diff options
| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 04:36:19 -0700 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 04:36:19 -0700 |
| commit | f1f45485da1ea261e01ed6630b9ca35adb614787 (patch) | |
| tree | eb6f5045a30bf211430c96efef026ac94917cb2a /11222-h | |
Diffstat (limited to '11222-h')
| -rw-r--r-- | 11222-h/11222-h.htm | 1706 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | 11222-h/images/395-1.png | bin | 0 -> 70375 bytes |
2 files changed, 1706 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/11222-h/11222-h.htm b/11222-h/11222-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..260ab8a --- /dev/null +++ b/11222-h/11222-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,1706 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> + +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> +<head> + <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; +charset=UTF-8" /> + + <title>The Mirror of Literature, Issue 395.</title> + + <style type="text/css"> + <!-- + body {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;} + p {text-align: justify;} + blockquote {text-align: justify;} + h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {text-align: center;} + pre {font-size: 0.7em;} + + hr {text-align: center; width: 50%;} + html>body hr {margin-right: 25%; margin-left: 25%; width: 50%;} + hr.full {width: 100%;} + html>body hr.full {margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 0%; width: 100%;} + + .note, .footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;} + + span.pagenum {position: absolute; left: 1%; right: 91%; font-size: 8pt;} + + .poem {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; margin-bottom: 1em; text-align: left;} + .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;} + .poem p {margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;} + .poem p.i2 {margin-left: 1em;} + .poem p.i8 {margin-left: 8em;} + + .figure {padding: 1em; margin: 0; text-align: center; font-size: 0.8em; margin: auto;} + .figure img {border: none;} + .figure p + --> + </style> +</head> +<body> +<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11222 ***</div> + + <hr class="full" /> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page257" name="page257"></a>[pg 257]</span> + + <h1>THE MIRROR<br /> + OF<br /> + LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.</h1> + <hr class="full" /> + + <table width="100%" summary="Banner"> + <tr> + <td align="left"><b>Vol. XIV. No. 395.]</b></td> + <td align="center"><b>SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1829.</b></td> + <td align="right"><b>[PRICE 2d.</b></td> + </tr> + </table> + <hr class="full" /> + + +<div class="figure" style="width: 100%;"> + <a href="images/395-1.png"><img width="100%" src="images/395-1.png" +alt="" /></a> + </div> + + + +<h2> +The Original Royal Exchange.</h2> +<h4> +(<i>From a Correspondent</i>.)</h4> + +<p> +Four centuries since the Merchants of London could not boast of a public +Exchange. They then assembled to transact business in Lombard-street, +among the Lombard Jews, from whom the street derives its name, and who +were then the bankers of all Europe. Here too they probably kept their +<i>benches</i> or <i>banks</i>, as they were wont to do in the market-places of +the continent, for transacting pecuniary matters; and thus drew around +them all those of whose various pursuits money is the common medium. +</p><p> +At length, in 1534, Sir R. Gresham, who was agent for Henry the Eighth +at Antwerp, and had been struck with the advantages attending the +<i>Bourse</i>, or Exchange, of that city, prevailed upon his Royal Master to +send a letter to the Mayor and Commonalty of London, recommending them +to erect a similar building on their manor of Leadenhall. The Court of +Common Council, however, were of opinion that such a removal of the +seat of business would be impracticable, and the scheme was therefore +dropped; but in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, Sir Thomas Gresham, who +succeeded to the Antwerp agency, happily accomplished what had been +denied to the hopes of his father. In 1564 Sir Thomas proposed to the +Corporation—"That if the City would give him a piece of ground, in a +commodious spot, he would erect an Exchange at his own expense, with +large and covered walks, wherein the merchants might assemble and +transact business at all seasons, without interruption from the weather, +or impediments of any kind." The Corporation met the proposal with +a spirit of equal liberality; and in 1566 various buildings, houses, +tenements, &c. in Cornhill, were purchased for rather more than £3,530, +and the materials re-sold for £478, on condition of pulling them down +and carrying them away.—The ground plot was then levelled at the charge +of the City, and possession given to Sir Thomas, who in the deed is +styled, "Agent to the Queen's Highness," and who laid the foundation of +the new Exchange on the 7th of June following; and the whole was covered +in before November 1567. +</p><p> +The plan adopted by Sir Thomas, in +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page258" name="page258"></a>[pg 258]</span> + the formation of his building, was +similar to the one at Antwerp. An open area was inclosed by a quadrangle +of lofty stone-buildings, with a colonnade as at present, supported, +by marble columns of the Doric order, over which ran a cornice, with +Ionic pilasters above, having niches between, containing statues of the +English Sovereigns. The entrances were from Cornhill and Broad-street. +Over the first, between two Ionic three-quarter columns, were the Royal +Arms, and on either side were those of the City and Sir Thomas; on the +north side, but not exactly in the centre, rose a Corinthian pillar +to about the same height as the tower in front surmounted with the +grasshopper. In every other respect it was similar to the south, of +which the previous engraving is a view. +</p><p> +Over the arcade were shops, to which you ascended by two staircases, +north and south. Above stairs were +about<a id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a> one hundred shops, varying +from 2-3/4 feet to 20 in breadth and forming a sort of bazaar, then +called the Pawne. These shops, for the first two or three years did not +answer the expectation of the founder, for such was the force of habit, +that the merchants, notwithstanding all the inconveniences attending +Lombard-street, could not be prevailed upon to avail themselves of the +new mart. +</p> +<p> +The building had been opened two or three years, when the Queen +signified her intention of paying it a visit of inspection; but so +many of the shops still remained unoccupied, that Sir Thomas found it +necessary to go round to the shopkeepers, and beseech them "to furnish +and adorne it with wares and wax lights, in as many shoppes as they +either could or woulde, and they should have all those so furnished +rent-free for that yeare."—<i>Stowe</i>. +</p><p> +Her Majesty on the day fixed (Jan. 23, 1570), having dined with the +founder, at his house in Bishopsgate-street, returned by the way of +Cornhill, and entered on the south side; and having viewed it, she +expressed herself much pleased; and, with the national spirit which so +eminently distinguished her, commanded that, instead of the foreign name +<i>Bourse</i>, by which the citizens had begun to call it, it should be +styled, in plain English—The Royal Exchange—which was proclaimed by +sound of trumpet:— +</p> +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> "Proclaim through every high street of the city,</p> +<p> This place be no longer called a Burse;</p> +<p> But since the building's stately, fair, and strange,</p> +<p> Be it for ever called—The Royal Exchange!"<a id="footnotetag2" name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a></p> +</div></div> + +<p> +The building could not have been very substantial, for by an entry in +the Wardbook of Cornhill ward, we find that in 1581, not fourteen years +after its completion, some of the arches of the arcade were in an unsafe +condition, and the lives of the merchants passing under were in danger. +And further—in 1603 another entry states, that the east and north walls +were also unsafe; and thus it continued wanting still greater repairs, +in which the Mercers' Company expended vast sums of money, till it was +entirely destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666. +</p><p> +Sir Thomas Gresham, by his will, bequeathed this building, with his +house in Bishopsgate-street, to the Mercers' Company and the Corporation +of London, in joint trust: the house as a college, and the produce of +the Exchange for the payment, in the first place, of the salaries of the +lecturers and the other expenses of the college; and secondly, of +certain annual sums to different hospitals, prisons, and almshouses. +</p><p> +Such was the origin of the Royal Exchange. After its destruction, in +1666, the funds in the hands of Sir Thomas Gresham's trustees amounted +to no more than £234. 8s. 2d.; but, with a spirit beyond all praise, +they contributed from their own resources the necessary sum for +rebuilding the Exchange, which was completed and opened September 28, +1669, the total cost being £58,962, which the City Corporation and the +Mercers' Company defrayed equally between them. Since that period it has +undergone several reparations; but a most complete and substantial one +was commenced in 1820, under the direction of Mr. Geo. Smith, architect +to the Mercers' Company, the estimated expense of which was nearly +£33,000; and staircases on the north, south, and west sides have since +been built of stone, at an expense of about £6,000. +</p><p> +The emoluments derived by Lady Gresham from the Royal Exchange are +stated to have amounted to £751. 5<i>s</i>. per annum; and these she +continued to enjoy till her decease, in the year 1596; but the Mercers' +Company, instead of profiting by the donation, had, after the +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page259" name="page259"></a>[pg 259]</span> + late +repairs, expended out of their own fund no less a sum than £200,500. +</p><p> +We are indebted to an active Correspondent for the original of +the engraving (a pencil drawing), and the abridgment of the previous +description, from a neatly compiled work—the <i>Percy</i> History of London, +and from original and authentic sources. We are, however, compelled +to omit the "dimensions of the ground on which the original Exchange +stood," notwithstanding our Correspondent has been at the pains to copy +the items from "an old record in the Chamber of London, never before +made public." The document is of considerable value, in illustrating the +topography of ancient London; but its interest is hardly popular enough +for our pages. +</p> +<hr/> + +<h3> +SONNET,<br/> + +ON LEAVING WINCHESTER.</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> Winton—ere thee I leave in hoary pride,</p> +<p class="i2"> Thy hallow'd temples, and thine aged towers,</p> +<p class="i2"> Lifting their heads amid the rural bowers</p> +<p> That grace fair Itchen's ever-rippling tide,</p> +<p> I gaze—and think how many a century</p> +<p class="i2"> Hath slowly roll'd along, since in their might</p> +<p class="i2"> The British Chieftain and the Roman Knight</p> +<p> First met in thee in triumph or to die.</p> +<p> But now in peace along thy vale I rove,</p> +<p class="i2"> Or mark with awe thy venerable pile</p> +<p class="i2"> Of mitred pomp, and down the lengthen'd aisle</p> +<p> Listen to notes divine, with those I love.</p> +<p> These are the charms that memory must renew,</p> +<p> Till I shall gaze again, with reverence due.</p> +</div></div> + +<h4> +TOSCAR.</h4> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +EQUANIMITY.</h3> +<h4> +HORACE. Part of Ode 3rd, Book 3rd, paraphrased.</h4> +<p> +"<i>Justum et tenacem propositi virum</i>" +</p> +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> Nor direful rage, nor bois'trous tumult loud,</p> +<p> Nor looks infuriate of the threat'ning crowd—</p> +<p> Nor haughty tyrants, with their angry scowl,</p> +<p> Like beasts that o'er the traveller's pathway prowl—</p> +<p> Nor southern storm, that o'er the ocean raves,</p> +<p> And swells in mountain heights its restless waves,</p> +<p> Can aught avail, with all their force combined,</p> +<p> To shake the man with firm, though tranquil, mind!</p> +<p> Guided by Justice and by Wisdom's laws,</p> +<p> Secure he stands to guard his righteous cause.</p> +<p> What—tho' in awful haste the tott'ring world,</p> +<p> By Heaven's command, be into ruin hurl'd:</p> +<p> As on a rock unshaken he remains,</p> +<p> Upborne by Him who all the just sustains!</p> +<p> Destruction's thunders rage from pole to pole—</p> +<p> Yet he undaunted smiles, and bids them calmly roll!</p> +</div></div> + +<h4> +TOSCAR.</h4> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +ST. SEPULCHRE'S BELL.</h3> +<h4> +(<i>For the Mirror</i>.)</h4> + +<p> +Among the list of benefactions in the parish church of St. Sepulchre is +the following, relative to the tolling of the church-bell on the eve of +the execution of unhappy criminals: +</p><p> +"Robert Doue, Citizen and Merchant Tailor of London, gave to the parish +church of St. Sepulchre's the somme of £50. That after the several +Sessions of London, when the prisoners remain in the gaole as condemned +men to death, expecting execution on the morrow following, the clarke +(that is, the parson) of the church shoold come in the night time, and +likewise in the morning, to the window of the prison where they lye, and +there ringing certain tolls with a hand-bell appointed for the purpose, +he doth afterwards (in most Christian manner) put them in mind of their +present condition and ensuing execution, desiring them to be prepared +therefore as they ought to be. When they are in the cart, and brought +before the wall of the church, there he standeth ready with the same +bell, and after certain toles rehearseth an appointed praier, desiring +all the people there present to pray for them. The Beadle, also, of +Merchant Taylors' Hall hath an honest stipend allowed to See that this +is duly done." +</p><p> +It has been a very ancient custom, on the night previous to the +execution of condemned criminals, for the bellman of the above parish to +go under Newgate, and, ringing his bell, repeat the verses beneath +(which, by the above extract, it would appear, should be the duty of the +clergyman), as a friendly admonition to the wretched prisoners: +</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> "All you that in the condemned hold do lie,</p> +<p> Prepare you, for to-morrow you shall die!</p> +<p> Watch all and pray, the hour is drawing near</p> +<p> That you before the Almighty must appear:</p> +<p> Examine well yourselves, in time repent,</p> +<p> That you may not t' eternal flames be sent.</p> +<p> And when St. Sepulchre's bell to-morrow tolls,</p> +<p> The Lord above have mercy on your souls!</p> +<p class="i8"> Past twelve o'clock!"</p> +</div></div> + +<p> +In the case of Stephen Gardener, who was executed at Tyburn, in 1724, +the bellman chanted the above verses. This man, with another, being +brought to St. Sepulchre's watch-house, on suspicion of felony, which, +however, was not validated, they were dismissed. "But," said the +constable to Gardener, "beware how you come here again, or this bellman +will certainly say his verses over you;" for the dreaded bellman +happened to be then in the watch-house.—Such proved to be the case, +for the same man suffered the penalty of the law, for housebreaking, +"the day and year first above mentioned." +</p><h4> +W.H.H.</h4> + +<hr class="full" /> + + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page260" name="page260"></a>[pg 260]</span></p> +<h2> +The Contemporary Traveller.</h2> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +NOTES OF A TOUR IN THE ISLAND OF JERSEY.</h3> +<h4> +<i>By Alexander Sutherland, Esq. Member of the Royal Physical Society of +Edinburgh</i>.</h4> + +<p> +We lost sight of the Needles at sunset. There was little wind; but a +heavy weltering sea throughout the night. Nevertheless, our bark drove +merrily on her way, and at day-break the French coast, near Cape de +la Hogue, was dimly visible through the haze of morning. At dawn the +breeze died away; and as the tide set strongly against us, it was found +necessary to let go an anchor, in order to prevent the current from +carrying us out of our course. The surface of the ocean, though furrowed +by the long deep swell peculiar to seas of vast extent, looked as if +oil had been poured upon it. The vessel pitched prodigiously too; but +neither foam-bubbles nor spray ruffled the glassy expanse. Wave after +wave swept by in majesty, smooth and shining like mountains of molten +crystal; and though the ocean was agitated to its profoundest depths, +its convulsed bosom had a character of sublime serenity, which neither +pen nor pencil could properly describe. +</p><p> +The night-dew had been remarkably heavy, and when the sun burst through +the thick array of clouds that impended over the French coast, the +cordage and sails discharged a sparkling shower of large pellucid drops. +In the course of the forenoon, a small bird of the linnet tribe perched +on the rigging in a state of exhaustion, and allowed itself to be +caught. It was thoughtlessly encaged in the crystal lamp that lighted +the cabin, where it either chafed itself to death, or died from the +intense heat of the noon-day sun, which shone almost vertically on its +prison. At the time this bird came on board, we were at least ten miles +northward of the island of Alderney, the nearest land. +</p><p> +At one P.M. tide and wind favouring, we weighed anchor, and stood away +for the Race of Alderney, which separates that island from Cape de la +Hogue. In the Race the tide ran with a strength and rapidity scarcely +paralleled on the coasts of Britain. The famous gulf of Coryvreckan in +the Hebridean Sea, and some parts of the Pentland Firth, are perhaps the +only places where the currents are equally irresistible. To the latter +strait, indeed, the Alderney Race bears a great resemblance; and an +Orkney man unexpectedly entering it, would be in danger of mistaking +Alderney for Stroma, and Cape de la Hogue for Dunnet Head. In stormy +weather the passage of the Race is esteemed by mariners an undertaking +of some peril—a fact we felt no disposition to gainsay; for though the +day was serene, and the swell from the westward completely broken by +the intervention of the island, the conflict of counter-currents was +tremendous. At some places the water appeared in a state of fierce +ebullition, leaping and foaming as if convulsed by the action of +submarine fires; at others it formed powerful eddies, which rendered +the helm almost of no avail in the guidance of the vessel. +</p><p> +We steered as near to Alderney, or Aurigni as it is frequently called, +as prudence warranted. It is a high, rugged, bare-looking island, +encompassed by perilous reefs, but supporting a pretty numerous +population. The only arborescent plants discernible from the deck of our +vessel, were clumps of brushwood. The grain on the cultivated spots was +uncut, and several wind-mills on the higher grounds, indicated the means +by which the islanders, who have very little intercourse with the rest +of the world, reduce their wheat into flour. The southern side of the +island is precipitous, and its eastern cape terminates in a fantastic +rock called the Cloak, which our captain consulted as a landmark in +steering through the Race. There is only one village in Alderney—a +paltry place, named St. Anne, or in common parlance La Ville; and there +a detachment of troops is generally stationed. Small vessels only can +enter the harbour, which is shelterless, and rendered difficult of +access by a sunken reef. At sunset Alderney was far astern, and three +of its sister islands, Sark, Herm, and Jethau, were in view ahead. +</p><p> +It was impossible to behold, without a portion of romantic enthusiasm, +the dazzling radiance of the orb of day, as it went down in splendour +beyond the gleaming waves. A thousand affecting emotions are liable to +be excited by the prospect of that mighty sea whose farther boundaries +lie in another hemisphere—whose waters have witnessed the noblest feats +of maritime enterprise, and the fiercest conflicts of hostile fleets. +Where shall we find the man to whom science is dear, who dreams not of +Columbus, when he first feels himself rocked by the majestic billows +of the Atlantic—who regards not the golden +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page261" name="page261"></a>[pg 261]</span> + line of light, which +the setting sun casts over the waste of waters, as a type of the +intellectual illumination experienced by the ocean pilgrim, when he +first steered his bark into its solitudes? Who can survey, even the +hither strand of that vast sea, without reflecting that the waves that +break at his feet have laved the palm-fringed shores of America; and +that the bones of millions—the pride, and pomp, and treasure of +nations—repose in the same capacious tomb? +</p><p> +Anxious to be a spectator of the perils that beset navigation among +these islands, I repaired to the deck before day-break, at which time, +according to our captain's calculation, we were likely to double the +Corbiére—a well-known promontory on the western side of Jersey—which +requires to be weathered with great circumspection. Jersey was already +visible on our larboard bow—a lofty precipitous coast. Wind and tide +were in our favour, and we swept smoothly and rapidly round the cape; +but the jagged summits of the reefs that environ it, and the impetuosity +of the currents, bore incontestable evidence to the verity of the tales +of misfortune which our captain associated with its name. The rock +which bears the appellation of the Corbiére, is close in shore, and +so grotesque in form, as to be readily singled out from the adjacent +cliffs. A reef, visible only at low water, shoots from it a considerable +distance into the sea, and another ledge of the same aspect, lies still +farther seaward; consequently the course of a careful pilot, is to hold +his way free through the channel between them. If a lands-*man may be +permitted to make an observation on a nautical point, I would say that +our steersman kept the peak of the Corbiére exactly on a level with the +adjacent precipices, till we were directly abreast of the headland, and +then stood abruptly in-shore till within a few fathoms of the cliffs, +under the shadow of which he afterwards held a steady course till +we opened the bay of St. Aubin. +</p><p> +The fantastic and inconstant outline of the Corbiére, as we were +hurried swiftly past it, was a subject of surprise and admiration. +When first seen through the haze of morning, it resembled a huge +elephant supporting an embattled tower; a little after, it assumed +the similitude of a gigantic warrior in a recumbent posture, armed +<i>cap-a-pie;</i> anon, this apparition vanished, and in its stead rose a +fortalice in miniature, with pigmy sentinels stationed on its ramparts. +The precipices between the Corbiére and the bay of St. Aubin, are no +less worthy of notice than that promontory. They slope down to the +water-edge in enormous protuberances, resembling billows of frozen +lava, intersected by wide sinuous rifts, and present a most interesting +field for geological research. +</p><p> +The bay of St. Aubin is embraced by a crescent of smiling eminences +thickly sprinkled with villas and orchards. St. Helier crouches at the +base of a lofty rock that forms the eastern cape: the village of St. +Aubin is similarly placed near Noirmont Point, the westward promontory, +and between the two, stretches a sandy shelving beach, studded with +martello towers. The centre of the bay is occupied by Elizabeth +Castle—a fortress erected on a lofty insulated rock, the jagged +pinnacles of which shoot up in grotesque array round the battlements. +The harbour is artificial, but capacious and safe, and so completely +commanded by the castle, as to be nearly inaccessible to an enemy. The +jetties and quays, which had only been recently constructed, are of +great extent and superior masonry. The majority of the vessels in port +were colliers from England; but summer is not the season to look for +crowded harbours. The merchants of St. Helier engage deeply in the +Newfoundland fishery, and are otherwise distinguished for maritime +enterprise; consequently there is no reason to infer that the vast sum +of money which must of necessity have been expended in the improvement +of the harbour, has been unprofitably sunk. During the late war the +islanders rapidly increased in opulence, as the island was filled with +troops and emigrants, who greatly enhanced the value of home produce; +but the cessation of hostilities restored matters to their natural +order, and the Jerseymen bewail the return of peace and plenty with +as much sincerity as any half-pay officer that ever doffed his martial +appurtenances. +</p><p> +St. Helier may contain about 7,000 inhabitants. Internally it differs +little from the majority of small sea-ports in England, save it may be +in the predominance of foreign names on the signboards, and the groups +of French marketwomen, distinguished by their fantastic head-gear, who +perambulate the streets. The only place worthy of a visit is the market, +which, for orderly arrangement, and plenteous supply, is scarcely +excelled in any quarter of the world. It was occupied chiefly by Norman +women, who repair here regularly once a-week from Granville to dispose +of their fowls, +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page262" name="page262"></a>[pg 262]</span> + fish, eggs, fruit, and vegetables. Most of them were +seated at their stalls, and industriously plying their needles, when +not occupied in serving customers. They had a mighty demure look, and +never condescended to solicit any person to deal with them—a mode of +behaviour which the butchers, fishmongers, fruiterers, and greengrocers, +of Great Britain would do well to imitate. The generality were +hard-featured; and their grotesque head-dresses, parti-coloured +kerchiefs, and short clumsily-plaited petticoats, gave them a grotesque, +antiquated air, altogether irreconcilable to an Englishman's taste. +They were, however, wonderfully clean, and civil and honourable in their +traffic, compared with the filthy, ribald, over-reaching hucksters who +infest our markets; and it was gratifying to hear that the Jersey people +encouraged their visits, and treated them with hospitality and respect. +</p><p> +The rock on which Elizabeth Castle is perched, is nearly a mile in +circuit, and accessible on foot at low water by means of a mole, formed +of loose stones and rubbish, absurdly termed "the Bridge," which +connects it with the mainland. In times of war with France, this +fortress was a post of great importance, and strongly garrisoned; +but in these piping days of peace, I found only one sentinel pacing his +"lonely round" on the ramparts. The barracks were desolate—the cannon +dismounted—and grass sufficient to have grazed a whole herd, had sprung +up in the courts, and among the pyramids of shot and shells piled up at +the embrazures. The gate stood open, inviting all who listed to enter, +and native or foreigner might institute what scrutiny he pleased without +interruption. +</p><p> +The hermitage of St. Elericus, the patron saint of Jersey, a holy man +who suffered martyrdom at the time the pagan Normans invaded the island, +is said to have occupied an isolated peak, quite detached from the +fortifications, which commands a noble seaward view of the bay. A small +arched building of rude masonry, having the semblance of a watch-tower, +covers a sort of crypt excavated in the rock, into which, by dint of +perseverance, a man might introduce himself; and this, if we are to +credit tradition, is the cave and bed of the ascetic. Here, like the +inspired seer of Patmos, he could congratulate himself on having shaken +off communion with mankind. Cliffs shattered by the warfare of the +elements—a restless and irresistible sea, intersected by perilous +reefs—and the blue firmament—were the only visible objects to distract +the solemn contemplations of his soul. +</p><p> +An abbey, dedicated to St. Elericus, once occupied the site of Elizabeth +Castle. The fortress was founded on the ruins of this edifice in 1551, +in the reign of Edward VI., and according to tradition, all the bells in +the island, with the reservation of one to each church, were seized by +authority, and ordered to be sold, to defray in part the expense of its +erection. The confiscated metal was shipped for St. Malo, where it was +expected to bring a high price, but the vessel foundered in leaving the +harbour, to the triumph of all good Catholics, who regarded the disaster +as a special manifestation of divine wrath at the sacrilegious +spoliation. +</p><p> +The works of Fort Regent occupy the precipitous hill that overhangs the +harbour, and completely command Elizabeth Castle, and indeed the whole +bay. They are of great strength, and immense masses of rock have been +blown away from the cliff in order to render it impregnable. The +barracks are bomb-proof, and scooped in the ramparts; and the parade +ground, which in shape exactly resembles a coffin, forms the nucleus of +the fortifications. This fortress had been completed since the peace, +and we found the 12th regiment of the line garrisoning it; but little +of the pomp and circumstance of warlike preparation was visible on +its ramparts. The prospect seaward is magnificent, and includes +a vast labyrinth of rocks called the Violet Bank, which fringes the +south-eastern corner of the island. One glimpse of this submarine garden +is sufficient to satisfy the most apprehensive patriot, that Jersey +is in a great measure independent of "towers along the steep." +</p><p> +At St. Helier a stranger may, without any great stretch of imagination, +fancy himself in England; but no sooner does he penetrate into the +country, than such self-deception becomes impossible. The roads, even +the best of them, are mere paths, narrow, deep sunk between enormous +dikes, and so fenced by hedges and trees, as to be almost impervious to +the light of day. The fields, of which it is scarce possible to obtain a +glimpse from these "covered ways," are paltry paddocks, rarely exceeding +two or three acres. Hedges and orchards render the face of the country +like a forest, and nearly as much ground is occupied by lanes and fences +as is under the plough. +</p><p> +(<i>To be concluded in our next</i>.) +</p> +<hr class="full" /> + + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page263" name="page263"></a>[pg 263]</span></p> +<h2> +SPIRIT OF THE<br/> Public Journals</h2> + +<hr/> +<h3> +THE IDIOT.—AN ANECDOTE.</h3> + +<p> +Every reader of dramatic history has heard of Garrick's contest with +Madam Clairon, and the triumph which the English Roscius achieved over +the Siddons of the French stage, by his representation of the father +struck with fatuity on beholding his only infant child dashed to pieces +by leaping in its joy from his arms: perhaps the sole remaining conquest +for histrionic tragedy is somewhere in the unexplored regions of the +mind, below the ordinary understanding, amidst the gradations of +idiotcy. The various shades and degrees of sense and sensibility which +lie there unknown, Genius, in some gifted moment, may discover. In the +meantime, as a small specimen of its undivulged dramatic treasures, we +submit to our readers the following little anecdote:— +</p><p> +A poor widow, in a small town in the north of England, kept a booth or +stall of apples and sweetmeats. She had an idiot child, so utterly +helpless and dependent, that he did not appear to be ever alive to anger +or self-defence. +</p><p> +He sat all day at her feet, and seemed to be possessed of no other +sentiment of the human kind than confidence in his mother's love, and +a dread of the schoolboys, by whom he was often annoyed. His whole +occupation, as he sat on the ground, was in swinging backwards and +forwards, singing "pal-lal" in a low pathetic voice, only interrupted +at intervals on the appearance of any of his tormentors, when he clung +to his mother in alarm. +</p><p> +From morning to evening he sang his plaintive and aimless ditty; at +night, when his poor mother gathered up her little wares to return home, +so deplorable did his defects appear, that while she carried her table +on her head, her stock of little merchandize in her lap, and her stool +in one hand, she was obliged to lead him by the other. Ever and anon as +any of the schoolboys appeared in view, the harmless thing clung close +to her, and hid his face in her bosom for protection. +</p><p> +A human creature so far below the standard of humanity was no where ever +seen; he had not even the shallow cunning which is often found among +these unfinished beings; and his simplicity could not even be measured +by the standard we would apply to the capacity of a lamb. Yet it had a +feeling rarely manifested even in the affectionate dog, and a knowledge +never shown by any mere animal. +</p><p> +He was sensible of his mother's kindness, and how much he owed to her +care. At night when she spread his humble pallet, though he knew not +prayer, nor could comprehend the solemnities of worship, he prostrated +himself at her feet, and as he kissed them, mumbled a kind of mental +orison, as if in fond and holy devotion. In the morning, before she went +abroad to resume her station in the market-place, he peeped anxiously +out to reconnoitre the street, and as often as he saw any of the +schoolboys in the way, he held her firmly back, and sang his sorrowful +"pal-lal." +</p><p> +One day the poor woman and her idiot boy were missed from the +market-place, and the charity of some of the neighbours induced them to +visit her hovel. They found her dead on her sorry couch, and the boy +sitting beside her, holding her hand, swinging and singing his pitiful +lay more sorrowfully than he had ever done before. He could not speak, +but only utter a brutish gabble! sometimes, however, he looked as if +he comprehended something of what was said. On this occasion, when the +neighbours spoke to him, he looked up with the tear in his eye, and +clasping the cold hand more tenderly, sank the strain of his mournful +"pal-lal" into a softer and sadder key. +</p><p> +The spectators, deeply affected, raised him from the body, and he +surrendered his hold of the earthy hand without resistance, retiring in +silence to an obscure corner of the room. One of them, looking towards +the others, said to them, "Poor wretch! what shall we do with him?" At +that moment he resumed his chant, and lifting two handfuls of dust from +the floor, sprinkled it on his head, and sang with a wild and clear +heart-piercing pathos, "pal-lal—pal-lal."—<i>Blackwood's Magazine</i>. +</p> +<hr/> + +<h3> +ENGLISH HEADS.</h3> + +<p> +Comparative estimate respecting the dimensions of the head of the +inhabitants in several counties of England. +</p><p> +The male head in England, at maturity, averages from 6-1/2 to 7-5/8 in +diameter; the medium and most general size being 7 inches. The female +head is smaller, varying from 6-3/8 to 7, or 7-1/2, the medium male +size. Fixing the medium of the English head at 7 inches, there can be +no difficulty in distinguishing +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page264" name="page264"></a>[pg 264]</span> + the portions of society above from +those below that measurement. +</p><p> +<i>London</i>.—The majority of the higher classes are above the medium, +while amongst the lower it is very rare to find a large head. + +<i>Spitalfields Weavers</i> have extremely small heads, 6-1/2, 6-5/8, 6-3/4, +being the prevailing admeasurement. +</p><p> +<i>Coventry</i>.—Almost exclusively peopled by weavers, the same facts are +peculiarly observed. +</p><p> +<i>Hertfordshire, Essex, Suffolk</i>, and <i>Norfolk</i>, contain a larger +proportion of small heads than any part of the empire; Essex and +Hertfordshire, particularly. Seven inches in diameter is here, as in +Spitalfields and Coventry, quite unusual—6-5/8 and 6-1/2 are more +general; and 6-3/8, the usual size for a boy of six years of age, is +frequently to be met with here in the full maturity of manhood. +</p><p> +<i>Kent, Surrey</i>, and <i>Sussex</i>.—An increase of size of the usual average +is observed; and the inland counties, in general, are nearly upon the +same scale. +</p><p> +<i>Devonshire</i> and <i>Cornwall</i>.—The heads of full sizes. +</p><p> +<i>Herefordshire</i>.—Superior to the London average. +</p><p> +<i>Lancashire, Yorkshire, Cumberland</i>, and <i>Northumberland</i>, have more +large heads, in proportion, than any part of the country. +</p><p> +<i>Scotland</i>.—The full-sized head is known to be possessed by the +inhabitants; their measurement ranging between 7-3/4 and 7-7/8 even to +8 inches; this extreme size, however, is rare.—<i>Literary Gazette</i>. +</p> +<hr class="full" /> + + + +<h2> +The Naturalist</h2> + +<h3> +ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS.</h3> + +<p> +The laying-out of the tract of ground on the northern verge of the +Regent's Park, and divided from the present garden of the Zoological +Society, has at length been commenced, and is proceeding with great +activity. We described this as part of the gardens in our illustrated +account of them in No. 330 of the MIRROR, and we now congratulate the +Society on their increased funds which have enabled them to begin this +very important portion of their original design. +</p><p> +For the purposes of these alterations, the belt of trees and shrubs +which formed so complete and natural a barrier between the road and +canal, will be removed; but when the buildings, &c. are completed, trees +and shrubs are to be replanted close to the road. In addition to huts, +cages, &c. for the reception of living animals, it is said that a +building will be erected in the new garden for the whole or part +of the Society's Museum, now deposited in Bruton Street. This is very +desirable, as the Establishment will then combine similar advantages to +those of the <i>Jardin des Plantes</i> at Paris, where the Museum is in the +grounds. The addition of a botanical garden would then complete the +scheme, and it is reasonable to hope that some of the useless ground in +the park may be applied to this very serviceable as well as ornamental +purpose. +</p><p> +The communication between the present Zoological exhibition, and the +additions in preparation, will be by a vaulted passage beneath the road. +This subterranean passage will be useful for the abode of such portions +of varied creation as love the shade, as bats, owls, &c. +</p> +<hr/> + +<h3> +THE GIRAFFE.</h3> + +<p> +The King's Giraffe died on Sunday week, at the Menagerie at +Sandpit-gate, near Windsor. It was nearly four years and a half old, and +arrived in England in August, 1827, as a present from the Pacha of Egypt +to his Majesty. +</p><p> +About the same time another Giraffe arrived at Marseilles, being also +a present from the Pacha to the King of France. This and the deceased +animal were females, and were taken very young by some Arabs, who fed +them with milk. The Governor of Sennaar, a large town of Nubia, obtained +them from the Arabs, and forwarded them to the Pacha of Egypt. This +ruler determined on presenting them to the Kings of England and France; +and as there was some difference in size, the Consuls of each nation +drew lots for them. The shortest and weakest fell to the lot of England. +The Giraffe destined for our Sovereign was conveyed to Malta, under the +charge of two Arabs; and was from thence forwarded to London, in the +Penelope merchant vessel, and arrived on the 11th of August. The animal +was conveyed to Windsor two days after, in a spacious caravan. The +following were its dimensions, as measured shortly after its arrival +at Windsor: +</p> +<pre> + Ft. In. + From the top of the head to the bottom of the hoof ... 10 8 + Length of the head ... 1 9 + From the top of the head to the neck root ... 4 0 +</pre> +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page265" name="page265"></a>[pg 265]</span></p> +<pre> + From the neck-root to the elbow ... 2 3 + From the elbow to the upper part of the knee ... 1 8 + From the upper part of the knee to the fetlock joint ... 1 11 + From the fetlock joint to the bottom of the hoof ... 0 10 + Length of the back ... 3 1 + From the croup to the bottom of the hoof ... 5 8 + From the hock to the bottom of the hoof ... 2 9 + Length of the hoof ... 0 7-1/2 +</pre> +<p> +From the period of its arrival to June last, the animal grew 18 inches. +Her usual food was barley, oats, split beans, and ash-leaves: she drank +milk. Her health was not good; her joints appeared to <i>shoot over</i>, and +she was very weak and crippled. She was occasionally led for exercise +round her paddock, when she was well enough, but she was seldom on her +legs: indeed, so great was the weakness of her fore legs for some time +previous to her death, that a pulley was constructed, being suspended +from the ceiling of her hovel, and fastened round her body, so as to +raise her on her legs without any exertion on her part. When she first +arrived she was exceedingly playful, and up to her death continued +perfectly harmless.—<i>Abridged from the library of Entertaining +Knowledge</i>. +</p> +<hr class="full" /> + + + +<h2> +The Anecdote Gallery.</h2> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +YOUTH AND GENIUS OF MOZART.</h3> + +<p> +(<i>Concluded from page 256</i>.)</p> + +<p> +On the 10th of April, 1764, the family arrived in England, and remained +there until the middle of the following year. Leopold Mozart fell ill of +a dangerous sore throat during his stay, and as no practising could go +forward in the house at that time, his son employed himself in writing +his first sinfonia. It was scored with all the instruments, not omitting +drums and trumpets. His sister sat near him while he wrote, and he said +to her, "remind me that I give the horns something good to do." An +extract or two from the correspondence of the father will show how +they were received in England:— +</p><p> +"A week after, as we were walking in St. James's Park, the king and +queen came by in their carriage, and, although we were differently +dressed, they knew us, and not only that, but the king opened the +window, and, putting his head out and laughing, greeted us with head +and hands, particularly our Master Wolfgang." +</p><p> +"On the 19th of May, we were with their Majesties from six to ten +o'clock in the evening. No one was present but the two princes, brothers +to the king and queen. The king placed before Wolfgang not only pieces +of Wagenseil, but of Bach, Abel, and Handel, all of which he performed +<i>prima vista</i>. He played upon the king's organ in such a style that +every one admired his organ even more than his harpsichord performance. +He then accompanied the queen, who sang an air, and afterwards a +flute-player in a solo. At last they gave him the bass part of one of +Handel's airs, to which he composed so beautifal a melody that all +present were lost in astonishment. In a word, what he knew in Salzburg +was a mere shadow of his present knowledge; his invention and fancy gain +strength every day." +</p><p> +"A concert was lately given at Ranelagh for the benefit of a newly +erected Lying-in-Hospital. I allowed Wolfgang to play a concerto on the +organ at it. Observe—this is the way to get the love of these people." +</p><p> +A large portion of Leopold Mozart's letters is occupied with masses +to be offered up for the health, &c.; and during his sojourn in the +Five-fields, Chelsea, he appears to have been in considerable hope that +he had converted a Mr. Sipruntini (a Dutch Jew, and a fine violoncello +player), to Catholicism. After dedicating a set of sonatas to the queen, +and experiencing great patronage from the nobility, Mozart, with his +father and sister, in July, 1765, crossed over into the Netherlands. +At the Hague, a fever attacked both children, and had nearly cost the +daughter her life. On their recovery, they played before the Prince of +Orange, and Wolfgang composed some variations on a national air, which +was, just then, sung, piped, and whistled throughout the streets of +Holland. The organist of the cathedral in Haerlem waited upon the +Mozarts, and invited the son to try his instrument, which he did the +next morning. Mozart senior describes the organ as a magnificent one, of +sixty-eight stops, and built wholly of metal, "as wood would not endure +the dampness of the Dutch atmosphere." Upon the return of the family to +Salzburg, Mozart enjoyed a year of quiet and uninterrupted study in the +higher walks of composition. Besides applying to the old masters, he was +indefatigable in perusing the works of Emanuel Bach, Hasse, Handel, and +Eberlin, and by the diligent performance +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page266" name="page266"></a>[pg 266]</span> + of these authors, he acquired +extraordinary brilliancy and power in the left hand. On the 11th of +September, 1767, the whole family proceeded on their way to Vienna; but +as the small pox was raging there, they went to Ollmütz instead, where +both the children caught that disorder. At Vienna, Mozart wrote his +first opera, by desire of the emperor. Though the singers extolled their +parts to the skies, in presence of Leopold Mozart, they formed in secret +a cabal against the work, and it was never performed. The Italian +singers and composers who were established in this capital did not like +to find themselves surpassed in knowledge and skill by a boy of twelve +years old, and they therefore not only charged the composition with a +want of dramatic effect, but they even went so far as to say, that he +had not scored it himself. To counteract such calumnies, Leopold Mozart +often obliged his son to put the orchestral parts to his compositions in +the presence of spectators, which he did with wonderful celerity before +Metastasio, Hasse, the Duke of Braganza, and others. The injurious +opinion of the nobility, which these people hoped to excite against +the young musician, had no success; for he composed a Mass—an +Offertorium—and a Trumpet Concerto for a Boy—which were performed +before the whole court, and at which he himself presided and beat the +time. The year 1769 was employed by Wolfgang in studying the Italian +language, and in the practice of composition; and at this time he was +appointed concert master to the court of Salzburg. +</p><p> +Father and son now made the tour of Italy, and met in every city with an +enthusiastic reception. +</p><p> +In Rome, Mozart gave a miraculous attestation of his quickness of ear, +and extensive memory, by bringing away from the Sistine Chapel the +"Miserere of Allegri," a work full of imitation and repercussion, mostly +for a double choir, and continually changing in the combination and +relation of the parts. This accomplished piece of thievery was thus +performed:—the sketch was drawn out upon the first hearing, and filled +up from recollection at home—Mozart then repaired to the second and +last performance, with his manuscript in his hat, and corrected it. +</p><p> +The slow voluptuous movement of the style of dancing prevalent in Italy +gave Mozart great pleasure; in the postscripts to his father's letters, +which he generally addressed to his sister and playfellow, he speaks of +this subject with as much zest as of his own art. Later in manhood he +became a pupil of Vestris, and the gracefulness of his dancing was much +admired, especially in the minuet. +</p><p> +About this time Mozart's voice began to break, and he ceased to sing in +public, unless words were put before him; the violin he continued to +play, but mostly in private. The alarming illnesses which had attacked +his children on their journey kept Leopold Mozart in continual +anxiety—the malaria of Rome and the heat of Naples were alike dreaded +by him. +</p><p> +The travellers arrived at Naples in May, and fortunately procured cool +and healthy lodgings. Here they visited the English Ambassador, Sir +William Hamilton, whose acquaintance they had made in London, and whose +lady was not only a very agreeable person, but a charming performer on +the harpsichord. She trembled on playing before Mozart. The concerts +given by the Mozarts in Naples were very successful, and they were +treated with great distinction; the carriages of the nobility, attended +by footmen with flambeaux, fetched them from home and carried them back; +the queen greeted them daily on the promenade, and they received +invitations to the ball given by the French Ambassador on the marriage +of the Dauphin. +</p><p> +If Mozart had not been engaged to compose the carnival opera for Milan, +he might have written that for Bologna, Rome, or Naples, as at these +three cities offers were made to him, a proof of what his genius had +effected in Italy. +</p> +<hr/> +<p> +The epoch at which Mozart's genius was ripe may be dated from his +twentieth year; constant study and practice had given him ease in +composition, and ideas came thicker with his early manhood—the fire, +the melodiousness, the boldness of harmony, the inexhaustible invention +which characterize his works, were at this time apparent; he began to +think in a manner entirely independent, and to perform what he had +promised as a regenerator of the musical art. The situation of his +father as Kapell-meister, in Salzburg, indeed gave Mozart some +opportunities of writing church music, but not such as he most coveted, +the sacred musical services of the court being restricted to a given +duration, and the orchestra but poorly supplied with singers; it was +therefore his earnest desire to get some permanent +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page267" name="page267"></a>[pg 267]</span> + appointment in which +he could exercise freely his talent for composition, and reckon on +a sufficient income. When childhood and boyhood had passed away, his +<i>quondam</i> patrons ceased to wonder at, or feel interest in, his genius, +and Mozart, whose early years had been spent in familiar intercourse +with the principal nobility of Europe, who had been from court to court, +and received distinctions and caresses unparalleled in the history of +musicians, up to the period of his death gained no situation worthy +his acceptance, but earned his fame in the midst of worldly cares and +annoyances, in alternate abundance and poverty, deceived by pretended +friendship, or persecuted by open enmity. The obstacles which Mozart +surmounted in establishing the immortality of his muse, leave those +without excuse who plead other occupations and the necessity of gaining +a livelihood as an excuse for want of success in the art. Where the +creative faculty has been bestowed, it will not be repressed by +circumstances. +</p><p> +In the exterior of Mozart there was nothing remarkable; he was small in +person, and had a very agreeable countenance, but it did not discover +the greatness of his genius at the first glance. His eyes were tolerably +large and well shaped, more heavy than fiery in the expression; when he +was thin they were rather prominent. His sight was always quick and +strong; he had an unsteady abstracted look, except when seated at the +piano-forte, when the whole form of his visage was changed. His hands +were small and beautiful, and he used them so softly and naturally upon +the piano-forte, that the eye was no less delighted than the ear. It was +surprising that he could grasp so much as he did in the bass. His head +was too large in proportion to his body, but his hands and feet were in +perfect symmetry, of which he was rather vain. The stunted growth of +Mozart's body may have arisen from the early efforts of his mind; not, +as some suppose, from want of exercise in childhood—for then he had +much exercise—though at a later period the want of it may have been +hurtful to him. Sophia, a sister-in-law of Mozart, who is still living, +relates: "he was always good-humoured, but very abstracted, and in +answering questions seemed always to be thinking of something else. +Even in the morning when he washed his hands, he never stood still, but +would walk up and down the room, sometimes striking one heel against the +other; at dinner he would frequently make the ends of his napkin fast, +and draw it backwards and forwards under his nose, seeming lost in +meditation, and not in the least aware of what he did." He was fond of +animals, and in his amusements delighted with any thing new; at one +time of his life with riding, at another with billiards. +</p> +<hr class="full" /> + + + +<h2> +The Selector;<br/> +AND<br/> +LITERARY NOTICES OF<br/> +<i>NEW WORKS</i>.</h2> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +A PORTRAIT, BY MISS LANDON.</h3> +<center> +FROM "THE VENETIAN BRACELET, AND OTHER POEMS,"<br/> (JUST PUBLISHED)</center> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> "O No, sweet Lady, not to thee</p> +<p class="i2"> That set and chilling tone,</p> +<p> By which the feelings on themselves</p> +<p class="i2"> So utterly are thrown,</p> +<p> For mine has sprung upon my lips,</p> +<p class="i2"> Impatient to express</p> +<p> The haunting charm of thy sweet voice</p> +<p class="i2"> And gentlest loveliness.</p> +<p> A very fairy queen thou art,</p> +<p> Whose only spells are on the heart.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p> The garden it has many a flower,</p> +<p class="i2"> But only one for thee—</p> +<p> The early graced of Grecian song,</p> +<p class="i2"> The fragant myrtle tree;</p> +<p> For it doth speak of happy love,</p> +<p class="i2"> The delicate, the true.</p> +<p> If its pearl buds are fair like thee,</p> +<p class="i2"> They seem as fragile too;</p> +<p> Likeness, not omens; for love's power</p> +<p> Will watch his own most precious flower.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p> Thou art not of that wilder race</p> +<p class="i2"> Upon the mountain side,</p> +<p> Able alike the summer sun</p> +<p class="i2"> And winter blast to bide;</p> +<p> But thou art of that gentle growth</p> +<p class="i2"> Which asks some loving eye</p> +<p> To keep it in sweet guardianship,</p> +<p class="i2"> Or it must droop and die;</p> +<p> Requiring equal love and care,</p> +<p> Even more delicate than fair.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p> I cannot paint to thee the charm</p> +<p class="i2"> Which thou hast wrought on me;</p> +<p> Thy laugh, so like the wild bird's song</p> +<p class="i2"> In the first bloom-touch'd tree.</p> +<p> You spoke of lovely Italy,</p> +<p class="i2"> And of its thousand flowers;</p> +<p> Your lips had caught the music breath</p> +<p class="i2"> Amid its summer bow'rs.</p> +<p> And can it be a form like thine</p> +<p> Has braved the stormy Apennine?</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p> I'm standing now with one white rose</p> +<p class="i2"> Where silver waters glide</p> +<p> I've flung that white rose on the stream—</p> +<p class="i2"> How light it breasts the tide!</p> +<p> The clear waves seem as if they loved</p> +<p class="i2"> So beautiful a thing;</p> +<p> And fondly to the scented leaves</p> +<p class="i2"> The laughing sunbeams cling.</p> +<p> A summer voyage—fairy freight;—</p> +<p> And such, sweet Lady, be thy fate!"</p> +</div></div> +<hr/> + +<h3> +WATERLOO.</h3> + +<p> +Three volumes of tales and sketches of considerable graphic interest, +have lately been published under the title of "<i>Stories of Waterloo</i>." +The first inquiry will naturally be whether they +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page268" name="page268"></a>[pg 268]</span> + throw any new lights +on the ever-memorable struggle. The details of the day are vividly +sketched, and as they must be familiar to all our readers, the following +excellent general observations will be appreciated:— +</p><p> +"No situation could be more trying to the unyielding courage of the +British army than their disposition in square at Waterloo. There is an +excited feeling in an attacking body that stimulates the coldest, and +blunts the thought of danger. The tumultuous enthusiasm of the assault +spreads from man to man, and duller spirits catch a gallant frenzy +from the brave around them. But the enduring and devoted courage which +pervaded the British squares, when, hour after hour, mowed down by +a murderous artillery, and wearied by furious and frequent onsets of +lancers and cuirassiers; when the constant order—'Close up!—close up!' +marked the quick succession of slaughter that thinned their diminished +ranks; and when the day wore later, when the remnants of two, and even +three regiments were necessary to complete the square which one of them +had formed in the morning—to support this with firmness, and 'feed +death,' inactive and unmoved, exhibited that calm and desperate bravery +which elicited the admiration of Napoleon himself. +</p><p> +"There was a terrible sameness in the battle of the 18th of June, which +distinguishes it in the history of modern slaughter. Although designated +by Napoleon 'a day of false manoeuvres,' in reality there was less +display of military tactics at Waterloo than in any general action we +have on record. Buonaparte's favourite plan was perseveringly followed. +To turn a wing, or separate a position, was his customary system. Both +were tried at Hougomont to turn the right, and at La Haye Sainte to +break through the left centre. Hence the French operations were confined +to fierce and incessant onsets with masses of cavalry and infantry, +generally supported by a numerous and destructive artillery. +</p><p> +"Knowing that to repel these desperate and sustained attacks a +tremendous sacrifice of human life must occur, Napoleon, in defiance +of their acknowledged bravery, calculated on wearying the British into +defeat. But when he saw his columns driven back in confusion—when +his cavalry receded from the squares they could not penetrate—when +battalions were reduced to companies by the fire of his cannon, and +still that 'feeble few' showed a perfect front, and held the ground +they had originally taken, no wonder his admiration was expressed to +Soult—'How beautifully these English fight!—but they must give way!'" +</p><p> +The closing scene is then described with great animation:— +</p><p> +"The irremediable disorder consequent on this decisive repulse, and the +confusion in the French rear, where Bulow had fiercely attacked them, +did not escape the eagle glance of Wellington. 'The hour is come!' he is +said to have exclaimed; and closing his telescope, commanded the whole +line to advance. The order was exultingly obeyed: forming four deep, on +came the British:—wounds, and fatigue, and hunger, were all forgotten! +With their customary steadiness they crossed the ridge; but when they +saw the French, and began to move down the hill, a cheer that seemed to +rend the heavens pealed from their proud array, and with levelled +bayonets they pressed on to meet the enemy. +</p><p> +"But, panicstruck and disorganized, the French resistance was short and +feeble. The Prussian cannon thundered in their rear; the British bayonet +was flashing in their front; and, unable to stand the terror of the +charge, they broke and fled. A dreadful and indiscriminate carnage +ensued. The great road was choked with the equipage, and cumbered with +the dead and dying; while the fields, as far as the eye could reach, +were covered with a host of helpless fugitives. Courage and discipline +were forgotten, and Napoleon's army of yesterday was now a splendid +wreck—a terror-stricken multitude. His own words best describe it—'It +was a total rout!' +</p><p> +"But although the French army had ceased to exist as such, and now +(to use the phrase of a Prussian officer) exhibited rather the flight +of a scattered horde of barbarians, than the retreat of a disciplined +body—never had it, in the proudest days of its glory, shown greater +devotion to its leader, or displayed more desperate and unyielding +bravery, than during the long and sanguine battle of the 18th. The +plan of Buonaparte's attack was worthy of his martial renown: it was +unsuccessful; but let this be ascribed to the true cause—the heroic and +enduring courage of the troops, and the man to whom he was opposed. +Wellington without that army, or, that army without Wellington, must +have fallen beneath the splendid efforts of Napoleon. +</p><p> +"While a mean attempt has been +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page269" name="page269"></a>[pg 269]</span> + often made to lower the military +character of that great warrior, who is now no more, those who would +libel Napoleon rob Wellington of half his glory. It may be the proud +boast of England's hero, that the subjugator of Europe fell before +him, not in the wane of his genius, but in the full possession +of those martial talents which placed him foremost in the list of +conquerors—leading that very army which had overthrown every power that +had hitherto opposed it, now perfect in its discipline, flushed with +recent success, and confident of approaching victory." +</p> +<hr/> + +<h3> +ANNUALS FOR 1830.</h3> + +<p> +1. <i>The Juvenile Forget-me-not. Edited by Mrs. S.C. Hall</i>. +<br/> +2. <i>The Amulet. By Mr. S.C. Hall</i>. +</p><p> + +The tone and temper of these two works—to us the <i>first fruits</i> of +"the Annuals" are excellent, as their literary execution is admirable. +The first has innumerable attractions for <i>the young</i>; its pleasantness +consists in simplicity and truth, whilst its narratives of the playful +incidents of childhood are interspersed with "good seed," and precept +and pretty illustration spring up in every page. The second work, <i>the +Amulet</i>, is calculated for maturer age, and its literary pretensions are +consequently of a more advanced order: but of these we shall speak more +at length on a future occasion. Our intention in coupling the works at +the head of this slight notice is to express our high esteem of the +taste which has dictated the scholar and the gentleman in the production +of the <i>Amulet</i>, and his ingenious lady in the "delightful task" of +writing and catering for those of tender growth, in the <i>Juvenile +Forget-me-not</i>. The association is indeed delightful, and has all the +interest of a family picture: it beams with affection and parental love, +truth, and nature; and happy, thrice happy, must be the union that is +crowned with so amiable an intercommunity of mind. +</p><p> +The first few pages of the <i>Juvenile Forget-me-not</i> are very +appropriately occupied by a playful paper by the late Mrs. Barbauld, +the sincerity and tenderness of whose Lessons and Hymns we have never +forgotten even amidst all the cares and crosses of after life. How often +and how fondly too have we lingered over their delightful pages; and +it may be questioned whether any works ever produced a better or more +lasting impression on the infantine mind—than these unassuming little +volumes. Mrs. Barbauld's present article is entitled "the Misses, +addressed to a careless girl"—as the Misses Chief, Management, Lay, +Place, Understanding, Representation, Trust, Rule, Hap, Chance, Take, +and Miss Fortune; the "latter, though she has it not in her power to +be an agreeable acquaintance, has sometimes proved a valuable friend. +The wisest philosophers have not scrupled to acknowledge themselves the +better for her company, &c." Then follow some pleasing lines to "My Son, +My Son," by Allan Cunningham, glorifying the bounty of Providence, +"A Tale of a Triangle," by Mary Howitt, is a pretty school sketch. Next +are some lines by James Montgomery, on Birds—as the Swallow, Skylark, +&c. in all, numbering forty-five. "The Muscle," by Dr. Walsh, consists +of half-a-dozen conversational pages, illustrating its natural history +in a very pleasing style, which is really worth the attention of many +who attempt to simplify science. Next Miss Mitford has a true story of +"Two Dolls," and the author of Selwyn a pretty little story, entitled +"Prison Roses;" Miss Jewsbury, "Aunt Kate and the Review;" and Mr. S.C. +Hall a sketch of a "Blind Sailor"—both of which are very pleasing. +"A Child's Prayer," by the Ettrick Shepherd, is a sweet and simple hymn +of praise. "The Royal Sufferer," by Mrs. Hofland, follows, and gives +the misfortunes of Prince Arthur in an interesting historiette.—We +have only room to enumerate "The Birth-day," a sketch from Nature, by +Mrs. Opie; an extremely well-drawn Irish sketch, by Mrs. S.C. Hall; and +"The Shipwrecked Boy," a tale, by the author of Letters from the East. +</p><p> +The Engravings, twelve in number, are, for the most part, excellent. +The Frontispiece—two lovely children—is exquisitely engraved by +J. Thomson, as is also "Heart's Ease," by the same artist: the last, +especially, is of great delicacy. "Holiday Time," from Richter, is +well chosen for this delightful little work. +</p><p> +Altogether, we congratulate the fair Editoress on the very pleasing, +attractive, and useful character of her volume for the coming season; +and as that for the previous year did not reach us early enough for +special notice at the time of publication, we are happy to make the +<i>amende</i>, by placing the <i>Juvenile Forget-me-not</i> first on our list +of Annuals for 1830. +</p> +<hr/> + +<h3> +BURMESE BOAT-RACES.</h3> + +<p> +As the waters of the Irawadi begin to fall, a yearly festival of three +days is +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page270" name="page270"></a>[pg 270]</span> + held, consisting chiefly of boat-racing. It is called the +Water-festival, of which we have the following account in Crawfurd's +<i>Embassy to Ava</i>:— +</p><p> +"According to promise, a gilt boat and six common war-boats were sent to +convey us to the place where these races were exhibited, which was on +the Irawadi, before the palace. We reached it at eleven o'clock. The +Kyi-wun, accompanied by a palace secretary, received us in a large and +commodious covered boat, anchored, to accommodate us, in the middle of +the river. The escort and our servants were very comfortably provided +for in other covered boats. The king and queen had already arrived, and +were in a large barge at the east bank of the river. This vessel, the +form of which represented two huge fishes, was extremely splendid; every +part of it was richly gilt; and a spire of at least thirty feet high, +resembling in miniature that of the palace, rose in the middle. The king +and queen sat under a green canopy at the bow of the vessel, which, +according to Burman notions, is the place of honour; indeed, the only +part ever occupied by persons of rank. The situation of their majesties +could be distinguished by the white umbrellas, which are the appropriate +marks of royalty. The king, whose habits are volatile and restless, +often walked up and down, and was easily known from the crowd of his +courtiers by his being the only person in an erect position; the +multitude sitting, crouching, or crawling all round him. Near the king's +barge were a number of gold boats; and the side of the river, in this +quarter, was lined with those of the nobility, decked with gay banners, +each having its little band of music, and some dancers exhibiting +occasionally on their benches. Shortly after our arrival, nine gilt, +war-boats were ordered to manoeuvre before us. The Burmans nowhere +appear to so much advantage as in their boats, the management of which +is evidently a favourite occupation. The boats themselves are extremely +neat, and the rowers expert, cheerful, and animated. In rowing, they +almost always sing; and their airs are not destitute of melody. The +burthen of the song, upon the present occasion, was literally translated +by Dr. Price, and was as follows:—"The golden glory shines forth like +the round sun; the royal kingdom, the country and its affairs, are the +most pleasant." If this verse be in unison with the feelings of the +people, (and I have no doubt it is,) they are, at least, satisfied +with their own condition, whatever it may appear to others." +</p><p> +Boat-racing, taming wild elephants, and boxing-matches, are said to be +the chief amusements of the king and the people. Mr. Crawfurd saw all +these, and he tells us that in the last of them the populace formed a +ring with as much regularity as if they had been true-born Englishmen, +and preserved it with much greater regularity than is usually witnessed +here—thanks to the assistance of the constables with their long staves. +While these official persons were duly exercising their authority, the +same good-natured monarch, who roasted his prime minister in the sun, +frequently called out, "Don't hurt them—don't prevent them from +looking on." +</p> +<hr/> + +<h3> +OPIUM EATING.</h3> + +<p> +Mr. Madden, in his recent <i>Travels in Turkey</i>, having determined to +experience the effects of that pestilent practice of eating opium, +which is so common in Turkey, he repaired to the market of Theriaki +Tchachissy, where he seated himself among the persons who were in the +habit of resorting thither for the purpose of enjoying (?) this fatal +pleasure. His description of those victims to sensuality is very +striking, and is enough to cure any man of common sense of wishing +to become an opium eater. +</p><p> +"Their gestures were frightful; those who were completely under the +influence of the opium talked incoherently, their features were flushed, +their eyes had an unnatural brilliancy, and the general expression of +their countenances was horribly wild. The effect is usually produced in +two hours, and lasts four or five; the dose varies from three grains +to a drachm. I saw one old man take four pills, of six grains each, +in the course of two hours; I was told he had been using opium for +five-and-twenty years; but this is a very rare example of an opium eater +passing thirty years of age, if he commence the practice early. The +debility, both moral and physical, attendant on its excitement, is +terrible; the appetite is soon destroyed, every fibre in the body +trembles, the nerves of the neck become affected, and the muscles get +rigid; several of these I have seen, in this place, at various times, +who had wry necks and contracted fingers; but still they cannot abandon +the custom; they are miserable till the hour arrives for taking their +daily dose; and when its delightful influence begins, +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page271" name="page271"></a>[pg 271]</span> + they are all +fire and animation. Some of them compose excellent verses, and others +addressed the bystanders in the most eloquent discourses, imagining +themselves to be emperors, and to have all the harems in the world at +their command. I commenced with one grain; in the course of an hour and +a half it produced no perceptible effect, the coffee-house keeper was +very anxious to give me an additional pill of two grains, but I was +contented with half a one; and another half hour, feeling nothing of the +expected reverie, I took half a grain more, making in all two grains in +the course of two hours. After two hours and a half from the first dose, +I took two grains more; and shortly after this dose, my spirits became +sensibly excited; the pleasure of the sensation seemed to depend on a +universal expansion of mind and matter. My faculties appeared enlarged; +every thing I looked on seemed increased in volume; I had no longer the +same pleasure when I closed my eyes which I had when they were open; it +appeared to me as if it was only external objects, which were acted on +by the imagination, and magnified into images of pleasure; in short, it +was 'the faint exquisite music of a dream' in a waking moment. I made my +way home as fast as possible, dreading, at every step, that I should +commit some extravagance. In walking, I was hardly sensible of my feet +touching the ground, it seemed as if I slid along the street, impelled +by some invisible agent, and that my blood was composed of some ethereal +fluid, which rendered my body lighter than air. I got to bed the moment +I reached home. The most extraordinary visions of delight filled my +brain all night. In the morning I rose, pale and dispirited; my head +ached; my body was so debilitated that I was obliged to remain on the +sofa all the day, dearly paying for my first essay at opium eating." +</p> +<hr class="full" /> + + + +<h2> +Old Poets.</h2> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +FRIENDSHIP.</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> I had a friend that lov'd me;</p> +<p> I was his soul; he liv'd not but in me;</p> +<p> We were so close within each other's breast,</p> +<p> The rivets were not found that join'd us first.</p> +<p> That does not reach us yet; we were so mix'd,</p> +<p> As meeting streams, both to ourselves were lost.</p> +<p> We were one mass, we could not give or take,</p> +<p> But from the same: for He was I; I He;</p> +<p> Return my better half, and give me all myself,</p> +<p> For thou art all!</p> +<p> If I have any joy when thou art absent,</p> +<p> I grudge it to myself; methinks I rob</p> +<p> Thee of thy part.</p> +</div></div> +<h4> +DRYDEN.</h4> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +MARRIAGE.</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> As good and wise; so she be fit for me,</p> +<p class="i2"> That is, to will, and not to will the same;</p> +<p> My wife is my adopted self, and she</p> +<p class="i2"> As me, to what I love, to love must frame.</p> +<p> And when by marriage both in one concur,</p> +<p> Woman converts to man, not man to her.</p> +</div></div> +<h4> +SIR T. OVERBURY.</h4> + +<hr/> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> What do you think of marriage?</p> +<p> I take't, as those that deny purgatory;</p> +<p> It locally contains or heaven or hell;</p> +<p> There's no third place in it.</p> +</div></div> +<h4> +WEBSTER.</h4> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +GENTILITY.</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> Nor stand so much on your gentility,</p> +<p> Which is an airy, and mere borrow'd thing,</p> +<p> From dead men's dust and bones; and none of yours,</p> +<p> Except you make, or hold it.</p> +</div></div> +<h4> +BEN JONSON.</h4> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +HEAVEN.</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> Heav'n is a great way off, and I shall be</p> +<p> Ten thousand years in travel, yet 'twere happy</p> +<p> If I may find a lodging there at last,</p> +<p> Though my poor soul get thither upon crutches.</p> +</div></div> +<h4> +SHIRLEY.</h4> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +COURT FAVOUR.</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> Dazzled with the height of place,</p> +<p class="i2"> While our hopes our wits beguile,</p> +<p> No man marks the narrow space</p> +<p class="i2"> Between a prison and a smile.</p> +<p> Then since fortune's favours fade,</p> +<p class="i2"> You that in her arms do sleep,</p> +<p> Learn to swim and not to wade,</p> +<p class="i2"> For the hearts of kings are deep.</p> +<p> But if greatness be so blind,</p> +<p class="i2"> As to trust in tow'rs of air,</p> +<p> Let it be with goodness joyn'd,</p> +<p class="i2"> That at least the fall be fair.</p> +</div></div> +<h4> +LORD BACON.</h4> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +HONESTY.</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> An honest soul is like a ship at sea,</p> +<p> That sleeps at anchor upon the occasion's calm;</p> +<p> But when it rages, and the wind blows high,</p> +<p> She cuts her way with skill and majesty.</p> +</div></div> +<h4> +BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER.</h4> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +SOLITUDE.</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> O sweet woods, the delight of solitariness!</p> +<p> O how much do I like your solitariness!</p> +<p> Here nor reason is hid, vailed in innocence,</p> +<p> Nor envy's snaky eye, finds any harbour here.</p> +<p> Nor flatterer's venomous insinuations.</p> +<p> Nor coming humourist's puddled opinions,</p> +<p> Nor courteous ruin of proffer'd usury,</p> +<p> Nor time prattled away, cradle of ignorance,</p> +<p> Nor causeless duty, nor cumber of arrogance,</p> +<p> Nor trifling titles of vanity dazzleth us,</p> +<p> Nor golden manacles stand for a paradise.</p> +<p> Here wrong's name is unheard; slander a monster is,</p> +<p> Keep thy sprite from abuse, here no abuse doth haunt,</p> +<p> What man grafts in a tree dissimulation.</p> +</div></div> +<h4> +SIR P. SIDNEY'S <i>Arcadia</i>.</h4> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +DISCIPLINE.</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p> Each state must have its policies:</p> +<p> Kingdoms have edicts, cities have their charters.</p> +<p> Ev'n the wild outlaw, in his forest walk,</p> +<p> Keeps yet some touch of civil discipline.</p> +<p> For not since Adam wore his verdant apron,</p> +<p> Hath man with man in social union dwelt,</p> +<p> But laws were made to draw that union closer.</p> +</div></div> +<h4> +OLD PLAY.</h4> + +<hr class="full" /> + + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page272" name="page272"></a>[pg 272]</span></p> +<h2> +The Gatherer.</h2> +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<p>A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.</p> +</div></div> +<h4> +SHAKSPEARE.</h4> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +FASHIONABLE ODDITIES.</h3> + +<p> +Lady Morgan, in her <i>Book of the Boudoir</i>, says, "The late Marquess of +Londonderry was a <i>liveable</i>, cheerful, <i>give-and-take person</i>." Again, +"<i>Vitality</i>, or <i>all-a-live-ness</i>, energy, and activity, are the great +elements of what we call talent;" which occasions a critic to observe, +"What a prodigious quantity of this "all-a-liveness" her ladyship must +have in her composition." +</p> +<hr/> + +<p> +What burns to keep a secret?—<i>Sealing Wax</i>. +</p><p> +When is wine like a pig's tusk?—When it is in a hogs head. +</p><h4> +C.J.T.</h4> + +<hr/> + +<p> +The young Duke of Rutland, when Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, in a drunken +frolic knighted the landlord of an inn in a country town. Being told the +next morning what he had done, the duke sent for <i>mine host</i>, and begged +of him to consider the ceremonial as merely a drunken frolic. "For my +own part, my lord duke, I should readily comply with your excellency's +wish; but Lady O'Shannessy!"</p> + +<hr/> + +<h3> +EPITAPH ON MARSHAL SAXE.</h3> +<p> +N.B. The figures are to be pronounced in French, as <i>un, deux, +trois</i>, &c.</p> + +<pre> + Ses vertus le feront admiré de chac 1 + Il avait des Rivaux, mais il triompha 2 + Les Batailles qu' il gagna sont au nombre de 3 + Pour Louis son grand coeur se serait mis en 4 + En amour, c'était peu pour lui d'aller à 5 + Nous l'aurions s'il n'eut fait que le berger Tir<a id="footnotetag3" name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a> 6 + Pour avoir trop souvent passé douze, "Hic-ja" 7 + Il a cessé de vivre en Decembre 8 + Strasbourg contient son corps dans un Tombeau tout 9 + Pour tant de "Te Deum" pas un "De profun"<a id="footnotetag4" name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a> 10 + —— + He died at the age of 55 +</pre> + + +<hr/> + +<h3> +ROUGE.</h3> + +<p> +A lady consulted St. Francis of Sales on the lawfulness of using rouge. +"Why," says he, "some pious men object to it; others see no harm in it; +I will hold a middle course, and allow you to use it on <i>one</i> cheek." +</p> +<hr/> + +<h3> +A PARLIAMENTARY JOKE.</h3> + +<p> +The prevailing fashion of certain orators interlarding their speeches +with frequent classical quotations, reminds us of a piece of mischievous +waggery perpetrated by one of the greatest men of his time. Sheridan +once electrified the country gentlemen in the House of Commons, by +concluding an animated appeal to their patriotism, with a quotation +from Herodotus, which they cheered most vociferously; when, in fact, +he merely strung together a jumble of words, a jargon uttered on the +instant, which sounded very much <i>like</i> Greek. Pitt, it is said, was +in a convulsion of laughter all the time. +</p> +<hr/> + +<h3> +THOUGHTS ON THE TIMES.</h3> + +<p> +There is not a word of news stirring. Yesterday's papers may serve for +to-day's, and Sunday's for all the week. There is, as it were, a syncope +in all things; nothing is doing; art, science, and business, are alike +at a stand-still. The stage, the press, the easel, the loom, the rudder +of the merchantman, and the helm of the state, all are alike in a most +extraordinary negative condition. The world is in a catalepsy. It hears +and sees, but it can do nothing.—<i>Blackwood</i>. +</p> +<hr/> + +<h3> +LIMBIRD'S EDITION OF THE<br/> +<i>Following Novels is already Published:</i></h3> + +<pre> + g. d. + Mackenzie's Man of Feeling 0 6 + Paul and Virginia 0 6 + The Castle of Otranto 0 6 + Almoran and Hamet 0 6 + Elizabeth, or the Exiles of Siberia 0 6 + The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne 0 5 + Rasselas 0 8 + The Old English Baron 0 8 + Nature and Art 0 8 + Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield 0 10 + Sicilian Romance 1 0 + The Man of the World 1 0 + A Simple Story 1 4 + Joseph Andrews 1 6 + Humphry Clinker 1 8 + The Romance of the Forest 1 8 + The Italian 2 0 + Zeluco, by Dr. Moore 2 6 + Edward, by Dr. Moore 2 6 + Roderick Random 2 6 + The Mysteries of Udolpho 3 6 + Peregrine Pickle 4 6 +</pre> + +<hr class="full"/> + +<blockquote class="footnote"> +<a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a> +<b>Footnote 1</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a> +<p>From an old Vestry-book belonging to St. Michael's we also +learn the rents of the shops, which were at first only forty +shillings, in the course of a few years were raised to four +marks; afterwards to four pounds, and after the fire they were +let at ten shillings per foot.</p> +</blockquote> + +<blockquote class="footnote"> +<a id="footnote2" name="footnote2"></a> +<b>Footnote 2</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a> +<p>Second part of "Queen Elizabeth's Troubles"—a Play, by +T. Heywood, 1609.</p> +</blockquote> + +<blockquote class="footnote"> +<a id="footnote3" name="footnote3"></a> +<b>Footnote 3</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a> +<p>Tircis, the name of a celebrated Arcadian shepherd.</p> +</blockquote> + +<blockquote class="footnote"> +<a id="footnote4" name="footnote4"></a> +<b>Footnote 4</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a> +<p>A great personage of the day remarked, that it was a pity +after the marshal had by his victories been the cause of so many +"Te Deums" that it would not be allowed (the marshal dying in the +Lutheran faith) to chant <i>one</i> "de profundis" over his remains.</p> +</blockquote> + +<hr class="full"/> +<p> +<i>Printed and Published by J. LIMBIRD 143, Strand, (near Somerset House,) +London; sold by ERNEST FLEISCHER, 626, New Market, Leipsic; and by all +Newsmen and Booksellers</i>.</p> + +<hr class="full"/> + +<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11222 ***</div> +</body> +</html> + diff --git a/11222-h/images/395-1.png b/11222-h/images/395-1.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c0b1a08 --- /dev/null +++ b/11222-h/images/395-1.png |
