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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11412 ***
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustration.
+ See 11412-h.htm or 11412-h.zip:
+ (http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/1/1/4/1/11412/11412-h/11412-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/1/1/4/1/11412/11412-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. 10, NO. 286.] SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1827. [PRICE 2d.
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Caxton's House in the Almonry, Westminster.]
+
+
+To expatiate on the advantages of printing, at this time of day, would
+be "wasteful and ridiculous excess." We content ourselves with the
+comparison of Dryden's
+
+
+ "Long trails of light descending down."
+
+
+In a retrospective glance at our previous volumes (for can the
+phrenologists tell us of a head capacious enough to contain their
+exhaustless variety?) our readers will perceive that, from time to
+time, sundry "accounts" of the origin and progress of printing have
+been inserted in the MIRROR;[1] and though we are not vain enough to
+consider our sheet as the "refined gold, the lily, the violet, the
+ice, or the rainbow," of the poet's perfection, yet in specimens of
+the general _economy of the art_, the long-extended patronage of the
+public gives us an early place.
+
+With an outline of the life of CAXTON our readers must be already
+familiar; but we wish them to consider the above accurate
+representation of the FIRST ENGLISH PRINTER'S RESIDENCE as antecedent
+to a _Memoir of Caxton_, in which it will be our aim to concentrate,
+in addition to biographical details, many important facts from the
+testimony of antiquarians; for scarcely a volume of the _Archaeologia_
+has appeared without some valuable communication on Caxton and his
+times.
+
+In the meantime we proceed with the _locale_ of Caxton's house,
+situate on the south-west of Westminster Abbey, where was formerly the
+eleemosynary, or almonry, where the alms of the abbots were
+distributed. Howell in his _Londinopolis_, describes this as "the spot
+where the abbot of Westminster permitted Caxton to set up his press in
+the _Almonry_, or Ambry," the former of which names is still retained.
+This is confirmed by Newcourt, in his _Repertorium_, who says, "St.
+Anne's, an old chapel, over against which the Lady Margaret, mother to
+king Henry VII., erected an alms-house for poor women, which is now
+turned into lodgings for singing-men of the college. The place wherein
+this chapel and alms-house stood was called the Eleemosinary, or
+Almonry, now corruptly called the Ambry, (Aumbry,) for that the alms
+of the abbey were there distributed to the poor; in which the abbot of
+Westminster erected the first press for book-printing that was in
+England, about the year of Christ 1471, and where WILLIAM CAXTON,
+citizen and mercer of London, who first brought it into England,
+practised it." Here he printed _The Game and Play of the Chesse_, said
+to be the first book that issued from the press in this country.
+
+Hence, according to Mr. M'Creery, the intelligent author of "The
+Press," a poem, "the title of _chapel_ to the internal regulations of
+a printing-office originated in Caxton's exercising the profession in
+one of the chapels in Westminster Abbey, and may be considered as an
+additional proof, from the antiquity of the custom, of his being the
+first English printer."[2]
+
+Every lover of science, on approaching this spot, will feel himself on
+holy ground, however the idle and incurious of our metropolis may
+neglect the scite, or be ignorant of its identity. We are there led
+into an eternity of reflection and association of ideas; but lest
+human pride should be too fondly feasted in the retrospect, the
+hallowed towers of the abbey, seen in the distance, serve to remind us
+of the imperial maxim, that "art is long, and life but short."
+
+[Footnote 1: See MIRROR, vol 3, p 194--vol 5. p 311.]
+
+[Footnote 2: We requote this passage from Mr. M'Creery, as it has
+already appeared in vol. 5; and in vol. 3, a correspondent denies that
+the first English book was printed at Westminster; but we are disposed
+to think that an impartial examination of the testimonies on each side
+of the controversy will decide in favour of Caxton.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TEA.--ITS INTRODUCTION INTO ENGLAND.
+
+
+(A correspondent, who signs _M.M.M._ informs us that the article sent
+to us by _P.T.W_. and inserted in No. 280 of the MIRROR, was copied
+verbatim from the _Imperial Magazine_, a work which we seldom see, and
+consequently we had no opportunity of ascertaining the origin of our
+correspondent's paper. It seemed to us a good _cyclopaedian_ article
+on the subject, and we accordingly admitted it. We now subjoin
+_M.M.M.'s_ communication.)
+
+In addition to what has been said in the article upon tea, (by
+_P.T.W._) allow me to remark (and which I do not recollect ever to
+have seen noticed in any work upon the subject) that the seed is
+contained in _two_ vessels, the outer one varying in shape,
+triangular, long, and round, according to the number which it contains
+of what may be termed inner vessels. The outer vessel of a triangular
+shape, measures, from the base to the apex about three quarters of an
+inch, and is of a dark brown colour, approaching to black, and thick,
+strong, and rough in texture; within this is another vessel,
+containing the kernel; this inner vessel is of a light brown colour,
+thin, and brittle, in shape, seldom perfectly round, but mostly flat
+on one side: there are three of them in a triangular seed vessel, two
+in a long one, and one in that which is round. The kernel is of a
+brown colour, and in taste very bitter. In no other species of teas
+than Bohea, is the large kind of seed found, which is probably owing
+to that species being gathered last or in autumn. There is a _small_
+seed found mixed with the Congou kind of teas, about the size of a
+pea, which is in every respect similar to the large, except in size.
+This seed was evidently not permitted to ripen, but the calyx of the
+flower connected with the peduncle is quite perfect. The Twankey
+species are of the same appearance, all of which I have had ample
+opportunity of inspecting.
+
+As an appendage to this note, we are induced to quote the following
+pleasant page from _Time's Telescope_ for 1828; and we take this
+opportunity of reminding our readers that our customary Supplementary
+sheet, containing the spirit of this and other popular Annual Works
+will be published with our next Number.
+
+From a single sheet found in Sir Hans Sloane's library, in the British
+Museum, and printed by Mr. Ellis in his Original Letters, _Second
+Series_, it appears that tea was known in England in the year 1657,
+though not then in general use. The author of this paper says, "That
+the vertues and excellencies of this leaf and drink are many and
+great, is evident and manifest by the high esteem and use of it
+(especially of late years) among the physicians and knowing men in
+France, Italy, Holland, and other parts of Christendom; _and in_
+ENGLAND it hath been sold in the leaf for _six pounds_, and sometimes
+for TEN _pounds_ the pound weight, and in respect of its former
+scarceness and dearness, it hath been only used as a regalia in high
+treatments and entertainments, and presents made thereof to princes
+and grandees, till the year 1657."
+
+Secretary Pepys, in his Diary, vol. i. p. 76, without saying where he
+had his drink, makes the following entry:--"Sept. 25th, 1660. I did
+send for a cup of tea (a China drink) of which I never had drunk
+before, and went away."
+
+In a letter from Mr. Henry Savill to his uncle, Secretary Coventry,
+dated from Paris, Aug. 12, 1678, and printed by Mr. Ellis, the writer,
+after acknowledging the hospitalities of his uncle's house, quaintly
+observes, "These, I hope, are the charms that have prevailed with me
+to remember (that is to trouble) you oftener than I am apt to do other
+of my friends, whose buttery-hatch is not so open, _and who call for_
+TEA instead of pipes and bottles after dinner; _a base unworthy Indian
+practice_, and which I must ever admire your most Christian family for
+not admitting. The truth is, all nations have grown so wicked as to
+have some of these filthy customs." In 1678, the year in which the
+above letter is dated, the East India Company began the importation of
+tea as a branch of trade; the quantity received at that time amounting
+to 4,713 lbs. The importation gradually enlarged, and the government,
+in consequence, augmented the duties upon tea. By the year 1700, the
+importation of tea had arrived at the quantity of 20,000 lbs. In 1721,
+it exceeded a million of pounds. In 1816, it had arrived at 86,234,380
+lbs. Something more than thirty millions of pounds is probably the
+present average of importation: some allowance must be made for tea
+damaged and spoiled upon the passage.--See more on this subject, well
+worthy of perusal, in Mr. Ellis's Letters, _Second Series_, vol. iv.
+pp. 57, et seq.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DANGER.
+
+
+FROM L'ADONE OF MARINO.
+
+_(For the Mirror.)_
+
+
+ Like some lone Pilgrim in the dusky night,
+ Seeking, through unknown paths, his doubtful way,
+ While thick nocturnal vapours veil his sight
+ From yawning chasms, that 'neath his footsteps lay;
+ Sudden before him gleams the forked light!
+ Dispels the gloom, yet fills him with dismay.
+ His trembling steps he then retraces back,
+ And seeks again the well-known beaten track.
+
+E.S.J.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CATS.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+The first couple of these animals which were carried to Cuyaba sold
+for a pound of gold. There was a plague of rats in the settlement, and
+they were purchased as a speculation, which proved an excellent one.
+Their first kittens produced thirty _oilavas_ each; the new generation
+were worth twenty; and the price gradually fell as the inhabitants
+were stocked with these beautiful and useful creatures. Montengro
+presented to the elder Almagro the first cat which was brought to
+South America, and was rewarded for it with six hundred _pesos_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE DEATH OF KING JOHN.
+
+_Extracted from an old black-letter volume, entitled "The Abridgment
+of the Acts and Monuments of Martyrs, from the earliest period of
+Christian suffering to the time of Queen Elizabeth, our gracious lady,
+now reigning," printed in her reign_.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+In the yeere 1216, king John was poisoned, as most writers testify, at
+Swinsted Abbey, by a monk of that abbey, of the order of Cistersians,
+or S. Bernard's brethren, called Simon of Swinsted. The monk did first
+consult with his abbot, shewing him what he minded to do, alleging for
+himself the prophecy of Caiphas, 11th of John, saying, it is better
+that one man die, than the whole people perish. I am well content,
+saith he, to lose my life, and so become a martyr, that I may utterly
+destroy this tyrant. With that the abbot did weep for gladness, and
+much commended his fervent zeal. The monk then being absolved of his
+abbot for doing this fact, went secretly into the garden, on the back
+side, and finding there a most venomous toad, did so prick him and
+press him with his penknife, that hee made him vomite all the poison
+that was within him; this done, he conveyed it into a cup of wine, and
+with a flattering and smiling countenance he sayeth to the king, "If
+it shall please your princely majesty, here is such a cup of wine as
+you never drank better in your lifetime. I trust this wassall shall
+make all England glad," and with that he drank a great draught
+thereof, and the king pledged him; the monk then went out of the house
+to the back, and then died, his bowels gushing out of his belly, and
+had continually from henceforth three monks to sing mass for him,
+confirmed by their general charter. The king, within a short space
+after, feeling great grief in his body, asked for Simon, the monk;
+answer was made he was dead. "Then God have mercy on me," said the
+king; so went he to Newark-upon-Trent, and there died, and was buried
+in the cathedral church at Worster, in 1216, the 19th day of October,
+after having been much fered with the clergy 18 years, 6 months, and a
+day.
+
+MALVINA.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LILLIARD EDGE.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Near the border between the parishes of Maxton and Ancrum is a bridge,
+called Lilliard Edge, formerly Anerum moor, where a battle was fought
+between the Scots and English soon after the death of king James V.,
+who died in the year 1542. When the Earl of Arran was regent of
+Scotland, Sir Ralph Rivers and Sir Bryan Laiton came to Jedburgh with
+an army of 5,000 English to seize Merse and Teviotdale in the name of
+Henry VIII., then king of England, who died not long after, in the
+year 1547. The regent and the Earl of Angus came with a small body of
+men to oppose them. The Earl of Angus was greatly exasperated against
+the English, because some time before they had defaced the tombs of
+his ancestors at Melrose, and had done much hurt to the abbey there.
+The regent and the Earl of Angus, without waiting the arrival of a
+greater force, which was expected, met the English at Lilliard Edge,
+where the Scots obtained a great victory, considering the inequality
+of their number. A young woman of the name of Lilliard fought along
+with the Scots with great courage; she fell in the battle, and a
+tombstone was erected upon her grave on the field where it was fought.
+Some remains of this tombstone are still to be seen. It is said to
+have contained the following inscription:--
+
+
+ "Fair maiden Lilliard lies under this stane;
+ Little was her stature, but great was her fame.
+ On the English lads she laid many thumps,
+ And when her legs were off she fought on her stumps."
+
+T.S.W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BOOKS AND BOOKWORMS.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Books were anciently made of plates of copper and lead, the bark of
+trees, bricks, Stones, and wood. Josephus speaks of two columns, the
+one of stone, the other of brick, on which the children of Seth wrote
+their inventions and astronomical discoveries. Porphyry mentions some
+pillars, preserved in Crete, on which the ceremonies observed by the
+Corybantes in their sacrifices were recorded. The leaves of the
+palm-tree were used, and the finest and thinnest part of the bark of
+such trees as the lime, the ash, the maple, and the elm; from hence
+comes the word _liber_, which signifies the inner bark of the trees;
+and as these barks are rolled up, in order to be removed with greater
+ease, these rolls were called _volumen_, a volume, a name afterwards
+given to the like rolls of paper or parchment. By degrees wax, then
+leather, were introduced, especially the skins of goats and sheep, of
+which at length parchment was prepared; also linen, then silk, horn,
+and lastly paper. The rolls or volumes of the ancients were composed
+of several sheets, fastened to each other, rolled upon a stick, and
+were sometimes fifty feet in length, and about a yard and a half wide.
+At first the letters were only divided into lines, then into separate
+words, which, by degrees, were noted with accents, and distributed by
+points, and stops into periods, paragraphs, chapters, and other
+divisions. In some countries, as among the orientals, the lines began
+from the right, and ran to the left; in others, as in northern and
+western nations, from the left to the right; others, as the Grecians,
+followed both directions alternately, going in the one and returning
+in the other.
+
+In the Chinese books, the lines run from top to bottom. Again, the
+page in some is entire and uniform; in others, divided into columns;
+in others, distinguished into text and notes, either marginal or at
+the bottom; usually it is furnished with signatures and catch-words,
+also with a register to discover whether the book be complete. The
+Mahometans place the name of God at the beginning of all their books.
+The word _book_ is derived from the Saxon _boc_, which comes from the
+northern _buech_, of _buechans_, a beech, or _service-tree_, on the
+bark of which our ancestors used to write. A very large estate was
+given for one on Cosmography by king Alfred. About the year 1400, they
+were sold from 10_l_. to 30_l_. a piece. The first printed one was
+the Vulgate edition of the Bible, 1462; the second was _Cicero de
+Officiis_, 1466. Leo I. ordered 200,000 to be burnt at Constantinople.
+In the suppressed monasteries of France, in 1790, there were found
+4,104,412 volumes; nearly one-half were on theology. The end of the
+book, now denoted by _finis_, was anciently marked with a <, called
+_coronis_, and the whole frequently washed with an oil drawn from
+cedar, or citron chips strewed between the leaves, to preserve it from
+rotting.
+
+Thus far books; now for the _bookworms_. Anthony Magliabecchi, the
+notorious bookworm, was born at Florence in 1633; his passion for
+reading induced him to employ every moment of his time in improving
+his mind. By means of an astonishing memory and incessant application,
+he became more conversant with literary history than any man of his
+time, and was appointed librarian to the grand duke of Tuscany. He has
+been called a living library. He was a man of a most forbidding and
+savage aspect, and exceedingly negligent of his person. He refused to
+be waited upon, and rarely took off his clothes to go to bed. His
+dinner was commonly three hard eggs, with a draught of water. He had a
+small window in his door, through which he could see all those who
+approached him; and if he did not wish for their company, he would not
+admit them. He spent some hours in each day at the palace library; but
+is said never in his life to have gone farther from Florence than to
+Pratz, whither he once accompanied Cardinal Norris to see a
+manuscript. He died at the age of 81, in the year 1714. In the present
+age we have _bookworms_, who wander from one bookstall to another, and
+there devour their daily store of knowledge. Others will linger at the
+tempting window filled with the "_twopenny_," and read all the open
+pages; then pass on to another of the same description, and thus enjoy
+literature by the way of _Cheapside_.
+
+P.T.W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MIDNIGHT--A TOUCH AT THE EPIC.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+ "The iron tongue of midnight hath toll'd twelve."
+SHAKSPEARE.
+
+
+ Amid the pauses of the midnight storm,
+ When all without is cold, within all warm!
+ Amid the pauses of the midnight blast,
+ When ev'ry bolt and ev'ry sleeper's fast!
+ In that dire hour, when graves give up their dead,
+ And men for once agree in their pursuit--a bed!
+ When heroes, statesmen, senators, and kings,
+ Lords, and et ceteras of meaner things,
+ Forget the road to fortune--or to jail,
+ And Morpheus all their equal guardian hail!
+ When each forgets each 'vantage or mishap.
+ And all are equal in one common nap!
+ At that dread hour...
+ Caetera desiderantur.
+
+
+_Carshalton_ W. P----n.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ON OATHS.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Since lately we have had a great deal of prevarication in our courts
+of justice about receiving the oaths of deists, &c., I have thought it
+meet to furnish the MIRROR with an account of the first usage of the
+words, "So help me God." The word oath is a corruption of the Saxon
+_eoth_. An oath is called corporal, because the person making an
+affidavit lays his hand upon a part of the scriptures.
+
+At the conclusion of the oath the above words are used, which may
+perhaps have originated in the very ancient manner of trial by battle
+in this country, when the appellee, laying his right hand on the book,
+takes the appellant by the right hand with his left, and maketh oath
+as follows:--"Hear this, thou who callest thyself _John_ by the name
+of baptism, whom I hold by thy hand, that falsely upon me thou hast
+lied; and for this thou liest, that I who call myself _Thomas_ by the
+name of baptism, did not feloniously murder thy father, _W._ by name,
+_so help me God_." (Here he kisses the book, and concludes,)--"And
+this I will defend against thee by my body, as this court shall
+award." And the appellant is thus sworn also.
+
+Here, it may be observed also, the true foundation of the word _lie_,
+being esteemed still so great an affront above all others, as whenever
+it is pronounced to cause "an immediate affray and bloodshed."
+
+I have seen people sworn in poetry; and certain it is, that in many
+countries in Europe the making of oaths differs. I have some curious
+specimens of ancient oaths, some in Latin prose, others in poetry.
+
+Lord Chief Justice Coke was so strict with regard to the receiving of
+oaths, that when at Cambridge Summer Assizes, upon a trial of felony,
+he said, "in case of trespass, although it be only to the value of
+_twopence_, no evidence shall be given to the jury _but upon oath_,
+much less where _the life of a man is in question_." An action may be
+brought on the case upon a man calling another a _perjured_ man,
+because it shall be intended to be contrary to his oath in a judicial
+proceeding.
+
+W.H.H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ORIGINAL LETTER
+
+_From the Younger Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, upon his death bed, to
+the Rev. Dr. W.----_.
+
+
+Dear Doctor,--I always looked upon you as a man of true virtue, and
+know you to be a person of sound understanding; for however I may have
+acted in opposition to the principles of religion, or the dictates of
+reason, I can honestly assure you I had always the highest veneration
+for both. The world and I may now shake hands, for I dare affirm that
+we are heartily weary of one another. Oh, doctor, what a prodigal have
+I been of that most valuable of all possessions, time. I have
+squandered it away with a profusion unparalleled; and now that the
+enjoyment of a few days would be worth a hecatomb of worlds, I cannot
+flatter myself with a prospect of half a dozen hours. How despicable,
+my dear friend, is that man who never prays to his God but in the time
+of distress. In what manner can he supplicate that omnipotent Being in
+his affliction with reverence, whom in the tide of his prosperity he
+never remembered with dread! Don't brand me with infidelity, my dear
+doctor, when I tell you I am almost ashamed to offer up my petitions
+at the throne of grace, or of imploring that divine mercy in the next
+world, which I have so scandalously abused in this! Shall ingratitude
+to man be looked upon as the blackest of crimes, and not ingratitude
+to God? Shall an insult offered to the king be looked upon in the most
+offensive light, and yet no notice be taken when the King of kings is
+treated with indignity and disrespect. The companions of my former
+libertinism would scarcely believe their eyes, my dear doctor, was you
+to show them this epistle. They would laugh at me as a dreaming
+enthusiast, or pity me as a timorous wretch who was shocked at the
+appearance of futurity. But whoever laughs at me for being right, or
+pities me for being sensible of my errors, is more entitled to my
+compassion than my resentment. A future life may very well strike
+terror into any man who has not acted well in this life; and he must
+have an uncommon share of courage indeed who does not shrink at the
+presence of his God. You see, my dear doctor, the apprehension of
+death will soon bring the most profligate to a proper use of their
+understanding. To what a situation am I now reduced? Is this odious
+little hut a suitable lodging for a prince? or is this anxiety of my
+mind becoming the characteristic of a Christian? From my rank and
+fortune I might have expected affluence to wait on my life, from my
+religion and understanding, peace to smile upon my end; instead of
+which I am afflicted with poverty, and haunted with remorse, despised
+by my country, and I fear forsaken by my God! There is nothing so
+dangerous, my dear doctor, as extraordinary abilities. I cannot be
+accused of vanity now, by being sensible I was once possessed of
+uncommon qualifications, more especially as I sincerely regret that I
+was ever blest with any at all. My rank in life made these
+accomplishments still more conspicuous; and, fascinated with the
+general applause which they procured, I never considered about the
+proper means by which they should be displayed; hence, to purchase a
+smile from a blockhead I despised, have I frequently treated the
+virtuous with disrespect, and sported with the Holy Name of heaven to
+obtain a laugh from a parcel of fools, who were entitled to nothing
+but my contempt. Your men of wit, my dear doctor, generally look upon
+themselves as discharged from the duties of religion, and confine the
+doctrines of the Gospel to people of meaner understandings; it is a
+sort of derogation, in their opinion, to comply with the rules of
+Christianity, and reckon that man possessed of a narrow genius who
+studies to be good. What a pity that the Holy Writings are not made
+the criterion of true judgment! or that any one should pass for a fine
+gentleman in this world, but he that seems solicitous about his
+happiness in the next. My dear doctor, I am forsaken by all my
+acquaintance, utterly neglected by the friends of my bosom and the
+dependants of my bounty. But no matter; I am not now fit to converse
+with the first, and have no ability to serve the latter. Let me not be
+cast off wholly, however, by the good. Favour me with a visit, dear
+doctor, as soon as possible. Writing to you gives me some ease,
+especially upon a subject I could talk of for ever. I am of opinion
+this is the last visit I shall ever solicit from you. My distemper is
+powerful. Come and pray for the departing spirit of the unhappy
+BUCKINGHAM.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+The Sketch Book.
+
+No. LI.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PHANTOM HAND.
+
+
+ I see a hand you cannot see,
+ Which beckons me away!
+
+
+In a lonely part of the bleak and rocky coast of Scotland, there dwelt
+a being, who was designated by the few who knew and feared him, the
+Warlock Fisher. He was, in truth, a singular and a fearful old man.
+For years he had followed his dangerous occupation alone; adventuring
+forth in weather which appalled the stoutest of the stout hearts that
+occasionally exchanged a word with him, in passing to and fro in their
+mutual employment. Of his name, birth, or descent, nothing was known;
+but the fecundity of conjecture had supplied an unfailing stock of
+_materiel_ on these points. Some said he was the devil incarnate;
+others said he was a Dutchman, or some other "far-away foreigner," who
+had fled to these comparative solitudes for shelter, from the
+retribution due to some grievous crime; and all agreed, that he was
+neither a Scot nor a true man. In outward form, however, he was still
+"a model of a man," tall, and well-made; though in years, his natural
+strength was far from being abated. His matted black hair, hanging in
+elf-locks about his ears and shoulders, together with the perpetual
+sullenness which seemed native in the expression of features neither
+regular nor pleasing, gave him an appearance unendurably disgusting.
+He lived alone, in a hovel of his own construction, partially scooped
+out of a rock--was never known to have suffered a visitor within its
+walls--to have spoken a kind word, or done a kind action. Once,
+indeed, he performed an act which, in a less ominous being, would have
+been lauded as the extreme of heroism. In a dreadfully stormy morning,
+a fishing-boat was seen in great distress, making for the shore--there
+were a father and two sons in it. The danger became imminent, as they
+neared the rocky promontory of the fisher--and the boat upset. Women
+and boys were screaming and gesticulating from the beach, in all the
+wild and useless energy of despair, but assistance was nowhere to be
+seen. The father and one of the lads disappeared for ever; but the
+younger boy clung, with extraordinary resolution, to the inverted
+vessel. By accident, the Warlock Fisher came to the door of his hovel,
+saw the drowning lad, and plunged instantaneously into the sea. For
+some minutes he was invisible amid the angry turmoil; but he swam like
+an inhabitant of that fearful element, and bore the boy in safety to
+the beach. From fatigue or fear, or the effects of both united, the
+poor lad died shortly afterwards; and his grateful relatives
+industriously insisted, that he had been blighted in the grasp of his
+unhallowed rescuer!
+
+Towards the end of autumn, the weather frequently becomes so broken
+and stormy in these parts, as to render the sustenance derived from
+fishing extremely precarious. Against this, however, the Warlock
+Fisher was provided; for, caring little for weather, and apparently
+less for life, he went out in all seasons, and was known to be absent
+for days, during the most violent storms, when every hope of seeing
+him again was lost. Still nothing harmed him: he came drifting back
+again, the same wayward, unfearing, unhallowed animal. To account for
+this, it was understood that he was in connexion with smugglers; that
+his days of absence were spent in their service--in reconnoitring for
+their safety, and assisting their predations. Whatever of truth there
+might be in this, it was well known that the Warlock Fisher never
+wanted ardent spirits; and so free was he in their use and of tobacco,
+that he has been heard, in a long and dreary winter's evening,
+carolling songs in a strange tongue, with all the fervour of an
+inspired bacchanal. It has been said, too, at such times he held
+strange talk with some who never answered, deprecated sights which no
+one else could see, and exhibited the fury of an outrageous maniac.
+
+It was towards the close of an autumn day, that a tall young man was
+seen surveying the barren rocks, and apparently deserted shores, near
+the dwelling of the fisher. He wore the inquiring aspect of a
+stranger, and yet his step indicated a previous acquaintance with the
+scene. The sun was flinging his boldest radiance on the rolling ocean,
+as the youth ascended the rugged path which led to the Warlock
+Fisher's hut. He surveyed the door for a moment, as if to be certain
+of the spot; and then, with one stroke of his foot, dashed the door
+inwards. It was damp and tenantless. The stranger set down his bundle,
+kindled a fire, and remained in quiet possession. In a few hours the
+fisher returned. He started involuntarily at the sight of the
+intruder, who sprang to his feet, ready for any alternative.
+
+"What seek you in my hut?" said the Fisher.
+
+"A shelter for the night--the hawks are out."
+
+"Who directed you to me?"
+
+"Old acquaintance!"
+
+"Never saw you with my eyes--shiver me! But never mind, you look like
+the breed--a ready hand and a light heel, ha! All's right--tap your
+keg!"
+
+No sooner said than done. The keg was broached, and a good brown basin
+of double hollands was brimming at the lips of the Warlock Fisher. The
+stranger did himself a similar service, and they grew friendly. The
+fisher could not avoid placing his hand before his eyes once or twice,
+as if wishful to avoid the keen gaze of the stranger, who still plied
+the fire with fuel and his host with hollands. Reserve was at length
+annihilated, and the fisher jocularly said--
+
+"Well, and so we're old acquaintance, ha?"
+
+"Ay," said the young man, with another searching glance. "I was in
+doubt at first, but _now_ I'm certain."
+
+"And what's to be done?" said the Fisher.
+
+"An hour after midnight you must put me on board -----'s boat, she'll
+be abroad. They'll run a light to the masthead, for which you'll
+steer. You're a good hand at the helm in a dark night and a rough
+sea," was the reply.
+
+"How, if I will not?"
+
+"Then--_your life or mine!"_
+
+They sprang to their feet simultaneously, and an immediate encounter
+seemed inevitable.
+
+"Psha!" said the Fisher, sinking on his seat, "what madness this is!
+I was a thought warm with the liquor, and the recollections of past
+times were rising on my memory. Think nothing of it. I heard those
+words once before," and he ground his teeth in rage--"Yes, once--but
+in a shriller voice than your's! Sometimes, too, the bastard rises to
+my view; and then I smite him so--bah! give us another basin-full!" He
+stuck short at vacancy, snatched the beverage from the stranger, and
+drank it off. "An hour after midnight, said ye?"
+
+"Ay--you'll see no bastards then!"
+
+"Worse--may be--worse!" muttered the Fisher, sinking into abstraction,
+and glaring wildly on the flickering embers before him.
+
+"Why, how's this?" said the stranger. "Are your senses playing bo-peep
+with the ghost of some pigeon-livered coast captain, eh? Come, take
+another pull at the keg, to clear your head-lights, and tell us a bit
+of your ditty."
+
+The Fisher took another draught, and proceeded--
+
+"About five-and-twenty years ago, a stranger came to this hut--may the
+curse of God annihilate him!--"
+
+"Amen to that," said the young man.
+
+"He brought with him a boy and a girl, a purse of gold, and ---- the
+arch fiend's tongue, to tempt me! Well, it was to take these children
+out to sea--upset the boat--and lose them!"--
+
+"And you did so!" interrupted the stranger.
+
+"I tried--but listen. On a fine evening, I took them out: the sun sunk
+rapidly, and I knew by the freshening of the breeze, there would be a
+storm. I was not mistaken. It came on even faster than I wished. The
+children were alarmed--the boy, in particular, grew suspicious; he
+insisted that I had an object in going out so far at sun-set. This
+irritated me,--and I rose to smite him, when the fair girl interposed
+her fragile form between us. She screamed for mercy, and clung to my
+arm with the desperation of despair. _I could not shake her off_! The
+boy had the spirit of a man; he seized a piece of spar, and struck me
+on the temples. 'How, you villain!' said he, 'your life or mine!' At
+that moment the boat upset, and we were all adrift. The boy I never
+saw again--a tremendous sea broke between us--but the wretched girl
+clung to me like hate! Damnation!--her dying scream is ringing in my
+ears like madness! I struck her on the forehead, and she sank--all but
+her hand, one little, white hand would not sink! I threw myself on my
+back, and struck at it with both my feet--and then I thought it sunk
+for ever. I made the shore with difficulty, for I was stunned and
+senseless, and the ocean heaved as if it would have washed away the
+mortal world--and the lightnings blazed as if all hell had come to
+light the scene of warfare! I have never since been on the sea at
+midnight, but that hand has followed or preceded me; I have never
+----." Here he sank down from his seat, and rolled himself in agony
+upon the floor.
+
+"Poor wretch!" muttered the stranger, "what hinders now my long-sought
+vengeance? Even with my foot--but thou shalt share my murdered
+sister's grave!"
+
+"A shot is fired--look out for the light!" said the young man.
+
+The Fisher went to the door; but suddenly started back, clasping his
+hands before his face.
+
+"Fire and brimstone! there it is again!" he cried.
+
+"What?" said his companion, looking cooly round him.
+
+"That infernal hand! Lightnings blast it!--but that's impossible," he
+added, in a fearful under-tone, which sounded as if some of the eternal
+rocks around him were adding a response to his imprecations--"_that's_
+impossible! It is a part of them--it has been so for years--darkness
+could not shroud it--distance could not separate it from my burning
+eye-balls!--awake, it was there--asleep, it flickered and blazed before
+me!--it has been my rock a-head through life, and it will herald me to
+hell!" So saying, he pressed his sinewy hands upon his face, and buried
+his head between his knees, till the rock beneath him seemed to shake
+with his uncontrollable agony.
+
+"Again it beckons me!" said he, starting up--"ten thousand fires are
+blazing in my heart--in my brain!--where, _where_ can I be worse?
+Fiend, I defy thee!"
+
+"I see nothing," said his companion, with unalterable composure.
+
+"You see nothing!" thundered the Fisher, with mingling sarcasm and
+fury--"look _there_." He snatched his hand, and pointing steadily into
+the gloom, again murmured, "Look there! look there!"
+
+At that moment the lightning blazed around with appalling brilliancy;
+and the stranger saw a small white hand, pointing tremulously upwards.
+
+"I saw it there," said he, "but it is not _hers_! Infatuated,
+abandoned villain." he continued, with irrepressible energy, "it is
+not my sister's hand--no! it is the incarnate fiend's who tempted you,
+and who now waves you to perdition--begone together!"
+
+He aimed a dreadful blow at the astonished Fisher, who instinctively
+avoided the stroke. Mutually wound up to the highest pitch of anger,
+they grappled each the other's throat, set their feet, and strained
+for the throw, which was inevitably to bury both in the wild waves
+beneath. A faint shriek was heard, and a gibbering, as of many voices,
+came fluttering around them.
+
+"Chatter on!" said the Fisher, "he joins you now!"
+
+"Together--it will be together!" said the stranger, as with a last
+desperate effort he bent his adversary backward from the betling
+cliff. The voice of the Fisher sounded hoarsely in execration, as they
+dashed into the sea together; but what he said was drowned in the
+hoarser murmur of the uplashing surge! The body of the stranger was
+found on the next morning, flung far up on the rocky shore--but that
+of the murderer was gone for ever!
+
+The superstitious peasantry of the neighbourhood still consider the
+spot as haunted; and at midnight, when the waves dash fitfully against
+the perilous crags, and the bleak winds sweep with long and angry moan
+around them, they still hear the gibbering voices of the fiends, and
+the mortal execrations of the Warlock Fisher!--but, after that fearful
+night, no man ever saw THE PHANTOM HAND!--_Literary Magnet_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ARCANA OF SCIENCE.
+
+_Elephants_.
+
+
+All the elephants which were exported from Point de Galle were caught
+in ancient, as well as in modern times, in that tract of country which
+extends from Matura to Tangcolle, in the south of Ceylon, and which,
+from its being famous for its elephants in his days, is described by
+Ptolemy in the map he made of Ceylon sixteen hundred years ago as the
+_elephantum pascua_. The trade in elephants from Ceylon, which used to
+be lucrative, is now completely annihilated, in consequence of all the
+petty Rajahs, Foligars, and other chiefs in the southern peninsula of
+India, who used formerly to purchase Ceylon elephants as a part of
+their state, having lost their sovereignties, and being therefore no
+longer required to keep up any state of this description. A gentleman
+who has a plantation at Candy, it is understood, recently introduced
+the use of elephants, in ploughing, with great advantage.--_Trans.
+Asiatic Society_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_The Fennecous Cerdo_.
+
+[Illustration: Fennecous Cerdo.]
+
+
+This beautiful and extraordinary animal, or at least one of its genus,
+was first made known to European naturalists by Bruce, who received it
+from his dragoman, whilst consul general at Algiers. It is frequently
+met with in the date territories of Africa, where the animals are
+hunted for their skins, which are afterwards sold at Mecca, and then
+exported to India. Bruce kept his animal alive for several months, and
+took a drawing of it in water colours, of the natural size, a copy of
+which, on transparent paper, was clandestinely made by his servant.
+Mr. Brander, into whose hands the _Fennecus_ fell after Bruce left
+Algiers, gave an account of it in "Some Swedish Transactions," but
+refused to let the figure be published, the drawing having been
+unfairly obtained.[3] Bruce asserts that this animal is described in
+many Arabian books, under the name of _El Fennec_, which appellation
+he conceives to be derived from the Greek word for a palm or
+date-tree.
+
+The favourite food of Bruce's Fennec was dates or any sweet fruit; but
+it was also very fond of eggs; when hungry it would eat bread,
+especially with honey or sugar. His attention was immediately
+attracted if a bird flew near him, and he would watch it with an
+eagerness that could hardly be diverted from its object; but he was
+dreadfully afraid of a cat. Bruce never heard that he had any voice.
+During the day he was inclined to sleep, but became restless and
+exceedingly unquiet as night came on. The above Fennec was about ten
+inches long, the tail five inches and a quarter, near an inch of it on
+the tip, black. The colour of the body was dirty white, bordering on
+cream colour; the hair on the belly rather whiter, softer and longer
+than on the rest of the body. His look was sly and wily; he built his
+nest on trees, and did not burrow in the earth.
+
+Naturalists, especially those of France, were long induced to suspect
+the truth of Bruce's description of this animal; but a specimen from
+the interior of Nubia, and preserved in the museum at Frankfort, has
+recently been engraved; and thus the matter nearly settled by the
+animal belonging to the genus _Canis_, and the sub genus _Vulpes_; the
+number of teeth and form, being precisely the same as the fox, which
+it also resembles in its feet, number of toes, and form of tail.
+
+For the above engraving we are indebted to the Appendix to the
+important and interesting Travels of Messrs. Denham and Clapperton. It
+is therein described as generally of a white colour, inclining to
+straw yellow; above, from the occiput to the insertion of the tail it
+is light rufous brown, delicately pencilled with fine black lines,
+from thinly scattered hairs tipped with black; the exterior of the
+thighs is lighter rufous brown; the chin, throat, belly, and interior
+of the thighs and legs are white, or cream colour. The nose is
+pointed, and black at the extremity; above, it is covered with very
+short, whitish hair inclining to rufous, with a small irregular rufous
+spot on each side beneath the eyes; the whiskers are black, rather
+short and scanty; the back of the head is pale rufous brown. The ears
+are very large, erect, and pointed, and covered externally with short,
+pale, rufous brown hair; internally, they are thickly fringed on the
+margin with long grayish white hairs, especially in front; the rest of
+the ears, internally, is bare; externally, they are folded or plaited
+at the base. The tail is very full, cylindrical, of a rufous brown
+colour, and pencilled with fine black lines like the back. The fur is
+very soft and fine; that on the back, from the back to the insertion
+of the tail, as well as that on the upper part of the shoulder before,
+and nearly the whole of the hinder thigh, is formed of tri-coloured
+hairs, the base of which is of a dark lead colour, the middle white,
+and the extremity light rufous brown.
+
+[Footnote 3: We did not know that such unpleasantries as Chancery
+injunctions were part of African law; perhaps sand may not be removed
+from the desert "without leave of the trustees," like scrapings from
+our roads.]
+
+
+_Fossil Turtle_.
+
+A beautiful and perfect fossil of the sea turtle has recently been
+discovered in an extensive stratum of limestone, four fathoms water,
+called the Stone Ridge, about four miles off Harwich harbour. It is
+incrusted in a mass of ferruginous limestone, and weighs 180 lbs.
+
+
+_Apples_.
+
+A gentleman of Staffordshire recommends the preservation of apples for
+winter store, packed in banks or hods of earth like potatoes.--
+_Communication to the Horticultural Society_.
+
+
+_Uses of Seals_.
+
+The benefits which the inhabitants of frigid regions derive from seals,
+are far too numerous and diversified to be particularized, as they
+supply them with almost all the conveniences of life. We, on the
+contrary, so persecute this animal, as to destroy hundreds of thousands
+annually, for the sake of the pure and transparent oil with which the
+seal abounds; 2ndly, for its tanned skin, which is appropriated to
+various purposes by different modes of preparation; and thirdly, we
+pursue it for its close and dense attire. In the common seal, the hair
+of the adult is of one uniform kind, so thickly arranged and imbued
+with oil, as to effectually resist the action of water; while, on the
+contrary, in the antarctic seals the hair is of two kinds: the longest,
+like that of the northern seals; the other, a delicate, soft fur,
+growing between the roots of the former, close to the surface of the
+skin, and not seen externally; and this beautiful fur constitutes an
+article of very increasing importance in commerce; but not only does the
+clothing of the seal vary materially in colour, fineness, and commercial
+situation, in the different species, but not less so in the age of the
+animal. The young of most kinds are usually of a very light colour, or
+entirely white, and are altogether destitute of true hair, having this
+substituted by a long and particularly soft fur.--_Quarterly Journal_.
+
+
+_Method of cutting Glass_.
+
+If a tube, or goblet, or other round glass body is to be cut, a line
+is to be marked with a gun flint having a sharp angle, an agate, a
+diamond, or a file, exactly on the place where it is to be cut. A long
+thread covered with sulphur is then to be passed two or three times
+round the circular line, and to be inflamed and burnt; when the glass
+is well heated some drops of cold water are to be thrown on it, when
+the piece will separate in an exact manner, as if cut with scissors.
+It is by this means that glasses are cut circularly into thin bands,
+which may either be separated from, or repose upon each other, at
+pleasure, in the manner of a spring---_From the French_.
+
+
+_Preservation of Skins_.
+
+A tanner at Tyman, in Hungary, uses with great advantage the
+pyroligueous acid, in preserving skins from putrefaction, and in
+recovering them when attacked. They are deprived of none of their
+useful qualities if covered by means of a brush with the acid, which
+they absorb very readily.--_Quarterly Journal_.
+
+
+_Organic Remains in Sussex_.
+
+A short time since, the entire skeleton of a stag, of very large size,
+was dug up by some labourers, in excavating the bed of the river Ouse,
+near Lewes, in Sussex. The remains were found imbedded in a layer of
+sand, beneath the alluvial blue clay, forming the surface of the
+valley. The horns were in the highest state of preservation, and had
+seven points, like the American deer. The greater part of the skeleton
+was destroyed by the carelessness of the workmen; but a portion,
+including the horns, has been preserved in the collection of Mr.
+Mantell, near Lewes.
+
+
+_Stupendous Lizard_.
+
+Mr. Bullock, in his Travels, (just published) relates that he saw near
+New Orleans, "what are believed to be the remains of a stupendous
+crocodile, and which are likely to prove so, intimating the former
+existence of a lizard at least 150 feet long; for I measured the right
+side of the under jaw, which I found to be 21 feet along the curve;
+and 4 feet 6 inches wide: the others consisted of numerous vertebrae,
+ribs, femoral bones, and toes, all corresponding in size to the jaw;
+there were also some teeth: these, however, were not of proportionate
+magnitude. These remains were discovered, a short time since, in the
+swamp, near Fort Philip; and the other parts of the mighty skeleton,
+are, it is said, in the same part of the swamp."
+
+
+_Digby's Philosophy_.
+
+Sir Kenelm Digby was a mere quack; but he was the son of an earl, and
+related to many noble families. His book on the supposed sympathetic
+powder, which cured wounds at any distance from the sufferer, is the
+standard of his abilities. This powder was Roman vitriol pounded. From
+this wild work, we, however learn, that the English routine of
+agriculture in his time was--1st. year, barley; 2nd. wheat; 3rd.
+beans; 4th. fallow.--_Pinkerton_.
+
+
+_Critics_.
+
+Thought, comprising its enumerated constituents and detailed process,
+is the most perfect and exalted elaboration of the human mind, and
+when protracted is a painful exertion; indeed, the greater portion of
+our species reluctantly submit to the toil and lassitude of
+reflection; but from laziness, or incapacity, and perhaps in some
+instances from diffidence, they suffer themselves to be directed by
+the opinions of others. Hence has arisen the swarm of critics and
+reviewers, those clouds that obscure the fair light that would beam on
+the mind of man, by his individual reflection, and through his
+existence degrade him, by a submission to assumed authority;--a
+voluntary blindness, that excludes him from the observation of nature,
+and through indolence and credulity render his noblest faculties
+feeble, assenting, and lethargic; and delude him to barter the
+inheritance of his intellect for a mess of pottage.--_Dr.
+Haslam.--Lancet_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MUNCHAUSEN RIDE THROUGH EDINBURGH.
+
+
+We were sitting rather negligently on an infernal animal, which, up to
+that day, had seemed quiet as a lamb--kissing our hand to Mrs.
+Davison, then Miss Duncan, and in the blaze of her fame, when a
+Highland regiment, no doubt the forty-second, that had been trudging
+down the Mound, so silently that we never heard them, all at once, and
+without the slightest warning, burst out, with all their bag-pipes,
+into one pibroch! The mare--to do her justice--had been bred in
+England, and ridden, as a charger, by an adjutant to an English
+regiment. She was even fond of music--and delighted to prance behind
+the band--unterrified by cymbals or great drum. She never moved in a
+roar of artillery at reviews--and, had the Castle of Edinburgh--Lord
+bless it--been self-involved, at that moment, in a storm of thunder
+and lightning, round its entire circle of cannon, that mare would not
+so much as have pricked up her ears, whisked her tail, or lifted
+a hoof. But the pibroch was more than horse-flesh and blood could
+endure--and off we two went like a whirlwind. Where we went--that is
+to say, what were the names of the few first streets along which
+we were borne, is a question which, as a man of veracity, we must
+positively decline answering. For some short space of time, lines of
+houses reeled by without a single face at the windows--and these,
+we have since conjectured, might be North and South Hanover street,
+and Queen-street. By and by we surely were in something like a
+square--could it be Charlotte-square?--and round and round it we
+flew--three, four, five, or six times, as horsemen do at the
+Caledonian amphitheatre--for the animal had got blind with terror, and
+kept viciously reasoning in a circle. What a show of faces at all the
+windows then! A shriek still accompanied us as we clattered, and
+thundered, and lightened along; and, unless our ears lied, there were
+occasional fits of stifled laughter, and once or twice a guffaw; for
+there was now a ringing of lost stirrups--and much holding of the
+mane. One complete round was executed by us, first on the shoulder
+beyond the pommel; secondly, on the neck; thirdly, between the ears;
+fourthly, between the forelegs, in a place called the counter, with
+our arms round the jugular veins of the flying phenomenon, and our
+toes in the air. That was, indeed, the crisis of our fever, but we
+made a wonderful recovery back into the saddle--righting like a boat
+capsized in a sudden squall at sea--and once more, with accelerated
+speed, away past the pillared front of St. George's church!
+
+The castle and all its rocks, in peristrephic panorama, then floated
+cloud-like by--and we saw the whole mile-length of Prince's-street
+stretched before us, studded with innumerable coaches, chaises,
+chariots, carts, wagons, drays, gigs, shandrydans, and wheel-barrows,
+through among which we dashed, as if they had been as much
+gingerbread--while men on horseback were seen flinging themselves off,
+and drivers dismounting in all directions, making their escape up
+flights of steps and common stairs--mothers or nurses with broods of
+young children flying hither and thither in distraction, or standing
+on the very crown of the causeway, wringing their hands in despair.
+The wheel-barrows were easily disposed of--nor was there much greater
+difficulty with the gigs and shandrydans. But the hackney-coaches
+stood confoundedly in the way--and a wagon, drawn by four horses, and
+heaped up to the very sky with beer-barrels, like the Tower of Babel
+or Babylon, did indeed give us pause--but ere we had leisure to
+ruminate on the shortness of human life, we broke through between the
+leaders and the wheels with a crash of leathern breeching, dismounted
+collars, riven harness, and tumbling of enormous horses that was
+perilous to hear; when, as Sin and Satan would have it--would you
+believe it?--there, twenty kilts deep at the least, was the same
+accursed Highland regiment, the forty-second, with fixed bayonets, and
+all its pipers in the van, the pibroch yelling, squeaking, squealing,
+grunting, growling, roaring, as if it had only that very instant
+broken out--so, suddenly to the right--about went the bag-pipe-haunted
+mare, and away up the Mound, past the pictures of Irish Giants--Female
+Dwarfs--Albinos--an Elephant endorsed with towers--Tigers and Lions of
+all sorts--and a large wooden building, like a pyramid, in which there
+was the thundering of cannon--for the battle, we rather think, of
+Camperdown was going on--the Bank of Scotland seemed to sink into
+the NorLoch--one gleam through the window of the eyes of the
+Director-General--and to be sure how we did make the street-stalls of
+the Lawn-market spin! The man in St. Giles's steeple was playing his
+one o'clock tune on the bells, heedless in that elevation of our
+career--in less than no time John Knox, preaching from a house
+half-way down the Canongate, gave us the go-by--and down through one
+long wide sprawl of men, women, and children we wheeled past the
+Gothic front, and round the south angle of Holyrood, and across the
+King's-park, where wan and withered sporting debtors held up their
+hands and cried, Hurra--hurra--hurra--without stop or stay, up the
+rocky way that leads to St. Anthony's Well and Chapel--and now it was
+manifest that we were bound for the summit of Arthur's Seat. We hope
+that we were sufficiently thankful that a direction was not taken
+towards Salisbury Crags, where we should have been dashed into many
+million pieces. Free now from even the slightest suburban impediment,
+obstacle, or interruption, we began to eye our gradually rising
+situation in life--and looking over our shoulder, the sight of city
+and sea was indeed magnificent. There in the distance rose North
+Berwick Law--but though we have plenty of time now for description, we
+had scant time then for beholding perhaps the noblest scenery in
+Scotland. Up with us--up with us into the clouds--and just as St.
+Giles's bells ceased to jingle, and both girths broke, we crowned the
+summit, and sat on horseback like king Arthur himself, eight hundred
+feet above the level of the sea!
+
+_Blackwood's Magazine_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Select Biography
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+No. LVIII.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LELAND.
+
+
+John Leland, the father of the English antiquaries, was born in
+London, about the end of the reign of Henry VII. He was a pupil to
+William Lily, the celebrated grammarian--the first head master of St.
+Paul's school; and by the kindness and liberality of a Mr. Myles, he
+was sent to Christ's college. Cambridge. From this university he
+removed to All Souls, Oxford, where he paid particular attention to
+the Greek language. He afterwards went to Paris, where he cultivated
+the acquaintance of the principal scholars of the age, and could
+probably number among his correspondents the illustrious names of
+Buddoeus, Erasmus, the Stephani, Faber, and Turnebus; in this city he
+perfected himself in the knowledge of the Latin and Greek tongues,
+to which he afterwards added that of several modern languages. On
+his return to England he took orders, and was appointed one of the
+chaplains to Henry VIII., who gave him the rectory of Popelay, in the
+marshes of Calais, appointed him his library keeper, and conferred
+on him the title of Royal Antiquary, which no other person in this
+kingdom, before, or after possessed. In this character his majesty
+in 1533 granted him a commission, empowering him to search after
+England's antiquities, and peruse the libraries of all cathedrals,
+abbeys, priories, colleges, &c., as also all the places wherein
+records, writings, and whatever else was lodged that related to
+antiquity. "Before Leland's time," says Hearne, in his preface to the
+_Itinerary_, "all the literary monuments of antiquity were totally
+disregarded; and the students of Germany apprised of this culpable
+indifference, were suffered to enter our libraries unmolested, and to
+cut out of the books deposited there whatever passages they thought
+proper, which they afterwards published as relics of the ancient
+literature of their own country."
+
+In this research Leland was occupied above six years in travelling
+through England, and in visiting all the remains of ancient buildings
+and monuments of every kind. On its completion, he hastened to the
+metropolis, to lay at the feet of his sovereign the result of his
+labours, which he presented to Henry, under the title of a "New Year's
+Gift,"[4] in which he says, "I have so traviled yn your dominions
+booth by the se costes and the midle partes, sparing nother labor nor
+costes, by the space of these vi. yeres paste, that there is almoste
+nother cape, nor bay, haven, creke or peers, river or confluence of
+rivers, breches, watchies, lakes, meres, fenny waters, montagnes,
+valleis, mores, hethes, forestes, chases wooddes, cities, burges,
+castelles, principale manor placis, monasteries, and colleges, but I
+have seene them; and notid yn so doing a hole worlde of thinges very
+memorable."
+
+At the dissolution of the monasteries, Leland made application to
+Secretary Cromwell, to entreat his assistance in getting the MSS. they
+contained sent to the king's library. In 1542 Henry presented him with
+the valuable rectory of Hasely, in Oxfordshire; the year following he
+preferred him to a canonry of King's college, now Christchurch,
+Oxford, and about the same time collated him to a prebend in the
+church of Sarum. As his duties in the church did not require much
+active service, he retired with his collections to his house in
+London, where he sat about digesting them, and preparing the
+publication he had promised to the world; but either his intense
+application, or some other cause, brought upon him a total derangement
+of mind, and after lingering two years in this state, he died on the
+18th of April, 1552.
+
+The writings of Leland are numerous; in his lifetime he published
+several Latin and Greek poems, and some tracts on antiquarian
+subjects. His valuable and voluminous MSS., after passing through many
+hands, came into the Bodleian library, furnishing very valuable
+materials to Stow, Lambard, Camden, Burton, Dugdale, and many other
+antiquaries and historians. Polydore Virgil, who had stolen from them
+pretty freely, had the insolence to abuse Leland's memory--calling him
+"a vain glorious man." From these collections Hall published, in 1709,
+"Commentarii de Scriptoribus Brittanicis." "The Itinerary of John
+Leland, Antiquary," was published by the celebrated Hearne, at Oxford,
+in nine volumes, 8vo., 1710, of which a second edition was printed in
+1745, with considerable improvements and additions. The same editor
+published "Joannis Lelandi Antiquarii de Rebus Brittanicis
+Collectanea." in six volumes, Oxon. 1716, 8vo.
+
+BIOS.
+
+[Footnote 4: This was published by Bale in 1549, 8vo.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE SELECTOR AND LITERARY NOTICES OF _NEW WORKS_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CORAL ISLANDS.
+
+[In a recent Number of the MIRROR we quoted from Mr. Montgomery's
+_Pelican Island_ a beautiful description of the formation of coral
+reefs or rocks; and we are now induced to resume our extracts from
+this soul stirring poem, with the following description of the process
+by which these reefs or rocks become beautiful and picturesque
+islands. Mr. Montgomery's poetical talent is altogether of the highest
+order, or, to use a familiar phrase, his _Pelican Island_ is "a gem of
+the first water." How exquisite is the following picture of creation!]
+
+
+ Here was the infancy of life, the age
+ Of gold in that green isle, itself new-born,
+ And all upon it in the prime of being,
+ Love, hope, and promise, 'twas in miniature
+ A world unsoil'd by sin; a Paradise
+ Where Death had not yet enter'd; Bliss had newly
+ Alighted, and shut close his rainbow wings,
+ To rest at ease, nor dread intruding ill.
+ Plants of superior growth now sprang apace,
+ With moon-like blossoms crown'd, or starry glories;
+ Light flexible shrubs among the greenwood play'd
+ Fantastic freaks,--they crept, they climb'd, they budded,
+ And hung their flowers and berries in the sun;
+ As the breeze taught, they danced, they sung, they twined
+ Their sprays in bowers, or spread the ground with net-work.
+ Through the slow lapse of undivided time,
+ Silently rising from their buried germs,
+ Trees lifted to the skies their stately heads,
+ Tufted with verdure, like depending plumage,
+ O'er stems unknotted, waving to the wind:
+ Of these in graceful form, and simple beauty,
+ The fruitful cocoa and the fragrant palm
+ Excell'd the wilding daughters of the wood,
+ That stretch'd unwieldy their enormous arms,
+ Clad with luxuriant foliage, from the trunk,
+ Like the old eagle, feather'd to the heel;
+ While every fibre, from the lowest root
+ To the last leaf upon the topmost twig,
+ Was held by common sympathy, diffusing
+ Through all the complex frame unconscious life.
+ Such was the locust with its hydra boughs,
+ A hundred heads on one stupendous trunk;
+ And such the mangrove, which, at full-moon flood,
+ Appear'd itself a wood upon the waters,
+ But when the tide left bare its upright roots,
+ A wood on piles suspended in the air;
+ Such too the Indian fig, that built itself
+ Into a sylvan temple, arch'd aloof
+ With airy aisles and living colonnades,
+ Where nations might have worshipp'd God in peace.
+ From year to year their fruits ungather'd fell;
+ Not lost, but quickening where they lay, they struck
+ Root downward, and brake forth on every hand,
+ Till the strong saplings, rank and file, stood up,
+ A mighty army, which o'erran the isle,
+ And changed the wilderness into a forest.
+ All this appear'd accomplish'd in the space
+ Between the morning and the evening star:
+ So, in his third day's work, Jehovah spake,
+ And Earth, an infant, naked as she came
+ Out of the womb of chaos, straight put on
+ Her beautiful attire, and deck'd her robe
+ Of verdure with ten thousand glorious flowers,
+ Exhaling incense; crown'd her mountain-heads
+ With cedars, train'd her vines around their girdles,
+ And pour'd spontaneous harvests at their feet.
+ Nor were those woods without inhabitants
+ Besides the ephemera of earth and air;
+ --Where glid the sunbeams through the latticed boughs,
+ And fell like dew-drops on the spangled ground,
+ To light the diamond-beetle on his way;
+ --Where cheerful openings let the sky look down
+ Into the very heart of solitude,
+ On little garden-pots of social flowers,
+ That crowded from the shades to peep at daylight;
+ --Or where unpermeable foliage made
+ Midnight at noon, and chill, damp horror reign'd
+ O'er dead, fall'n leaves and slimy funguses;
+ --Reptiles were quicken'd into various birth.
+ Loathsome, unsightly, swoln to obscene bulk,
+ Lurk'd the dark toad beneath the infected turf;
+ The slow-worm crawl'd, the light cameleon climb'd,
+ And changed his colour as his pace he changed;
+ The nimble lizard ran from bough to bough,
+ Glancing through light, in shadow disappearing;
+ The scorpion, many-eyed, with sting of fire,
+ Bred there,--the legion-fiend of creeping things;
+ Terribly beautiful, the serpent lay,
+ Wreath'd like a coronet of gold and jewels,
+ Fit for a tyrant's brow; anon he flew
+ Straight as an arrow shot from his own rings,
+ And struck his victim, shrieking ere it went
+ Down his strain'd throat, that open sepulchre.
+ Amphibious monsters haunted the lagoon;
+ The hippopotamus, amidst the flood,
+ Flexile and active as the smallest swimmer;
+ But on the bank, ill balanced and infirm,
+ He grazed the herbage, with huge, head declined,
+ Or lean'd to rest against some ancient tree.
+ The crocodile, the dragon of the waters,
+ In iron panoply, fell as the plague,
+ And merciless as famine, cranch'd his prey,
+ While, from his jaws, with dreadful fangs all serried,
+ The life-blood dyed the waves with deadly streams.
+ The seal and the sea-lion, from the gulf
+ Came forth, and couching with their little ones.
+ Slept on the shelving rocks that girt the shores,
+ Securing prompt retreat from sudden danger;
+ The pregnant turtle, stealing out at eve,
+ With anxious eye, and trembling heart, explored
+ The loneliest coves, and in the loose warm sand
+ Deposited her eggs, which the sun hatch'd:
+ Hence the young brood, that never knew a parent,
+ Unburrow'd and by instinct sought the sea;
+ Nature herself, with her own gentle hand,
+ Dropping them one by one into the flood,
+ And laughing to behold their antic joy,
+ When launch'd in their maternal element.
+ The vision of that brooding world went on;
+ Millions of beings yet more admirable
+ Than all that went before them now appear'd;
+ Flocking from every point of heaven, and filling
+ Eye, ear, and mind, with objects, sounds, emotions
+ Akin to livelier sympathy and love
+ Than reptiles, fishes, insects, could inspire;
+ --Birds, the free tenants of land, air, and ocean,
+ Their forms all symmetry, their motions grace;
+ In plumage delicate and beautiful,
+ Thick without burthen, close as fishes' scales,
+ Or loose as full-blown poppies to the breeze;
+ With wings that might have had a soul within them,
+ They bore their owners by such sweet enchantment;
+ --Birds, small and great, of endless shapes and colours,
+ Here flew and perch'd, there swam and dived at pleasure;
+ Watchful and agile, uttering voices wild
+ And harsh, yet in accordance with the waves
+ Upon the beech, the winds in caverns moaning,
+ Or winds and waves abroad upon the water.
+ Some sought their food among the finny shoals,
+ Swift darting from the clouds, emerging soon
+ With slender captives glittering in their beaks;
+ These in recesses of steep crags constructed
+ Their eyries inaccessible, and train'd
+ Their hardy broods to forage in all weathers;
+ Others, more gorgeously apparell'd, dwelt
+ Among the woods, on Nature's dainties feeding,
+ Herbs, seeds, and roots; or, ever on the wing,
+ Pursuing insects through the boundless air:
+ In hollow trees or thickets these conceal'd
+ Their exquisitely woven nests; where lay
+ Their callow offspring, quiet as the down
+ On their own breasts, till from her search the dam
+ With laden bill return'd, and shared the meal
+ Among the clamorous suppliants, all agape;
+ Then, cowering o'er them with expanded wings,
+ She felt how sweet it is to be a mother.
+ Of these, a few, with melody untaught,
+ Turn'd all the air to music within hearing,
+ Themselves unseen; while bolder quiristers
+ On loftier branches strain'd their clarion-pipes,
+ And made the forest echo to their screams
+ Discordant,--yet there was no discord there,
+ But temper'd harmony: all tones combining,
+ In the rich confluence often thousand tongues,
+ To tell of joy and to inspire it. Who
+ Could hear such concert, and not join in chorus?
+ Not I;--sometimes entranced, I seem'd to float
+ Upon a buoyant sea of sounds: again
+ With curious ear I tried to disentangle
+ The maze of voices, and with eye as nice
+ To single out each minstrel, and pursue
+ His little song through all its labyrinth,
+ Till my soul enter'd into him, and felt
+ Every vibration of his thrilling throat,
+ Pulse of his heart, and flutter of his pinions.
+ Often, as one among the multitude,
+ I sang from very fulness of delight;
+ Now like a winged fisher of the sea,
+ Now a recluse among the woods,--enjoying
+ The bliss of all at once, or each in turn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+RAPIDS OF NIAGARA.
+
+
+The Rapids begin about half a mile above the cataract; and although
+the breadth of the river might at first make them appear of little
+importance, a nearer inspection will convince the stranger of their
+actual size, and the terrific danger of the passage. The inhabitants
+of the neighbourhood regard it as certain death to get once involved
+in them; and that, not merely because all escape from the cataract
+would be hopeless, but because the violent force of the water among
+the rocks in the channel, would instantly dash the bones of a man in
+pieces. Instances are on record of persons being carried down by the
+stream; indeed there was an instance of two men carried over in March
+last; but no one is known to have ever survived. Indeed, it is very
+rare that the bodies are found; as the depth of the gulf below the
+cataract, and the tumultuous agitation of the eddies, whirlpools, and
+counter currents, render it difficult for any thing once sunk to rise
+again; while the general course of the water is so rapid, that it is
+soon hurried far down the stream. The large logs which are brought
+down in great numbers during the spring, bear sufficient testimony to
+these remarks. Wild ducks, geese, &c. are frequently precipitated over
+the cataract, and generally re-appear either dead, or with their legs
+or wings broken. Some say that water-fowl avoid the place when able to
+escape, but that the ice on the shores of the river above often
+prevents them from obtaining food, and that they are carried down from
+mere inability to fly; while others assert that, they are sometimes
+seen voluntarily riding among the rapids, and, after descending
+half-way down the cataract, taking wing, and returning to repeat their
+dangerous amusement.--_American Work_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BRIDAL, CANZONET.
+
+
+ Sir Knight, heed not the clarion's call,
+ From hill, or from valley, or turretted hall;
+ Cease, holy Friar, cease for awhile
+ The anthem that swells through the fretted aisle;
+ Forester bold, to the bugle's sound
+ Listen no longer, though gaily wound,
+ But haste to the bridal, haste away,
+ Where love's rebeck is tuned to a sweeter lay.
+
+ Sir Knight, Sir Knight, no longer twine
+ The laurel-leaf o'er that bold brow of thine;
+ Friar, to-day from thy temples tear
+ The ivy garland that sages wear;
+ To-day, bold Forester, cast aside
+ Thy oak-leaf crown, the woodland's pride,
+ And bind round your brows the myrtle gay,
+ While the rebeck resounds love's sweetest lays.
+
+ Sir Knight, urge not now the gallant steed
+ O'er the plains that to honour and glory lead;
+ Friar, forget thy order's vow,
+ And pace not the gloomy cloisters now.
+ Chase no longer with bow and with spear,
+ Forester bold, the dappled deer,
+ But tread me a measure as light and gay
+ As ever kept lime to the rebeck's lay.
+
+_Neele's Romance of History_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER
+
+"I am but a _Gatherer_ and disposer of other men's stuff."--_Walton_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TRAVELLING.
+
+
+Sterne pitied the man who could travel from Dan to Beersheba, and say
+all "was barren:" however delighted travellers or tourists may be on
+their journey, it is surprising how few details are preserved in their
+memory. This occasioned Dr. Johnson to remark, in his "Tour to the
+Hebrides," how much the lapse even "of a few hours takes from the
+certainty of knowledge, and the distinctness of imagery;" and that
+"those who trust to memory what cannot be safely trusted but to the
+eye, must tell by guess, what a few hours before they had known with
+certainty." We were never more convinced of the importance of these
+observations than after our first visit to the dock-yard, at
+Portsmouth. In collating some little memoranda made on the spot, we
+referred to our party, (_seven_ in number) on our return to the inn,
+for the _extent_ of the dock-yard: not one of them could give a
+correct answer, though all had just heard it detailed and explained
+with accuracy. Dr. Kitchener may well recommend tourists to walk about
+with note-books in their hands! and such inadvertence as the preceding
+almost warrants the oddity of his suggestion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MOTTOES FOR DECANTER LABELS.
+
+
+Arridet PORTus? subeat non causa doloris.
+
+SumebatiS HERI? non dolor est hodie.
+
+Hic liquor est molLIS BONus, aptus ad omnia laeta.
+
+Oppida ne CALCA VALLAta ad praelia, quoerens, Sisonitum capias ecce tibi
+est Volupe.
+
+Dum lucet CLARE Te magis iste trahat.
+
+_Literary Gazette_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MALARIA.
+
+
+Dr. Gregory, father of the late celebrated professor in Edinburgh,
+when a student in a part of Germany where _malaria_ prevailed, from
+being a philosopher and living low, _drinking only water_, was seized
+with intermittent fever, when his jolly companions, who ate and drank
+freely, escaped. If brandy or other stimulants are taken previous to
+exposure to malaria, intermittent fever is generally prevented. Such
+are the opinions of the doctor, and if Dr. Macculloch be right, we
+suggest the establishment of a brandy vault at each angle of the
+parks, that every passenger may prepare himself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LORD HOWE
+
+
+When the late Lord Howe was a captain, a lieutenant, not remarkable
+for courage or presence of mind in dangers (common fame had brought
+some imputation upon his character) ran to the great cabin and
+informed his commander that the ship was on fire near the gun-room.
+Soon after this he returned exclaiming, "You need not be afraid as the
+fire is extinguished." "_Afraid!_" replied Captain H. a little
+nettled, "how does a man _feel_, Sir, when he is afraid? I need not
+ask how he _looks_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BACKGAMMON BOARDS.
+
+
+We frequently find backgammon boards with backs lettered as if they
+were two folio volumes. The origin of it was thus; Eudes, bishop of
+Sully, forbade his clergy to play at chess. As they were resolved not
+to obey the commandment, and yet dared not have a chess-board seen in
+their houses or cloisters, they had them bound and lettered as books,
+and played at night, before they went to bed, instead of reading the
+New Testament or the Lives of the Saints; and the monks called the
+draft or chess-board their _wooden gospels_. They had also drinking
+vessels bound to resemble the breviary, and were found drinking, when
+it was supposed they were at prayer.--_Literary Gazette_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LOVE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+
+Country people will tell you that they like the country, and detest
+the town, although their enjoyments are of a kind which may be
+obtained in far greater perfection in the latter than in the former.
+The only person I ever knew who was honest in this respect, was a
+gentleman, the possessor of a beautiful seat, in a beautiful country,
+when he avowed his opinion, that there was "no garden like
+Covent-garden, and no flower like a cauliflower."
+
+C.L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+The _Morning Chronicle_, Nov. 20, in noticing the funeral of the late
+Mr. Sale, says, "At a little after three o'clock, the body of the
+lamented gentleman entered the church."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LIMBIRD'S EDITION OF THE BRITISH NOVELIST, Publishing in Monthly
+Parts, price 6d. each.--Each Novel will be complete in itself, and may
+be purchased separately.
+
+_The following Novels are already Published:_
+
+ s. d.
+
+Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield 0 10
+The Mysteries of Udolpho 3 6
+Mackenzie's Man of Feeling 0 6
+Rasselas 0 8
+Paul and Virginia 0 6
+The Old English Baron 0 8
+The Castle of Otranto 0 8
+The Romance of the Forest 1 8
+Almoran and Hamet 0 6
+Elizabeth, or the Exiles of Siberia 0 6
+Nature and Art 0 8
+The Italian 2 0
+A Simple Story 1 4
+The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne 0 6
+Sicilian Romance 1 0
+The Man of the World 1 0
+Zelaco, by Dr. Moore 2 0
+Joseph Andrews 1 6
+Humphry Clinker 1 8
+Edward, by Dr. Moore 2 6
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, London, and Sold by all
+Booksellers and Newsmen_.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11412 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11412 ***</div>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction, Vol. 10, Issue 286, December 8, 1827, by Various</h1>
+<br />
+<br />
+<center><b>E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Keith M. Eckrich, David Garcia,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team</b></center>
+<br />
+<br />
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page377" name="page377"></a>[pg
+ 377]</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. X, NO. 286.]</b>
+ </td>
+ <td align="center">
+ <b>SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1827.</b>
+ </td>
+ <td align="right">
+ <b>[PRICE 2d.</b>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <div class="figure" style="width: 100%;">
+ <a href="images/286-1.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/286-1.png"
+ alt="Caxton's House in the Almonry, Westminster." /></a>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ To expatiate on the advantages of printing, at this time of
+ day, would be "wasteful and ridiculous excess." We content
+ ourselves with the comparison of Dryden's
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Long trails of light descending down."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In a retrospective glance at our previous volumes (for can
+ the phrenologists tell us of a head capacious enough to
+ contain their exhaustless variety?) our readers will perceive
+ that, from time to time, sundry "accounts" of the origin and
+ progress of printing have been inserted in the
+ MIRROR;<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ and though we are not vain enough to consider our sheet as
+ the "refined gold, the lily, the violet, the ice, or the
+ rainbow," of the poet's perfection, yet in specimens of the
+ general <i>economy of the art</i>, the long-extended
+ patronage of the public gives us an early place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With an outline of the life of CAXTON our readers must be
+ already familiar; but we wish them to consider the above
+ accurate representation of the FIRST ENGLISH PRINTER'S
+ RESIDENCE as antecedent to a <i>Memoir of Caxton</i>, in
+ which it will be our aim to concentrate, in addition to
+ biographical details, many important facts from the testimony
+ of antiquarians; for scarcely a volume of the
+ <i>Archaeologia</i> has appeared without some valuable
+ communication on Caxton and his times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime we proceed with the <i>locale</i> of Caxton's
+ house, situate on the south-west of Westminster Abbey, where
+ was formerly the eleemosynary, or almonry, where the alms of
+ the abbots were distributed. Howell in his
+ <i>Londinopolis</i>, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page378"
+ name="page378"></a>[pg 378]</span> describes this as "the
+ spot where the abbot of Westminster permitted Caxton to set
+ up his press in the <i>Almonry</i>, or Ambry," the former of
+ which names is still retained. This is confirmed by Newcourt,
+ in his <i>Repertorium</i>, who says, "St. Anne's, an old
+ chapel, over against which the Lady Margaret, mother to king
+ Henry VII., erected an alms-house for poor women, which is
+ now turned into lodgings for singing-men of the college. The
+ place wherein this chapel and alms-house stood was called the
+ Eleemosinary, or Almonry, now corruptly called the Ambry,
+ (Aumbry,) for that the alms of the abbey were there
+ distributed to the poor; in which the abbot of Westminster
+ erected the first press for book-printing that was in
+ England, about the year of Christ 1471, and where WILLIAM
+ CAXTON, citizen and mercer of London, who first brought it
+ into England, practised it." Here he printed <i>The Game and
+ Play of the Chesse</i>, said to be the first book that issued
+ from the press in this country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence, according to Mr. M'Creery, the intelligent author of
+ "The Press," a poem, "the title of <i>chapel</i> to the
+ internal regulations of a printing-office originated in
+ Caxton's exercising the profession in one of the chapels in
+ Westminster Abbey, and may be considered as an additional
+ proof, from the antiquity of the custom, of his being the
+ first English printer."<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every lover of science, on approaching this spot, will feel
+ himself on holy ground, however the idle and incurious of our
+ metropolis may neglect the scite, or be ignorant of its
+ identity. We are there led into an eternity of reflection and
+ association of ideas; but lest human pride should be too
+ fondly feasted in the retrospect, the hallowed towers of the
+ abbey, seen in the distance, serve to remind us of the
+ imperial maxim, that "art is long, and life but short."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ TEA.&mdash;ITS INTRODUCTION INTO ENGLAND.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (A correspondent, who signs <i>M.M.M.</i> informs us that the
+ article sent to us by <i>P.T.W</i>. and inserted in No. 280
+ of the MIRROR, was copied verbatim from the <i>Imperial
+ Magazine</i>, a work which we seldom see, and consequently we
+ had no opportunity of ascertaining the origin of our
+ correspondent's paper. It seemed to us a good
+ <i>cyclopaedian</i> article on the subject, and we
+ accordingly admitted it. We now subjoin <i>M.M.M.'s</i>
+ communication.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to what has been said in the article upon tea,
+ (by <i>P.T.W.</i>) allow me to remark (and which I do not
+ recollect ever to have seen noticed in any work upon the
+ subject) that the seed is contained in <i>two</i> vessels,
+ the outer one varying in shape, triangular, long, and round,
+ according to the number which it contains of what may be
+ termed inner vessels. The outer vessel of a triangular shape,
+ measures, from the base to the apex about three quarters of
+ an inch, and is of a dark brown colour, approaching to black,
+ and thick, strong, and rough in texture; within this is
+ another vessel, containing the kernel; this inner vessel is
+ of a light brown colour, thin, and brittle, in shape, seldom
+ perfectly round, but mostly flat on one side: there are three
+ of them in a triangular seed vessel, two in a long one, and
+ one in that which is round. The kernel is of a brown colour,
+ and in taste very bitter. In no other species of teas than
+ Bohea, is the large kind of seed found, which is probably
+ owing to that species being gathered last or in autumn. There
+ is a <i>small</i> seed found mixed with the Congou kind of
+ teas, about the size of a pea, which is in every respect
+ similar to the large, except in size. This seed was evidently
+ not permitted to ripen, but the calyx of the flower connected
+ with the peduncle is quite perfect. The Twankey species are
+ of the same appearance, all of which I have had ample
+ opportunity of inspecting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As an appendage to this note, we are induced to quote the
+ following pleasant page from <i>Time's Telescope</i> for
+ 1828; and we take this opportunity of reminding our readers
+ that our customary Supplementary sheet, containing the spirit
+ of this and other popular Annual Works will be published with
+ our next Number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a single sheet found in Sir Hans Sloane's library, in
+ the British Museum, and printed by Mr. Ellis in his Original
+ Letters, <i>Second Series</i>, it appears that tea was known
+ in England in the year 1657, though not then in general use.
+ The author of this paper says, "That the vertues and
+ excellencies of this leaf and drink are many and great, is
+ evident and manifest by the high esteem and use of it
+ (especially of late years) among the physicians and knowing
+ men in France, Italy, Holland, and other parts of
+ Christendom; <i>and in</i> ENGLAND it hath been sold in the
+ leaf for <i>six pounds</i>, and sometimes for TEN
+ <i>pounds</i> the pound weight, and in respect of its former
+ scarceness and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page379"
+ name="page379"></a>[pg 379]</span> dearness, it hath been
+ only used as a regalia in high treatments and entertainments,
+ and presents made thereof to princes and grandees, till the
+ year 1657."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secretary Pepys, in his Diary, vol. i. p. 76, without saying
+ where he had his drink, makes the following
+ entry:&mdash;"Sept. 25th, 1660. I did send for a cup of tea
+ (a China drink) of which I never had drunk before, and went
+ away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a letter from Mr. Henry Savill to his uncle, Secretary
+ Coventry, dated from Paris, Aug. 12, 1678, and printed by Mr.
+ Ellis, the writer, after acknowledging the hospitalities of
+ his uncle's house, quaintly observes, "These, I hope, are the
+ charms that have prevailed with me to remember (that is to
+ trouble) you oftener than I am apt to do other of my friends,
+ whose buttery-hatch is not so open, <i>and who call for</i>
+ TEA instead of pipes and bottles after dinner; <i>a base
+ unworthy Indian practice</i>, and which I must ever admire
+ your most Christian family for not admitting. The truth is,
+ all nations have grown so wicked as to have some of these
+ filthy customs." In 1678, the year in which the above letter
+ is dated, the East India Company began the importation of tea
+ as a branch of trade; the quantity received at that time
+ amounting to 4,713 lbs. The importation gradually enlarged,
+ and the government, in consequence, augmented the duties upon
+ tea. By the year 1700, the importation of tea had arrived at
+ the quantity of 20,000 lbs. In 1721, it exceeded a million of
+ pounds. In 1816, it had arrived at 86,234,380 lbs. Something
+ more than thirty millions of pounds is probably the present
+ average of importation: some allowance must be made for tea
+ damaged and spoiled upon the passage.&mdash;See more on this
+ subject, well worthy of perusal, in Mr. Ellis's Letters,
+ <i>Second Series</i>, vol. iv. pp. 57, et seq.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ DANGER.
+ </h3>
+ <center>
+ FROM L'ADONE OF MARINO.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ <i>(For the Mirror.)</i>
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Like some lone Pilgrim in the dusky night,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Seeking, through unknown paths, his doubtful way,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While thick nocturnal vapours veil his sight
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ From yawning chasms, that 'neath his footsteps lay;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sudden before him gleams the forked light!
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Dispels the gloom, yet fills him with dismay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His trembling steps he then retraces back,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And seeks again the well-known beaten track.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ E.S.J.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ CATS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first couple of these animals which were carried to
+ Cuyaba sold for a pound of gold. There was a plague of rats
+ in the settlement, and they were purchased as a speculation,
+ which proved an excellent one. Their first kittens produced
+ thirty <i>oilavas</i> each; the new generation were worth
+ twenty; and the price gradually fell as the inhabitants were
+ stocked with these beautiful and useful creatures. Montengro
+ presented to the elder Almagro the first cat which was
+ brought to South America, and was rewarded for it with six
+ hundred <i>pesos</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE DEATH OF KING JOHN.
+ </h3>
+ <center>
+ <i>Extracted from an old black-letter volume, entitled "The
+ Abridgment of the Acts and Monuments of Martyrs, from the
+ earliest period of Christian suffering to the time of Queen
+ Elizabeth, our gracious lady, now reigning," printed in her
+ reign</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the yeere 1216, king John was poisoned, as most writers
+ testify, at Swinsted Abbey, by a monk of that abbey, of the
+ order of Cistersians, or S. Bernard's brethren, called Simon
+ of Swinsted. The monk did first consult with his abbot,
+ shewing him what he minded to do, alleging for himself the
+ prophecy of Caiphas, 11th of John, saying, it is better that
+ one man die, than the whole people perish. I am well content,
+ saith he, to lose my life, and so become a martyr, that I may
+ utterly destroy this tyrant. With that the abbot did weep for
+ gladness, and much commended his fervent zeal. The monk then
+ being absolved of his abbot for doing this fact, went
+ secretly into the garden, on the back side, and finding there
+ a most venomous toad, did so prick him and press him with his
+ penknife, that hee made him vomite all the poison that was
+ within him; this done, he conveyed it into a cup of wine, and
+ with a flattering and smiling countenance he sayeth to the
+ king, "If it shall please your princely majesty, here is such
+ a cup of wine as you never drank better in your lifetime. I
+ trust this wassall shall make all England glad," and with
+ that he drank a great draught thereof, and the king pledged
+ him; the monk then went out of the house to the back, and
+ then died, his bowels gushing out of his belly, and had
+ continually from henceforth three monks to sing mass for him,
+ confirmed by their general charter. The king, within a short
+ space after, feeling great grief in his body, asked for
+ Simon, the monk; answer was made he was dead. "Then God have
+ mercy on me," said the king; so went he to Newark-upon-Trent,
+ and there died, and was buried in the cathedral church at
+ Worster, in 1216, the 19th day of October, after having been
+ much fered with the clergy 18 years, 6 months, and a day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MALVINA.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page380" name="page380"></a>[pg
+ 380]</span>
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ LILLIARD EDGE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Near the border between the parishes of Maxton and Ancrum is
+ a bridge, called Lilliard Edge, formerly Anerum moor, where a
+ battle was fought between the Scots and English soon after
+ the death of king James V., who died in the year 1542. When
+ the Earl of Arran was regent of Scotland, Sir Ralph Rivers
+ and Sir Bryan Laiton came to Jedburgh with an army of 5,000
+ English to seize Merse and Teviotdale in the name of Henry
+ VIII., then king of England, who died not long after, in the
+ year 1547. The regent and the Earl of Angus came with a small
+ body of men to oppose them. The Earl of Angus was greatly
+ exasperated against the English, because some time before
+ they had defaced the tombs of his ancestors at Melrose, and
+ had done much hurt to the abbey there. The regent and the
+ Earl of Angus, without waiting the arrival of a greater
+ force, which was expected, met the English at Lilliard Edge,
+ where the Scots obtained a great victory, considering the
+ inequality of their number. A young woman of the name of
+ Lilliard fought along with the Scots with great courage; she
+ fell in the battle, and a tombstone was erected upon her
+ grave on the field where it was fought. Some remains of this
+ tombstone are still to be seen. It is said to have contained
+ the following inscription:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Fair maiden Lilliard lies under this stane;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little was her stature, but great was her fame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the English lads she laid many thumps,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when her legs were off she fought on her stumps."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ T.S.W.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ BOOKS AND BOOKWORMS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Books were anciently made of plates of copper and lead, the
+ bark of trees, bricks, Stones, and wood. Josephus speaks of
+ two columns, the one of stone, the other of brick, on which
+ the children of Seth wrote their inventions and astronomical
+ discoveries. Porphyry mentions some pillars, preserved in
+ Crete, on which the ceremonies observed by the Corybantes in
+ their sacrifices were recorded. The leaves of the palm-tree
+ were used, and the finest and thinnest part of the bark of
+ such trees as the lime, the ash, the maple, and the elm; from
+ hence comes the word <i>liber</i>, which signifies the inner
+ bark of the trees; and as these barks are rolled up, in order
+ to be removed with greater ease, these rolls were called
+ <i>volumen</i>, a volume, a name afterwards given to the like
+ rolls of paper or parchment. By degrees wax, then leather,
+ were introduced, especially the skins of goats and sheep, of
+ which at length parchment was prepared; also linen, then
+ silk, horn, and lastly paper. The rolls or volumes of the
+ ancients were composed of several sheets, fastened to each
+ other, rolled upon a stick, and were sometimes fifty feet in
+ length, and about a yard and a half wide. At first the
+ letters were only divided into lines, then into separate
+ words, which, by degrees, were noted with accents, and
+ distributed by points, and stops into periods, paragraphs,
+ chapters, and other divisions. In some countries, as among
+ the orientals, the lines began from the right, and ran to the
+ left; in others, as in northern and western nations, from the
+ left to the right; others, as the Grecians, followed both
+ directions alternately, going in the one and returning in the
+ other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Chinese books, the lines run from top to bottom.
+ Again, the page in some is entire and uniform; in others,
+ divided into columns; in others, distinguished into text and
+ notes, either marginal or at the bottom; usually it is
+ furnished with signatures and catch-words, also with a
+ register to discover whether the book be complete. The
+ Mahometans place the name of God at the beginning of all
+ their books. The word <i>book</i> is derived from the Saxon
+ <i>boc</i>, which comes from the northern <i>buech</i>, of
+ <i>buechans</i>, a beech, or <i>service-tree</i>, on the bark
+ of which our ancestors used to write. A very large estate was
+ given for one on Cosmography by king Alfred. About the year
+ 1400, they were sold from 10<i>l</i>. to 30<i>l</i>. a piece.
+ The first printed one was the Vulgate edition of the Bible,
+ 1462; the second was <i>Cicero de Officiis</i>, 1466. Leo I.
+ ordered 200,000 to be burnt at Constantinople. In the
+ suppressed monasteries of France, in 1790, there were found
+ 4,104,412 volumes; nearly one-half were on theology. The end
+ of the book, now denoted by <i>finis</i>, was anciently
+ marked with a <b>&lt;</b>, called <i>coronis</i>, and the
+ whole frequently washed with an oil drawn from cedar, or
+ citron chips strewed between the leaves, to preserve it from
+ rotting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far books; now for the <i>bookworms</i>. Anthony
+ Magliabecchi, the notorious bookworm, was born at Florence in
+ 1633; his passion for reading induced him to employ every
+ moment of his time in improving his mind. By means of an
+ astonishing memory and incessant application, he became more
+ conversant with literary history than any man of his time,
+ and was appointed librarian to the grand duke of Tuscany. He
+ has been called a living library. He was a man of a most
+ forbidding and savage aspect, and exceedingly
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page381" name="page381"></a>[pg
+ 381]</span> negligent of his person. He refused to be waited
+ upon, and rarely took off his clothes to go to bed. His
+ dinner was commonly three hard eggs, with a draught of water.
+ He had a small window in his door, through which he could see
+ all those who approached him; and if he did not wish for
+ their company, he would not admit them. He spent some hours
+ in each day at the palace library; but is said never in his
+ life to have gone farther from Florence than to Pratz,
+ whither he once accompanied Cardinal Norris to see a
+ manuscript. He died at the age of 81, in the year 1714. In
+ the present age we have <i>bookworms</i>, who wander from one
+ bookstall to another, and there devour their daily store of
+ knowledge. Others will linger at the tempting window filled
+ with the "<i>twopenny</i>," and read all the open pages; then
+ pass on to another of the same description, and thus enjoy
+ literature by the way of <i>Cheapside</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ P.T.W.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ MIDNIGHT&mdash;A TOUCH AT THE EPIC.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "The iron tongue of midnight hath toll'd twelve."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHAKSPEARE.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Amid the pauses of the midnight storm,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When all without is cold, within all warm!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amid the pauses of the midnight blast,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When ev'ry bolt and ev'ry sleeper's fast!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In that dire hour, when graves give up their dead,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And men for once agree in their pursuit&mdash;a bed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When heroes, statesmen, senators, and kings,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lords, and et ceteras of meaner things,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forget the road to fortune&mdash;or to jail,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Morpheus all their equal guardian hail!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When each forgets each 'vantage or mishap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all are equal in one common nap!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that dread hour...
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Caetera desiderantur.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <i>Carshalton</i> W. P&mdash;&mdash;n.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ ON OATHS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since lately we have had a great deal of prevarication in our
+ courts of justice about receiving the oaths of deists,
+ &amp;c., I have thought it meet to furnish the MIRROR with an
+ account of the first usage of the words, "So help me God."
+ The word oath is a corruption of the Saxon <i>eoth</i>. An
+ oath is called corporal, because the person making an
+ affidavit lays his hand upon a part of the scriptures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the conclusion of the oath the above words are used, which
+ may perhaps have originated in the very ancient manner of
+ trial by battle in this country, when the appellee, laying
+ his right hand on the book, takes the appellant by the right
+ hand with his left, and maketh oath as follows:&mdash;"Hear
+ this, thou who callest thyself <i>John</i> by the name of
+ baptism, whom I hold by thy hand, that falsely upon me thou
+ hast lied; and for this thou liest, that I who call myself
+ <i>Thomas</i> by the name of baptism, did not feloniously
+ murder thy father, <i>W.</i> by name, <i>so help me God</i>."
+ (Here he kisses the book, and concludes,)&mdash;"And this I
+ will defend against thee by my body, as this court shall
+ award." And the appellant is thus sworn also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, it may be observed also, the true foundation of the
+ word <i>lie</i>, being esteemed still so great an affront
+ above all others, as whenever it is pronounced to cause "an
+ immediate affray and bloodshed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have seen people sworn in poetry; and certain it is, that
+ in many countries in Europe the making of oaths differs. I
+ have some curious specimens of ancient oaths, some in Latin
+ prose, others in poetry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Chief Justice Coke was so strict with regard to the
+ receiving of oaths, that when at Cambridge Summer Assizes,
+ upon a trial of felony, he said, "in case of trespass,
+ although it be only to the value of <i>twopence</i>, no
+ evidence shall be given to the jury <i>but upon oath</i>,
+ much less where <i>the life of a man is in question</i>." An
+ action may be brought on the case upon a man calling another
+ a <i>perjured</i> man, because it shall be intended to be
+ contrary to his oath in a judicial proceeding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ W.H.H.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ ORIGINAL LETTER
+ </h3>
+ <center>
+ <i>From the Younger Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, upon his
+ death bed, to the Rev. Dr. W.&mdash;&mdash;</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Dear Doctor,&mdash;I always looked upon you as a man of true
+ virtue, and know you to be a person of sound understanding;
+ for however I may have acted in opposition to the principles
+ of religion, or the dictates of reason, I can honestly assure
+ you I had always the highest veneration for both. The world
+ and I may now shake hands, for I dare affirm that we are
+ heartily weary of one another. Oh, doctor, what a prodigal
+ have I been of that most valuable of all possessions, time. I
+ have squandered it away with a profusion unparalleled; and
+ now that the enjoyment of a few days would be worth a
+ hecatomb of worlds, I cannot flatter myself with a prospect
+ of half a dozen hours. How despicable, my dear friend, is
+ that man who never prays to his God but in the time of
+ distress. In what manner can he supplicate that omnipotent
+ Being in his affliction with reverence, whom in the tide of
+ his prosperity he never remembered
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page382" name="page382"></a>[pg
+ 382]</span> with dread! Don't brand me with infidelity, my
+ dear doctor, when I tell you I am almost ashamed to offer up
+ my petitions at the throne of grace, or of imploring that
+ divine mercy in the next world, which I have so scandalously
+ abused in this! Shall ingratitude to man be looked upon as
+ the blackest of crimes, and not ingratitude to God? Shall an
+ insult offered to the king be looked upon in the most
+ offensive light, and yet no notice be taken when the King of
+ kings is treated with indignity and disrespect. The
+ companions of my former libertinism would scarcely believe
+ their eyes, my dear doctor, was you to show them this
+ epistle. They would laugh at me as a dreaming enthusiast, or
+ pity me as a timorous wretch who was shocked at the
+ appearance of futurity. But whoever laughs at me for being
+ right, or pities me for being sensible of my errors, is more
+ entitled to my compassion than my resentment. A future life
+ may very well strike terror into any man who has not acted
+ well in this life; and he must have an uncommon share of
+ courage indeed who does not shrink at the presence of his
+ God. You see, my dear doctor, the apprehension of death will
+ soon bring the most profligate to a proper use of their
+ understanding. To what a situation am I now reduced? Is this
+ odious little hut a suitable lodging for a prince? or is this
+ anxiety of my mind becoming the characteristic of a
+ Christian? From my rank and fortune I might have expected
+ affluence to wait on my life, from my religion and
+ understanding, peace to smile upon my end; instead of which I
+ am afflicted with poverty, and haunted with remorse, despised
+ by my country, and I fear forsaken by my God! There is
+ nothing so dangerous, my dear doctor, as extraordinary
+ abilities. I cannot be accused of vanity now, by being
+ sensible I was once possessed of uncommon qualifications,
+ more especially as I sincerely regret that I was ever blest
+ with any at all. My rank in life made these accomplishments
+ still more conspicuous; and, fascinated with the general
+ applause which they procured, I never considered about the
+ proper means by which they should be displayed; hence, to
+ purchase a smile from a blockhead I despised, have I
+ frequently treated the virtuous with disrespect, and sported
+ with the Holy Name of heaven to obtain a laugh from a parcel
+ of fools, who were entitled to nothing but my contempt. Your
+ men of wit, my dear doctor, generally look upon themselves as
+ discharged from the duties of religion, and confine the
+ doctrines of the Gospel to people of meaner understandings;
+ it is a sort of derogation, in their opinion, to comply with
+ the rules of Christianity, and reckon that man possessed of a
+ narrow genius who studies to be good. What a pity that the
+ Holy Writings are not made the criterion of true judgment! or
+ that any one should pass for a fine gentleman in this world,
+ but he that seems solicitous about his happiness in the next.
+ My dear doctor, I am forsaken by all my acquaintance, utterly
+ neglected by the friends of my bosom and the dependants of my
+ bounty. But no matter; I am not now fit to converse with the
+ first, and have no ability to serve the latter. Let me not be
+ cast off wholly, however, by the good. Favour me with a
+ visit, dear doctor, as soon as possible. Writing to you gives
+ me some ease, especially upon a subject I could talk of for
+ ever. I am of opinion this is the last visit I shall ever
+ solicit from you. My distemper is powerful. Come and pray for
+ the departing spirit of the unhappy BUCKINGHAM.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ The Sketch Book.
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ No. LI.
+ </center>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE PHANTOM HAND.
+ </h3>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ I see a hand you cannot see,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Which beckons me away!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In a lonely part of the bleak and rocky coast of Scotland,
+ there dwelt a being, who was designated by the few who knew
+ and feared him, the Warlock Fisher. He was, in truth, a
+ singular and a fearful old man. For years he had followed his
+ dangerous occupation alone; adventuring forth in weather
+ which appalled the stoutest of the stout hearts that
+ occasionally exchanged a word with him, in passing to and fro
+ in their mutual employment. Of his name, birth, or descent,
+ nothing was known; but the fecundity of conjecture had
+ supplied an unfailing stock of <i>materiel</i> on these
+ points. Some said he was the devil incarnate; others said he
+ was a Dutchman, or some other "far-away foreigner," who had
+ fled to these comparative solitudes for shelter, from the
+ retribution due to some grievous crime; and all agreed, that
+ he was neither a Scot nor a true man. In outward form,
+ however, he was still "a model of a man," tall, and
+ well-made; though in years, his natural strength was far from
+ being abated. His matted black hair, hanging in elf-locks
+ about his ears and shoulders, together with the perpetual
+ sullenness which seemed native in the expression of features
+ neither regular nor pleasing, gave him an appearance
+ unendurably disgusting. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page383"
+ name="page383"></a>[pg 383]</span> He lived alone, in a hovel
+ of his own construction, partially scooped out of a
+ rock&mdash;was never known to have suffered a visitor within
+ its walls&mdash;to have spoken a kind word, or done a kind
+ action. Once, indeed, he performed an act which, in a less
+ ominous being, would have been lauded as the extreme of
+ heroism. In a dreadfully stormy morning, a fishing-boat was
+ seen in great distress, making for the shore&mdash;there were
+ a father and two sons in it. The danger became imminent, as
+ they neared the rocky promontory of the fisher&mdash;and the
+ boat upset. Women and boys were screaming and gesticulating
+ from the beach, in all the wild and useless energy of
+ despair, but assistance was nowhere to be seen. The father
+ and one of the lads disappeared for ever; but the younger boy
+ clung, with extraordinary resolution, to the inverted vessel.
+ By accident, the Warlock Fisher came to the door of his
+ hovel, saw the drowning lad, and plunged instantaneously into
+ the sea. For some minutes he was invisible amid the angry
+ turmoil; but he swam like an inhabitant of that fearful
+ element, and bore the boy in safety to the beach. From
+ fatigue or fear, or the effects of both united, the poor lad
+ died shortly afterwards; and his grateful relatives
+ industriously insisted, that he had been blighted in the
+ grasp of his unhallowed rescuer!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the end of autumn, the weather frequently becomes so
+ broken and stormy in these parts, as to render the sustenance
+ derived from fishing extremely precarious. Against this,
+ however, the Warlock Fisher was provided; for, caring little
+ for weather, and apparently less for life, he went out in all
+ seasons, and was known to be absent for days, during the most
+ violent storms, when every hope of seeing him again was lost.
+ Still nothing harmed him: he came drifting back again, the
+ same wayward, unfearing, unhallowed animal. To account for
+ this, it was understood that he was in connexion with
+ smugglers; that his days of absence were spent in their
+ service&mdash;in reconnoitring for their safety, and
+ assisting their predations. Whatever of truth there might be
+ in this, it was well known that the Warlock Fisher never
+ wanted ardent spirits; and so free was he in their use and of
+ tobacco, that he has been heard, in a long and dreary
+ winter's evening, carolling songs in a strange tongue, with
+ all the fervour of an inspired bacchanal. It has been said,
+ too, at such times he held strange talk with some who never
+ answered, deprecated sights which no one else could see, and
+ exhibited the fury of an outrageous maniac.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was towards the close of an autumn day, that a tall young
+ man was seen surveying the barren rocks, and apparently
+ deserted shores, near the dwelling of the fisher. He wore the
+ inquiring aspect of a stranger, and yet his step indicated a
+ previous acquaintance with the scene. The sun was flinging
+ his boldest radiance on the rolling ocean, as the youth
+ ascended the rugged path which led to the Warlock Fisher's
+ hut. He surveyed the door for a moment, as if to be certain
+ of the spot; and then, with one stroke of his foot, dashed
+ the door inwards. It was damp and tenantless. The stranger
+ set down his bundle, kindled a fire, and remained in quiet
+ possession. In a few hours the fisher returned. He started
+ involuntarily at the sight of the intruder, who sprang to his
+ feet, ready for any alternative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What seek you in my hut?" said the Fisher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A shelter for the night&mdash;the hawks are out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who directed you to me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Old acquaintance!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never saw you with my eyes&mdash;shiver me! But never mind,
+ you look like the breed&mdash;a ready hand and a light heel,
+ ha! All's right&mdash;tap your keg!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner said than done. The keg was broached, and a good
+ brown basin of double hollands was brimming at the lips of
+ the Warlock Fisher. The stranger did himself a similar
+ service, and they grew friendly. The fisher could not avoid
+ placing his hand before his eyes once or twice, as if wishful
+ to avoid the keen gaze of the stranger, who still plied the
+ fire with fuel and his host with hollands. Reserve was at
+ length annihilated, and the fisher jocularly said&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, and so we're old acquaintance, ha?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay," said the young man, with another searching glance. "I
+ was in doubt at first, but <i>now</i> I'm certain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what's to be done?" said the Fisher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An hour after midnight you must put me on board
+ &mdash;&mdash;-'s boat, she'll be abroad. They'll run a light
+ to the masthead, for which you'll steer. You're a good hand
+ at the helm in a dark night and a rough sea," was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How, if I will not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then&mdash;<i>your life or mine!"</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They sprang to their feet simultaneously, and an immediate
+ encounter seemed inevitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Psha!" said the Fisher, sinking on his seat, "what madness
+ this is! I was a thought warm with the liquor, and the
+ recollections of past times were rising on
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page384" name="page384"></a>[pg
+ 384]</span> my memory. Think nothing of it. I heard those
+ words once before," and he ground his teeth in
+ rage&mdash;"Yes, once&mdash;but in a shriller voice than
+ your's! Sometimes, too, the bastard rises to my view; and
+ then I smite him so&mdash;bah! give us another basin-full!"
+ He stuck short at vacancy, snatched the beverage from the
+ stranger, and drank it off. "An hour after midnight, said
+ ye?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay&mdash;you'll see no bastards then!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Worse&mdash;may be&mdash;worse!" muttered the Fisher,
+ sinking into abstraction, and glaring wildly on the
+ flickering embers before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, how's this?" said the stranger. "Are your senses
+ playing bo-peep with the ghost of some pigeon-livered coast
+ captain, eh? Come, take another pull at the keg, to clear
+ your head-lights, and tell us a bit of your ditty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Fisher took another draught, and proceeded&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "About five-and-twenty years ago, a stranger came to this
+ hut&mdash;may the curse of God annihilate him!&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Amen to that," said the young man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He brought with him a boy and a girl, a purse of gold, and
+ &mdash;&mdash; the arch fiend's tongue, to tempt me! Well, it
+ was to take these children out to sea&mdash;upset the
+ boat&mdash;and lose them!"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you did so!" interrupted the stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I tried&mdash;but listen. On a fine evening, I took them
+ out: the sun sunk rapidly, and I knew by the freshening of
+ the breeze, there would be a storm. I was not mistaken. It
+ came on even faster than I wished. The children were
+ alarmed&mdash;the boy, in particular, grew suspicious; he
+ insisted that I had an object in going out so far at sun-set.
+ This irritated me,&mdash;and I rose to smite him, when the
+ fair girl interposed her fragile form between us. She
+ screamed for mercy, and clung to my arm with the desperation
+ of despair. <i>I could not shake her off</i>! The boy had the
+ spirit of a man; he seized a piece of spar, and struck me on
+ the temples. 'How, you villain!' said he, 'your life or
+ mine!' At that moment the boat upset, and we were all adrift.
+ The boy I never saw again&mdash;a tremendous sea broke
+ between us&mdash;but the wretched girl clung to me like hate!
+ Damnation!&mdash;her dying scream is ringing in my ears like
+ madness! I struck her on the forehead, and she sank&mdash;all
+ but her hand, one little, white hand would not sink! I threw
+ myself on my back, and struck at it with both my
+ feet&mdash;and then I thought it sunk for ever. I made the
+ shore with difficulty, for I was stunned and senseless, and
+ the ocean heaved as if it would have washed away the mortal
+ world&mdash;and the lightnings blazed as if all hell had come
+ to light the scene of warfare! I have never since been on the
+ sea at midnight, but that hand has followed or preceded me; I
+ have never &mdash;&mdash;." Here he sank down from his seat,
+ and rolled himself in agony upon the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor wretch!" muttered the stranger, "what hinders now my
+ long-sought vengeance? Even with my foot&mdash;but thou shalt
+ share my murdered sister's grave!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A shot is fired&mdash;look out for the light!" said the
+ young man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Fisher went to the door; but suddenly started back,
+ clasping his hands before his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fire and brimstone! there it is again!" he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What?" said his companion, looking cooly round him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That infernal hand! Lightnings blast it!&mdash;but that's
+ impossible," he added, in a fearful under-tone, which sounded
+ as if some of the eternal rocks around him were adding a
+ response to his imprecations&mdash;"<i>that's</i> impossible!
+ It is a part of them&mdash;it has been so for
+ years&mdash;darkness could not shroud it&mdash;distance could
+ not separate it from my burning eye-balls!&mdash;awake, it
+ was there&mdash;asleep, it flickered and blazed before
+ me!&mdash;it has been my rock a-head through life, and it
+ will herald me to hell!" So saying, he pressed his sinewy
+ hands upon his face, and buried his head between his knees,
+ till the rock beneath him seemed to shake with his
+ uncontrollable agony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Again it beckons me!" said he, starting up&mdash;"ten
+ thousand fires are blazing in my heart&mdash;in my
+ brain!&mdash;where, <i>where</i> can I be worse? Fiend, I
+ defy thee!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see nothing," said his companion, with unalterable
+ composure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see nothing!" thundered the Fisher, with mingling
+ sarcasm and fury&mdash;"look <i>there</i>." He snatched his
+ hand, and pointing steadily into the gloom, again murmured,
+ "Look there! look there!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment the lightning blazed around with appalling
+ brilliancy; and the stranger saw a small white hand, pointing
+ tremulously upwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I saw it there," said he, "but it is not <i>hers</i>!
+ Infatuated, abandoned villain." he continued, with
+ irrepressible energy, "it is not my sister's hand&mdash;no!
+ it is the incarnate fiend's who tempted you, and who now
+ waves you to perdition&mdash;begone together!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He aimed a dreadful blow at the astonished
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page385" name="page385"></a>[pg
+ 385]</span> Fisher, who instinctively avoided the stroke.
+ Mutually wound up to the highest pitch of anger, they
+ grappled each the other's throat, set their feet, and
+ strained for the throw, which was inevitably to bury both in
+ the wild waves beneath. A faint shriek was heard, and a
+ gibbering, as of many voices, came fluttering around them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Chatter on!" said the Fisher, "he joins you now!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Together&mdash;it will be together!" said the stranger, as
+ with a last desperate effort he bent his adversary backward
+ from the betling cliff. The voice of the Fisher sounded
+ hoarsely in execration, as they dashed into the sea together;
+ but what he said was drowned in the hoarser murmur of the
+ uplashing surge! The body of the stranger was found on the
+ next morning, flung far up on the rocky shore&mdash;but that
+ of the murderer was gone for ever!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The superstitious peasantry of the neighbourhood still
+ consider the spot as haunted; and at midnight, when the waves
+ dash fitfully against the perilous crags, and the bleak winds
+ sweep with long and angry moan around them, they still hear
+ the gibbering voices of the fiends, and the mortal
+ execrations of the Warlock Fisher!&mdash;but, after that
+ fearful night, no man ever saw THE PHANTOM
+ HAND!&mdash;<i>Literary Magnet</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ ARCANA OF SCIENCE.
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ <i>Elephants</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ All the elephants which were exported from Point de Galle
+ were caught in ancient, as well as in modern times, in that
+ tract of country which extends from Matura to Tangcolle, in
+ the south of Ceylon, and which, from its being famous for its
+ elephants in his days, is described by Ptolemy in the map he
+ made of Ceylon sixteen hundred years ago as the <i>elephantum
+ pascua</i>. The trade in elephants from Ceylon, which used to
+ be lucrative, is now completely annihilated, in consequence
+ of all the petty Rajahs, Foligars, and other chiefs in the
+ southern peninsula of India, who used formerly to purchase
+ Ceylon elephants as a part of their state, having lost their
+ sovereignties, and being therefore no longer required to keep
+ up any state of this description. A gentleman who has a
+ plantation at Candy, it is understood, recently introduced
+ the use of elephants, in ploughing, with great
+ advantage.&mdash;<i>Trans. Asiatic Society</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <center>
+ <i>The Fennecous Cerdo</i>.
+ </center>
+ <div class="figure" style="width: 50%; float: right;">
+ <a href="images/286-2.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/286-2.png" alt="Fennecous Cerdo." /></a>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ This beautiful and extraordinary animal, or at least one of
+ its genus, was first made known to European naturalists by
+ Bruce, who received it from his dragoman, whilst consul
+ general at Algiers. It is frequently met with in the date
+ territories of Africa, where the animals are hunted for their
+ skins, which are afterwards sold at Mecca, and then exported
+ to India. Bruce kept his animal alive for several months, and
+ took a drawing of it in water colours, of the natural size, a
+ copy of which, on transparent paper, was clandestinely made
+ by his servant. Mr. Brander, into whose hands the
+ <i>Fennecus</i> fell after Bruce left Algiers, gave an
+ account of it in "Some Swedish Transactions," but refused to
+ let the figure be published, the drawing having been unfairly
+ obtained.<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a>
+ Bruce asserts that this animal is described in many Arabian
+ books, under the name of <i>El Fennec</i>, which appellation
+ he conceives to be derived from the Greek word for a palm or
+ date-tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The favourite food of Bruce's Fennec was dates or any sweet
+ fruit; but it was also very fond of eggs; when hungry it
+ would eat bread, especially with honey or sugar. His
+ attention was immediately attracted if a bird flew near him,
+ and he would watch it with an eagerness that could hardly be
+ diverted from its object; but he was dreadfully afraid of a
+ cat. Bruce never heard that he had any voice. During the day
+ he was inclined to sleep, but became restless and exceedingly
+ unquiet as night came on. The above Fennec was about ten
+ inches long, the tail five inches and a quarter, near an inch
+ of it on the tip, black. The colour of the body was dirty
+ white, bordering on cream colour; the hair on the belly
+ rather whiter, softer and longer than on the rest of the
+ body. His look was sly and wily; he built his nest on trees,
+ and did not burrow in the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Naturalists, especially those of France,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page386" name="page386"></a>[pg
+ 386]</span> were long induced to suspect the truth of Bruce's
+ description of this animal; but a specimen from the interior
+ of Nubia, and preserved in the museum at Frankfort, has
+ recently been engraved; and thus the matter nearly settled by
+ the animal belonging to the genus <i>Canis</i>, and the sub
+ genus <i>Vulpes</i>; the number of teeth and form, being
+ precisely the same as the fox, which it also resembles in its
+ feet, number of toes, and form of tail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the above engraving we are indebted to the Appendix to
+ the important and interesting Travels of Messrs. Denham and
+ Clapperton. It is therein described as generally of a white
+ colour, inclining to straw yellow; above, from the occiput to
+ the insertion of the tail it is light rufous brown,
+ delicately pencilled with fine black lines, from thinly
+ scattered hairs tipped with black; the exterior of the thighs
+ is lighter rufous brown; the chin, throat, belly, and
+ interior of the thighs and legs are white, or cream colour.
+ The nose is pointed, and black at the extremity; above, it is
+ covered with very short, whitish hair inclining to rufous,
+ with a small irregular rufous spot on each side beneath the
+ eyes; the whiskers are black, rather short and scanty; the
+ back of the head is pale rufous brown. The ears are very
+ large, erect, and pointed, and covered externally with short,
+ pale, rufous brown hair; internally, they are thickly fringed
+ on the margin with long grayish white hairs, especially in
+ front; the rest of the ears, internally, is bare; externally,
+ they are folded or plaited at the base. The tail is very
+ full, cylindrical, of a rufous brown colour, and pencilled
+ with fine black lines like the back. The fur is very soft and
+ fine; that on the back, from the back to the insertion of the
+ tail, as well as that on the upper part of the shoulder
+ before, and nearly the whole of the hinder thigh, is formed
+ of tri-coloured hairs, the base of which is of a dark lead
+ colour, the middle white, and the extremity light rufous
+ brown.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Fossil Turtle</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ A beautiful and perfect fossil of the sea turtle has recently
+ been discovered in an extensive stratum of limestone, four
+ fathoms water, called the Stone Ridge, about four miles off
+ Harwich harbour. It is incrusted in a mass of ferruginous
+ limestone, and weighs 180 lbs.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Apples</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ A gentleman of Staffordshire recommends the preservation of
+ apples for winter store, packed in banks or hods of earth
+ like potatoes.&mdash;<i>Communication to the Horticultural
+ Society</i>.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Uses of Seals</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The benefits which the inhabitants of frigid regions derive
+ from seals, are far too numerous and diversified to be
+ particularized, as they supply them with almost all the
+ conveniences of life. We, on the contrary, so persecute this
+ animal, as to destroy hundreds of thousands annually, for the
+ sake of the pure and transparent oil with which the seal
+ abounds; 2ndly, for its tanned skin, which is appropriated to
+ various purposes by different modes of preparation; and
+ thirdly, we pursue it for its close and dense attire. In the
+ common seal, the hair of the adult is of one uniform kind, so
+ thickly arranged and imbued with oil, as to effectually
+ resist the action of water; while, on the contrary, in the
+ antarctic seals the hair is of two kinds: the longest, like
+ that of the northern seals; the other, a delicate, soft fur,
+ growing between the roots of the former, close to the surface
+ of the skin, and not seen externally; and this beautiful fur
+ constitutes an article of very increasing importance in
+ commerce; but not only does the clothing of the seal vary
+ materially in colour, fineness, and commercial situation, in
+ the different species, but not less so in the age of the
+ animal. The young of most kinds are usually of a very light
+ colour, or entirely white, and are altogether destitute of
+ true hair, having this substituted by a long and particularly
+ soft fur.&mdash;<i>Quarterly Journal</i>.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Method of cutting Glass</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ If a tube, or goblet, or other round glass body is to be cut,
+ a line is to be marked with a gun flint having a sharp angle,
+ an agate, a diamond, or a file, exactly on the place where it
+ is to be cut. A long thread covered with sulphur is then to
+ be passed two or three times round the circular line, and to
+ be inflamed and burnt; when the glass is well heated some
+ drops of cold water are to be thrown on it, when the piece
+ will separate in an exact manner, as if cut with scissors. It
+ is by this means that glasses are cut circularly into thin
+ bands, which may either be separated from, or repose upon
+ each other, at pleasure, in the manner of a
+ spring&mdash;-<i>From the French</i>.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Preservation of Skins</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ A tanner at Tyman, in Hungary, uses with great advantage the
+ pyroligueous acid, in preserving skins from putrefaction, and
+ in recovering them when attacked. They are deprived of none
+ of their useful qualities if covered by means of a brush with
+ the acid, which they absorb very readily.&mdash;<i>Quarterly
+ Journal</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page387" name="page387"></a>[pg
+ 387]</span>
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Organic Remains in Sussex</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ A short time since, the entire skeleton of a stag, of very
+ large size, was dug up by some labourers, in excavating the
+ bed of the river Ouse, near Lewes, in Sussex. The remains
+ were found imbedded in a layer of sand, beneath the alluvial
+ blue clay, forming the surface of the valley. The horns were
+ in the highest state of preservation, and had seven points,
+ like the American deer. The greater part of the skeleton was
+ destroyed by the carelessness of the workmen; but a portion,
+ including the horns, has been preserved in the collection of
+ Mr. Mantell, near Lewes.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Stupendous Lizard</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Bullock, in his Travels, (just published) relates that he
+ saw near New Orleans, "what are believed to be the remains of
+ a stupendous crocodile, and which are likely to prove so,
+ intimating the former existence of a lizard at least 150 feet
+ long; for I measured the right side of the under jaw, which I
+ found to be 21 feet along the curve; and 4 feet 6 inches
+ wide: the others consisted of numerous vertebrae, ribs,
+ femoral bones, and toes, all corresponding in size to the
+ jaw; there were also some teeth: these, however, were not of
+ proportionate magnitude. These remains were discovered, a
+ short time since, in the swamp, near Fort Philip; and the
+ other parts of the mighty skeleton, are, it is said, in the
+ same part of the swamp."
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Digby's Philosophy</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Sir Kenelm Digby was a mere quack; but he was the son of an
+ earl, and related to many noble families. His book on the
+ supposed sympathetic powder, which cured wounds at any
+ distance from the sufferer, is the standard of his abilities.
+ This powder was Roman vitriol pounded. From this wild work,
+ we, however learn, that the English routine of agriculture in
+ his time was&mdash;1st. year, barley; 2nd. wheat; 3rd. beans;
+ 4th. fallow.&mdash;<i>Pinkerton</i>.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Critics</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Thought, comprising its enumerated constituents and detailed
+ process, is the most perfect and exalted elaboration of the
+ human mind, and when protracted is a painful exertion;
+ indeed, the greater portion of our species reluctantly submit
+ to the toil and lassitude of reflection; but from laziness,
+ or incapacity, and perhaps in some instances from diffidence,
+ they suffer themselves to be directed by the opinions of
+ others. Hence has arisen the swarm of critics and reviewers,
+ those clouds that obscure the fair light that would beam on
+ the mind of man, by his individual reflection, and through
+ his existence degrade him, by a submission to assumed
+ authority;&mdash;a voluntary blindness, that excludes him
+ from the observation of nature, and through indolence and
+ credulity render his noblest faculties feeble, assenting, and
+ lethargic; and delude him to barter the inheritance of his
+ intellect for a mess of pottage.&mdash;<i>Dr.
+ Haslam.&mdash;Lancet</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ MUNCHAUSEN RIDE THROUGH EDINBURGH.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ We were sitting rather negligently on an infernal animal,
+ which, up to that day, had seemed quiet as a
+ lamb&mdash;kissing our hand to Mrs. Davison, then Miss
+ Duncan, and in the blaze of her fame, when a Highland
+ regiment, no doubt the forty-second, that had been trudging
+ down the Mound, so silently that we never heard them, all at
+ once, and without the slightest warning, burst out, with all
+ their bag-pipes, into one pibroch! The mare&mdash;to do her
+ justice&mdash;had been bred in England, and ridden, as a
+ charger, by an adjutant to an English regiment. She was even
+ fond of music&mdash;and delighted to prance behind the
+ band&mdash;unterrified by cymbals or great drum. She never
+ moved in a roar of artillery at reviews&mdash;and, had the
+ Castle of Edinburgh&mdash;Lord bless it&mdash;been
+ self-involved, at that moment, in a storm of thunder and
+ lightning, round its entire circle of cannon, that mare would
+ not so much as have pricked up her ears, whisked her tail, or
+ lifted a hoof. But the pibroch was more than horse-flesh and
+ blood could endure&mdash;and off we two went like a
+ whirlwind. Where we went&mdash;that is to say, what were the
+ names of the few first streets along which we were borne, is
+ a question which, as a man of veracity, we must positively
+ decline answering. For some short space of time, lines of
+ houses reeled by without a single face at the
+ windows&mdash;and these, we have since conjectured, might be
+ North and South Hanover street, and Queen-street. By and by
+ we surely were in something like a square&mdash;could it be
+ Charlotte-square?&mdash;and round and round it we
+ flew&mdash;three, four, five, or six times, as horsemen do at
+ the Caledonian amphitheatre&mdash;for the animal had got
+ blind with terror, and kept viciously reasoning in a circle.
+ What a show of faces at all the windows then! A shriek still
+ accompanied us as we clattered, and thundered, and lightened
+ along; and, unless our ears lied, there were occasional
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page388" name="page388"></a>[pg
+ 388]</span> fits of stifled laughter, and once or twice a
+ guffaw; for there was now a ringing of lost
+ stirrups&mdash;and much holding of the mane. One complete
+ round was executed by us, first on the shoulder beyond the
+ pommel; secondly, on the neck; thirdly, between the ears;
+ fourthly, between the forelegs, in a place called the
+ counter, with our arms round the jugular veins of the flying
+ phenomenon, and our toes in the air. That was, indeed, the
+ crisis of our fever, but we made a wonderful recovery back
+ into the saddle&mdash;righting like a boat capsized in a
+ sudden squall at sea&mdash;and once more, with accelerated
+ speed, away past the pillared front of St. George's church!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The castle and all its rocks, in peristrephic panorama, then
+ floated cloud-like by&mdash;and we saw the whole mile-length
+ of Prince's-street stretched before us, studded with
+ innumerable coaches, chaises, chariots, carts, wagons, drays,
+ gigs, shandrydans, and wheel-barrows, through among which we
+ dashed, as if they had been as much gingerbread&mdash;while
+ men on horseback were seen flinging themselves off, and
+ drivers dismounting in all directions, making their escape up
+ flights of steps and common stairs&mdash;mothers or nurses
+ with broods of young children flying hither and thither in
+ distraction, or standing on the very crown of the causeway,
+ wringing their hands in despair. The wheel-barrows were
+ easily disposed of&mdash;nor was there much greater
+ difficulty with the gigs and shandrydans. But the
+ hackney-coaches stood confoundedly in the way&mdash;and a
+ wagon, drawn by four horses, and heaped up to the very sky
+ with beer-barrels, like the Tower of Babel or Babylon, did
+ indeed give us pause&mdash;but ere we had leisure to ruminate
+ on the shortness of human life, we broke through between the
+ leaders and the wheels with a crash of leathern breeching,
+ dismounted collars, riven harness, and tumbling of enormous
+ horses that was perilous to hear; when, as Sin and Satan
+ would have it&mdash;would you believe it?&mdash;there, twenty
+ kilts deep at the least, was the same accursed Highland
+ regiment, the forty-second, with fixed bayonets, and all its
+ pipers in the van, the pibroch yelling, squeaking, squealing,
+ grunting, growling, roaring, as if it had only that very
+ instant broken out&mdash;so, suddenly to the
+ right&mdash;about went the bag-pipe-haunted mare, and away up
+ the Mound, past the pictures of Irish Giants&mdash;Female
+ Dwarfs&mdash;Albinos&mdash;an Elephant endorsed with
+ towers&mdash;Tigers and Lions of all sorts&mdash;and a large
+ wooden building, like a pyramid, in which there was the
+ thundering of cannon&mdash;for the battle, we rather think,
+ of Camperdown was going on&mdash;the Bank of Scotland seemed
+ to sink into the NorLoch&mdash;one gleam through the window
+ of the eyes of the Director-General&mdash;and to be sure how
+ we did make the street-stalls of the Lawn-market spin! The
+ man in St. Giles's steeple was playing his one o'clock tune
+ on the bells, heedless in that elevation of our
+ career&mdash;in less than no time John Knox, preaching from a
+ house half-way down the Canongate, gave us the
+ go-by&mdash;and down through one long wide sprawl of men,
+ women, and children we wheeled past the Gothic front, and
+ round the south angle of Holyrood, and across the
+ King's-park, where wan and withered sporting debtors held up
+ their hands and cried,
+ Hurra&mdash;hurra&mdash;hurra&mdash;without stop or stay, up
+ the rocky way that leads to St. Anthony's Well and
+ Chapel&mdash;and now it was manifest that we were bound for
+ the summit of Arthur's Seat. We hope that we were
+ sufficiently thankful that a direction was not taken towards
+ Salisbury Crags, where we should have been dashed into many
+ million pieces. Free now from even the slightest suburban
+ impediment, obstacle, or interruption, we began to eye our
+ gradually rising situation in life&mdash;and looking over our
+ shoulder, the sight of city and sea was indeed magnificent.
+ There in the distance rose North Berwick Law&mdash;but though
+ we have plenty of time now for description, we had scant time
+ then for beholding perhaps the noblest scenery in Scotland.
+ Up with us&mdash;up with us into the clouds&mdash;and just as
+ St. Giles's bells ceased to jingle, and both girths broke, we
+ crowned the summit, and sat on horseback like king Arthur
+ himself, eight hundred feet above the level of the sea!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Blackwood's Magazine</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ Select Biography
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ No. LVIII.
+ </center>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ LELAND.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ John Leland, the father of the English antiquaries, was born
+ in London, about the end of the reign of Henry VII. He was a
+ pupil to William Lily, the celebrated grammarian&mdash;the
+ first head master of St. Paul's school; and by the kindness
+ and liberality of a Mr. Myles, he was sent to Christ's
+ college. Cambridge. From this university he removed to All
+ Souls, Oxford, where he paid particular attention to the
+ Greek language. He afterwards went to Paris, where he
+ cultivated the acquaintance of the principal scholars of the
+ age, and could probably number among his correspondents
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page389" name="page389"></a>[pg
+ 389]</span> the illustrious names of Buddoeus, Erasmus, the
+ Stephani, Faber, and Turnebus; in this city he perfected
+ himself in the knowledge of the Latin and Greek tongues, to
+ which he afterwards added that of several modern languages.
+ On his return to England he took orders, and was appointed
+ one of the chaplains to Henry VIII., who gave him the rectory
+ of Popelay, in the marshes of Calais, appointed him his
+ library keeper, and conferred on him the title of Royal
+ Antiquary, which no other person in this kingdom, before, or
+ after possessed. In this character his majesty in 1533
+ granted him a commission, empowering him to search after
+ England's antiquities, and peruse the libraries of all
+ cathedrals, abbeys, priories, colleges, &amp;c., as also all
+ the places wherein records, writings, and whatever else was
+ lodged that related to antiquity. "Before Leland's time,"
+ says Hearne, in his preface to the <i>Itinerary</i>, "all the
+ literary monuments of antiquity were totally disregarded; and
+ the students of Germany apprised of this culpable
+ indifference, were suffered to enter our libraries
+ unmolested, and to cut out of the books deposited there
+ whatever passages they thought proper, which they afterwards
+ published as relics of the ancient literature of their own
+ country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this research Leland was occupied above six years in
+ travelling through England, and in visiting all the remains
+ of ancient buildings and monuments of every kind. On its
+ completion, he hastened to the metropolis, to lay at the feet
+ of his sovereign the result of his labours, which he
+ presented to Henry, under the title of a "New Year's
+ Gift,"<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a>
+ in which he says, "I have so traviled yn your dominions booth
+ by the se costes and the midle partes, sparing nother labor
+ nor costes, by the space of these vi. yeres paste, that there
+ is almoste nother cape, nor bay, haven, creke or peers, river
+ or confluence of rivers, breches, watchies, lakes, meres,
+ fenny waters, montagnes, valleis, mores, hethes, forestes,
+ chases wooddes, cities, burges, castelles, principale manor
+ placis, monasteries, and colleges, but I have seene them; and
+ notid yn so doing a hole worlde of thinges very memorable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the dissolution of the monasteries, Leland made
+ application to Secretary Cromwell, to entreat his assistance
+ in getting the MSS. they contained sent to the king's
+ library. In 1542 Henry presented him with the valuable
+ rectory of Hasely, in Oxfordshire; the year following he
+ preferred him to a canonry of King's college, now
+ Christchurch, Oxford, and about the same time collated him to
+ a prebend in the church of Sarum. As his duties in the church
+ did not require much active service, he retired with his
+ collections to his house in London, where he sat about
+ digesting them, and preparing the publication he had promised
+ to the world; but either his intense application, or some
+ other cause, brought upon him a total derangement of mind,
+ and after lingering two years in this state, he died on the
+ 18th of April, 1552.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The writings of Leland are numerous; in his lifetime he
+ published several Latin and Greek poems, and some tracts on
+ antiquarian subjects. His valuable and voluminous MSS., after
+ passing through many hands, came into the Bodleian library,
+ furnishing very valuable materials to Stow, Lambard, Camden,
+ Burton, Dugdale, and many other antiquaries and historians.
+ Polydore Virgil, who had stolen from them pretty freely, had
+ the insolence to abuse Leland's memory&mdash;calling him "a
+ vain glorious man." From these collections Hall published, in
+ 1709, "Commentarii de Scriptoribus Brittanicis." "The
+ Itinerary of John Leland, Antiquary," was published by the
+ celebrated Hearne, at Oxford, in nine volumes, 8vo., 1710, of
+ which a second edition was printed in 1745, with considerable
+ improvements and additions. The same editor published
+ "Joannis Lelandi Antiquarii de Rebus Brittanicis
+ Collectanea." in six volumes, Oxon. 1716, 8vo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BIOS.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ THE SELECTOR<br />
+ AND<br />
+ LITERARY NOTICES OF<br />
+ <i>NEW WORKS</i>.
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ CORAL ISLANDS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ [In a recent Number of the MIRROR we quoted from Mr.
+ Montgomery's <i>Pelican Island</i> a beautiful description of
+ the formation of coral reefs or rocks; and we are now induced
+ to resume our extracts from this soul stirring poem, with the
+ following description of the process by which these reefs or
+ rocks become beautiful and picturesque islands. Mr.
+ Montgomery's poetical talent is altogether of the highest
+ order, or, to use a familiar phrase, his <i>Pelican
+ Island</i> is "a gem of the first water." How exquisite is
+ the following picture of creation!]
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Here was the infancy of life, the age
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of gold in that green isle, itself new-born,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all upon it in the prime of being,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Love, hope, and promise, 'twas in miniature
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A world unsoil'd by sin; a Paradise
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where Death had not yet enter'd; Bliss had newly
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alighted, and shut close his rainbow wings,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To rest at ease, nor dread intruding ill.
+ </p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page390"
+ name="page390"></a>[pg 390]</span>
+ <p>
+ Plants of superior growth now sprang apace,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With moon-like blossoms crown'd, or starry glories;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Light flexible shrubs among the greenwood play'd
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fantastic freaks,&mdash;they crept, they climb'd, they
+ budded,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And hung their flowers and berries in the sun;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the breeze taught, they danced, they sung, they twined
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their sprays in bowers, or spread the ground with
+ net-work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through the slow lapse of undivided time,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silently rising from their buried germs,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trees lifted to the skies their stately heads,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tufted with verdure, like depending plumage,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O'er stems unknotted, waving to the wind:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of these in graceful form, and simple beauty,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fruitful cocoa and the fragrant palm
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Excell'd the wilding daughters of the wood,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That stretch'd unwieldy their enormous arms,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clad with luxuriant foliage, from the trunk,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like the old eagle, feather'd to the heel;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While every fibre, from the lowest root
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the last leaf upon the topmost twig,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was held by common sympathy, diffusing
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through all the complex frame unconscious life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the locust with its hydra boughs,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A hundred heads on one stupendous trunk;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And such the mangrove, which, at full-moon flood,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Appear'd itself a wood upon the waters,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the tide left bare its upright roots,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wood on piles suspended in the air;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such too the Indian fig, that built itself
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Into a sylvan temple, arch'd aloof
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With airy aisles and living colonnades,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where nations might have worshipp'd God in peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From year to year their fruits ungather'd fell;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not lost, but quickening where they lay, they struck
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Root downward, and brake forth on every hand,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Till the strong saplings, rank and file, stood up,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A mighty army, which o'erran the isle,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And changed the wilderness into a forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this appear'd accomplish'd in the space
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between the morning and the evening star:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, in his third day's work, Jehovah spake,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Earth, an infant, naked as she came
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out of the womb of chaos, straight put on
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her beautiful attire, and deck'd her robe
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of verdure with ten thousand glorious flowers,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Exhaling incense; crown'd her mountain-heads
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With cedars, train'd her vines around their girdles,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And pour'd spontaneous harvests at their feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor were those woods without inhabitants
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the ephemera of earth and air;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Where glid the sunbeams through the latticed
+ boughs,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And fell like dew-drops on the spangled ground,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To light the diamond-beetle on his way;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Where cheerful openings let the sky look down
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Into the very heart of solitude,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On little garden-pots of social flowers,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That crowded from the shades to peep at daylight;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Or where unpermeable foliage made
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Midnight at noon, and chill, damp horror reign'd
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O'er dead, fall'n leaves and slimy funguses;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Reptiles were quicken'd into various birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Loathsome, unsightly, swoln to obscene bulk,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lurk'd the dark toad beneath the infected turf;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The slow-worm crawl'd, the light cameleon climb'd,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And changed his colour as his pace he changed;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nimble lizard ran from bough to bough,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Glancing through light, in shadow disappearing;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scorpion, many-eyed, with sting of fire,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bred there,&mdash;the legion-fiend of creeping things;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Terribly beautiful, the serpent lay,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wreath'd like a coronet of gold and jewels,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fit for a tyrant's brow; anon he flew
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Straight as an arrow shot from his own rings,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And struck his victim, shrieking ere it went
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Down his strain'd throat, that open sepulchre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amphibious monsters haunted the lagoon;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hippopotamus, amidst the flood,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Flexile and active as the smallest swimmer;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But on the bank, ill balanced and infirm,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He grazed the herbage, with huge, head declined,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Or lean'd to rest against some ancient tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crocodile, the dragon of the waters,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In iron panoply, fell as the plague,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And merciless as famine, cranch'd his prey,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While, from his jaws, with dreadful fangs all serried,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The life-blood dyed the waves with deadly streams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seal and the sea-lion, from the gulf
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Came forth, and couching with their little ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slept on the shelving rocks that girt the shores,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Securing prompt retreat from sudden danger;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pregnant turtle, stealing out at eve,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With anxious eye, and trembling heart, explored
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loneliest coves, and in the loose warm sand
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deposited her eggs, which the sun hatch'd:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence the young brood, that never knew a parent,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unburrow'd and by instinct sought the sea;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nature herself, with her own gentle hand,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dropping them one by one into the flood,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And laughing to behold their antic joy,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When launch'd in their maternal element.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vision of that brooding world went on;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Millions of beings yet more admirable
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Than all that went before them now appear'd;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Flocking from every point of heaven, and filling
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eye, ear, and mind, with objects, sounds, emotions
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Akin to livelier sympathy and love
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Than reptiles, fishes, insects, could inspire;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Birds, the free tenants of land, air, and ocean,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their forms all symmetry, their motions grace;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In plumage delicate and beautiful,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thick without burthen, close as fishes' scales,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Or loose as full-blown poppies to the breeze;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With wings that might have had a soul within them,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They bore their owners by such sweet enchantment;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Birds, small and great, of endless shapes and
+ colours,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here flew and perch'd, there swam and dived at pleasure;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Watchful and agile, uttering voices wild
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And harsh, yet in accordance with the waves
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the beech, the winds in caverns moaning,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Or winds and waves abroad upon the water.
+ </p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page391"
+ name="page391"></a>[pg 391]</span>
+ <p>
+ Some sought their food among the finny shoals,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swift darting from the clouds, emerging soon
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With slender captives glittering in their beaks;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These in recesses of steep crags constructed
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their eyries inaccessible, and train'd
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their hardy broods to forage in all weathers;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Others, more gorgeously apparell'd, dwelt
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the woods, on Nature's dainties feeding,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbs, seeds, and roots; or, ever on the wing,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pursuing insects through the boundless air:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In hollow trees or thickets these conceal'd
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their exquisitely woven nests; where lay
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their callow offspring, quiet as the down
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On their own breasts, till from her search the dam
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With laden bill return'd, and shared the meal
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the clamorous suppliants, all agape;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, cowering o'er them with expanded wings,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She felt how sweet it is to be a mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of these, a few, with melody untaught,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turn'd all the air to music within hearing,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Themselves unseen; while bolder quiristers
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On loftier branches strain'd their clarion-pipes,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And made the forest echo to their screams
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Discordant,&mdash;yet there was no discord there,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But temper'd harmony: all tones combining,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the rich confluence often thousand tongues,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To tell of joy and to inspire it. Who
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could hear such concert, and not join in chorus?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not I;&mdash;sometimes entranced, I seem'd to float
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon a buoyant sea of sounds: again
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With curious ear I tried to disentangle
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The maze of voices, and with eye as nice
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To single out each minstrel, and pursue
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His little song through all its labyrinth,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Till my soul enter'd into him, and felt
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every vibration of his thrilling throat,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pulse of his heart, and flutter of his pinions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often, as one among the multitude,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sang from very fulness of delight;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now like a winged fisher of the sea,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now a recluse among the woods,&mdash;enjoying
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bliss of all at once, or each in turn.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ RAPIDS OF NIAGARA.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Rapids begin about half a mile above the cataract; and
+ although the breadth of the river might at first make them
+ appear of little importance, a nearer inspection will
+ convince the stranger of their actual size, and the terrific
+ danger of the passage. The inhabitants of the neighbourhood
+ regard it as certain death to get once involved in them; and
+ that, not merely because all escape from the cataract would
+ be hopeless, but because the violent force of the water among
+ the rocks in the channel, would instantly dash the bones of a
+ man in pieces. Instances are on record of persons being
+ carried down by the stream; indeed there was an instance of
+ two men carried over in March last; but no one is known to
+ have ever survived. Indeed, it is very rare that the bodies
+ are found; as the depth of the gulf below the cataract, and
+ the tumultuous agitation of the eddies, whirlpools, and
+ counter currents, render it difficult for any thing once sunk
+ to rise again; while the general course of the water is so
+ rapid, that it is soon hurried far down the stream. The large
+ logs which are brought down in great numbers during the
+ spring, bear sufficient testimony to these remarks. Wild
+ ducks, geese, &amp;c. are frequently precipitated over the
+ cataract, and generally re-appear either dead, or with their
+ legs or wings broken. Some say that water-fowl avoid the
+ place when able to escape, but that the ice on the shores of
+ the river above often prevents them from obtaining food, and
+ that they are carried down from mere inability to fly; while
+ others assert that, they are sometimes seen voluntarily
+ riding among the rapids, and, after descending half-way down
+ the cataract, taking wing, and returning to repeat their
+ dangerous amusement.&mdash;<i>American Work</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ BRIDAL, CANZONET.
+ </h3>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Sir Knight, heed not the clarion's call,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From hill, or from valley, or turretted hall;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cease, holy Friar, cease for awhile
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The anthem that swells through the fretted aisle;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forester bold, to the bugle's sound
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Listen no longer, though gaily wound,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But haste to the bridal, haste away,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where love's rebeck is tuned to a sweeter lay.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Sir Knight, Sir Knight, no longer twine
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The laurel-leaf o'er that bold brow of thine;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friar, to-day from thy temples tear
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ivy garland that sages wear;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day, bold Forester, cast aside
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thy oak-leaf crown, the woodland's pride,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And bind round your brows the myrtle gay,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the rebeck resounds love's sweetest lays.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Sir Knight, urge not now the gallant steed
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O'er the plains that to honour and glory lead;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friar, forget thy order's vow,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And pace not the gloomy cloisters now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chase no longer with bow and with spear,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forester bold, the dappled deer,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But tread me a measure as light and gay
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As ever kept lime to the rebeck's lay.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <i>Neele's Romance of History</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ THE GATHERER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "I am but a <i>Gatherer</i> and disposer of other men's
+ stuff."&mdash;<i>Walton</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ TRAVELLING.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Sterne pitied the man who could travel from Dan to Beersheba,
+ and say all "was barren:" however delighted travellers or
+ tourists may be on their journey, it is surprising how few
+ details are preserved in their memory. This occasioned Dr.
+ Johnson to remark, in his "Tour to the Hebrides," how much
+ the lapse even "of a few hours takes from the certainty of
+ knowledge, and the distinctness
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page392" name="page392"></a>[pg
+ 392]</span> of imagery;" and that "those who trust to memory
+ what cannot be safely trusted but to the eye, must tell by
+ guess, what a few hours before they had known with
+ certainty." We were never more convinced of the importance of
+ these observations than after our first visit to the
+ dock-yard, at Portsmouth. In collating some little memoranda
+ made on the spot, we referred to our party, (<i>seven</i> in
+ number) on our return to the inn, for the <i>extent</i> of
+ the dock-yard: not one of them could give a correct answer,
+ though all had just heard it detailed and explained with
+ accuracy. Dr. Kitchener may well recommend tourists to walk
+ about with note-books in their hands! and such inadvertence
+ as the preceding almost warrants the oddity of his
+ suggestion.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ MOTTOES FOR DECANTER LABELS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Arridet PORTus? subeat non causa doloris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SumebatiS HERI? non dolor est hodie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hic liquor est molLIS BONus, aptus ad omnia laeta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oppida ne CALCA VALLAta ad praelia, quoerens, Sisonitum
+ capias ecce tibi est Volupe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dum lucet CLARE Te magis iste trahat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Literary Gazette</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ MALARIA.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Gregory, father of the late celebrated professor in
+ Edinburgh, when a student in a part of Germany where
+ <i>malaria</i> prevailed, from being a philosopher and living
+ low, <i>drinking only water</i>, was seized with intermittent
+ fever, when his jolly companions, who ate and drank freely,
+ escaped. If brandy or other stimulants are taken previous to
+ exposure to malaria, intermittent fever is generally
+ prevented. Such are the opinions of the doctor, and if Dr.
+ Macculloch be right, we suggest the establishment of a brandy
+ vault at each angle of the parks, that every passenger may
+ prepare himself.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ LORD HOWE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ When the late Lord Howe was a captain, a lieutenant, not
+ remarkable for courage or presence of mind in dangers (common
+ fame had brought some imputation upon his character) ran to
+ the great cabin and informed his commander that the ship was
+ on fire near the gun-room. Soon after this he returned
+ exclaiming, "You need not be afraid as the fire is
+ extinguished." "<i>Afraid!</i>" replied Captain H. a little
+ nettled, "how does a man <i>feel</i>, Sir, when he is afraid?
+ I need not ask how he <i>looks</i>."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ BACKGAMMON BOARDS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ We frequently find backgammon boards with backs lettered as
+ if they were two folio volumes. The origin of it was thus;
+ Eudes, bishop of Sully, forbade his clergy to play at chess.
+ As they were resolved not to obey the commandment, and yet
+ dared not have a chess-board seen in their houses or
+ cloisters, they had them bound and lettered as books, and
+ played at night, before they went to bed, instead of reading
+ the New Testament or the Lives of the Saints; and the monks
+ called the draft or chess-board their <i>wooden gospels</i>.
+ They had also drinking vessels bound to resemble the
+ breviary, and were found drinking, when it was supposed they
+ were at prayer.&mdash;<i>Literary Gazette</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ LOVE OF THE COUNTRY.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Country people will tell you that they like the country, and
+ detest the town, although their enjoyments are of a kind
+ which may be obtained in far greater perfection in the latter
+ than in the former. The only person I ever knew who was
+ honest in this respect, was a gentleman, the possessor of a
+ beautiful seat, in a beautiful country, when he avowed his
+ opinion, that there was "no garden like Covent-garden, and no
+ flower like a cauliflower."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ C.L.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ The <i>Morning Chronicle</i>, Nov. 20, in noticing the
+ funeral of the late Mr. Sale, says, "At a little after three
+ o'clock, the body of the lamented gentleman entered the
+ church."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ LIMBIRD'S EDITION OF THE BRITISH NOVELIST, Publishing in
+ Monthly Parts, price 6d. each.&mdash;Each Novel will be
+ complete in itself, and may be purchased separately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>The following Novels are already Published:</i>
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ s. d.
+
+Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield 0 10
+The Mysteries of Udolpho 3 6
+Mackenzie's Man of Feeling 0 6
+Rasselas 0 8
+Paul and Virginia 0 6
+The Old English Baron 0 8
+The Castle of Otranto 0 8
+The Romance of the Forest 1 8
+Almoran and Hamet 0 6
+Elizabeth, or the Exiles of Siberia 0 6
+Nature and Art 0 8
+The Italian 2 0
+A Simple Story 1 4
+The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne 0 6
+Sicilian Romance 1 0
+The Man of the World 1 0
+Zelaco, by Dr. Moore 2 0
+Joseph Andrews 1 6
+Humphry Clinker 1 8
+Edward, by Dr. Moore 2 6
+</pre>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+ <p>
+ See MIRROR, vol 3, p 194&mdash;vol 5. p 311.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2" name="footnote2"></a> <b>Footnote 2</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+ <p>
+ We requote this passage from Mr. M'Creery, as it has
+ already appeared in vol. 5; and in vol. 3, a correspondent
+ denies that the first English book was printed at
+ Westminster; but we are disposed to think that an impartial
+ examination of the testimonies on each side of the
+ controversy will decide in favour of Caxton.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3" name="footnote3"></a> <b>Footnote 3</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+ <p>
+ We did not know that such unpleasantries as Chancery
+ injunctions were part of African law; perhaps sand may not
+ be removed from the desert "without leave of the trustees,"
+ like scrapings from our roads.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4" name="footnote4"></a> <b>Footnote 4</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+ <p>
+ This was published by Bale in 1549, 8vo.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <p>
+ <i>Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, London, and Sold by
+ all Booksellers and Newsmen</i>.
+ </p>
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11412 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #11412 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/11412)
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+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction, Vol. 10, Issue 286, December 8, 1827, by Various</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
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+ 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;}
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+<body>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction, Vol. 10, Issue 286, December 8, 1827, by Various</h1>
+<pre>
+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 <a href = "https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction, Vol. 10, Issue 286, December 8, 1827</p>
+<p>Author: Various</p>
+<p>Release Date: March 2, 2004 [eBook #11412]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: iso-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION, VOL. 10, ISSUE 286, DECEMBER 8, 1827***</p>
+<br />
+<br />
+<center><b>E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Keith M. Eckrich, David Garcia,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team</b></center>
+<br />
+<br />
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page377" name="page377"></a>[pg
+ 377]</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. X, NO. 286.]</b>
+ </td>
+ <td align="center">
+ <b>SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1827.</b>
+ </td>
+ <td align="right">
+ <b>[PRICE 2d.</b>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <div class="figure" style="width: 100%;">
+ <a href="images/286-1.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/286-1.png"
+ alt="Caxton's House in the Almonry, Westminster." /></a>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ To expatiate on the advantages of printing, at this time of
+ day, would be "wasteful and ridiculous excess." We content
+ ourselves with the comparison of Dryden's
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Long trails of light descending down."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In a retrospective glance at our previous volumes (for can
+ the phrenologists tell us of a head capacious enough to
+ contain their exhaustless variety?) our readers will perceive
+ that, from time to time, sundry "accounts" of the origin and
+ progress of printing have been inserted in the
+ MIRROR;<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ and though we are not vain enough to consider our sheet as
+ the "refined gold, the lily, the violet, the ice, or the
+ rainbow," of the poet's perfection, yet in specimens of the
+ general <i>economy of the art</i>, the long-extended
+ patronage of the public gives us an early place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With an outline of the life of CAXTON our readers must be
+ already familiar; but we wish them to consider the above
+ accurate representation of the FIRST ENGLISH PRINTER'S
+ RESIDENCE as antecedent to a <i>Memoir of Caxton</i>, in
+ which it will be our aim to concentrate, in addition to
+ biographical details, many important facts from the testimony
+ of antiquarians; for scarcely a volume of the
+ <i>Archaeologia</i> has appeared without some valuable
+ communication on Caxton and his times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime we proceed with the <i>locale</i> of Caxton's
+ house, situate on the south-west of Westminster Abbey, where
+ was formerly the eleemosynary, or almonry, where the alms of
+ the abbots were distributed. Howell in his
+ <i>Londinopolis</i>, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page378"
+ name="page378"></a>[pg 378]</span> describes this as "the
+ spot where the abbot of Westminster permitted Caxton to set
+ up his press in the <i>Almonry</i>, or Ambry," the former of
+ which names is still retained. This is confirmed by Newcourt,
+ in his <i>Repertorium</i>, who says, "St. Anne's, an old
+ chapel, over against which the Lady Margaret, mother to king
+ Henry VII., erected an alms-house for poor women, which is
+ now turned into lodgings for singing-men of the college. The
+ place wherein this chapel and alms-house stood was called the
+ Eleemosinary, or Almonry, now corruptly called the Ambry,
+ (Aumbry,) for that the alms of the abbey were there
+ distributed to the poor; in which the abbot of Westminster
+ erected the first press for book-printing that was in
+ England, about the year of Christ 1471, and where WILLIAM
+ CAXTON, citizen and mercer of London, who first brought it
+ into England, practised it." Here he printed <i>The Game and
+ Play of the Chesse</i>, said to be the first book that issued
+ from the press in this country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence, according to Mr. M'Creery, the intelligent author of
+ "The Press," a poem, "the title of <i>chapel</i> to the
+ internal regulations of a printing-office originated in
+ Caxton's exercising the profession in one of the chapels in
+ Westminster Abbey, and may be considered as an additional
+ proof, from the antiquity of the custom, of his being the
+ first English printer."<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every lover of science, on approaching this spot, will feel
+ himself on holy ground, however the idle and incurious of our
+ metropolis may neglect the scite, or be ignorant of its
+ identity. We are there led into an eternity of reflection and
+ association of ideas; but lest human pride should be too
+ fondly feasted in the retrospect, the hallowed towers of the
+ abbey, seen in the distance, serve to remind us of the
+ imperial maxim, that "art is long, and life but short."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ TEA.&mdash;ITS INTRODUCTION INTO ENGLAND.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (A correspondent, who signs <i>M.M.M.</i> informs us that the
+ article sent to us by <i>P.T.W</i>. and inserted in No. 280
+ of the MIRROR, was copied verbatim from the <i>Imperial
+ Magazine</i>, a work which we seldom see, and consequently we
+ had no opportunity of ascertaining the origin of our
+ correspondent's paper. It seemed to us a good
+ <i>cyclopaedian</i> article on the subject, and we
+ accordingly admitted it. We now subjoin <i>M.M.M.'s</i>
+ communication.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to what has been said in the article upon tea,
+ (by <i>P.T.W.</i>) allow me to remark (and which I do not
+ recollect ever to have seen noticed in any work upon the
+ subject) that the seed is contained in <i>two</i> vessels,
+ the outer one varying in shape, triangular, long, and round,
+ according to the number which it contains of what may be
+ termed inner vessels. The outer vessel of a triangular shape,
+ measures, from the base to the apex about three quarters of
+ an inch, and is of a dark brown colour, approaching to black,
+ and thick, strong, and rough in texture; within this is
+ another vessel, containing the kernel; this inner vessel is
+ of a light brown colour, thin, and brittle, in shape, seldom
+ perfectly round, but mostly flat on one side: there are three
+ of them in a triangular seed vessel, two in a long one, and
+ one in that which is round. The kernel is of a brown colour,
+ and in taste very bitter. In no other species of teas than
+ Bohea, is the large kind of seed found, which is probably
+ owing to that species being gathered last or in autumn. There
+ is a <i>small</i> seed found mixed with the Congou kind of
+ teas, about the size of a pea, which is in every respect
+ similar to the large, except in size. This seed was evidently
+ not permitted to ripen, but the calyx of the flower connected
+ with the peduncle is quite perfect. The Twankey species are
+ of the same appearance, all of which I have had ample
+ opportunity of inspecting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As an appendage to this note, we are induced to quote the
+ following pleasant page from <i>Time's Telescope</i> for
+ 1828; and we take this opportunity of reminding our readers
+ that our customary Supplementary sheet, containing the spirit
+ of this and other popular Annual Works will be published with
+ our next Number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a single sheet found in Sir Hans Sloane's library, in
+ the British Museum, and printed by Mr. Ellis in his Original
+ Letters, <i>Second Series</i>, it appears that tea was known
+ in England in the year 1657, though not then in general use.
+ The author of this paper says, "That the vertues and
+ excellencies of this leaf and drink are many and great, is
+ evident and manifest by the high esteem and use of it
+ (especially of late years) among the physicians and knowing
+ men in France, Italy, Holland, and other parts of
+ Christendom; <i>and in</i> ENGLAND it hath been sold in the
+ leaf for <i>six pounds</i>, and sometimes for TEN
+ <i>pounds</i> the pound weight, and in respect of its former
+ scarceness and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page379"
+ name="page379"></a>[pg 379]</span> dearness, it hath been
+ only used as a regalia in high treatments and entertainments,
+ and presents made thereof to princes and grandees, till the
+ year 1657."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secretary Pepys, in his Diary, vol. i. p. 76, without saying
+ where he had his drink, makes the following
+ entry:&mdash;"Sept. 25th, 1660. I did send for a cup of tea
+ (a China drink) of which I never had drunk before, and went
+ away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a letter from Mr. Henry Savill to his uncle, Secretary
+ Coventry, dated from Paris, Aug. 12, 1678, and printed by Mr.
+ Ellis, the writer, after acknowledging the hospitalities of
+ his uncle's house, quaintly observes, "These, I hope, are the
+ charms that have prevailed with me to remember (that is to
+ trouble) you oftener than I am apt to do other of my friends,
+ whose buttery-hatch is not so open, <i>and who call for</i>
+ TEA instead of pipes and bottles after dinner; <i>a base
+ unworthy Indian practice</i>, and which I must ever admire
+ your most Christian family for not admitting. The truth is,
+ all nations have grown so wicked as to have some of these
+ filthy customs." In 1678, the year in which the above letter
+ is dated, the East India Company began the importation of tea
+ as a branch of trade; the quantity received at that time
+ amounting to 4,713 lbs. The importation gradually enlarged,
+ and the government, in consequence, augmented the duties upon
+ tea. By the year 1700, the importation of tea had arrived at
+ the quantity of 20,000 lbs. In 1721, it exceeded a million of
+ pounds. In 1816, it had arrived at 86,234,380 lbs. Something
+ more than thirty millions of pounds is probably the present
+ average of importation: some allowance must be made for tea
+ damaged and spoiled upon the passage.&mdash;See more on this
+ subject, well worthy of perusal, in Mr. Ellis's Letters,
+ <i>Second Series</i>, vol. iv. pp. 57, et seq.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ DANGER.
+ </h3>
+ <center>
+ FROM L'ADONE OF MARINO.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ <i>(For the Mirror.)</i>
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Like some lone Pilgrim in the dusky night,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Seeking, through unknown paths, his doubtful way,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While thick nocturnal vapours veil his sight
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ From yawning chasms, that 'neath his footsteps lay;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sudden before him gleams the forked light!
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Dispels the gloom, yet fills him with dismay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His trembling steps he then retraces back,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And seeks again the well-known beaten track.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ E.S.J.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ CATS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first couple of these animals which were carried to
+ Cuyaba sold for a pound of gold. There was a plague of rats
+ in the settlement, and they were purchased as a speculation,
+ which proved an excellent one. Their first kittens produced
+ thirty <i>oilavas</i> each; the new generation were worth
+ twenty; and the price gradually fell as the inhabitants were
+ stocked with these beautiful and useful creatures. Montengro
+ presented to the elder Almagro the first cat which was
+ brought to South America, and was rewarded for it with six
+ hundred <i>pesos</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE DEATH OF KING JOHN.
+ </h3>
+ <center>
+ <i>Extracted from an old black-letter volume, entitled "The
+ Abridgment of the Acts and Monuments of Martyrs, from the
+ earliest period of Christian suffering to the time of Queen
+ Elizabeth, our gracious lady, now reigning," printed in her
+ reign</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the yeere 1216, king John was poisoned, as most writers
+ testify, at Swinsted Abbey, by a monk of that abbey, of the
+ order of Cistersians, or S. Bernard's brethren, called Simon
+ of Swinsted. The monk did first consult with his abbot,
+ shewing him what he minded to do, alleging for himself the
+ prophecy of Caiphas, 11th of John, saying, it is better that
+ one man die, than the whole people perish. I am well content,
+ saith he, to lose my life, and so become a martyr, that I may
+ utterly destroy this tyrant. With that the abbot did weep for
+ gladness, and much commended his fervent zeal. The monk then
+ being absolved of his abbot for doing this fact, went
+ secretly into the garden, on the back side, and finding there
+ a most venomous toad, did so prick him and press him with his
+ penknife, that hee made him vomite all the poison that was
+ within him; this done, he conveyed it into a cup of wine, and
+ with a flattering and smiling countenance he sayeth to the
+ king, "If it shall please your princely majesty, here is such
+ a cup of wine as you never drank better in your lifetime. I
+ trust this wassall shall make all England glad," and with
+ that he drank a great draught thereof, and the king pledged
+ him; the monk then went out of the house to the back, and
+ then died, his bowels gushing out of his belly, and had
+ continually from henceforth three monks to sing mass for him,
+ confirmed by their general charter. The king, within a short
+ space after, feeling great grief in his body, asked for
+ Simon, the monk; answer was made he was dead. "Then God have
+ mercy on me," said the king; so went he to Newark-upon-Trent,
+ and there died, and was buried in the cathedral church at
+ Worster, in 1216, the 19th day of October, after having been
+ much fered with the clergy 18 years, 6 months, and a day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MALVINA.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page380" name="page380"></a>[pg
+ 380]</span>
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ LILLIARD EDGE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Near the border between the parishes of Maxton and Ancrum is
+ a bridge, called Lilliard Edge, formerly Anerum moor, where a
+ battle was fought between the Scots and English soon after
+ the death of king James V., who died in the year 1542. When
+ the Earl of Arran was regent of Scotland, Sir Ralph Rivers
+ and Sir Bryan Laiton came to Jedburgh with an army of 5,000
+ English to seize Merse and Teviotdale in the name of Henry
+ VIII., then king of England, who died not long after, in the
+ year 1547. The regent and the Earl of Angus came with a small
+ body of men to oppose them. The Earl of Angus was greatly
+ exasperated against the English, because some time before
+ they had defaced the tombs of his ancestors at Melrose, and
+ had done much hurt to the abbey there. The regent and the
+ Earl of Angus, without waiting the arrival of a greater
+ force, which was expected, met the English at Lilliard Edge,
+ where the Scots obtained a great victory, considering the
+ inequality of their number. A young woman of the name of
+ Lilliard fought along with the Scots with great courage; she
+ fell in the battle, and a tombstone was erected upon her
+ grave on the field where it was fought. Some remains of this
+ tombstone are still to be seen. It is said to have contained
+ the following inscription:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Fair maiden Lilliard lies under this stane;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little was her stature, but great was her fame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the English lads she laid many thumps,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when her legs were off she fought on her stumps."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ T.S.W.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ BOOKS AND BOOKWORMS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Books were anciently made of plates of copper and lead, the
+ bark of trees, bricks, Stones, and wood. Josephus speaks of
+ two columns, the one of stone, the other of brick, on which
+ the children of Seth wrote their inventions and astronomical
+ discoveries. Porphyry mentions some pillars, preserved in
+ Crete, on which the ceremonies observed by the Corybantes in
+ their sacrifices were recorded. The leaves of the palm-tree
+ were used, and the finest and thinnest part of the bark of
+ such trees as the lime, the ash, the maple, and the elm; from
+ hence comes the word <i>liber</i>, which signifies the inner
+ bark of the trees; and as these barks are rolled up, in order
+ to be removed with greater ease, these rolls were called
+ <i>volumen</i>, a volume, a name afterwards given to the like
+ rolls of paper or parchment. By degrees wax, then leather,
+ were introduced, especially the skins of goats and sheep, of
+ which at length parchment was prepared; also linen, then
+ silk, horn, and lastly paper. The rolls or volumes of the
+ ancients were composed of several sheets, fastened to each
+ other, rolled upon a stick, and were sometimes fifty feet in
+ length, and about a yard and a half wide. At first the
+ letters were only divided into lines, then into separate
+ words, which, by degrees, were noted with accents, and
+ distributed by points, and stops into periods, paragraphs,
+ chapters, and other divisions. In some countries, as among
+ the orientals, the lines began from the right, and ran to the
+ left; in others, as in northern and western nations, from the
+ left to the right; others, as the Grecians, followed both
+ directions alternately, going in the one and returning in the
+ other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Chinese books, the lines run from top to bottom.
+ Again, the page in some is entire and uniform; in others,
+ divided into columns; in others, distinguished into text and
+ notes, either marginal or at the bottom; usually it is
+ furnished with signatures and catch-words, also with a
+ register to discover whether the book be complete. The
+ Mahometans place the name of God at the beginning of all
+ their books. The word <i>book</i> is derived from the Saxon
+ <i>boc</i>, which comes from the northern <i>buech</i>, of
+ <i>buechans</i>, a beech, or <i>service-tree</i>, on the bark
+ of which our ancestors used to write. A very large estate was
+ given for one on Cosmography by king Alfred. About the year
+ 1400, they were sold from 10<i>l</i>. to 30<i>l</i>. a piece.
+ The first printed one was the Vulgate edition of the Bible,
+ 1462; the second was <i>Cicero de Officiis</i>, 1466. Leo I.
+ ordered 200,000 to be burnt at Constantinople. In the
+ suppressed monasteries of France, in 1790, there were found
+ 4,104,412 volumes; nearly one-half were on theology. The end
+ of the book, now denoted by <i>finis</i>, was anciently
+ marked with a <b>&lt;</b>, called <i>coronis</i>, and the
+ whole frequently washed with an oil drawn from cedar, or
+ citron chips strewed between the leaves, to preserve it from
+ rotting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far books; now for the <i>bookworms</i>. Anthony
+ Magliabecchi, the notorious bookworm, was born at Florence in
+ 1633; his passion for reading induced him to employ every
+ moment of his time in improving his mind. By means of an
+ astonishing memory and incessant application, he became more
+ conversant with literary history than any man of his time,
+ and was appointed librarian to the grand duke of Tuscany. He
+ has been called a living library. He was a man of a most
+ forbidding and savage aspect, and exceedingly
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page381" name="page381"></a>[pg
+ 381]</span> negligent of his person. He refused to be waited
+ upon, and rarely took off his clothes to go to bed. His
+ dinner was commonly three hard eggs, with a draught of water.
+ He had a small window in his door, through which he could see
+ all those who approached him; and if he did not wish for
+ their company, he would not admit them. He spent some hours
+ in each day at the palace library; but is said never in his
+ life to have gone farther from Florence than to Pratz,
+ whither he once accompanied Cardinal Norris to see a
+ manuscript. He died at the age of 81, in the year 1714. In
+ the present age we have <i>bookworms</i>, who wander from one
+ bookstall to another, and there devour their daily store of
+ knowledge. Others will linger at the tempting window filled
+ with the "<i>twopenny</i>," and read all the open pages; then
+ pass on to another of the same description, and thus enjoy
+ literature by the way of <i>Cheapside</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ P.T.W.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ MIDNIGHT&mdash;A TOUCH AT THE EPIC.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "The iron tongue of midnight hath toll'd twelve."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHAKSPEARE.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Amid the pauses of the midnight storm,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When all without is cold, within all warm!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amid the pauses of the midnight blast,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When ev'ry bolt and ev'ry sleeper's fast!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In that dire hour, when graves give up their dead,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And men for once agree in their pursuit&mdash;a bed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When heroes, statesmen, senators, and kings,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lords, and et ceteras of meaner things,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forget the road to fortune&mdash;or to jail,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Morpheus all their equal guardian hail!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When each forgets each 'vantage or mishap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all are equal in one common nap!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that dread hour...
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Caetera desiderantur.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <i>Carshalton</i> W. P&mdash;&mdash;n.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ ON OATHS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since lately we have had a great deal of prevarication in our
+ courts of justice about receiving the oaths of deists,
+ &amp;c., I have thought it meet to furnish the MIRROR with an
+ account of the first usage of the words, "So help me God."
+ The word oath is a corruption of the Saxon <i>eoth</i>. An
+ oath is called corporal, because the person making an
+ affidavit lays his hand upon a part of the scriptures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the conclusion of the oath the above words are used, which
+ may perhaps have originated in the very ancient manner of
+ trial by battle in this country, when the appellee, laying
+ his right hand on the book, takes the appellant by the right
+ hand with his left, and maketh oath as follows:&mdash;"Hear
+ this, thou who callest thyself <i>John</i> by the name of
+ baptism, whom I hold by thy hand, that falsely upon me thou
+ hast lied; and for this thou liest, that I who call myself
+ <i>Thomas</i> by the name of baptism, did not feloniously
+ murder thy father, <i>W.</i> by name, <i>so help me God</i>."
+ (Here he kisses the book, and concludes,)&mdash;"And this I
+ will defend against thee by my body, as this court shall
+ award." And the appellant is thus sworn also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, it may be observed also, the true foundation of the
+ word <i>lie</i>, being esteemed still so great an affront
+ above all others, as whenever it is pronounced to cause "an
+ immediate affray and bloodshed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have seen people sworn in poetry; and certain it is, that
+ in many countries in Europe the making of oaths differs. I
+ have some curious specimens of ancient oaths, some in Latin
+ prose, others in poetry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Chief Justice Coke was so strict with regard to the
+ receiving of oaths, that when at Cambridge Summer Assizes,
+ upon a trial of felony, he said, "in case of trespass,
+ although it be only to the value of <i>twopence</i>, no
+ evidence shall be given to the jury <i>but upon oath</i>,
+ much less where <i>the life of a man is in question</i>." An
+ action may be brought on the case upon a man calling another
+ a <i>perjured</i> man, because it shall be intended to be
+ contrary to his oath in a judicial proceeding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ W.H.H.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ ORIGINAL LETTER
+ </h3>
+ <center>
+ <i>From the Younger Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, upon his
+ death bed, to the Rev. Dr. W.&mdash;&mdash;</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Dear Doctor,&mdash;I always looked upon you as a man of true
+ virtue, and know you to be a person of sound understanding;
+ for however I may have acted in opposition to the principles
+ of religion, or the dictates of reason, I can honestly assure
+ you I had always the highest veneration for both. The world
+ and I may now shake hands, for I dare affirm that we are
+ heartily weary of one another. Oh, doctor, what a prodigal
+ have I been of that most valuable of all possessions, time. I
+ have squandered it away with a profusion unparalleled; and
+ now that the enjoyment of a few days would be worth a
+ hecatomb of worlds, I cannot flatter myself with a prospect
+ of half a dozen hours. How despicable, my dear friend, is
+ that man who never prays to his God but in the time of
+ distress. In what manner can he supplicate that omnipotent
+ Being in his affliction with reverence, whom in the tide of
+ his prosperity he never remembered
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page382" name="page382"></a>[pg
+ 382]</span> with dread! Don't brand me with infidelity, my
+ dear doctor, when I tell you I am almost ashamed to offer up
+ my petitions at the throne of grace, or of imploring that
+ divine mercy in the next world, which I have so scandalously
+ abused in this! Shall ingratitude to man be looked upon as
+ the blackest of crimes, and not ingratitude to God? Shall an
+ insult offered to the king be looked upon in the most
+ offensive light, and yet no notice be taken when the King of
+ kings is treated with indignity and disrespect. The
+ companions of my former libertinism would scarcely believe
+ their eyes, my dear doctor, was you to show them this
+ epistle. They would laugh at me as a dreaming enthusiast, or
+ pity me as a timorous wretch who was shocked at the
+ appearance of futurity. But whoever laughs at me for being
+ right, or pities me for being sensible of my errors, is more
+ entitled to my compassion than my resentment. A future life
+ may very well strike terror into any man who has not acted
+ well in this life; and he must have an uncommon share of
+ courage indeed who does not shrink at the presence of his
+ God. You see, my dear doctor, the apprehension of death will
+ soon bring the most profligate to a proper use of their
+ understanding. To what a situation am I now reduced? Is this
+ odious little hut a suitable lodging for a prince? or is this
+ anxiety of my mind becoming the characteristic of a
+ Christian? From my rank and fortune I might have expected
+ affluence to wait on my life, from my religion and
+ understanding, peace to smile upon my end; instead of which I
+ am afflicted with poverty, and haunted with remorse, despised
+ by my country, and I fear forsaken by my God! There is
+ nothing so dangerous, my dear doctor, as extraordinary
+ abilities. I cannot be accused of vanity now, by being
+ sensible I was once possessed of uncommon qualifications,
+ more especially as I sincerely regret that I was ever blest
+ with any at all. My rank in life made these accomplishments
+ still more conspicuous; and, fascinated with the general
+ applause which they procured, I never considered about the
+ proper means by which they should be displayed; hence, to
+ purchase a smile from a blockhead I despised, have I
+ frequently treated the virtuous with disrespect, and sported
+ with the Holy Name of heaven to obtain a laugh from a parcel
+ of fools, who were entitled to nothing but my contempt. Your
+ men of wit, my dear doctor, generally look upon themselves as
+ discharged from the duties of religion, and confine the
+ doctrines of the Gospel to people of meaner understandings;
+ it is a sort of derogation, in their opinion, to comply with
+ the rules of Christianity, and reckon that man possessed of a
+ narrow genius who studies to be good. What a pity that the
+ Holy Writings are not made the criterion of true judgment! or
+ that any one should pass for a fine gentleman in this world,
+ but he that seems solicitous about his happiness in the next.
+ My dear doctor, I am forsaken by all my acquaintance, utterly
+ neglected by the friends of my bosom and the dependants of my
+ bounty. But no matter; I am not now fit to converse with the
+ first, and have no ability to serve the latter. Let me not be
+ cast off wholly, however, by the good. Favour me with a
+ visit, dear doctor, as soon as possible. Writing to you gives
+ me some ease, especially upon a subject I could talk of for
+ ever. I am of opinion this is the last visit I shall ever
+ solicit from you. My distemper is powerful. Come and pray for
+ the departing spirit of the unhappy BUCKINGHAM.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ The Sketch Book.
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ No. LI.
+ </center>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE PHANTOM HAND.
+ </h3>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ I see a hand you cannot see,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Which beckons me away!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In a lonely part of the bleak and rocky coast of Scotland,
+ there dwelt a being, who was designated by the few who knew
+ and feared him, the Warlock Fisher. He was, in truth, a
+ singular and a fearful old man. For years he had followed his
+ dangerous occupation alone; adventuring forth in weather
+ which appalled the stoutest of the stout hearts that
+ occasionally exchanged a word with him, in passing to and fro
+ in their mutual employment. Of his name, birth, or descent,
+ nothing was known; but the fecundity of conjecture had
+ supplied an unfailing stock of <i>materiel</i> on these
+ points. Some said he was the devil incarnate; others said he
+ was a Dutchman, or some other "far-away foreigner," who had
+ fled to these comparative solitudes for shelter, from the
+ retribution due to some grievous crime; and all agreed, that
+ he was neither a Scot nor a true man. In outward form,
+ however, he was still "a model of a man," tall, and
+ well-made; though in years, his natural strength was far from
+ being abated. His matted black hair, hanging in elf-locks
+ about his ears and shoulders, together with the perpetual
+ sullenness which seemed native in the expression of features
+ neither regular nor pleasing, gave him an appearance
+ unendurably disgusting. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page383"
+ name="page383"></a>[pg 383]</span> He lived alone, in a hovel
+ of his own construction, partially scooped out of a
+ rock&mdash;was never known to have suffered a visitor within
+ its walls&mdash;to have spoken a kind word, or done a kind
+ action. Once, indeed, he performed an act which, in a less
+ ominous being, would have been lauded as the extreme of
+ heroism. In a dreadfully stormy morning, a fishing-boat was
+ seen in great distress, making for the shore&mdash;there were
+ a father and two sons in it. The danger became imminent, as
+ they neared the rocky promontory of the fisher&mdash;and the
+ boat upset. Women and boys were screaming and gesticulating
+ from the beach, in all the wild and useless energy of
+ despair, but assistance was nowhere to be seen. The father
+ and one of the lads disappeared for ever; but the younger boy
+ clung, with extraordinary resolution, to the inverted vessel.
+ By accident, the Warlock Fisher came to the door of his
+ hovel, saw the drowning lad, and plunged instantaneously into
+ the sea. For some minutes he was invisible amid the angry
+ turmoil; but he swam like an inhabitant of that fearful
+ element, and bore the boy in safety to the beach. From
+ fatigue or fear, or the effects of both united, the poor lad
+ died shortly afterwards; and his grateful relatives
+ industriously insisted, that he had been blighted in the
+ grasp of his unhallowed rescuer!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the end of autumn, the weather frequently becomes so
+ broken and stormy in these parts, as to render the sustenance
+ derived from fishing extremely precarious. Against this,
+ however, the Warlock Fisher was provided; for, caring little
+ for weather, and apparently less for life, he went out in all
+ seasons, and was known to be absent for days, during the most
+ violent storms, when every hope of seeing him again was lost.
+ Still nothing harmed him: he came drifting back again, the
+ same wayward, unfearing, unhallowed animal. To account for
+ this, it was understood that he was in connexion with
+ smugglers; that his days of absence were spent in their
+ service&mdash;in reconnoitring for their safety, and
+ assisting their predations. Whatever of truth there might be
+ in this, it was well known that the Warlock Fisher never
+ wanted ardent spirits; and so free was he in their use and of
+ tobacco, that he has been heard, in a long and dreary
+ winter's evening, carolling songs in a strange tongue, with
+ all the fervour of an inspired bacchanal. It has been said,
+ too, at such times he held strange talk with some who never
+ answered, deprecated sights which no one else could see, and
+ exhibited the fury of an outrageous maniac.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was towards the close of an autumn day, that a tall young
+ man was seen surveying the barren rocks, and apparently
+ deserted shores, near the dwelling of the fisher. He wore the
+ inquiring aspect of a stranger, and yet his step indicated a
+ previous acquaintance with the scene. The sun was flinging
+ his boldest radiance on the rolling ocean, as the youth
+ ascended the rugged path which led to the Warlock Fisher's
+ hut. He surveyed the door for a moment, as if to be certain
+ of the spot; and then, with one stroke of his foot, dashed
+ the door inwards. It was damp and tenantless. The stranger
+ set down his bundle, kindled a fire, and remained in quiet
+ possession. In a few hours the fisher returned. He started
+ involuntarily at the sight of the intruder, who sprang to his
+ feet, ready for any alternative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What seek you in my hut?" said the Fisher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A shelter for the night&mdash;the hawks are out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who directed you to me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Old acquaintance!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never saw you with my eyes&mdash;shiver me! But never mind,
+ you look like the breed&mdash;a ready hand and a light heel,
+ ha! All's right&mdash;tap your keg!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner said than done. The keg was broached, and a good
+ brown basin of double hollands was brimming at the lips of
+ the Warlock Fisher. The stranger did himself a similar
+ service, and they grew friendly. The fisher could not avoid
+ placing his hand before his eyes once or twice, as if wishful
+ to avoid the keen gaze of the stranger, who still plied the
+ fire with fuel and his host with hollands. Reserve was at
+ length annihilated, and the fisher jocularly said&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, and so we're old acquaintance, ha?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay," said the young man, with another searching glance. "I
+ was in doubt at first, but <i>now</i> I'm certain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what's to be done?" said the Fisher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An hour after midnight you must put me on board
+ &mdash;&mdash;-'s boat, she'll be abroad. They'll run a light
+ to the masthead, for which you'll steer. You're a good hand
+ at the helm in a dark night and a rough sea," was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How, if I will not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then&mdash;<i>your life or mine!"</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They sprang to their feet simultaneously, and an immediate
+ encounter seemed inevitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Psha!" said the Fisher, sinking on his seat, "what madness
+ this is! I was a thought warm with the liquor, and the
+ recollections of past times were rising on
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page384" name="page384"></a>[pg
+ 384]</span> my memory. Think nothing of it. I heard those
+ words once before," and he ground his teeth in
+ rage&mdash;"Yes, once&mdash;but in a shriller voice than
+ your's! Sometimes, too, the bastard rises to my view; and
+ then I smite him so&mdash;bah! give us another basin-full!"
+ He stuck short at vacancy, snatched the beverage from the
+ stranger, and drank it off. "An hour after midnight, said
+ ye?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay&mdash;you'll see no bastards then!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Worse&mdash;may be&mdash;worse!" muttered the Fisher,
+ sinking into abstraction, and glaring wildly on the
+ flickering embers before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, how's this?" said the stranger. "Are your senses
+ playing bo-peep with the ghost of some pigeon-livered coast
+ captain, eh? Come, take another pull at the keg, to clear
+ your head-lights, and tell us a bit of your ditty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Fisher took another draught, and proceeded&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "About five-and-twenty years ago, a stranger came to this
+ hut&mdash;may the curse of God annihilate him!&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Amen to that," said the young man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He brought with him a boy and a girl, a purse of gold, and
+ &mdash;&mdash; the arch fiend's tongue, to tempt me! Well, it
+ was to take these children out to sea&mdash;upset the
+ boat&mdash;and lose them!"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you did so!" interrupted the stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I tried&mdash;but listen. On a fine evening, I took them
+ out: the sun sunk rapidly, and I knew by the freshening of
+ the breeze, there would be a storm. I was not mistaken. It
+ came on even faster than I wished. The children were
+ alarmed&mdash;the boy, in particular, grew suspicious; he
+ insisted that I had an object in going out so far at sun-set.
+ This irritated me,&mdash;and I rose to smite him, when the
+ fair girl interposed her fragile form between us. She
+ screamed for mercy, and clung to my arm with the desperation
+ of despair. <i>I could not shake her off</i>! The boy had the
+ spirit of a man; he seized a piece of spar, and struck me on
+ the temples. 'How, you villain!' said he, 'your life or
+ mine!' At that moment the boat upset, and we were all adrift.
+ The boy I never saw again&mdash;a tremendous sea broke
+ between us&mdash;but the wretched girl clung to me like hate!
+ Damnation!&mdash;her dying scream is ringing in my ears like
+ madness! I struck her on the forehead, and she sank&mdash;all
+ but her hand, one little, white hand would not sink! I threw
+ myself on my back, and struck at it with both my
+ feet&mdash;and then I thought it sunk for ever. I made the
+ shore with difficulty, for I was stunned and senseless, and
+ the ocean heaved as if it would have washed away the mortal
+ world&mdash;and the lightnings blazed as if all hell had come
+ to light the scene of warfare! I have never since been on the
+ sea at midnight, but that hand has followed or preceded me; I
+ have never &mdash;&mdash;." Here he sank down from his seat,
+ and rolled himself in agony upon the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor wretch!" muttered the stranger, "what hinders now my
+ long-sought vengeance? Even with my foot&mdash;but thou shalt
+ share my murdered sister's grave!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A shot is fired&mdash;look out for the light!" said the
+ young man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Fisher went to the door; but suddenly started back,
+ clasping his hands before his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fire and brimstone! there it is again!" he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What?" said his companion, looking cooly round him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That infernal hand! Lightnings blast it!&mdash;but that's
+ impossible," he added, in a fearful under-tone, which sounded
+ as if some of the eternal rocks around him were adding a
+ response to his imprecations&mdash;"<i>that's</i> impossible!
+ It is a part of them&mdash;it has been so for
+ years&mdash;darkness could not shroud it&mdash;distance could
+ not separate it from my burning eye-balls!&mdash;awake, it
+ was there&mdash;asleep, it flickered and blazed before
+ me!&mdash;it has been my rock a-head through life, and it
+ will herald me to hell!" So saying, he pressed his sinewy
+ hands upon his face, and buried his head between his knees,
+ till the rock beneath him seemed to shake with his
+ uncontrollable agony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Again it beckons me!" said he, starting up&mdash;"ten
+ thousand fires are blazing in my heart&mdash;in my
+ brain!&mdash;where, <i>where</i> can I be worse? Fiend, I
+ defy thee!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see nothing," said his companion, with unalterable
+ composure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see nothing!" thundered the Fisher, with mingling
+ sarcasm and fury&mdash;"look <i>there</i>." He snatched his
+ hand, and pointing steadily into the gloom, again murmured,
+ "Look there! look there!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment the lightning blazed around with appalling
+ brilliancy; and the stranger saw a small white hand, pointing
+ tremulously upwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I saw it there," said he, "but it is not <i>hers</i>!
+ Infatuated, abandoned villain." he continued, with
+ irrepressible energy, "it is not my sister's hand&mdash;no!
+ it is the incarnate fiend's who tempted you, and who now
+ waves you to perdition&mdash;begone together!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He aimed a dreadful blow at the astonished
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page385" name="page385"></a>[pg
+ 385]</span> Fisher, who instinctively avoided the stroke.
+ Mutually wound up to the highest pitch of anger, they
+ grappled each the other's throat, set their feet, and
+ strained for the throw, which was inevitably to bury both in
+ the wild waves beneath. A faint shriek was heard, and a
+ gibbering, as of many voices, came fluttering around them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Chatter on!" said the Fisher, "he joins you now!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Together&mdash;it will be together!" said the stranger, as
+ with a last desperate effort he bent his adversary backward
+ from the betling cliff. The voice of the Fisher sounded
+ hoarsely in execration, as they dashed into the sea together;
+ but what he said was drowned in the hoarser murmur of the
+ uplashing surge! The body of the stranger was found on the
+ next morning, flung far up on the rocky shore&mdash;but that
+ of the murderer was gone for ever!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The superstitious peasantry of the neighbourhood still
+ consider the spot as haunted; and at midnight, when the waves
+ dash fitfully against the perilous crags, and the bleak winds
+ sweep with long and angry moan around them, they still hear
+ the gibbering voices of the fiends, and the mortal
+ execrations of the Warlock Fisher!&mdash;but, after that
+ fearful night, no man ever saw THE PHANTOM
+ HAND!&mdash;<i>Literary Magnet</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ ARCANA OF SCIENCE.
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ <i>Elephants</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ All the elephants which were exported from Point de Galle
+ were caught in ancient, as well as in modern times, in that
+ tract of country which extends from Matura to Tangcolle, in
+ the south of Ceylon, and which, from its being famous for its
+ elephants in his days, is described by Ptolemy in the map he
+ made of Ceylon sixteen hundred years ago as the <i>elephantum
+ pascua</i>. The trade in elephants from Ceylon, which used to
+ be lucrative, is now completely annihilated, in consequence
+ of all the petty Rajahs, Foligars, and other chiefs in the
+ southern peninsula of India, who used formerly to purchase
+ Ceylon elephants as a part of their state, having lost their
+ sovereignties, and being therefore no longer required to keep
+ up any state of this description. A gentleman who has a
+ plantation at Candy, it is understood, recently introduced
+ the use of elephants, in ploughing, with great
+ advantage.&mdash;<i>Trans. Asiatic Society</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <center>
+ <i>The Fennecous Cerdo</i>.
+ </center>
+ <div class="figure" style="width: 50%; float: right;">
+ <a href="images/286-2.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/286-2.png" alt="Fennecous Cerdo." /></a>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ This beautiful and extraordinary animal, or at least one of
+ its genus, was first made known to European naturalists by
+ Bruce, who received it from his dragoman, whilst consul
+ general at Algiers. It is frequently met with in the date
+ territories of Africa, where the animals are hunted for their
+ skins, which are afterwards sold at Mecca, and then exported
+ to India. Bruce kept his animal alive for several months, and
+ took a drawing of it in water colours, of the natural size, a
+ copy of which, on transparent paper, was clandestinely made
+ by his servant. Mr. Brander, into whose hands the
+ <i>Fennecus</i> fell after Bruce left Algiers, gave an
+ account of it in "Some Swedish Transactions," but refused to
+ let the figure be published, the drawing having been unfairly
+ obtained.<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a>
+ Bruce asserts that this animal is described in many Arabian
+ books, under the name of <i>El Fennec</i>, which appellation
+ he conceives to be derived from the Greek word for a palm or
+ date-tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The favourite food of Bruce's Fennec was dates or any sweet
+ fruit; but it was also very fond of eggs; when hungry it
+ would eat bread, especially with honey or sugar. His
+ attention was immediately attracted if a bird flew near him,
+ and he would watch it with an eagerness that could hardly be
+ diverted from its object; but he was dreadfully afraid of a
+ cat. Bruce never heard that he had any voice. During the day
+ he was inclined to sleep, but became restless and exceedingly
+ unquiet as night came on. The above Fennec was about ten
+ inches long, the tail five inches and a quarter, near an inch
+ of it on the tip, black. The colour of the body was dirty
+ white, bordering on cream colour; the hair on the belly
+ rather whiter, softer and longer than on the rest of the
+ body. His look was sly and wily; he built his nest on trees,
+ and did not burrow in the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Naturalists, especially those of France,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page386" name="page386"></a>[pg
+ 386]</span> were long induced to suspect the truth of Bruce's
+ description of this animal; but a specimen from the interior
+ of Nubia, and preserved in the museum at Frankfort, has
+ recently been engraved; and thus the matter nearly settled by
+ the animal belonging to the genus <i>Canis</i>, and the sub
+ genus <i>Vulpes</i>; the number of teeth and form, being
+ precisely the same as the fox, which it also resembles in its
+ feet, number of toes, and form of tail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the above engraving we are indebted to the Appendix to
+ the important and interesting Travels of Messrs. Denham and
+ Clapperton. It is therein described as generally of a white
+ colour, inclining to straw yellow; above, from the occiput to
+ the insertion of the tail it is light rufous brown,
+ delicately pencilled with fine black lines, from thinly
+ scattered hairs tipped with black; the exterior of the thighs
+ is lighter rufous brown; the chin, throat, belly, and
+ interior of the thighs and legs are white, or cream colour.
+ The nose is pointed, and black at the extremity; above, it is
+ covered with very short, whitish hair inclining to rufous,
+ with a small irregular rufous spot on each side beneath the
+ eyes; the whiskers are black, rather short and scanty; the
+ back of the head is pale rufous brown. The ears are very
+ large, erect, and pointed, and covered externally with short,
+ pale, rufous brown hair; internally, they are thickly fringed
+ on the margin with long grayish white hairs, especially in
+ front; the rest of the ears, internally, is bare; externally,
+ they are folded or plaited at the base. The tail is very
+ full, cylindrical, of a rufous brown colour, and pencilled
+ with fine black lines like the back. The fur is very soft and
+ fine; that on the back, from the back to the insertion of the
+ tail, as well as that on the upper part of the shoulder
+ before, and nearly the whole of the hinder thigh, is formed
+ of tri-coloured hairs, the base of which is of a dark lead
+ colour, the middle white, and the extremity light rufous
+ brown.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Fossil Turtle</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ A beautiful and perfect fossil of the sea turtle has recently
+ been discovered in an extensive stratum of limestone, four
+ fathoms water, called the Stone Ridge, about four miles off
+ Harwich harbour. It is incrusted in a mass of ferruginous
+ limestone, and weighs 180 lbs.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Apples</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ A gentleman of Staffordshire recommends the preservation of
+ apples for winter store, packed in banks or hods of earth
+ like potatoes.&mdash;<i>Communication to the Horticultural
+ Society</i>.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Uses of Seals</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The benefits which the inhabitants of frigid regions derive
+ from seals, are far too numerous and diversified to be
+ particularized, as they supply them with almost all the
+ conveniences of life. We, on the contrary, so persecute this
+ animal, as to destroy hundreds of thousands annually, for the
+ sake of the pure and transparent oil with which the seal
+ abounds; 2ndly, for its tanned skin, which is appropriated to
+ various purposes by different modes of preparation; and
+ thirdly, we pursue it for its close and dense attire. In the
+ common seal, the hair of the adult is of one uniform kind, so
+ thickly arranged and imbued with oil, as to effectually
+ resist the action of water; while, on the contrary, in the
+ antarctic seals the hair is of two kinds: the longest, like
+ that of the northern seals; the other, a delicate, soft fur,
+ growing between the roots of the former, close to the surface
+ of the skin, and not seen externally; and this beautiful fur
+ constitutes an article of very increasing importance in
+ commerce; but not only does the clothing of the seal vary
+ materially in colour, fineness, and commercial situation, in
+ the different species, but not less so in the age of the
+ animal. The young of most kinds are usually of a very light
+ colour, or entirely white, and are altogether destitute of
+ true hair, having this substituted by a long and particularly
+ soft fur.&mdash;<i>Quarterly Journal</i>.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Method of cutting Glass</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ If a tube, or goblet, or other round glass body is to be cut,
+ a line is to be marked with a gun flint having a sharp angle,
+ an agate, a diamond, or a file, exactly on the place where it
+ is to be cut. A long thread covered with sulphur is then to
+ be passed two or three times round the circular line, and to
+ be inflamed and burnt; when the glass is well heated some
+ drops of cold water are to be thrown on it, when the piece
+ will separate in an exact manner, as if cut with scissors. It
+ is by this means that glasses are cut circularly into thin
+ bands, which may either be separated from, or repose upon
+ each other, at pleasure, in the manner of a
+ spring&mdash;-<i>From the French</i>.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Preservation of Skins</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ A tanner at Tyman, in Hungary, uses with great advantage the
+ pyroligueous acid, in preserving skins from putrefaction, and
+ in recovering them when attacked. They are deprived of none
+ of their useful qualities if covered by means of a brush with
+ the acid, which they absorb very readily.&mdash;<i>Quarterly
+ Journal</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page387" name="page387"></a>[pg
+ 387]</span>
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Organic Remains in Sussex</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ A short time since, the entire skeleton of a stag, of very
+ large size, was dug up by some labourers, in excavating the
+ bed of the river Ouse, near Lewes, in Sussex. The remains
+ were found imbedded in a layer of sand, beneath the alluvial
+ blue clay, forming the surface of the valley. The horns were
+ in the highest state of preservation, and had seven points,
+ like the American deer. The greater part of the skeleton was
+ destroyed by the carelessness of the workmen; but a portion,
+ including the horns, has been preserved in the collection of
+ Mr. Mantell, near Lewes.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Stupendous Lizard</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Bullock, in his Travels, (just published) relates that he
+ saw near New Orleans, "what are believed to be the remains of
+ a stupendous crocodile, and which are likely to prove so,
+ intimating the former existence of a lizard at least 150 feet
+ long; for I measured the right side of the under jaw, which I
+ found to be 21 feet along the curve; and 4 feet 6 inches
+ wide: the others consisted of numerous vertebrae, ribs,
+ femoral bones, and toes, all corresponding in size to the
+ jaw; there were also some teeth: these, however, were not of
+ proportionate magnitude. These remains were discovered, a
+ short time since, in the swamp, near Fort Philip; and the
+ other parts of the mighty skeleton, are, it is said, in the
+ same part of the swamp."
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Digby's Philosophy</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Sir Kenelm Digby was a mere quack; but he was the son of an
+ earl, and related to many noble families. His book on the
+ supposed sympathetic powder, which cured wounds at any
+ distance from the sufferer, is the standard of his abilities.
+ This powder was Roman vitriol pounded. From this wild work,
+ we, however learn, that the English routine of agriculture in
+ his time was&mdash;1st. year, barley; 2nd. wheat; 3rd. beans;
+ 4th. fallow.&mdash;<i>Pinkerton</i>.
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <i>Critics</i>.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Thought, comprising its enumerated constituents and detailed
+ process, is the most perfect and exalted elaboration of the
+ human mind, and when protracted is a painful exertion;
+ indeed, the greater portion of our species reluctantly submit
+ to the toil and lassitude of reflection; but from laziness,
+ or incapacity, and perhaps in some instances from diffidence,
+ they suffer themselves to be directed by the opinions of
+ others. Hence has arisen the swarm of critics and reviewers,
+ those clouds that obscure the fair light that would beam on
+ the mind of man, by his individual reflection, and through
+ his existence degrade him, by a submission to assumed
+ authority;&mdash;a voluntary blindness, that excludes him
+ from the observation of nature, and through indolence and
+ credulity render his noblest faculties feeble, assenting, and
+ lethargic; and delude him to barter the inheritance of his
+ intellect for a mess of pottage.&mdash;<i>Dr.
+ Haslam.&mdash;Lancet</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ MUNCHAUSEN RIDE THROUGH EDINBURGH.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ We were sitting rather negligently on an infernal animal,
+ which, up to that day, had seemed quiet as a
+ lamb&mdash;kissing our hand to Mrs. Davison, then Miss
+ Duncan, and in the blaze of her fame, when a Highland
+ regiment, no doubt the forty-second, that had been trudging
+ down the Mound, so silently that we never heard them, all at
+ once, and without the slightest warning, burst out, with all
+ their bag-pipes, into one pibroch! The mare&mdash;to do her
+ justice&mdash;had been bred in England, and ridden, as a
+ charger, by an adjutant to an English regiment. She was even
+ fond of music&mdash;and delighted to prance behind the
+ band&mdash;unterrified by cymbals or great drum. She never
+ moved in a roar of artillery at reviews&mdash;and, had the
+ Castle of Edinburgh&mdash;Lord bless it&mdash;been
+ self-involved, at that moment, in a storm of thunder and
+ lightning, round its entire circle of cannon, that mare would
+ not so much as have pricked up her ears, whisked her tail, or
+ lifted a hoof. But the pibroch was more than horse-flesh and
+ blood could endure&mdash;and off we two went like a
+ whirlwind. Where we went&mdash;that is to say, what were the
+ names of the few first streets along which we were borne, is
+ a question which, as a man of veracity, we must positively
+ decline answering. For some short space of time, lines of
+ houses reeled by without a single face at the
+ windows&mdash;and these, we have since conjectured, might be
+ North and South Hanover street, and Queen-street. By and by
+ we surely were in something like a square&mdash;could it be
+ Charlotte-square?&mdash;and round and round it we
+ flew&mdash;three, four, five, or six times, as horsemen do at
+ the Caledonian amphitheatre&mdash;for the animal had got
+ blind with terror, and kept viciously reasoning in a circle.
+ What a show of faces at all the windows then! A shriek still
+ accompanied us as we clattered, and thundered, and lightened
+ along; and, unless our ears lied, there were occasional
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page388" name="page388"></a>[pg
+ 388]</span> fits of stifled laughter, and once or twice a
+ guffaw; for there was now a ringing of lost
+ stirrups&mdash;and much holding of the mane. One complete
+ round was executed by us, first on the shoulder beyond the
+ pommel; secondly, on the neck; thirdly, between the ears;
+ fourthly, between the forelegs, in a place called the
+ counter, with our arms round the jugular veins of the flying
+ phenomenon, and our toes in the air. That was, indeed, the
+ crisis of our fever, but we made a wonderful recovery back
+ into the saddle&mdash;righting like a boat capsized in a
+ sudden squall at sea&mdash;and once more, with accelerated
+ speed, away past the pillared front of St. George's church!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The castle and all its rocks, in peristrephic panorama, then
+ floated cloud-like by&mdash;and we saw the whole mile-length
+ of Prince's-street stretched before us, studded with
+ innumerable coaches, chaises, chariots, carts, wagons, drays,
+ gigs, shandrydans, and wheel-barrows, through among which we
+ dashed, as if they had been as much gingerbread&mdash;while
+ men on horseback were seen flinging themselves off, and
+ drivers dismounting in all directions, making their escape up
+ flights of steps and common stairs&mdash;mothers or nurses
+ with broods of young children flying hither and thither in
+ distraction, or standing on the very crown of the causeway,
+ wringing their hands in despair. The wheel-barrows were
+ easily disposed of&mdash;nor was there much greater
+ difficulty with the gigs and shandrydans. But the
+ hackney-coaches stood confoundedly in the way&mdash;and a
+ wagon, drawn by four horses, and heaped up to the very sky
+ with beer-barrels, like the Tower of Babel or Babylon, did
+ indeed give us pause&mdash;but ere we had leisure to ruminate
+ on the shortness of human life, we broke through between the
+ leaders and the wheels with a crash of leathern breeching,
+ dismounted collars, riven harness, and tumbling of enormous
+ horses that was perilous to hear; when, as Sin and Satan
+ would have it&mdash;would you believe it?&mdash;there, twenty
+ kilts deep at the least, was the same accursed Highland
+ regiment, the forty-second, with fixed bayonets, and all its
+ pipers in the van, the pibroch yelling, squeaking, squealing,
+ grunting, growling, roaring, as if it had only that very
+ instant broken out&mdash;so, suddenly to the
+ right&mdash;about went the bag-pipe-haunted mare, and away up
+ the Mound, past the pictures of Irish Giants&mdash;Female
+ Dwarfs&mdash;Albinos&mdash;an Elephant endorsed with
+ towers&mdash;Tigers and Lions of all sorts&mdash;and a large
+ wooden building, like a pyramid, in which there was the
+ thundering of cannon&mdash;for the battle, we rather think,
+ of Camperdown was going on&mdash;the Bank of Scotland seemed
+ to sink into the NorLoch&mdash;one gleam through the window
+ of the eyes of the Director-General&mdash;and to be sure how
+ we did make the street-stalls of the Lawn-market spin! The
+ man in St. Giles's steeple was playing his one o'clock tune
+ on the bells, heedless in that elevation of our
+ career&mdash;in less than no time John Knox, preaching from a
+ house half-way down the Canongate, gave us the
+ go-by&mdash;and down through one long wide sprawl of men,
+ women, and children we wheeled past the Gothic front, and
+ round the south angle of Holyrood, and across the
+ King's-park, where wan and withered sporting debtors held up
+ their hands and cried,
+ Hurra&mdash;hurra&mdash;hurra&mdash;without stop or stay, up
+ the rocky way that leads to St. Anthony's Well and
+ Chapel&mdash;and now it was manifest that we were bound for
+ the summit of Arthur's Seat. We hope that we were
+ sufficiently thankful that a direction was not taken towards
+ Salisbury Crags, where we should have been dashed into many
+ million pieces. Free now from even the slightest suburban
+ impediment, obstacle, or interruption, we began to eye our
+ gradually rising situation in life&mdash;and looking over our
+ shoulder, the sight of city and sea was indeed magnificent.
+ There in the distance rose North Berwick Law&mdash;but though
+ we have plenty of time now for description, we had scant time
+ then for beholding perhaps the noblest scenery in Scotland.
+ Up with us&mdash;up with us into the clouds&mdash;and just as
+ St. Giles's bells ceased to jingle, and both girths broke, we
+ crowned the summit, and sat on horseback like king Arthur
+ himself, eight hundred feet above the level of the sea!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Blackwood's Magazine</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ Select Biography
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ No. LVIII.
+ </center>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ LELAND.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ John Leland, the father of the English antiquaries, was born
+ in London, about the end of the reign of Henry VII. He was a
+ pupil to William Lily, the celebrated grammarian&mdash;the
+ first head master of St. Paul's school; and by the kindness
+ and liberality of a Mr. Myles, he was sent to Christ's
+ college. Cambridge. From this university he removed to All
+ Souls, Oxford, where he paid particular attention to the
+ Greek language. He afterwards went to Paris, where he
+ cultivated the acquaintance of the principal scholars of the
+ age, and could probably number among his correspondents
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page389" name="page389"></a>[pg
+ 389]</span> the illustrious names of Buddoeus, Erasmus, the
+ Stephani, Faber, and Turnebus; in this city he perfected
+ himself in the knowledge of the Latin and Greek tongues, to
+ which he afterwards added that of several modern languages.
+ On his return to England he took orders, and was appointed
+ one of the chaplains to Henry VIII., who gave him the rectory
+ of Popelay, in the marshes of Calais, appointed him his
+ library keeper, and conferred on him the title of Royal
+ Antiquary, which no other person in this kingdom, before, or
+ after possessed. In this character his majesty in 1533
+ granted him a commission, empowering him to search after
+ England's antiquities, and peruse the libraries of all
+ cathedrals, abbeys, priories, colleges, &amp;c., as also all
+ the places wherein records, writings, and whatever else was
+ lodged that related to antiquity. "Before Leland's time,"
+ says Hearne, in his preface to the <i>Itinerary</i>, "all the
+ literary monuments of antiquity were totally disregarded; and
+ the students of Germany apprised of this culpable
+ indifference, were suffered to enter our libraries
+ unmolested, and to cut out of the books deposited there
+ whatever passages they thought proper, which they afterwards
+ published as relics of the ancient literature of their own
+ country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this research Leland was occupied above six years in
+ travelling through England, and in visiting all the remains
+ of ancient buildings and monuments of every kind. On its
+ completion, he hastened to the metropolis, to lay at the feet
+ of his sovereign the result of his labours, which he
+ presented to Henry, under the title of a "New Year's
+ Gift,"<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a>
+ in which he says, "I have so traviled yn your dominions booth
+ by the se costes and the midle partes, sparing nother labor
+ nor costes, by the space of these vi. yeres paste, that there
+ is almoste nother cape, nor bay, haven, creke or peers, river
+ or confluence of rivers, breches, watchies, lakes, meres,
+ fenny waters, montagnes, valleis, mores, hethes, forestes,
+ chases wooddes, cities, burges, castelles, principale manor
+ placis, monasteries, and colleges, but I have seene them; and
+ notid yn so doing a hole worlde of thinges very memorable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the dissolution of the monasteries, Leland made
+ application to Secretary Cromwell, to entreat his assistance
+ in getting the MSS. they contained sent to the king's
+ library. In 1542 Henry presented him with the valuable
+ rectory of Hasely, in Oxfordshire; the year following he
+ preferred him to a canonry of King's college, now
+ Christchurch, Oxford, and about the same time collated him to
+ a prebend in the church of Sarum. As his duties in the church
+ did not require much active service, he retired with his
+ collections to his house in London, where he sat about
+ digesting them, and preparing the publication he had promised
+ to the world; but either his intense application, or some
+ other cause, brought upon him a total derangement of mind,
+ and after lingering two years in this state, he died on the
+ 18th of April, 1552.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The writings of Leland are numerous; in his lifetime he
+ published several Latin and Greek poems, and some tracts on
+ antiquarian subjects. His valuable and voluminous MSS., after
+ passing through many hands, came into the Bodleian library,
+ furnishing very valuable materials to Stow, Lambard, Camden,
+ Burton, Dugdale, and many other antiquaries and historians.
+ Polydore Virgil, who had stolen from them pretty freely, had
+ the insolence to abuse Leland's memory&mdash;calling him "a
+ vain glorious man." From these collections Hall published, in
+ 1709, "Commentarii de Scriptoribus Brittanicis." "The
+ Itinerary of John Leland, Antiquary," was published by the
+ celebrated Hearne, at Oxford, in nine volumes, 8vo., 1710, of
+ which a second edition was printed in 1745, with considerable
+ improvements and additions. The same editor published
+ "Joannis Lelandi Antiquarii de Rebus Brittanicis
+ Collectanea." in six volumes, Oxon. 1716, 8vo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BIOS.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ THE SELECTOR<br />
+ AND<br />
+ LITERARY NOTICES OF<br />
+ <i>NEW WORKS</i>.
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ CORAL ISLANDS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ [In a recent Number of the MIRROR we quoted from Mr.
+ Montgomery's <i>Pelican Island</i> a beautiful description of
+ the formation of coral reefs or rocks; and we are now induced
+ to resume our extracts from this soul stirring poem, with the
+ following description of the process by which these reefs or
+ rocks become beautiful and picturesque islands. Mr.
+ Montgomery's poetical talent is altogether of the highest
+ order, or, to use a familiar phrase, his <i>Pelican
+ Island</i> is "a gem of the first water." How exquisite is
+ the following picture of creation!]
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Here was the infancy of life, the age
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of gold in that green isle, itself new-born,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all upon it in the prime of being,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Love, hope, and promise, 'twas in miniature
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A world unsoil'd by sin; a Paradise
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where Death had not yet enter'd; Bliss had newly
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alighted, and shut close his rainbow wings,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To rest at ease, nor dread intruding ill.
+ </p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page390"
+ name="page390"></a>[pg 390]</span>
+ <p>
+ Plants of superior growth now sprang apace,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With moon-like blossoms crown'd, or starry glories;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Light flexible shrubs among the greenwood play'd
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fantastic freaks,&mdash;they crept, they climb'd, they
+ budded,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And hung their flowers and berries in the sun;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the breeze taught, they danced, they sung, they twined
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their sprays in bowers, or spread the ground with
+ net-work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through the slow lapse of undivided time,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silently rising from their buried germs,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trees lifted to the skies their stately heads,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tufted with verdure, like depending plumage,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O'er stems unknotted, waving to the wind:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of these in graceful form, and simple beauty,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fruitful cocoa and the fragrant palm
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Excell'd the wilding daughters of the wood,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That stretch'd unwieldy their enormous arms,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clad with luxuriant foliage, from the trunk,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like the old eagle, feather'd to the heel;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While every fibre, from the lowest root
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the last leaf upon the topmost twig,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was held by common sympathy, diffusing
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through all the complex frame unconscious life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the locust with its hydra boughs,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A hundred heads on one stupendous trunk;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And such the mangrove, which, at full-moon flood,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Appear'd itself a wood upon the waters,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the tide left bare its upright roots,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wood on piles suspended in the air;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such too the Indian fig, that built itself
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Into a sylvan temple, arch'd aloof
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With airy aisles and living colonnades,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where nations might have worshipp'd God in peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From year to year their fruits ungather'd fell;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not lost, but quickening where they lay, they struck
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Root downward, and brake forth on every hand,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Till the strong saplings, rank and file, stood up,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A mighty army, which o'erran the isle,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And changed the wilderness into a forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this appear'd accomplish'd in the space
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between the morning and the evening star:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, in his third day's work, Jehovah spake,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Earth, an infant, naked as she came
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out of the womb of chaos, straight put on
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her beautiful attire, and deck'd her robe
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of verdure with ten thousand glorious flowers,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Exhaling incense; crown'd her mountain-heads
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With cedars, train'd her vines around their girdles,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And pour'd spontaneous harvests at their feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor were those woods without inhabitants
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the ephemera of earth and air;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Where glid the sunbeams through the latticed
+ boughs,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And fell like dew-drops on the spangled ground,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To light the diamond-beetle on his way;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Where cheerful openings let the sky look down
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Into the very heart of solitude,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On little garden-pots of social flowers,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That crowded from the shades to peep at daylight;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Or where unpermeable foliage made
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Midnight at noon, and chill, damp horror reign'd
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O'er dead, fall'n leaves and slimy funguses;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Reptiles were quicken'd into various birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Loathsome, unsightly, swoln to obscene bulk,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lurk'd the dark toad beneath the infected turf;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The slow-worm crawl'd, the light cameleon climb'd,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And changed his colour as his pace he changed;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nimble lizard ran from bough to bough,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Glancing through light, in shadow disappearing;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scorpion, many-eyed, with sting of fire,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bred there,&mdash;the legion-fiend of creeping things;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Terribly beautiful, the serpent lay,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wreath'd like a coronet of gold and jewels,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fit for a tyrant's brow; anon he flew
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Straight as an arrow shot from his own rings,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And struck his victim, shrieking ere it went
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Down his strain'd throat, that open sepulchre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amphibious monsters haunted the lagoon;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hippopotamus, amidst the flood,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Flexile and active as the smallest swimmer;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But on the bank, ill balanced and infirm,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He grazed the herbage, with huge, head declined,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Or lean'd to rest against some ancient tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crocodile, the dragon of the waters,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In iron panoply, fell as the plague,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And merciless as famine, cranch'd his prey,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While, from his jaws, with dreadful fangs all serried,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The life-blood dyed the waves with deadly streams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seal and the sea-lion, from the gulf
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Came forth, and couching with their little ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slept on the shelving rocks that girt the shores,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Securing prompt retreat from sudden danger;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pregnant turtle, stealing out at eve,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With anxious eye, and trembling heart, explored
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loneliest coves, and in the loose warm sand
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deposited her eggs, which the sun hatch'd:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence the young brood, that never knew a parent,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unburrow'd and by instinct sought the sea;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nature herself, with her own gentle hand,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dropping them one by one into the flood,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And laughing to behold their antic joy,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When launch'd in their maternal element.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vision of that brooding world went on;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Millions of beings yet more admirable
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Than all that went before them now appear'd;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Flocking from every point of heaven, and filling
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eye, ear, and mind, with objects, sounds, emotions
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Akin to livelier sympathy and love
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Than reptiles, fishes, insects, could inspire;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Birds, the free tenants of land, air, and ocean,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their forms all symmetry, their motions grace;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In plumage delicate and beautiful,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thick without burthen, close as fishes' scales,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Or loose as full-blown poppies to the breeze;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With wings that might have had a soul within them,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They bore their owners by such sweet enchantment;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Birds, small and great, of endless shapes and
+ colours,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here flew and perch'd, there swam and dived at pleasure;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Watchful and agile, uttering voices wild
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And harsh, yet in accordance with the waves
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the beech, the winds in caverns moaning,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Or winds and waves abroad upon the water.
+ </p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page391"
+ name="page391"></a>[pg 391]</span>
+ <p>
+ Some sought their food among the finny shoals,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swift darting from the clouds, emerging soon
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With slender captives glittering in their beaks;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These in recesses of steep crags constructed
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their eyries inaccessible, and train'd
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their hardy broods to forage in all weathers;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Others, more gorgeously apparell'd, dwelt
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the woods, on Nature's dainties feeding,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbs, seeds, and roots; or, ever on the wing,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pursuing insects through the boundless air:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In hollow trees or thickets these conceal'd
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their exquisitely woven nests; where lay
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their callow offspring, quiet as the down
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On their own breasts, till from her search the dam
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With laden bill return'd, and shared the meal
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the clamorous suppliants, all agape;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, cowering o'er them with expanded wings,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She felt how sweet it is to be a mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of these, a few, with melody untaught,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turn'd all the air to music within hearing,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Themselves unseen; while bolder quiristers
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On loftier branches strain'd their clarion-pipes,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And made the forest echo to their screams
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Discordant,&mdash;yet there was no discord there,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But temper'd harmony: all tones combining,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the rich confluence often thousand tongues,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To tell of joy and to inspire it. Who
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could hear such concert, and not join in chorus?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not I;&mdash;sometimes entranced, I seem'd to float
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon a buoyant sea of sounds: again
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With curious ear I tried to disentangle
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The maze of voices, and with eye as nice
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To single out each minstrel, and pursue
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His little song through all its labyrinth,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Till my soul enter'd into him, and felt
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every vibration of his thrilling throat,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pulse of his heart, and flutter of his pinions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often, as one among the multitude,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sang from very fulness of delight;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now like a winged fisher of the sea,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now a recluse among the woods,&mdash;enjoying
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bliss of all at once, or each in turn.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ RAPIDS OF NIAGARA.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Rapids begin about half a mile above the cataract; and
+ although the breadth of the river might at first make them
+ appear of little importance, a nearer inspection will
+ convince the stranger of their actual size, and the terrific
+ danger of the passage. The inhabitants of the neighbourhood
+ regard it as certain death to get once involved in them; and
+ that, not merely because all escape from the cataract would
+ be hopeless, but because the violent force of the water among
+ the rocks in the channel, would instantly dash the bones of a
+ man in pieces. Instances are on record of persons being
+ carried down by the stream; indeed there was an instance of
+ two men carried over in March last; but no one is known to
+ have ever survived. Indeed, it is very rare that the bodies
+ are found; as the depth of the gulf below the cataract, and
+ the tumultuous agitation of the eddies, whirlpools, and
+ counter currents, render it difficult for any thing once sunk
+ to rise again; while the general course of the water is so
+ rapid, that it is soon hurried far down the stream. The large
+ logs which are brought down in great numbers during the
+ spring, bear sufficient testimony to these remarks. Wild
+ ducks, geese, &amp;c. are frequently precipitated over the
+ cataract, and generally re-appear either dead, or with their
+ legs or wings broken. Some say that water-fowl avoid the
+ place when able to escape, but that the ice on the shores of
+ the river above often prevents them from obtaining food, and
+ that they are carried down from mere inability to fly; while
+ others assert that, they are sometimes seen voluntarily
+ riding among the rapids, and, after descending half-way down
+ the cataract, taking wing, and returning to repeat their
+ dangerous amusement.&mdash;<i>American Work</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ BRIDAL, CANZONET.
+ </h3>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Sir Knight, heed not the clarion's call,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From hill, or from valley, or turretted hall;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cease, holy Friar, cease for awhile
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The anthem that swells through the fretted aisle;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forester bold, to the bugle's sound
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Listen no longer, though gaily wound,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But haste to the bridal, haste away,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where love's rebeck is tuned to a sweeter lay.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Sir Knight, Sir Knight, no longer twine
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The laurel-leaf o'er that bold brow of thine;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friar, to-day from thy temples tear
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ivy garland that sages wear;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day, bold Forester, cast aside
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thy oak-leaf crown, the woodland's pride,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And bind round your brows the myrtle gay,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the rebeck resounds love's sweetest lays.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Sir Knight, urge not now the gallant steed
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O'er the plains that to honour and glory lead;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friar, forget thy order's vow,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And pace not the gloomy cloisters now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chase no longer with bow and with spear,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forester bold, the dappled deer,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But tread me a measure as light and gay
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As ever kept lime to the rebeck's lay.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <i>Neele's Romance of History</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ THE GATHERER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "I am but a <i>Gatherer</i> and disposer of other men's
+ stuff."&mdash;<i>Walton</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ TRAVELLING.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Sterne pitied the man who could travel from Dan to Beersheba,
+ and say all "was barren:" however delighted travellers or
+ tourists may be on their journey, it is surprising how few
+ details are preserved in their memory. This occasioned Dr.
+ Johnson to remark, in his "Tour to the Hebrides," how much
+ the lapse even "of a few hours takes from the certainty of
+ knowledge, and the distinctness
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page392" name="page392"></a>[pg
+ 392]</span> of imagery;" and that "those who trust to memory
+ what cannot be safely trusted but to the eye, must tell by
+ guess, what a few hours before they had known with
+ certainty." We were never more convinced of the importance of
+ these observations than after our first visit to the
+ dock-yard, at Portsmouth. In collating some little memoranda
+ made on the spot, we referred to our party, (<i>seven</i> in
+ number) on our return to the inn, for the <i>extent</i> of
+ the dock-yard: not one of them could give a correct answer,
+ though all had just heard it detailed and explained with
+ accuracy. Dr. Kitchener may well recommend tourists to walk
+ about with note-books in their hands! and such inadvertence
+ as the preceding almost warrants the oddity of his
+ suggestion.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ MOTTOES FOR DECANTER LABELS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Arridet PORTus? subeat non causa doloris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SumebatiS HERI? non dolor est hodie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hic liquor est molLIS BONus, aptus ad omnia laeta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oppida ne CALCA VALLAta ad praelia, quoerens, Sisonitum
+ capias ecce tibi est Volupe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dum lucet CLARE Te magis iste trahat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Literary Gazette</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ MALARIA.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Gregory, father of the late celebrated professor in
+ Edinburgh, when a student in a part of Germany where
+ <i>malaria</i> prevailed, from being a philosopher and living
+ low, <i>drinking only water</i>, was seized with intermittent
+ fever, when his jolly companions, who ate and drank freely,
+ escaped. If brandy or other stimulants are taken previous to
+ exposure to malaria, intermittent fever is generally
+ prevented. Such are the opinions of the doctor, and if Dr.
+ Macculloch be right, we suggest the establishment of a brandy
+ vault at each angle of the parks, that every passenger may
+ prepare himself.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ LORD HOWE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ When the late Lord Howe was a captain, a lieutenant, not
+ remarkable for courage or presence of mind in dangers (common
+ fame had brought some imputation upon his character) ran to
+ the great cabin and informed his commander that the ship was
+ on fire near the gun-room. Soon after this he returned
+ exclaiming, "You need not be afraid as the fire is
+ extinguished." "<i>Afraid!</i>" replied Captain H. a little
+ nettled, "how does a man <i>feel</i>, Sir, when he is afraid?
+ I need not ask how he <i>looks</i>."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ BACKGAMMON BOARDS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ We frequently find backgammon boards with backs lettered as
+ if they were two folio volumes. The origin of it was thus;
+ Eudes, bishop of Sully, forbade his clergy to play at chess.
+ As they were resolved not to obey the commandment, and yet
+ dared not have a chess-board seen in their houses or
+ cloisters, they had them bound and lettered as books, and
+ played at night, before they went to bed, instead of reading
+ the New Testament or the Lives of the Saints; and the monks
+ called the draft or chess-board their <i>wooden gospels</i>.
+ They had also drinking vessels bound to resemble the
+ breviary, and were found drinking, when it was supposed they
+ were at prayer.&mdash;<i>Literary Gazette</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ LOVE OF THE COUNTRY.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Country people will tell you that they like the country, and
+ detest the town, although their enjoyments are of a kind
+ which may be obtained in far greater perfection in the latter
+ than in the former. The only person I ever knew who was
+ honest in this respect, was a gentleman, the possessor of a
+ beautiful seat, in a beautiful country, when he avowed his
+ opinion, that there was "no garden like Covent-garden, and no
+ flower like a cauliflower."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ C.L.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ The <i>Morning Chronicle</i>, Nov. 20, in noticing the
+ funeral of the late Mr. Sale, says, "At a little after three
+ o'clock, the body of the lamented gentleman entered the
+ church."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ LIMBIRD'S EDITION OF THE BRITISH NOVELIST, Publishing in
+ Monthly Parts, price 6d. each.&mdash;Each Novel will be
+ complete in itself, and may be purchased separately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>The following Novels are already Published:</i>
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ s. d.
+
+Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield 0 10
+The Mysteries of Udolpho 3 6
+Mackenzie's Man of Feeling 0 6
+Rasselas 0 8
+Paul and Virginia 0 6
+The Old English Baron 0 8
+The Castle of Otranto 0 8
+The Romance of the Forest 1 8
+Almoran and Hamet 0 6
+Elizabeth, or the Exiles of Siberia 0 6
+Nature and Art 0 8
+The Italian 2 0
+A Simple Story 1 4
+The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne 0 6
+Sicilian Romance 1 0
+The Man of the World 1 0
+Zelaco, by Dr. Moore 2 0
+Joseph Andrews 1 6
+Humphry Clinker 1 8
+Edward, by Dr. Moore 2 6
+</pre>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+ <p>
+ See MIRROR, vol 3, p 194&mdash;vol 5. p 311.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2" name="footnote2"></a> <b>Footnote 2</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+ <p>
+ We requote this passage from Mr. M'Creery, as it has
+ already appeared in vol. 5; and in vol. 3, a correspondent
+ denies that the first English book was printed at
+ Westminster; but we are disposed to think that an impartial
+ examination of the testimonies on each side of the
+ controversy will decide in favour of Caxton.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3" name="footnote3"></a> <b>Footnote 3</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+ <p>
+ We did not know that such unpleasantries as Chancery
+ injunctions were part of African law; perhaps sand may not
+ be removed from the desert "without leave of the trustees,"
+ like scrapings from our roads.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4" name="footnote4"></a> <b>Footnote 4</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+ <p>
+ This was published by Bale in 1549, 8vo.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <p>
+ <i>Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, London, and Sold by
+ all Booksellers and Newsmen</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION, VOL. 10, ISSUE 286, DECEMBER 8, 1827***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 11412-h.txt or 11412-h.zip *******</p>
+<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br />
+<a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/1/1/4/1/11412">https://www.gutenberg.org/1/1/4/1/11412</a></p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction, Vol. 10, Issue 286, December 8, 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 286, December 8, 1827
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: March 2, 2004 [eBook #11412]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE,
+AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION, VOL. 10, ISSUE 286, DECEMBER 8, 1827***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Keith M. Eckrich, David Garcia, and
+the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustration.
+ See 11412-h.htm or 11412-h.zip:
+ (http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/1/1/4/1/11412/11412-h/11412-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/1/1/4/1/11412/11412-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. 10, NO. 286.] SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1827. [PRICE 2d.
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Caxton's House in the Almonry, Westminster.]
+
+
+To expatiate on the advantages of printing, at this time of day, would
+be "wasteful and ridiculous excess." We content ourselves with the
+comparison of Dryden's
+
+
+ "Long trails of light descending down."
+
+
+In a retrospective glance at our previous volumes (for can the
+phrenologists tell us of a head capacious enough to contain their
+exhaustless variety?) our readers will perceive that, from time to
+time, sundry "accounts" of the origin and progress of printing have
+been inserted in the MIRROR;[1] and though we are not vain enough to
+consider our sheet as the "refined gold, the lily, the violet, the
+ice, or the rainbow," of the poet's perfection, yet in specimens of
+the general _economy of the art_, the long-extended patronage of the
+public gives us an early place.
+
+With an outline of the life of CAXTON our readers must be already
+familiar; but we wish them to consider the above accurate
+representation of the FIRST ENGLISH PRINTER'S RESIDENCE as antecedent
+to a _Memoir of Caxton_, in which it will be our aim to concentrate,
+in addition to biographical details, many important facts from the
+testimony of antiquarians; for scarcely a volume of the _Archaeologia_
+has appeared without some valuable communication on Caxton and his
+times.
+
+In the meantime we proceed with the _locale_ of Caxton's house,
+situate on the south-west of Westminster Abbey, where was formerly the
+eleemosynary, or almonry, where the alms of the abbots were
+distributed. Howell in his _Londinopolis_, describes this as "the spot
+where the abbot of Westminster permitted Caxton to set up his press in
+the _Almonry_, or Ambry," the former of which names is still retained.
+This is confirmed by Newcourt, in his _Repertorium_, who says, "St.
+Anne's, an old chapel, over against which the Lady Margaret, mother to
+king Henry VII., erected an alms-house for poor women, which is now
+turned into lodgings for singing-men of the college. The place wherein
+this chapel and alms-house stood was called the Eleemosinary, or
+Almonry, now corruptly called the Ambry, (Aumbry,) for that the alms
+of the abbey were there distributed to the poor; in which the abbot of
+Westminster erected the first press for book-printing that was in
+England, about the year of Christ 1471, and where WILLIAM CAXTON,
+citizen and mercer of London, who first brought it into England,
+practised it." Here he printed _The Game and Play of the Chesse_, said
+to be the first book that issued from the press in this country.
+
+Hence, according to Mr. M'Creery, the intelligent author of "The
+Press," a poem, "the title of _chapel_ to the internal regulations of
+a printing-office originated in Caxton's exercising the profession in
+one of the chapels in Westminster Abbey, and may be considered as an
+additional proof, from the antiquity of the custom, of his being the
+first English printer."[2]
+
+Every lover of science, on approaching this spot, will feel himself on
+holy ground, however the idle and incurious of our metropolis may
+neglect the scite, or be ignorant of its identity. We are there led
+into an eternity of reflection and association of ideas; but lest
+human pride should be too fondly feasted in the retrospect, the
+hallowed towers of the abbey, seen in the distance, serve to remind us
+of the imperial maxim, that "art is long, and life but short."
+
+[Footnote 1: See MIRROR, vol 3, p 194--vol 5. p 311.]
+
+[Footnote 2: We requote this passage from Mr. M'Creery, as it has
+already appeared in vol. 5; and in vol. 3, a correspondent denies that
+the first English book was printed at Westminster; but we are disposed
+to think that an impartial examination of the testimonies on each side
+of the controversy will decide in favour of Caxton.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TEA.--ITS INTRODUCTION INTO ENGLAND.
+
+
+(A correspondent, who signs _M.M.M._ informs us that the article sent
+to us by _P.T.W_. and inserted in No. 280 of the MIRROR, was copied
+verbatim from the _Imperial Magazine_, a work which we seldom see, and
+consequently we had no opportunity of ascertaining the origin of our
+correspondent's paper. It seemed to us a good _cyclopaedian_ article
+on the subject, and we accordingly admitted it. We now subjoin
+_M.M.M.'s_ communication.)
+
+In addition to what has been said in the article upon tea, (by
+_P.T.W._) allow me to remark (and which I do not recollect ever to
+have seen noticed in any work upon the subject) that the seed is
+contained in _two_ vessels, the outer one varying in shape,
+triangular, long, and round, according to the number which it contains
+of what may be termed inner vessels. The outer vessel of a triangular
+shape, measures, from the base to the apex about three quarters of an
+inch, and is of a dark brown colour, approaching to black, and thick,
+strong, and rough in texture; within this is another vessel,
+containing the kernel; this inner vessel is of a light brown colour,
+thin, and brittle, in shape, seldom perfectly round, but mostly flat
+on one side: there are three of them in a triangular seed vessel, two
+in a long one, and one in that which is round. The kernel is of a
+brown colour, and in taste very bitter. In no other species of teas
+than Bohea, is the large kind of seed found, which is probably owing
+to that species being gathered last or in autumn. There is a _small_
+seed found mixed with the Congou kind of teas, about the size of a
+pea, which is in every respect similar to the large, except in size.
+This seed was evidently not permitted to ripen, but the calyx of the
+flower connected with the peduncle is quite perfect. The Twankey
+species are of the same appearance, all of which I have had ample
+opportunity of inspecting.
+
+As an appendage to this note, we are induced to quote the following
+pleasant page from _Time's Telescope_ for 1828; and we take this
+opportunity of reminding our readers that our customary Supplementary
+sheet, containing the spirit of this and other popular Annual Works
+will be published with our next Number.
+
+From a single sheet found in Sir Hans Sloane's library, in the British
+Museum, and printed by Mr. Ellis in his Original Letters, _Second
+Series_, it appears that tea was known in England in the year 1657,
+though not then in general use. The author of this paper says, "That
+the vertues and excellencies of this leaf and drink are many and
+great, is evident and manifest by the high esteem and use of it
+(especially of late years) among the physicians and knowing men in
+France, Italy, Holland, and other parts of Christendom; _and in_
+ENGLAND it hath been sold in the leaf for _six pounds_, and sometimes
+for TEN _pounds_ the pound weight, and in respect of its former
+scarceness and dearness, it hath been only used as a regalia in high
+treatments and entertainments, and presents made thereof to princes
+and grandees, till the year 1657."
+
+Secretary Pepys, in his Diary, vol. i. p. 76, without saying where he
+had his drink, makes the following entry:--"Sept. 25th, 1660. I did
+send for a cup of tea (a China drink) of which I never had drunk
+before, and went away."
+
+In a letter from Mr. Henry Savill to his uncle, Secretary Coventry,
+dated from Paris, Aug. 12, 1678, and printed by Mr. Ellis, the writer,
+after acknowledging the hospitalities of his uncle's house, quaintly
+observes, "These, I hope, are the charms that have prevailed with me
+to remember (that is to trouble) you oftener than I am apt to do other
+of my friends, whose buttery-hatch is not so open, _and who call for_
+TEA instead of pipes and bottles after dinner; _a base unworthy Indian
+practice_, and which I must ever admire your most Christian family for
+not admitting. The truth is, all nations have grown so wicked as to
+have some of these filthy customs." In 1678, the year in which the
+above letter is dated, the East India Company began the importation of
+tea as a branch of trade; the quantity received at that time amounting
+to 4,713 lbs. The importation gradually enlarged, and the government,
+in consequence, augmented the duties upon tea. By the year 1700, the
+importation of tea had arrived at the quantity of 20,000 lbs. In 1721,
+it exceeded a million of pounds. In 1816, it had arrived at 86,234,380
+lbs. Something more than thirty millions of pounds is probably the
+present average of importation: some allowance must be made for tea
+damaged and spoiled upon the passage.--See more on this subject, well
+worthy of perusal, in Mr. Ellis's Letters, _Second Series_, vol. iv.
+pp. 57, et seq.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DANGER.
+
+
+FROM L'ADONE OF MARINO.
+
+_(For the Mirror.)_
+
+
+ Like some lone Pilgrim in the dusky night,
+ Seeking, through unknown paths, his doubtful way,
+ While thick nocturnal vapours veil his sight
+ From yawning chasms, that 'neath his footsteps lay;
+ Sudden before him gleams the forked light!
+ Dispels the gloom, yet fills him with dismay.
+ His trembling steps he then retraces back,
+ And seeks again the well-known beaten track.
+
+E.S.J.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CATS.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+The first couple of these animals which were carried to Cuyaba sold
+for a pound of gold. There was a plague of rats in the settlement, and
+they were purchased as a speculation, which proved an excellent one.
+Their first kittens produced thirty _oilavas_ each; the new generation
+were worth twenty; and the price gradually fell as the inhabitants
+were stocked with these beautiful and useful creatures. Montengro
+presented to the elder Almagro the first cat which was brought to
+South America, and was rewarded for it with six hundred _pesos_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE DEATH OF KING JOHN.
+
+_Extracted from an old black-letter volume, entitled "The Abridgment
+of the Acts and Monuments of Martyrs, from the earliest period of
+Christian suffering to the time of Queen Elizabeth, our gracious lady,
+now reigning," printed in her reign_.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+In the yeere 1216, king John was poisoned, as most writers testify, at
+Swinsted Abbey, by a monk of that abbey, of the order of Cistersians,
+or S. Bernard's brethren, called Simon of Swinsted. The monk did first
+consult with his abbot, shewing him what he minded to do, alleging for
+himself the prophecy of Caiphas, 11th of John, saying, it is better
+that one man die, than the whole people perish. I am well content,
+saith he, to lose my life, and so become a martyr, that I may utterly
+destroy this tyrant. With that the abbot did weep for gladness, and
+much commended his fervent zeal. The monk then being absolved of his
+abbot for doing this fact, went secretly into the garden, on the back
+side, and finding there a most venomous toad, did so prick him and
+press him with his penknife, that hee made him vomite all the poison
+that was within him; this done, he conveyed it into a cup of wine, and
+with a flattering and smiling countenance he sayeth to the king, "If
+it shall please your princely majesty, here is such a cup of wine as
+you never drank better in your lifetime. I trust this wassall shall
+make all England glad," and with that he drank a great draught
+thereof, and the king pledged him; the monk then went out of the house
+to the back, and then died, his bowels gushing out of his belly, and
+had continually from henceforth three monks to sing mass for him,
+confirmed by their general charter. The king, within a short space
+after, feeling great grief in his body, asked for Simon, the monk;
+answer was made he was dead. "Then God have mercy on me," said the
+king; so went he to Newark-upon-Trent, and there died, and was buried
+in the cathedral church at Worster, in 1216, the 19th day of October,
+after having been much fered with the clergy 18 years, 6 months, and a
+day.
+
+MALVINA.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LILLIARD EDGE.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Near the border between the parishes of Maxton and Ancrum is a bridge,
+called Lilliard Edge, formerly Anerum moor, where a battle was fought
+between the Scots and English soon after the death of king James V.,
+who died in the year 1542. When the Earl of Arran was regent of
+Scotland, Sir Ralph Rivers and Sir Bryan Laiton came to Jedburgh with
+an army of 5,000 English to seize Merse and Teviotdale in the name of
+Henry VIII., then king of England, who died not long after, in the
+year 1547. The regent and the Earl of Angus came with a small body of
+men to oppose them. The Earl of Angus was greatly exasperated against
+the English, because some time before they had defaced the tombs of
+his ancestors at Melrose, and had done much hurt to the abbey there.
+The regent and the Earl of Angus, without waiting the arrival of a
+greater force, which was expected, met the English at Lilliard Edge,
+where the Scots obtained a great victory, considering the inequality
+of their number. A young woman of the name of Lilliard fought along
+with the Scots with great courage; she fell in the battle, and a
+tombstone was erected upon her grave on the field where it was fought.
+Some remains of this tombstone are still to be seen. It is said to
+have contained the following inscription:--
+
+
+ "Fair maiden Lilliard lies under this stane;
+ Little was her stature, but great was her fame.
+ On the English lads she laid many thumps,
+ And when her legs were off she fought on her stumps."
+
+T.S.W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BOOKS AND BOOKWORMS.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Books were anciently made of plates of copper and lead, the bark of
+trees, bricks, Stones, and wood. Josephus speaks of two columns, the
+one of stone, the other of brick, on which the children of Seth wrote
+their inventions and astronomical discoveries. Porphyry mentions some
+pillars, preserved in Crete, on which the ceremonies observed by the
+Corybantes in their sacrifices were recorded. The leaves of the
+palm-tree were used, and the finest and thinnest part of the bark of
+such trees as the lime, the ash, the maple, and the elm; from hence
+comes the word _liber_, which signifies the inner bark of the trees;
+and as these barks are rolled up, in order to be removed with greater
+ease, these rolls were called _volumen_, a volume, a name afterwards
+given to the like rolls of paper or parchment. By degrees wax, then
+leather, were introduced, especially the skins of goats and sheep, of
+which at length parchment was prepared; also linen, then silk, horn,
+and lastly paper. The rolls or volumes of the ancients were composed
+of several sheets, fastened to each other, rolled upon a stick, and
+were sometimes fifty feet in length, and about a yard and a half wide.
+At first the letters were only divided into lines, then into separate
+words, which, by degrees, were noted with accents, and distributed by
+points, and stops into periods, paragraphs, chapters, and other
+divisions. In some countries, as among the orientals, the lines began
+from the right, and ran to the left; in others, as in northern and
+western nations, from the left to the right; others, as the Grecians,
+followed both directions alternately, going in the one and returning
+in the other.
+
+In the Chinese books, the lines run from top to bottom. Again, the
+page in some is entire and uniform; in others, divided into columns;
+in others, distinguished into text and notes, either marginal or at
+the bottom; usually it is furnished with signatures and catch-words,
+also with a register to discover whether the book be complete. The
+Mahometans place the name of God at the beginning of all their books.
+The word _book_ is derived from the Saxon _boc_, which comes from the
+northern _buech_, of _buechans_, a beech, or _service-tree_, on the
+bark of which our ancestors used to write. A very large estate was
+given for one on Cosmography by king Alfred. About the year 1400, they
+were sold from 10_l_. to 30_l_. a piece. The first printed one was
+the Vulgate edition of the Bible, 1462; the second was _Cicero de
+Officiis_, 1466. Leo I. ordered 200,000 to be burnt at Constantinople.
+In the suppressed monasteries of France, in 1790, there were found
+4,104,412 volumes; nearly one-half were on theology. The end of the
+book, now denoted by _finis_, was anciently marked with a <, called
+_coronis_, and the whole frequently washed with an oil drawn from
+cedar, or citron chips strewed between the leaves, to preserve it from
+rotting.
+
+Thus far books; now for the _bookworms_. Anthony Magliabecchi, the
+notorious bookworm, was born at Florence in 1633; his passion for
+reading induced him to employ every moment of his time in improving
+his mind. By means of an astonishing memory and incessant application,
+he became more conversant with literary history than any man of his
+time, and was appointed librarian to the grand duke of Tuscany. He has
+been called a living library. He was a man of a most forbidding and
+savage aspect, and exceedingly negligent of his person. He refused to
+be waited upon, and rarely took off his clothes to go to bed. His
+dinner was commonly three hard eggs, with a draught of water. He had a
+small window in his door, through which he could see all those who
+approached him; and if he did not wish for their company, he would not
+admit them. He spent some hours in each day at the palace library; but
+is said never in his life to have gone farther from Florence than to
+Pratz, whither he once accompanied Cardinal Norris to see a
+manuscript. He died at the age of 81, in the year 1714. In the present
+age we have _bookworms_, who wander from one bookstall to another, and
+there devour their daily store of knowledge. Others will linger at the
+tempting window filled with the "_twopenny_," and read all the open
+pages; then pass on to another of the same description, and thus enjoy
+literature by the way of _Cheapside_.
+
+P.T.W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MIDNIGHT--A TOUCH AT THE EPIC.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+ "The iron tongue of midnight hath toll'd twelve."
+SHAKSPEARE.
+
+
+ Amid the pauses of the midnight storm,
+ When all without is cold, within all warm!
+ Amid the pauses of the midnight blast,
+ When ev'ry bolt and ev'ry sleeper's fast!
+ In that dire hour, when graves give up their dead,
+ And men for once agree in their pursuit--a bed!
+ When heroes, statesmen, senators, and kings,
+ Lords, and et ceteras of meaner things,
+ Forget the road to fortune--or to jail,
+ And Morpheus all their equal guardian hail!
+ When each forgets each 'vantage or mishap.
+ And all are equal in one common nap!
+ At that dread hour...
+ Caetera desiderantur.
+
+
+_Carshalton_ W. P----n.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ON OATHS.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Since lately we have had a great deal of prevarication in our courts
+of justice about receiving the oaths of deists, &c., I have thought it
+meet to furnish the MIRROR with an account of the first usage of the
+words, "So help me God." The word oath is a corruption of the Saxon
+_eoth_. An oath is called corporal, because the person making an
+affidavit lays his hand upon a part of the scriptures.
+
+At the conclusion of the oath the above words are used, which may
+perhaps have originated in the very ancient manner of trial by battle
+in this country, when the appellee, laying his right hand on the book,
+takes the appellant by the right hand with his left, and maketh oath
+as follows:--"Hear this, thou who callest thyself _John_ by the name
+of baptism, whom I hold by thy hand, that falsely upon me thou hast
+lied; and for this thou liest, that I who call myself _Thomas_ by the
+name of baptism, did not feloniously murder thy father, _W._ by name,
+_so help me God_." (Here he kisses the book, and concludes,)--"And
+this I will defend against thee by my body, as this court shall
+award." And the appellant is thus sworn also.
+
+Here, it may be observed also, the true foundation of the word _lie_,
+being esteemed still so great an affront above all others, as whenever
+it is pronounced to cause "an immediate affray and bloodshed."
+
+I have seen people sworn in poetry; and certain it is, that in many
+countries in Europe the making of oaths differs. I have some curious
+specimens of ancient oaths, some in Latin prose, others in poetry.
+
+Lord Chief Justice Coke was so strict with regard to the receiving of
+oaths, that when at Cambridge Summer Assizes, upon a trial of felony,
+he said, "in case of trespass, although it be only to the value of
+_twopence_, no evidence shall be given to the jury _but upon oath_,
+much less where _the life of a man is in question_." An action may be
+brought on the case upon a man calling another a _perjured_ man,
+because it shall be intended to be contrary to his oath in a judicial
+proceeding.
+
+W.H.H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ORIGINAL LETTER
+
+_From the Younger Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, upon his death bed, to
+the Rev. Dr. W.----_.
+
+
+Dear Doctor,--I always looked upon you as a man of true virtue, and
+know you to be a person of sound understanding; for however I may have
+acted in opposition to the principles of religion, or the dictates of
+reason, I can honestly assure you I had always the highest veneration
+for both. The world and I may now shake hands, for I dare affirm that
+we are heartily weary of one another. Oh, doctor, what a prodigal have
+I been of that most valuable of all possessions, time. I have
+squandered it away with a profusion unparalleled; and now that the
+enjoyment of a few days would be worth a hecatomb of worlds, I cannot
+flatter myself with a prospect of half a dozen hours. How despicable,
+my dear friend, is that man who never prays to his God but in the time
+of distress. In what manner can he supplicate that omnipotent Being in
+his affliction with reverence, whom in the tide of his prosperity he
+never remembered with dread! Don't brand me with infidelity, my dear
+doctor, when I tell you I am almost ashamed to offer up my petitions
+at the throne of grace, or of imploring that divine mercy in the next
+world, which I have so scandalously abused in this! Shall ingratitude
+to man be looked upon as the blackest of crimes, and not ingratitude
+to God? Shall an insult offered to the king be looked upon in the most
+offensive light, and yet no notice be taken when the King of kings is
+treated with indignity and disrespect. The companions of my former
+libertinism would scarcely believe their eyes, my dear doctor, was you
+to show them this epistle. They would laugh at me as a dreaming
+enthusiast, or pity me as a timorous wretch who was shocked at the
+appearance of futurity. But whoever laughs at me for being right, or
+pities me for being sensible of my errors, is more entitled to my
+compassion than my resentment. A future life may very well strike
+terror into any man who has not acted well in this life; and he must
+have an uncommon share of courage indeed who does not shrink at the
+presence of his God. You see, my dear doctor, the apprehension of
+death will soon bring the most profligate to a proper use of their
+understanding. To what a situation am I now reduced? Is this odious
+little hut a suitable lodging for a prince? or is this anxiety of my
+mind becoming the characteristic of a Christian? From my rank and
+fortune I might have expected affluence to wait on my life, from my
+religion and understanding, peace to smile upon my end; instead of
+which I am afflicted with poverty, and haunted with remorse, despised
+by my country, and I fear forsaken by my God! There is nothing so
+dangerous, my dear doctor, as extraordinary abilities. I cannot be
+accused of vanity now, by being sensible I was once possessed of
+uncommon qualifications, more especially as I sincerely regret that I
+was ever blest with any at all. My rank in life made these
+accomplishments still more conspicuous; and, fascinated with the
+general applause which they procured, I never considered about the
+proper means by which they should be displayed; hence, to purchase a
+smile from a blockhead I despised, have I frequently treated the
+virtuous with disrespect, and sported with the Holy Name of heaven to
+obtain a laugh from a parcel of fools, who were entitled to nothing
+but my contempt. Your men of wit, my dear doctor, generally look upon
+themselves as discharged from the duties of religion, and confine the
+doctrines of the Gospel to people of meaner understandings; it is a
+sort of derogation, in their opinion, to comply with the rules of
+Christianity, and reckon that man possessed of a narrow genius who
+studies to be good. What a pity that the Holy Writings are not made
+the criterion of true judgment! or that any one should pass for a fine
+gentleman in this world, but he that seems solicitous about his
+happiness in the next. My dear doctor, I am forsaken by all my
+acquaintance, utterly neglected by the friends of my bosom and the
+dependants of my bounty. But no matter; I am not now fit to converse
+with the first, and have no ability to serve the latter. Let me not be
+cast off wholly, however, by the good. Favour me with a visit, dear
+doctor, as soon as possible. Writing to you gives me some ease,
+especially upon a subject I could talk of for ever. I am of opinion
+this is the last visit I shall ever solicit from you. My distemper is
+powerful. Come and pray for the departing spirit of the unhappy
+BUCKINGHAM.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+The Sketch Book.
+
+No. LI.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PHANTOM HAND.
+
+
+ I see a hand you cannot see,
+ Which beckons me away!
+
+
+In a lonely part of the bleak and rocky coast of Scotland, there dwelt
+a being, who was designated by the few who knew and feared him, the
+Warlock Fisher. He was, in truth, a singular and a fearful old man.
+For years he had followed his dangerous occupation alone; adventuring
+forth in weather which appalled the stoutest of the stout hearts that
+occasionally exchanged a word with him, in passing to and fro in their
+mutual employment. Of his name, birth, or descent, nothing was known;
+but the fecundity of conjecture had supplied an unfailing stock of
+_materiel_ on these points. Some said he was the devil incarnate;
+others said he was a Dutchman, or some other "far-away foreigner," who
+had fled to these comparative solitudes for shelter, from the
+retribution due to some grievous crime; and all agreed, that he was
+neither a Scot nor a true man. In outward form, however, he was still
+"a model of a man," tall, and well-made; though in years, his natural
+strength was far from being abated. His matted black hair, hanging in
+elf-locks about his ears and shoulders, together with the perpetual
+sullenness which seemed native in the expression of features neither
+regular nor pleasing, gave him an appearance unendurably disgusting.
+He lived alone, in a hovel of his own construction, partially scooped
+out of a rock--was never known to have suffered a visitor within its
+walls--to have spoken a kind word, or done a kind action. Once,
+indeed, he performed an act which, in a less ominous being, would have
+been lauded as the extreme of heroism. In a dreadfully stormy morning,
+a fishing-boat was seen in great distress, making for the shore--there
+were a father and two sons in it. The danger became imminent, as they
+neared the rocky promontory of the fisher--and the boat upset. Women
+and boys were screaming and gesticulating from the beach, in all the
+wild and useless energy of despair, but assistance was nowhere to be
+seen. The father and one of the lads disappeared for ever; but the
+younger boy clung, with extraordinary resolution, to the inverted
+vessel. By accident, the Warlock Fisher came to the door of his hovel,
+saw the drowning lad, and plunged instantaneously into the sea. For
+some minutes he was invisible amid the angry turmoil; but he swam like
+an inhabitant of that fearful element, and bore the boy in safety to
+the beach. From fatigue or fear, or the effects of both united, the
+poor lad died shortly afterwards; and his grateful relatives
+industriously insisted, that he had been blighted in the grasp of his
+unhallowed rescuer!
+
+Towards the end of autumn, the weather frequently becomes so broken
+and stormy in these parts, as to render the sustenance derived from
+fishing extremely precarious. Against this, however, the Warlock
+Fisher was provided; for, caring little for weather, and apparently
+less for life, he went out in all seasons, and was known to be absent
+for days, during the most violent storms, when every hope of seeing
+him again was lost. Still nothing harmed him: he came drifting back
+again, the same wayward, unfearing, unhallowed animal. To account for
+this, it was understood that he was in connexion with smugglers; that
+his days of absence were spent in their service--in reconnoitring for
+their safety, and assisting their predations. Whatever of truth there
+might be in this, it was well known that the Warlock Fisher never
+wanted ardent spirits; and so free was he in their use and of tobacco,
+that he has been heard, in a long and dreary winter's evening,
+carolling songs in a strange tongue, with all the fervour of an
+inspired bacchanal. It has been said, too, at such times he held
+strange talk with some who never answered, deprecated sights which no
+one else could see, and exhibited the fury of an outrageous maniac.
+
+It was towards the close of an autumn day, that a tall young man was
+seen surveying the barren rocks, and apparently deserted shores, near
+the dwelling of the fisher. He wore the inquiring aspect of a
+stranger, and yet his step indicated a previous acquaintance with the
+scene. The sun was flinging his boldest radiance on the rolling ocean,
+as the youth ascended the rugged path which led to the Warlock
+Fisher's hut. He surveyed the door for a moment, as if to be certain
+of the spot; and then, with one stroke of his foot, dashed the door
+inwards. It was damp and tenantless. The stranger set down his bundle,
+kindled a fire, and remained in quiet possession. In a few hours the
+fisher returned. He started involuntarily at the sight of the
+intruder, who sprang to his feet, ready for any alternative.
+
+"What seek you in my hut?" said the Fisher.
+
+"A shelter for the night--the hawks are out."
+
+"Who directed you to me?"
+
+"Old acquaintance!"
+
+"Never saw you with my eyes--shiver me! But never mind, you look like
+the breed--a ready hand and a light heel, ha! All's right--tap your
+keg!"
+
+No sooner said than done. The keg was broached, and a good brown basin
+of double hollands was brimming at the lips of the Warlock Fisher. The
+stranger did himself a similar service, and they grew friendly. The
+fisher could not avoid placing his hand before his eyes once or twice,
+as if wishful to avoid the keen gaze of the stranger, who still plied
+the fire with fuel and his host with hollands. Reserve was at length
+annihilated, and the fisher jocularly said--
+
+"Well, and so we're old acquaintance, ha?"
+
+"Ay," said the young man, with another searching glance. "I was in
+doubt at first, but _now_ I'm certain."
+
+"And what's to be done?" said the Fisher.
+
+"An hour after midnight you must put me on board -----'s boat, she'll
+be abroad. They'll run a light to the masthead, for which you'll
+steer. You're a good hand at the helm in a dark night and a rough
+sea," was the reply.
+
+"How, if I will not?"
+
+"Then--_your life or mine!"_
+
+They sprang to their feet simultaneously, and an immediate encounter
+seemed inevitable.
+
+"Psha!" said the Fisher, sinking on his seat, "what madness this is!
+I was a thought warm with the liquor, and the recollections of past
+times were rising on my memory. Think nothing of it. I heard those
+words once before," and he ground his teeth in rage--"Yes, once--but
+in a shriller voice than your's! Sometimes, too, the bastard rises to
+my view; and then I smite him so--bah! give us another basin-full!" He
+stuck short at vacancy, snatched the beverage from the stranger, and
+drank it off. "An hour after midnight, said ye?"
+
+"Ay--you'll see no bastards then!"
+
+"Worse--may be--worse!" muttered the Fisher, sinking into abstraction,
+and glaring wildly on the flickering embers before him.
+
+"Why, how's this?" said the stranger. "Are your senses playing bo-peep
+with the ghost of some pigeon-livered coast captain, eh? Come, take
+another pull at the keg, to clear your head-lights, and tell us a bit
+of your ditty."
+
+The Fisher took another draught, and proceeded--
+
+"About five-and-twenty years ago, a stranger came to this hut--may the
+curse of God annihilate him!--"
+
+"Amen to that," said the young man.
+
+"He brought with him a boy and a girl, a purse of gold, and ---- the
+arch fiend's tongue, to tempt me! Well, it was to take these children
+out to sea--upset the boat--and lose them!"--
+
+"And you did so!" interrupted the stranger.
+
+"I tried--but listen. On a fine evening, I took them out: the sun sunk
+rapidly, and I knew by the freshening of the breeze, there would be a
+storm. I was not mistaken. It came on even faster than I wished. The
+children were alarmed--the boy, in particular, grew suspicious; he
+insisted that I had an object in going out so far at sun-set. This
+irritated me,--and I rose to smite him, when the fair girl interposed
+her fragile form between us. She screamed for mercy, and clung to my
+arm with the desperation of despair. _I could not shake her off_! The
+boy had the spirit of a man; he seized a piece of spar, and struck me
+on the temples. 'How, you villain!' said he, 'your life or mine!' At
+that moment the boat upset, and we were all adrift. The boy I never
+saw again--a tremendous sea broke between us--but the wretched girl
+clung to me like hate! Damnation!--her dying scream is ringing in my
+ears like madness! I struck her on the forehead, and she sank--all but
+her hand, one little, white hand would not sink! I threw myself on my
+back, and struck at it with both my feet--and then I thought it sunk
+for ever. I made the shore with difficulty, for I was stunned and
+senseless, and the ocean heaved as if it would have washed away the
+mortal world--and the lightnings blazed as if all hell had come to
+light the scene of warfare! I have never since been on the sea at
+midnight, but that hand has followed or preceded me; I have never
+----." Here he sank down from his seat, and rolled himself in agony
+upon the floor.
+
+"Poor wretch!" muttered the stranger, "what hinders now my long-sought
+vengeance? Even with my foot--but thou shalt share my murdered
+sister's grave!"
+
+"A shot is fired--look out for the light!" said the young man.
+
+The Fisher went to the door; but suddenly started back, clasping his
+hands before his face.
+
+"Fire and brimstone! there it is again!" he cried.
+
+"What?" said his companion, looking cooly round him.
+
+"That infernal hand! Lightnings blast it!--but that's impossible," he
+added, in a fearful under-tone, which sounded as if some of the eternal
+rocks around him were adding a response to his imprecations--"_that's_
+impossible! It is a part of them--it has been so for years--darkness
+could not shroud it--distance could not separate it from my burning
+eye-balls!--awake, it was there--asleep, it flickered and blazed before
+me!--it has been my rock a-head through life, and it will herald me to
+hell!" So saying, he pressed his sinewy hands upon his face, and buried
+his head between his knees, till the rock beneath him seemed to shake
+with his uncontrollable agony.
+
+"Again it beckons me!" said he, starting up--"ten thousand fires are
+blazing in my heart--in my brain!--where, _where_ can I be worse?
+Fiend, I defy thee!"
+
+"I see nothing," said his companion, with unalterable composure.
+
+"You see nothing!" thundered the Fisher, with mingling sarcasm and
+fury--"look _there_." He snatched his hand, and pointing steadily into
+the gloom, again murmured, "Look there! look there!"
+
+At that moment the lightning blazed around with appalling brilliancy;
+and the stranger saw a small white hand, pointing tremulously upwards.
+
+"I saw it there," said he, "but it is not _hers_! Infatuated,
+abandoned villain." he continued, with irrepressible energy, "it is
+not my sister's hand--no! it is the incarnate fiend's who tempted you,
+and who now waves you to perdition--begone together!"
+
+He aimed a dreadful blow at the astonished Fisher, who instinctively
+avoided the stroke. Mutually wound up to the highest pitch of anger,
+they grappled each the other's throat, set their feet, and strained
+for the throw, which was inevitably to bury both in the wild waves
+beneath. A faint shriek was heard, and a gibbering, as of many voices,
+came fluttering around them.
+
+"Chatter on!" said the Fisher, "he joins you now!"
+
+"Together--it will be together!" said the stranger, as with a last
+desperate effort he bent his adversary backward from the betling
+cliff. The voice of the Fisher sounded hoarsely in execration, as they
+dashed into the sea together; but what he said was drowned in the
+hoarser murmur of the uplashing surge! The body of the stranger was
+found on the next morning, flung far up on the rocky shore--but that
+of the murderer was gone for ever!
+
+The superstitious peasantry of the neighbourhood still consider the
+spot as haunted; and at midnight, when the waves dash fitfully against
+the perilous crags, and the bleak winds sweep with long and angry moan
+around them, they still hear the gibbering voices of the fiends, and
+the mortal execrations of the Warlock Fisher!--but, after that fearful
+night, no man ever saw THE PHANTOM HAND!--_Literary Magnet_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ARCANA OF SCIENCE.
+
+_Elephants_.
+
+
+All the elephants which were exported from Point de Galle were caught
+in ancient, as well as in modern times, in that tract of country which
+extends from Matura to Tangcolle, in the south of Ceylon, and which,
+from its being famous for its elephants in his days, is described by
+Ptolemy in the map he made of Ceylon sixteen hundred years ago as the
+_elephantum pascua_. The trade in elephants from Ceylon, which used to
+be lucrative, is now completely annihilated, in consequence of all the
+petty Rajahs, Foligars, and other chiefs in the southern peninsula of
+India, who used formerly to purchase Ceylon elephants as a part of
+their state, having lost their sovereignties, and being therefore no
+longer required to keep up any state of this description. A gentleman
+who has a plantation at Candy, it is understood, recently introduced
+the use of elephants, in ploughing, with great advantage.--_Trans.
+Asiatic Society_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_The Fennecous Cerdo_.
+
+[Illustration: Fennecous Cerdo.]
+
+
+This beautiful and extraordinary animal, or at least one of its genus,
+was first made known to European naturalists by Bruce, who received it
+from his dragoman, whilst consul general at Algiers. It is frequently
+met with in the date territories of Africa, where the animals are
+hunted for their skins, which are afterwards sold at Mecca, and then
+exported to India. Bruce kept his animal alive for several months, and
+took a drawing of it in water colours, of the natural size, a copy of
+which, on transparent paper, was clandestinely made by his servant.
+Mr. Brander, into whose hands the _Fennecus_ fell after Bruce left
+Algiers, gave an account of it in "Some Swedish Transactions," but
+refused to let the figure be published, the drawing having been
+unfairly obtained.[3] Bruce asserts that this animal is described in
+many Arabian books, under the name of _El Fennec_, which appellation
+he conceives to be derived from the Greek word for a palm or
+date-tree.
+
+The favourite food of Bruce's Fennec was dates or any sweet fruit; but
+it was also very fond of eggs; when hungry it would eat bread,
+especially with honey or sugar. His attention was immediately
+attracted if a bird flew near him, and he would watch it with an
+eagerness that could hardly be diverted from its object; but he was
+dreadfully afraid of a cat. Bruce never heard that he had any voice.
+During the day he was inclined to sleep, but became restless and
+exceedingly unquiet as night came on. The above Fennec was about ten
+inches long, the tail five inches and a quarter, near an inch of it on
+the tip, black. The colour of the body was dirty white, bordering on
+cream colour; the hair on the belly rather whiter, softer and longer
+than on the rest of the body. His look was sly and wily; he built his
+nest on trees, and did not burrow in the earth.
+
+Naturalists, especially those of France, were long induced to suspect
+the truth of Bruce's description of this animal; but a specimen from
+the interior of Nubia, and preserved in the museum at Frankfort, has
+recently been engraved; and thus the matter nearly settled by the
+animal belonging to the genus _Canis_, and the sub genus _Vulpes_; the
+number of teeth and form, being precisely the same as the fox, which
+it also resembles in its feet, number of toes, and form of tail.
+
+For the above engraving we are indebted to the Appendix to the
+important and interesting Travels of Messrs. Denham and Clapperton. It
+is therein described as generally of a white colour, inclining to
+straw yellow; above, from the occiput to the insertion of the tail it
+is light rufous brown, delicately pencilled with fine black lines,
+from thinly scattered hairs tipped with black; the exterior of the
+thighs is lighter rufous brown; the chin, throat, belly, and interior
+of the thighs and legs are white, or cream colour. The nose is
+pointed, and black at the extremity; above, it is covered with very
+short, whitish hair inclining to rufous, with a small irregular rufous
+spot on each side beneath the eyes; the whiskers are black, rather
+short and scanty; the back of the head is pale rufous brown. The ears
+are very large, erect, and pointed, and covered externally with short,
+pale, rufous brown hair; internally, they are thickly fringed on the
+margin with long grayish white hairs, especially in front; the rest of
+the ears, internally, is bare; externally, they are folded or plaited
+at the base. The tail is very full, cylindrical, of a rufous brown
+colour, and pencilled with fine black lines like the back. The fur is
+very soft and fine; that on the back, from the back to the insertion
+of the tail, as well as that on the upper part of the shoulder before,
+and nearly the whole of the hinder thigh, is formed of tri-coloured
+hairs, the base of which is of a dark lead colour, the middle white,
+and the extremity light rufous brown.
+
+[Footnote 3: We did not know that such unpleasantries as Chancery
+injunctions were part of African law; perhaps sand may not be removed
+from the desert "without leave of the trustees," like scrapings from
+our roads.]
+
+
+_Fossil Turtle_.
+
+A beautiful and perfect fossil of the sea turtle has recently been
+discovered in an extensive stratum of limestone, four fathoms water,
+called the Stone Ridge, about four miles off Harwich harbour. It is
+incrusted in a mass of ferruginous limestone, and weighs 180 lbs.
+
+
+_Apples_.
+
+A gentleman of Staffordshire recommends the preservation of apples for
+winter store, packed in banks or hods of earth like potatoes.--
+_Communication to the Horticultural Society_.
+
+
+_Uses of Seals_.
+
+The benefits which the inhabitants of frigid regions derive from seals,
+are far too numerous and diversified to be particularized, as they
+supply them with almost all the conveniences of life. We, on the
+contrary, so persecute this animal, as to destroy hundreds of thousands
+annually, for the sake of the pure and transparent oil with which the
+seal abounds; 2ndly, for its tanned skin, which is appropriated to
+various purposes by different modes of preparation; and thirdly, we
+pursue it for its close and dense attire. In the common seal, the hair
+of the adult is of one uniform kind, so thickly arranged and imbued
+with oil, as to effectually resist the action of water; while, on the
+contrary, in the antarctic seals the hair is of two kinds: the longest,
+like that of the northern seals; the other, a delicate, soft fur,
+growing between the roots of the former, close to the surface of the
+skin, and not seen externally; and this beautiful fur constitutes an
+article of very increasing importance in commerce; but not only does the
+clothing of the seal vary materially in colour, fineness, and commercial
+situation, in the different species, but not less so in the age of the
+animal. The young of most kinds are usually of a very light colour, or
+entirely white, and are altogether destitute of true hair, having this
+substituted by a long and particularly soft fur.--_Quarterly Journal_.
+
+
+_Method of cutting Glass_.
+
+If a tube, or goblet, or other round glass body is to be cut, a line
+is to be marked with a gun flint having a sharp angle, an agate, a
+diamond, or a file, exactly on the place where it is to be cut. A long
+thread covered with sulphur is then to be passed two or three times
+round the circular line, and to be inflamed and burnt; when the glass
+is well heated some drops of cold water are to be thrown on it, when
+the piece will separate in an exact manner, as if cut with scissors.
+It is by this means that glasses are cut circularly into thin bands,
+which may either be separated from, or repose upon each other, at
+pleasure, in the manner of a spring---_From the French_.
+
+
+_Preservation of Skins_.
+
+A tanner at Tyman, in Hungary, uses with great advantage the
+pyroligueous acid, in preserving skins from putrefaction, and in
+recovering them when attacked. They are deprived of none of their
+useful qualities if covered by means of a brush with the acid, which
+they absorb very readily.--_Quarterly Journal_.
+
+
+_Organic Remains in Sussex_.
+
+A short time since, the entire skeleton of a stag, of very large size,
+was dug up by some labourers, in excavating the bed of the river Ouse,
+near Lewes, in Sussex. The remains were found imbedded in a layer of
+sand, beneath the alluvial blue clay, forming the surface of the
+valley. The horns were in the highest state of preservation, and had
+seven points, like the American deer. The greater part of the skeleton
+was destroyed by the carelessness of the workmen; but a portion,
+including the horns, has been preserved in the collection of Mr.
+Mantell, near Lewes.
+
+
+_Stupendous Lizard_.
+
+Mr. Bullock, in his Travels, (just published) relates that he saw near
+New Orleans, "what are believed to be the remains of a stupendous
+crocodile, and which are likely to prove so, intimating the former
+existence of a lizard at least 150 feet long; for I measured the right
+side of the under jaw, which I found to be 21 feet along the curve;
+and 4 feet 6 inches wide: the others consisted of numerous vertebrae,
+ribs, femoral bones, and toes, all corresponding in size to the jaw;
+there were also some teeth: these, however, were not of proportionate
+magnitude. These remains were discovered, a short time since, in the
+swamp, near Fort Philip; and the other parts of the mighty skeleton,
+are, it is said, in the same part of the swamp."
+
+
+_Digby's Philosophy_.
+
+Sir Kenelm Digby was a mere quack; but he was the son of an earl, and
+related to many noble families. His book on the supposed sympathetic
+powder, which cured wounds at any distance from the sufferer, is the
+standard of his abilities. This powder was Roman vitriol pounded. From
+this wild work, we, however learn, that the English routine of
+agriculture in his time was--1st. year, barley; 2nd. wheat; 3rd.
+beans; 4th. fallow.--_Pinkerton_.
+
+
+_Critics_.
+
+Thought, comprising its enumerated constituents and detailed process,
+is the most perfect and exalted elaboration of the human mind, and
+when protracted is a painful exertion; indeed, the greater portion of
+our species reluctantly submit to the toil and lassitude of
+reflection; but from laziness, or incapacity, and perhaps in some
+instances from diffidence, they suffer themselves to be directed by
+the opinions of others. Hence has arisen the swarm of critics and
+reviewers, those clouds that obscure the fair light that would beam on
+the mind of man, by his individual reflection, and through his
+existence degrade him, by a submission to assumed authority;--a
+voluntary blindness, that excludes him from the observation of nature,
+and through indolence and credulity render his noblest faculties
+feeble, assenting, and lethargic; and delude him to barter the
+inheritance of his intellect for a mess of pottage.--_Dr.
+Haslam.--Lancet_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MUNCHAUSEN RIDE THROUGH EDINBURGH.
+
+
+We were sitting rather negligently on an infernal animal, which, up to
+that day, had seemed quiet as a lamb--kissing our hand to Mrs.
+Davison, then Miss Duncan, and in the blaze of her fame, when a
+Highland regiment, no doubt the forty-second, that had been trudging
+down the Mound, so silently that we never heard them, all at once, and
+without the slightest warning, burst out, with all their bag-pipes,
+into one pibroch! The mare--to do her justice--had been bred in
+England, and ridden, as a charger, by an adjutant to an English
+regiment. She was even fond of music--and delighted to prance behind
+the band--unterrified by cymbals or great drum. She never moved in a
+roar of artillery at reviews--and, had the Castle of Edinburgh--Lord
+bless it--been self-involved, at that moment, in a storm of thunder
+and lightning, round its entire circle of cannon, that mare would not
+so much as have pricked up her ears, whisked her tail, or lifted
+a hoof. But the pibroch was more than horse-flesh and blood could
+endure--and off we two went like a whirlwind. Where we went--that is
+to say, what were the names of the few first streets along which
+we were borne, is a question which, as a man of veracity, we must
+positively decline answering. For some short space of time, lines of
+houses reeled by without a single face at the windows--and these,
+we have since conjectured, might be North and South Hanover street,
+and Queen-street. By and by we surely were in something like a
+square--could it be Charlotte-square?--and round and round it we
+flew--three, four, five, or six times, as horsemen do at the
+Caledonian amphitheatre--for the animal had got blind with terror, and
+kept viciously reasoning in a circle. What a show of faces at all the
+windows then! A shriek still accompanied us as we clattered, and
+thundered, and lightened along; and, unless our ears lied, there were
+occasional fits of stifled laughter, and once or twice a guffaw; for
+there was now a ringing of lost stirrups--and much holding of the
+mane. One complete round was executed by us, first on the shoulder
+beyond the pommel; secondly, on the neck; thirdly, between the ears;
+fourthly, between the forelegs, in a place called the counter, with
+our arms round the jugular veins of the flying phenomenon, and our
+toes in the air. That was, indeed, the crisis of our fever, but we
+made a wonderful recovery back into the saddle--righting like a boat
+capsized in a sudden squall at sea--and once more, with accelerated
+speed, away past the pillared front of St. George's church!
+
+The castle and all its rocks, in peristrephic panorama, then floated
+cloud-like by--and we saw the whole mile-length of Prince's-street
+stretched before us, studded with innumerable coaches, chaises,
+chariots, carts, wagons, drays, gigs, shandrydans, and wheel-barrows,
+through among which we dashed, as if they had been as much
+gingerbread--while men on horseback were seen flinging themselves off,
+and drivers dismounting in all directions, making their escape up
+flights of steps and common stairs--mothers or nurses with broods of
+young children flying hither and thither in distraction, or standing
+on the very crown of the causeway, wringing their hands in despair.
+The wheel-barrows were easily disposed of--nor was there much greater
+difficulty with the gigs and shandrydans. But the hackney-coaches
+stood confoundedly in the way--and a wagon, drawn by four horses, and
+heaped up to the very sky with beer-barrels, like the Tower of Babel
+or Babylon, did indeed give us pause--but ere we had leisure to
+ruminate on the shortness of human life, we broke through between the
+leaders and the wheels with a crash of leathern breeching, dismounted
+collars, riven harness, and tumbling of enormous horses that was
+perilous to hear; when, as Sin and Satan would have it--would you
+believe it?--there, twenty kilts deep at the least, was the same
+accursed Highland regiment, the forty-second, with fixed bayonets, and
+all its pipers in the van, the pibroch yelling, squeaking, squealing,
+grunting, growling, roaring, as if it had only that very instant
+broken out--so, suddenly to the right--about went the bag-pipe-haunted
+mare, and away up the Mound, past the pictures of Irish Giants--Female
+Dwarfs--Albinos--an Elephant endorsed with towers--Tigers and Lions of
+all sorts--and a large wooden building, like a pyramid, in which there
+was the thundering of cannon--for the battle, we rather think, of
+Camperdown was going on--the Bank of Scotland seemed to sink into
+the NorLoch--one gleam through the window of the eyes of the
+Director-General--and to be sure how we did make the street-stalls of
+the Lawn-market spin! The man in St. Giles's steeple was playing his
+one o'clock tune on the bells, heedless in that elevation of our
+career--in less than no time John Knox, preaching from a house
+half-way down the Canongate, gave us the go-by--and down through one
+long wide sprawl of men, women, and children we wheeled past the
+Gothic front, and round the south angle of Holyrood, and across the
+King's-park, where wan and withered sporting debtors held up their
+hands and cried, Hurra--hurra--hurra--without stop or stay, up the
+rocky way that leads to St. Anthony's Well and Chapel--and now it was
+manifest that we were bound for the summit of Arthur's Seat. We hope
+that we were sufficiently thankful that a direction was not taken
+towards Salisbury Crags, where we should have been dashed into many
+million pieces. Free now from even the slightest suburban impediment,
+obstacle, or interruption, we began to eye our gradually rising
+situation in life--and looking over our shoulder, the sight of city
+and sea was indeed magnificent. There in the distance rose North
+Berwick Law--but though we have plenty of time now for description, we
+had scant time then for beholding perhaps the noblest scenery in
+Scotland. Up with us--up with us into the clouds--and just as St.
+Giles's bells ceased to jingle, and both girths broke, we crowned the
+summit, and sat on horseback like king Arthur himself, eight hundred
+feet above the level of the sea!
+
+_Blackwood's Magazine_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Select Biography
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+No. LVIII.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LELAND.
+
+
+John Leland, the father of the English antiquaries, was born in
+London, about the end of the reign of Henry VII. He was a pupil to
+William Lily, the celebrated grammarian--the first head master of St.
+Paul's school; and by the kindness and liberality of a Mr. Myles, he
+was sent to Christ's college. Cambridge. From this university he
+removed to All Souls, Oxford, where he paid particular attention to
+the Greek language. He afterwards went to Paris, where he cultivated
+the acquaintance of the principal scholars of the age, and could
+probably number among his correspondents the illustrious names of
+Buddoeus, Erasmus, the Stephani, Faber, and Turnebus; in this city he
+perfected himself in the knowledge of the Latin and Greek tongues,
+to which he afterwards added that of several modern languages. On
+his return to England he took orders, and was appointed one of the
+chaplains to Henry VIII., who gave him the rectory of Popelay, in the
+marshes of Calais, appointed him his library keeper, and conferred
+on him the title of Royal Antiquary, which no other person in this
+kingdom, before, or after possessed. In this character his majesty
+in 1533 granted him a commission, empowering him to search after
+England's antiquities, and peruse the libraries of all cathedrals,
+abbeys, priories, colleges, &c., as also all the places wherein
+records, writings, and whatever else was lodged that related to
+antiquity. "Before Leland's time," says Hearne, in his preface to the
+_Itinerary_, "all the literary monuments of antiquity were totally
+disregarded; and the students of Germany apprised of this culpable
+indifference, were suffered to enter our libraries unmolested, and to
+cut out of the books deposited there whatever passages they thought
+proper, which they afterwards published as relics of the ancient
+literature of their own country."
+
+In this research Leland was occupied above six years in travelling
+through England, and in visiting all the remains of ancient buildings
+and monuments of every kind. On its completion, he hastened to the
+metropolis, to lay at the feet of his sovereign the result of his
+labours, which he presented to Henry, under the title of a "New Year's
+Gift,"[4] in which he says, "I have so traviled yn your dominions
+booth by the se costes and the midle partes, sparing nother labor nor
+costes, by the space of these vi. yeres paste, that there is almoste
+nother cape, nor bay, haven, creke or peers, river or confluence of
+rivers, breches, watchies, lakes, meres, fenny waters, montagnes,
+valleis, mores, hethes, forestes, chases wooddes, cities, burges,
+castelles, principale manor placis, monasteries, and colleges, but I
+have seene them; and notid yn so doing a hole worlde of thinges very
+memorable."
+
+At the dissolution of the monasteries, Leland made application to
+Secretary Cromwell, to entreat his assistance in getting the MSS. they
+contained sent to the king's library. In 1542 Henry presented him with
+the valuable rectory of Hasely, in Oxfordshire; the year following he
+preferred him to a canonry of King's college, now Christchurch,
+Oxford, and about the same time collated him to a prebend in the
+church of Sarum. As his duties in the church did not require much
+active service, he retired with his collections to his house in
+London, where he sat about digesting them, and preparing the
+publication he had promised to the world; but either his intense
+application, or some other cause, brought upon him a total derangement
+of mind, and after lingering two years in this state, he died on the
+18th of April, 1552.
+
+The writings of Leland are numerous; in his lifetime he published
+several Latin and Greek poems, and some tracts on antiquarian
+subjects. His valuable and voluminous MSS., after passing through many
+hands, came into the Bodleian library, furnishing very valuable
+materials to Stow, Lambard, Camden, Burton, Dugdale, and many other
+antiquaries and historians. Polydore Virgil, who had stolen from them
+pretty freely, had the insolence to abuse Leland's memory--calling him
+"a vain glorious man." From these collections Hall published, in 1709,
+"Commentarii de Scriptoribus Brittanicis." "The Itinerary of John
+Leland, Antiquary," was published by the celebrated Hearne, at Oxford,
+in nine volumes, 8vo., 1710, of which a second edition was printed in
+1745, with considerable improvements and additions. The same editor
+published "Joannis Lelandi Antiquarii de Rebus Brittanicis
+Collectanea." in six volumes, Oxon. 1716, 8vo.
+
+BIOS.
+
+[Footnote 4: This was published by Bale in 1549, 8vo.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE SELECTOR AND LITERARY NOTICES OF _NEW WORKS_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CORAL ISLANDS.
+
+[In a recent Number of the MIRROR we quoted from Mr. Montgomery's
+_Pelican Island_ a beautiful description of the formation of coral
+reefs or rocks; and we are now induced to resume our extracts from
+this soul stirring poem, with the following description of the process
+by which these reefs or rocks become beautiful and picturesque
+islands. Mr. Montgomery's poetical talent is altogether of the highest
+order, or, to use a familiar phrase, his _Pelican Island_ is "a gem of
+the first water." How exquisite is the following picture of creation!]
+
+
+ Here was the infancy of life, the age
+ Of gold in that green isle, itself new-born,
+ And all upon it in the prime of being,
+ Love, hope, and promise, 'twas in miniature
+ A world unsoil'd by sin; a Paradise
+ Where Death had not yet enter'd; Bliss had newly
+ Alighted, and shut close his rainbow wings,
+ To rest at ease, nor dread intruding ill.
+ Plants of superior growth now sprang apace,
+ With moon-like blossoms crown'd, or starry glories;
+ Light flexible shrubs among the greenwood play'd
+ Fantastic freaks,--they crept, they climb'd, they budded,
+ And hung their flowers and berries in the sun;
+ As the breeze taught, they danced, they sung, they twined
+ Their sprays in bowers, or spread the ground with net-work.
+ Through the slow lapse of undivided time,
+ Silently rising from their buried germs,
+ Trees lifted to the skies their stately heads,
+ Tufted with verdure, like depending plumage,
+ O'er stems unknotted, waving to the wind:
+ Of these in graceful form, and simple beauty,
+ The fruitful cocoa and the fragrant palm
+ Excell'd the wilding daughters of the wood,
+ That stretch'd unwieldy their enormous arms,
+ Clad with luxuriant foliage, from the trunk,
+ Like the old eagle, feather'd to the heel;
+ While every fibre, from the lowest root
+ To the last leaf upon the topmost twig,
+ Was held by common sympathy, diffusing
+ Through all the complex frame unconscious life.
+ Such was the locust with its hydra boughs,
+ A hundred heads on one stupendous trunk;
+ And such the mangrove, which, at full-moon flood,
+ Appear'd itself a wood upon the waters,
+ But when the tide left bare its upright roots,
+ A wood on piles suspended in the air;
+ Such too the Indian fig, that built itself
+ Into a sylvan temple, arch'd aloof
+ With airy aisles and living colonnades,
+ Where nations might have worshipp'd God in peace.
+ From year to year their fruits ungather'd fell;
+ Not lost, but quickening where they lay, they struck
+ Root downward, and brake forth on every hand,
+ Till the strong saplings, rank and file, stood up,
+ A mighty army, which o'erran the isle,
+ And changed the wilderness into a forest.
+ All this appear'd accomplish'd in the space
+ Between the morning and the evening star:
+ So, in his third day's work, Jehovah spake,
+ And Earth, an infant, naked as she came
+ Out of the womb of chaos, straight put on
+ Her beautiful attire, and deck'd her robe
+ Of verdure with ten thousand glorious flowers,
+ Exhaling incense; crown'd her mountain-heads
+ With cedars, train'd her vines around their girdles,
+ And pour'd spontaneous harvests at their feet.
+ Nor were those woods without inhabitants
+ Besides the ephemera of earth and air;
+ --Where glid the sunbeams through the latticed boughs,
+ And fell like dew-drops on the spangled ground,
+ To light the diamond-beetle on his way;
+ --Where cheerful openings let the sky look down
+ Into the very heart of solitude,
+ On little garden-pots of social flowers,
+ That crowded from the shades to peep at daylight;
+ --Or where unpermeable foliage made
+ Midnight at noon, and chill, damp horror reign'd
+ O'er dead, fall'n leaves and slimy funguses;
+ --Reptiles were quicken'd into various birth.
+ Loathsome, unsightly, swoln to obscene bulk,
+ Lurk'd the dark toad beneath the infected turf;
+ The slow-worm crawl'd, the light cameleon climb'd,
+ And changed his colour as his pace he changed;
+ The nimble lizard ran from bough to bough,
+ Glancing through light, in shadow disappearing;
+ The scorpion, many-eyed, with sting of fire,
+ Bred there,--the legion-fiend of creeping things;
+ Terribly beautiful, the serpent lay,
+ Wreath'd like a coronet of gold and jewels,
+ Fit for a tyrant's brow; anon he flew
+ Straight as an arrow shot from his own rings,
+ And struck his victim, shrieking ere it went
+ Down his strain'd throat, that open sepulchre.
+ Amphibious monsters haunted the lagoon;
+ The hippopotamus, amidst the flood,
+ Flexile and active as the smallest swimmer;
+ But on the bank, ill balanced and infirm,
+ He grazed the herbage, with huge, head declined,
+ Or lean'd to rest against some ancient tree.
+ The crocodile, the dragon of the waters,
+ In iron panoply, fell as the plague,
+ And merciless as famine, cranch'd his prey,
+ While, from his jaws, with dreadful fangs all serried,
+ The life-blood dyed the waves with deadly streams.
+ The seal and the sea-lion, from the gulf
+ Came forth, and couching with their little ones.
+ Slept on the shelving rocks that girt the shores,
+ Securing prompt retreat from sudden danger;
+ The pregnant turtle, stealing out at eve,
+ With anxious eye, and trembling heart, explored
+ The loneliest coves, and in the loose warm sand
+ Deposited her eggs, which the sun hatch'd:
+ Hence the young brood, that never knew a parent,
+ Unburrow'd and by instinct sought the sea;
+ Nature herself, with her own gentle hand,
+ Dropping them one by one into the flood,
+ And laughing to behold their antic joy,
+ When launch'd in their maternal element.
+ The vision of that brooding world went on;
+ Millions of beings yet more admirable
+ Than all that went before them now appear'd;
+ Flocking from every point of heaven, and filling
+ Eye, ear, and mind, with objects, sounds, emotions
+ Akin to livelier sympathy and love
+ Than reptiles, fishes, insects, could inspire;
+ --Birds, the free tenants of land, air, and ocean,
+ Their forms all symmetry, their motions grace;
+ In plumage delicate and beautiful,
+ Thick without burthen, close as fishes' scales,
+ Or loose as full-blown poppies to the breeze;
+ With wings that might have had a soul within them,
+ They bore their owners by such sweet enchantment;
+ --Birds, small and great, of endless shapes and colours,
+ Here flew and perch'd, there swam and dived at pleasure;
+ Watchful and agile, uttering voices wild
+ And harsh, yet in accordance with the waves
+ Upon the beech, the winds in caverns moaning,
+ Or winds and waves abroad upon the water.
+ Some sought their food among the finny shoals,
+ Swift darting from the clouds, emerging soon
+ With slender captives glittering in their beaks;
+ These in recesses of steep crags constructed
+ Their eyries inaccessible, and train'd
+ Their hardy broods to forage in all weathers;
+ Others, more gorgeously apparell'd, dwelt
+ Among the woods, on Nature's dainties feeding,
+ Herbs, seeds, and roots; or, ever on the wing,
+ Pursuing insects through the boundless air:
+ In hollow trees or thickets these conceal'd
+ Their exquisitely woven nests; where lay
+ Their callow offspring, quiet as the down
+ On their own breasts, till from her search the dam
+ With laden bill return'd, and shared the meal
+ Among the clamorous suppliants, all agape;
+ Then, cowering o'er them with expanded wings,
+ She felt how sweet it is to be a mother.
+ Of these, a few, with melody untaught,
+ Turn'd all the air to music within hearing,
+ Themselves unseen; while bolder quiristers
+ On loftier branches strain'd their clarion-pipes,
+ And made the forest echo to their screams
+ Discordant,--yet there was no discord there,
+ But temper'd harmony: all tones combining,
+ In the rich confluence often thousand tongues,
+ To tell of joy and to inspire it. Who
+ Could hear such concert, and not join in chorus?
+ Not I;--sometimes entranced, I seem'd to float
+ Upon a buoyant sea of sounds: again
+ With curious ear I tried to disentangle
+ The maze of voices, and with eye as nice
+ To single out each minstrel, and pursue
+ His little song through all its labyrinth,
+ Till my soul enter'd into him, and felt
+ Every vibration of his thrilling throat,
+ Pulse of his heart, and flutter of his pinions.
+ Often, as one among the multitude,
+ I sang from very fulness of delight;
+ Now like a winged fisher of the sea,
+ Now a recluse among the woods,--enjoying
+ The bliss of all at once, or each in turn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+RAPIDS OF NIAGARA.
+
+
+The Rapids begin about half a mile above the cataract; and although
+the breadth of the river might at first make them appear of little
+importance, a nearer inspection will convince the stranger of their
+actual size, and the terrific danger of the passage. The inhabitants
+of the neighbourhood regard it as certain death to get once involved
+in them; and that, not merely because all escape from the cataract
+would be hopeless, but because the violent force of the water among
+the rocks in the channel, would instantly dash the bones of a man in
+pieces. Instances are on record of persons being carried down by the
+stream; indeed there was an instance of two men carried over in March
+last; but no one is known to have ever survived. Indeed, it is very
+rare that the bodies are found; as the depth of the gulf below the
+cataract, and the tumultuous agitation of the eddies, whirlpools, and
+counter currents, render it difficult for any thing once sunk to rise
+again; while the general course of the water is so rapid, that it is
+soon hurried far down the stream. The large logs which are brought
+down in great numbers during the spring, bear sufficient testimony to
+these remarks. Wild ducks, geese, &c. are frequently precipitated over
+the cataract, and generally re-appear either dead, or with their legs
+or wings broken. Some say that water-fowl avoid the place when able to
+escape, but that the ice on the shores of the river above often
+prevents them from obtaining food, and that they are carried down from
+mere inability to fly; while others assert that, they are sometimes
+seen voluntarily riding among the rapids, and, after descending
+half-way down the cataract, taking wing, and returning to repeat their
+dangerous amusement.--_American Work_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BRIDAL, CANZONET.
+
+
+ Sir Knight, heed not the clarion's call,
+ From hill, or from valley, or turretted hall;
+ Cease, holy Friar, cease for awhile
+ The anthem that swells through the fretted aisle;
+ Forester bold, to the bugle's sound
+ Listen no longer, though gaily wound,
+ But haste to the bridal, haste away,
+ Where love's rebeck is tuned to a sweeter lay.
+
+ Sir Knight, Sir Knight, no longer twine
+ The laurel-leaf o'er that bold brow of thine;
+ Friar, to-day from thy temples tear
+ The ivy garland that sages wear;
+ To-day, bold Forester, cast aside
+ Thy oak-leaf crown, the woodland's pride,
+ And bind round your brows the myrtle gay,
+ While the rebeck resounds love's sweetest lays.
+
+ Sir Knight, urge not now the gallant steed
+ O'er the plains that to honour and glory lead;
+ Friar, forget thy order's vow,
+ And pace not the gloomy cloisters now.
+ Chase no longer with bow and with spear,
+ Forester bold, the dappled deer,
+ But tread me a measure as light and gay
+ As ever kept lime to the rebeck's lay.
+
+_Neele's Romance of History_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER
+
+"I am but a _Gatherer_ and disposer of other men's stuff."--_Walton_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TRAVELLING.
+
+
+Sterne pitied the man who could travel from Dan to Beersheba, and say
+all "was barren:" however delighted travellers or tourists may be on
+their journey, it is surprising how few details are preserved in their
+memory. This occasioned Dr. Johnson to remark, in his "Tour to the
+Hebrides," how much the lapse even "of a few hours takes from the
+certainty of knowledge, and the distinctness of imagery;" and that
+"those who trust to memory what cannot be safely trusted but to the
+eye, must tell by guess, what a few hours before they had known with
+certainty." We were never more convinced of the importance of these
+observations than after our first visit to the dock-yard, at
+Portsmouth. In collating some little memoranda made on the spot, we
+referred to our party, (_seven_ in number) on our return to the inn,
+for the _extent_ of the dock-yard: not one of them could give a
+correct answer, though all had just heard it detailed and explained
+with accuracy. Dr. Kitchener may well recommend tourists to walk about
+with note-books in their hands! and such inadvertence as the preceding
+almost warrants the oddity of his suggestion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MOTTOES FOR DECANTER LABELS.
+
+
+Arridet PORTus? subeat non causa doloris.
+
+SumebatiS HERI? non dolor est hodie.
+
+Hic liquor est molLIS BONus, aptus ad omnia laeta.
+
+Oppida ne CALCA VALLAta ad praelia, quoerens, Sisonitum capias ecce tibi
+est Volupe.
+
+Dum lucet CLARE Te magis iste trahat.
+
+_Literary Gazette_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MALARIA.
+
+
+Dr. Gregory, father of the late celebrated professor in Edinburgh,
+when a student in a part of Germany where _malaria_ prevailed, from
+being a philosopher and living low, _drinking only water_, was seized
+with intermittent fever, when his jolly companions, who ate and drank
+freely, escaped. If brandy or other stimulants are taken previous to
+exposure to malaria, intermittent fever is generally prevented. Such
+are the opinions of the doctor, and if Dr. Macculloch be right, we
+suggest the establishment of a brandy vault at each angle of the
+parks, that every passenger may prepare himself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LORD HOWE
+
+
+When the late Lord Howe was a captain, a lieutenant, not remarkable
+for courage or presence of mind in dangers (common fame had brought
+some imputation upon his character) ran to the great cabin and
+informed his commander that the ship was on fire near the gun-room.
+Soon after this he returned exclaiming, "You need not be afraid as the
+fire is extinguished." "_Afraid!_" replied Captain H. a little
+nettled, "how does a man _feel_, Sir, when he is afraid? I need not
+ask how he _looks_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BACKGAMMON BOARDS.
+
+
+We frequently find backgammon boards with backs lettered as if they
+were two folio volumes. The origin of it was thus; Eudes, bishop of
+Sully, forbade his clergy to play at chess. As they were resolved not
+to obey the commandment, and yet dared not have a chess-board seen in
+their houses or cloisters, they had them bound and lettered as books,
+and played at night, before they went to bed, instead of reading the
+New Testament or the Lives of the Saints; and the monks called the
+draft or chess-board their _wooden gospels_. They had also drinking
+vessels bound to resemble the breviary, and were found drinking, when
+it was supposed they were at prayer.--_Literary Gazette_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LOVE OF THE COUNTRY.
+
+
+Country people will tell you that they like the country, and detest
+the town, although their enjoyments are of a kind which may be
+obtained in far greater perfection in the latter than in the former.
+The only person I ever knew who was honest in this respect, was a
+gentleman, the possessor of a beautiful seat, in a beautiful country,
+when he avowed his opinion, that there was "no garden like
+Covent-garden, and no flower like a cauliflower."
+
+C.L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+The _Morning Chronicle_, Nov. 20, in noticing the funeral of the late
+Mr. Sale, says, "At a little after three o'clock, the body of the
+lamented gentleman entered the church."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LIMBIRD'S EDITION OF THE BRITISH NOVELIST, Publishing in Monthly
+Parts, price 6d. each.--Each Novel will be complete in itself, and may
+be purchased separately.
+
+_The following Novels are already Published:_
+
+ s. d.
+
+Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield 0 10
+The Mysteries of Udolpho 3 6
+Mackenzie's Man of Feeling 0 6
+Rasselas 0 8
+Paul and Virginia 0 6
+The Old English Baron 0 8
+The Castle of Otranto 0 8
+The Romance of the Forest 1 8
+Almoran and Hamet 0 6
+Elizabeth, or the Exiles of Siberia 0 6
+Nature and Art 0 8
+The Italian 2 0
+A Simple Story 1 4
+The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne 0 6
+Sicilian Romance 1 0
+The Man of the World 1 0
+Zelaco, by Dr. Moore 2 0
+Joseph Andrews 1 6
+Humphry Clinker 1 8
+Edward, by Dr. Moore 2 6
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, London, and Sold by all
+Booksellers and Newsmen_.
+
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+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT,
+AND INSTRUCTION, VOL. 10, ISSUE 286, DECEMBER 8, 1827***
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