garland of green leaves, who stood
+close at his side. Carl's tongue moved to utter a salutation, but the
+words stuck in his throat, an indescribable sensation of horror thrilled
+through his frame; tales of the demons of the Hartz rushed upon his
+memory--but he recovered instantly from the sudden shock. The desperate
+state of his fortune gave him courage, and, looking up, he was surprised
+at the consternation which the stranger had occasioned: he was a person
+of ordinary appearance, who, accosting him frankly, exclaimed, "Ho,
+comrade, thou art, I see, bent on the same errand as myself; but
+wherefore dost thou seek the treasures of the Nibelungen without the
+protecting wreath?"--"The treasures of the Nibelungen?" returned Carl;
+"I have indeed heard of such a thing, and that it was hidden in the
+bosom of the Hartz by a princess of the olden time; but I never was mad
+enough to think of so wild a chase as a search after riches, which has
+baffled the wisest of our ancestors, must surely prove."--"Belike then,"
+replied the forester, "thou art well to do in the world, and therefore
+needest not to replenish thy wallets with gold,--travelling perchance to
+take possession of some rich inheritance."--"No, by St. Roelas," cried
+the woodcutter, "thou hast guessed wide of the mark. I am going to hide
+my poverty in the mine of Rammelsburg."--"The mine of Rammelsburg!"
+echoed the stranger, and laughed scornfully, so that the deep woods rang
+with the sound; and Carl feeling his old sensations return as the
+fiendish merriment resounded through the wilderness, again gazed
+stedfastly in his companion's face, but he read nothing there to justify
+his suspicions: the fiery eye lost its lustre; the lip its curl; and,
+gazing benignantly upon the forlorn wood-cutter, he continued his
+speech, saying, "Then prithee take the advice of one who knows these
+forests, and all that they contain. Here are materials in abundance for
+our garland; advance forward, and fear not the issue;"--and, gathering
+leaves from the boughs of trees of a species unknown to his new
+acquaintance, he twined them into a wreath, and placed the sylvan diadem
+on Carl's head. The instant that he felt the light pressure on his
+temples, all his fears vanished; and he followed his guide, conversing
+pleasantly through wide avenues and over broad glades of fresh turf,
+which seemed to be laid out like a royal chase, till they came to a wall
+of rock resembling the Hahnen Klippers, and entering through an arch, a
+grey moss-covered tower arose in the distance. The ponderous doors were
+wide open; and Carl advancing, found himself in a large hall well
+lighted, and showing abundance of treasure scattered abroad in all
+directions. He was conscious that he had lost his companion, but he
+seemed no longer to require his instruction; and casting down his own
+worthless burthen, he laded himself with the riches that courted his
+touch. The adventurer was soon supplied with a sufficient quantity of
+gold and jewels to satisfy his most unbounded wishes; and turning from
+the spot with a light heart, he sped merrily along. The country round
+about seemed strange to him; but on repassing the rocky ledge, a brisk
+wind suddenly springing up blew off his cap. The morning air was cold,
+and Carl, hastening to regain his head-gear, discovered that the wreath
+had disappeared; and, as if awakening from a dream, he found himself
+surrounded by familiar objects; he felt, however, the weight of the load
+upon his back, and though panting with the fatigue it occasioned, made
+the best of his way home. On approaching the hut, a low murmur struck on
+his ear. He paused; listened attentively; and distinguishing a female
+voice, he rushed forward, and in the next moment clasped Linda in his
+arms. She had fled from the persecutions of the bailiff to seek shelter
+in Carl's straw-roofed hut; and the now happy lovers, as they surveyed
+the treasures which had been snatched from the Nibelungen, agreed that
+they owed their good fortune to Riebezhahl the Wood King, who sometimes
+taking pity upon the frail and feeble denizens of earth, pointed out to
+their wondering eyes the inexhaustible riches of which he was the
+acknowledged guardian.
+
+_London Weekly Review_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DRAFTS ON LA FITTE.
+
+COOKE.
+
+
+Only upon one occasion did Cooke deviate from his resolution of not
+apologizing to a provincial assembly, and that was at Liverpool. A
+previous breach of decorum was visited one night by the fury of an
+offended audience; confusion was at its height; the people were the
+actors, and Cooke the audience: yet the sturdy tragedian remained
+callous to the bursts of indignation which were heard around him, until
+destruction became the order of the day; lamps _lighted_ on the stage;
+benches betokened _mobility_; _pedal_ applications were made _forte_ to
+the _piano_; _basely violated_ was the repository of the _base viol_;
+and the property of poor Knight the manager gave every sign of that
+being its last appearance. What popular rage had failed to produce,
+consideration for the fortunes of his friend effected. At his
+entreaties, the Caledonian was induced to advance to the front of the
+stage (never was there a more _moving_ scene than that before it);
+silence was obtained, and he condescended to express his sorrow for the
+state in which some nights previously he had presented himself: adding,
+"that _he_ never _before_ felt so keenly the _degradation_ of _his_
+situation." Equivocal as was the mode of extenuation, the audience
+allied to _Mersey_ accorded the _mercy_ it possessed, and was or
+appeared to be, satisfied; but not so the actor, and he as fully as
+instantly avenged what he deemed his misplaced submission. As he
+concluded his address, he turned to the gratified but yet trembling
+manager, and (in allusion to the large share in the slave-trade then
+imputed to Liverpool) with that peculiarity of undertone he possessed,
+which could be distinctly heard throughout the largest theatre although
+pronounced as a whisper, exclaimed, "There's not a stone in the walls of
+Liverpool which has not been cemented by the _bluid_ of Africans." Then,
+casting one of his Shylock glances of hatred and contempt on the mute
+and astounded audience, majestically left the stage.
+
+On the first night of his performance at the Boston theatre, Richard was
+the part he had adopted; and so strongly had he fortified himself for
+the kingly task, that he deemed himself the very monarch he was destined
+to enact. The theatre was crowded in every part: expectation was on
+tiptoe: anticipation as to his person, voice, and manner, was announced
+by the sibilating "I guess" heard around, and "pretty considerable"
+agitation prevailed. The orchestra had begun and ceased, unheeded or
+unheard; nor could one of Sir Thomas Lethbridge's best cut and dried
+have produced less effect amongst the "irreclaimables." The curtain
+rose, and amidst thundering plaudits the welcome stranger advanced, in
+angles, to the front of the stage, and, as Sir Pertinax has it, "booed
+and booed and booed;" but greeting could not endure for ever: well
+justified curiosity assumed its station, and at length silence, almost
+breathless silence, reigned around, such as attended Irving in his
+Zoar, or Canning when he lately produced his budget. The hospitable
+clamour was over; but instead of "Now is the winter of our discontent
+made glorious summer by this sun of York" being given, Cooke, in a
+respectful but decided tone, requested that "God save the King" might be
+played by the orchestra prior to the commencement of the play. The
+proposal at first but excited mockery and laughter, which, however, gave
+way to far different feelings, on Cooke firmly and composedly declaring,
+that, until his request was complied with, he was determined not to
+proceed; and, should it be absolutely refused, he was resolved to
+retire. The fury of the Bostonians was at its height: menace,
+accompanied by every vituperative epithet rage could suggest, was
+lavished on the actor; but he kept his station, calm and secure as his
+own native island set in the stormy seas, until anger gradually subsided
+through very weariness; and every effort having been ineffectually used
+to wean "_the tyrant_" from his purpose, the political antipathies of
+the audience began to yield to their theatrical taste; and, after much
+argument and delay, the unpalatable demand was reluctantly assented to.
+Cooke, however, whose nature it was, when opposed, only to become more
+exigent, was not himself appeased; for, as the notes "unpleasing to a
+_Yankee_ ear" were sounded, with a majestic wave of his hand he silenced
+the unwilling music, and, "Standing, if you please," was as
+dictatorially as fearlessly pronounced, to the consternation of the
+audience. So much had, however, already been accorded, that it was not
+deemed matter of much moment to concede the rest: and however
+ungracefully the attitude of respect was assumed, the national hymn was
+performed amidst grimace and muttering; Cooke beating time with his
+foot,--nodding significantly and satisfactorily at "Confound their
+politics;" and occasionally taking a pinch of snuff, as, in his royal
+robes, he triumphantly contemplated the astonished and indignant
+audience. It ended:--"Richard was himself again," and "_Now_ is the
+winter of our _discontent_ made glorious summer" was given with equal
+emphasis, feeling, and effect.
+
+At the time that _greater_ performer, the elephant, made his appearance
+on the boards, his own _board_ became a subject of no trifling
+consideration with the managers, particularly as the African had taken a
+predilection for _rum_, which the new actor used to quaff with
+extraordinary zest. On one occasion Cooke was missing from a morning
+rehearsal, and all had been some time in waiting for the tragedian,
+when the messenger whom Kerable despatched in search of him, returned
+grinning to the green-room. "Where is Mr. Cooke, sir?" demanded Kemble.
+"He is below _breakfasting_ with the _elephant_, sir!" was the reply.
+
+It was too much for Cooke, after having so frequently disappointed full
+houses, to be obliged to play to an empty theatre. It was like playing
+whist with _dummy_. However, towards the close of the O. P. war, (which,
+by the way, excited more the attention of the Parisians than the
+national contest in which we were engaged,) the public had adopted the
+plan of never commencing operations until half-price, to the injury of
+the manager's purse. It was during the earlier acts of "The Man of the
+World," that Cooke, in performing to "a beggarly account of empty
+boxes," was addressed by one of the actors, in accordance with the
+scene, in a whisper; when the _elevated_ comedian, casting a glance
+around, bitterly observed, "Speak out: there need be no secret. _No one
+hears us._" Poor Cooke could not plead in excuse what an actor did on
+being hissed for too _sober_ a representation of a _drunken_ part,
+"Ladies and gentlemen, I beg your pardon: but it is really the _first
+time_ I ever was _intoxicated_."
+
+His death was in singular accordance with his _taste_ through life. He
+sought the banks of the _Brandywine_, and whether it were that the
+composition of its stream so little responded to its title as to prey
+upon his _spirits_, or from some other cause, there he "_drank_ his
+last."
+
+
+DICKEY SUETT.
+
+
+I met with him once in a house situated on the very confines of _Beef
+and Law_; on the line of demarcation between the theatres and Lincoln's
+Inn; a sort of _debateable_ ground between the spouters and ranters of
+the stage, and the eaters of commons, by either of which party it was
+frequented. Around a large table in the parlour sat a motley group.
+There were ragged wits, well-dressed students, new-fledged actors, a
+hackney writer or so, an Irish barrister named Shuter, a Scotch
+reporter, and a hodge-podge of most discordant materials congregated
+under the amalgamating power of Suett, who seemed, by the incongruity of
+his dress and diversified manner, to have studied the various tastes of
+those he swayed, and to be the comprehensive representative of each of
+the strange beings he looked upon, with all of whom he would
+occasionally identify himself with so much ease, that it were hard to
+say whether it was the result of labour or of tact, of calculation, or
+the mere impulse of mother-wit. The _ropes of his face_, when drawn
+_taught_, peculiarly commanded the attention of the Caledonian, while
+the sly and humorous glance of his half-shut eye was acknowledged by the
+Hibernian to whom it was addressed; the _snow drift_ of powder which lay
+in patches on his long, straight hair, agreed with the taste of his
+dramatic nursling; the far-extended cambric of white frill imposed upon
+the students, while the unseemly rents in his coat at once compensated
+to the wits for what there might be of gaudy or gay in his outward man.
+We were received with equal courtesy and ceremony by the president; and
+were just seated, when a ballet-dancer of Drury-lane entered. As he was
+a Frenchman, it became a question of _national_ politeness: and Dicky
+_chestered_ him to his dexter! and, as was befitting, condescended to
+address him. "I am proud, sir," said Suett, with the formality of _Black
+Rod_ himself, "to do the honours of my _country_ to the _representative_
+of a nation which held my _master_ Garrick in peculiar respect. He was a
+great actor, sir; a wonderful man! Your Lekain, or any other _Cain_,
+could not come up to him, for he was _Able_, Pardon the pun. Oh,
+la!--but he was vain, sir; vain as a peacock; it could not be of his
+person. Had he been, as Richard has it, _'a marvellous proper man'_ like
+myself, one might have said something. He used to say, I was too _lean_
+for _Suett_. Oh, dear. _A votre sante, Monsieur,_ happy to see you on
+this side the Channel. Never been to France yet, although in the
+_Straits_ great part of my life, and not unfrequently _half seas
+over_.--Well, sir, to return to Garrick. There was that man 'frae the
+north,' who wrote the History of England and Roderick Random,--the
+latter a true story, they say;--he who challenged Campbell the
+barrister, for calling him _names_, _To bias_ the cause. Well, sir, Davy
+refused one of his farces; but the wily Caledonian _pocketed_ the
+affront, in coolly observing, 'that he had nearly completed another
+volume of his history, and hoped he might be permitted to name _the
+British Roscius_, the pride of his country, and all that sort of thing.'
+It was a palpable hit, sir--the thing was settled--the _manager
+managed_; and _Smelfungus_ retired, _without_ his manuscript, half sorry
+he had not added _another_ scene to his farce. Well, sir, the story got
+wind, and some days after Davy dined with a lawyer who had interested
+himself vainly for a friend's comedy with him, when, in the course of
+conversation, the barrister observed to Davy, before a large company,
+that he had nearly compiled another volume of The Statutes _at large_
+(would they were all _at large_), and hoped he might be permitted to
+name _the British Roscius, the pride of his country._ There was a roar
+at the expense of Garrick. 'The galled jade' winced terribly:--he was
+touchy as tinder, sir:--never was _Digest_ so ill-_digested_.'"
+
+It was when the meteor-like popularity of little Betty was at its height
+that poor Suett fell ill, at what he termed his _town_ residence (a
+second-floor in a low street), and the pigmy Roscius, having eaten too
+much fruit, kept all London in intense agony for his fate at the same
+moment. Bulletins were exhibited in Southampton-row several times
+a-day, signed by numerous physicians. Had he died, how posterity would
+have been befooled! Suett was then _actually_ dying, yet would he have
+his joke, and his last moments were cheered by the horse-laugh of the
+rabble assembled to _spell_ the bulletin suspended to "the second-floor
+bell," attested by the _mark_ of the old woman who attended him. "You
+shall be buried in Saint Paul's," said a friend. "Oh, la!" was the dying
+ejaculation of the comedian.
+
+_New Monthly Magazine._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+THE SELECTOR; AND LITERARY NOTICES OF NEW WORKS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+AMERICAN TRAVELLING.
+
+
+June 7th, at three in the morning, the steam-boat (which was of immense
+size, and on the high pressure system) arrived at Albany, having come
+one hundred and sixty miles in seventeen hours, including stoppages. I
+found that, unluckily, the mail-coach had left the place just before our
+arrival, so I booked myself in an accommodation-stage, which was to
+reach Boston (a distance of one hundred and sixty miles) in three days,
+and entered the wretched-looking vehicle, with a heavy heart, at eight
+o'clock.... The machine in which I travelled was slow and crowded. The
+proprietor had undertaken to let us rest at night on the road; but we
+found that his notions of rest were very imperfect, and that his night
+was one of the polar regions.--Having partaken of a wretched dinner at
+Sand Lake, we arrived about one in the morning at Cheshire, where we
+were to sleep.
+
+By dint of most active exertion, I secured a bed to myself, the narrow
+dimensions of which precluded the possibility of participation, and
+plunged into it with all possible haste, as there was not a moment to
+be lost. Secure in "single blessedness," I was incredibly amused at the
+compliments of nocturnal arrangement which passed around me among my
+Yankee companions. They were nine in number, and occupied by triplets
+the three other beds which the room contained. Whether it was with a
+view of preserving their linen unrumpled, or of enjoying greater space,
+I cannot tell; but certain it is, that they divested themselves of
+clothing to a degree not generally practised in Europe. A spirit of
+accommodation appeared to prevail; and it seemed to be a matter of
+indifference whether to occupy the lateral portions of the bed, or the
+warmer central position, except in one instance, where a gentleman
+protested against being placed next to the wall, as he was in the habit
+of chewing tobacco in his sleep!
+
+At four o'clock in the morning we again set off, and, as much rain had
+fell in the night, the roads were in a dreadful state. The coach company
+now consisted of nine passengers inside, one on the top, (which, from
+its convex form, is a very precarious situation,) and three on the box,
+besides the coachman, who sat on the knees of the unfortunate middle
+man,--an uneasy burden, considering the intense heat of the weather.
+
+It matters little to the American driver where he sits; he is indeed, in
+all respects, a far different personage from his great-coated prototype
+in England. He is in general extremely dexterous in the art of driving,
+though his costume is of a most grotesque description. Figure to
+yourself a slipshod sloven, dressed in a striped calico jacket and an
+old straw hat, alternately arranging the fragile harness of his horses,
+and springing again upon his box with surprising agility; careless of
+the bones of his passengers, and confident in his skill and resources,
+he scruples not frequently to gallop his coach over corderoy roads, (so
+called from being formed of the trunks of trees laid transversely,) or
+dash it round corners, and through holes that would appal the heart of
+the stoutest English coachman, however elated by gin, or irritated by
+opposition. I was once whirled along one of these roads, when the
+leathers, (barbarous substitutes for springs,) which supported the
+carriage gave way with a sudden shock. The undaunted driver instantly
+sprang from his box, tore a stake from a rail fence by the road-side,
+laid it across under the body of the coach, and was off again before I
+properly recovered the use of my senses, which were completely
+bewildered by the jolting I had undergone. I can compare it to nothing
+but the butt of Regulus, without the nails. When the lash and butt-end
+of the whip fail him, he does not scruple to use his foot, as the
+situation of his seat allows the application of it to his wheelers.
+
+We dined at New Salem at six, and arrived at Petersham, where we were to
+sleep, at twelve o'clock at night, having been twenty hours coming sixty
+miles.
+
+Though tired and disgusted with my journey, the prospect of a short
+respite from this state of purgatory was embittered during the last few
+miles by alarm at the idea of passing the night with one, if not two, of
+my fellow-travellers; and I internally resolved rather to sleep upon the
+floor.
+
+After a desperate struggle, I succeeded, to my great joy, in securing a
+bed for myself, not, however, without undergoing a severe objurgation
+from the landlady, who could not understand such unaccommodating
+selfishness. Short were our slumbers. By the rigid order of the
+proprietor, we were turned out the next morning at three, and pursued
+our journey.--_De Roos's Personal Narrative._
+
+
+KANGAROO WAGGERY.
+
+
+One of the largest tame kangaroos I have seen in the country is
+domiciled here, and a mischievous wag he is, creeping and snuffing
+cautiously toward a stranger, with such an innocently expressive
+countenance, that roguery could never be surmised to exist under
+it--when, having obtained as he thinks a sufficient introduction, he
+claps his forepaws on your shoulders, (as if to caress you,) and raising
+himself suddenly upon his tail, administers such a well-put push with
+his hind-legs, that it is two to one but he drives you heels over head!
+This is all done in what he considers facetious play, with a view to
+giving you a hint to examine your pockets, and see what _bon-bons_ you
+have got for him, as he munches cakes and comfits with epicurean _gout_;
+and if the door be ajar, he will gravely take his station behind your
+chair at meal-time, like a lackey, giving you an admonitory kick every
+now and then, if you fail to help him as well as yourself.--_Two Years
+in New South Wales._
+
+
+A MAGNIFICENT WATERFALL.
+
+
+My swarthy guides, although this was unquestionably the first time that
+they had ever led a traveller to view the remarkable scenery of their
+country, evinced a degree of tact, as _ciceroni_, as well as natural
+feeling of the picturesque, that equally pleased and surprised me.
+Having forewarned me that this was not yet the waterfall, they now
+pioneered the way for about a mile farther along the rocks, some of them
+keeping near, and continually cautioning me to look to my feet, as a
+single false step might precipitate me into the raging abyss of waters,
+the tumult of which seemed to shake even the solid rocks around us.
+
+At length we halted, as before, and the next moment I was led to a
+projecting rock, where a scene burst upon me, far surpassing my most
+sanguine expectations. The whole water of the river (except what escapes
+by the subsidiary channel we had crossed, and by a similar one on the
+north side) being previously confined to a bed of scarcely one hundred
+feet in breadth, descends at once in a magnificent cascade of full four
+hundred feet in height. I stood upon a cliff nearly level with the top
+of the fall, and directly in front of it. The beams of the evening sun
+fell upon the cascade, and occasioned a most splendid rainbow; while the
+vapoury mists arising from the broken waters, the bright green woods
+that hung from the surrounding cliffs, the astounding roar of the
+waterfall, and the tumultuous boiling and whirling of the stream below,
+striving to escape along its deep, dark, and narrow, path, formed
+altogether a combination of beauty and grandeur, such as I never before
+witnessed. As I gazed on this stupendous stream, I felt as if in a
+dream. The sublimity of nature drowned all apprehensions of danger; and,
+after a short pause, I hastily left the spot where I stood to gain a
+nearer view from a cliff that impended over the foaming gulf. I had just
+reached this station, when I felt myself grasped all at once by four
+Korannas, who simultaneously seized hold of me by the arms and legs. My
+first impression was, that they were going to hurl me over the
+precipice; but it was a momentary thought, and it wronged the friendly
+savages. They are themselves a timid race, and they were alarmed, lest
+my temerity should lead me into danger. They hurried me back from the
+brink, and then explained their motive, and asked my forgiveness. I was
+not ungrateful for their care, though somewhat annoyed by their
+officiousness.--_Thompson's Travels in Southern Africa._
+
+
+SETTING IN OF AN INDIAN MONSOON.
+
+
+The shades of evening approached as we reached the ground, and just as
+the encampment was completed the atmosphere grew suddenly dark, the heat
+became oppressive, and an unusual stillness presaged the immediate
+setting in of the monsoon. The whole appearance of nature resembled
+those solemn preludes to earthquakes and hurricanes in the West Indies,
+from which the east in general is providentially free. We were allowed
+very little time for conjecture; in a few minutes the heavy clouds burst
+over us.... I witnessed seventeen monsoons in India, but this exceeded
+them all in its awful appearance and dreadful effects.
+
+Encamped in a low situation, on the borders of a lake formed to collect
+the surrounding water, we found ourselves in a few hours in a liquid
+plain. The tent-pins giving way, in a loose soil, the tents fell down,
+and left the whole army exposed to the contending elements.
+
+It requires a lively imagination to conceive the situation of a hundred
+thousand human beings of every description, with more than two hundred
+thousand elephants, camels, horses, and oxen, suddenly overwhelmed by
+this dreadful storm, in a strange country, without any knowledge of high
+or low ground; the whole being covered by an immense lake, and
+surrounded by thick darkness, which prevented our distinguishing a
+single object, except such as the vivid glare of lightning displayed in
+horrible forms. No language can describe the wreck of a large encampment
+thus instantaneously destroyed and covered with water, amid the cries of
+old men and helpless women, terrified by the piercing shrieks of their
+expiring children, unable to afford them relief. During this dreadful
+night more than two hundred persons and three thousand cattle perished,
+and the morning dawn exhibited a shocking spectacle.--_Forbes's Oriental
+Memoirs._
+
+
+GRACE OF CARRIAGE.
+
+
+This requires not only a perfect freedom of motion, but also a firmness
+of step, or constant steady bearing of the centre of gravity over the
+base. It is usually possessed by those who live in the country, and
+according to nature, as it is called, and who take much and varied
+exercise. What a contrast is there between the gait of the active
+mountaineer, rejoicing in the consciousness of perfect nature, and of
+the mechanic or shopkeeper, whose life is spent in the cell of his
+trade, and whose body soon receives a shape and air that correspond to
+this!--and in the softer sex, what a contrast is there, between her who
+recalls to us the fabled Diana of old, and that other, who has scarcely
+trodden but on smooth pavements or carpets, and who, under any new
+circumstances, carries her person as awkwardly as something to the
+management of which she is not accustomed.
+
+_Arnott's Elements of Physics._
+
+
+THE CAVALRY SCHOOL OF ST. GERMAINS.
+
+
+Bonaparte frequently visited the school of infantry at St. Cyr, reviewed
+the cadets, and gave them cold collations in the park. But he had never
+visited the school of cavalry since its establishment, of which we were
+very jealous, and did all in our power to attract him. Whenever he
+hunted, the cadets were in grand parade on the parterre, crying, _"Vive
+l'Empereur!"_ with all their young energies; he held his hat raised as
+he passed them; but that was all we could gain. Wise people whispered
+that he never would go whilst they were so evidently expecting him; that
+he liked to keep them always on the alert; it was good for discipline.
+The general took another plan, and once allowed no sign of life about
+the castle when the emperor passed--it was like a deserted place. But it
+did not take neither; he passed, as if there were no castle there. It
+was _desesperant._ When, lo! the next day but one after I had spoken to
+him, he suddenly galloped into the court of the castle, and the cry of
+the sentinel, _"L'Empereur!"_ was the first notice they had of it. He
+examined into every thing. All were in undress, all at work, and this
+was what he wanted. In the military-schools the cadets got
+ammunition-bread, and lived like well-fed soldiers; but there was great
+outcry in the circles of Paris against the bread of the school of St.
+Germain's. Ladies complained that their sons were poisoned by it; the
+emperor thought it was all nicety, and said no man was fit to be an
+officer who could not eat ammunition-bread. However, being there, he
+asked for a loaf, which was brought, and he saw it was villanous trash,
+composed of pease, beans, rye, potatoes, and every thing that would make
+flour or meal, instead of good brown wheaten flour. He tore the loaf in
+two in a rage, and dashed it against the wall, and there it stuck like a
+piece of mortar, to the great annoyance of those whose duty it was to
+have attended to this. He ordered the baker to be called, and made him
+look at it _sticking_. The man was in great terror first at the
+emperor's anger, but, taking heart, he begged his majesty not to take
+his contract from him, and he would give good bread in future; at which
+the emperor broke into a royal and imperial passion, and threatened to
+send him to the galleys; but, suddenly turning round, he said, "Yes, he
+would allow him to keep his contract, on condition that, as long as it
+lasted, he should furnish the school with good white household bread,
+_(pain de menage,)_ such as was sold in the bakers' shops in Paris; that
+he might choose that, or lose his contract;" and the baker thankfully
+promised to furnish good white bread in future, at the same
+price.--_Appendix to the 9th volume of Scott's Life of Napoleon._
+
+
+CENTRE OF GRAVITY, IN REFERENCE TO SEA-SICKNESS.
+
+
+Man requiring so strictly to maintain his perpendicularity, that is, to
+keep the centre of gravity always over the support of his body,
+ascertains the required position in various ways, but chiefly by the
+perpendicularity or known position of things about him. Vertigo, and
+sickness commonly called sea-sickness, because it most frequently occurs
+at sea, are the consequences of depriving him of his standards of
+comparison, or of disturbing them.
+
+Hence on shipboard, where the lines of the masts, windows, furniture,
+&c. are constantly changing, sickness, vertigo, and other affections of
+the same class are common to persons unaccustomed to ships. Many
+experience similar effects in carriages, and in swings, or on looking
+from a lofty precipice, where known objects being distant, and viewed
+under a new aspect, are not so readily recognised: also in walking on a
+wall or roof, in looking directly up to a roof, or to the stars in the
+zenith, because, then, all standards disappear: on walking into a round
+room, where there are no perpendicular lines of light and shade, as when
+the walls and roof are covered with a spotted paper without regular
+arrangement of spot:--on turning round, as in waltzing, or on a wheel;
+because the eye is not then allowed to rest on the standards, &c.
+
+At night, or by blind people, standards belonging to the sense of touch
+are used; and it is because on board ship, the standards both of sight
+and of touch are lost, that the effect is so very remarkable.
+
+But sea-sickness also partly depends on the irregular pressure of the
+bowels against the diaphragm, as their inertia or weight varies with the
+rising and falling of the ship.
+
+From the nature of sea-sickness, as discovered in all these facts, it is
+seen why persons unaccustomed to the motion of a ship, often find relief
+in keeping their eyes directed to the fixed shore, where it is visible;
+or in lying down on their backs and shutting their eyes; or in taking
+such a dose of exhilarating drink as shall diminish their sensibility to
+all objects of external sense.
+
+_Arnott's Elements of Physics._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+FINE ARTS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE BRITISH INSTITUTION.
+
+
+The following gratifying report of the directors has just been
+made:--"The funds of the institution consist at the present time of
+12,500l. 3 per cent, consols. It is hoped that these funds may be
+considerably increased by the exhibition of the beautiful collection of
+pictures now on view at the gallery, which last year attracted such
+general notice, and which his majesty, ever anxious to forward the
+purposes of the institution, has again allowed the directors to offer
+for the inspection of the public. The directors, finding that the two
+institutions which have been established for the relief of decayed
+artists, were not only founded upon the most humane principles, but
+conducted in the most beneficial manner, have applied in the course of
+the present year, 400l, to the purposes of those institutions; viz.
+200l. to the Artists' Benevolent Fund, and 200l to the Artists'
+General Benevolent Institution." The report next mentions two pictures
+to be painted on the subjects of Lord Howe's and Lord St. Vincent's
+victories, by Mr. Briggs and Mr. Jones, to be placed, "as well as those
+which were exhibited this year in the gallery in commemoration of other
+naval victories, in the hall of Greenwich hospital." It also confirms
+the gift of Mr. Hilton's and Mr. Northcote's pictures to the new church
+at Pimlico, built by Mr. Hakewill, and to the chapel built by Mr.
+Cockerell, in the upper part of Regent-street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+ARTS AND SCIENCES.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MUSICAL COMPOSITION.
+
+
+A very valuable musical manuscript, by Guillaume de Machault, who was
+_valet de chambre_ to Phillippe-le-Bel, in 1307, has been discovered in
+the royal library at Paris. It contains several French and Latin
+anthems, ballads, &c.; and concludes with a mass, which is supposed to
+have been sung at the coronation of Charles V., in 1364; and which
+proves, at that time they were acquainted with the art of composition in
+four parts.
+
+
+NOISY FISH.
+
+
+M. Cuvier lately read a short paper to the French academy on the species
+of fish called _pogonias_, in which he particularly adverted to the
+noise by which they make themselves heard, even under water. However
+difficult the explanation of this phenomenon, there can be no doubt of
+its existence; the evidence of it adduced by M. Cuvier being perfectly
+satisfactory. The silurus, a large and ravenous fish, which abounds in
+the Danube, gives daily proof of it.
+
+
+GEOLOGY.
+
+
+A treatise on the great geological question, whether the continents now
+inhabited, have or have not been repeatedly submerged in the sea, has
+lately been read to the Academie des Sciences, by M. Constant Prevost.
+M. Prevost maintains, contrary to the generally received opinion, that
+there has been but one great inundation of the earth; and that the
+various remains of plants, animals, &c., which have given rise to the
+supposition of successive inundations, have been floated to the places
+in which they are occasionally found.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER.
+
+ "I am but a _Gatherer_ and disposer of other men's
+ stuff."--Wotton.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A PUZZLE FOR THE CURIOUS.
+
+
+At a town in Gloucestershire the relatives as below, recently surrounded
+one dinner-table:--One great-grandfather, two grandfathers, one
+grandmother, three fathers, two mothers, four children, three
+grand-children, ore great-grandchild, three sisters, one brother, two
+husbands, two wives, one mother-in-law, one father-in-law, two
+brothers-in-law, three sisters-in-law, one son-in-law, two
+daughters-in-law, two uncles, three aunts, one nephew, two nieces, and
+two cousins. The whole party consisted of seven persons only.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ROMANCE OF WAR.
+
+
+A French soldier, who accompanied the armies of Russia, concealed a
+small treasure at the entrance of a village near Wilna, with a view of
+taking it with him on his return. After the defeat of Moscow he was made
+prisoner, and sent to Siberia, and only recovered his liberty at the end
+of last year. On reaching Wilna he remembered his hidden treasure, and
+after tracing out the spot where he had hid it, he went to take it away.
+What was his astonishment to find, in the place of his money, a small
+tin box, containing a letter addressed to him, in which a commercial
+house was mentioned at Nancy, where he might receive the sum buried,
+with interest, since the year 1812. The soldier supposed this was all a
+hoax; he went, however, to the house pointed out, where he received his
+capital, with twelve years' interest. With this sum he established a
+small business at Nancy, which enables him to live comfortably; but he
+has never been able, though he has taken some pains, to ascertain how
+his money was taken away and restored to him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Two lovely ladies dwell at ----,
+ And each a-churching goes;
+ Emma goes there _to close her eyes_,
+ And Jane to _eye her clothes_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The death of Stanislaus, king of Poland, was occasioned in a singular
+manner. Being much addicted to smoking, he generally every day finished
+many pipes. In knocking out the ashes he set fire to his dressing-gown.
+As no one was near him, the flames had surrounded him, when the officer
+on guard, hearing his cries, ran to his assistance, and extinguished the
+fire. He might have survived, but a singular circumstance accompanied
+the accident. He had been devout during the last years of his life, and,
+as a penance for his sins, had worn a girdle with points on the inside;
+these became heated, and being pressed into his body while the flames
+were extinguishing, caused a number of wounds, the discharge from which,
+at his period of life, proved too much for his debilitated constitution.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Professor Porson was often in pecuniary difficulties. On one occasion he
+came with a dejected air to a friend, and said he had been walking
+through the streets of London all the morning, thinking how strange it
+was that not one of all the crowds he met should know as much about
+Greek tragic verse as himself, and yet that he could not turn his
+knowledge into a hundred pounds. In these moments he often talked of
+retiring forever to the wilds of America, where he formed a plan of
+living in solitary happiness, without a book or a friend.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One evening, at the Literary Fund Club, Mr. Incledon having sung with
+great effect Mr. T. Dibdin's ballad of "May we ne'er want a friend, or a
+bottle to give him," an elderly gentleman whispered in Mr. T. Dibdin's
+ear, "Ah! my dear sir, these are the true things of the old school; what
+a pity it is no one living is found to write such ditties now!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_Printed and published by J LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, (near Somerset House,)
+and sold by all Newsmen and Booksellers._
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT,
+AND INSTRUCTION, VOL. 10, ISSUE 268, AUGUST 11, 1827***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 10026.txt or 10026.zip *******
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