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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11460 ***
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. XIV, NO. 406.] SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1829. [PRICE 2d.
+
+
+
+
+VIRGIL'S TOMB.
+
+
+[Illustration: Virgil's Tomb.]
+
+
+This consecrated relic of genius stands on the hill of Posilipo, in the
+environs of Naples. Its recent state is so beautifully described by
+Eustace, that we shall not, like gipsys do stolen children, disfigure it
+to prevent recognition.
+
+Proceeding westward along the Chiaia and keeping towards the beach, says
+Eustace, we came to the quarter called Mergyllina. To ascend the hill of
+Posilipo we turned to the right, and followed a street winding as a
+staircase up the steep, and terminating at a garden gate. Having
+entered, we pursued a path through a vineyard and descending a little,
+came to a small square building, flat-roofed, placed on a sort of
+platform on the brow of a precipice on one side, and on the other
+sheltered by a super-incumbent rock. An aged ilex, spreading from the
+sides of the rock, and bending over the edifice, covers the roof with
+its ever verdant foliage. Numberless shrubs spring around, and
+interwoven with ivy clothe the walls and hang in festoons over the
+precipice. The edifice before us was an ancient tomb--the tomb of
+VIRGIL! We entered; a vaulted cell and two modern windows alone
+presented themselves to view: the poet's name is the only ornament of
+the place. No sarcophagus, no urn, and even no inscription to feed the
+devotion of the classical pilgrim. The epitaph which though not genuine
+is yet ancient, was inscribed by the order of the Duke of Pescolangiano,
+then proprietor of the place, on a marble slab placed in the side of the
+rock opposite the entrance of the tomb, where it still remains. Every
+body is acquainted with it--
+
+
+ Mantua me genuit, Calabri rapuere, tenet nunc Parthenope, cecini
+ pascua, rura, duces.
+
+
+But there are authors who venture to assert, that the tomb of which we
+are now speaking, is not the sepulchre of Virgil. Of this number are the
+classic Addison and the laborious and accurate Cluverius. The authority
+of two such eminent persons, without doubt, carries great weight with
+it, but that weight is upon this occasion considerably lessened by the
+weakness of the arguments on which their opinion is grounded. These
+arguments may be found in Cluverius, and Addison merely expresses his
+opinion without entering into any discussion. They are drawn from a few
+verses of Statius.
+
+In opposition to these arguments, or rather conjectures founded upon the
+vague expressions of a single poet (a poet often censured for his
+obscurity), we have the constant and uninterrupted tradition of the
+country supported by the authority of a numerous host of learned and
+ingenious antiquaries; and upon such grounds we may still continue to
+cherish the conviction, that we have visited the tomb of Virgil, and
+hailed his sacred shade on the spot where his ashes long reposed.
+
+The laurel which was once said to have sprung up at its base, and
+covered it with its luxuriant branches, now flourishes only in the
+verses of youthful bards, or in the descriptions of early travellers;
+myrtle, ivy and ilex, all plants equally agreeable to the genius of the
+place, and the subjects of the poet, now perform the office of the
+long-withered bays, and encircle the tomb with verdure and perfume.
+
+The sepulchre of Virgil, it may be imagined, must have long remained an
+object of interest and veneration, especially as his works had excited
+universal admiration even in his life-time, and were very soon after his
+death put into the hands of children, and made a part of the rudiments
+of early education. Yet Martial declares that it had been neglected in
+his time, and that Silius Italicus alone restored its long forgotten
+honours.
+
+The reader will learn with regret that Virgil's tomb, consecrated as it
+ought to be to genius and meditation, is sometimes converted into the
+retreat of assassins, or the lurking place of Sbirri. Such at least it
+was the last time we visited it, when wandering that way about sun-set
+we found it filled with armed men. We were surprised on both sides, and
+on ours not very agreeably at the unexpected rencounter; so lonely the
+place and so threatening the aspects of these strangers. Their manners
+however were courteous; and on inquiry we were informed that they were
+Sbirri, and then lying in wait for a murderer, who was supposed to
+make that spot his nightly asylum. It would be unjust to accuse the
+Neapolitans of culpable indifference towards this or any other monument
+of antiquity; but it is incumbent on the proprietor or the public, to
+secure them against such profanation. On the whole, few places are in
+themselves more picturesque, and from the recollection inseparably
+interwoven with it, no spot is more interesting than the tomb of Virgil.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LAST CHRISTMAS DAY.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+ "Say, if such blandishments did ever greet
+ Thy charmed soul; hast thou not crav'd to die?
+ Hast not thine immaterial seem'd but air
+ Verging to sigh itself from thee, and share
+ Beatitude? hast thou not watch'd thy breath
+ In meek, faint hope, that soon 'twould sink in death?"
+
+_MS. Poem._
+
+
+Last Christmas Day! my heart leaps with joy at its very memory; it was a
+mental _Noel_, a Christmas of the soul, (if I may thus express myself.)
+That which I am about to relate of it is strictly true, and I do relate
+it because that day is one of the very few in our brief existence which
+form a moral epoch in, and influence subsequent, life. Last Christmas
+Day, I well remember, my spirit revelled in an Eden blessedness--a bliss
+which the unholy world did not, could not, give, and consequently could
+not take away. Reader! I will hope, I will believe, that thou hast
+experienced feelings and emotions, like those high and holy ones of
+which I would endeavour now to preserve a faint transcript. Come then,
+let us unite our ideas, let us speak together, but let us yet mention as
+present, those beatific thoughts and imaginings which are indeed past.
+Let us ever remember and cherish in our heart of hearts those golden
+fore-tastes of future eternity, or (according to Platonism) those
+rapturous reminiscences of past, which prove beyond logical
+demonstration, the existence of some vital principle in man, godlike in
+faculties, in essence immaterial, in duration, immortal! It is Christmas
+Day, a deep, unearthly calm possesses our minds; all passions are
+slumbering, save the beautiful and holy ones of adoring love, mingled
+with overwhelming gratitude towards our maker, and philanthropic love,
+universal benevolence, to man. It is winter, but one of those delicious
+days in which closing our eyes, so that we behold not sad hosts of bare
+stems and branches, we may well deem that summer reigns! And a summer
+indeed reigns in our bosoms! Now nature seems new and fascinating, as it
+did to Adam when he wakened into life. Now, as for the first time, we
+discern with unspeakable emotions, that divine affection as well as
+unlimited power, which actuates and supports creation. Now we comprehend
+that the universe was designed to minister happiness to myriads of
+intelligent beings; but that man, by sin, frustrates the gracious
+intent, and produces misery. Now the glorious golden sun seems in its
+gladdening lustre, like a smile from its creator; a smile beaming
+ineffable love, and joy, and peace. Now the sky, the pale, delicate,
+sapphire sky, the soft, tender, inviting, enfolding, and immeasurable
+sky, appears to image the mercy of its maker. Let us yet gaze upon the
+sky, for it also admonishes us of other delightful things; it is
+silent--it is awful--it is holy; but its silence is beautiful, and with
+wordless eloquence it speaks unto our enraptured bosoms of deep,
+eternal, unimaginable repose! it infuses into our breasts undefinable
+ideas and sensations; it appears to our enchanted imaginations an emblem
+meet of the grand dream of eternity, and our spirits seem on the verge
+of quitting earth, in thrilling contemplations on the islands of that
+infinite abyss, and their immortal inhabitants! We gaze in hope,
+adoration, and rapture on the blue expanse, varied by delicate vapours,
+sailing calmly, wondrously through it; and then occur to our memories
+spontaneously, the exquisite lines translated from a _morceau_, by
+Gluck, (a German poet;) and our hearts respond as each of us sighs:
+
+
+ "There's peace and welcome in yon sea
+ Of endless blue tranquillity.
+ Those clouds are living things!
+ I trace their veins of liquid gold,
+ I see them solemnly unfold
+ Their soft and fleecy wings!
+
+ These be the angels that convey
+ Us weary children of a day
+ Life's tedious nothing o'er,
+ Where neither passions come, nor woes
+ To vex the genius of repose
+ On death's majestic shore!"
+
+
+Then do our delighted eyes wander downward; then doth earth appear a
+glorious, though but a temporary palace, the gift of a gracious God to
+man! then do we feel an unaccountable assurance that angels visit the
+beautiful domain; then that (though viewlessly) they rejoice with, they
+sorrow for, (if angels can sorrow) and they minister unto "the heirs of
+salvation," as they did in the days of old, and as they will do, to the
+end of time. Were we not assured of this blessed fact in the book of
+books, reason would assert, that for a thankless, graceless generation
+alone, earth should not have been formed so divinely fair; but it is
+heavenly, that the immortal servitors of man may even here find records
+of the divinity, and themes for undying thanksgiving. Are we indeed
+visited, watched, and ministered unto, by beatific essences? Oh, reason
+and revelation, both loudly proclaim the fact; those beneficent beings
+may be with us then, when we deem ourselves alone; they may be our
+society in the solitude of our chambers; they may pass us in the breeze,
+and they may wander beside us in our loneliest walks. Such meditations
+are calculated to inspire our bosoms with new life; to brighten all
+nature around us, and to unite us to the invisible world by ties, of the
+existence of which we were never previously sensible; ties, at once so
+sweet and so sacred, that we almost crave the blessing of death, in
+order more surely to strengthen them! Then doth the beauty of "the vale
+of tears" confound us; then doth it infuse into our bosoms such
+unalterable fore-tastes; such mysterious and undefinable sensations of
+the blessedness of "the isles of joy," that our very souls seem to have
+become but one prayer, one fervent, wordless, agonizing prayer, for
+divine repose, and unimaginable blessedness; and then doth the mere
+suggestion of final reprobation amount to insufferable torture! Oh, that
+such heavenly imaginings, such divine intimations of a transcendent
+futurity, were more frequently vouchsafed to us, and were less
+evanescent. They are glimpses of everlasting day, shining on wanderers
+in "the valley of the shadow of death;" they are droppings from the
+overflowing and ineffable cup of mercy; they are presciences of
+eternity, inestimable, unutterable! and the pen that would describe
+indescribable perceptions, droops in shame and sorrow at its own
+imbecility. Such perceptions have visited, do visit us, on this most
+rapturous of Christmas Days? Is it not a golden day? does it not remove
+us for a little space from earth, into the society of the holiest
+sentient beings, and to the beauty of a celestial, surpassing, world?
+Does it not bestow on our souls their long-lost ethereal wings? and do
+not the delighted strangers soar for a little while above the grossest
+realms of matter? Alas! even but for a little while; now do they drop,
+for now flag and droop those angelic pinions which are too humid and
+heavy with that atmosphere, from whence they could not wholly disengage
+themselves; the golden harps of heaven murmur in their entranced ears no
+longer; the smiles of the Sons of Peace fade from their enchanted sight;
+and the clouds of this nether world retain from their enamoured gaze,
+the treasures of infinity!
+
+Perhaps we have enjoyed a very enthusiastic, a very poetical, Christmas
+Day! we pretend not to deny it, though steadfastly believing it was
+neither an anti-Christian, nor an utterly unprofitable one; nay, we even
+venture to hope, that the beatitude of spirit just feebly portrayed was
+not unpleasing in His sight, unto whom, for His gift of immortal life,
+we upon Christmas Day render our peculiar thanksgivings!
+
+M.L.B.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE FALL OF ZARAGOZA.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+ Awake, awake, the trumpet hath sung its lay to the sunny sky,
+ And the glorious shout from Spanish lips gives forth its wild reply.
+ Awake, awake, how the chargers foam, as to battle they dash on,
+ Oh, Zaragoza, on this proud day, must thy walls be lost or won!
+
+ His hand--the hand of the youthful chief was on his flashing sword,
+ And his plume gleam'd white thro' the smoke and flame o'er the lofty
+ city pour'd--
+ And the banners around him darkly swept like the waves of a stormy sea,
+ But Zaragoza, amid this strife, his heart was firm to thee.
+
+ "Away, away, tread her walls to dust!"--the Gallic warriors cried
+ "Defend, my bands, your hearth and home," the youthful chief replied.
+ They caught the sound of this spirit-voice as they stay'd their foes'
+ career,
+ And many a thrilling cry was heard, when the bayonet met the spear
+
+ In vain, ye heroes, do you breathe your latest vows to heaven,
+ In vain is your devoted blood in the cause of Freedom given,
+ For when the morn awakes again, your city shall not be
+ The haunt of maids who warbled deep, their sweetest songs for ye!
+
+ But the story of your hallow'd death shall not remain unsung,
+ Oh, its record shall be glorified by many a minstrel tongue
+ For Freedom's holy light hath touch'd each ruin'd shrine and wall,
+ That sadly speak unto the heart of Zaragoza's fall.
+
+_Deal_.
+
+REGINALD AUGUSTINE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE BANQUETTING HOUSE, WHITEHALL.[1]
+
+
+ [1] For a general description of this magnificent edifice, see
+ MIRROR, No. 247.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Many persons who have visited this chapel may not have noticed or been
+aware of the splendid painted ceiling by Sir Peter Paul Rubens, which
+was executed by him when ambassador at the court of James I. This
+beautiful performance represents the apotheosis of that peaceful
+monarch, he being seated on his throne, and turning towards the deities
+of peace and commerce, having rejected the gods of war and discord. It
+is painted on canvass, and is in excellent preservation; the original
+painter had £3,000. for his labour; it has been retouched more than
+once, and the last time was by Cipriani, who had £2,000. for his
+repairs.
+
+Ralph, in his _Critical Review of Public Buildings_, observes, "that
+this picture is not so generally known as one could wish, but needs only
+to be known to be esteemed according to its merits;" and he further
+adds, "it is but an ill decoration for a place of religious worship, for
+in the first place, its contents are nowise akin to devotion, and in the
+next, the workmanship is so very extraordinary that a man must have
+abundance of zeal or no taste, that can attend to anything besides."
+
+It is almost needless to remark, that it was from a passage broken for
+the occasion through the wall of this building, that the unfortunate
+Charles was conducted by the regicides to his death; this passage still
+remains, and now serves as a doorway to an additional building in
+Scotland Yard: and nearly facing this doorway stood the ingenious Dial,
+engraved and described in No. 400, of the MIRROR. The next important and
+public event connected with this building occurred in 1811, when a very
+different and far more gratifying spectacle took place, being that of
+the ceremony of placing in the chapel, the eagles and other colours
+taken by our gallant troops during the war. There were six standards and
+the like number of regimental colours, which after having been presented
+at the altar were affixed to the places they now occupy. There is a
+singular circumstance attached to the history of one of the eagles which
+may be well introduced in this place; it may be distinguished from the
+others by its having a wreath placed round its neck, the flag itself
+being destroyed. It was the usual custom for the eagles to be attached
+to the staves on which they are borne by a screw, so that in the event
+of any imminent danger, they might be taken off and secured; but
+Napoleon on his presenting this standard to his 8th regiment, observed,
+it was impossible that it should be taken from so brave a body of men
+as they had always proved themselves to be, and desired it might be
+rivetted to the staff, which was accordingly done; and probably had it
+not been for this order the eagle might have escaped our valiant 87th,
+by whom it was taken on the heights of Barossa.
+
+On Maundy Thursday another gratifying ceremony takes place, _viz_, the
+distribution of the Maundy Money to as many poor people as the years
+of his majesty's age. This money consists of the smaller silver coins,
+being each in value from 1_d_. to 4_d_.; these are enclosed in a small,
+white kid bag, which is again enveloped in another of crimson leather.
+
+A.P.D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RETROSPECTIVE GLEANINGS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TOUCHING FOR THE KING'S EVIL.
+
+(_To the Editor of the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Having read an interesting paper from your ingenious correspondent
+_P.T.W._ in your number of the 14th of November, respecting "Touching
+for the Cure of the King's Evil," it occurred to me that some farther
+information relative to the original of that "hereditary miracle," as
+Mr. Collier is pleased to term it, might not be uninteresting to some
+of your readers: I therefore send you the following:--
+
+Stowe, in his _Annals_, accounts for the origin of touching for the
+evil, in the following manner:--"A young woman who was afflicted with
+this disorder in a very alarming manner, and to a most disgusting
+degree, feeling uneasiness and pain consequent upon it in her sleep,
+dreamt that she should be cured by the simple operation of having the
+part washed with the king's hand. Application was consequently made
+to Edward, by her friends, who very humanely consented to perform
+the unpleasant request. A basin of water was brought, with which he
+carefully softened the humours, till they broke, and the contents
+discharged; the sign of the cross wound up the charm; and the female
+retired, with the assurance of his protection during the remainder
+of the cure, which was effected within a week." This is somewhat
+differently related in _Ailred's History of the Life and Miracles of
+Edward the Confessor_, an extract from which may be found in a note
+to the first volume of Rapin's _History of England_.
+
+The following curious advertisement was issued by the order of King
+Charles II. for healing the people, on the 18th of May, 1664.
+
+"Notice.
+
+"His sacred majesty having declared it to be his royal will and purpose
+to continue the healing of his people for the evil during the month of
+May, and then give over till Michaelmas next; I am commanded to give
+notice thereof, that the people may not come up to the town in the
+interim, and lose their labour."
+
+Thomas Mousewell was tried for high treason in 1684, for having spoken
+with contempt of King Charles's pretensions to cure the scrofula.
+
+In a manuscript account of the Restoration, written by Thomas Gumble,
+D.D. Chaplain to General Monck, in the year 1662, is the following
+description of the ceremony:--" There was a great chair placed for the
+king, in a place somewhat distant from the people. As soon as the king
+was sate, one of the clerks of the closet stood at the right side of his
+chair, holding on his arm as many gold angels (every one tied in a
+ribbon of white silk) as there were sick to be touched, which were in
+number, forty-eight. Dr. Brown, the chaplain of the Princess of Aurange,
+performed the place of the king's chaplain. The chaplain then read the
+sixteenth chapter of St. Mark, from the fourteenth verse to the end; and
+then the chirurgeon presented the sick, (having examined them to see
+that it was the evil) after three reverences on their knees, before the
+king, who, whilst the chaplain said these words in that gospel: 'They
+shall lay their hands upon the sick, and they shall be healed,' layed
+his hands on the two cheeks of the sick, saying, 'I touch thee, but
+_God_ healeth thee!' The chaplain then began another gospel; and whilst
+these words were pronounced out of the first chapter of St. John: 'This
+was the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world,'
+his majesty took the pieces of gold, and put them on the necks of the
+diseased, the chaplain repeating the words as many times as there were
+persons to receive them, concluding with a prayer, 'That Almighty God
+would bless the ceremony;' then, after the reverences as before, they
+retired. The Earls of Middlesex and St. Albans held the bason, ewer, and
+towel, whilst the king washed."
+
+Shakspeare, in his _Macbeth_, thus describes this royal, but now
+exploded gift:--
+
+
+ "Strangely visited people,
+ All swollen and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye,
+ The mere despair of surgery, he cures--
+ Hanging a golden stamp about their necks,
+ Put on with holy prayers."
+
+
+In Nicholls's _Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century_, vol. ii.
+p. 495, 505, many curious particulars relating to this ceremony are to
+be found.
+
+As the custom has now for some time been discontinued, and the credulity
+of those who believed in its efficacy, laughed at, I hope it will not be
+long ere that disgusting custom of allowing persons (of whom women in
+general form by far the greater number) afflicted with the king's evil,
+and different other disorders, to come on the scaffold immediately after
+the execution of a criminal, for the purpose of touching the part
+affected, with the hand of the _but just dead_ malefactor, will be put a
+stop to; it being the very height of absurdity to imagine that it can be
+productive of any good effect; but on the contrary, tending to divest
+the minds of the surrounding multitude of that awe with which the
+ignominious spectacle should impress them.
+
+[Greek: S.G.]
+
+In the trifling paper I sent you respecting "Cats," which you deemed
+worthy of insertion in No. 398, you have it "by some merchants from the
+Island of Cyprus, who came hither for _fur_," it should be _tin_--Fur
+being an article of importation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BOOKSELLERS' MARKS OR SIGNS.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Many books, especially those printed in the 17th century, have no other
+designation either of printer, bookseller, or even city, but merely
+marks or signs. The _anchor_ is the mark of Raphelengius, at Leyden; and
+the same with a _dolphin_ twisted round it, of the Mantuii, at Venice
+and Rome; the _Arion_ denotes a book printed by Oporrinus, at Basil; the
+_caduceus_, or _pegasus_, by the Wechelliuses, at Paris and Frankfort;
+the _cranes_, by Cramoisy; the _compass_, by Plantin, at Antwerp; the
+_fountain_, by Vascosan, at Paris; the _sphere_ in a balance, by Janson,
+or Blaew, at Amsterdam; the _lily_, by the Juntas, at Venice, Florence,
+Lyons, and Rome; the _mulberry-tree_, by Morel, at Paris; the
+_olive-tree_, by the Stephenses, at Paris and Geneva, and the Elzevirs,
+at Amsterdam and Leyden; the _bird between two serpents_, by the
+Frobeniuses, at Basil; the _truth_, by the Commelins, at Heidelberg and
+Paris; the _Saturn_, by Collinaeus; the _printing press_, by Badius
+Ascensius, &c.
+
+P.T.W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NATURALIST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DIFFERENT COLOURS OF THE EGGS OF BIRDS.
+
+
+It is a remarkable fact in the economy of nature, that of those birds
+whose nests are the most liable to discovery, and whose eggs are most
+exposed to observation from the form of the nests, the eggs are of that
+colour which is the least different from the surrounding objects; whilst
+those birds whose eggs are of a bright and positive colour, hide their
+nests in the hollows of trees, or never quit them, excepting in the
+night, or sit immediately that they have laid one or two eggs. It is
+also to be observed that of those species which build an exposed nest,
+and the females of which alone perform the duty of incubation, the
+colour of the female is much less bright than that of the male, and more
+in harmony with the objects by which she is surrounded during the period
+in which she sits upon her eggs. It would seem, therefore, that those
+birds which lay a brightly-coloured egg have the instinct to make a
+close nest, or to place it in the least exposed situations; while those
+which lay a sober-coloured egg are less solicitous to conceal it from
+the notice of their enemies. M. Gloger, a German naturalist, has paid
+great attention to this curious circumstance, and has very recently
+published an elaborate memoir, in a work printed at Berlin, in which he
+notices the habits of all the species of birds indigenous to Germany, in
+confirmation of the theory. Our limits will not allow us to notice the
+particular species which he enumerates; but it may be sufficient to
+excite attention to this subject, to mention, that the birds which lay
+an egg perfectly white (the most attractive of colours) make their nests
+in holes of the earth, and cavities of trees, such as the kingfisher and
+the woodpecker, or construct them with a very narrow opening, as the
+domestic swallow; that the same coloured egg is found amongst the birds
+which scarcely quit their nests in the day, as hawks and owls; and that
+such birds as doves, which only lay one or two eggs, and sit immediately
+after, have their eggs white. The bright blue or bright green egg
+belongs to birds which make their nests in holes, as the starling, or
+construct them of green moss, or place them in the midst of grass, but
+always well covered. The eggs of many gallinaceous birds, that make
+their nests carelessly in the grass, are of a pale and less decided
+green, such as those of the partridge and pheasant. Of the
+mixed-coloured eggs, those of which white forms the ground belong to
+birds that make very close nests. Speckled eggs, with a dark or dirty
+ground, belong to the largest number of species. Almost all the song
+birds lay such eggs; and building open nests, they almost invariably
+line the inside of them with materials of a harmonious colour with the
+eggs, so that no evident contrast is presented which would lead to their
+destruction.--_Companion to the Almanac._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EFFECTS OF SEA AIR.
+
+
+Those who frequent the sea-coast are not long in discovering that their
+best dyed black hats become of a rusty brown; and similar effects are
+produced on some other colours. The brown is, in fact, _rust_. Most, if
+not all, the usual black colours have iron for a basis, the black oxide
+of which is developed by galls, logwood, or other substances containing
+gallic acid. Now the sea-air contains a proportion of the muriates over
+which it is wafted; and these coming in contact with any thing dyed
+black, part with their hydrochloric (_muriatic_) acid, and form brown
+hydrochlorate of iron, or contribute to form the brown or red oxide,
+called rust. The gallic acid, indeed, from its superior affinity, has
+the strongest hold of the iron; but the incessant action of the sea-air,
+loaded with muriates, partially overcomes this, in the same way as any
+acid, even of inferior affinity to the gallic, when put upon black
+stuff, will turn it brown.--_Ibid._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE DUGONG, THE MERMAID OF EARLY WRITERS.
+
+
+Of all the cetacea, that which approaches the nearest in form to man is
+undoubtedly the dugong, which, when its head and breast are raised above
+the water, and its pectoral fins, resembling hands, are visible, might
+easily be taken by superstitious seamen for a semi-human
+being.--_Edinburgh Journal._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SPIDERS.
+
+
+Live and grow without food. Out of fifty spiders produced on the last
+day of August, and which were kept entirely without food, three lived to
+the 8th of February following, and even visibly increased in bulk. Was
+it from the effluvia arising from the dead bodies of their companions
+that they lived so long? Other spiders were kept in glass vessels
+without food, from the 15th of July till the end of January. During that
+time they cast their skins more than once, as if they had been well
+fed.--_Redi, Generat. Insect._
+
+Spiders are excellent barometers: if the ends of their webs are found
+branching out to any length, it is a sure sign of favourable weather:
+if, on the contrary, they are found short, and the spider does not
+attend to repairing it properly, bad weather may be expected.--_Times._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SWARMING OF BEES.
+
+
+The ingenious President of the Horticultural Society, Mr. T.A. Knight,
+has been led from repeated observation to infer, that, in the swarming
+of bees, not a single labourer emigrates without previously inspecting
+its proposed future habitation, as well as the temporary stations of
+rest where their numbers collect soon after swarming.--_Philosophical
+Magazine._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE CHAMELEON'S ANTIPATHY TO BLACK.
+
+
+Whatever may be the cause, the fact seems to be certain, that the
+chameleon has an antipathy to things of a black colour. One, which
+Forbes kept, uniformly avoided a black board which was hung up in the
+chamber; and, what is most remarkable, when it was forcibly brought
+before the black board, it trembled violently, and assumed a black
+colour.--_Oriental Mem_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+RULES FOR THE WEATHER.
+
+
+A wet summer is always followed by a frosty winter; but it happens
+occasionally that the cold extends no farther. Two remarkable instances
+of this occurred in 1807-8 and 1813-14. With these exceptions, every
+frosty winter has been followed by a cold summer.
+
+The true cause of cold, or rather the direct cause, is to be found in
+the winter excess of west wind, every winter with excess of west wind
+being followed by a cold summer; and if there is no cold before, or
+during a first excess, then a second excess of west wind in winter
+occasions a still colder summer than the first. It also appears, by
+repeated experience, that cold does not extend to more than two years at
+a time.
+
+Again, if the winter excess of east wind be great, in the first
+instance, the winters will be mild, and followed by mild summers; while
+the summer excess of east wind is itself, in the first instance, always
+mild; but uniformly followed by cold winters and cold summers, which
+continue, more or less, for one or two years, according to
+circumstances.--_Mackenzie, Syst. of the Weather_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PERIODICAL LITERATURE.
+
+
+Periodical Literature--how sweet is the name! 'Tis a type of many of the
+most beautiful things and events in nature; or say, rather, that _they_
+are types of _it_--both the flowers and the stars. As to flowers, they
+are the prettiest periodicals ever published in folio--the leaves are
+wire-wove and hot-pressed by Nature's self; their circulation is wide
+over all the land; from castle to cottage they are regularly taken in;
+as old age bends over them, his youth is renewed; and you see childhood
+poring upon them, prest close to its very bosom. Some of them are
+ephemeral, and their contents are exhaled between the rising and the
+setting sun. Once a-week others break through their green, pink, or
+crimson cover; and how delightful, on the seventh day, smiles in the
+sunshine the Sabbath flower--the only Sunday publication perused without
+blame by the most religious--even before morning prayer. Each month,
+indeed, throughout the whole year, has its own flower-periodical. Some
+are annual, some biennial, some triennial, and there are perennials that
+seem to live for ever--and yet are still periodical--though our love
+will not allow us to know when they die, and phoenix-like re-appear from
+their own ashes. So much for flowers--typifying or typified;--leaves
+emblematical of pages--buds of binding dew-veils of covers--and the
+wafting away of bloom and fragrance like the dissemination of fine
+feelings, bright fancies, and winged thoughts!
+
+The flowers are the periodicals of the earth--the stars are those of
+heaven. With what unfailing regularity do the Numbers issue forth!
+Hesperus and Lucifer! ye are one concern! The pole-star is studied by
+all nations. How beautiful the poetry of the moon! On what subject does
+not the sun throw light! No fear of hurting your eyes by reading that
+fine, clear, large type on that softened page. Lo! as you turn over, one
+blue, another yellow, and another green, all, all alike delightful to
+the pupil, and dear to him as the very apple of his eye! Yes, the great
+Periodical Press of heaven is unceasingly at work--night and day; and
+though even it has been taxed, and its emanations confined, still their
+circulation is incalculable; nor have we yet heard that Ministers intend
+instituting any prosecution against it. It is yet Free, the only free
+Power all over the world. 'Tis indeed like the air we breathe--if we
+have it not, we die!
+
+Look, then, at all our paper Periodicals with pleasure, for sake of the
+flowers and the stars. Suppose them all extinct, and life would be like
+a flowerless earth, a starless heaven. We should soon forget the seasons
+themselves--the days of the week--and the weeks of the month--and the
+months of the year--and the years of the century--and the centuries of
+all Time--and all Time itself flowing away on into eternity. The
+Periodicals of external nature would soon all lose their meaning, were
+there no longer any Periodicals of the soul. These are the lights and
+shadows of life, merrily dancing or gravely stealing over the dial;
+remembrancers of the past--teachers of the present--prophets of the
+future hours. Were they all dead, spring would in vain renew her
+promise--wearisome would be the long, long, interminable
+summer-days--the fruits of autumn would taste fushionless--and the
+winter's ingle blink mournfully round the hearth. What are the blessed
+Seasons themselves, in nature and in Thomson, but Periodicals of a
+larger growth? They are the parents, or publishers, or editors, of all
+the others--principal contributors--nay, subscribers too--and may their
+pretty family live for ever, still dying, yet ever renewed, and on the
+increase every year. We should suspect him of a bad, black heart, who
+loved not the Periodical Literature of earth and sky--who would weep not
+to see one of its flowers wither--one of its stars fall--one beauty to
+die on its humble bed--one glory to drop from its lofty sphere. Let them
+bloom and burn on--flowers in which there is no poison, stars in which
+there is no disease--whose blossoms are all sweet, and whose rays are
+all sanative--both alike steeped in dew, and both, to the fine ear of
+nature's worshipper, bathed in music.
+
+Only look at Maga! One hundred and forty-eight months old! and yet
+lovely as maiden between frock and gown--even as sweet sixteen! Not a
+wrinkle on cheek or forehead! No crow-foot has touched her eyes--
+
+
+ "Her eye's blue languish, and her golden hair!"
+
+
+Like an antelope in the wilderness--or swan on the river--or eagle in
+the sky. Dream that she is dead, and oh! what a world! Yet die she must
+some day--so must the moon and stars. Meanwhile there is a blessing in
+prayers--and hark! how the nations cry, "Oh! Maga, live for ever!"
+
+We often pity our poor ancestors. How they contrived to make the ends
+meet, surpasses our conjectural powers. What a weary waste must have
+seemed expanding before their eyes, between morning and night! Don't
+tell us that the human female never longs for other pastime than
+
+
+ "To suckle fools and chronicle small beer."
+
+
+True, ladies sighed not then for periodicals--but there, in the depths
+of their ignorance, lay their utter wretchedness. What! keep pickling
+and preserving during the whole mortal life of an immortal being! Except
+when at jelly, everlastingly at jam! The soul sickens at the monotonous
+sweetness of such a wersh existence. True that many sat all life-long at
+needlework; but is not that a very sew-sew sort of life? Then oh! the
+miserable males! We speak of times after the invention, it is true, of
+printing--but who read what were called books then? Books! no more like
+our periodicals, than dry, rotten, worm-eaten, fungous logs are like
+green living leafy trees, laden with dews, bees, and birds, in the
+musical sunshine. What could males do then but yawn, sleep, snore,
+guzzle, guttle, and drink till they grew dead and got buried?
+Fox-hunting won't always do--and often it is not to be had; who can be
+happy with his gun through good report and bad report in an a' day's
+rain? Small amusement in fishing in muddy water; palls upon the sense
+quarrelling with neighbours on points of etiquette and the disputed
+property of hedgerow trees; a fever in the family ceases to raise the
+pulse of any inmate, except the patient; death itself is no relief to
+the dulness; a funeral is little better; the yawn of the grave seems a
+sort of unhallowed mockery; the scutcheon hung out on the front of the
+old dismal hall, is like a sign on a deserted Spittal; along with sables
+is worn a suitable stupidity by all the sad survivors.--And such, before
+the era of Periodicals, such was the life in--merry England. Oh!
+dear!--oh! dear me!
+
+We shall not enter into any historical details--for this is not a
+Monologue for the Quarterly--but we simply assert, that in the times we
+allude to (don't mention dates) there was little or no reading in
+England. There was neither the Reading Fly nor the Reading Public. What
+could this be owing to, but the non-existence of Periodicals? What
+elderly-young lady could be expected to turn from house affairs, for
+example, to Spenser's Fairy Queen? It is a long, long, long poem, that
+Fairy Queen of Spenser's; nobody, of course, ever dreamt of getting
+through it; but though you may have given up all hope of getting through
+a poem or a wood, you expect to be able to find your way back again to
+the spot where you unluckily got in; not so, however, with the Fairy
+Queen. Beautiful it is indeed, most exquisitely and unapproachably
+beautiful in many passages, especially about ladies and ladies' love
+more than celestial, for Venus loses in comparison her lustre in the
+sky; but still people were afraid to get into it then as now; and
+"heavenly Una, with her milk-white lamb," lay buried in dust. As
+to Shakspeare, we cannot find many traces of him in the domestic
+occupations of the English gentry during the times alluded to; nor do we
+believe that the character of Hamlet was at all relished in their halls,
+though perhaps an occasional squire chuckled at the humours of Sir John
+Falstaff. We have Mr. Wordsworth's authority for believing that Paradise
+Lost was a dead letter, and John Milton virtually anonymous. We need say
+no more. Books like these, huge heavy vols. lay with other lumber in the
+garrets and libraries. As yet, Periodical Literature was not; and the
+art of printing seems long to have preceded the art of reading. It did
+not occur to those generations that books were intended to be read by
+people in general, but only by the select few. Whereas now, reading is
+not only one of the luxuries, but absolutely one of the necessaries of
+life, and we now no more think of going without our book than without
+our breakfast; lunch consists now of veal-pies and Venetian
+Bracelets--we still dine on Roast-beef, but with it, instead of
+Yorkshire pudding, a Scotch novel--Thomas Campbell and Thomas Moore
+sweeten tea for us--and in "Course of Time" we sup on a Welsh rabbit
+and a Religious Poem.
+
+We have not time--how can we?--to trace the history of the great
+revolution. But a great revolution there has been, from nobody's reading
+anything, to every body's reading all things; and perhaps it began with
+that good old proser Richardson, the father of Pamela, Clarissa, and
+Sir Charles Grandison. He seems to have been a sort of idiot, who had
+a strange insight into some parts of human nature, and a tolerable
+acquaintance with most parts of speech. He set the public a-reading, and
+Fielding and Smollett shoved her on--till the Minerva Press took her in
+hand--and then--the Periodicals. But such Periodicals! The Gentleman's
+Magazine--God bless it then, now, and for ever!--the Monthly Review,
+the Critical and the British Critic! The age had been for some years
+literary, and was now fast becoming periodical. Magazines multiplied.
+Arose in glory the Edinburgh, and then the Quarterly Review--Maga,
+like a new sun, looked out from heaven--from her golden urn a hundred
+satellites drew light--and last of all, "the Planetary Five," the
+Annuals, hung their lamps on high; other similar luminous bodies emerged
+from the clouds, till the whole circumference was bespangled, and
+astronomy became the favourite study with all ranks of people, from the
+King upon the throne to the meanest of his subjects. Now, will any one
+presume to deny, that this has been a great change to the better, and
+that there is now something worth living for in the world? Look at our
+literature now, and it is all periodical together. A thousand daily,
+thrice-a-week, twice-a week, weekly newspapers, a hundred monthlies,
+fifty quarterlies, and twenty-five annuals! No mouth looks up now and is
+not fed; on the contrary, we are in danger of being crammed; an empty
+head is as rare as an empty stomach; the whole day is one meal, one
+physical, moral, and intellectual feast; the Public goes to bed with a
+Periodical in her hand, and falls asleep with it beneath her pillow.
+
+What blockhead thinks now of reading Milton, or Pope, or Gray? Paradise
+Lost is lost; it has gone to the devil. Pope's Epistles are returned to
+the dead-letter office; the age is too loyal for "ruin seize thee,
+ruthless king," and the oldest inhabitant has forgotten "the curfew
+tolls."--_Blackwood's Magazine._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE SELECTOR, AND LITERARY NOTICES OF _NEW WORKS._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DR. LARDNER'S CYCLOPAEDIA.
+
+
+_History of Scotland. By Sir Walter Scott, Bart._ Vol. I.
+
+The rapid and sketchy page just quoted from _Blackwood's Magazine_ will
+illustrate the high ground which periodical literature is daily
+attaining in this country. Of this ascendancy, the volume before us is
+indeed a fine specimen, and one of which we have reason to entertain a
+national pride. We know it to be a common practice with publishers on
+the continent to produce long works volume by volume, so that Dr.
+Lardner's plan is by no means novel; but we should also bear in mind
+that, compared with our family and cabinet libraries, the majority of
+similar foreign works are mere flimsy productions; and the _Encyclopedie
+Methodique_, published in monthly volumes, in Paris, both in quantity
+and execution, will not reach our literary standards of 1829. As Dr.
+Lardner's plan is well known, it need not here be repeated; neither need
+we remark upon the high qualifications of Sir Walter Scott, as an
+historian of Scotland. An extract shall speak for itself; and perhaps we
+cannot do better than select one of the battle-pieces, which has all the
+vividness of the finest historical painting: say
+
+BANNOCKBURN.
+
+"Robert Bruce summoned the array of his kingdom to rendezvous in the
+Tor-wood, about four miles from Stirling, and by degrees prepared the
+field of battle which he had selected for the contest. It was a space of
+ground then called the New Park--perhaps reserved for the chase, since
+Stirling was frequently a royal residence. This ground was partly open,
+partly encumbered with trees, in groups or separate. It was occupied by
+the Scottish line of battle, extending from south to north, and fronting
+to the east. In this position, Bruce's left flank and rear might have
+been exposed to a sally from the castle of Stirling; but Mowbray
+the governor's faith was beyond suspicion, and the king was not in
+apprehension that he would violate the tenour of the treaty, by which
+he was bound to remain in passive expectation of his fate. The direct
+approach to the Scottish front was protected in a great measure by a
+morass called the New-miln Bog. A brook, called Bannockburn, running to
+the eastward, between rocky and precipitous banks, effectually covered
+the Scottish right wing, which rested upon it, and was totally
+inaccessible. Their left flank was apparently bare, but was, in fact,
+formidably protected in front by a peculiar kind of field-works. As
+the ground in that part of the field was adapted for the manoeuvres of
+cavalry Bruce caused many rows of pits, three feet deep, to be dug in
+it, so close together, as to suggest the appearance of a honeycomb, with
+its ranges of cells. In these pits sharp stakes were strongly pitched,
+and the apertures covered with sod so carefully, as that the condition
+of the ground might escape observation. Calthrops, or spikes contrived
+to lame the horses, were also scattered in different directions.
+
+"Having led his troops into the field of combat, on the tidings of the
+English approach, the 23d of June, 1314, the King of Scotland ordered
+his soldiers to arm themselves, and making proclamation that those who
+were not prepared to conquer or die with their sovereign were at liberty
+to depart, he was answered by a cheerful and general expression of their
+determination to take their fate with him. The King proceeded to draw
+up the army in the following order: Three oblong columns or masses of
+infantry, armed with lances, arranged on the same front, with intervals
+betwixt them formed his first line. Of these Edward Bruce had the
+guidance of the right wing, James Douglas and Walter, the Steward of
+Scotland, of the left, and Thomas Randolph of the central division.
+These three commanders had their orders to permit no English troops to
+pass their front, in order to gain Stirling. The second line, forming
+one column or mass, consisted of the men of the isles, under Bruce's
+faithful friend and ally, the insular prince Angus, his own men of
+Carrick, and those of Argyle and Cantire. With these the king posted
+himself in order to carry support and assistance wherever it might be
+required. With himself also he kept in the rear a select body of horse,
+the greater part of whom he designed for executing a particular service.
+The followers of the camp were dismissed with the baggage, to station
+themselves behind an eminence to the rear of the Scottish army, still
+called the Gillies' (that is, the servants') hill....
+
+"On the morning of St. Barnaby, called the Bright, being the 24th of
+June, 1314, Edward advanced in full form to the attack of the Scots,
+whom he found in their position of the preceding evening. The Vanguard
+of the English, consisting of the archers and bill-men, or lancers,
+comprehending almost all the infantry of the army, advanced, under the
+command of the Earls of Gloucester and Hereford, who also had a fine
+body of men at arms to support their column. All the remainder of the
+English troops, consisting of nine battles, or separate divisions, were
+so straitened by the narrowness of the ground, that, to the eye of the
+Scots, they seemed to form one very large body, gleaming with flashes of
+armour, and dark with the number of banners which floated over them.
+Edward himself commanded this tremendous array, and, in order to guard
+his person, was attended by four hundred chosen men at arms. Immediately
+around the King waited Sir Aymer de Valence, that Earl of Pembroke who
+defeated Bruce at Methven Wood, but was now to see a very different day;
+Sir Giles de Argentine, a Knight of St. John of Jerusalem, who was
+accounted, for his deeds in Palestine and elsewhere, one of the best
+Knights that lived; and Sir Ingram Umfraville, an Anglicised
+Scottishman, also famed for his skill in arms.
+
+"As the Scottish saw the immense display of their enemies rolling
+towards them like a surging ocean, they were called on to join in an
+appeal to Heaven against the strength of human foes.--Maurice, the Abbot
+of Inchaffray, bare-headed and bare-footed, walked along the Scottish
+line, and conferred his benediction on the soldiers, who knelt to
+receive it, and to worship the power in whose name it was bestowed.
+
+"During this time the King of England was questioning Umfraville
+about the purpose of his opponents. "Will they," said Edward, "abide
+battle?"--"They assuredly will," replied Umfraville; "and to engage them
+with advantage, your Highness were best order a seeming retreat, and
+draw them out of their strong ground." Edward rejected this counsel,
+and observing the Scottish soldiers kneel down, joyfully exclaimed,
+"They crave mercy."--"It is from Heaven, not from your Highness,"
+answered Umfraville: "on that field they will win or die." The King
+then commanded the charge to be sounded, and the attack to take place.
+
+"The Earls of Gloucester and Hereford charged the Scots left wing, under
+Edward Bruce, with their men at arms; but some rivalry between these two
+great Lords induced them to hurry to the charge with more of emulation
+than of discretion, and arriving at the shock disordered and out of
+breath, they were unable to force the deep ranks of the spearmen; many
+horses were thrown down, and their masters left at the mercy of the
+enemy. The other three divisions of the Scottish army attacked the mass
+of the English infantry, who resisted courageously. The English archers,
+as at the battle of Falkirk, now began to show their formidable skill,
+at the expense of the Scottish spearmen; but for this Bruce was
+prepared. He commanded Sir Robert Keith, the Marshal of Scotland, with
+those four hundred men at arms whom he had kept in reserve for the
+purpose, to make a circuit, and charge the English bowmen in the flank.
+This was done with a celerity and precision which dispersed the whole
+archery, who, having neither stakes nor other barrier to keep off the
+horse, nor long weapons to repel them, were cut down at pleasure, and
+almost without resistance.
+
+"The battle continued to rage, but with disadvantage to the English.
+The Scottish archers had now an opportunity of galling their infantry
+without opposition; and it would appear that King Edward could find no
+means of bringing any part of his numerous centre or rear-guard to the
+support of those in the front, who were engaged at disadvantage.
+
+"Bruce, seeing the confusion thicken, now placed himself at the head of
+the reserve, and addressing Angus of the Isles in the words, "My hope is
+constant in thee," rushed into the engagement followed by all the troops
+he had hitherto kept in reserve. The effect of such an effort, reserved
+for a favourable moment, failed not to be decisive. Those of the English
+who had been staggered were now constrained to retreat; those who were
+already in retreat took to actual flight. At this critical moment, the
+camp-followers of the Scottish army, seized with curiosity to see how
+the day went, or perhaps desirous to have a share of the plunder,
+suddenly showed themselves on the ridge of the Gillies'-hill, in the
+rear of the Scottish line of battle; and as they displayed cloths and
+horse-coverings upon poles for ensigns, they bore in the eyes of the
+English the terrors of an army with banners. The belief that they beheld
+the rise of an ambuscade, or the arrival of a new army of Scots, gave
+the last impulse of terror, and all fled now, even those who had before
+resisted. The slaughter was immense; the deep ravine of Bannockburn, to
+the south of the field of battle, lying in the direction taken by most
+of the fugitives, was almost choked and bridged over with the slain,
+the difficulty of the ground retarding the fugitive horsemen till the
+lancers were upon them. Others, and in great numbers, rushed into the
+river Forth, in the blindness of terror, and perished there. No less
+than twenty-seven Barons fell in the field; the Earl of Gloucester was
+at the head of the fatal list: young, brave, and high-born, when he saw
+the day was lost, he rode headlong on the Scottish spears, and was
+slain. Sir Robert Clifford, renowned in the Scottish wars, was also
+killed. Two hundred Knights and seven hundred Esquires, of high birth
+and blood, graced the list of slaughter with the noblest names of
+England; and thirty thousand of the common file filled up the fatal
+roll.
+
+"Edward, among whose weaknesses we cannot number cowardice, was
+reluctantly forced from the bloody field by the Earl of Pembroke. The
+noble Sir Giles de Argentine considered it as his duty to attend the
+King until he saw him in personal safety, then observing that "it was
+not his own wont to fly," turned back, rushed again into the battle,
+cried his war-cry, galloped boldly against the victorious Scots, and was
+slain, according to his wish, with his face to the enemy. Edward must
+have been bewildered in the confusion of the field, for instead of
+directing his course southerly to Linlithgow, from which he came, he
+rode northward to Stirling, and demanded admittance. Philip de Mowbray,
+the governor, remonstrated against this rash step, reminding the
+unfortunate Prince that he was obliged by his treaty to surrender the
+castle next day, as not having been relieved according to the
+conditions.
+
+"Edward was therefore obliged to take the southern road; and he must
+have made a considerable circuit to avoid the Scottish army. He was,
+however, discovered on his retreat, and pursued by Douglas with sixty
+horse, who were all that could be mustered for the service. The King, by
+a rapid and continued flight through a country in which his misfortunes
+must have changed many friends into enemies, at length gained the castle
+of Dunbar, where he was hospitably received by the Earl of March. From
+Dunbar Edward escaped almost alone to Berwick in a fishing skiff, having
+left behind him the finest army a King of England ever commanded.
+
+"The quantity of spoil gained by the victors at the battle of
+Bannockburn was inestimable, and the ransoms paid by the prisoners
+largely added to the mass of treasure. Five near relations to the
+Bruce--namely, his wife, her sister Christian, his daughter Marjory,
+the Bishop of Glasgow (Wishart), and the young Earl of Mar, the King's
+nephew, were exchanged against the Earl of Hereford, High Constable of
+England.
+
+"The Scottish loss was very small: Sir William Vipont and Sir Walter
+Ross were the only persons of consideration slain. Sir Edward Bruce is
+said to have been so much attached to the last of these knights as to
+have expressed his wish that the battle had remained unfought, so Ross
+had not died."
+
+The present volume contains 350 pages, in a very pleasing type, and a
+vignette title; and the style in which it is produced is uniformly
+worthy of the very responsible quarter whence it emanates.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE YOUNG LADY'S BOOK.
+
+
+This is indeed a _golden gift_ for any _demoiselle_ of our readers'
+acquaintance, for it blends the unusual qualities of elegance and
+usefulness of the highest order. It is described in the title as "A
+Manual of Elegant Recreations, Exercises and Pursuits," and numbers in
+its contents, Moral deportment--the Florist--Mineralogy, Conchology,
+Entomology, the Aviary, the Toilet, Embroidery, the Escrutoire,
+Painting, Music, Dancing, Archery, Riding, and the Ornamental Artist.
+Each of these subjects is treated of in separate chapters, in a neat
+style, slightly scientific, and highly amusive; and the whole are
+illustrated with upwards of _Six Hundred Engravings_, which are
+appropriately chosen and admirably executed. Botany, Conchology,
+Entomology, and the Aviary thus admit of scores of little cuts worked in
+with the type; the female accomplishments of Embroidery, ornamental card
+and basket work, contain many beautiful devices; and the "elegant
+recreations" of Dancing, Riding, &c. are equally well illustrated by the
+various forms, positions, &c.--Each subject has been treated of by a
+master or mistress of the respective art, but the uniformity with which
+the editor has marshalled them in his work, almost makes them resemble
+the productions of one hand. We need not point out the merit of this
+individual contribution; for the lady-pen must be omnipotent indeed
+which could write equally well on every branch of female accomplishment.
+By way of a seasonable extract we take part of a brief historical sketch
+prefixed to the Dancing instructions, and a few of the hints:--
+
+"From the death of Elizabeth, until after the restoration of Charles
+II., the turbulence of the times, and the peculiar character of the age,
+prevented this art, which flourishes only in 'the bowers of peace and
+joy,' from making much progress; but in the days of the merry monarch
+it began to revive, and advanced more, or less, in all the succeeding
+reigns. The celebrated Beau Nash, who was, for a long time, M.C. at
+Bath, may be considered the founder of modern ball-room dancing; which,
+however, has been divested of much of its cold formality, and improved
+in various other respects since the time of that singular person. It is,
+nevertheless, a matter of regret, that the graceful and stately Minuet
+has been entirely abandoned in favour of the more recently-invented
+dances.
+
+"The French country dances, or Contre-Danses (from the parties being
+placed opposite to each other,) since called Quadrilles (from their
+having four sides) which approximate nearly to the Cotillon, were
+first introduced to France about the middle of Lewis the Fifteenth's
+reign. Previously to this period, the dances most in vogue were La
+Perigourdine, La Matelotte, La Pavane, Les Forlanes, Minuets, &c.
+Quadrilles, when first introduced, were danced by four persons only:
+four more were soon added, and thus the complete square was formed; but
+the figures were materially different from those of the present period.
+The gentlemen advanced with the opposite ladies, menaced each other with
+the fore-finger, and retired clapping their hands three times; they then
+turned hands of four, turned their own partners, and grand rond of all
+concluded the figure. The Vauxhall d'Hiver was, at that time, the most
+fashionable place of resort: the pupils of the Royal Academy were
+engaged to execute new dances; a full and effective band performed the
+most fashionable airs, and new figures were at length introduced and
+announced as a source of attraction; but this place was soon pulled
+down, and re-built on the ground now occupied by the Theatre du
+Vaudeville. The establishment failed, and the proprietor became a
+bankrupt. A short time after, it was re-opened by another speculator;
+but on such a scale, as merely to attract the working classes of the
+community. The band was now composed of a set of miserable scrapers, who
+played in unison, and continually in the key of G sharp; amid the sounds
+which emanated from their instruments, the jangling of a tambourin, and
+the shrill notes of a fife were occasionally heard. Thus did things
+continue until the French Revolution; when, about the time the Executive
+Directory was formed, the splendid apartments of the Hotel de Richelieu
+were opened for the reception of the higher classes, who had then but
+few opportunities of meeting to 'trip it on the light fantastic toe.'
+Monsieur Hullin, then of the Opera, was selected to form a band of
+twenty-four musicians, from among those of the highest talent in the
+various theatres: he found no difficulty in this, as they were paid in
+paper-money, then of little or no value; whereas, the administrators of
+the Richelieu establishment paid in specie. The tunes were composed in
+different keys, with full orchestral accompaniments, by Monsieur Hullin;
+and the contrast thus produced to the abominable style which had so long
+existed, commenced a new era in dancing: the old figures were abolished,
+and stage-steps were adopted;--Pas de Zephyrs, Pas de Bourrés, Ballotés,
+Jetés Battus, &c. were among the most popular. Minuets and Forlanes were
+still continued; but Monsieur Vestris displaced the latter by the
+Gavotte, which he taught to Monsieur Trenis and Madame de Choiseul, who
+first danced it at a fête given by a lady of celebrity, at the Hotel de
+Valentinois, Rue St. Lazar, on the 16th of August, 1797; at this fête,
+Monsieur Hullin introduced an entirely new set of figures of his own
+composition.--These elicited general approbation: they were danced at
+all parties, and still retain pre-eminence. The names of Pantalon,
+L'Eté, La Poule, La Trenis, &c. which were given to the tunes, have been
+applied to the figures. The figure of La Trenis, was introduced by
+Monsieur Trenis's desire, it being part of the figure from a Gavotte,
+danced in the then favourite ballet of Nina.
+
+"To the French we are indebted for rather an ingenious, but in the
+opinion of many professional dancers, an useless invention, by which it
+was proposed, that as the steps in dancing are not very numerous,
+although they may be infinitely combined, that characters might be made
+use of to express the various steps and figures of a dance, in the same
+manner as words and sentences are expressed by letters; or what is more
+closely analogous, as the musical characters are employed to represent
+to the eye the sounds of an air. The well-known Monsieur Beauchamp, and
+a French dancing-master, each laid claim to be the original inventer
+of this art; and the consequence was a law suit, in which, however,
+judgment was pronounced in favour of the former. The art has been
+introduced into this country, but without success. An English
+dancing-master has also, we believe, with considerable labour and
+ingenuity, devised a plan somewhat similar to that of the French author:
+diagrams being proposed to represent the figures, or steps, instead of
+characters.
+
+"There are a variety of dances to which the term National may, with some
+propriety, be applied. Among the most celebrated of these are,--the
+Italian Tarantula, the German Waltz, and the Spanish Bolero. To dwell on
+their peculiarities would, however, as it appears to us, be useless: the
+first is rarely exhibited, even on the stage: the second, although it
+still retains much of its original character, has, in this country, been
+modified into the Waltz Country Dance, and all the objections which it
+encountered, on its first introduction, seem to have been gradually
+overcome, since it assumed its present popular form; and the graceful
+Bolero is restricted to the theatre only, being never introduced to the
+English ball-room.
+
+"The manner of walking well is an object which all young ladies should
+be anxious to acquire; but, unfortunately, it is a point too much
+neglected. In the drawing-room, the ball-room, or during the promenade,
+an elegant deportment, a 'poetry of motion,'--is, and ever will be,
+appreciated. The step ought not to exceed the length of the foot; the
+leg should be put forward, without stiffness, in about the fourth
+position; but without any effort to turn the foot out, as it will tend
+to throw the body awry, and give the person an appearance of being a
+professional dancer. The head should be kept up and the chest open: the
+body will then attain an advantageous position, and that steadiness so
+much required in good walking. The arms should fall in their natural
+position, and all their movements and oppositions to the feet be easy
+and unconstrained. The employment of soldiers to teach young ladies how
+to walk, which, we are sorry to say, is a practice adopted by many
+parents and heads of seminaries, is much to be deprecated. The stiffness
+acquired under regimental tuition, is adverse to all the principles of
+grace, and annihilates that buoyant lightness which is so conducive to
+ease and elegance in the young."
+
+Besides the host of cuts incorporated with the text, each art has a
+whole page embellishment exquisitely engraved on wood; the designs of
+which are the very acme of taste. The head and tail, and letter pieces
+of the chapters are in equally good taste; and taken altogether,
+the "Young Lady's Book," either as a production of usefulness or
+illustratration of art, is the finest production of its day. It has
+been erroneously noticed, from its publication at this season, as an
+"Annual," but it displays infinitely more pains-taking than either of
+those elaborate productions--and is, we should judge, neither the labour
+of one or two years.
+
+We had almost overlooked the imitative Mechlin lace-facings, which would
+deceive any Nottingham factor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE ZOOLOGICAL KEEPSAKE.
+
+
+The design of this "Annual" is good, we may say, very good; but we are
+alike bound to confess that the execution falls short of the idea. It
+contains an account of the Gardens and Museum of the Zoological Society,
+but this is too much interlarded with digressions. All the introductory
+matter might have been omitted with advantage to the author as well as
+the public. The descriptions are divided by poetical pieces, which serve
+as _reliefs_, one of which we extract:--
+
+
+THE LOST LAMB; OR, THE CHILD SAVED.
+
+BY H.C. DEAKIN, ESQ.
+
+_Author of "Portraits of the Dead."_
+
+
+ Morn rose upon the purple hills,
+ In all his pomp display'd;
+ Flash'd forth like stars a hundred rills,
+ In valley, plain, and glade.
+ The foaming mist, day's chilly shrine,
+ Into the clouds upcurl'd,
+ Forth broke in majesty divine
+ The Grampians' giant world.
+
+ It was a glorious sight to view
+ Those mountain forms unfold,--
+ The Heavens above intensely blue,
+ The plains beneath like gold.
+ Day woke, a thousand songs arose,
+ Morn's orisons on high,
+ Earth's universal heart o'erflows
+ To Him beyond the sky.
+
+ The shepherd roused him from his sleep,
+ And down the vale be hied,
+ Like guardian good, to count his sheep,
+ His _firstling_ by his side.
+ His firstling! 'twas his only child--
+ A boy of three years old,
+ The father's weary hours beguiled
+ Whilst watching o'er his fold.
+
+ And many an hour the child and he
+ Joy'd o'er the vale together;
+ It was a lovely thing to see
+ That child among the heather.
+ The vale is pass'd, the mountains rear
+ Their rugged cliffs in air,
+ He must ascend to view more near
+ His distant fleecy care.
+
+ "My child! the flowers are bright for thee,
+ The daisy's pearl'd with dew;
+ Go, share them with the honey-bee,
+ Till I return for you,
+ Thy dog and mine with thee shall stay
+ Whilst I the flock am counting,"--
+ He said, and took his tedious way,
+ The hilly green sward mounting.
+
+ O'er crag and cliff the father toil'd,
+ Unconscious pass'd the hours:
+ He for a time forgot the child
+ He'd left among the flowers.
+ The boiling clouds come down and veil
+ Valley, and wood, and plain;
+ Then fears the father's heart assail,
+ He will descend again.
+
+ Morn melted into noon, and night
+ Dark on the shepherd shone,
+ Terror in vain impels his flight,
+ His child!--his child is gone!
+ He calls upon his darling's name,
+ His dog in vain he calls;
+ He hears naught but the eagle's scream,
+ Or roar of waterfalls.
+
+ He rushes home--he is not there--
+ With agony and woe;
+ He hunts him in the cold night air,
+ O'er hill and vale below.
+ Morn rose--the faithful dog appears,
+ He whines for food so mild,
+ The father hied him through his tears,
+ And said, "Tray, where's my child?"
+
+ Thrice rose the morn--the father's heart
+ With grief was almost dead;
+ But every morn the dog appeared,
+ And whined and begged for bread.
+ Yet through the night and through the day,
+ The dog was never seen--
+ "He is not wont to stay away,
+ Where can the dog have been?"
+
+ On the fourth morn this faithful friend,
+ As usual whined for meat--
+ They mark the way his footsteps tend,
+ And follow his retreat.
+ They watch him to a cave beside
+ The Grampians' craggy base--
+ Behold! the shepherd's wandering child
+ Within the dog's embrace.
+
+ He springs--he weeps away his cares,
+ He cries aloud with joy--
+ He kneels, he sobs to heaven his prayers,
+ For his redeemed boy.
+ Then, turning, hugs his favourite hound,
+ The trusty, true, and bold,
+ By whom was saved, through whom was found
+ The _firstling_ of his fold!
+
+
+The Engravings, which are very numerous, are exclusively on wood. A few
+of them are views in the Regent's Park Gardens; but in point of
+execution, we think the best is a Portrait of the Satyr, or "_Happy_
+Jerry," at Cross's Menagerie. Though by no means one of nature's
+favourites, he appears to possess the companionable qualities of
+sitting in a chair, smoking a pipe, and drinking spirits and water, and
+appearing to understand every look, word, and action of his keeper;
+indeed, so thoroughly contented is the creature, that he has obtained
+the name of "Happy Jerry."
+
+To speak _zoologically_, next year we hope the artist and editor will
+put their best feet foremost, and improve upon the present volume. The
+design is one of the best for a Juvenile Annual--for who does not
+recollect the very amusing game of "Birds, Beasts, and Fishes, and
+sometimes Insects and Reptiles." What a menagerie of guessing novelties
+would have been a _Zoological Keepsake_ in our school days.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER.
+
+ A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.
+SHAKSPEARE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SPILLING THE SALT.
+
+
+It is a curious fact, though not generally known, that the popular
+superstition of overturning the salt at table being unlucky, originated
+in a picture of the Last Supper, by Leonardo da Vinci, in which Judas
+Iscariot is represented as overturning the salt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+KANGAROOS.
+
+
+"I have been much entertained during my wanderings through the country
+adjoining this town, in observing the singular habits and extreme
+sagacity of the kangaroos. I have noticed several who carried in their
+fore paws a sort of umbrella, or fan, which they held so as to protect
+their head and shoulders from the violence of the sun. One day I slipped
+a brace of large greyhounds at a female who carried one of these useful
+appendages, which she soon dropped and escaped: it was formed of a large
+bough, over which some large leaves were spread, and fastened on simply
+by the shoots of the bough sticking into the leaf."--_From a letter
+dated Hobart's Town, February_, 1829.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE EARL OF MANSFIELD.
+
+
+"When he was at Westminster School, Lady Kinnoul, in one of the
+vacations, invited him to her home, where, observing him with a pen in
+his hand, and seemingly thoughtful, she asked him if he was writing his
+theme, and what in plain English the theme was? The school-boy's smart
+answer rather surprised her Ladyship--'What is that to you?' She
+replied--'How can you be so rude? I asked you very civilly a plain
+question, and did not expect from a school-boy such a pert answer.' The
+reply was, 'Indeed, my Lady, I can only answer once more, 'What is that
+to you?' In reality the theme was--_Quid ad te pertinet!"--From
+Holliday's Life of the Earl of Mansfield_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"IN SPITE OF HIS TEETH."
+
+
+King John once demanded of a certain Jew ten thousand marks, on refusal
+of which, he ordered one of the Israelite's teeth to be drawn every day
+till he should consent. The Jew lost seven, and then paid the required
+sum. Hence the phrase--"In spite of his teeth."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SWAN RIVER.
+
+
+A gentleman who had just arrived in town met an Hibernian friend, and
+with anxious solicitude asked him "where the best bed was to be got?"
+"By my soul," said the Emeralder, with a Kilmainham look, "I'm tould at
+the _Swan River_, where there's nothing but _down_."
+
+W.C.R.R.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SIAMESE YOUTHS.
+
+
+QUERY.--Would not the _law_ be the most profitable profession for the
+Siamese Youths? They might plead _pro_ and _con_, and take _fees_ from
+_plaintiff_ and _defendant_. If raised to the Bench, they might receive
+the salary of _one_ Judge, but act as _two_, thereby saving the nation
+some money in these _hard_ times of _cash_ payments, and please all
+parties, _one_ summing up for plaintiff and the _other_ for defendant.
+
+P.T.W.
+
+N.B. They appear very good natured, although they _huffed_ me _twice_ at
+draughts.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WITH the present Number is published a SUPPLEMENT, containing a
+Steel-plate PORTRAIT of THOMAS CAMPBELL, ESQ. and a copious MEMOIR; with
+Title, Preface, and Index to Vol. xiv.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement,
+and Instruction, by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11460 ***
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+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type"
+ content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
+ <title>
+ The Mirror of Literature, Issue 406.
+ </title>
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11460 ***</div>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page433" name="page433"></a>[pg
+ 433]</span>
+ <h1>
+ THE MIRROR<br />
+ OF<br />
+ LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+ </h1>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <table width="100%" summary="Banner">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <b>VOL. XIV, NO. 406.]</b>
+ </td>
+ <td align="center">
+ <b>SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1829.</b>
+ </td>
+ <td align="right">
+ <b>[PRICE 2d.</b>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ VIRGIL'S TOMB.
+ </h2>
+ <div class="figure" style="width: 100%;">
+ <a href="images/406-1.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/406-1.png" alt="Virgil's Tomb." /></a>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ This consecrated relic of genius stands on the hill of
+ Posilipo, in the environs of Naples. Its recent state is so
+ beautifully described by Eustace, that we shall not, like
+ gipsys do stolen children, disfigure it to prevent
+ recognition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Proceeding westward along the Chiaia and keeping towards the
+ beach, says Eustace, we came to the quarter called
+ Mergyllina. To ascend the hill of Posilipo we turned to the
+ right, and followed a street winding as a staircase up the
+ steep, and terminating at a garden gate. Having entered, we
+ pursued a path through a vineyard and descending a little,
+ came to a small square building, flat-roofed, placed on a
+ sort of platform on the brow of a precipice on one side,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page434" name="page434"></a>[pg
+ 434]</span> and on the other sheltered by a super-incumbent
+ rock. An aged ilex, spreading from the sides of the rock, and
+ bending over the edifice, covers the roof with its ever
+ verdant foliage. Numberless shrubs spring around, and
+ interwoven with ivy clothe the walls and hang in festoons
+ over the precipice. The edifice before us was an ancient
+ tomb&mdash;the tomb of VIRGIL! We entered; a vaulted cell and
+ two modern windows alone presented themselves to view: the
+ poet's name is the only ornament of the place. No
+ sarcophagus, no urn, and even no inscription to feed the
+ devotion of the classical pilgrim. The epitaph which though
+ not genuine is yet ancient, was inscribed by the order of the
+ Duke of Pescolangiano, then proprietor of the place, on a
+ marble slab placed in the side of the rock opposite the
+ entrance of the tomb, where it still remains. Every body is
+ acquainted with it&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Mantua me genuit, Calabri rapuere, tenet nunc Parthenope,
+ cecini
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ pascua, rura, duces.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ But there are authors who venture to assert, that the tomb of
+ which we are now speaking, is not the sepulchre of Virgil. Of
+ this number are the classic Addison and the laborious and
+ accurate Cluverius. The authority of two such eminent
+ persons, without doubt, carries great weight with it, but
+ that weight is upon this occasion considerably lessened by
+ the weakness of the arguments on which their opinion is
+ grounded. These arguments may be found in Cluverius, and
+ Addison merely expresses his opinion without entering into
+ any discussion. They are drawn from a few verses of Statius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In opposition to these arguments, or rather conjectures
+ founded upon the vague expressions of a single poet (a poet
+ often censured for his obscurity), we have the constant and
+ uninterrupted tradition of the country supported by the
+ authority of a numerous host of learned and ingenious
+ antiquaries; and upon such grounds we may still continue to
+ cherish the conviction, that we have visited the tomb of
+ Virgil, and hailed his sacred shade on the spot where his
+ ashes long reposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The laurel which was once said to have sprung up at its base,
+ and covered it with its luxuriant branches, now flourishes
+ only in the verses of youthful bards, or in the descriptions
+ of early travellers; myrtle, ivy and ilex, all plants equally
+ agreeable to the genius of the place, and the subjects of the
+ poet, now perform the office of the long-withered bays, and
+ encircle the tomb with verdure and perfume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sepulchre of Virgil, it may be imagined, must have long
+ remained an object of interest and veneration, especially as
+ his works had excited universal admiration even in his
+ life-time, and were very soon after his death put into the
+ hands of children, and made a part of the rudiments of early
+ education. Yet Martial declares that it had been neglected in
+ his time, and that Silius Italicus alone restored its long
+ forgotten honours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader will learn with regret that Virgil's tomb,
+ consecrated as it ought to be to genius and meditation, is
+ sometimes converted into the retreat of assassins, or the
+ lurking place of Sbirri. Such at least it was the last time
+ we visited it, when wandering that way about sun-set we found
+ it filled with armed men. We were surprised on both sides,
+ and on ours not very agreeably at the unexpected rencounter;
+ so lonely the place and so threatening the aspects of these
+ strangers. Their manners however were courteous; and on
+ inquiry we were informed that they were Sbirri, and then
+ lying in wait for a murderer, who was supposed to make that
+ spot his nightly asylum. It would be unjust to accuse the
+ Neapolitans of culpable indifference towards this or any
+ other monument of antiquity; but it is incumbent on the
+ proprietor or the public, to secure them against such
+ profanation. On the whole, few places are in themselves more
+ picturesque, and from the recollection inseparably interwoven
+ with it, no spot is more interesting than the tomb of Virgil.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ LAST CHRISTMAS DAY.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Say, if such blandishments did ever greet
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thy charmed soul; hast thou not crav'd to die?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hast not thine immaterial seem'd but air
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Verging to sigh itself from thee, and share
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beatitude? hast thou not watch'd thy breath
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In meek, faint hope, that soon 'twould sink in death?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <i>MS. Poem.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Last Christmas Day! my heart leaps with joy at its very
+ memory; it was a mental <i>Noel</i>, a Christmas of the soul,
+ (if I may thus express myself.) That which I am about to
+ relate of it is strictly true, and I do relate it because
+ that day is one of the very few in our brief existence which
+ form a moral epoch in, and influence subsequent, life. Last
+ Christmas Day, I well remember, my spirit revelled in an Eden
+ blessedness&mdash;a bliss which the unholy
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page435" name="page435"></a>[pg
+ 435]</span> world did not, could not, give, and consequently
+ could not take away. Reader! I will hope, I will believe,
+ that thou hast experienced feelings and emotions, like those
+ high and holy ones of which I would endeavour now to preserve
+ a faint transcript. Come then, let us unite our ideas, let us
+ speak together, but let us yet mention as present, those
+ beatific thoughts and imaginings which are indeed past. Let
+ us ever remember and cherish in our heart of hearts those
+ golden fore-tastes of future eternity, or (according to
+ Platonism) those rapturous reminiscences of past, which prove
+ beyond logical demonstration, the existence of some vital
+ principle in man, godlike in faculties, in essence
+ immaterial, in duration, immortal! It is Christmas Day, a
+ deep, unearthly calm possesses our minds; all passions are
+ slumbering, save the beautiful and holy ones of adoring love,
+ mingled with overwhelming gratitude towards our maker, and
+ philanthropic love, universal benevolence, to man. It is
+ winter, but one of those delicious days in which closing our
+ eyes, so that we behold not sad hosts of bare stems and
+ branches, we may well deem that summer reigns! And a summer
+ indeed reigns in our bosoms! Now nature seems new and
+ fascinating, as it did to Adam when he wakened into life.
+ Now, as for the first time, we discern with unspeakable
+ emotions, that divine affection as well as unlimited power,
+ which actuates and supports creation. Now we comprehend that
+ the universe was designed to minister happiness to myriads of
+ intelligent beings; but that man, by sin, frustrates the
+ gracious intent, and produces misery. Now the glorious golden
+ sun seems in its gladdening lustre, like a smile from its
+ creator; a smile beaming ineffable love, and joy, and peace.
+ Now the sky, the pale, delicate, sapphire sky, the soft,
+ tender, inviting, enfolding, and immeasurable sky, appears to
+ image the mercy of its maker. Let us yet gaze upon the sky,
+ for it also admonishes us of other delightful things; it is
+ silent&mdash;it is awful&mdash;it is holy; but its silence is
+ beautiful, and with wordless eloquence it speaks unto our
+ enraptured bosoms of deep, eternal, unimaginable repose! it
+ infuses into our breasts undefinable ideas and sensations; it
+ appears to our enchanted imaginations an emblem meet of the
+ grand dream of eternity, and our spirits seem on the verge of
+ quitting earth, in thrilling contemplations on the islands of
+ that infinite abyss, and their immortal inhabitants! We gaze
+ in hope, adoration, and rapture on the blue expanse, varied
+ by delicate vapours, sailing calmly, wondrously through it;
+ and then occur to our memories spontaneously, the exquisite
+ lines translated from a <i>morceau</i>, by Gluck, (a German
+ poet;) and our hearts respond as each of us sighs:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "There's peace and welcome in yon sea
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of endless blue tranquillity.
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Those clouds are living things!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I trace their veins of liquid gold,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I see them solemnly unfold
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Their soft and fleecy wings!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ These be the angels that convey
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Us weary children of a day
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Life's tedious nothing o'er,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where neither passions come, nor woes
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To vex the genius of repose
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ On death's majestic shore!"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Then do our delighted eyes wander downward; then doth earth
+ appear a glorious, though but a temporary palace, the gift of
+ a gracious God to man! then do we feel an unaccountable
+ assurance that angels visit the beautiful domain; then that
+ (though viewlessly) they rejoice with, they sorrow for, (if
+ angels can sorrow) and they minister unto "the heirs of
+ salvation," as they did in the days of old, and as they will
+ do, to the end of time. Were we not assured of this blessed
+ fact in the book of books, reason would assert, that for a
+ thankless, graceless generation alone, earth should not have
+ been formed so divinely fair; but it is heavenly, that the
+ immortal servitors of man may even here find records of the
+ divinity, and themes for undying thanksgiving. Are we indeed
+ visited, watched, and ministered unto, by beatific essences?
+ Oh, reason and revelation, both loudly proclaim the fact;
+ those beneficent beings may be with us then, when we deem
+ ourselves alone; they may be our society in the solitude of
+ our chambers; they may pass us in the breeze, and they may
+ wander beside us in our loneliest walks. Such meditations are
+ calculated to inspire our bosoms with new life; to brighten
+ all nature around us, and to unite us to the invisible world
+ by ties, of the existence of which we were never previously
+ sensible; ties, at once so sweet and so sacred, that we
+ almost crave the blessing of death, in order more surely to
+ strengthen them! Then doth the beauty of "the vale of tears"
+ confound us; then doth it infuse into our bosoms such
+ unalterable fore-tastes; such mysterious and undefinable
+ sensations of the blessedness of "the isles of joy," that our
+ very souls seem to have become but one prayer, one fervent,
+ wordless, agonizing prayer, for divine repose, and
+ unimaginable blessedness; and then doth the mere suggestion
+ of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page436"
+ name="page436"></a>[pg 436]</span> final reprobation amount
+ to insufferable torture! Oh, that such heavenly imaginings,
+ such divine intimations of a transcendent futurity, were more
+ frequently vouchsafed to us, and were less evanescent. They
+ are glimpses of everlasting day, shining on wanderers in "the
+ valley of the shadow of death;" they are droppings from the
+ overflowing and ineffable cup of mercy; they are presciences
+ of eternity, inestimable, unutterable! and the pen that would
+ describe indescribable perceptions, droops in shame and
+ sorrow at its own imbecility. Such perceptions have visited,
+ do visit us, on this most rapturous of Christmas Days? Is it
+ not a golden day? does it not remove us for a little space
+ from earth, into the society of the holiest sentient beings,
+ and to the beauty of a celestial, surpassing, world? Does it
+ not bestow on our souls their long-lost ethereal wings? and
+ do not the delighted strangers soar for a little while above
+ the grossest realms of matter? Alas! even but for a little
+ while; now do they drop, for now flag and droop those angelic
+ pinions which are too humid and heavy with that atmosphere,
+ from whence they could not wholly disengage themselves; the
+ golden harps of heaven murmur in their entranced ears no
+ longer; the smiles of the Sons of Peace fade from their
+ enchanted sight; and the clouds of this nether world retain
+ from their enamoured gaze, the treasures of infinity!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps we have enjoyed a very enthusiastic, a very poetical,
+ Christmas Day! we pretend not to deny it, though steadfastly
+ believing it was neither an anti-Christian, nor an utterly
+ unprofitable one; nay, we even venture to hope, that the
+ beatitude of spirit just feebly portrayed was not unpleasing
+ in His sight, unto whom, for His gift of immortal life, we
+ upon Christmas Day render our peculiar thanksgivings!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M.L.B.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE FALL OF ZARAGOZA.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Awake, awake, the trumpet hath sung its lay to the sunny
+ sky,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the glorious shout from Spanish lips gives forth its
+ wild reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Awake, awake, how the chargers foam, as to battle they
+ dash on,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, Zaragoza, on this proud day, must thy walls be lost
+ or won!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ His hand&mdash;the hand of the youthful chief was on his
+ flashing sword,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And his plume gleam'd white thro' the smoke and flame
+ o'er the lofty city pour'd&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the banners around him darkly swept like the waves of
+ a stormy sea,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Zaragoza, amid this strife, his heart was firm to
+ thee.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Away, away, tread her walls to dust!"&mdash;the Gallic
+ warriors cried
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Defend, my bands, your hearth and home," the youthful
+ chief replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They caught the sound of this spirit-voice as they stay'd
+ their foes' career,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And many a thrilling cry was heard, when the bayonet met
+ the spear
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ In vain, ye heroes, do you breathe your latest vows to
+ heaven,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In vain is your devoted blood in the cause of Freedom
+ given,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For when the morn awakes again, your city shall not be
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The haunt of maids who warbled deep, their sweetest songs
+ for ye!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ But the story of your hallow'd death shall not remain
+ unsung,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, its record shall be glorified by many a minstrel
+ tongue
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Freedom's holy light hath touch'd each ruin'd shrine
+ and wall,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That sadly speak unto the heart of Zaragoza's fall.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <i>Deal</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ REGINALD AUGUSTINE.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE BANQUETTING HOUSE, WHITEHALL.<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many persons who have visited this chapel may not have
+ noticed or been aware of the splendid painted ceiling by Sir
+ Peter Paul Rubens, which was executed by him when ambassador
+ at the court of James I. This beautiful performance
+ represents the apotheosis of that peaceful monarch, he being
+ seated on his throne, and turning towards the deities of
+ peace and commerce, having rejected the gods of war and
+ discord. It is painted on canvass, and is in excellent
+ preservation; the original painter had &pound;3,000. for his
+ labour; it has been retouched more than once, and the last
+ time was by Cipriani, who had &pound;2,000. for his repairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ralph, in his <i>Critical Review of Public Buildings</i>,
+ observes, "that this picture is not so generally known as one
+ could wish, but needs only to be known to be esteemed
+ according to its merits;" and he further adds, "it is but an
+ ill decoration for a place of religious worship, for in the
+ first place, its contents are nowise akin to devotion, and in
+ the next, the workmanship is so very extraordinary that a man
+ must have abundance of zeal or no taste, that can attend to
+ anything besides."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is almost needless to remark, that it was from a passage
+ broken for the occasion <span class="pagenum"><a id="page437"
+ name="page437"></a>[pg 437]</span> through the wall of this
+ building, that the unfortunate Charles was conducted by the
+ regicides to his death; this passage still remains, and now
+ serves as a doorway to an additional building in Scotland
+ Yard: and nearly facing this doorway stood the ingenious
+ Dial, engraved and described in No. 400, of the MIRROR. The
+ next important and public event connected with this building
+ occurred in 1811, when a very different and far more
+ gratifying spectacle took place, being that of the ceremony
+ of placing in the chapel, the eagles and other colours taken
+ by our gallant troops during the war. There were six
+ standards and the like number of regimental colours, which
+ after having been presented at the altar were affixed to the
+ places they now occupy. There is a singular circumstance
+ attached to the history of one of the eagles which may be
+ well introduced in this place; it may be distinguished from
+ the others by its having a wreath placed round its neck, the
+ flag itself being destroyed. It was the usual custom for the
+ eagles to be attached to the staves on which they are borne
+ by a screw, so that in the event of any imminent danger, they
+ might be taken off and secured; but Napoleon on his
+ presenting this standard to his 8th regiment, observed, it
+ was impossible that it should be taken from so brave a body
+ of men as they had always proved themselves to be, and
+ desired it might be rivetted to the staff, which was
+ accordingly done; and probably had it not been for this order
+ the eagle might have escaped our valiant 87th, by whom it was
+ taken on the heights of Barossa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Maundy Thursday another gratifying ceremony takes place,
+ <i>viz</i>, the distribution of the Maundy Money to as many
+ poor people as the years of his majesty's age. This money
+ consists of the smaller silver coins, being each in value
+ from 1<i>d</i>. to 4<i>d</i>.; these are enclosed in a small,
+ white kid bag, which is again enveloped in another of crimson
+ leather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.P.D.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ RETROSPECTIVE GLEANINGS.
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ TOUCHING FOR THE KING'S EVIL.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>To the Editor of the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having read an interesting paper from your ingenious
+ correspondent <i>P.T.W.</i> in your number of the 14th of
+ November, respecting "Touching for the Cure of the King's
+ Evil," it occurred to me that some farther information
+ relative to the original of that "hereditary miracle," as Mr.
+ Collier is pleased to term it, might not be uninteresting to
+ some of your readers: I therefore send you the
+ following:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stowe, in his <i>Annals</i>, accounts for the origin of
+ touching for the evil, in the following manner:&mdash;"A
+ young woman who was afflicted with this disorder in a very
+ alarming manner, and to a most disgusting degree, feeling
+ uneasiness and pain consequent upon it in her sleep, dreamt
+ that she should be cured by the simple operation of having
+ the part washed with the king's hand. Application was
+ consequently made to Edward, by her friends, who very
+ humanely consented to perform the unpleasant request. A basin
+ of water was brought, with which he carefully softened the
+ humours, till they broke, and the contents discharged; the
+ sign of the cross wound up the charm; and the female retired,
+ with the assurance of his protection during the remainder of
+ the cure, which was effected within a week." This is somewhat
+ differently related in <i>Ailred's History of the Life and
+ Miracles of Edward the Confessor</i>, an extract from which
+ may be found in a note to the first volume of Rapin's
+ <i>History of England</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following curious advertisement was issued by the order
+ of King Charles II. for healing the people, on the 18th of
+ May, 1664.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ "Notice.
+ </blockquote>
+ <blockquote>
+ "His sacred majesty having declared it to be his royal will
+ and purpose to continue the healing of his people for the
+ evil during the month of May, and then give over till
+ Michaelmas next; I am commanded to give notice thereof, that
+ the people may not come up to the town in the interim, and
+ lose their labour."
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Thomas Mousewell was tried for high treason in 1684, for
+ having spoken with contempt of King Charles's pretensions to
+ cure the scrofula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a manuscript account of the Restoration, written by Thomas
+ Gumble, D.D. Chaplain to General Monck, in the year 1662, is
+ the following description of the ceremony:&mdash;" There was
+ a great chair placed for the king, in a place somewhat
+ distant from the people. As soon as the king was sate, one of
+ the clerks of the closet stood at the right side of his
+ chair, holding on his arm as many gold angels (every one tied
+ in a ribbon of white silk) as there were sick to be touched,
+ which were in number, forty-eight. Dr. Brown, the chaplain of
+ the Princess of Aurange, performed the place of the king's
+ chaplain. The chaplain <span class="pagenum"><a id="page438"
+ name="page438"></a>[pg 438]</span> then read the sixteenth
+ chapter of St. Mark, from the fourteenth verse to the end;
+ and then the chirurgeon presented the sick, (having examined
+ them to see that it was the evil) after three reverences on
+ their knees, before the king, who, whilst the chaplain said
+ these words in that gospel: 'They shall lay their hands upon
+ the sick, and they shall be healed,' layed his hands on the
+ two cheeks of the sick, saying, 'I touch thee, but <i>God</i>
+ healeth thee!' The chaplain then began another gospel; and
+ whilst these words were pronounced out of the first chapter
+ of St. John: 'This was the true light which lighteth every
+ man that cometh into the world,' his majesty took the pieces
+ of gold, and put them on the necks of the diseased, the
+ chaplain repeating the words as many times as there were
+ persons to receive them, concluding with a prayer, 'That
+ Almighty God would bless the ceremony;' then, after the
+ reverences as before, they retired. The Earls of Middlesex
+ and St. Albans held the bason, ewer, and towel, whilst the
+ king washed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shakspeare, in his <i>Macbeth</i>, thus describes this royal,
+ but now exploded gift:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i4">
+ "Strangely visited people,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All swollen and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mere despair of surgery, he cures&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hanging a golden stamp about their necks,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Put on with holy prayers."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In Nicholls's <i>Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth
+ Century</i>, vol. ii. p. 495, 505, many curious particulars
+ relating to this ceremony are to be found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the custom has now for some time been discontinued, and
+ the credulity of those who believed in its efficacy, laughed
+ at, I hope it will not be long ere that disgusting custom of
+ allowing persons (of whom women in general form by far the
+ greater number) afflicted with the king's evil, and different
+ other disorders, to come on the scaffold immediately after
+ the execution of a criminal, for the purpose of touching the
+ part affected, with the hand of the <i>but just dead</i>
+ malefactor, will be put a stop to; it being the very height
+ of absurdity to imagine that it can be productive of any good
+ effect; but on the contrary, tending to divest the minds of
+ the surrounding multitude of that awe with which the
+ ignominious spectacle should impress them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &Sigma;.&Gamma;. [Greek: S.G.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the trifling paper I sent you respecting "Cats," which you
+ deemed worthy of insertion in No. 398, you have it "by some
+ merchants from the Island of Cyprus, who came hither for
+ <i>fur</i>," it should be <i>tin</i>&mdash;Fur being an
+ article of importation.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ BOOKSELLERS' MARKS OR SIGNS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many books, especially those printed in the 17th century,
+ have no other designation either of printer, bookseller, or
+ even city, but merely marks or signs. The <i>anchor</i> is
+ the mark of Raphelengius, at Leyden; and the same with a
+ <i>dolphin</i> twisted round it, of the Mantuii, at Venice
+ and Rome; the <i>Arion</i> denotes a book printed by
+ Oporrinus, at Basil; the <i>caduceus</i>, or <i>pegasus</i>,
+ by the Wechelliuses, at Paris and Frankfort; the
+ <i>cranes</i>, by Cramoisy; the <i>compass</i>, by Plantin,
+ at Antwerp; the <i>fountain</i>, by Vascosan, at Paris; the
+ <i>sphere</i> in a balance, by Janson, or Blaew, at
+ Amsterdam; the <i>lily</i>, by the Juntas, at Venice,
+ Florence, Lyons, and Rome; the <i>mulberry-tree</i>, by
+ Morel, at Paris; the <i>olive-tree</i>, by the Stephenses, at
+ Paris and Geneva, and the Elzevirs, at Amsterdam and Leyden;
+ the <i>bird between two serpents</i>, by the Frobeniuses, at
+ Basil; the <i>truth</i>, by the Commelins, at Heidelberg and
+ Paris; the <i>Saturn</i>, by Collinaeus; the <i>printing
+ press</i>, by Badius Ascensius, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ P.T.W.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ THE NATURALIST.
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ DIFFERENT COLOURS OF THE EGGS OF BIRDS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It is a remarkable fact in the economy of nature, that of
+ those birds whose nests are the most liable to discovery, and
+ whose eggs are most exposed to observation from the form of
+ the nests, the eggs are of that colour which is the least
+ different from the surrounding objects; whilst those birds
+ whose eggs are of a bright and positive colour, hide their
+ nests in the hollows of trees, or never quit them, excepting
+ in the night, or sit immediately that they have laid one or
+ two eggs. It is also to be observed that of those species
+ which build an exposed nest, and the females of which alone
+ perform the duty of incubation, the colour of the female is
+ much less bright than that of the male, and more in harmony
+ with the objects by which she is surrounded during the period
+ in which she sits upon her eggs. It would seem, therefore,
+ that those birds which lay a brightly-coloured egg have the
+ instinct to make a close nest, or to place it in the least
+ exposed situations; <span class="pagenum"><a id="page439"
+ name="page439"></a>[pg 439]</span> while those which lay a
+ sober-coloured egg are less solicitous to conceal it from the
+ notice of their enemies. M. Gloger, a German naturalist, has
+ paid great attention to this curious circumstance, and has
+ very recently published an elaborate memoir, in a work
+ printed at Berlin, in which he notices the habits of all the
+ species of birds indigenous to Germany, in confirmation of
+ the theory. Our limits will not allow us to notice the
+ particular species which he enumerates; but it may be
+ sufficient to excite attention to this subject, to mention,
+ that the birds which lay an egg perfectly white (the most
+ attractive of colours) make their nests in holes of the
+ earth, and cavities of trees, such as the kingfisher and the
+ woodpecker, or construct them with a very narrow opening, as
+ the domestic swallow; that the same coloured egg is found
+ amongst the birds which scarcely quit their nests in the day,
+ as hawks and owls; and that such birds as doves, which only
+ lay one or two eggs, and sit immediately after, have their
+ eggs white. The bright blue or bright green egg belongs to
+ birds which make their nests in holes, as the starling, or
+ construct them of green moss, or place them in the midst of
+ grass, but always well covered. The eggs of many gallinaceous
+ birds, that make their nests carelessly in the grass, are of
+ a pale and less decided green, such as those of the partridge
+ and pheasant. Of the mixed-coloured eggs, those of which
+ white forms the ground belong to birds that make very close
+ nests. Speckled eggs, with a dark or dirty ground, belong to
+ the largest number of species. Almost all the song birds lay
+ such eggs; and building open nests, they almost invariably
+ line the inside of them with materials of a harmonious colour
+ with the eggs, so that no evident contrast is presented which
+ would lead to their destruction.&mdash;<i>Companion to the
+ Almanac.</i>
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ EFFECTS OF SEA AIR.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Those who frequent the sea-coast are not long in discovering
+ that their best dyed black hats become of a rusty brown; and
+ similar effects are produced on some other colours. The brown
+ is, in fact, <i>rust</i>. Most, if not all, the usual black
+ colours have iron for a basis, the black oxide of which is
+ developed by galls, logwood, or other substances containing
+ gallic acid. Now the sea-air contains a proportion of the
+ muriates over which it is wafted; and these coming in contact
+ with any thing dyed black, part with their hydrochloric
+ (<i>muriatic</i>) acid, and form brown hydrochlorate of iron,
+ or contribute to form the brown or red oxide, called rust.
+ The gallic acid, indeed, from its superior affinity, has the
+ strongest hold of the iron; but the incessant action of the
+ sea-air, loaded with muriates, partially overcomes this, in
+ the same way as any acid, even of inferior affinity to the
+ gallic, when put upon black stuff, will turn it
+ brown.&mdash;<i>Ibid.</i>
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE DUGONG, THE MERMAID OF EARLY WRITERS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Of all the cetacea, that which approaches the nearest in form
+ to man is undoubtedly the dugong, which, when its head and
+ breast are raised above the water, and its pectoral fins,
+ resembling hands, are visible, might easily be taken by
+ superstitious seamen for a semi-human
+ being.&mdash;<i>Edinburgh Journal.</i>
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ SPIDERS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Live and grow without food. Out of fifty spiders produced on
+ the last day of August, and which were kept entirely without
+ food, three lived to the 8th of February following, and even
+ visibly increased in bulk. Was it from the effluvia arising
+ from the dead bodies of their companions that they lived so
+ long? Other spiders were kept in glass vessels without food,
+ from the 15th of July till the end of January. During that
+ time they cast their skins more than once, as if they had
+ been well fed.&mdash;<i>Redi, Generat. Insect.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spiders are excellent barometers: if the ends of their webs
+ are found branching out to any length, it is a sure sign of
+ favourable weather: if, on the contrary, they are found
+ short, and the spider does not attend to repairing it
+ properly, bad weather may be expected.&mdash;<i>Times.</i>
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ SWARMING OF BEES.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The ingenious President of the Horticultural Society, Mr.
+ T.A. Knight, has been led from repeated observation to infer,
+ that, in the swarming of bees, not a single labourer
+ emigrates without previously inspecting its proposed future
+ habitation, as well as the temporary stations of rest where
+ their numbers collect soon after
+ swarming.&mdash;<i>Philosophical Magazine.</i>
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE CHAMELEON'S ANTIPATHY TO BLACK.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Whatever may be the cause, the fact seems to be certain, that
+ the chameleon <span class="pagenum"><a id="page440"
+ name="page440"></a>[pg 440]</span> has an antipathy to things
+ of a black colour. One, which Forbes kept, uniformly avoided
+ a black board which was hung up in the chamber; and, what is
+ most remarkable, when it was forcibly brought before the
+ black board, it trembled violently, and assumed a black
+ colour.&mdash;<i>Oriental Mem</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ RULES FOR THE WEATHER.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ A wet summer is always followed by a frosty winter; but it
+ happens occasionally that the cold extends no farther. Two
+ remarkable instances of this occurred in 1807-8 and 1813-14.
+ With these exceptions, every frosty winter has been followed
+ by a cold summer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The true cause of cold, or rather the direct cause, is to be
+ found in the winter excess of west wind, every winter with
+ excess of west wind being followed by a cold summer; and if
+ there is no cold before, or during a first excess, then a
+ second excess of west wind in winter occasions a still colder
+ summer than the first. It also appears, by repeated
+ experience, that cold does not extend to more than two years
+ at a time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, if the winter excess of east wind be great, in the
+ first instance, the winters will be mild, and followed by
+ mild summers; while the summer excess of east wind is itself,
+ in the first instance, always mild; but uniformly followed by
+ cold winters and cold summers, which continue, more or less,
+ for one or two years, according to
+ circumstances.&mdash;<i>Mackenzie, Syst. of the Weather</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ PERIODICAL LITERATURE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Periodical Literature&mdash;how sweet is the name! 'Tis a
+ type of many of the most beautiful things and events in
+ nature; or say, rather, that <i>they</i> are types of
+ <i>it</i>&mdash;both the flowers and the stars. As to
+ flowers, they are the prettiest periodicals ever published in
+ folio&mdash;the leaves are wire-wove and hot-pressed by
+ Nature's self; their circulation is wide over all the land;
+ from castle to cottage they are regularly taken in; as old
+ age bends over them, his youth is renewed; and you see
+ childhood poring upon them, prest close to its very bosom.
+ Some of them are ephemeral, and their contents are exhaled
+ between the rising and the setting sun. Once a-week others
+ break through their green, pink, or crimson cover; and how
+ delightful, on the seventh day, smiles in the sunshine the
+ Sabbath flower&mdash;the only Sunday publication perused
+ without blame by the most religious&mdash;even before morning
+ prayer. Each month, indeed, throughout the whole year, has
+ its own flower-periodical. Some are annual, some biennial,
+ some triennial, and there are perennials that seem to live
+ for ever&mdash;and yet are still periodical&mdash;though our
+ love will not allow us to know when they die, and
+ phoenix-like re-appear from their own ashes. So much for
+ flowers&mdash;typifying or typified;&mdash;leaves
+ emblematical of pages&mdash;buds of binding dew-veils of
+ covers&mdash;and the wafting away of bloom and fragrance like
+ the dissemination of fine feelings, bright fancies, and
+ winged thoughts!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The flowers are the periodicals of the earth&mdash;the stars
+ are those of heaven. With what unfailing regularity do the
+ Numbers issue forth! Hesperus and Lucifer! ye are one
+ concern! The pole-star is studied by all nations. How
+ beautiful the poetry of the moon! On what subject does not
+ the sun throw light! No fear of hurting your eyes by reading
+ that fine, clear, large type on that softened page. Lo! as
+ you turn over, one blue, another yellow, and another green,
+ all, all alike delightful to the pupil, and dear to him as
+ the very apple of his eye! Yes, the great Periodical Press of
+ heaven is unceasingly at work&mdash;night and day; and though
+ even it has been taxed, and its emanations confined, still
+ their circulation is incalculable; nor have we yet heard that
+ Ministers intend instituting any prosecution against it. It
+ is yet Free, the only free Power all over the world. 'Tis
+ indeed like the air we breathe&mdash;if we have it not, we
+ die!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Look, then, at all our paper Periodicals with pleasure, for
+ sake of the flowers and the stars. Suppose them all extinct,
+ and life would be like a flowerless earth, a starless heaven.
+ We should soon forget the seasons themselves&mdash;the days
+ of the week&mdash;and the weeks of the month&mdash;and the
+ months of the year&mdash;and the years of the
+ century&mdash;and the centuries of all Time&mdash;and all
+ Time itself flowing away on into eternity. The Periodicals of
+ external nature would soon all lose their meaning, were there
+ no longer any Periodicals of the soul. These are the lights
+ and shadows of life, merrily dancing or gravely stealing over
+ the dial; remembrancers of the past&mdash;teachers of the
+ present&mdash;prophets of the future hours. Were they all
+ dead, spring would in vain renew her promise&mdash;wearisome
+ would be the long, long, interminable
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page441" name="page441"></a>[pg
+ 441]</span> summer-days&mdash;the fruits of autumn would
+ taste fushionless&mdash;and the winter's ingle blink
+ mournfully round the hearth. What are the blessed Seasons
+ themselves, in nature and in Thomson, but Periodicals of a
+ larger growth? They are the parents, or publishers, or
+ editors, of all the others&mdash;principal
+ contributors&mdash;nay, subscribers too&mdash;and may their
+ pretty family live for ever, still dying, yet ever renewed,
+ and on the increase every year. We should suspect him of a
+ bad, black heart, who loved not the Periodical Literature of
+ earth and sky&mdash;who would weep not to see one of its
+ flowers wither&mdash;one of its stars fall&mdash;one beauty
+ to die on its humble bed&mdash;one glory to drop from its
+ lofty sphere. Let them bloom and burn on&mdash;flowers in
+ which there is no poison, stars in which there is no
+ disease&mdash;whose blossoms are all sweet, and whose rays
+ are all sanative&mdash;both alike steeped in dew, and both,
+ to the fine ear of nature's worshipper, bathed in music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only look at Maga! One hundred and forty-eight months old!
+ and yet lovely as maiden between frock and gown&mdash;even as
+ sweet sixteen! Not a wrinkle on cheek or forehead! No
+ crow-foot has touched her eyes&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Her eye's blue languish, and her golden hair!"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Like an antelope in the wilderness&mdash;or swan on the
+ river&mdash;or eagle in the sky. Dream that she is dead, and
+ oh! what a world! Yet die she must some day&mdash;so must the
+ moon and stars. Meanwhile there is a blessing in
+ prayers&mdash;and hark! how the nations cry, "Oh! Maga, live
+ for ever!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We often pity our poor ancestors. How they contrived to make
+ the ends meet, surpasses our conjectural powers. What a weary
+ waste must have seemed expanding before their eyes, between
+ morning and night! Don't tell us that the human female never
+ longs for other pastime than
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "To suckle fools and chronicle small beer."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ True, ladies sighed not then for periodicals&mdash;but there,
+ in the depths of their ignorance, lay their utter
+ wretchedness. What! keep pickling and preserving during the
+ whole mortal life of an immortal being! Except when at jelly,
+ everlastingly at jam! The soul sickens at the monotonous
+ sweetness of such a wersh existence. True that many sat all
+ life-long at needlework; but is not that a very sew-sew sort
+ of life? Then oh! the miserable males! We speak of times
+ after the invention, it is true, of printing&mdash;but who
+ read what were called books then? Books! no more like our
+ periodicals, than dry, rotten, worm-eaten, fungous logs are
+ like green living leafy trees, laden with dews, bees, and
+ birds, in the musical sunshine. What could males do then but
+ yawn, sleep, snore, guzzle, guttle, and drink till they grew
+ dead and got buried? Fox-hunting won't always do&mdash;and
+ often it is not to be had; who can be happy with his gun
+ through good report and bad report in an a' day's rain? Small
+ amusement in fishing in muddy water; palls upon the sense
+ quarrelling with neighbours on points of etiquette and the
+ disputed property of hedgerow trees; a fever in the family
+ ceases to raise the pulse of any inmate, except the patient;
+ death itself is no relief to the dulness; a funeral is little
+ better; the yawn of the grave seems a sort of unhallowed
+ mockery; the scutcheon hung out on the front of the old
+ dismal hall, is like a sign on a deserted Spittal; along with
+ sables is worn a suitable stupidity by all the sad
+ survivors.&mdash;And such, before the era of Periodicals,
+ such was the life in&mdash;merry England. Oh! dear!&mdash;oh!
+ dear me!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We shall not enter into any historical details&mdash;for this
+ is not a Monologue for the Quarterly&mdash;but we simply
+ assert, that in the times we allude to (don't mention dates)
+ there was little or no reading in England. There was neither
+ the Reading Fly nor the Reading Public. What could this be
+ owing to, but the non-existence of Periodicals? What
+ elderly-young lady could be expected to turn from house
+ affairs, for example, to Spenser's Fairy Queen? It is a long,
+ long, long poem, that Fairy Queen of Spenser's; nobody, of
+ course, ever dreamt of getting through it; but though you may
+ have given up all hope of getting through a poem or a wood,
+ you expect to be able to find your way back again to the spot
+ where you unluckily got in; not so, however, with the Fairy
+ Queen. Beautiful it is indeed, most exquisitely and
+ unapproachably beautiful in many passages, especially about
+ ladies and ladies' love more than celestial, for Venus loses
+ in comparison her lustre in the sky; but still people were
+ afraid to get into it then as now; and "heavenly Una, with
+ her milk-white lamb," lay buried in dust. As to Shakspeare,
+ we cannot find many traces of him in the domestic occupations
+ of the English gentry during the times alluded to; nor do we
+ believe that the character of Hamlet was at all relished in
+ their halls, though perhaps an occasional squire chuckled at
+ the humours <span class="pagenum"><a id="page442"
+ name="page442"></a>[pg 442]</span> of Sir John Falstaff. We
+ have Mr. Wordsworth's authority for believing that Paradise
+ Lost was a dead letter, and John Milton virtually anonymous.
+ We need say no more. Books like these, huge heavy vols. lay
+ with other lumber in the garrets and libraries. As yet,
+ Periodical Literature was not; and the art of printing seems
+ long to have preceded the art of reading. It did not occur to
+ those generations that books were intended to be read by
+ people in general, but only by the select few. Whereas now,
+ reading is not only one of the luxuries, but absolutely one
+ of the necessaries of life, and we now no more think of going
+ without our book than without our breakfast; lunch consists
+ now of veal-pies and Venetian Bracelets&mdash;we still dine
+ on Roast-beef, but with it, instead of Yorkshire pudding, a
+ Scotch novel&mdash;Thomas Campbell and Thomas Moore sweeten
+ tea for us&mdash;and in "Course of Time" we sup on a Welsh
+ rabbit and a Religious Poem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have not time&mdash;how can we?&mdash;to trace the history
+ of the great revolution. But a great revolution there has
+ been, from nobody's reading anything, to every body's reading
+ all things; and perhaps it began with that good old proser
+ Richardson, the father of Pamela, Clarissa, and Sir Charles
+ Grandison. He seems to have been a sort of idiot, who had a
+ strange insight into some parts of human nature, and a
+ tolerable acquaintance with most parts of speech. He set the
+ public a-reading, and Fielding and Smollett shoved her
+ on&mdash;till the Minerva Press took her in hand&mdash;and
+ then&mdash;the Periodicals. But such Periodicals! The
+ Gentleman's Magazine&mdash;God bless it then, now, and for
+ ever!&mdash;the Monthly Review, the Critical and the British
+ Critic! The age had been for some years literary, and was now
+ fast becoming periodical. Magazines multiplied. Arose in
+ glory the Edinburgh, and then the Quarterly
+ Review&mdash;Maga, like a new sun, looked out from
+ heaven&mdash;from her golden urn a hundred satellites drew
+ light&mdash;and last of all, "the Planetary Five," the
+ Annuals, hung their lamps on high; other similar luminous
+ bodies emerged from the clouds, till the whole circumference
+ was bespangled, and astronomy became the favourite study with
+ all ranks of people, from the King upon the throne to the
+ meanest of his subjects. Now, will any one presume to deny,
+ that this has been a great change to the better, and that
+ there is now something worth living for in the world? Look at
+ our literature now, and it is all periodical together. A
+ thousand daily, thrice-a-week, twice-a week, weekly
+ newspapers, a hundred monthlies, fifty quarterlies, and
+ twenty-five annuals! No mouth looks up now and is not fed; on
+ the contrary, we are in danger of being crammed; an empty
+ head is as rare as an empty stomach; the whole day is one
+ meal, one physical, moral, and intellectual feast; the Public
+ goes to bed with a Periodical in her hand, and falls asleep
+ with it beneath her pillow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What blockhead thinks now of reading Milton, or Pope, or
+ Gray? Paradise Lost is lost; it has gone to the devil. Pope's
+ Epistles are returned to the dead-letter office; the age is
+ too loyal for "ruin seize thee, ruthless king," and the
+ oldest inhabitant has forgotten "the curfew
+ tolls."&mdash;<i>Blackwood's Magazine.</i>
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ THE SELECTOR, AND LITERARY NOTICES OF <i>NEW WORKS.</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ DR. LARDNER'S CYCLOPAEDIA.
+ </h3>
+ <center>
+ <i>History of Scotland. By Sir Walter Scott, Bart.</i> Vol.
+ I.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The rapid and sketchy page just quoted from <i>Blackwood's
+ Magazine</i> will illustrate the high ground which periodical
+ literature is daily attaining in this country. Of this
+ ascendancy, the volume before us is indeed a fine specimen,
+ and one of which we have reason to entertain a national
+ pride. We know it to be a common practice with publishers on
+ the continent to produce long works volume by volume, so that
+ Dr. Lardner's plan is by no means novel; but we should also
+ bear in mind that, compared with our family and cabinet
+ libraries, the majority of similar foreign works are mere
+ flimsy productions; and the <i>Encyclopedie Methodique</i>,
+ published in monthly volumes, in Paris, both in quantity and
+ execution, will not reach our literary standards of 1829. As
+ Dr. Lardner's plan is well known, it need not here be
+ repeated; neither need we remark upon the high qualifications
+ of Sir Walter Scott, as an historian of Scotland. An extract
+ shall speak for itself; and perhaps we cannot do better than
+ select one of the battle-pieces, which has all the vividness
+ of the finest historical painting: say
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ BANNOCKBURN.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ "Robert Bruce summoned the array of his kingdom to rendezvous
+ in the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page443"
+ name="page443"></a>[pg 443]</span> Tor-wood, about four miles
+ from Stirling, and by degrees prepared the field of battle
+ which he had selected for the contest. It was a space of
+ ground then called the New Park&mdash;perhaps reserved for
+ the chase, since Stirling was frequently a royal residence.
+ This ground was partly open, partly encumbered with trees, in
+ groups or separate. It was occupied by the Scottish line of
+ battle, extending from south to north, and fronting to the
+ east. In this position, Bruce's left flank and rear might
+ have been exposed to a sally from the castle of Stirling; but
+ Mowbray the governor's faith was beyond suspicion, and the
+ king was not in apprehension that he would violate the tenour
+ of the treaty, by which he was bound to remain in passive
+ expectation of his fate. The direct approach to the Scottish
+ front was protected in a great measure by a morass called the
+ New-miln Bog. A brook, called Bannockburn, running to the
+ eastward, between rocky and precipitous banks, effectually
+ covered the Scottish right wing, which rested upon it, and
+ was totally inaccessible. Their left flank was apparently
+ bare, but was, in fact, formidably protected in front by a
+ peculiar kind of field-works. As the ground in that part of
+ the field was adapted for the manoeuvres of cavalry Bruce
+ caused many rows of pits, three feet deep, to be dug in it,
+ so close together, as to suggest the appearance of a
+ honeycomb, with its ranges of cells. In these pits sharp
+ stakes were strongly pitched, and the apertures covered with
+ sod so carefully, as that the condition of the ground might
+ escape observation. Calthrops, or spikes contrived to lame
+ the horses, were also scattered in different directions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Having led his troops into the field of combat, on the
+ tidings of the English approach, the 23d of June, 1314, the
+ King of Scotland ordered his soldiers to arm themselves, and
+ making proclamation that those who were not prepared to
+ conquer or die with their sovereign were at liberty to
+ depart, he was answered by a cheerful and general expression
+ of their determination to take their fate with him. The King
+ proceeded to draw up the army in the following order: Three
+ oblong columns or masses of infantry, armed with lances,
+ arranged on the same front, with intervals betwixt them
+ formed his first line. Of these Edward Bruce had the guidance
+ of the right wing, James Douglas and Walter, the Steward of
+ Scotland, of the left, and Thomas Randolph of the central
+ division. These three commanders had their orders to permit
+ no English troops to pass their front, in order to gain
+ Stirling. The second line, forming one column or mass,
+ consisted of the men of the isles, under Bruce's faithful
+ friend and ally, the insular prince Angus, his own men of
+ Carrick, and those of Argyle and Cantire. With these the king
+ posted himself in order to carry support and assistance
+ wherever it might be required. With himself also he kept in
+ the rear a select body of horse, the greater part of whom he
+ designed for executing a particular service. The followers of
+ the camp were dismissed with the baggage, to station
+ themselves behind an eminence to the rear of the Scottish
+ army, still called the Gillies' (that is, the servants')
+ hill....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the morning of St. Barnaby, called the Bright, being the
+ 24th of June, 1314, Edward advanced in full form to the
+ attack of the Scots, whom he found in their position of the
+ preceding evening. The Vanguard of the English, consisting of
+ the archers and bill-men, or lancers, comprehending almost
+ all the infantry of the army, advanced, under the command of
+ the Earls of Gloucester and Hereford, who also had a fine
+ body of men at arms to support their column. All the
+ remainder of the English troops, consisting of nine battles,
+ or separate divisions, were so straitened by the narrowness
+ of the ground, that, to the eye of the Scots, they seemed to
+ form one very large body, gleaming with flashes of armour,
+ and dark with the number of banners which floated over them.
+ Edward himself commanded this tremendous array, and, in order
+ to guard his person, was attended by four hundred chosen men
+ at arms. Immediately around the King waited Sir Aymer de
+ Valence, that Earl of Pembroke who defeated Bruce at Methven
+ Wood, but was now to see a very different day; Sir Giles de
+ Argentine, a Knight of St. John of Jerusalem, who was
+ accounted, for his deeds in Palestine and elsewhere, one of
+ the best Knights that lived; and Sir Ingram Umfraville, an
+ Anglicised Scottishman, also famed for his skill in arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As the Scottish saw the immense display of their enemies
+ rolling towards them like a surging ocean, they were called
+ on to join in an appeal to Heaven against the strength of
+ human foes.&mdash;Maurice, the Abbot of Inchaffray,
+ bare-headed and bare-footed, walked along the Scottish line,
+ and conferred his benediction on the soldiers, who knelt to
+ receive it, and to worship the power in whose name it was
+ bestowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page444" name="page444"></a>[pg
+ 444]</span> "During this time the King of England was
+ questioning Umfraville about the purpose of his opponents.
+ "Will they," said Edward, "abide battle?"&mdash;"They
+ assuredly will," replied Umfraville; "and to engage them with
+ advantage, your Highness were best order a seeming retreat,
+ and draw them out of their strong ground." Edward rejected
+ this counsel, and observing the Scottish soldiers kneel down,
+ joyfully exclaimed, "They crave mercy."&mdash;"It is from
+ Heaven, not from your Highness," answered Umfraville: "on
+ that field they will win or die." The King then commanded the
+ charge to be sounded, and the attack to take place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Earls of Gloucester and Hereford charged the Scots left
+ wing, under Edward Bruce, with their men at arms; but some
+ rivalry between these two great Lords induced them to hurry
+ to the charge with more of emulation than of discretion, and
+ arriving at the shock disordered and out of breath, they were
+ unable to force the deep ranks of the spearmen; many horses
+ were thrown down, and their masters left at the mercy of the
+ enemy. The other three divisions of the Scottish army
+ attacked the mass of the English infantry, who resisted
+ courageously. The English archers, as at the battle of
+ Falkirk, now began to show their formidable skill, at the
+ expense of the Scottish spearmen; but for this Bruce was
+ prepared. He commanded Sir Robert Keith, the Marshal of
+ Scotland, with those four hundred men at arms whom he had
+ kept in reserve for the purpose, to make a circuit, and
+ charge the English bowmen in the flank. This was done with a
+ celerity and precision which dispersed the whole archery,
+ who, having neither stakes nor other barrier to keep off the
+ horse, nor long weapons to repel them, were cut down at
+ pleasure, and almost without resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The battle continued to rage, but with disadvantage to the
+ English. The Scottish archers had now an opportunity of
+ galling their infantry without opposition; and it would
+ appear that King Edward could find no means of bringing any
+ part of his numerous centre or rear-guard to the support of
+ those in the front, who were engaged at disadvantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bruce, seeing the confusion thicken, now placed himself at
+ the head of the reserve, and addressing Angus of the Isles in
+ the words, "My hope is constant in thee," rushed into the
+ engagement followed by all the troops he had hitherto kept in
+ reserve. The effect of such an effort, reserved for a
+ favourable moment, failed not to be decisive. Those of the
+ English who had been staggered were now constrained to
+ retreat; those who were already in retreat took to actual
+ flight. At this critical moment, the camp-followers of the
+ Scottish army, seized with curiosity to see how the day went,
+ or perhaps desirous to have a share of the plunder, suddenly
+ showed themselves on the ridge of the Gillies'-hill, in the
+ rear of the Scottish line of battle; and as they displayed
+ cloths and horse-coverings upon poles for ensigns, they bore
+ in the eyes of the English the terrors of an army with
+ banners. The belief that they beheld the rise of an
+ ambuscade, or the arrival of a new army of Scots, gave the
+ last impulse of terror, and all fled now, even those who had
+ before resisted. The slaughter was immense; the deep ravine
+ of Bannockburn, to the south of the field of battle, lying in
+ the direction taken by most of the fugitives, was almost
+ choked and bridged over with the slain, the difficulty of the
+ ground retarding the fugitive horsemen till the lancers were
+ upon them. Others, and in great numbers, rushed into the
+ river Forth, in the blindness of terror, and perished there.
+ No less than twenty-seven Barons fell in the field; the Earl
+ of Gloucester was at the head of the fatal list: young,
+ brave, and high-born, when he saw the day was lost, he rode
+ headlong on the Scottish spears, and was slain. Sir Robert
+ Clifford, renowned in the Scottish wars, was also killed. Two
+ hundred Knights and seven hundred Esquires, of high birth and
+ blood, graced the list of slaughter with the noblest names of
+ England; and thirty thousand of the common file filled up the
+ fatal roll.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Edward, among whose weaknesses we cannot number cowardice,
+ was reluctantly forced from the bloody field by the Earl of
+ Pembroke. The noble Sir Giles de Argentine considered it as
+ his duty to attend the King until he saw him in personal
+ safety, then observing that "it was not his own wont to fly,"
+ turned back, rushed again into the battle, cried his war-cry,
+ galloped boldly against the victorious Scots, and was slain,
+ according to his wish, with his face to the enemy. Edward
+ must have been bewildered in the confusion of the field, for
+ instead of directing his course southerly to Linlithgow, from
+ which he came, he rode northward to Stirling, and demanded
+ admittance. Philip de Mowbray, the governor, remonstrated
+ against this rash step, reminding the unfortunate Prince that
+ he was obliged by his treaty to surrender
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page445" name="page445"></a>[pg
+ 445]</span> the castle next day, as not having been relieved
+ according to the conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Edward was therefore obliged to take the southern road; and
+ he must have made a considerable circuit to avoid the
+ Scottish army. He was, however, discovered on his retreat,
+ and pursued by Douglas with sixty horse, who were all that
+ could be mustered for the service. The King, by a rapid and
+ continued flight through a country in which his misfortunes
+ must have changed many friends into enemies, at length gained
+ the castle of Dunbar, where he was hospitably received by the
+ Earl of March. From Dunbar Edward escaped almost alone to
+ Berwick in a fishing skiff, having left behind him the finest
+ army a King of England ever commanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The quantity of spoil gained by the victors at the battle of
+ Bannockburn was inestimable, and the ransoms paid by the
+ prisoners largely added to the mass of treasure. Five near
+ relations to the Bruce&mdash;namely, his wife, her sister
+ Christian, his daughter Marjory, the Bishop of Glasgow
+ (Wishart), and the young Earl of Mar, the King's nephew, were
+ exchanged against the Earl of Hereford, High Constable of
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Scottish loss was very small: Sir William Vipont and Sir
+ Walter Ross were the only persons of consideration slain. Sir
+ Edward Bruce is said to have been so much attached to the
+ last of these knights as to have expressed his wish that the
+ battle had remained unfought, so Ross had not died."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The present volume contains 350 pages, in a very pleasing
+ type, and a vignette title; and the style in which it is
+ produced is uniformly worthy of the very responsible quarter
+ whence it emanates.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE YOUNG LADY'S BOOK.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ This is indeed a <i>golden gift</i> for any <i>demoiselle</i>
+ of our readers' acquaintance, for it blends the unusual
+ qualities of elegance and usefulness of the highest order. It
+ is described in the title as "A Manual of Elegant
+ Recreations, Exercises and Pursuits," and numbers in its
+ contents, Moral deportment&mdash;the
+ Florist&mdash;Mineralogy, Conchology, Entomology, the Aviary,
+ the Toilet, Embroidery, the Escrutoire, Painting, Music,
+ Dancing, Archery, Riding, and the Ornamental Artist. Each of
+ these subjects is treated of in separate chapters, in a neat
+ style, slightly scientific, and highly amusive; and the whole
+ are illustrated with upwards of <i>Six Hundred
+ Engravings</i>, which are appropriately chosen and admirably
+ executed. Botany, Conchology, Entomology, and the Aviary thus
+ admit of scores of little cuts worked in with the type; the
+ female accomplishments of Embroidery, ornamental card and
+ basket work, contain many beautiful devices; and the "elegant
+ recreations" of Dancing, Riding, &amp;c. are equally well
+ illustrated by the various forms, positions,
+ &amp;c.&mdash;Each subject has been treated of by a master or
+ mistress of the respective art, but the uniformity with which
+ the editor has marshalled them in his work, almost makes them
+ resemble the productions of one hand. We need not point out
+ the merit of this individual contribution; for the lady-pen
+ must be omnipotent indeed which could write equally well on
+ every branch of female accomplishment. By way of a seasonable
+ extract we take part of a brief historical sketch prefixed to
+ the Dancing instructions, and a few of the hints:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From the death of Elizabeth, until after the restoration of
+ Charles II., the turbulence of the times, and the peculiar
+ character of the age, prevented this art, which flourishes
+ only in 'the bowers of peace and joy,' from making much
+ progress; but in the days of the merry monarch it began to
+ revive, and advanced more, or less, in all the succeeding
+ reigns. The celebrated Beau Nash, who was, for a long time,
+ M.C. at Bath, may be considered the founder of modern
+ ball-room dancing; which, however, has been divested of much
+ of its cold formality, and improved in various other respects
+ since the time of that singular person. It is, nevertheless,
+ a matter of regret, that the graceful and stately Minuet has
+ been entirely abandoned in favour of the more
+ recently-invented dances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The French country dances, or Contre-Danses (from the
+ parties being placed opposite to each other,) since called
+ Quadrilles (from their having four sides) which approximate
+ nearly to the Cotillon, were first introduced to France about
+ the middle of Lewis the Fifteenth's reign. Previously to this
+ period, the dances most in vogue were La Perigourdine, La
+ Matelotte, La Pavane, Les Forlanes, Minuets, &amp;c.
+ Quadrilles, when first introduced, were danced by four
+ persons only: four more were soon added, and thus the
+ complete square was formed; but the figures were materially
+ different from those of the present period. The gentlemen
+ advanced with the opposite ladies, menaced each other with
+ the fore-finger, and retired clapping their hands three
+ times; they then turned hands of four, turned their
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page446" name="page446"></a>[pg
+ 446]</span> own partners, and grand rond of all concluded the
+ figure. The Vauxhall d'Hiver was, at that time, the most
+ fashionable place of resort: the pupils of the Royal Academy
+ were engaged to execute new dances; a full and effective band
+ performed the most fashionable airs, and new figures were at
+ length introduced and announced as a source of attraction;
+ but this place was soon pulled down, and re-built on the
+ ground now occupied by the Theatre du Vaudeville. The
+ establishment failed, and the proprietor became a bankrupt. A
+ short time after, it was re-opened by another speculator; but
+ on such a scale, as merely to attract the working classes of
+ the community. The band was now composed of a set of
+ miserable scrapers, who played in unison, and continually in
+ the key of G sharp; amid the sounds which emanated from their
+ instruments, the jangling of a tambourin, and the shrill
+ notes of a fife were occasionally heard. Thus did things
+ continue until the French Revolution; when, about the time
+ the Executive Directory was formed, the splendid apartments
+ of the Hotel de Richelieu were opened for the reception of
+ the higher classes, who had then but few opportunities of
+ meeting to 'trip it on the light fantastic toe.' Monsieur
+ Hullin, then of the Opera, was selected to form a band of
+ twenty-four musicians, from among those of the highest talent
+ in the various theatres: he found no difficulty in this, as
+ they were paid in paper-money, then of little or no value;
+ whereas, the administrators of the Richelieu establishment
+ paid in specie. The tunes were composed in different keys,
+ with full orchestral accompaniments, by Monsieur Hullin; and
+ the contrast thus produced to the abominable style which had
+ so long existed, commenced a new era in dancing: the old
+ figures were abolished, and stage-steps were
+ adopted;&mdash;Pas de Zephyrs, Pas de Bourr&eacute;s,
+ Ballot&eacute;s, Jet&eacute;s Battus, &amp;c. were among the
+ most popular. Minuets and Forlanes were still continued; but
+ Monsieur Vestris displaced the latter by the Gavotte, which
+ he taught to Monsieur Trenis and Madame de Choiseul, who
+ first danced it at a f&ecirc;te given by a lady of celebrity,
+ at the Hotel de Valentinois, Rue St. Lazar, on the 16th of
+ August, 1797; at this f&ecirc;te, Monsieur Hullin introduced
+ an entirely new set of figures of his own
+ composition.&mdash;These elicited general approbation: they
+ were danced at all parties, and still retain pre-eminence.
+ The names of Pantalon, L'Et&eacute;, La Poule, La Trenis,
+ &amp;c. which were given to the tunes, have been applied to
+ the figures. The figure of La Trenis, was introduced by
+ Monsieur Trenis's desire, it being part of the figure from a
+ Gavotte, danced in the then favourite ballet of Nina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To the French we are indebted for rather an ingenious, but
+ in the opinion of many professional dancers, an useless
+ invention, by which it was proposed, that as the steps in
+ dancing are not very numerous, although they may be
+ infinitely combined, that characters might be made use of to
+ express the various steps and figures of a dance, in the same
+ manner as words and sentences are expressed by letters; or
+ what is more closely analogous, as the musical characters are
+ employed to represent to the eye the sounds of an air. The
+ well-known Monsieur Beauchamp, and a French dancing-master,
+ each laid claim to be the original inventer of this art; and
+ the consequence was a law suit, in which, however, judgment
+ was pronounced in favour of the former. The art has been
+ introduced into this country, but without success. An English
+ dancing-master has also, we believe, with considerable labour
+ and ingenuity, devised a plan somewhat similar to that of the
+ French author: diagrams being proposed to represent the
+ figures, or steps, instead of characters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are a variety of dances to which the term National
+ may, with some propriety, be applied. Among the most
+ celebrated of these are,&mdash;the Italian Tarantula, the
+ German Waltz, and the Spanish Bolero. To dwell on their
+ peculiarities would, however, as it appears to us, be
+ useless: the first is rarely exhibited, even on the stage:
+ the second, although it still retains much of its original
+ character, has, in this country, been modified into the Waltz
+ Country Dance, and all the objections which it encountered,
+ on its first introduction, seem to have been gradually
+ overcome, since it assumed its present popular form; and the
+ graceful Bolero is restricted to the theatre only, being
+ never introduced to the English ball-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The manner of walking well is an object which all young
+ ladies should be anxious to acquire; but, unfortunately, it
+ is a point too much neglected. In the drawing-room, the
+ ball-room, or during the promenade, an elegant deportment, a
+ 'poetry of motion,'&mdash;is, and ever will be, appreciated.
+ The step ought not to exceed the length of the foot; the leg
+ should be put forward, without stiffness, in about the fourth
+ position; but <span class="pagenum"><a id="page447"
+ name="page447"></a>[pg 447]</span> without any effort to turn
+ the foot out, as it will tend to throw the body awry, and
+ give the person an appearance of being a professional dancer.
+ The head should be kept up and the chest open: the body will
+ then attain an advantageous position, and that steadiness so
+ much required in good walking. The arms should fall in their
+ natural position, and all their movements and oppositions to
+ the feet be easy and unconstrained. The employment of
+ soldiers to teach young ladies how to walk, which, we are
+ sorry to say, is a practice adopted by many parents and heads
+ of seminaries, is much to be deprecated. The stiffness
+ acquired under regimental tuition, is adverse to all the
+ principles of grace, and annihilates that buoyant lightness
+ which is so conducive to ease and elegance in the young."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the host of cuts incorporated with the text, each art
+ has a whole page embellishment exquisitely engraved on wood;
+ the designs of which are the very acme of taste. The head and
+ tail, and letter pieces of the chapters are in equally good
+ taste; and taken altogether, the "Young Lady's Book," either
+ as a production of usefulness or illustratration of art, is
+ the finest production of its day. It has been erroneously
+ noticed, from its publication at this season, as an "Annual,"
+ but it displays infinitely more pains-taking than either of
+ those elaborate productions&mdash;and is, we should judge,
+ neither the labour of one or two years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had almost overlooked the imitative Mechlin lace-facings,
+ which would deceive any Nottingham factor.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE ZOOLOGICAL KEEPSAKE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The design of this "Annual" is good, we may say, very good;
+ but we are alike bound to confess that the execution falls
+ short of the idea. It contains an account of the Gardens and
+ Museum of the Zoological Society, but this is too much
+ interlarded with digressions. All the introductory matter
+ might have been omitted with advantage to the author as well
+ as the public. The descriptions are divided by poetical
+ pieces, which serve as <i>reliefs</i>, one of which we
+ extract:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE LOST LAMB; OR, THE CHILD SAVED.
+ </h3>
+ <h4>
+ BY H.C. DEAKIN, ESQ.
+ </h4>
+ <center>
+ <i>Author of "Portraits of the Dead."</i>
+ </center>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Morn rose upon the purple hills,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ In all his pomp display'd;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Flash'd forth like stars a hundred rills,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ In valley, plain, and glade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foaming mist, day's chilly shrine,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Into the clouds upcurl'd,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forth broke in majesty divine
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The Grampians' giant world.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ It was a glorious sight to view
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Those mountain forms unfold,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Heavens above intensely blue,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The plains beneath like gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Day woke, a thousand songs arose,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Morn's orisons on high,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Earth's universal heart o'erflows
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ To Him beyond the sky.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ The shepherd roused him from his sleep,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And down the vale be hied,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like guardian good, to count his sheep,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ His <i>firstling</i> by his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His firstling! 'twas his only child&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ A boy of three years old,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father's weary hours beguiled
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Whilst watching o'er his fold.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ And many an hour the child and he
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Joy'd o'er the vale together;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a lovely thing to see
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ That child among the heather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vale is pass'd, the mountains rear
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Their rugged cliffs in air,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He must ascend to view more near
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ His distant fleecy care.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "My child! the flowers are bright for thee,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The daisy's pearl'd with dew;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Go, share them with the honey-bee,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Till I return for you,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thy dog and mine with thee shall stay
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Whilst I the flock am counting,"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said, and took his tedious way,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The hilly green sward mounting.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ O'er crag and cliff the father toil'd,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Unconscious pass'd the hours:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He for a time forgot the child
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ He'd left among the flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boiling clouds come down and veil
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Valley, and wood, and plain;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then fears the father's heart assail,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ He will descend again.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Morn melted into noon, and night
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Dark on the shepherd shone,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Terror in vain impels his flight,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ His child!&mdash;his child is gone!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He calls upon his darling's name,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ His dog in vain he calls;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hears naught but the eagle's scream,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Or roar of waterfalls.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ He rushes home&mdash;he is not there&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ With agony and woe;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hunts him in the cold night air,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ O'er hill and vale below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morn rose&mdash;the faithful dog appears,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ He whines for food so mild,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father hied him through his tears,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And said, "Tray, where's my child?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Thrice rose the morn&mdash;the father's heart
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ With grief was almost dead;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But every morn the dog appeared,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And whined and begged for bread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet through the night and through the day,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The dog was never seen&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is not wont to stay away,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Where can the dog have been?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ On the fourth morn this faithful friend,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ As usual whined for meat&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They mark the way his footsteps tend,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And follow his retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They watch him to a cave beside
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The Grampians' craggy base&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behold! the shepherd's wandering child
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Within the dog's embrace.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ He springs&mdash;he weeps away his cares,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ He cries aloud with joy&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He kneels, he sobs to heaven his prayers,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ For his redeemed boy.
+ </p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page448"
+ name="page448"></a>[pg 448]</span>
+ <p>
+ Then, turning, hugs his favourite hound,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The trusty, true, and bold,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By whom was saved, through whom was found
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The <i>firstling</i> of his fold!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The Engravings, which are very numerous, are exclusively on
+ wood. A few of them are views in the Regent's Park Gardens;
+ but in point of execution, we think the best is a Portrait of
+ the Satyr, or "<i>Happy</i> Jerry," at Cross's Menagerie.
+ Though by no means one of nature's favourites, he appears to
+ possess the companionable qualities of sitting in a chair,
+ smoking a pipe, and drinking spirits and water, and appearing
+ to understand every look, word, and action of his keeper;
+ indeed, so thoroughly contented is the creature, that he has
+ obtained the name of "Happy Jerry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To speak <i>zoologically</i>, next year we hope the artist
+ and editor will put their best feet foremost, and improve
+ upon the present volume. The design is one of the best for a
+ Juvenile Annual&mdash;for who does not recollect the very
+ amusing game of "Birds, Beasts, and Fishes, and sometimes
+ Insects and Reptiles." What a menagerie of guessing novelties
+ would have been a <i>Zoological Keepsake</i> in our school
+ days.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ THE GATHERER.
+ </h2>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHAKSPEARE.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ SPILLING THE SALT.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It is a curious fact, though not generally known, that the
+ popular superstition of overturning the salt at table being
+ unlucky, originated in a picture of the Last Supper, by
+ Leonardo da Vinci, in which Judas Iscariot is represented as
+ overturning the salt.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ KANGAROOS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ "I have been much entertained during my wanderings through
+ the country adjoining this town, in observing the singular
+ habits and extreme sagacity of the kangaroos. I have noticed
+ several who carried in their fore paws a sort of umbrella, or
+ fan, which they held so as to protect their head and
+ shoulders from the violence of the sun. One day I slipped a
+ brace of large greyhounds at a female who carried one of
+ these useful appendages, which she soon dropped and escaped:
+ it was formed of a large bough, over which some large leaves
+ were spread, and fastened on simply by the shoots of the
+ bough sticking into the leaf."&mdash;<i>From a letter dated
+ Hobart's Town, February</i>, 1829.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE EARL OF MANSFIELD.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ "When he was at Westminster School, Lady Kinnoul, in one of
+ the vacations, invited him to her home, where, observing him
+ with a pen in his hand, and seemingly thoughtful, she asked
+ him if he was writing his theme, and what in plain English
+ the theme was? The school-boy's smart answer rather surprised
+ her Ladyship&mdash;'What is that to you?' She
+ replied&mdash;'How can you be so rude? I asked you very
+ civilly a plain question, and did not expect from a
+ school-boy such a pert answer.' The reply was, 'Indeed, my
+ Lady, I can only answer once more, 'What is that to you?' In
+ reality the theme was&mdash;<i>Quid ad te
+ pertinet!"&mdash;From Holliday's Life of the Earl of
+ Mansfield</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ "IN SPITE OF HIS TEETH."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ King John once demanded of a certain Jew ten thousand marks,
+ on refusal of which, he ordered one of the Israelite's teeth
+ to be drawn every day till he should consent. The Jew lost
+ seven, and then paid the required sum. Hence the
+ phrase&mdash;"In spite of his teeth."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ SWAN RIVER.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ A gentleman who had just arrived in town met an Hibernian
+ friend, and with anxious solicitude asked him "where the best
+ bed was to be got?" "By my soul," said the Emeralder, with a
+ Kilmainham look, "I'm tould at the <i>Swan River</i>, where
+ there's nothing but <i>down</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ W.C.R.R.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ SIAMESE YOUTHS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ QUERY.&mdash;Would not the <i>law</i> be the most profitable
+ profession for the Siamese Youths? They might plead
+ <i>pro</i> and <i>con</i>, and take <i>fees</i> from
+ <i>plaintiff</i> and <i>defendant</i>. If raised to the
+ Bench, they might receive the salary of <i>one</i> Judge, but
+ act as <i>two</i>, thereby saving the nation some money in
+ these <i>hard</i> times of <i>cash</i> payments, and please
+ all parties, <i>one</i> summing up for plaintiff and the
+ <i>other</i> for defendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ P.T.W.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ N.B. They appear very good natured, although they
+ <i>huffed</i> me <i>twice</i> at draughts.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ WITH the present Number is published a SUPPLEMENT, containing
+ a Steel-plate PORTRAIT of THOMAS CAMPBELL, ESQ. and a copious
+ MEMOIR; with Title, Preface, and Index to Vol. xiv.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a> <b>Footnote 1</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+ <p>
+ For a general description of this magnificent edifice, see
+ MIRROR, No. 247.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11460 ***</div>
+</body>
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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #11460 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/11460)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction, 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
+ Volume 14, No. 406, Saturday, December 26, 1829.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: March 5, 2004 [EBook #11460]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIRROR OF LITERATURE, NO. 406 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Andy Jewell, David Garcia and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. XIV, NO. 406.] SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1829. [PRICE 2d.
+
+
+
+
+VIRGIL'S TOMB.
+
+
+[Illustration: Virgil's Tomb.]
+
+
+This consecrated relic of genius stands on the hill of Posilipo, in the
+environs of Naples. Its recent state is so beautifully described by
+Eustace, that we shall not, like gipsys do stolen children, disfigure it
+to prevent recognition.
+
+Proceeding westward along the Chiaia and keeping towards the beach, says
+Eustace, we came to the quarter called Mergyllina. To ascend the hill of
+Posilipo we turned to the right, and followed a street winding as a
+staircase up the steep, and terminating at a garden gate. Having
+entered, we pursued a path through a vineyard and descending a little,
+came to a small square building, flat-roofed, placed on a sort of
+platform on the brow of a precipice on one side, and on the other
+sheltered by a super-incumbent rock. An aged ilex, spreading from the
+sides of the rock, and bending over the edifice, covers the roof with
+its ever verdant foliage. Numberless shrubs spring around, and
+interwoven with ivy clothe the walls and hang in festoons over the
+precipice. The edifice before us was an ancient tomb--the tomb of
+VIRGIL! We entered; a vaulted cell and two modern windows alone
+presented themselves to view: the poet's name is the only ornament of
+the place. No sarcophagus, no urn, and even no inscription to feed the
+devotion of the classical pilgrim. The epitaph which though not genuine
+is yet ancient, was inscribed by the order of the Duke of Pescolangiano,
+then proprietor of the place, on a marble slab placed in the side of the
+rock opposite the entrance of the tomb, where it still remains. Every
+body is acquainted with it--
+
+
+ Mantua me genuit, Calabri rapuere, tenet nunc Parthenope, cecini
+ pascua, rura, duces.
+
+
+But there are authors who venture to assert, that the tomb of which we
+are now speaking, is not the sepulchre of Virgil. Of this number are the
+classic Addison and the laborious and accurate Cluverius. The authority
+of two such eminent persons, without doubt, carries great weight with
+it, but that weight is upon this occasion considerably lessened by the
+weakness of the arguments on which their opinion is grounded. These
+arguments may be found in Cluverius, and Addison merely expresses his
+opinion without entering into any discussion. They are drawn from a few
+verses of Statius.
+
+In opposition to these arguments, or rather conjectures founded upon the
+vague expressions of a single poet (a poet often censured for his
+obscurity), we have the constant and uninterrupted tradition of the
+country supported by the authority of a numerous host of learned and
+ingenious antiquaries; and upon such grounds we may still continue to
+cherish the conviction, that we have visited the tomb of Virgil, and
+hailed his sacred shade on the spot where his ashes long reposed.
+
+The laurel which was once said to have sprung up at its base, and
+covered it with its luxuriant branches, now flourishes only in the
+verses of youthful bards, or in the descriptions of early travellers;
+myrtle, ivy and ilex, all plants equally agreeable to the genius of the
+place, and the subjects of the poet, now perform the office of the
+long-withered bays, and encircle the tomb with verdure and perfume.
+
+The sepulchre of Virgil, it may be imagined, must have long remained an
+object of interest and veneration, especially as his works had excited
+universal admiration even in his life-time, and were very soon after his
+death put into the hands of children, and made a part of the rudiments
+of early education. Yet Martial declares that it had been neglected in
+his time, and that Silius Italicus alone restored its long forgotten
+honours.
+
+The reader will learn with regret that Virgil's tomb, consecrated as it
+ought to be to genius and meditation, is sometimes converted into the
+retreat of assassins, or the lurking place of Sbirri. Such at least it
+was the last time we visited it, when wandering that way about sun-set
+we found it filled with armed men. We were surprised on both sides, and
+on ours not very agreeably at the unexpected rencounter; so lonely the
+place and so threatening the aspects of these strangers. Their manners
+however were courteous; and on inquiry we were informed that they were
+Sbirri, and then lying in wait for a murderer, who was supposed to
+make that spot his nightly asylum. It would be unjust to accuse the
+Neapolitans of culpable indifference towards this or any other monument
+of antiquity; but it is incumbent on the proprietor or the public, to
+secure them against such profanation. On the whole, few places are in
+themselves more picturesque, and from the recollection inseparably
+interwoven with it, no spot is more interesting than the tomb of Virgil.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LAST CHRISTMAS DAY.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+ "Say, if such blandishments did ever greet
+ Thy charmed soul; hast thou not crav'd to die?
+ Hast not thine immaterial seem'd but air
+ Verging to sigh itself from thee, and share
+ Beatitude? hast thou not watch'd thy breath
+ In meek, faint hope, that soon 'twould sink in death?"
+
+_MS. Poem._
+
+
+Last Christmas Day! my heart leaps with joy at its very memory; it was a
+mental _Noel_, a Christmas of the soul, (if I may thus express myself.)
+That which I am about to relate of it is strictly true, and I do relate
+it because that day is one of the very few in our brief existence which
+form a moral epoch in, and influence subsequent, life. Last Christmas
+Day, I well remember, my spirit revelled in an Eden blessedness--a bliss
+which the unholy world did not, could not, give, and consequently could
+not take away. Reader! I will hope, I will believe, that thou hast
+experienced feelings and emotions, like those high and holy ones of
+which I would endeavour now to preserve a faint transcript. Come then,
+let us unite our ideas, let us speak together, but let us yet mention as
+present, those beatific thoughts and imaginings which are indeed past.
+Let us ever remember and cherish in our heart of hearts those golden
+fore-tastes of future eternity, or (according to Platonism) those
+rapturous reminiscences of past, which prove beyond logical
+demonstration, the existence of some vital principle in man, godlike in
+faculties, in essence immaterial, in duration, immortal! It is Christmas
+Day, a deep, unearthly calm possesses our minds; all passions are
+slumbering, save the beautiful and holy ones of adoring love, mingled
+with overwhelming gratitude towards our maker, and philanthropic love,
+universal benevolence, to man. It is winter, but one of those delicious
+days in which closing our eyes, so that we behold not sad hosts of bare
+stems and branches, we may well deem that summer reigns! And a summer
+indeed reigns in our bosoms! Now nature seems new and fascinating, as it
+did to Adam when he wakened into life. Now, as for the first time, we
+discern with unspeakable emotions, that divine affection as well as
+unlimited power, which actuates and supports creation. Now we comprehend
+that the universe was designed to minister happiness to myriads of
+intelligent beings; but that man, by sin, frustrates the gracious
+intent, and produces misery. Now the glorious golden sun seems in its
+gladdening lustre, like a smile from its creator; a smile beaming
+ineffable love, and joy, and peace. Now the sky, the pale, delicate,
+sapphire sky, the soft, tender, inviting, enfolding, and immeasurable
+sky, appears to image the mercy of its maker. Let us yet gaze upon the
+sky, for it also admonishes us of other delightful things; it is
+silent--it is awful--it is holy; but its silence is beautiful, and with
+wordless eloquence it speaks unto our enraptured bosoms of deep,
+eternal, unimaginable repose! it infuses into our breasts undefinable
+ideas and sensations; it appears to our enchanted imaginations an emblem
+meet of the grand dream of eternity, and our spirits seem on the verge
+of quitting earth, in thrilling contemplations on the islands of that
+infinite abyss, and their immortal inhabitants! We gaze in hope,
+adoration, and rapture on the blue expanse, varied by delicate vapours,
+sailing calmly, wondrously through it; and then occur to our memories
+spontaneously, the exquisite lines translated from a _morceau_, by
+Gluck, (a German poet;) and our hearts respond as each of us sighs:
+
+
+ "There's peace and welcome in yon sea
+ Of endless blue tranquillity.
+ Those clouds are living things!
+ I trace their veins of liquid gold,
+ I see them solemnly unfold
+ Their soft and fleecy wings!
+
+ These be the angels that convey
+ Us weary children of a day
+ Life's tedious nothing o'er,
+ Where neither passions come, nor woes
+ To vex the genius of repose
+ On death's majestic shore!"
+
+
+Then do our delighted eyes wander downward; then doth earth appear a
+glorious, though but a temporary palace, the gift of a gracious God to
+man! then do we feel an unaccountable assurance that angels visit the
+beautiful domain; then that (though viewlessly) they rejoice with, they
+sorrow for, (if angels can sorrow) and they minister unto "the heirs of
+salvation," as they did in the days of old, and as they will do, to the
+end of time. Were we not assured of this blessed fact in the book of
+books, reason would assert, that for a thankless, graceless generation
+alone, earth should not have been formed so divinely fair; but it is
+heavenly, that the immortal servitors of man may even here find records
+of the divinity, and themes for undying thanksgiving. Are we indeed
+visited, watched, and ministered unto, by beatific essences? Oh, reason
+and revelation, both loudly proclaim the fact; those beneficent beings
+may be with us then, when we deem ourselves alone; they may be our
+society in the solitude of our chambers; they may pass us in the breeze,
+and they may wander beside us in our loneliest walks. Such meditations
+are calculated to inspire our bosoms with new life; to brighten all
+nature around us, and to unite us to the invisible world by ties, of the
+existence of which we were never previously sensible; ties, at once so
+sweet and so sacred, that we almost crave the blessing of death, in
+order more surely to strengthen them! Then doth the beauty of "the vale
+of tears" confound us; then doth it infuse into our bosoms such
+unalterable fore-tastes; such mysterious and undefinable sensations of
+the blessedness of "the isles of joy," that our very souls seem to have
+become but one prayer, one fervent, wordless, agonizing prayer, for
+divine repose, and unimaginable blessedness; and then doth the mere
+suggestion of final reprobation amount to insufferable torture! Oh, that
+such heavenly imaginings, such divine intimations of a transcendent
+futurity, were more frequently vouchsafed to us, and were less
+evanescent. They are glimpses of everlasting day, shining on wanderers
+in "the valley of the shadow of death;" they are droppings from the
+overflowing and ineffable cup of mercy; they are presciences of
+eternity, inestimable, unutterable! and the pen that would describe
+indescribable perceptions, droops in shame and sorrow at its own
+imbecility. Such perceptions have visited, do visit us, on this most
+rapturous of Christmas Days? Is it not a golden day? does it not remove
+us for a little space from earth, into the society of the holiest
+sentient beings, and to the beauty of a celestial, surpassing, world?
+Does it not bestow on our souls their long-lost ethereal wings? and do
+not the delighted strangers soar for a little while above the grossest
+realms of matter? Alas! even but for a little while; now do they drop,
+for now flag and droop those angelic pinions which are too humid and
+heavy with that atmosphere, from whence they could not wholly disengage
+themselves; the golden harps of heaven murmur in their entranced ears no
+longer; the smiles of the Sons of Peace fade from their enchanted sight;
+and the clouds of this nether world retain from their enamoured gaze,
+the treasures of infinity!
+
+Perhaps we have enjoyed a very enthusiastic, a very poetical, Christmas
+Day! we pretend not to deny it, though steadfastly believing it was
+neither an anti-Christian, nor an utterly unprofitable one; nay, we even
+venture to hope, that the beatitude of spirit just feebly portrayed was
+not unpleasing in His sight, unto whom, for His gift of immortal life,
+we upon Christmas Day render our peculiar thanksgivings!
+
+M.L.B.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE FALL OF ZARAGOZA.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+ Awake, awake, the trumpet hath sung its lay to the sunny sky,
+ And the glorious shout from Spanish lips gives forth its wild reply.
+ Awake, awake, how the chargers foam, as to battle they dash on,
+ Oh, Zaragoza, on this proud day, must thy walls be lost or won!
+
+ His hand--the hand of the youthful chief was on his flashing sword,
+ And his plume gleam'd white thro' the smoke and flame o'er the lofty
+ city pour'd--
+ And the banners around him darkly swept like the waves of a stormy sea,
+ But Zaragoza, amid this strife, his heart was firm to thee.
+
+ "Away, away, tread her walls to dust!"--the Gallic warriors cried
+ "Defend, my bands, your hearth and home," the youthful chief replied.
+ They caught the sound of this spirit-voice as they stay'd their foes'
+ career,
+ And many a thrilling cry was heard, when the bayonet met the spear
+
+ In vain, ye heroes, do you breathe your latest vows to heaven,
+ In vain is your devoted blood in the cause of Freedom given,
+ For when the morn awakes again, your city shall not be
+ The haunt of maids who warbled deep, their sweetest songs for ye!
+
+ But the story of your hallow'd death shall not remain unsung,
+ Oh, its record shall be glorified by many a minstrel tongue
+ For Freedom's holy light hath touch'd each ruin'd shrine and wall,
+ That sadly speak unto the heart of Zaragoza's fall.
+
+_Deal_.
+
+REGINALD AUGUSTINE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE BANQUETTING HOUSE, WHITEHALL.[1]
+
+
+ [1] For a general description of this magnificent edifice, see
+ MIRROR, No. 247.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Many persons who have visited this chapel may not have noticed or been
+aware of the splendid painted ceiling by Sir Peter Paul Rubens, which
+was executed by him when ambassador at the court of James I. This
+beautiful performance represents the apotheosis of that peaceful
+monarch, he being seated on his throne, and turning towards the deities
+of peace and commerce, having rejected the gods of war and discord. It
+is painted on canvass, and is in excellent preservation; the original
+painter had £3,000. for his labour; it has been retouched more than
+once, and the last time was by Cipriani, who had £2,000. for his
+repairs.
+
+Ralph, in his _Critical Review of Public Buildings_, observes, "that
+this picture is not so generally known as one could wish, but needs only
+to be known to be esteemed according to its merits;" and he further
+adds, "it is but an ill decoration for a place of religious worship, for
+in the first place, its contents are nowise akin to devotion, and in the
+next, the workmanship is so very extraordinary that a man must have
+abundance of zeal or no taste, that can attend to anything besides."
+
+It is almost needless to remark, that it was from a passage broken for
+the occasion through the wall of this building, that the unfortunate
+Charles was conducted by the regicides to his death; this passage still
+remains, and now serves as a doorway to an additional building in
+Scotland Yard: and nearly facing this doorway stood the ingenious Dial,
+engraved and described in No. 400, of the MIRROR. The next important and
+public event connected with this building occurred in 1811, when a very
+different and far more gratifying spectacle took place, being that of
+the ceremony of placing in the chapel, the eagles and other colours
+taken by our gallant troops during the war. There were six standards and
+the like number of regimental colours, which after having been presented
+at the altar were affixed to the places they now occupy. There is a
+singular circumstance attached to the history of one of the eagles which
+may be well introduced in this place; it may be distinguished from the
+others by its having a wreath placed round its neck, the flag itself
+being destroyed. It was the usual custom for the eagles to be attached
+to the staves on which they are borne by a screw, so that in the event
+of any imminent danger, they might be taken off and secured; but
+Napoleon on his presenting this standard to his 8th regiment, observed,
+it was impossible that it should be taken from so brave a body of men
+as they had always proved themselves to be, and desired it might be
+rivetted to the staff, which was accordingly done; and probably had it
+not been for this order the eagle might have escaped our valiant 87th,
+by whom it was taken on the heights of Barossa.
+
+On Maundy Thursday another gratifying ceremony takes place, _viz_, the
+distribution of the Maundy Money to as many poor people as the years
+of his majesty's age. This money consists of the smaller silver coins,
+being each in value from 1_d_. to 4_d_.; these are enclosed in a small,
+white kid bag, which is again enveloped in another of crimson leather.
+
+A.P.D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RETROSPECTIVE GLEANINGS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TOUCHING FOR THE KING'S EVIL.
+
+(_To the Editor of the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Having read an interesting paper from your ingenious correspondent
+_P.T.W._ in your number of the 14th of November, respecting "Touching
+for the Cure of the King's Evil," it occurred to me that some farther
+information relative to the original of that "hereditary miracle," as
+Mr. Collier is pleased to term it, might not be uninteresting to some
+of your readers: I therefore send you the following:--
+
+Stowe, in his _Annals_, accounts for the origin of touching for the
+evil, in the following manner:--"A young woman who was afflicted with
+this disorder in a very alarming manner, and to a most disgusting
+degree, feeling uneasiness and pain consequent upon it in her sleep,
+dreamt that she should be cured by the simple operation of having the
+part washed with the king's hand. Application was consequently made
+to Edward, by her friends, who very humanely consented to perform
+the unpleasant request. A basin of water was brought, with which he
+carefully softened the humours, till they broke, and the contents
+discharged; the sign of the cross wound up the charm; and the female
+retired, with the assurance of his protection during the remainder
+of the cure, which was effected within a week." This is somewhat
+differently related in _Ailred's History of the Life and Miracles of
+Edward the Confessor_, an extract from which may be found in a note
+to the first volume of Rapin's _History of England_.
+
+The following curious advertisement was issued by the order of King
+Charles II. for healing the people, on the 18th of May, 1664.
+
+"Notice.
+
+"His sacred majesty having declared it to be his royal will and purpose
+to continue the healing of his people for the evil during the month of
+May, and then give over till Michaelmas next; I am commanded to give
+notice thereof, that the people may not come up to the town in the
+interim, and lose their labour."
+
+Thomas Mousewell was tried for high treason in 1684, for having spoken
+with contempt of King Charles's pretensions to cure the scrofula.
+
+In a manuscript account of the Restoration, written by Thomas Gumble,
+D.D. Chaplain to General Monck, in the year 1662, is the following
+description of the ceremony:--" There was a great chair placed for the
+king, in a place somewhat distant from the people. As soon as the king
+was sate, one of the clerks of the closet stood at the right side of his
+chair, holding on his arm as many gold angels (every one tied in a
+ribbon of white silk) as there were sick to be touched, which were in
+number, forty-eight. Dr. Brown, the chaplain of the Princess of Aurange,
+performed the place of the king's chaplain. The chaplain then read the
+sixteenth chapter of St. Mark, from the fourteenth verse to the end; and
+then the chirurgeon presented the sick, (having examined them to see
+that it was the evil) after three reverences on their knees, before the
+king, who, whilst the chaplain said these words in that gospel: 'They
+shall lay their hands upon the sick, and they shall be healed,' layed
+his hands on the two cheeks of the sick, saying, 'I touch thee, but
+_God_ healeth thee!' The chaplain then began another gospel; and whilst
+these words were pronounced out of the first chapter of St. John: 'This
+was the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world,'
+his majesty took the pieces of gold, and put them on the necks of the
+diseased, the chaplain repeating the words as many times as there were
+persons to receive them, concluding with a prayer, 'That Almighty God
+would bless the ceremony;' then, after the reverences as before, they
+retired. The Earls of Middlesex and St. Albans held the bason, ewer, and
+towel, whilst the king washed."
+
+Shakspeare, in his _Macbeth_, thus describes this royal, but now
+exploded gift:--
+
+
+ "Strangely visited people,
+ All swollen and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye,
+ The mere despair of surgery, he cures--
+ Hanging a golden stamp about their necks,
+ Put on with holy prayers."
+
+
+In Nicholls's _Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century_, vol. ii.
+p. 495, 505, many curious particulars relating to this ceremony are to
+be found.
+
+As the custom has now for some time been discontinued, and the credulity
+of those who believed in its efficacy, laughed at, I hope it will not be
+long ere that disgusting custom of allowing persons (of whom women in
+general form by far the greater number) afflicted with the king's evil,
+and different other disorders, to come on the scaffold immediately after
+the execution of a criminal, for the purpose of touching the part
+affected, with the hand of the _but just dead_ malefactor, will be put a
+stop to; it being the very height of absurdity to imagine that it can be
+productive of any good effect; but on the contrary, tending to divest
+the minds of the surrounding multitude of that awe with which the
+ignominious spectacle should impress them.
+
+[Greek: S.G.]
+
+In the trifling paper I sent you respecting "Cats," which you deemed
+worthy of insertion in No. 398, you have it "by some merchants from the
+Island of Cyprus, who came hither for _fur_," it should be _tin_--Fur
+being an article of importation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BOOKSELLERS' MARKS OR SIGNS.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Many books, especially those printed in the 17th century, have no other
+designation either of printer, bookseller, or even city, but merely
+marks or signs. The _anchor_ is the mark of Raphelengius, at Leyden; and
+the same with a _dolphin_ twisted round it, of the Mantuii, at Venice
+and Rome; the _Arion_ denotes a book printed by Oporrinus, at Basil; the
+_caduceus_, or _pegasus_, by the Wechelliuses, at Paris and Frankfort;
+the _cranes_, by Cramoisy; the _compass_, by Plantin, at Antwerp; the
+_fountain_, by Vascosan, at Paris; the _sphere_ in a balance, by Janson,
+or Blaew, at Amsterdam; the _lily_, by the Juntas, at Venice, Florence,
+Lyons, and Rome; the _mulberry-tree_, by Morel, at Paris; the
+_olive-tree_, by the Stephenses, at Paris and Geneva, and the Elzevirs,
+at Amsterdam and Leyden; the _bird between two serpents_, by the
+Frobeniuses, at Basil; the _truth_, by the Commelins, at Heidelberg and
+Paris; the _Saturn_, by Collinaeus; the _printing press_, by Badius
+Ascensius, &c.
+
+P.T.W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NATURALIST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DIFFERENT COLOURS OF THE EGGS OF BIRDS.
+
+
+It is a remarkable fact in the economy of nature, that of those birds
+whose nests are the most liable to discovery, and whose eggs are most
+exposed to observation from the form of the nests, the eggs are of that
+colour which is the least different from the surrounding objects; whilst
+those birds whose eggs are of a bright and positive colour, hide their
+nests in the hollows of trees, or never quit them, excepting in the
+night, or sit immediately that they have laid one or two eggs. It is
+also to be observed that of those species which build an exposed nest,
+and the females of which alone perform the duty of incubation, the
+colour of the female is much less bright than that of the male, and more
+in harmony with the objects by which she is surrounded during the period
+in which she sits upon her eggs. It would seem, therefore, that those
+birds which lay a brightly-coloured egg have the instinct to make a
+close nest, or to place it in the least exposed situations; while those
+which lay a sober-coloured egg are less solicitous to conceal it from
+the notice of their enemies. M. Gloger, a German naturalist, has paid
+great attention to this curious circumstance, and has very recently
+published an elaborate memoir, in a work printed at Berlin, in which he
+notices the habits of all the species of birds indigenous to Germany, in
+confirmation of the theory. Our limits will not allow us to notice the
+particular species which he enumerates; but it may be sufficient to
+excite attention to this subject, to mention, that the birds which lay
+an egg perfectly white (the most attractive of colours) make their nests
+in holes of the earth, and cavities of trees, such as the kingfisher and
+the woodpecker, or construct them with a very narrow opening, as the
+domestic swallow; that the same coloured egg is found amongst the birds
+which scarcely quit their nests in the day, as hawks and owls; and that
+such birds as doves, which only lay one or two eggs, and sit immediately
+after, have their eggs white. The bright blue or bright green egg
+belongs to birds which make their nests in holes, as the starling, or
+construct them of green moss, or place them in the midst of grass, but
+always well covered. The eggs of many gallinaceous birds, that make
+their nests carelessly in the grass, are of a pale and less decided
+green, such as those of the partridge and pheasant. Of the
+mixed-coloured eggs, those of which white forms the ground belong to
+birds that make very close nests. Speckled eggs, with a dark or dirty
+ground, belong to the largest number of species. Almost all the song
+birds lay such eggs; and building open nests, they almost invariably
+line the inside of them with materials of a harmonious colour with the
+eggs, so that no evident contrast is presented which would lead to their
+destruction.--_Companion to the Almanac._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EFFECTS OF SEA AIR.
+
+
+Those who frequent the sea-coast are not long in discovering that their
+best dyed black hats become of a rusty brown; and similar effects are
+produced on some other colours. The brown is, in fact, _rust_. Most, if
+not all, the usual black colours have iron for a basis, the black oxide
+of which is developed by galls, logwood, or other substances containing
+gallic acid. Now the sea-air contains a proportion of the muriates over
+which it is wafted; and these coming in contact with any thing dyed
+black, part with their hydrochloric (_muriatic_) acid, and form brown
+hydrochlorate of iron, or contribute to form the brown or red oxide,
+called rust. The gallic acid, indeed, from its superior affinity, has
+the strongest hold of the iron; but the incessant action of the sea-air,
+loaded with muriates, partially overcomes this, in the same way as any
+acid, even of inferior affinity to the gallic, when put upon black
+stuff, will turn it brown.--_Ibid._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE DUGONG, THE MERMAID OF EARLY WRITERS.
+
+
+Of all the cetacea, that which approaches the nearest in form to man is
+undoubtedly the dugong, which, when its head and breast are raised above
+the water, and its pectoral fins, resembling hands, are visible, might
+easily be taken by superstitious seamen for a semi-human
+being.--_Edinburgh Journal._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SPIDERS.
+
+
+Live and grow without food. Out of fifty spiders produced on the last
+day of August, and which were kept entirely without food, three lived to
+the 8th of February following, and even visibly increased in bulk. Was
+it from the effluvia arising from the dead bodies of their companions
+that they lived so long? Other spiders were kept in glass vessels
+without food, from the 15th of July till the end of January. During that
+time they cast their skins more than once, as if they had been well
+fed.--_Redi, Generat. Insect._
+
+Spiders are excellent barometers: if the ends of their webs are found
+branching out to any length, it is a sure sign of favourable weather:
+if, on the contrary, they are found short, and the spider does not
+attend to repairing it properly, bad weather may be expected.--_Times._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SWARMING OF BEES.
+
+
+The ingenious President of the Horticultural Society, Mr. T.A. Knight,
+has been led from repeated observation to infer, that, in the swarming
+of bees, not a single labourer emigrates without previously inspecting
+its proposed future habitation, as well as the temporary stations of
+rest where their numbers collect soon after swarming.--_Philosophical
+Magazine._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE CHAMELEON'S ANTIPATHY TO BLACK.
+
+
+Whatever may be the cause, the fact seems to be certain, that the
+chameleon has an antipathy to things of a black colour. One, which
+Forbes kept, uniformly avoided a black board which was hung up in the
+chamber; and, what is most remarkable, when it was forcibly brought
+before the black board, it trembled violently, and assumed a black
+colour.--_Oriental Mem_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+RULES FOR THE WEATHER.
+
+
+A wet summer is always followed by a frosty winter; but it happens
+occasionally that the cold extends no farther. Two remarkable instances
+of this occurred in 1807-8 and 1813-14. With these exceptions, every
+frosty winter has been followed by a cold summer.
+
+The true cause of cold, or rather the direct cause, is to be found in
+the winter excess of west wind, every winter with excess of west wind
+being followed by a cold summer; and if there is no cold before, or
+during a first excess, then a second excess of west wind in winter
+occasions a still colder summer than the first. It also appears, by
+repeated experience, that cold does not extend to more than two years at
+a time.
+
+Again, if the winter excess of east wind be great, in the first
+instance, the winters will be mild, and followed by mild summers; while
+the summer excess of east wind is itself, in the first instance, always
+mild; but uniformly followed by cold winters and cold summers, which
+continue, more or less, for one or two years, according to
+circumstances.--_Mackenzie, Syst. of the Weather_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PERIODICAL LITERATURE.
+
+
+Periodical Literature--how sweet is the name! 'Tis a type of many of the
+most beautiful things and events in nature; or say, rather, that _they_
+are types of _it_--both the flowers and the stars. As to flowers, they
+are the prettiest periodicals ever published in folio--the leaves are
+wire-wove and hot-pressed by Nature's self; their circulation is wide
+over all the land; from castle to cottage they are regularly taken in;
+as old age bends over them, his youth is renewed; and you see childhood
+poring upon them, prest close to its very bosom. Some of them are
+ephemeral, and their contents are exhaled between the rising and the
+setting sun. Once a-week others break through their green, pink, or
+crimson cover; and how delightful, on the seventh day, smiles in the
+sunshine the Sabbath flower--the only Sunday publication perused without
+blame by the most religious--even before morning prayer. Each month,
+indeed, throughout the whole year, has its own flower-periodical. Some
+are annual, some biennial, some triennial, and there are perennials that
+seem to live for ever--and yet are still periodical--though our love
+will not allow us to know when they die, and phoenix-like re-appear from
+their own ashes. So much for flowers--typifying or typified;--leaves
+emblematical of pages--buds of binding dew-veils of covers--and the
+wafting away of bloom and fragrance like the dissemination of fine
+feelings, bright fancies, and winged thoughts!
+
+The flowers are the periodicals of the earth--the stars are those of
+heaven. With what unfailing regularity do the Numbers issue forth!
+Hesperus and Lucifer! ye are one concern! The pole-star is studied by
+all nations. How beautiful the poetry of the moon! On what subject does
+not the sun throw light! No fear of hurting your eyes by reading that
+fine, clear, large type on that softened page. Lo! as you turn over, one
+blue, another yellow, and another green, all, all alike delightful to
+the pupil, and dear to him as the very apple of his eye! Yes, the great
+Periodical Press of heaven is unceasingly at work--night and day; and
+though even it has been taxed, and its emanations confined, still their
+circulation is incalculable; nor have we yet heard that Ministers intend
+instituting any prosecution against it. It is yet Free, the only free
+Power all over the world. 'Tis indeed like the air we breathe--if we
+have it not, we die!
+
+Look, then, at all our paper Periodicals with pleasure, for sake of the
+flowers and the stars. Suppose them all extinct, and life would be like
+a flowerless earth, a starless heaven. We should soon forget the seasons
+themselves--the days of the week--and the weeks of the month--and the
+months of the year--and the years of the century--and the centuries of
+all Time--and all Time itself flowing away on into eternity. The
+Periodicals of external nature would soon all lose their meaning, were
+there no longer any Periodicals of the soul. These are the lights and
+shadows of life, merrily dancing or gravely stealing over the dial;
+remembrancers of the past--teachers of the present--prophets of the
+future hours. Were they all dead, spring would in vain renew her
+promise--wearisome would be the long, long, interminable
+summer-days--the fruits of autumn would taste fushionless--and the
+winter's ingle blink mournfully round the hearth. What are the blessed
+Seasons themselves, in nature and in Thomson, but Periodicals of a
+larger growth? They are the parents, or publishers, or editors, of all
+the others--principal contributors--nay, subscribers too--and may their
+pretty family live for ever, still dying, yet ever renewed, and on the
+increase every year. We should suspect him of a bad, black heart, who
+loved not the Periodical Literature of earth and sky--who would weep not
+to see one of its flowers wither--one of its stars fall--one beauty to
+die on its humble bed--one glory to drop from its lofty sphere. Let them
+bloom and burn on--flowers in which there is no poison, stars in which
+there is no disease--whose blossoms are all sweet, and whose rays are
+all sanative--both alike steeped in dew, and both, to the fine ear of
+nature's worshipper, bathed in music.
+
+Only look at Maga! One hundred and forty-eight months old! and yet
+lovely as maiden between frock and gown--even as sweet sixteen! Not a
+wrinkle on cheek or forehead! No crow-foot has touched her eyes--
+
+
+ "Her eye's blue languish, and her golden hair!"
+
+
+Like an antelope in the wilderness--or swan on the river--or eagle in
+the sky. Dream that she is dead, and oh! what a world! Yet die she must
+some day--so must the moon and stars. Meanwhile there is a blessing in
+prayers--and hark! how the nations cry, "Oh! Maga, live for ever!"
+
+We often pity our poor ancestors. How they contrived to make the ends
+meet, surpasses our conjectural powers. What a weary waste must have
+seemed expanding before their eyes, between morning and night! Don't
+tell us that the human female never longs for other pastime than
+
+
+ "To suckle fools and chronicle small beer."
+
+
+True, ladies sighed not then for periodicals--but there, in the depths
+of their ignorance, lay their utter wretchedness. What! keep pickling
+and preserving during the whole mortal life of an immortal being! Except
+when at jelly, everlastingly at jam! The soul sickens at the monotonous
+sweetness of such a wersh existence. True that many sat all life-long at
+needlework; but is not that a very sew-sew sort of life? Then oh! the
+miserable males! We speak of times after the invention, it is true, of
+printing--but who read what were called books then? Books! no more like
+our periodicals, than dry, rotten, worm-eaten, fungous logs are like
+green living leafy trees, laden with dews, bees, and birds, in the
+musical sunshine. What could males do then but yawn, sleep, snore,
+guzzle, guttle, and drink till they grew dead and got buried?
+Fox-hunting won't always do--and often it is not to be had; who can be
+happy with his gun through good report and bad report in an a' day's
+rain? Small amusement in fishing in muddy water; palls upon the sense
+quarrelling with neighbours on points of etiquette and the disputed
+property of hedgerow trees; a fever in the family ceases to raise the
+pulse of any inmate, except the patient; death itself is no relief to
+the dulness; a funeral is little better; the yawn of the grave seems a
+sort of unhallowed mockery; the scutcheon hung out on the front of the
+old dismal hall, is like a sign on a deserted Spittal; along with sables
+is worn a suitable stupidity by all the sad survivors.--And such, before
+the era of Periodicals, such was the life in--merry England. Oh!
+dear!--oh! dear me!
+
+We shall not enter into any historical details--for this is not a
+Monologue for the Quarterly--but we simply assert, that in the times we
+allude to (don't mention dates) there was little or no reading in
+England. There was neither the Reading Fly nor the Reading Public. What
+could this be owing to, but the non-existence of Periodicals? What
+elderly-young lady could be expected to turn from house affairs, for
+example, to Spenser's Fairy Queen? It is a long, long, long poem, that
+Fairy Queen of Spenser's; nobody, of course, ever dreamt of getting
+through it; but though you may have given up all hope of getting through
+a poem or a wood, you expect to be able to find your way back again to
+the spot where you unluckily got in; not so, however, with the Fairy
+Queen. Beautiful it is indeed, most exquisitely and unapproachably
+beautiful in many passages, especially about ladies and ladies' love
+more than celestial, for Venus loses in comparison her lustre in the
+sky; but still people were afraid to get into it then as now; and
+"heavenly Una, with her milk-white lamb," lay buried in dust. As
+to Shakspeare, we cannot find many traces of him in the domestic
+occupations of the English gentry during the times alluded to; nor do we
+believe that the character of Hamlet was at all relished in their halls,
+though perhaps an occasional squire chuckled at the humours of Sir John
+Falstaff. We have Mr. Wordsworth's authority for believing that Paradise
+Lost was a dead letter, and John Milton virtually anonymous. We need say
+no more. Books like these, huge heavy vols. lay with other lumber in the
+garrets and libraries. As yet, Periodical Literature was not; and the
+art of printing seems long to have preceded the art of reading. It did
+not occur to those generations that books were intended to be read by
+people in general, but only by the select few. Whereas now, reading is
+not only one of the luxuries, but absolutely one of the necessaries of
+life, and we now no more think of going without our book than without
+our breakfast; lunch consists now of veal-pies and Venetian
+Bracelets--we still dine on Roast-beef, but with it, instead of
+Yorkshire pudding, a Scotch novel--Thomas Campbell and Thomas Moore
+sweeten tea for us--and in "Course of Time" we sup on a Welsh rabbit
+and a Religious Poem.
+
+We have not time--how can we?--to trace the history of the great
+revolution. But a great revolution there has been, from nobody's reading
+anything, to every body's reading all things; and perhaps it began with
+that good old proser Richardson, the father of Pamela, Clarissa, and
+Sir Charles Grandison. He seems to have been a sort of idiot, who had
+a strange insight into some parts of human nature, and a tolerable
+acquaintance with most parts of speech. He set the public a-reading, and
+Fielding and Smollett shoved her on--till the Minerva Press took her in
+hand--and then--the Periodicals. But such Periodicals! The Gentleman's
+Magazine--God bless it then, now, and for ever!--the Monthly Review,
+the Critical and the British Critic! The age had been for some years
+literary, and was now fast becoming periodical. Magazines multiplied.
+Arose in glory the Edinburgh, and then the Quarterly Review--Maga,
+like a new sun, looked out from heaven--from her golden urn a hundred
+satellites drew light--and last of all, "the Planetary Five," the
+Annuals, hung their lamps on high; other similar luminous bodies emerged
+from the clouds, till the whole circumference was bespangled, and
+astronomy became the favourite study with all ranks of people, from the
+King upon the throne to the meanest of his subjects. Now, will any one
+presume to deny, that this has been a great change to the better, and
+that there is now something worth living for in the world? Look at our
+literature now, and it is all periodical together. A thousand daily,
+thrice-a-week, twice-a week, weekly newspapers, a hundred monthlies,
+fifty quarterlies, and twenty-five annuals! No mouth looks up now and is
+not fed; on the contrary, we are in danger of being crammed; an empty
+head is as rare as an empty stomach; the whole day is one meal, one
+physical, moral, and intellectual feast; the Public goes to bed with a
+Periodical in her hand, and falls asleep with it beneath her pillow.
+
+What blockhead thinks now of reading Milton, or Pope, or Gray? Paradise
+Lost is lost; it has gone to the devil. Pope's Epistles are returned to
+the dead-letter office; the age is too loyal for "ruin seize thee,
+ruthless king," and the oldest inhabitant has forgotten "the curfew
+tolls."--_Blackwood's Magazine._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE SELECTOR, AND LITERARY NOTICES OF _NEW WORKS._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DR. LARDNER'S CYCLOPAEDIA.
+
+
+_History of Scotland. By Sir Walter Scott, Bart._ Vol. I.
+
+The rapid and sketchy page just quoted from _Blackwood's Magazine_ will
+illustrate the high ground which periodical literature is daily
+attaining in this country. Of this ascendancy, the volume before us is
+indeed a fine specimen, and one of which we have reason to entertain a
+national pride. We know it to be a common practice with publishers on
+the continent to produce long works volume by volume, so that Dr.
+Lardner's plan is by no means novel; but we should also bear in mind
+that, compared with our family and cabinet libraries, the majority of
+similar foreign works are mere flimsy productions; and the _Encyclopedie
+Methodique_, published in monthly volumes, in Paris, both in quantity
+and execution, will not reach our literary standards of 1829. As Dr.
+Lardner's plan is well known, it need not here be repeated; neither need
+we remark upon the high qualifications of Sir Walter Scott, as an
+historian of Scotland. An extract shall speak for itself; and perhaps we
+cannot do better than select one of the battle-pieces, which has all the
+vividness of the finest historical painting: say
+
+BANNOCKBURN.
+
+"Robert Bruce summoned the array of his kingdom to rendezvous in the
+Tor-wood, about four miles from Stirling, and by degrees prepared the
+field of battle which he had selected for the contest. It was a space of
+ground then called the New Park--perhaps reserved for the chase, since
+Stirling was frequently a royal residence. This ground was partly open,
+partly encumbered with trees, in groups or separate. It was occupied by
+the Scottish line of battle, extending from south to north, and fronting
+to the east. In this position, Bruce's left flank and rear might have
+been exposed to a sally from the castle of Stirling; but Mowbray
+the governor's faith was beyond suspicion, and the king was not in
+apprehension that he would violate the tenour of the treaty, by which
+he was bound to remain in passive expectation of his fate. The direct
+approach to the Scottish front was protected in a great measure by a
+morass called the New-miln Bog. A brook, called Bannockburn, running to
+the eastward, between rocky and precipitous banks, effectually covered
+the Scottish right wing, which rested upon it, and was totally
+inaccessible. Their left flank was apparently bare, but was, in fact,
+formidably protected in front by a peculiar kind of field-works. As
+the ground in that part of the field was adapted for the manoeuvres of
+cavalry Bruce caused many rows of pits, three feet deep, to be dug in
+it, so close together, as to suggest the appearance of a honeycomb, with
+its ranges of cells. In these pits sharp stakes were strongly pitched,
+and the apertures covered with sod so carefully, as that the condition
+of the ground might escape observation. Calthrops, or spikes contrived
+to lame the horses, were also scattered in different directions.
+
+"Having led his troops into the field of combat, on the tidings of the
+English approach, the 23d of June, 1314, the King of Scotland ordered
+his soldiers to arm themselves, and making proclamation that those who
+were not prepared to conquer or die with their sovereign were at liberty
+to depart, he was answered by a cheerful and general expression of their
+determination to take their fate with him. The King proceeded to draw
+up the army in the following order: Three oblong columns or masses of
+infantry, armed with lances, arranged on the same front, with intervals
+betwixt them formed his first line. Of these Edward Bruce had the
+guidance of the right wing, James Douglas and Walter, the Steward of
+Scotland, of the left, and Thomas Randolph of the central division.
+These three commanders had their orders to permit no English troops to
+pass their front, in order to gain Stirling. The second line, forming
+one column or mass, consisted of the men of the isles, under Bruce's
+faithful friend and ally, the insular prince Angus, his own men of
+Carrick, and those of Argyle and Cantire. With these the king posted
+himself in order to carry support and assistance wherever it might be
+required. With himself also he kept in the rear a select body of horse,
+the greater part of whom he designed for executing a particular service.
+The followers of the camp were dismissed with the baggage, to station
+themselves behind an eminence to the rear of the Scottish army, still
+called the Gillies' (that is, the servants') hill....
+
+"On the morning of St. Barnaby, called the Bright, being the 24th of
+June, 1314, Edward advanced in full form to the attack of the Scots,
+whom he found in their position of the preceding evening. The Vanguard
+of the English, consisting of the archers and bill-men, or lancers,
+comprehending almost all the infantry of the army, advanced, under the
+command of the Earls of Gloucester and Hereford, who also had a fine
+body of men at arms to support their column. All the remainder of the
+English troops, consisting of nine battles, or separate divisions, were
+so straitened by the narrowness of the ground, that, to the eye of the
+Scots, they seemed to form one very large body, gleaming with flashes of
+armour, and dark with the number of banners which floated over them.
+Edward himself commanded this tremendous array, and, in order to guard
+his person, was attended by four hundred chosen men at arms. Immediately
+around the King waited Sir Aymer de Valence, that Earl of Pembroke who
+defeated Bruce at Methven Wood, but was now to see a very different day;
+Sir Giles de Argentine, a Knight of St. John of Jerusalem, who was
+accounted, for his deeds in Palestine and elsewhere, one of the best
+Knights that lived; and Sir Ingram Umfraville, an Anglicised
+Scottishman, also famed for his skill in arms.
+
+"As the Scottish saw the immense display of their enemies rolling
+towards them like a surging ocean, they were called on to join in an
+appeal to Heaven against the strength of human foes.--Maurice, the Abbot
+of Inchaffray, bare-headed and bare-footed, walked along the Scottish
+line, and conferred his benediction on the soldiers, who knelt to
+receive it, and to worship the power in whose name it was bestowed.
+
+"During this time the King of England was questioning Umfraville
+about the purpose of his opponents. "Will they," said Edward, "abide
+battle?"--"They assuredly will," replied Umfraville; "and to engage them
+with advantage, your Highness were best order a seeming retreat, and
+draw them out of their strong ground." Edward rejected this counsel,
+and observing the Scottish soldiers kneel down, joyfully exclaimed,
+"They crave mercy."--"It is from Heaven, not from your Highness,"
+answered Umfraville: "on that field they will win or die." The King
+then commanded the charge to be sounded, and the attack to take place.
+
+"The Earls of Gloucester and Hereford charged the Scots left wing, under
+Edward Bruce, with their men at arms; but some rivalry between these two
+great Lords induced them to hurry to the charge with more of emulation
+than of discretion, and arriving at the shock disordered and out of
+breath, they were unable to force the deep ranks of the spearmen; many
+horses were thrown down, and their masters left at the mercy of the
+enemy. The other three divisions of the Scottish army attacked the mass
+of the English infantry, who resisted courageously. The English archers,
+as at the battle of Falkirk, now began to show their formidable skill,
+at the expense of the Scottish spearmen; but for this Bruce was
+prepared. He commanded Sir Robert Keith, the Marshal of Scotland, with
+those four hundred men at arms whom he had kept in reserve for the
+purpose, to make a circuit, and charge the English bowmen in the flank.
+This was done with a celerity and precision which dispersed the whole
+archery, who, having neither stakes nor other barrier to keep off the
+horse, nor long weapons to repel them, were cut down at pleasure, and
+almost without resistance.
+
+"The battle continued to rage, but with disadvantage to the English.
+The Scottish archers had now an opportunity of galling their infantry
+without opposition; and it would appear that King Edward could find no
+means of bringing any part of his numerous centre or rear-guard to the
+support of those in the front, who were engaged at disadvantage.
+
+"Bruce, seeing the confusion thicken, now placed himself at the head of
+the reserve, and addressing Angus of the Isles in the words, "My hope is
+constant in thee," rushed into the engagement followed by all the troops
+he had hitherto kept in reserve. The effect of such an effort, reserved
+for a favourable moment, failed not to be decisive. Those of the English
+who had been staggered were now constrained to retreat; those who were
+already in retreat took to actual flight. At this critical moment, the
+camp-followers of the Scottish army, seized with curiosity to see how
+the day went, or perhaps desirous to have a share of the plunder,
+suddenly showed themselves on the ridge of the Gillies'-hill, in the
+rear of the Scottish line of battle; and as they displayed cloths and
+horse-coverings upon poles for ensigns, they bore in the eyes of the
+English the terrors of an army with banners. The belief that they beheld
+the rise of an ambuscade, or the arrival of a new army of Scots, gave
+the last impulse of terror, and all fled now, even those who had before
+resisted. The slaughter was immense; the deep ravine of Bannockburn, to
+the south of the field of battle, lying in the direction taken by most
+of the fugitives, was almost choked and bridged over with the slain,
+the difficulty of the ground retarding the fugitive horsemen till the
+lancers were upon them. Others, and in great numbers, rushed into the
+river Forth, in the blindness of terror, and perished there. No less
+than twenty-seven Barons fell in the field; the Earl of Gloucester was
+at the head of the fatal list: young, brave, and high-born, when he saw
+the day was lost, he rode headlong on the Scottish spears, and was
+slain. Sir Robert Clifford, renowned in the Scottish wars, was also
+killed. Two hundred Knights and seven hundred Esquires, of high birth
+and blood, graced the list of slaughter with the noblest names of
+England; and thirty thousand of the common file filled up the fatal
+roll.
+
+"Edward, among whose weaknesses we cannot number cowardice, was
+reluctantly forced from the bloody field by the Earl of Pembroke. The
+noble Sir Giles de Argentine considered it as his duty to attend the
+King until he saw him in personal safety, then observing that "it was
+not his own wont to fly," turned back, rushed again into the battle,
+cried his war-cry, galloped boldly against the victorious Scots, and was
+slain, according to his wish, with his face to the enemy. Edward must
+have been bewildered in the confusion of the field, for instead of
+directing his course southerly to Linlithgow, from which he came, he
+rode northward to Stirling, and demanded admittance. Philip de Mowbray,
+the governor, remonstrated against this rash step, reminding the
+unfortunate Prince that he was obliged by his treaty to surrender the
+castle next day, as not having been relieved according to the
+conditions.
+
+"Edward was therefore obliged to take the southern road; and he must
+have made a considerable circuit to avoid the Scottish army. He was,
+however, discovered on his retreat, and pursued by Douglas with sixty
+horse, who were all that could be mustered for the service. The King, by
+a rapid and continued flight through a country in which his misfortunes
+must have changed many friends into enemies, at length gained the castle
+of Dunbar, where he was hospitably received by the Earl of March. From
+Dunbar Edward escaped almost alone to Berwick in a fishing skiff, having
+left behind him the finest army a King of England ever commanded.
+
+"The quantity of spoil gained by the victors at the battle of
+Bannockburn was inestimable, and the ransoms paid by the prisoners
+largely added to the mass of treasure. Five near relations to the
+Bruce--namely, his wife, her sister Christian, his daughter Marjory,
+the Bishop of Glasgow (Wishart), and the young Earl of Mar, the King's
+nephew, were exchanged against the Earl of Hereford, High Constable of
+England.
+
+"The Scottish loss was very small: Sir William Vipont and Sir Walter
+Ross were the only persons of consideration slain. Sir Edward Bruce is
+said to have been so much attached to the last of these knights as to
+have expressed his wish that the battle had remained unfought, so Ross
+had not died."
+
+The present volume contains 350 pages, in a very pleasing type, and a
+vignette title; and the style in which it is produced is uniformly
+worthy of the very responsible quarter whence it emanates.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE YOUNG LADY'S BOOK.
+
+
+This is indeed a _golden gift_ for any _demoiselle_ of our readers'
+acquaintance, for it blends the unusual qualities of elegance and
+usefulness of the highest order. It is described in the title as "A
+Manual of Elegant Recreations, Exercises and Pursuits," and numbers in
+its contents, Moral deportment--the Florist--Mineralogy, Conchology,
+Entomology, the Aviary, the Toilet, Embroidery, the Escrutoire,
+Painting, Music, Dancing, Archery, Riding, and the Ornamental Artist.
+Each of these subjects is treated of in separate chapters, in a neat
+style, slightly scientific, and highly amusive; and the whole are
+illustrated with upwards of _Six Hundred Engravings_, which are
+appropriately chosen and admirably executed. Botany, Conchology,
+Entomology, and the Aviary thus admit of scores of little cuts worked in
+with the type; the female accomplishments of Embroidery, ornamental card
+and basket work, contain many beautiful devices; and the "elegant
+recreations" of Dancing, Riding, &c. are equally well illustrated by the
+various forms, positions, &c.--Each subject has been treated of by a
+master or mistress of the respective art, but the uniformity with which
+the editor has marshalled them in his work, almost makes them resemble
+the productions of one hand. We need not point out the merit of this
+individual contribution; for the lady-pen must be omnipotent indeed
+which could write equally well on every branch of female accomplishment.
+By way of a seasonable extract we take part of a brief historical sketch
+prefixed to the Dancing instructions, and a few of the hints:--
+
+"From the death of Elizabeth, until after the restoration of Charles
+II., the turbulence of the times, and the peculiar character of the age,
+prevented this art, which flourishes only in 'the bowers of peace and
+joy,' from making much progress; but in the days of the merry monarch
+it began to revive, and advanced more, or less, in all the succeeding
+reigns. The celebrated Beau Nash, who was, for a long time, M.C. at
+Bath, may be considered the founder of modern ball-room dancing; which,
+however, has been divested of much of its cold formality, and improved
+in various other respects since the time of that singular person. It is,
+nevertheless, a matter of regret, that the graceful and stately Minuet
+has been entirely abandoned in favour of the more recently-invented
+dances.
+
+"The French country dances, or Contre-Danses (from the parties being
+placed opposite to each other,) since called Quadrilles (from their
+having four sides) which approximate nearly to the Cotillon, were
+first introduced to France about the middle of Lewis the Fifteenth's
+reign. Previously to this period, the dances most in vogue were La
+Perigourdine, La Matelotte, La Pavane, Les Forlanes, Minuets, &c.
+Quadrilles, when first introduced, were danced by four persons only:
+four more were soon added, and thus the complete square was formed; but
+the figures were materially different from those of the present period.
+The gentlemen advanced with the opposite ladies, menaced each other with
+the fore-finger, and retired clapping their hands three times; they then
+turned hands of four, turned their own partners, and grand rond of all
+concluded the figure. The Vauxhall d'Hiver was, at that time, the most
+fashionable place of resort: the pupils of the Royal Academy were
+engaged to execute new dances; a full and effective band performed the
+most fashionable airs, and new figures were at length introduced and
+announced as a source of attraction; but this place was soon pulled
+down, and re-built on the ground now occupied by the Theatre du
+Vaudeville. The establishment failed, and the proprietor became a
+bankrupt. A short time after, it was re-opened by another speculator;
+but on such a scale, as merely to attract the working classes of the
+community. The band was now composed of a set of miserable scrapers, who
+played in unison, and continually in the key of G sharp; amid the sounds
+which emanated from their instruments, the jangling of a tambourin, and
+the shrill notes of a fife were occasionally heard. Thus did things
+continue until the French Revolution; when, about the time the Executive
+Directory was formed, the splendid apartments of the Hotel de Richelieu
+were opened for the reception of the higher classes, who had then but
+few opportunities of meeting to 'trip it on the light fantastic toe.'
+Monsieur Hullin, then of the Opera, was selected to form a band of
+twenty-four musicians, from among those of the highest talent in the
+various theatres: he found no difficulty in this, as they were paid in
+paper-money, then of little or no value; whereas, the administrators of
+the Richelieu establishment paid in specie. The tunes were composed in
+different keys, with full orchestral accompaniments, by Monsieur Hullin;
+and the contrast thus produced to the abominable style which had so long
+existed, commenced a new era in dancing: the old figures were abolished,
+and stage-steps were adopted;--Pas de Zephyrs, Pas de Bourrés, Ballotés,
+Jetés Battus, &c. were among the most popular. Minuets and Forlanes were
+still continued; but Monsieur Vestris displaced the latter by the
+Gavotte, which he taught to Monsieur Trenis and Madame de Choiseul, who
+first danced it at a fête given by a lady of celebrity, at the Hotel de
+Valentinois, Rue St. Lazar, on the 16th of August, 1797; at this fête,
+Monsieur Hullin introduced an entirely new set of figures of his own
+composition.--These elicited general approbation: they were danced at
+all parties, and still retain pre-eminence. The names of Pantalon,
+L'Eté, La Poule, La Trenis, &c. which were given to the tunes, have been
+applied to the figures. The figure of La Trenis, was introduced by
+Monsieur Trenis's desire, it being part of the figure from a Gavotte,
+danced in the then favourite ballet of Nina.
+
+"To the French we are indebted for rather an ingenious, but in the
+opinion of many professional dancers, an useless invention, by which it
+was proposed, that as the steps in dancing are not very numerous,
+although they may be infinitely combined, that characters might be made
+use of to express the various steps and figures of a dance, in the same
+manner as words and sentences are expressed by letters; or what is more
+closely analogous, as the musical characters are employed to represent
+to the eye the sounds of an air. The well-known Monsieur Beauchamp, and
+a French dancing-master, each laid claim to be the original inventer
+of this art; and the consequence was a law suit, in which, however,
+judgment was pronounced in favour of the former. The art has been
+introduced into this country, but without success. An English
+dancing-master has also, we believe, with considerable labour and
+ingenuity, devised a plan somewhat similar to that of the French author:
+diagrams being proposed to represent the figures, or steps, instead of
+characters.
+
+"There are a variety of dances to which the term National may, with some
+propriety, be applied. Among the most celebrated of these are,--the
+Italian Tarantula, the German Waltz, and the Spanish Bolero. To dwell on
+their peculiarities would, however, as it appears to us, be useless: the
+first is rarely exhibited, even on the stage: the second, although it
+still retains much of its original character, has, in this country, been
+modified into the Waltz Country Dance, and all the objections which it
+encountered, on its first introduction, seem to have been gradually
+overcome, since it assumed its present popular form; and the graceful
+Bolero is restricted to the theatre only, being never introduced to the
+English ball-room.
+
+"The manner of walking well is an object which all young ladies should
+be anxious to acquire; but, unfortunately, it is a point too much
+neglected. In the drawing-room, the ball-room, or during the promenade,
+an elegant deportment, a 'poetry of motion,'--is, and ever will be,
+appreciated. The step ought not to exceed the length of the foot; the
+leg should be put forward, without stiffness, in about the fourth
+position; but without any effort to turn the foot out, as it will tend
+to throw the body awry, and give the person an appearance of being a
+professional dancer. The head should be kept up and the chest open: the
+body will then attain an advantageous position, and that steadiness so
+much required in good walking. The arms should fall in their natural
+position, and all their movements and oppositions to the feet be easy
+and unconstrained. The employment of soldiers to teach young ladies how
+to walk, which, we are sorry to say, is a practice adopted by many
+parents and heads of seminaries, is much to be deprecated. The stiffness
+acquired under regimental tuition, is adverse to all the principles of
+grace, and annihilates that buoyant lightness which is so conducive to
+ease and elegance in the young."
+
+Besides the host of cuts incorporated with the text, each art has a
+whole page embellishment exquisitely engraved on wood; the designs of
+which are the very acme of taste. The head and tail, and letter pieces
+of the chapters are in equally good taste; and taken altogether,
+the "Young Lady's Book," either as a production of usefulness or
+illustratration of art, is the finest production of its day. It has
+been erroneously noticed, from its publication at this season, as an
+"Annual," but it displays infinitely more pains-taking than either of
+those elaborate productions--and is, we should judge, neither the labour
+of one or two years.
+
+We had almost overlooked the imitative Mechlin lace-facings, which would
+deceive any Nottingham factor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE ZOOLOGICAL KEEPSAKE.
+
+
+The design of this "Annual" is good, we may say, very good; but we are
+alike bound to confess that the execution falls short of the idea. It
+contains an account of the Gardens and Museum of the Zoological Society,
+but this is too much interlarded with digressions. All the introductory
+matter might have been omitted with advantage to the author as well as
+the public. The descriptions are divided by poetical pieces, which serve
+as _reliefs_, one of which we extract:--
+
+
+THE LOST LAMB; OR, THE CHILD SAVED.
+
+BY H.C. DEAKIN, ESQ.
+
+_Author of "Portraits of the Dead."_
+
+
+ Morn rose upon the purple hills,
+ In all his pomp display'd;
+ Flash'd forth like stars a hundred rills,
+ In valley, plain, and glade.
+ The foaming mist, day's chilly shrine,
+ Into the clouds upcurl'd,
+ Forth broke in majesty divine
+ The Grampians' giant world.
+
+ It was a glorious sight to view
+ Those mountain forms unfold,--
+ The Heavens above intensely blue,
+ The plains beneath like gold.
+ Day woke, a thousand songs arose,
+ Morn's orisons on high,
+ Earth's universal heart o'erflows
+ To Him beyond the sky.
+
+ The shepherd roused him from his sleep,
+ And down the vale be hied,
+ Like guardian good, to count his sheep,
+ His _firstling_ by his side.
+ His firstling! 'twas his only child--
+ A boy of three years old,
+ The father's weary hours beguiled
+ Whilst watching o'er his fold.
+
+ And many an hour the child and he
+ Joy'd o'er the vale together;
+ It was a lovely thing to see
+ That child among the heather.
+ The vale is pass'd, the mountains rear
+ Their rugged cliffs in air,
+ He must ascend to view more near
+ His distant fleecy care.
+
+ "My child! the flowers are bright for thee,
+ The daisy's pearl'd with dew;
+ Go, share them with the honey-bee,
+ Till I return for you,
+ Thy dog and mine with thee shall stay
+ Whilst I the flock am counting,"--
+ He said, and took his tedious way,
+ The hilly green sward mounting.
+
+ O'er crag and cliff the father toil'd,
+ Unconscious pass'd the hours:
+ He for a time forgot the child
+ He'd left among the flowers.
+ The boiling clouds come down and veil
+ Valley, and wood, and plain;
+ Then fears the father's heart assail,
+ He will descend again.
+
+ Morn melted into noon, and night
+ Dark on the shepherd shone,
+ Terror in vain impels his flight,
+ His child!--his child is gone!
+ He calls upon his darling's name,
+ His dog in vain he calls;
+ He hears naught but the eagle's scream,
+ Or roar of waterfalls.
+
+ He rushes home--he is not there--
+ With agony and woe;
+ He hunts him in the cold night air,
+ O'er hill and vale below.
+ Morn rose--the faithful dog appears,
+ He whines for food so mild,
+ The father hied him through his tears,
+ And said, "Tray, where's my child?"
+
+ Thrice rose the morn--the father's heart
+ With grief was almost dead;
+ But every morn the dog appeared,
+ And whined and begged for bread.
+ Yet through the night and through the day,
+ The dog was never seen--
+ "He is not wont to stay away,
+ Where can the dog have been?"
+
+ On the fourth morn this faithful friend,
+ As usual whined for meat--
+ They mark the way his footsteps tend,
+ And follow his retreat.
+ They watch him to a cave beside
+ The Grampians' craggy base--
+ Behold! the shepherd's wandering child
+ Within the dog's embrace.
+
+ He springs--he weeps away his cares,
+ He cries aloud with joy--
+ He kneels, he sobs to heaven his prayers,
+ For his redeemed boy.
+ Then, turning, hugs his favourite hound,
+ The trusty, true, and bold,
+ By whom was saved, through whom was found
+ The _firstling_ of his fold!
+
+
+The Engravings, which are very numerous, are exclusively on wood. A few
+of them are views in the Regent's Park Gardens; but in point of
+execution, we think the best is a Portrait of the Satyr, or "_Happy_
+Jerry," at Cross's Menagerie. Though by no means one of nature's
+favourites, he appears to possess the companionable qualities of
+sitting in a chair, smoking a pipe, and drinking spirits and water, and
+appearing to understand every look, word, and action of his keeper;
+indeed, so thoroughly contented is the creature, that he has obtained
+the name of "Happy Jerry."
+
+To speak _zoologically_, next year we hope the artist and editor will
+put their best feet foremost, and improve upon the present volume. The
+design is one of the best for a Juvenile Annual--for who does not
+recollect the very amusing game of "Birds, Beasts, and Fishes, and
+sometimes Insects and Reptiles." What a menagerie of guessing novelties
+would have been a _Zoological Keepsake_ in our school days.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER.
+
+ A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.
+SHAKSPEARE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SPILLING THE SALT.
+
+
+It is a curious fact, though not generally known, that the popular
+superstition of overturning the salt at table being unlucky, originated
+in a picture of the Last Supper, by Leonardo da Vinci, in which Judas
+Iscariot is represented as overturning the salt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+KANGAROOS.
+
+
+"I have been much entertained during my wanderings through the country
+adjoining this town, in observing the singular habits and extreme
+sagacity of the kangaroos. I have noticed several who carried in their
+fore paws a sort of umbrella, or fan, which they held so as to protect
+their head and shoulders from the violence of the sun. One day I slipped
+a brace of large greyhounds at a female who carried one of these useful
+appendages, which she soon dropped and escaped: it was formed of a large
+bough, over which some large leaves were spread, and fastened on simply
+by the shoots of the bough sticking into the leaf."--_From a letter
+dated Hobart's Town, February_, 1829.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE EARL OF MANSFIELD.
+
+
+"When he was at Westminster School, Lady Kinnoul, in one of the
+vacations, invited him to her home, where, observing him with a pen in
+his hand, and seemingly thoughtful, she asked him if he was writing his
+theme, and what in plain English the theme was? The school-boy's smart
+answer rather surprised her Ladyship--'What is that to you?' She
+replied--'How can you be so rude? I asked you very civilly a plain
+question, and did not expect from a school-boy such a pert answer.' The
+reply was, 'Indeed, my Lady, I can only answer once more, 'What is that
+to you?' In reality the theme was--_Quid ad te pertinet!"--From
+Holliday's Life of the Earl of Mansfield_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"IN SPITE OF HIS TEETH."
+
+
+King John once demanded of a certain Jew ten thousand marks, on refusal
+of which, he ordered one of the Israelite's teeth to be drawn every day
+till he should consent. The Jew lost seven, and then paid the required
+sum. Hence the phrase--"In spite of his teeth."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SWAN RIVER.
+
+
+A gentleman who had just arrived in town met an Hibernian friend, and
+with anxious solicitude asked him "where the best bed was to be got?"
+"By my soul," said the Emeralder, with a Kilmainham look, "I'm tould at
+the _Swan River_, where there's nothing but _down_."
+
+W.C.R.R.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SIAMESE YOUTHS.
+
+
+QUERY.--Would not the _law_ be the most profitable profession for the
+Siamese Youths? They might plead _pro_ and _con_, and take _fees_ from
+_plaintiff_ and _defendant_. If raised to the Bench, they might receive
+the salary of _one_ Judge, but act as _two_, thereby saving the nation
+some money in these _hard_ times of _cash_ payments, and please all
+parties, _one_ summing up for plaintiff and the _other_ for defendant.
+
+P.T.W.
+
+N.B. They appear very good natured, although they _huffed_ me _twice_ at
+draughts.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WITH the present Number is published a SUPPLEMENT, containing a
+Steel-plate PORTRAIT of THOMAS CAMPBELL, ESQ. and a copious MEMOIR; with
+Title, Preface, and Index to Vol. xiv.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement,
+and Instruction, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIRROR OF LITERATURE, NO. 406 ***
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type"
+ content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <title>
+ The Mirror of Literature, Issue 406.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ /*<![CDATA[*/
+ <!--
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+
+ .poem {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; margin-bottom: 1em; text-align: left;}
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+ .poem p {margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem p.i2 {margin-left: 1em;}
+ .poem p.i4 {margin-left: 2em;}
+ .poem p.i6 {margin-left: 3em;}
+ .poem p.i8 {margin-left: 4em;}
+
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+ <body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction, 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
+ Volume 14, No. 406, Saturday, December 26, 1829.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: March 5, 2004 [EBook #11460]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIRROR OF LITERATURE, NO. 406 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Andy Jewell, David Garcia and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page433" name="page433"></a>[pg
+ 433]</span>
+ <h1>
+ THE MIRROR<br />
+ OF<br />
+ LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+ </h1>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <table width="100%" summary="Banner">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">
+ <b>VOL. XIV, NO. 406.]</b>
+ </td>
+ <td align="center">
+ <b>SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1829.</b>
+ </td>
+ <td align="right">
+ <b>[PRICE 2d.</b>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ VIRGIL'S TOMB.
+ </h2>
+ <div class="figure" style="width: 100%;">
+ <a href="images/406-1.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/406-1.png" alt="Virgil's Tomb." /></a>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ This consecrated relic of genius stands on the hill of
+ Posilipo, in the environs of Naples. Its recent state is so
+ beautifully described by Eustace, that we shall not, like
+ gipsys do stolen children, disfigure it to prevent
+ recognition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Proceeding westward along the Chiaia and keeping towards the
+ beach, says Eustace, we came to the quarter called
+ Mergyllina. To ascend the hill of Posilipo we turned to the
+ right, and followed a street winding as a staircase up the
+ steep, and terminating at a garden gate. Having entered, we
+ pursued a path through a vineyard and descending a little,
+ came to a small square building, flat-roofed, placed on a
+ sort of platform on the brow of a precipice on one side,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page434" name="page434"></a>[pg
+ 434]</span> and on the other sheltered by a super-incumbent
+ rock. An aged ilex, spreading from the sides of the rock, and
+ bending over the edifice, covers the roof with its ever
+ verdant foliage. Numberless shrubs spring around, and
+ interwoven with ivy clothe the walls and hang in festoons
+ over the precipice. The edifice before us was an ancient
+ tomb&mdash;the tomb of VIRGIL! We entered; a vaulted cell and
+ two modern windows alone presented themselves to view: the
+ poet's name is the only ornament of the place. No
+ sarcophagus, no urn, and even no inscription to feed the
+ devotion of the classical pilgrim. The epitaph which though
+ not genuine is yet ancient, was inscribed by the order of the
+ Duke of Pescolangiano, then proprietor of the place, on a
+ marble slab placed in the side of the rock opposite the
+ entrance of the tomb, where it still remains. Every body is
+ acquainted with it&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Mantua me genuit, Calabri rapuere, tenet nunc Parthenope,
+ cecini
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ pascua, rura, duces.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ But there are authors who venture to assert, that the tomb of
+ which we are now speaking, is not the sepulchre of Virgil. Of
+ this number are the classic Addison and the laborious and
+ accurate Cluverius. The authority of two such eminent
+ persons, without doubt, carries great weight with it, but
+ that weight is upon this occasion considerably lessened by
+ the weakness of the arguments on which their opinion is
+ grounded. These arguments may be found in Cluverius, and
+ Addison merely expresses his opinion without entering into
+ any discussion. They are drawn from a few verses of Statius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In opposition to these arguments, or rather conjectures
+ founded upon the vague expressions of a single poet (a poet
+ often censured for his obscurity), we have the constant and
+ uninterrupted tradition of the country supported by the
+ authority of a numerous host of learned and ingenious
+ antiquaries; and upon such grounds we may still continue to
+ cherish the conviction, that we have visited the tomb of
+ Virgil, and hailed his sacred shade on the spot where his
+ ashes long reposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The laurel which was once said to have sprung up at its base,
+ and covered it with its luxuriant branches, now flourishes
+ only in the verses of youthful bards, or in the descriptions
+ of early travellers; myrtle, ivy and ilex, all plants equally
+ agreeable to the genius of the place, and the subjects of the
+ poet, now perform the office of the long-withered bays, and
+ encircle the tomb with verdure and perfume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sepulchre of Virgil, it may be imagined, must have long
+ remained an object of interest and veneration, especially as
+ his works had excited universal admiration even in his
+ life-time, and were very soon after his death put into the
+ hands of children, and made a part of the rudiments of early
+ education. Yet Martial declares that it had been neglected in
+ his time, and that Silius Italicus alone restored its long
+ forgotten honours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader will learn with regret that Virgil's tomb,
+ consecrated as it ought to be to genius and meditation, is
+ sometimes converted into the retreat of assassins, or the
+ lurking place of Sbirri. Such at least it was the last time
+ we visited it, when wandering that way about sun-set we found
+ it filled with armed men. We were surprised on both sides,
+ and on ours not very agreeably at the unexpected rencounter;
+ so lonely the place and so threatening the aspects of these
+ strangers. Their manners however were courteous; and on
+ inquiry we were informed that they were Sbirri, and then
+ lying in wait for a murderer, who was supposed to make that
+ spot his nightly asylum. It would be unjust to accuse the
+ Neapolitans of culpable indifference towards this or any
+ other monument of antiquity; but it is incumbent on the
+ proprietor or the public, to secure them against such
+ profanation. On the whole, few places are in themselves more
+ picturesque, and from the recollection inseparably interwoven
+ with it, no spot is more interesting than the tomb of Virgil.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ LAST CHRISTMAS DAY.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Say, if such blandishments did ever greet
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thy charmed soul; hast thou not crav'd to die?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hast not thine immaterial seem'd but air
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Verging to sigh itself from thee, and share
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beatitude? hast thou not watch'd thy breath
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In meek, faint hope, that soon 'twould sink in death?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <i>MS. Poem.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Last Christmas Day! my heart leaps with joy at its very
+ memory; it was a mental <i>Noel</i>, a Christmas of the soul,
+ (if I may thus express myself.) That which I am about to
+ relate of it is strictly true, and I do relate it because
+ that day is one of the very few in our brief existence which
+ form a moral epoch in, and influence subsequent, life. Last
+ Christmas Day, I well remember, my spirit revelled in an Eden
+ blessedness&mdash;a bliss which the unholy
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page435" name="page435"></a>[pg
+ 435]</span> world did not, could not, give, and consequently
+ could not take away. Reader! I will hope, I will believe,
+ that thou hast experienced feelings and emotions, like those
+ high and holy ones of which I would endeavour now to preserve
+ a faint transcript. Come then, let us unite our ideas, let us
+ speak together, but let us yet mention as present, those
+ beatific thoughts and imaginings which are indeed past. Let
+ us ever remember and cherish in our heart of hearts those
+ golden fore-tastes of future eternity, or (according to
+ Platonism) those rapturous reminiscences of past, which prove
+ beyond logical demonstration, the existence of some vital
+ principle in man, godlike in faculties, in essence
+ immaterial, in duration, immortal! It is Christmas Day, a
+ deep, unearthly calm possesses our minds; all passions are
+ slumbering, save the beautiful and holy ones of adoring love,
+ mingled with overwhelming gratitude towards our maker, and
+ philanthropic love, universal benevolence, to man. It is
+ winter, but one of those delicious days in which closing our
+ eyes, so that we behold not sad hosts of bare stems and
+ branches, we may well deem that summer reigns! And a summer
+ indeed reigns in our bosoms! Now nature seems new and
+ fascinating, as it did to Adam when he wakened into life.
+ Now, as for the first time, we discern with unspeakable
+ emotions, that divine affection as well as unlimited power,
+ which actuates and supports creation. Now we comprehend that
+ the universe was designed to minister happiness to myriads of
+ intelligent beings; but that man, by sin, frustrates the
+ gracious intent, and produces misery. Now the glorious golden
+ sun seems in its gladdening lustre, like a smile from its
+ creator; a smile beaming ineffable love, and joy, and peace.
+ Now the sky, the pale, delicate, sapphire sky, the soft,
+ tender, inviting, enfolding, and immeasurable sky, appears to
+ image the mercy of its maker. Let us yet gaze upon the sky,
+ for it also admonishes us of other delightful things; it is
+ silent&mdash;it is awful&mdash;it is holy; but its silence is
+ beautiful, and with wordless eloquence it speaks unto our
+ enraptured bosoms of deep, eternal, unimaginable repose! it
+ infuses into our breasts undefinable ideas and sensations; it
+ appears to our enchanted imaginations an emblem meet of the
+ grand dream of eternity, and our spirits seem on the verge of
+ quitting earth, in thrilling contemplations on the islands of
+ that infinite abyss, and their immortal inhabitants! We gaze
+ in hope, adoration, and rapture on the blue expanse, varied
+ by delicate vapours, sailing calmly, wondrously through it;
+ and then occur to our memories spontaneously, the exquisite
+ lines translated from a <i>morceau</i>, by Gluck, (a German
+ poet;) and our hearts respond as each of us sighs:
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "There's peace and welcome in yon sea
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of endless blue tranquillity.
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Those clouds are living things!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I trace their veins of liquid gold,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I see them solemnly unfold
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Their soft and fleecy wings!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ These be the angels that convey
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Us weary children of a day
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Life's tedious nothing o'er,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where neither passions come, nor woes
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To vex the genius of repose
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ On death's majestic shore!"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Then do our delighted eyes wander downward; then doth earth
+ appear a glorious, though but a temporary palace, the gift of
+ a gracious God to man! then do we feel an unaccountable
+ assurance that angels visit the beautiful domain; then that
+ (though viewlessly) they rejoice with, they sorrow for, (if
+ angels can sorrow) and they minister unto "the heirs of
+ salvation," as they did in the days of old, and as they will
+ do, to the end of time. Were we not assured of this blessed
+ fact in the book of books, reason would assert, that for a
+ thankless, graceless generation alone, earth should not have
+ been formed so divinely fair; but it is heavenly, that the
+ immortal servitors of man may even here find records of the
+ divinity, and themes for undying thanksgiving. Are we indeed
+ visited, watched, and ministered unto, by beatific essences?
+ Oh, reason and revelation, both loudly proclaim the fact;
+ those beneficent beings may be with us then, when we deem
+ ourselves alone; they may be our society in the solitude of
+ our chambers; they may pass us in the breeze, and they may
+ wander beside us in our loneliest walks. Such meditations are
+ calculated to inspire our bosoms with new life; to brighten
+ all nature around us, and to unite us to the invisible world
+ by ties, of the existence of which we were never previously
+ sensible; ties, at once so sweet and so sacred, that we
+ almost crave the blessing of death, in order more surely to
+ strengthen them! Then doth the beauty of "the vale of tears"
+ confound us; then doth it infuse into our bosoms such
+ unalterable fore-tastes; such mysterious and undefinable
+ sensations of the blessedness of "the isles of joy," that our
+ very souls seem to have become but one prayer, one fervent,
+ wordless, agonizing prayer, for divine repose, and
+ unimaginable blessedness; and then doth the mere suggestion
+ of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page436"
+ name="page436"></a>[pg 436]</span> final reprobation amount
+ to insufferable torture! Oh, that such heavenly imaginings,
+ such divine intimations of a transcendent futurity, were more
+ frequently vouchsafed to us, and were less evanescent. They
+ are glimpses of everlasting day, shining on wanderers in "the
+ valley of the shadow of death;" they are droppings from the
+ overflowing and ineffable cup of mercy; they are presciences
+ of eternity, inestimable, unutterable! and the pen that would
+ describe indescribable perceptions, droops in shame and
+ sorrow at its own imbecility. Such perceptions have visited,
+ do visit us, on this most rapturous of Christmas Days? Is it
+ not a golden day? does it not remove us for a little space
+ from earth, into the society of the holiest sentient beings,
+ and to the beauty of a celestial, surpassing, world? Does it
+ not bestow on our souls their long-lost ethereal wings? and
+ do not the delighted strangers soar for a little while above
+ the grossest realms of matter? Alas! even but for a little
+ while; now do they drop, for now flag and droop those angelic
+ pinions which are too humid and heavy with that atmosphere,
+ from whence they could not wholly disengage themselves; the
+ golden harps of heaven murmur in their entranced ears no
+ longer; the smiles of the Sons of Peace fade from their
+ enchanted sight; and the clouds of this nether world retain
+ from their enamoured gaze, the treasures of infinity!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps we have enjoyed a very enthusiastic, a very poetical,
+ Christmas Day! we pretend not to deny it, though steadfastly
+ believing it was neither an anti-Christian, nor an utterly
+ unprofitable one; nay, we even venture to hope, that the
+ beatitude of spirit just feebly portrayed was not unpleasing
+ in His sight, unto whom, for His gift of immortal life, we
+ upon Christmas Day render our peculiar thanksgivings!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M.L.B.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE FALL OF ZARAGOZA.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Awake, awake, the trumpet hath sung its lay to the sunny
+ sky,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the glorious shout from Spanish lips gives forth its
+ wild reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Awake, awake, how the chargers foam, as to battle they
+ dash on,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, Zaragoza, on this proud day, must thy walls be lost
+ or won!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ His hand&mdash;the hand of the youthful chief was on his
+ flashing sword,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And his plume gleam'd white thro' the smoke and flame
+ o'er the lofty city pour'd&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the banners around him darkly swept like the waves of
+ a stormy sea,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Zaragoza, amid this strife, his heart was firm to
+ thee.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Away, away, tread her walls to dust!"&mdash;the Gallic
+ warriors cried
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Defend, my bands, your hearth and home," the youthful
+ chief replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They caught the sound of this spirit-voice as they stay'd
+ their foes' career,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And many a thrilling cry was heard, when the bayonet met
+ the spear
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ In vain, ye heroes, do you breathe your latest vows to
+ heaven,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In vain is your devoted blood in the cause of Freedom
+ given,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For when the morn awakes again, your city shall not be
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The haunt of maids who warbled deep, their sweetest songs
+ for ye!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ But the story of your hallow'd death shall not remain
+ unsung,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, its record shall be glorified by many a minstrel
+ tongue
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Freedom's holy light hath touch'd each ruin'd shrine
+ and wall,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That sadly speak unto the heart of Zaragoza's fall.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <i>Deal</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ REGINALD AUGUSTINE.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE BANQUETTING HOUSE, WHITEHALL.<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many persons who have visited this chapel may not have
+ noticed or been aware of the splendid painted ceiling by Sir
+ Peter Paul Rubens, which was executed by him when ambassador
+ at the court of James I. This beautiful performance
+ represents the apotheosis of that peaceful monarch, he being
+ seated on his throne, and turning towards the deities of
+ peace and commerce, having rejected the gods of war and
+ discord. It is painted on canvass, and is in excellent
+ preservation; the original painter had &pound;3,000. for his
+ labour; it has been retouched more than once, and the last
+ time was by Cipriani, who had &pound;2,000. for his repairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ralph, in his <i>Critical Review of Public Buildings</i>,
+ observes, "that this picture is not so generally known as one
+ could wish, but needs only to be known to be esteemed
+ according to its merits;" and he further adds, "it is but an
+ ill decoration for a place of religious worship, for in the
+ first place, its contents are nowise akin to devotion, and in
+ the next, the workmanship is so very extraordinary that a man
+ must have abundance of zeal or no taste, that can attend to
+ anything besides."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is almost needless to remark, that it was from a passage
+ broken for the occasion <span class="pagenum"><a id="page437"
+ name="page437"></a>[pg 437]</span> through the wall of this
+ building, that the unfortunate Charles was conducted by the
+ regicides to his death; this passage still remains, and now
+ serves as a doorway to an additional building in Scotland
+ Yard: and nearly facing this doorway stood the ingenious
+ Dial, engraved and described in No. 400, of the MIRROR. The
+ next important and public event connected with this building
+ occurred in 1811, when a very different and far more
+ gratifying spectacle took place, being that of the ceremony
+ of placing in the chapel, the eagles and other colours taken
+ by our gallant troops during the war. There were six
+ standards and the like number of regimental colours, which
+ after having been presented at the altar were affixed to the
+ places they now occupy. There is a singular circumstance
+ attached to the history of one of the eagles which may be
+ well introduced in this place; it may be distinguished from
+ the others by its having a wreath placed round its neck, the
+ flag itself being destroyed. It was the usual custom for the
+ eagles to be attached to the staves on which they are borne
+ by a screw, so that in the event of any imminent danger, they
+ might be taken off and secured; but Napoleon on his
+ presenting this standard to his 8th regiment, observed, it
+ was impossible that it should be taken from so brave a body
+ of men as they had always proved themselves to be, and
+ desired it might be rivetted to the staff, which was
+ accordingly done; and probably had it not been for this order
+ the eagle might have escaped our valiant 87th, by whom it was
+ taken on the heights of Barossa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Maundy Thursday another gratifying ceremony takes place,
+ <i>viz</i>, the distribution of the Maundy Money to as many
+ poor people as the years of his majesty's age. This money
+ consists of the smaller silver coins, being each in value
+ from 1<i>d</i>. to 4<i>d</i>.; these are enclosed in a small,
+ white kid bag, which is again enveloped in another of crimson
+ leather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.P.D.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ RETROSPECTIVE GLEANINGS.
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ TOUCHING FOR THE KING'S EVIL.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>To the Editor of the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having read an interesting paper from your ingenious
+ correspondent <i>P.T.W.</i> in your number of the 14th of
+ November, respecting "Touching for the Cure of the King's
+ Evil," it occurred to me that some farther information
+ relative to the original of that "hereditary miracle," as Mr.
+ Collier is pleased to term it, might not be uninteresting to
+ some of your readers: I therefore send you the
+ following:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stowe, in his <i>Annals</i>, accounts for the origin of
+ touching for the evil, in the following manner:&mdash;"A
+ young woman who was afflicted with this disorder in a very
+ alarming manner, and to a most disgusting degree, feeling
+ uneasiness and pain consequent upon it in her sleep, dreamt
+ that she should be cured by the simple operation of having
+ the part washed with the king's hand. Application was
+ consequently made to Edward, by her friends, who very
+ humanely consented to perform the unpleasant request. A basin
+ of water was brought, with which he carefully softened the
+ humours, till they broke, and the contents discharged; the
+ sign of the cross wound up the charm; and the female retired,
+ with the assurance of his protection during the remainder of
+ the cure, which was effected within a week." This is somewhat
+ differently related in <i>Ailred's History of the Life and
+ Miracles of Edward the Confessor</i>, an extract from which
+ may be found in a note to the first volume of Rapin's
+ <i>History of England</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following curious advertisement was issued by the order
+ of King Charles II. for healing the people, on the 18th of
+ May, 1664.
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ "Notice.
+ </blockquote>
+ <blockquote>
+ "His sacred majesty having declared it to be his royal will
+ and purpose to continue the healing of his people for the
+ evil during the month of May, and then give over till
+ Michaelmas next; I am commanded to give notice thereof, that
+ the people may not come up to the town in the interim, and
+ lose their labour."
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Thomas Mousewell was tried for high treason in 1684, for
+ having spoken with contempt of King Charles's pretensions to
+ cure the scrofula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a manuscript account of the Restoration, written by Thomas
+ Gumble, D.D. Chaplain to General Monck, in the year 1662, is
+ the following description of the ceremony:&mdash;" There was
+ a great chair placed for the king, in a place somewhat
+ distant from the people. As soon as the king was sate, one of
+ the clerks of the closet stood at the right side of his
+ chair, holding on his arm as many gold angels (every one tied
+ in a ribbon of white silk) as there were sick to be touched,
+ which were in number, forty-eight. Dr. Brown, the chaplain of
+ the Princess of Aurange, performed the place of the king's
+ chaplain. The chaplain <span class="pagenum"><a id="page438"
+ name="page438"></a>[pg 438]</span> then read the sixteenth
+ chapter of St. Mark, from the fourteenth verse to the end;
+ and then the chirurgeon presented the sick, (having examined
+ them to see that it was the evil) after three reverences on
+ their knees, before the king, who, whilst the chaplain said
+ these words in that gospel: 'They shall lay their hands upon
+ the sick, and they shall be healed,' layed his hands on the
+ two cheeks of the sick, saying, 'I touch thee, but <i>God</i>
+ healeth thee!' The chaplain then began another gospel; and
+ whilst these words were pronounced out of the first chapter
+ of St. John: 'This was the true light which lighteth every
+ man that cometh into the world,' his majesty took the pieces
+ of gold, and put them on the necks of the diseased, the
+ chaplain repeating the words as many times as there were
+ persons to receive them, concluding with a prayer, 'That
+ Almighty God would bless the ceremony;' then, after the
+ reverences as before, they retired. The Earls of Middlesex
+ and St. Albans held the bason, ewer, and towel, whilst the
+ king washed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shakspeare, in his <i>Macbeth</i>, thus describes this royal,
+ but now exploded gift:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i4">
+ "Strangely visited people,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All swollen and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mere despair of surgery, he cures&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hanging a golden stamp about their necks,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Put on with holy prayers."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In Nicholls's <i>Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth
+ Century</i>, vol. ii. p. 495, 505, many curious particulars
+ relating to this ceremony are to be found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the custom has now for some time been discontinued, and
+ the credulity of those who believed in its efficacy, laughed
+ at, I hope it will not be long ere that disgusting custom of
+ allowing persons (of whom women in general form by far the
+ greater number) afflicted with the king's evil, and different
+ other disorders, to come on the scaffold immediately after
+ the execution of a criminal, for the purpose of touching the
+ part affected, with the hand of the <i>but just dead</i>
+ malefactor, will be put a stop to; it being the very height
+ of absurdity to imagine that it can be productive of any good
+ effect; but on the contrary, tending to divest the minds of
+ the surrounding multitude of that awe with which the
+ ignominious spectacle should impress them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &Sigma;.&Gamma;. [Greek: S.G.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the trifling paper I sent you respecting "Cats," which you
+ deemed worthy of insertion in No. 398, you have it "by some
+ merchants from the Island of Cyprus, who came hither for
+ <i>fur</i>," it should be <i>tin</i>&mdash;Fur being an
+ article of importation.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ BOOKSELLERS' MARKS OR SIGNS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ (<i>For the Mirror</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many books, especially those printed in the 17th century,
+ have no other designation either of printer, bookseller, or
+ even city, but merely marks or signs. The <i>anchor</i> is
+ the mark of Raphelengius, at Leyden; and the same with a
+ <i>dolphin</i> twisted round it, of the Mantuii, at Venice
+ and Rome; the <i>Arion</i> denotes a book printed by
+ Oporrinus, at Basil; the <i>caduceus</i>, or <i>pegasus</i>,
+ by the Wechelliuses, at Paris and Frankfort; the
+ <i>cranes</i>, by Cramoisy; the <i>compass</i>, by Plantin,
+ at Antwerp; the <i>fountain</i>, by Vascosan, at Paris; the
+ <i>sphere</i> in a balance, by Janson, or Blaew, at
+ Amsterdam; the <i>lily</i>, by the Juntas, at Venice,
+ Florence, Lyons, and Rome; the <i>mulberry-tree</i>, by
+ Morel, at Paris; the <i>olive-tree</i>, by the Stephenses, at
+ Paris and Geneva, and the Elzevirs, at Amsterdam and Leyden;
+ the <i>bird between two serpents</i>, by the Frobeniuses, at
+ Basil; the <i>truth</i>, by the Commelins, at Heidelberg and
+ Paris; the <i>Saturn</i>, by Collinaeus; the <i>printing
+ press</i>, by Badius Ascensius, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ P.T.W.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ THE NATURALIST.
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ DIFFERENT COLOURS OF THE EGGS OF BIRDS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It is a remarkable fact in the economy of nature, that of
+ those birds whose nests are the most liable to discovery, and
+ whose eggs are most exposed to observation from the form of
+ the nests, the eggs are of that colour which is the least
+ different from the surrounding objects; whilst those birds
+ whose eggs are of a bright and positive colour, hide their
+ nests in the hollows of trees, or never quit them, excepting
+ in the night, or sit immediately that they have laid one or
+ two eggs. It is also to be observed that of those species
+ which build an exposed nest, and the females of which alone
+ perform the duty of incubation, the colour of the female is
+ much less bright than that of the male, and more in harmony
+ with the objects by which she is surrounded during the period
+ in which she sits upon her eggs. It would seem, therefore,
+ that those birds which lay a brightly-coloured egg have the
+ instinct to make a close nest, or to place it in the least
+ exposed situations; <span class="pagenum"><a id="page439"
+ name="page439"></a>[pg 439]</span> while those which lay a
+ sober-coloured egg are less solicitous to conceal it from the
+ notice of their enemies. M. Gloger, a German naturalist, has
+ paid great attention to this curious circumstance, and has
+ very recently published an elaborate memoir, in a work
+ printed at Berlin, in which he notices the habits of all the
+ species of birds indigenous to Germany, in confirmation of
+ the theory. Our limits will not allow us to notice the
+ particular species which he enumerates; but it may be
+ sufficient to excite attention to this subject, to mention,
+ that the birds which lay an egg perfectly white (the most
+ attractive of colours) make their nests in holes of the
+ earth, and cavities of trees, such as the kingfisher and the
+ woodpecker, or construct them with a very narrow opening, as
+ the domestic swallow; that the same coloured egg is found
+ amongst the birds which scarcely quit their nests in the day,
+ as hawks and owls; and that such birds as doves, which only
+ lay one or two eggs, and sit immediately after, have their
+ eggs white. The bright blue or bright green egg belongs to
+ birds which make their nests in holes, as the starling, or
+ construct them of green moss, or place them in the midst of
+ grass, but always well covered. The eggs of many gallinaceous
+ birds, that make their nests carelessly in the grass, are of
+ a pale and less decided green, such as those of the partridge
+ and pheasant. Of the mixed-coloured eggs, those of which
+ white forms the ground belong to birds that make very close
+ nests. Speckled eggs, with a dark or dirty ground, belong to
+ the largest number of species. Almost all the song birds lay
+ such eggs; and building open nests, they almost invariably
+ line the inside of them with materials of a harmonious colour
+ with the eggs, so that no evident contrast is presented which
+ would lead to their destruction.&mdash;<i>Companion to the
+ Almanac.</i>
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ EFFECTS OF SEA AIR.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Those who frequent the sea-coast are not long in discovering
+ that their best dyed black hats become of a rusty brown; and
+ similar effects are produced on some other colours. The brown
+ is, in fact, <i>rust</i>. Most, if not all, the usual black
+ colours have iron for a basis, the black oxide of which is
+ developed by galls, logwood, or other substances containing
+ gallic acid. Now the sea-air contains a proportion of the
+ muriates over which it is wafted; and these coming in contact
+ with any thing dyed black, part with their hydrochloric
+ (<i>muriatic</i>) acid, and form brown hydrochlorate of iron,
+ or contribute to form the brown or red oxide, called rust.
+ The gallic acid, indeed, from its superior affinity, has the
+ strongest hold of the iron; but the incessant action of the
+ sea-air, loaded with muriates, partially overcomes this, in
+ the same way as any acid, even of inferior affinity to the
+ gallic, when put upon black stuff, will turn it
+ brown.&mdash;<i>Ibid.</i>
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE DUGONG, THE MERMAID OF EARLY WRITERS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Of all the cetacea, that which approaches the nearest in form
+ to man is undoubtedly the dugong, which, when its head and
+ breast are raised above the water, and its pectoral fins,
+ resembling hands, are visible, might easily be taken by
+ superstitious seamen for a semi-human
+ being.&mdash;<i>Edinburgh Journal.</i>
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ SPIDERS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Live and grow without food. Out of fifty spiders produced on
+ the last day of August, and which were kept entirely without
+ food, three lived to the 8th of February following, and even
+ visibly increased in bulk. Was it from the effluvia arising
+ from the dead bodies of their companions that they lived so
+ long? Other spiders were kept in glass vessels without food,
+ from the 15th of July till the end of January. During that
+ time they cast their skins more than once, as if they had
+ been well fed.&mdash;<i>Redi, Generat. Insect.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spiders are excellent barometers: if the ends of their webs
+ are found branching out to any length, it is a sure sign of
+ favourable weather: if, on the contrary, they are found
+ short, and the spider does not attend to repairing it
+ properly, bad weather may be expected.&mdash;<i>Times.</i>
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ SWARMING OF BEES.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The ingenious President of the Horticultural Society, Mr.
+ T.A. Knight, has been led from repeated observation to infer,
+ that, in the swarming of bees, not a single labourer
+ emigrates without previously inspecting its proposed future
+ habitation, as well as the temporary stations of rest where
+ their numbers collect soon after
+ swarming.&mdash;<i>Philosophical Magazine.</i>
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE CHAMELEON'S ANTIPATHY TO BLACK.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Whatever may be the cause, the fact seems to be certain, that
+ the chameleon <span class="pagenum"><a id="page440"
+ name="page440"></a>[pg 440]</span> has an antipathy to things
+ of a black colour. One, which Forbes kept, uniformly avoided
+ a black board which was hung up in the chamber; and, what is
+ most remarkable, when it was forcibly brought before the
+ black board, it trembled violently, and assumed a black
+ colour.&mdash;<i>Oriental Mem</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ RULES FOR THE WEATHER.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ A wet summer is always followed by a frosty winter; but it
+ happens occasionally that the cold extends no farther. Two
+ remarkable instances of this occurred in 1807-8 and 1813-14.
+ With these exceptions, every frosty winter has been followed
+ by a cold summer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The true cause of cold, or rather the direct cause, is to be
+ found in the winter excess of west wind, every winter with
+ excess of west wind being followed by a cold summer; and if
+ there is no cold before, or during a first excess, then a
+ second excess of west wind in winter occasions a still colder
+ summer than the first. It also appears, by repeated
+ experience, that cold does not extend to more than two years
+ at a time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, if the winter excess of east wind be great, in the
+ first instance, the winters will be mild, and followed by
+ mild summers; while the summer excess of east wind is itself,
+ in the first instance, always mild; but uniformly followed by
+ cold winters and cold summers, which continue, more or less,
+ for one or two years, according to
+ circumstances.&mdash;<i>Mackenzie, Syst. of the Weather</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ PERIODICAL LITERATURE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Periodical Literature&mdash;how sweet is the name! 'Tis a
+ type of many of the most beautiful things and events in
+ nature; or say, rather, that <i>they</i> are types of
+ <i>it</i>&mdash;both the flowers and the stars. As to
+ flowers, they are the prettiest periodicals ever published in
+ folio&mdash;the leaves are wire-wove and hot-pressed by
+ Nature's self; their circulation is wide over all the land;
+ from castle to cottage they are regularly taken in; as old
+ age bends over them, his youth is renewed; and you see
+ childhood poring upon them, prest close to its very bosom.
+ Some of them are ephemeral, and their contents are exhaled
+ between the rising and the setting sun. Once a-week others
+ break through their green, pink, or crimson cover; and how
+ delightful, on the seventh day, smiles in the sunshine the
+ Sabbath flower&mdash;the only Sunday publication perused
+ without blame by the most religious&mdash;even before morning
+ prayer. Each month, indeed, throughout the whole year, has
+ its own flower-periodical. Some are annual, some biennial,
+ some triennial, and there are perennials that seem to live
+ for ever&mdash;and yet are still periodical&mdash;though our
+ love will not allow us to know when they die, and
+ phoenix-like re-appear from their own ashes. So much for
+ flowers&mdash;typifying or typified;&mdash;leaves
+ emblematical of pages&mdash;buds of binding dew-veils of
+ covers&mdash;and the wafting away of bloom and fragrance like
+ the dissemination of fine feelings, bright fancies, and
+ winged thoughts!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The flowers are the periodicals of the earth&mdash;the stars
+ are those of heaven. With what unfailing regularity do the
+ Numbers issue forth! Hesperus and Lucifer! ye are one
+ concern! The pole-star is studied by all nations. How
+ beautiful the poetry of the moon! On what subject does not
+ the sun throw light! No fear of hurting your eyes by reading
+ that fine, clear, large type on that softened page. Lo! as
+ you turn over, one blue, another yellow, and another green,
+ all, all alike delightful to the pupil, and dear to him as
+ the very apple of his eye! Yes, the great Periodical Press of
+ heaven is unceasingly at work&mdash;night and day; and though
+ even it has been taxed, and its emanations confined, still
+ their circulation is incalculable; nor have we yet heard that
+ Ministers intend instituting any prosecution against it. It
+ is yet Free, the only free Power all over the world. 'Tis
+ indeed like the air we breathe&mdash;if we have it not, we
+ die!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Look, then, at all our paper Periodicals with pleasure, for
+ sake of the flowers and the stars. Suppose them all extinct,
+ and life would be like a flowerless earth, a starless heaven.
+ We should soon forget the seasons themselves&mdash;the days
+ of the week&mdash;and the weeks of the month&mdash;and the
+ months of the year&mdash;and the years of the
+ century&mdash;and the centuries of all Time&mdash;and all
+ Time itself flowing away on into eternity. The Periodicals of
+ external nature would soon all lose their meaning, were there
+ no longer any Periodicals of the soul. These are the lights
+ and shadows of life, merrily dancing or gravely stealing over
+ the dial; remembrancers of the past&mdash;teachers of the
+ present&mdash;prophets of the future hours. Were they all
+ dead, spring would in vain renew her promise&mdash;wearisome
+ would be the long, long, interminable
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page441" name="page441"></a>[pg
+ 441]</span> summer-days&mdash;the fruits of autumn would
+ taste fushionless&mdash;and the winter's ingle blink
+ mournfully round the hearth. What are the blessed Seasons
+ themselves, in nature and in Thomson, but Periodicals of a
+ larger growth? They are the parents, or publishers, or
+ editors, of all the others&mdash;principal
+ contributors&mdash;nay, subscribers too&mdash;and may their
+ pretty family live for ever, still dying, yet ever renewed,
+ and on the increase every year. We should suspect him of a
+ bad, black heart, who loved not the Periodical Literature of
+ earth and sky&mdash;who would weep not to see one of its
+ flowers wither&mdash;one of its stars fall&mdash;one beauty
+ to die on its humble bed&mdash;one glory to drop from its
+ lofty sphere. Let them bloom and burn on&mdash;flowers in
+ which there is no poison, stars in which there is no
+ disease&mdash;whose blossoms are all sweet, and whose rays
+ are all sanative&mdash;both alike steeped in dew, and both,
+ to the fine ear of nature's worshipper, bathed in music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only look at Maga! One hundred and forty-eight months old!
+ and yet lovely as maiden between frock and gown&mdash;even as
+ sweet sixteen! Not a wrinkle on cheek or forehead! No
+ crow-foot has touched her eyes&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "Her eye's blue languish, and her golden hair!"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Like an antelope in the wilderness&mdash;or swan on the
+ river&mdash;or eagle in the sky. Dream that she is dead, and
+ oh! what a world! Yet die she must some day&mdash;so must the
+ moon and stars. Meanwhile there is a blessing in
+ prayers&mdash;and hark! how the nations cry, "Oh! Maga, live
+ for ever!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We often pity our poor ancestors. How they contrived to make
+ the ends meet, surpasses our conjectural powers. What a weary
+ waste must have seemed expanding before their eyes, between
+ morning and night! Don't tell us that the human female never
+ longs for other pastime than
+ </p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "To suckle fools and chronicle small beer."
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ True, ladies sighed not then for periodicals&mdash;but there,
+ in the depths of their ignorance, lay their utter
+ wretchedness. What! keep pickling and preserving during the
+ whole mortal life of an immortal being! Except when at jelly,
+ everlastingly at jam! The soul sickens at the monotonous
+ sweetness of such a wersh existence. True that many sat all
+ life-long at needlework; but is not that a very sew-sew sort
+ of life? Then oh! the miserable males! We speak of times
+ after the invention, it is true, of printing&mdash;but who
+ read what were called books then? Books! no more like our
+ periodicals, than dry, rotten, worm-eaten, fungous logs are
+ like green living leafy trees, laden with dews, bees, and
+ birds, in the musical sunshine. What could males do then but
+ yawn, sleep, snore, guzzle, guttle, and drink till they grew
+ dead and got buried? Fox-hunting won't always do&mdash;and
+ often it is not to be had; who can be happy with his gun
+ through good report and bad report in an a' day's rain? Small
+ amusement in fishing in muddy water; palls upon the sense
+ quarrelling with neighbours on points of etiquette and the
+ disputed property of hedgerow trees; a fever in the family
+ ceases to raise the pulse of any inmate, except the patient;
+ death itself is no relief to the dulness; a funeral is little
+ better; the yawn of the grave seems a sort of unhallowed
+ mockery; the scutcheon hung out on the front of the old
+ dismal hall, is like a sign on a deserted Spittal; along with
+ sables is worn a suitable stupidity by all the sad
+ survivors.&mdash;And such, before the era of Periodicals,
+ such was the life in&mdash;merry England. Oh! dear!&mdash;oh!
+ dear me!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We shall not enter into any historical details&mdash;for this
+ is not a Monologue for the Quarterly&mdash;but we simply
+ assert, that in the times we allude to (don't mention dates)
+ there was little or no reading in England. There was neither
+ the Reading Fly nor the Reading Public. What could this be
+ owing to, but the non-existence of Periodicals? What
+ elderly-young lady could be expected to turn from house
+ affairs, for example, to Spenser's Fairy Queen? It is a long,
+ long, long poem, that Fairy Queen of Spenser's; nobody, of
+ course, ever dreamt of getting through it; but though you may
+ have given up all hope of getting through a poem or a wood,
+ you expect to be able to find your way back again to the spot
+ where you unluckily got in; not so, however, with the Fairy
+ Queen. Beautiful it is indeed, most exquisitely and
+ unapproachably beautiful in many passages, especially about
+ ladies and ladies' love more than celestial, for Venus loses
+ in comparison her lustre in the sky; but still people were
+ afraid to get into it then as now; and "heavenly Una, with
+ her milk-white lamb," lay buried in dust. As to Shakspeare,
+ we cannot find many traces of him in the domestic occupations
+ of the English gentry during the times alluded to; nor do we
+ believe that the character of Hamlet was at all relished in
+ their halls, though perhaps an occasional squire chuckled at
+ the humours <span class="pagenum"><a id="page442"
+ name="page442"></a>[pg 442]</span> of Sir John Falstaff. We
+ have Mr. Wordsworth's authority for believing that Paradise
+ Lost was a dead letter, and John Milton virtually anonymous.
+ We need say no more. Books like these, huge heavy vols. lay
+ with other lumber in the garrets and libraries. As yet,
+ Periodical Literature was not; and the art of printing seems
+ long to have preceded the art of reading. It did not occur to
+ those generations that books were intended to be read by
+ people in general, but only by the select few. Whereas now,
+ reading is not only one of the luxuries, but absolutely one
+ of the necessaries of life, and we now no more think of going
+ without our book than without our breakfast; lunch consists
+ now of veal-pies and Venetian Bracelets&mdash;we still dine
+ on Roast-beef, but with it, instead of Yorkshire pudding, a
+ Scotch novel&mdash;Thomas Campbell and Thomas Moore sweeten
+ tea for us&mdash;and in "Course of Time" we sup on a Welsh
+ rabbit and a Religious Poem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have not time&mdash;how can we?&mdash;to trace the history
+ of the great revolution. But a great revolution there has
+ been, from nobody's reading anything, to every body's reading
+ all things; and perhaps it began with that good old proser
+ Richardson, the father of Pamela, Clarissa, and Sir Charles
+ Grandison. He seems to have been a sort of idiot, who had a
+ strange insight into some parts of human nature, and a
+ tolerable acquaintance with most parts of speech. He set the
+ public a-reading, and Fielding and Smollett shoved her
+ on&mdash;till the Minerva Press took her in hand&mdash;and
+ then&mdash;the Periodicals. But such Periodicals! The
+ Gentleman's Magazine&mdash;God bless it then, now, and for
+ ever!&mdash;the Monthly Review, the Critical and the British
+ Critic! The age had been for some years literary, and was now
+ fast becoming periodical. Magazines multiplied. Arose in
+ glory the Edinburgh, and then the Quarterly
+ Review&mdash;Maga, like a new sun, looked out from
+ heaven&mdash;from her golden urn a hundred satellites drew
+ light&mdash;and last of all, "the Planetary Five," the
+ Annuals, hung their lamps on high; other similar luminous
+ bodies emerged from the clouds, till the whole circumference
+ was bespangled, and astronomy became the favourite study with
+ all ranks of people, from the King upon the throne to the
+ meanest of his subjects. Now, will any one presume to deny,
+ that this has been a great change to the better, and that
+ there is now something worth living for in the world? Look at
+ our literature now, and it is all periodical together. A
+ thousand daily, thrice-a-week, twice-a week, weekly
+ newspapers, a hundred monthlies, fifty quarterlies, and
+ twenty-five annuals! No mouth looks up now and is not fed; on
+ the contrary, we are in danger of being crammed; an empty
+ head is as rare as an empty stomach; the whole day is one
+ meal, one physical, moral, and intellectual feast; the Public
+ goes to bed with a Periodical in her hand, and falls asleep
+ with it beneath her pillow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What blockhead thinks now of reading Milton, or Pope, or
+ Gray? Paradise Lost is lost; it has gone to the devil. Pope's
+ Epistles are returned to the dead-letter office; the age is
+ too loyal for "ruin seize thee, ruthless king," and the
+ oldest inhabitant has forgotten "the curfew
+ tolls."&mdash;<i>Blackwood's Magazine.</i>
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ THE SELECTOR, AND LITERARY NOTICES OF <i>NEW WORKS.</i>
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ DR. LARDNER'S CYCLOPAEDIA.
+ </h3>
+ <center>
+ <i>History of Scotland. By Sir Walter Scott, Bart.</i> Vol.
+ I.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The rapid and sketchy page just quoted from <i>Blackwood's
+ Magazine</i> will illustrate the high ground which periodical
+ literature is daily attaining in this country. Of this
+ ascendancy, the volume before us is indeed a fine specimen,
+ and one of which we have reason to entertain a national
+ pride. We know it to be a common practice with publishers on
+ the continent to produce long works volume by volume, so that
+ Dr. Lardner's plan is by no means novel; but we should also
+ bear in mind that, compared with our family and cabinet
+ libraries, the majority of similar foreign works are mere
+ flimsy productions; and the <i>Encyclopedie Methodique</i>,
+ published in monthly volumes, in Paris, both in quantity and
+ execution, will not reach our literary standards of 1829. As
+ Dr. Lardner's plan is well known, it need not here be
+ repeated; neither need we remark upon the high qualifications
+ of Sir Walter Scott, as an historian of Scotland. An extract
+ shall speak for itself; and perhaps we cannot do better than
+ select one of the battle-pieces, which has all the vividness
+ of the finest historical painting: say
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ BANNOCKBURN.
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ "Robert Bruce summoned the array of his kingdom to rendezvous
+ in the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page443"
+ name="page443"></a>[pg 443]</span> Tor-wood, about four miles
+ from Stirling, and by degrees prepared the field of battle
+ which he had selected for the contest. It was a space of
+ ground then called the New Park&mdash;perhaps reserved for
+ the chase, since Stirling was frequently a royal residence.
+ This ground was partly open, partly encumbered with trees, in
+ groups or separate. It was occupied by the Scottish line of
+ battle, extending from south to north, and fronting to the
+ east. In this position, Bruce's left flank and rear might
+ have been exposed to a sally from the castle of Stirling; but
+ Mowbray the governor's faith was beyond suspicion, and the
+ king was not in apprehension that he would violate the tenour
+ of the treaty, by which he was bound to remain in passive
+ expectation of his fate. The direct approach to the Scottish
+ front was protected in a great measure by a morass called the
+ New-miln Bog. A brook, called Bannockburn, running to the
+ eastward, between rocky and precipitous banks, effectually
+ covered the Scottish right wing, which rested upon it, and
+ was totally inaccessible. Their left flank was apparently
+ bare, but was, in fact, formidably protected in front by a
+ peculiar kind of field-works. As the ground in that part of
+ the field was adapted for the manoeuvres of cavalry Bruce
+ caused many rows of pits, three feet deep, to be dug in it,
+ so close together, as to suggest the appearance of a
+ honeycomb, with its ranges of cells. In these pits sharp
+ stakes were strongly pitched, and the apertures covered with
+ sod so carefully, as that the condition of the ground might
+ escape observation. Calthrops, or spikes contrived to lame
+ the horses, were also scattered in different directions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Having led his troops into the field of combat, on the
+ tidings of the English approach, the 23d of June, 1314, the
+ King of Scotland ordered his soldiers to arm themselves, and
+ making proclamation that those who were not prepared to
+ conquer or die with their sovereign were at liberty to
+ depart, he was answered by a cheerful and general expression
+ of their determination to take their fate with him. The King
+ proceeded to draw up the army in the following order: Three
+ oblong columns or masses of infantry, armed with lances,
+ arranged on the same front, with intervals betwixt them
+ formed his first line. Of these Edward Bruce had the guidance
+ of the right wing, James Douglas and Walter, the Steward of
+ Scotland, of the left, and Thomas Randolph of the central
+ division. These three commanders had their orders to permit
+ no English troops to pass their front, in order to gain
+ Stirling. The second line, forming one column or mass,
+ consisted of the men of the isles, under Bruce's faithful
+ friend and ally, the insular prince Angus, his own men of
+ Carrick, and those of Argyle and Cantire. With these the king
+ posted himself in order to carry support and assistance
+ wherever it might be required. With himself also he kept in
+ the rear a select body of horse, the greater part of whom he
+ designed for executing a particular service. The followers of
+ the camp were dismissed with the baggage, to station
+ themselves behind an eminence to the rear of the Scottish
+ army, still called the Gillies' (that is, the servants')
+ hill....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the morning of St. Barnaby, called the Bright, being the
+ 24th of June, 1314, Edward advanced in full form to the
+ attack of the Scots, whom he found in their position of the
+ preceding evening. The Vanguard of the English, consisting of
+ the archers and bill-men, or lancers, comprehending almost
+ all the infantry of the army, advanced, under the command of
+ the Earls of Gloucester and Hereford, who also had a fine
+ body of men at arms to support their column. All the
+ remainder of the English troops, consisting of nine battles,
+ or separate divisions, were so straitened by the narrowness
+ of the ground, that, to the eye of the Scots, they seemed to
+ form one very large body, gleaming with flashes of armour,
+ and dark with the number of banners which floated over them.
+ Edward himself commanded this tremendous array, and, in order
+ to guard his person, was attended by four hundred chosen men
+ at arms. Immediately around the King waited Sir Aymer de
+ Valence, that Earl of Pembroke who defeated Bruce at Methven
+ Wood, but was now to see a very different day; Sir Giles de
+ Argentine, a Knight of St. John of Jerusalem, who was
+ accounted, for his deeds in Palestine and elsewhere, one of
+ the best Knights that lived; and Sir Ingram Umfraville, an
+ Anglicised Scottishman, also famed for his skill in arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As the Scottish saw the immense display of their enemies
+ rolling towards them like a surging ocean, they were called
+ on to join in an appeal to Heaven against the strength of
+ human foes.&mdash;Maurice, the Abbot of Inchaffray,
+ bare-headed and bare-footed, walked along the Scottish line,
+ and conferred his benediction on the soldiers, who knelt to
+ receive it, and to worship the power in whose name it was
+ bestowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page444" name="page444"></a>[pg
+ 444]</span> "During this time the King of England was
+ questioning Umfraville about the purpose of his opponents.
+ "Will they," said Edward, "abide battle?"&mdash;"They
+ assuredly will," replied Umfraville; "and to engage them with
+ advantage, your Highness were best order a seeming retreat,
+ and draw them out of their strong ground." Edward rejected
+ this counsel, and observing the Scottish soldiers kneel down,
+ joyfully exclaimed, "They crave mercy."&mdash;"It is from
+ Heaven, not from your Highness," answered Umfraville: "on
+ that field they will win or die." The King then commanded the
+ charge to be sounded, and the attack to take place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Earls of Gloucester and Hereford charged the Scots left
+ wing, under Edward Bruce, with their men at arms; but some
+ rivalry between these two great Lords induced them to hurry
+ to the charge with more of emulation than of discretion, and
+ arriving at the shock disordered and out of breath, they were
+ unable to force the deep ranks of the spearmen; many horses
+ were thrown down, and their masters left at the mercy of the
+ enemy. The other three divisions of the Scottish army
+ attacked the mass of the English infantry, who resisted
+ courageously. The English archers, as at the battle of
+ Falkirk, now began to show their formidable skill, at the
+ expense of the Scottish spearmen; but for this Bruce was
+ prepared. He commanded Sir Robert Keith, the Marshal of
+ Scotland, with those four hundred men at arms whom he had
+ kept in reserve for the purpose, to make a circuit, and
+ charge the English bowmen in the flank. This was done with a
+ celerity and precision which dispersed the whole archery,
+ who, having neither stakes nor other barrier to keep off the
+ horse, nor long weapons to repel them, were cut down at
+ pleasure, and almost without resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The battle continued to rage, but with disadvantage to the
+ English. The Scottish archers had now an opportunity of
+ galling their infantry without opposition; and it would
+ appear that King Edward could find no means of bringing any
+ part of his numerous centre or rear-guard to the support of
+ those in the front, who were engaged at disadvantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bruce, seeing the confusion thicken, now placed himself at
+ the head of the reserve, and addressing Angus of the Isles in
+ the words, "My hope is constant in thee," rushed into the
+ engagement followed by all the troops he had hitherto kept in
+ reserve. The effect of such an effort, reserved for a
+ favourable moment, failed not to be decisive. Those of the
+ English who had been staggered were now constrained to
+ retreat; those who were already in retreat took to actual
+ flight. At this critical moment, the camp-followers of the
+ Scottish army, seized with curiosity to see how the day went,
+ or perhaps desirous to have a share of the plunder, suddenly
+ showed themselves on the ridge of the Gillies'-hill, in the
+ rear of the Scottish line of battle; and as they displayed
+ cloths and horse-coverings upon poles for ensigns, they bore
+ in the eyes of the English the terrors of an army with
+ banners. The belief that they beheld the rise of an
+ ambuscade, or the arrival of a new army of Scots, gave the
+ last impulse of terror, and all fled now, even those who had
+ before resisted. The slaughter was immense; the deep ravine
+ of Bannockburn, to the south of the field of battle, lying in
+ the direction taken by most of the fugitives, was almost
+ choked and bridged over with the slain, the difficulty of the
+ ground retarding the fugitive horsemen till the lancers were
+ upon them. Others, and in great numbers, rushed into the
+ river Forth, in the blindness of terror, and perished there.
+ No less than twenty-seven Barons fell in the field; the Earl
+ of Gloucester was at the head of the fatal list: young,
+ brave, and high-born, when he saw the day was lost, he rode
+ headlong on the Scottish spears, and was slain. Sir Robert
+ Clifford, renowned in the Scottish wars, was also killed. Two
+ hundred Knights and seven hundred Esquires, of high birth and
+ blood, graced the list of slaughter with the noblest names of
+ England; and thirty thousand of the common file filled up the
+ fatal roll.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Edward, among whose weaknesses we cannot number cowardice,
+ was reluctantly forced from the bloody field by the Earl of
+ Pembroke. The noble Sir Giles de Argentine considered it as
+ his duty to attend the King until he saw him in personal
+ safety, then observing that "it was not his own wont to fly,"
+ turned back, rushed again into the battle, cried his war-cry,
+ galloped boldly against the victorious Scots, and was slain,
+ according to his wish, with his face to the enemy. Edward
+ must have been bewildered in the confusion of the field, for
+ instead of directing his course southerly to Linlithgow, from
+ which he came, he rode northward to Stirling, and demanded
+ admittance. Philip de Mowbray, the governor, remonstrated
+ against this rash step, reminding the unfortunate Prince that
+ he was obliged by his treaty to surrender
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page445" name="page445"></a>[pg
+ 445]</span> the castle next day, as not having been relieved
+ according to the conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Edward was therefore obliged to take the southern road; and
+ he must have made a considerable circuit to avoid the
+ Scottish army. He was, however, discovered on his retreat,
+ and pursued by Douglas with sixty horse, who were all that
+ could be mustered for the service. The King, by a rapid and
+ continued flight through a country in which his misfortunes
+ must have changed many friends into enemies, at length gained
+ the castle of Dunbar, where he was hospitably received by the
+ Earl of March. From Dunbar Edward escaped almost alone to
+ Berwick in a fishing skiff, having left behind him the finest
+ army a King of England ever commanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The quantity of spoil gained by the victors at the battle of
+ Bannockburn was inestimable, and the ransoms paid by the
+ prisoners largely added to the mass of treasure. Five near
+ relations to the Bruce&mdash;namely, his wife, her sister
+ Christian, his daughter Marjory, the Bishop of Glasgow
+ (Wishart), and the young Earl of Mar, the King's nephew, were
+ exchanged against the Earl of Hereford, High Constable of
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Scottish loss was very small: Sir William Vipont and Sir
+ Walter Ross were the only persons of consideration slain. Sir
+ Edward Bruce is said to have been so much attached to the
+ last of these knights as to have expressed his wish that the
+ battle had remained unfought, so Ross had not died."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The present volume contains 350 pages, in a very pleasing
+ type, and a vignette title; and the style in which it is
+ produced is uniformly worthy of the very responsible quarter
+ whence it emanates.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE YOUNG LADY'S BOOK.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ This is indeed a <i>golden gift</i> for any <i>demoiselle</i>
+ of our readers' acquaintance, for it blends the unusual
+ qualities of elegance and usefulness of the highest order. It
+ is described in the title as "A Manual of Elegant
+ Recreations, Exercises and Pursuits," and numbers in its
+ contents, Moral deportment&mdash;the
+ Florist&mdash;Mineralogy, Conchology, Entomology, the Aviary,
+ the Toilet, Embroidery, the Escrutoire, Painting, Music,
+ Dancing, Archery, Riding, and the Ornamental Artist. Each of
+ these subjects is treated of in separate chapters, in a neat
+ style, slightly scientific, and highly amusive; and the whole
+ are illustrated with upwards of <i>Six Hundred
+ Engravings</i>, which are appropriately chosen and admirably
+ executed. Botany, Conchology, Entomology, and the Aviary thus
+ admit of scores of little cuts worked in with the type; the
+ female accomplishments of Embroidery, ornamental card and
+ basket work, contain many beautiful devices; and the "elegant
+ recreations" of Dancing, Riding, &amp;c. are equally well
+ illustrated by the various forms, positions,
+ &amp;c.&mdash;Each subject has been treated of by a master or
+ mistress of the respective art, but the uniformity with which
+ the editor has marshalled them in his work, almost makes them
+ resemble the productions of one hand. We need not point out
+ the merit of this individual contribution; for the lady-pen
+ must be omnipotent indeed which could write equally well on
+ every branch of female accomplishment. By way of a seasonable
+ extract we take part of a brief historical sketch prefixed to
+ the Dancing instructions, and a few of the hints:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From the death of Elizabeth, until after the restoration of
+ Charles II., the turbulence of the times, and the peculiar
+ character of the age, prevented this art, which flourishes
+ only in 'the bowers of peace and joy,' from making much
+ progress; but in the days of the merry monarch it began to
+ revive, and advanced more, or less, in all the succeeding
+ reigns. The celebrated Beau Nash, who was, for a long time,
+ M.C. at Bath, may be considered the founder of modern
+ ball-room dancing; which, however, has been divested of much
+ of its cold formality, and improved in various other respects
+ since the time of that singular person. It is, nevertheless,
+ a matter of regret, that the graceful and stately Minuet has
+ been entirely abandoned in favour of the more
+ recently-invented dances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The French country dances, or Contre-Danses (from the
+ parties being placed opposite to each other,) since called
+ Quadrilles (from their having four sides) which approximate
+ nearly to the Cotillon, were first introduced to France about
+ the middle of Lewis the Fifteenth's reign. Previously to this
+ period, the dances most in vogue were La Perigourdine, La
+ Matelotte, La Pavane, Les Forlanes, Minuets, &amp;c.
+ Quadrilles, when first introduced, were danced by four
+ persons only: four more were soon added, and thus the
+ complete square was formed; but the figures were materially
+ different from those of the present period. The gentlemen
+ advanced with the opposite ladies, menaced each other with
+ the fore-finger, and retired clapping their hands three
+ times; they then turned hands of four, turned their
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page446" name="page446"></a>[pg
+ 446]</span> own partners, and grand rond of all concluded the
+ figure. The Vauxhall d'Hiver was, at that time, the most
+ fashionable place of resort: the pupils of the Royal Academy
+ were engaged to execute new dances; a full and effective band
+ performed the most fashionable airs, and new figures were at
+ length introduced and announced as a source of attraction;
+ but this place was soon pulled down, and re-built on the
+ ground now occupied by the Theatre du Vaudeville. The
+ establishment failed, and the proprietor became a bankrupt. A
+ short time after, it was re-opened by another speculator; but
+ on such a scale, as merely to attract the working classes of
+ the community. The band was now composed of a set of
+ miserable scrapers, who played in unison, and continually in
+ the key of G sharp; amid the sounds which emanated from their
+ instruments, the jangling of a tambourin, and the shrill
+ notes of a fife were occasionally heard. Thus did things
+ continue until the French Revolution; when, about the time
+ the Executive Directory was formed, the splendid apartments
+ of the Hotel de Richelieu were opened for the reception of
+ the higher classes, who had then but few opportunities of
+ meeting to 'trip it on the light fantastic toe.' Monsieur
+ Hullin, then of the Opera, was selected to form a band of
+ twenty-four musicians, from among those of the highest talent
+ in the various theatres: he found no difficulty in this, as
+ they were paid in paper-money, then of little or no value;
+ whereas, the administrators of the Richelieu establishment
+ paid in specie. The tunes were composed in different keys,
+ with full orchestral accompaniments, by Monsieur Hullin; and
+ the contrast thus produced to the abominable style which had
+ so long existed, commenced a new era in dancing: the old
+ figures were abolished, and stage-steps were
+ adopted;&mdash;Pas de Zephyrs, Pas de Bourr&eacute;s,
+ Ballot&eacute;s, Jet&eacute;s Battus, &amp;c. were among the
+ most popular. Minuets and Forlanes were still continued; but
+ Monsieur Vestris displaced the latter by the Gavotte, which
+ he taught to Monsieur Trenis and Madame de Choiseul, who
+ first danced it at a f&ecirc;te given by a lady of celebrity,
+ at the Hotel de Valentinois, Rue St. Lazar, on the 16th of
+ August, 1797; at this f&ecirc;te, Monsieur Hullin introduced
+ an entirely new set of figures of his own
+ composition.&mdash;These elicited general approbation: they
+ were danced at all parties, and still retain pre-eminence.
+ The names of Pantalon, L'Et&eacute;, La Poule, La Trenis,
+ &amp;c. which were given to the tunes, have been applied to
+ the figures. The figure of La Trenis, was introduced by
+ Monsieur Trenis's desire, it being part of the figure from a
+ Gavotte, danced in the then favourite ballet of Nina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To the French we are indebted for rather an ingenious, but
+ in the opinion of many professional dancers, an useless
+ invention, by which it was proposed, that as the steps in
+ dancing are not very numerous, although they may be
+ infinitely combined, that characters might be made use of to
+ express the various steps and figures of a dance, in the same
+ manner as words and sentences are expressed by letters; or
+ what is more closely analogous, as the musical characters are
+ employed to represent to the eye the sounds of an air. The
+ well-known Monsieur Beauchamp, and a French dancing-master,
+ each laid claim to be the original inventer of this art; and
+ the consequence was a law suit, in which, however, judgment
+ was pronounced in favour of the former. The art has been
+ introduced into this country, but without success. An English
+ dancing-master has also, we believe, with considerable labour
+ and ingenuity, devised a plan somewhat similar to that of the
+ French author: diagrams being proposed to represent the
+ figures, or steps, instead of characters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are a variety of dances to which the term National
+ may, with some propriety, be applied. Among the most
+ celebrated of these are,&mdash;the Italian Tarantula, the
+ German Waltz, and the Spanish Bolero. To dwell on their
+ peculiarities would, however, as it appears to us, be
+ useless: the first is rarely exhibited, even on the stage:
+ the second, although it still retains much of its original
+ character, has, in this country, been modified into the Waltz
+ Country Dance, and all the objections which it encountered,
+ on its first introduction, seem to have been gradually
+ overcome, since it assumed its present popular form; and the
+ graceful Bolero is restricted to the theatre only, being
+ never introduced to the English ball-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The manner of walking well is an object which all young
+ ladies should be anxious to acquire; but, unfortunately, it
+ is a point too much neglected. In the drawing-room, the
+ ball-room, or during the promenade, an elegant deportment, a
+ 'poetry of motion,'&mdash;is, and ever will be, appreciated.
+ The step ought not to exceed the length of the foot; the leg
+ should be put forward, without stiffness, in about the fourth
+ position; but <span class="pagenum"><a id="page447"
+ name="page447"></a>[pg 447]</span> without any effort to turn
+ the foot out, as it will tend to throw the body awry, and
+ give the person an appearance of being a professional dancer.
+ The head should be kept up and the chest open: the body will
+ then attain an advantageous position, and that steadiness so
+ much required in good walking. The arms should fall in their
+ natural position, and all their movements and oppositions to
+ the feet be easy and unconstrained. The employment of
+ soldiers to teach young ladies how to walk, which, we are
+ sorry to say, is a practice adopted by many parents and heads
+ of seminaries, is much to be deprecated. The stiffness
+ acquired under regimental tuition, is adverse to all the
+ principles of grace, and annihilates that buoyant lightness
+ which is so conducive to ease and elegance in the young."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the host of cuts incorporated with the text, each art
+ has a whole page embellishment exquisitely engraved on wood;
+ the designs of which are the very acme of taste. The head and
+ tail, and letter pieces of the chapters are in equally good
+ taste; and taken altogether, the "Young Lady's Book," either
+ as a production of usefulness or illustratration of art, is
+ the finest production of its day. It has been erroneously
+ noticed, from its publication at this season, as an "Annual,"
+ but it displays infinitely more pains-taking than either of
+ those elaborate productions&mdash;and is, we should judge,
+ neither the labour of one or two years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had almost overlooked the imitative Mechlin lace-facings,
+ which would deceive any Nottingham factor.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE ZOOLOGICAL KEEPSAKE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The design of this "Annual" is good, we may say, very good;
+ but we are alike bound to confess that the execution falls
+ short of the idea. It contains an account of the Gardens and
+ Museum of the Zoological Society, but this is too much
+ interlarded with digressions. All the introductory matter
+ might have been omitted with advantage to the author as well
+ as the public. The descriptions are divided by poetical
+ pieces, which serve as <i>reliefs</i>, one of which we
+ extract:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE LOST LAMB; OR, THE CHILD SAVED.
+ </h3>
+ <h4>
+ BY H.C. DEAKIN, ESQ.
+ </h4>
+ <center>
+ <i>Author of "Portraits of the Dead."</i>
+ </center>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Morn rose upon the purple hills,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ In all his pomp display'd;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Flash'd forth like stars a hundred rills,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ In valley, plain, and glade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foaming mist, day's chilly shrine,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Into the clouds upcurl'd,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forth broke in majesty divine
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The Grampians' giant world.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ It was a glorious sight to view
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Those mountain forms unfold,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Heavens above intensely blue,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The plains beneath like gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Day woke, a thousand songs arose,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Morn's orisons on high,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Earth's universal heart o'erflows
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ To Him beyond the sky.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ The shepherd roused him from his sleep,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And down the vale be hied,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like guardian good, to count his sheep,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ His <i>firstling</i> by his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His firstling! 'twas his only child&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ A boy of three years old,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father's weary hours beguiled
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Whilst watching o'er his fold.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ And many an hour the child and he
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Joy'd o'er the vale together;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a lovely thing to see
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ That child among the heather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vale is pass'd, the mountains rear
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Their rugged cliffs in air,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He must ascend to view more near
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ His distant fleecy care.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ "My child! the flowers are bright for thee,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The daisy's pearl'd with dew;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Go, share them with the honey-bee,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Till I return for you,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thy dog and mine with thee shall stay
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Whilst I the flock am counting,"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said, and took his tedious way,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The hilly green sward mounting.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ O'er crag and cliff the father toil'd,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Unconscious pass'd the hours:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He for a time forgot the child
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ He'd left among the flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boiling clouds come down and veil
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Valley, and wood, and plain;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then fears the father's heart assail,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ He will descend again.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Morn melted into noon, and night
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Dark on the shepherd shone,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Terror in vain impels his flight,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ His child!&mdash;his child is gone!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He calls upon his darling's name,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ His dog in vain he calls;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hears naught but the eagle's scream,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Or roar of waterfalls.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ He rushes home&mdash;he is not there&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ With agony and woe;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hunts him in the cold night air,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ O'er hill and vale below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morn rose&mdash;the faithful dog appears,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ He whines for food so mild,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father hied him through his tears,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And said, "Tray, where's my child?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ Thrice rose the morn&mdash;the father's heart
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ With grief was almost dead;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But every morn the dog appeared,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And whined and begged for bread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet through the night and through the day,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The dog was never seen&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is not wont to stay away,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Where can the dog have been?"
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ On the fourth morn this faithful friend,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ As usual whined for meat&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They mark the way his footsteps tend,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ And follow his retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They watch him to a cave beside
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The Grampians' craggy base&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behold! the shepherd's wandering child
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ Within the dog's embrace.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ He springs&mdash;he weeps away his cares,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ He cries aloud with joy&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He kneels, he sobs to heaven his prayers,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ For his redeemed boy.
+ </p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page448"
+ name="page448"></a>[pg 448]</span>
+ <p>
+ Then, turning, hugs his favourite hound,
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The trusty, true, and bold,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By whom was saved, through whom was found
+ </p>
+ <p class="i2">
+ The <i>firstling</i> of his fold!
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The Engravings, which are very numerous, are exclusively on
+ wood. A few of them are views in the Regent's Park Gardens;
+ but in point of execution, we think the best is a Portrait of
+ the Satyr, or "<i>Happy</i> Jerry," at Cross's Menagerie.
+ Though by no means one of nature's favourites, he appears to
+ possess the companionable qualities of sitting in a chair,
+ smoking a pipe, and drinking spirits and water, and appearing
+ to understand every look, word, and action of his keeper;
+ indeed, so thoroughly contented is the creature, that he has
+ obtained the name of "Happy Jerry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To speak <i>zoologically</i>, next year we hope the artist
+ and editor will put their best feet foremost, and improve
+ upon the present volume. The design is one of the best for a
+ Juvenile Annual&mdash;for who does not recollect the very
+ amusing game of "Birds, Beasts, and Fishes, and sometimes
+ Insects and Reptiles." What a menagerie of guessing novelties
+ would have been a <i>Zoological Keepsake</i> in our school
+ days.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <h2>
+ THE GATHERER.
+ </h2>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>
+ A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHAKSPEARE.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ SPILLING THE SALT.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ It is a curious fact, though not generally known, that the
+ popular superstition of overturning the salt at table being
+ unlucky, originated in a picture of the Last Supper, by
+ Leonardo da Vinci, in which Judas Iscariot is represented as
+ overturning the salt.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ KANGAROOS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ "I have been much entertained during my wanderings through
+ the country adjoining this town, in observing the singular
+ habits and extreme sagacity of the kangaroos. I have noticed
+ several who carried in their fore paws a sort of umbrella, or
+ fan, which they held so as to protect their head and
+ shoulders from the violence of the sun. One day I slipped a
+ brace of large greyhounds at a female who carried one of
+ these useful appendages, which she soon dropped and escaped:
+ it was formed of a large bough, over which some large leaves
+ were spread, and fastened on simply by the shoots of the
+ bough sticking into the leaf."&mdash;<i>From a letter dated
+ Hobart's Town, February</i>, 1829.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ THE EARL OF MANSFIELD.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ "When he was at Westminster School, Lady Kinnoul, in one of
+ the vacations, invited him to her home, where, observing him
+ with a pen in his hand, and seemingly thoughtful, she asked
+ him if he was writing his theme, and what in plain English
+ the theme was? The school-boy's smart answer rather surprised
+ her Ladyship&mdash;'What is that to you?' She
+ replied&mdash;'How can you be so rude? I asked you very
+ civilly a plain question, and did not expect from a
+ school-boy such a pert answer.' The reply was, 'Indeed, my
+ Lady, I can only answer once more, 'What is that to you?' In
+ reality the theme was&mdash;<i>Quid ad te
+ pertinet!"&mdash;From Holliday's Life of the Earl of
+ Mansfield</i>.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ "IN SPITE OF HIS TEETH."
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ King John once demanded of a certain Jew ten thousand marks,
+ on refusal of which, he ordered one of the Israelite's teeth
+ to be drawn every day till he should consent. The Jew lost
+ seven, and then paid the required sum. Hence the
+ phrase&mdash;"In spite of his teeth."
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ SWAN RIVER.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ A gentleman who had just arrived in town met an Hibernian
+ friend, and with anxious solicitude asked him "where the best
+ bed was to be got?" "By my soul," said the Emeralder, with a
+ Kilmainham look, "I'm tould at the <i>Swan River</i>, where
+ there's nothing but <i>down</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ W.C.R.R.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <h3>
+ SIAMESE YOUTHS.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ QUERY.&mdash;Would not the <i>law</i> be the most profitable
+ profession for the Siamese Youths? They might plead
+ <i>pro</i> and <i>con</i>, and take <i>fees</i> from
+ <i>plaintiff</i> and <i>defendant</i>. If raised to the
+ Bench, they might receive the salary of <i>one</i> Judge, but
+ act as <i>two</i>, thereby saving the nation some money in
+ these <i>hard</i> times of <i>cash</i> payments, and please
+ all parties, <i>one</i> summing up for plaintiff and the
+ <i>other</i> for defendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ P.T.W.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ N.B. They appear very good natured, although they
+ <i>huffed</i> me <i>twice</i> at draughts.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ WITH the present Number is published a SUPPLEMENT, containing
+ a Steel-plate PORTRAIT of THOMAS CAMPBELL, ESQ. and a copious
+ MEMOIR; with Title, Preface, and Index to Vol. xiv.
+ </p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a> <b>Footnote 1</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+ <p>
+ For a general description of this magnificent edifice, see
+ MIRROR, No. 247.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement,
+and Instruction, by Various
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction, 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
+ Volume 14, No. 406, Saturday, December 26, 1829.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: March 5, 2004 [EBook #11460]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIRROR OF LITERATURE, NO. 406 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Andy Jewell, David Garcia and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. XIV, NO. 406.] SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1829. [PRICE 2d.
+
+
+
+
+VIRGIL'S TOMB.
+
+
+[Illustration: Virgil's Tomb.]
+
+
+This consecrated relic of genius stands on the hill of Posilipo, in the
+environs of Naples. Its recent state is so beautifully described by
+Eustace, that we shall not, like gipsys do stolen children, disfigure it
+to prevent recognition.
+
+Proceeding westward along the Chiaia and keeping towards the beach, says
+Eustace, we came to the quarter called Mergyllina. To ascend the hill of
+Posilipo we turned to the right, and followed a street winding as a
+staircase up the steep, and terminating at a garden gate. Having
+entered, we pursued a path through a vineyard and descending a little,
+came to a small square building, flat-roofed, placed on a sort of
+platform on the brow of a precipice on one side, and on the other
+sheltered by a super-incumbent rock. An aged ilex, spreading from the
+sides of the rock, and bending over the edifice, covers the roof with
+its ever verdant foliage. Numberless shrubs spring around, and
+interwoven with ivy clothe the walls and hang in festoons over the
+precipice. The edifice before us was an ancient tomb--the tomb of
+VIRGIL! We entered; a vaulted cell and two modern windows alone
+presented themselves to view: the poet's name is the only ornament of
+the place. No sarcophagus, no urn, and even no inscription to feed the
+devotion of the classical pilgrim. The epitaph which though not genuine
+is yet ancient, was inscribed by the order of the Duke of Pescolangiano,
+then proprietor of the place, on a marble slab placed in the side of the
+rock opposite the entrance of the tomb, where it still remains. Every
+body is acquainted with it--
+
+
+ Mantua me genuit, Calabri rapuere, tenet nunc Parthenope, cecini
+ pascua, rura, duces.
+
+
+But there are authors who venture to assert, that the tomb of which we
+are now speaking, is not the sepulchre of Virgil. Of this number are the
+classic Addison and the laborious and accurate Cluverius. The authority
+of two such eminent persons, without doubt, carries great weight with
+it, but that weight is upon this occasion considerably lessened by the
+weakness of the arguments on which their opinion is grounded. These
+arguments may be found in Cluverius, and Addison merely expresses his
+opinion without entering into any discussion. They are drawn from a few
+verses of Statius.
+
+In opposition to these arguments, or rather conjectures founded upon the
+vague expressions of a single poet (a poet often censured for his
+obscurity), we have the constant and uninterrupted tradition of the
+country supported by the authority of a numerous host of learned and
+ingenious antiquaries; and upon such grounds we may still continue to
+cherish the conviction, that we have visited the tomb of Virgil, and
+hailed his sacred shade on the spot where his ashes long reposed.
+
+The laurel which was once said to have sprung up at its base, and
+covered it with its luxuriant branches, now flourishes only in the
+verses of youthful bards, or in the descriptions of early travellers;
+myrtle, ivy and ilex, all plants equally agreeable to the genius of the
+place, and the subjects of the poet, now perform the office of the
+long-withered bays, and encircle the tomb with verdure and perfume.
+
+The sepulchre of Virgil, it may be imagined, must have long remained an
+object of interest and veneration, especially as his works had excited
+universal admiration even in his life-time, and were very soon after his
+death put into the hands of children, and made a part of the rudiments
+of early education. Yet Martial declares that it had been neglected in
+his time, and that Silius Italicus alone restored its long forgotten
+honours.
+
+The reader will learn with regret that Virgil's tomb, consecrated as it
+ought to be to genius and meditation, is sometimes converted into the
+retreat of assassins, or the lurking place of Sbirri. Such at least it
+was the last time we visited it, when wandering that way about sun-set
+we found it filled with armed men. We were surprised on both sides, and
+on ours not very agreeably at the unexpected rencounter; so lonely the
+place and so threatening the aspects of these strangers. Their manners
+however were courteous; and on inquiry we were informed that they were
+Sbirri, and then lying in wait for a murderer, who was supposed to
+make that spot his nightly asylum. It would be unjust to accuse the
+Neapolitans of culpable indifference towards this or any other monument
+of antiquity; but it is incumbent on the proprietor or the public, to
+secure them against such profanation. On the whole, few places are in
+themselves more picturesque, and from the recollection inseparably
+interwoven with it, no spot is more interesting than the tomb of Virgil.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LAST CHRISTMAS DAY.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+ "Say, if such blandishments did ever greet
+ Thy charmed soul; hast thou not crav'd to die?
+ Hast not thine immaterial seem'd but air
+ Verging to sigh itself from thee, and share
+ Beatitude? hast thou not watch'd thy breath
+ In meek, faint hope, that soon 'twould sink in death?"
+
+_MS. Poem._
+
+
+Last Christmas Day! my heart leaps with joy at its very memory; it was a
+mental _Noel_, a Christmas of the soul, (if I may thus express myself.)
+That which I am about to relate of it is strictly true, and I do relate
+it because that day is one of the very few in our brief existence which
+form a moral epoch in, and influence subsequent, life. Last Christmas
+Day, I well remember, my spirit revelled in an Eden blessedness--a bliss
+which the unholy world did not, could not, give, and consequently could
+not take away. Reader! I will hope, I will believe, that thou hast
+experienced feelings and emotions, like those high and holy ones of
+which I would endeavour now to preserve a faint transcript. Come then,
+let us unite our ideas, let us speak together, but let us yet mention as
+present, those beatific thoughts and imaginings which are indeed past.
+Let us ever remember and cherish in our heart of hearts those golden
+fore-tastes of future eternity, or (according to Platonism) those
+rapturous reminiscences of past, which prove beyond logical
+demonstration, the existence of some vital principle in man, godlike in
+faculties, in essence immaterial, in duration, immortal! It is Christmas
+Day, a deep, unearthly calm possesses our minds; all passions are
+slumbering, save the beautiful and holy ones of adoring love, mingled
+with overwhelming gratitude towards our maker, and philanthropic love,
+universal benevolence, to man. It is winter, but one of those delicious
+days in which closing our eyes, so that we behold not sad hosts of bare
+stems and branches, we may well deem that summer reigns! And a summer
+indeed reigns in our bosoms! Now nature seems new and fascinating, as it
+did to Adam when he wakened into life. Now, as for the first time, we
+discern with unspeakable emotions, that divine affection as well as
+unlimited power, which actuates and supports creation. Now we comprehend
+that the universe was designed to minister happiness to myriads of
+intelligent beings; but that man, by sin, frustrates the gracious
+intent, and produces misery. Now the glorious golden sun seems in its
+gladdening lustre, like a smile from its creator; a smile beaming
+ineffable love, and joy, and peace. Now the sky, the pale, delicate,
+sapphire sky, the soft, tender, inviting, enfolding, and immeasurable
+sky, appears to image the mercy of its maker. Let us yet gaze upon the
+sky, for it also admonishes us of other delightful things; it is
+silent--it is awful--it is holy; but its silence is beautiful, and with
+wordless eloquence it speaks unto our enraptured bosoms of deep,
+eternal, unimaginable repose! it infuses into our breasts undefinable
+ideas and sensations; it appears to our enchanted imaginations an emblem
+meet of the grand dream of eternity, and our spirits seem on the verge
+of quitting earth, in thrilling contemplations on the islands of that
+infinite abyss, and their immortal inhabitants! We gaze in hope,
+adoration, and rapture on the blue expanse, varied by delicate vapours,
+sailing calmly, wondrously through it; and then occur to our memories
+spontaneously, the exquisite lines translated from a _morceau_, by
+Gluck, (a German poet;) and our hearts respond as each of us sighs:
+
+
+ "There's peace and welcome in yon sea
+ Of endless blue tranquillity.
+ Those clouds are living things!
+ I trace their veins of liquid gold,
+ I see them solemnly unfold
+ Their soft and fleecy wings!
+
+ These be the angels that convey
+ Us weary children of a day
+ Life's tedious nothing o'er,
+ Where neither passions come, nor woes
+ To vex the genius of repose
+ On death's majestic shore!"
+
+
+Then do our delighted eyes wander downward; then doth earth appear a
+glorious, though but a temporary palace, the gift of a gracious God to
+man! then do we feel an unaccountable assurance that angels visit the
+beautiful domain; then that (though viewlessly) they rejoice with, they
+sorrow for, (if angels can sorrow) and they minister unto "the heirs of
+salvation," as they did in the days of old, and as they will do, to the
+end of time. Were we not assured of this blessed fact in the book of
+books, reason would assert, that for a thankless, graceless generation
+alone, earth should not have been formed so divinely fair; but it is
+heavenly, that the immortal servitors of man may even here find records
+of the divinity, and themes for undying thanksgiving. Are we indeed
+visited, watched, and ministered unto, by beatific essences? Oh, reason
+and revelation, both loudly proclaim the fact; those beneficent beings
+may be with us then, when we deem ourselves alone; they may be our
+society in the solitude of our chambers; they may pass us in the breeze,
+and they may wander beside us in our loneliest walks. Such meditations
+are calculated to inspire our bosoms with new life; to brighten all
+nature around us, and to unite us to the invisible world by ties, of the
+existence of which we were never previously sensible; ties, at once so
+sweet and so sacred, that we almost crave the blessing of death, in
+order more surely to strengthen them! Then doth the beauty of "the vale
+of tears" confound us; then doth it infuse into our bosoms such
+unalterable fore-tastes; such mysterious and undefinable sensations of
+the blessedness of "the isles of joy," that our very souls seem to have
+become but one prayer, one fervent, wordless, agonizing prayer, for
+divine repose, and unimaginable blessedness; and then doth the mere
+suggestion of final reprobation amount to insufferable torture! Oh, that
+such heavenly imaginings, such divine intimations of a transcendent
+futurity, were more frequently vouchsafed to us, and were less
+evanescent. They are glimpses of everlasting day, shining on wanderers
+in "the valley of the shadow of death;" they are droppings from the
+overflowing and ineffable cup of mercy; they are presciences of
+eternity, inestimable, unutterable! and the pen that would describe
+indescribable perceptions, droops in shame and sorrow at its own
+imbecility. Such perceptions have visited, do visit us, on this most
+rapturous of Christmas Days? Is it not a golden day? does it not remove
+us for a little space from earth, into the society of the holiest
+sentient beings, and to the beauty of a celestial, surpassing, world?
+Does it not bestow on our souls their long-lost ethereal wings? and do
+not the delighted strangers soar for a little while above the grossest
+realms of matter? Alas! even but for a little while; now do they drop,
+for now flag and droop those angelic pinions which are too humid and
+heavy with that atmosphere, from whence they could not wholly disengage
+themselves; the golden harps of heaven murmur in their entranced ears no
+longer; the smiles of the Sons of Peace fade from their enchanted sight;
+and the clouds of this nether world retain from their enamoured gaze,
+the treasures of infinity!
+
+Perhaps we have enjoyed a very enthusiastic, a very poetical, Christmas
+Day! we pretend not to deny it, though steadfastly believing it was
+neither an anti-Christian, nor an utterly unprofitable one; nay, we even
+venture to hope, that the beatitude of spirit just feebly portrayed was
+not unpleasing in His sight, unto whom, for His gift of immortal life,
+we upon Christmas Day render our peculiar thanksgivings!
+
+M.L.B.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE FALL OF ZARAGOZA.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+ Awake, awake, the trumpet hath sung its lay to the sunny sky,
+ And the glorious shout from Spanish lips gives forth its wild reply.
+ Awake, awake, how the chargers foam, as to battle they dash on,
+ Oh, Zaragoza, on this proud day, must thy walls be lost or won!
+
+ His hand--the hand of the youthful chief was on his flashing sword,
+ And his plume gleam'd white thro' the smoke and flame o'er the lofty
+ city pour'd--
+ And the banners around him darkly swept like the waves of a stormy sea,
+ But Zaragoza, amid this strife, his heart was firm to thee.
+
+ "Away, away, tread her walls to dust!"--the Gallic warriors cried
+ "Defend, my bands, your hearth and home," the youthful chief replied.
+ They caught the sound of this spirit-voice as they stay'd their foes'
+ career,
+ And many a thrilling cry was heard, when the bayonet met the spear
+
+ In vain, ye heroes, do you breathe your latest vows to heaven,
+ In vain is your devoted blood in the cause of Freedom given,
+ For when the morn awakes again, your city shall not be
+ The haunt of maids who warbled deep, their sweetest songs for ye!
+
+ But the story of your hallow'd death shall not remain unsung,
+ Oh, its record shall be glorified by many a minstrel tongue
+ For Freedom's holy light hath touch'd each ruin'd shrine and wall,
+ That sadly speak unto the heart of Zaragoza's fall.
+
+_Deal_.
+
+REGINALD AUGUSTINE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE BANQUETTING HOUSE, WHITEHALL.[1]
+
+
+ [1] For a general description of this magnificent edifice, see
+ MIRROR, No. 247.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Many persons who have visited this chapel may not have noticed or been
+aware of the splendid painted ceiling by Sir Peter Paul Rubens, which
+was executed by him when ambassador at the court of James I. This
+beautiful performance represents the apotheosis of that peaceful
+monarch, he being seated on his throne, and turning towards the deities
+of peace and commerce, having rejected the gods of war and discord. It
+is painted on canvass, and is in excellent preservation; the original
+painter had L3,000. for his labour; it has been retouched more than
+once, and the last time was by Cipriani, who had L2,000. for his
+repairs.
+
+Ralph, in his _Critical Review of Public Buildings_, observes, "that
+this picture is not so generally known as one could wish, but needs only
+to be known to be esteemed according to its merits;" and he further
+adds, "it is but an ill decoration for a place of religious worship, for
+in the first place, its contents are nowise akin to devotion, and in the
+next, the workmanship is so very extraordinary that a man must have
+abundance of zeal or no taste, that can attend to anything besides."
+
+It is almost needless to remark, that it was from a passage broken for
+the occasion through the wall of this building, that the unfortunate
+Charles was conducted by the regicides to his death; this passage still
+remains, and now serves as a doorway to an additional building in
+Scotland Yard: and nearly facing this doorway stood the ingenious Dial,
+engraved and described in No. 400, of the MIRROR. The next important and
+public event connected with this building occurred in 1811, when a very
+different and far more gratifying spectacle took place, being that of
+the ceremony of placing in the chapel, the eagles and other colours
+taken by our gallant troops during the war. There were six standards and
+the like number of regimental colours, which after having been presented
+at the altar were affixed to the places they now occupy. There is a
+singular circumstance attached to the history of one of the eagles which
+may be well introduced in this place; it may be distinguished from the
+others by its having a wreath placed round its neck, the flag itself
+being destroyed. It was the usual custom for the eagles to be attached
+to the staves on which they are borne by a screw, so that in the event
+of any imminent danger, they might be taken off and secured; but
+Napoleon on his presenting this standard to his 8th regiment, observed,
+it was impossible that it should be taken from so brave a body of men
+as they had always proved themselves to be, and desired it might be
+rivetted to the staff, which was accordingly done; and probably had it
+not been for this order the eagle might have escaped our valiant 87th,
+by whom it was taken on the heights of Barossa.
+
+On Maundy Thursday another gratifying ceremony takes place, _viz_, the
+distribution of the Maundy Money to as many poor people as the years
+of his majesty's age. This money consists of the smaller silver coins,
+being each in value from 1_d_. to 4_d_.; these are enclosed in a small,
+white kid bag, which is again enveloped in another of crimson leather.
+
+A.P.D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RETROSPECTIVE GLEANINGS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TOUCHING FOR THE KING'S EVIL.
+
+(_To the Editor of the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Having read an interesting paper from your ingenious correspondent
+_P.T.W._ in your number of the 14th of November, respecting "Touching
+for the Cure of the King's Evil," it occurred to me that some farther
+information relative to the original of that "hereditary miracle," as
+Mr. Collier is pleased to term it, might not be uninteresting to some
+of your readers: I therefore send you the following:--
+
+Stowe, in his _Annals_, accounts for the origin of touching for the
+evil, in the following manner:--"A young woman who was afflicted with
+this disorder in a very alarming manner, and to a most disgusting
+degree, feeling uneasiness and pain consequent upon it in her sleep,
+dreamt that she should be cured by the simple operation of having the
+part washed with the king's hand. Application was consequently made
+to Edward, by her friends, who very humanely consented to perform
+the unpleasant request. A basin of water was brought, with which he
+carefully softened the humours, till they broke, and the contents
+discharged; the sign of the cross wound up the charm; and the female
+retired, with the assurance of his protection during the remainder
+of the cure, which was effected within a week." This is somewhat
+differently related in _Ailred's History of the Life and Miracles of
+Edward the Confessor_, an extract from which may be found in a note
+to the first volume of Rapin's _History of England_.
+
+The following curious advertisement was issued by the order of King
+Charles II. for healing the people, on the 18th of May, 1664.
+
+"Notice.
+
+"His sacred majesty having declared it to be his royal will and purpose
+to continue the healing of his people for the evil during the month of
+May, and then give over till Michaelmas next; I am commanded to give
+notice thereof, that the people may not come up to the town in the
+interim, and lose their labour."
+
+Thomas Mousewell was tried for high treason in 1684, for having spoken
+with contempt of King Charles's pretensions to cure the scrofula.
+
+In a manuscript account of the Restoration, written by Thomas Gumble,
+D.D. Chaplain to General Monck, in the year 1662, is the following
+description of the ceremony:--" There was a great chair placed for the
+king, in a place somewhat distant from the people. As soon as the king
+was sate, one of the clerks of the closet stood at the right side of his
+chair, holding on his arm as many gold angels (every one tied in a
+ribbon of white silk) as there were sick to be touched, which were in
+number, forty-eight. Dr. Brown, the chaplain of the Princess of Aurange,
+performed the place of the king's chaplain. The chaplain then read the
+sixteenth chapter of St. Mark, from the fourteenth verse to the end; and
+then the chirurgeon presented the sick, (having examined them to see
+that it was the evil) after three reverences on their knees, before the
+king, who, whilst the chaplain said these words in that gospel: 'They
+shall lay their hands upon the sick, and they shall be healed,' layed
+his hands on the two cheeks of the sick, saying, 'I touch thee, but
+_God_ healeth thee!' The chaplain then began another gospel; and whilst
+these words were pronounced out of the first chapter of St. John: 'This
+was the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world,'
+his majesty took the pieces of gold, and put them on the necks of the
+diseased, the chaplain repeating the words as many times as there were
+persons to receive them, concluding with a prayer, 'That Almighty God
+would bless the ceremony;' then, after the reverences as before, they
+retired. The Earls of Middlesex and St. Albans held the bason, ewer, and
+towel, whilst the king washed."
+
+Shakspeare, in his _Macbeth_, thus describes this royal, but now
+exploded gift:--
+
+
+ "Strangely visited people,
+ All swollen and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye,
+ The mere despair of surgery, he cures--
+ Hanging a golden stamp about their necks,
+ Put on with holy prayers."
+
+
+In Nicholls's _Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century_, vol. ii.
+p. 495, 505, many curious particulars relating to this ceremony are to
+be found.
+
+As the custom has now for some time been discontinued, and the credulity
+of those who believed in its efficacy, laughed at, I hope it will not be
+long ere that disgusting custom of allowing persons (of whom women in
+general form by far the greater number) afflicted with the king's evil,
+and different other disorders, to come on the scaffold immediately after
+the execution of a criminal, for the purpose of touching the part
+affected, with the hand of the _but just dead_ malefactor, will be put a
+stop to; it being the very height of absurdity to imagine that it can be
+productive of any good effect; but on the contrary, tending to divest
+the minds of the surrounding multitude of that awe with which the
+ignominious spectacle should impress them.
+
+[Greek: S.G.]
+
+In the trifling paper I sent you respecting "Cats," which you deemed
+worthy of insertion in No. 398, you have it "by some merchants from the
+Island of Cyprus, who came hither for _fur_," it should be _tin_--Fur
+being an article of importation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BOOKSELLERS' MARKS OR SIGNS.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+Many books, especially those printed in the 17th century, have no other
+designation either of printer, bookseller, or even city, but merely
+marks or signs. The _anchor_ is the mark of Raphelengius, at Leyden; and
+the same with a _dolphin_ twisted round it, of the Mantuii, at Venice
+and Rome; the _Arion_ denotes a book printed by Oporrinus, at Basil; the
+_caduceus_, or _pegasus_, by the Wechelliuses, at Paris and Frankfort;
+the _cranes_, by Cramoisy; the _compass_, by Plantin, at Antwerp; the
+_fountain_, by Vascosan, at Paris; the _sphere_ in a balance, by Janson,
+or Blaew, at Amsterdam; the _lily_, by the Juntas, at Venice, Florence,
+Lyons, and Rome; the _mulberry-tree_, by Morel, at Paris; the
+_olive-tree_, by the Stephenses, at Paris and Geneva, and the Elzevirs,
+at Amsterdam and Leyden; the _bird between two serpents_, by the
+Frobeniuses, at Basil; the _truth_, by the Commelins, at Heidelberg and
+Paris; the _Saturn_, by Collinaeus; the _printing press_, by Badius
+Ascensius, &c.
+
+P.T.W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NATURALIST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DIFFERENT COLOURS OF THE EGGS OF BIRDS.
+
+
+It is a remarkable fact in the economy of nature, that of those birds
+whose nests are the most liable to discovery, and whose eggs are most
+exposed to observation from the form of the nests, the eggs are of that
+colour which is the least different from the surrounding objects; whilst
+those birds whose eggs are of a bright and positive colour, hide their
+nests in the hollows of trees, or never quit them, excepting in the
+night, or sit immediately that they have laid one or two eggs. It is
+also to be observed that of those species which build an exposed nest,
+and the females of which alone perform the duty of incubation, the
+colour of the female is much less bright than that of the male, and more
+in harmony with the objects by which she is surrounded during the period
+in which she sits upon her eggs. It would seem, therefore, that those
+birds which lay a brightly-coloured egg have the instinct to make a
+close nest, or to place it in the least exposed situations; while those
+which lay a sober-coloured egg are less solicitous to conceal it from
+the notice of their enemies. M. Gloger, a German naturalist, has paid
+great attention to this curious circumstance, and has very recently
+published an elaborate memoir, in a work printed at Berlin, in which he
+notices the habits of all the species of birds indigenous to Germany, in
+confirmation of the theory. Our limits will not allow us to notice the
+particular species which he enumerates; but it may be sufficient to
+excite attention to this subject, to mention, that the birds which lay
+an egg perfectly white (the most attractive of colours) make their nests
+in holes of the earth, and cavities of trees, such as the kingfisher and
+the woodpecker, or construct them with a very narrow opening, as the
+domestic swallow; that the same coloured egg is found amongst the birds
+which scarcely quit their nests in the day, as hawks and owls; and that
+such birds as doves, which only lay one or two eggs, and sit immediately
+after, have their eggs white. The bright blue or bright green egg
+belongs to birds which make their nests in holes, as the starling, or
+construct them of green moss, or place them in the midst of grass, but
+always well covered. The eggs of many gallinaceous birds, that make
+their nests carelessly in the grass, are of a pale and less decided
+green, such as those of the partridge and pheasant. Of the
+mixed-coloured eggs, those of which white forms the ground belong to
+birds that make very close nests. Speckled eggs, with a dark or dirty
+ground, belong to the largest number of species. Almost all the song
+birds lay such eggs; and building open nests, they almost invariably
+line the inside of them with materials of a harmonious colour with the
+eggs, so that no evident contrast is presented which would lead to their
+destruction.--_Companion to the Almanac._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EFFECTS OF SEA AIR.
+
+
+Those who frequent the sea-coast are not long in discovering that their
+best dyed black hats become of a rusty brown; and similar effects are
+produced on some other colours. The brown is, in fact, _rust_. Most, if
+not all, the usual black colours have iron for a basis, the black oxide
+of which is developed by galls, logwood, or other substances containing
+gallic acid. Now the sea-air contains a proportion of the muriates over
+which it is wafted; and these coming in contact with any thing dyed
+black, part with their hydrochloric (_muriatic_) acid, and form brown
+hydrochlorate of iron, or contribute to form the brown or red oxide,
+called rust. The gallic acid, indeed, from its superior affinity, has
+the strongest hold of the iron; but the incessant action of the sea-air,
+loaded with muriates, partially overcomes this, in the same way as any
+acid, even of inferior affinity to the gallic, when put upon black
+stuff, will turn it brown.--_Ibid._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE DUGONG, THE MERMAID OF EARLY WRITERS.
+
+
+Of all the cetacea, that which approaches the nearest in form to man is
+undoubtedly the dugong, which, when its head and breast are raised above
+the water, and its pectoral fins, resembling hands, are visible, might
+easily be taken by superstitious seamen for a semi-human
+being.--_Edinburgh Journal._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SPIDERS.
+
+
+Live and grow without food. Out of fifty spiders produced on the last
+day of August, and which were kept entirely without food, three lived to
+the 8th of February following, and even visibly increased in bulk. Was
+it from the effluvia arising from the dead bodies of their companions
+that they lived so long? Other spiders were kept in glass vessels
+without food, from the 15th of July till the end of January. During that
+time they cast their skins more than once, as if they had been well
+fed.--_Redi, Generat. Insect._
+
+Spiders are excellent barometers: if the ends of their webs are found
+branching out to any length, it is a sure sign of favourable weather:
+if, on the contrary, they are found short, and the spider does not
+attend to repairing it properly, bad weather may be expected.--_Times._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SWARMING OF BEES.
+
+
+The ingenious President of the Horticultural Society, Mr. T.A. Knight,
+has been led from repeated observation to infer, that, in the swarming
+of bees, not a single labourer emigrates without previously inspecting
+its proposed future habitation, as well as the temporary stations of
+rest where their numbers collect soon after swarming.--_Philosophical
+Magazine._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE CHAMELEON'S ANTIPATHY TO BLACK.
+
+
+Whatever may be the cause, the fact seems to be certain, that the
+chameleon has an antipathy to things of a black colour. One, which
+Forbes kept, uniformly avoided a black board which was hung up in the
+chamber; and, what is most remarkable, when it was forcibly brought
+before the black board, it trembled violently, and assumed a black
+colour.--_Oriental Mem_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+RULES FOR THE WEATHER.
+
+
+A wet summer is always followed by a frosty winter; but it happens
+occasionally that the cold extends no farther. Two remarkable instances
+of this occurred in 1807-8 and 1813-14. With these exceptions, every
+frosty winter has been followed by a cold summer.
+
+The true cause of cold, or rather the direct cause, is to be found in
+the winter excess of west wind, every winter with excess of west wind
+being followed by a cold summer; and if there is no cold before, or
+during a first excess, then a second excess of west wind in winter
+occasions a still colder summer than the first. It also appears, by
+repeated experience, that cold does not extend to more than two years at
+a time.
+
+Again, if the winter excess of east wind be great, in the first
+instance, the winters will be mild, and followed by mild summers; while
+the summer excess of east wind is itself, in the first instance, always
+mild; but uniformly followed by cold winters and cold summers, which
+continue, more or less, for one or two years, according to
+circumstances.--_Mackenzie, Syst. of the Weather_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PERIODICAL LITERATURE.
+
+
+Periodical Literature--how sweet is the name! 'Tis a type of many of the
+most beautiful things and events in nature; or say, rather, that _they_
+are types of _it_--both the flowers and the stars. As to flowers, they
+are the prettiest periodicals ever published in folio--the leaves are
+wire-wove and hot-pressed by Nature's self; their circulation is wide
+over all the land; from castle to cottage they are regularly taken in;
+as old age bends over them, his youth is renewed; and you see childhood
+poring upon them, prest close to its very bosom. Some of them are
+ephemeral, and their contents are exhaled between the rising and the
+setting sun. Once a-week others break through their green, pink, or
+crimson cover; and how delightful, on the seventh day, smiles in the
+sunshine the Sabbath flower--the only Sunday publication perused without
+blame by the most religious--even before morning prayer. Each month,
+indeed, throughout the whole year, has its own flower-periodical. Some
+are annual, some biennial, some triennial, and there are perennials that
+seem to live for ever--and yet are still periodical--though our love
+will not allow us to know when they die, and phoenix-like re-appear from
+their own ashes. So much for flowers--typifying or typified;--leaves
+emblematical of pages--buds of binding dew-veils of covers--and the
+wafting away of bloom and fragrance like the dissemination of fine
+feelings, bright fancies, and winged thoughts!
+
+The flowers are the periodicals of the earth--the stars are those of
+heaven. With what unfailing regularity do the Numbers issue forth!
+Hesperus and Lucifer! ye are one concern! The pole-star is studied by
+all nations. How beautiful the poetry of the moon! On what subject does
+not the sun throw light! No fear of hurting your eyes by reading that
+fine, clear, large type on that softened page. Lo! as you turn over, one
+blue, another yellow, and another green, all, all alike delightful to
+the pupil, and dear to him as the very apple of his eye! Yes, the great
+Periodical Press of heaven is unceasingly at work--night and day; and
+though even it has been taxed, and its emanations confined, still their
+circulation is incalculable; nor have we yet heard that Ministers intend
+instituting any prosecution against it. It is yet Free, the only free
+Power all over the world. 'Tis indeed like the air we breathe--if we
+have it not, we die!
+
+Look, then, at all our paper Periodicals with pleasure, for sake of the
+flowers and the stars. Suppose them all extinct, and life would be like
+a flowerless earth, a starless heaven. We should soon forget the seasons
+themselves--the days of the week--and the weeks of the month--and the
+months of the year--and the years of the century--and the centuries of
+all Time--and all Time itself flowing away on into eternity. The
+Periodicals of external nature would soon all lose their meaning, were
+there no longer any Periodicals of the soul. These are the lights and
+shadows of life, merrily dancing or gravely stealing over the dial;
+remembrancers of the past--teachers of the present--prophets of the
+future hours. Were they all dead, spring would in vain renew her
+promise--wearisome would be the long, long, interminable
+summer-days--the fruits of autumn would taste fushionless--and the
+winter's ingle blink mournfully round the hearth. What are the blessed
+Seasons themselves, in nature and in Thomson, but Periodicals of a
+larger growth? They are the parents, or publishers, or editors, of all
+the others--principal contributors--nay, subscribers too--and may their
+pretty family live for ever, still dying, yet ever renewed, and on the
+increase every year. We should suspect him of a bad, black heart, who
+loved not the Periodical Literature of earth and sky--who would weep not
+to see one of its flowers wither--one of its stars fall--one beauty to
+die on its humble bed--one glory to drop from its lofty sphere. Let them
+bloom and burn on--flowers in which there is no poison, stars in which
+there is no disease--whose blossoms are all sweet, and whose rays are
+all sanative--both alike steeped in dew, and both, to the fine ear of
+nature's worshipper, bathed in music.
+
+Only look at Maga! One hundred and forty-eight months old! and yet
+lovely as maiden between frock and gown--even as sweet sixteen! Not a
+wrinkle on cheek or forehead! No crow-foot has touched her eyes--
+
+
+ "Her eye's blue languish, and her golden hair!"
+
+
+Like an antelope in the wilderness--or swan on the river--or eagle in
+the sky. Dream that she is dead, and oh! what a world! Yet die she must
+some day--so must the moon and stars. Meanwhile there is a blessing in
+prayers--and hark! how the nations cry, "Oh! Maga, live for ever!"
+
+We often pity our poor ancestors. How they contrived to make the ends
+meet, surpasses our conjectural powers. What a weary waste must have
+seemed expanding before their eyes, between morning and night! Don't
+tell us that the human female never longs for other pastime than
+
+
+ "To suckle fools and chronicle small beer."
+
+
+True, ladies sighed not then for periodicals--but there, in the depths
+of their ignorance, lay their utter wretchedness. What! keep pickling
+and preserving during the whole mortal life of an immortal being! Except
+when at jelly, everlastingly at jam! The soul sickens at the monotonous
+sweetness of such a wersh existence. True that many sat all life-long at
+needlework; but is not that a very sew-sew sort of life? Then oh! the
+miserable males! We speak of times after the invention, it is true, of
+printing--but who read what were called books then? Books! no more like
+our periodicals, than dry, rotten, worm-eaten, fungous logs are like
+green living leafy trees, laden with dews, bees, and birds, in the
+musical sunshine. What could males do then but yawn, sleep, snore,
+guzzle, guttle, and drink till they grew dead and got buried?
+Fox-hunting won't always do--and often it is not to be had; who can be
+happy with his gun through good report and bad report in an a' day's
+rain? Small amusement in fishing in muddy water; palls upon the sense
+quarrelling with neighbours on points of etiquette and the disputed
+property of hedgerow trees; a fever in the family ceases to raise the
+pulse of any inmate, except the patient; death itself is no relief to
+the dulness; a funeral is little better; the yawn of the grave seems a
+sort of unhallowed mockery; the scutcheon hung out on the front of the
+old dismal hall, is like a sign on a deserted Spittal; along with sables
+is worn a suitable stupidity by all the sad survivors.--And such, before
+the era of Periodicals, such was the life in--merry England. Oh!
+dear!--oh! dear me!
+
+We shall not enter into any historical details--for this is not a
+Monologue for the Quarterly--but we simply assert, that in the times we
+allude to (don't mention dates) there was little or no reading in
+England. There was neither the Reading Fly nor the Reading Public. What
+could this be owing to, but the non-existence of Periodicals? What
+elderly-young lady could be expected to turn from house affairs, for
+example, to Spenser's Fairy Queen? It is a long, long, long poem, that
+Fairy Queen of Spenser's; nobody, of course, ever dreamt of getting
+through it; but though you may have given up all hope of getting through
+a poem or a wood, you expect to be able to find your way back again to
+the spot where you unluckily got in; not so, however, with the Fairy
+Queen. Beautiful it is indeed, most exquisitely and unapproachably
+beautiful in many passages, especially about ladies and ladies' love
+more than celestial, for Venus loses in comparison her lustre in the
+sky; but still people were afraid to get into it then as now; and
+"heavenly Una, with her milk-white lamb," lay buried in dust. As
+to Shakspeare, we cannot find many traces of him in the domestic
+occupations of the English gentry during the times alluded to; nor do we
+believe that the character of Hamlet was at all relished in their halls,
+though perhaps an occasional squire chuckled at the humours of Sir John
+Falstaff. We have Mr. Wordsworth's authority for believing that Paradise
+Lost was a dead letter, and John Milton virtually anonymous. We need say
+no more. Books like these, huge heavy vols. lay with other lumber in the
+garrets and libraries. As yet, Periodical Literature was not; and the
+art of printing seems long to have preceded the art of reading. It did
+not occur to those generations that books were intended to be read by
+people in general, but only by the select few. Whereas now, reading is
+not only one of the luxuries, but absolutely one of the necessaries of
+life, and we now no more think of going without our book than without
+our breakfast; lunch consists now of veal-pies and Venetian
+Bracelets--we still dine on Roast-beef, but with it, instead of
+Yorkshire pudding, a Scotch novel--Thomas Campbell and Thomas Moore
+sweeten tea for us--and in "Course of Time" we sup on a Welsh rabbit
+and a Religious Poem.
+
+We have not time--how can we?--to trace the history of the great
+revolution. But a great revolution there has been, from nobody's reading
+anything, to every body's reading all things; and perhaps it began with
+that good old proser Richardson, the father of Pamela, Clarissa, and
+Sir Charles Grandison. He seems to have been a sort of idiot, who had
+a strange insight into some parts of human nature, and a tolerable
+acquaintance with most parts of speech. He set the public a-reading, and
+Fielding and Smollett shoved her on--till the Minerva Press took her in
+hand--and then--the Periodicals. But such Periodicals! The Gentleman's
+Magazine--God bless it then, now, and for ever!--the Monthly Review,
+the Critical and the British Critic! The age had been for some years
+literary, and was now fast becoming periodical. Magazines multiplied.
+Arose in glory the Edinburgh, and then the Quarterly Review--Maga,
+like a new sun, looked out from heaven--from her golden urn a hundred
+satellites drew light--and last of all, "the Planetary Five," the
+Annuals, hung their lamps on high; other similar luminous bodies emerged
+from the clouds, till the whole circumference was bespangled, and
+astronomy became the favourite study with all ranks of people, from the
+King upon the throne to the meanest of his subjects. Now, will any one
+presume to deny, that this has been a great change to the better, and
+that there is now something worth living for in the world? Look at our
+literature now, and it is all periodical together. A thousand daily,
+thrice-a-week, twice-a week, weekly newspapers, a hundred monthlies,
+fifty quarterlies, and twenty-five annuals! No mouth looks up now and is
+not fed; on the contrary, we are in danger of being crammed; an empty
+head is as rare as an empty stomach; the whole day is one meal, one
+physical, moral, and intellectual feast; the Public goes to bed with a
+Periodical in her hand, and falls asleep with it beneath her pillow.
+
+What blockhead thinks now of reading Milton, or Pope, or Gray? Paradise
+Lost is lost; it has gone to the devil. Pope's Epistles are returned to
+the dead-letter office; the age is too loyal for "ruin seize thee,
+ruthless king," and the oldest inhabitant has forgotten "the curfew
+tolls."--_Blackwood's Magazine._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE SELECTOR, AND LITERARY NOTICES OF _NEW WORKS._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DR. LARDNER'S CYCLOPAEDIA.
+
+
+_History of Scotland. By Sir Walter Scott, Bart._ Vol. I.
+
+The rapid and sketchy page just quoted from _Blackwood's Magazine_ will
+illustrate the high ground which periodical literature is daily
+attaining in this country. Of this ascendancy, the volume before us is
+indeed a fine specimen, and one of which we have reason to entertain a
+national pride. We know it to be a common practice with publishers on
+the continent to produce long works volume by volume, so that Dr.
+Lardner's plan is by no means novel; but we should also bear in mind
+that, compared with our family and cabinet libraries, the majority of
+similar foreign works are mere flimsy productions; and the _Encyclopedie
+Methodique_, published in monthly volumes, in Paris, both in quantity
+and execution, will not reach our literary standards of 1829. As Dr.
+Lardner's plan is well known, it need not here be repeated; neither need
+we remark upon the high qualifications of Sir Walter Scott, as an
+historian of Scotland. An extract shall speak for itself; and perhaps we
+cannot do better than select one of the battle-pieces, which has all the
+vividness of the finest historical painting: say
+
+BANNOCKBURN.
+
+"Robert Bruce summoned the array of his kingdom to rendezvous in the
+Tor-wood, about four miles from Stirling, and by degrees prepared the
+field of battle which he had selected for the contest. It was a space of
+ground then called the New Park--perhaps reserved for the chase, since
+Stirling was frequently a royal residence. This ground was partly open,
+partly encumbered with trees, in groups or separate. It was occupied by
+the Scottish line of battle, extending from south to north, and fronting
+to the east. In this position, Bruce's left flank and rear might have
+been exposed to a sally from the castle of Stirling; but Mowbray
+the governor's faith was beyond suspicion, and the king was not in
+apprehension that he would violate the tenour of the treaty, by which
+he was bound to remain in passive expectation of his fate. The direct
+approach to the Scottish front was protected in a great measure by a
+morass called the New-miln Bog. A brook, called Bannockburn, running to
+the eastward, between rocky and precipitous banks, effectually covered
+the Scottish right wing, which rested upon it, and was totally
+inaccessible. Their left flank was apparently bare, but was, in fact,
+formidably protected in front by a peculiar kind of field-works. As
+the ground in that part of the field was adapted for the manoeuvres of
+cavalry Bruce caused many rows of pits, three feet deep, to be dug in
+it, so close together, as to suggest the appearance of a honeycomb, with
+its ranges of cells. In these pits sharp stakes were strongly pitched,
+and the apertures covered with sod so carefully, as that the condition
+of the ground might escape observation. Calthrops, or spikes contrived
+to lame the horses, were also scattered in different directions.
+
+"Having led his troops into the field of combat, on the tidings of the
+English approach, the 23d of June, 1314, the King of Scotland ordered
+his soldiers to arm themselves, and making proclamation that those who
+were not prepared to conquer or die with their sovereign were at liberty
+to depart, he was answered by a cheerful and general expression of their
+determination to take their fate with him. The King proceeded to draw
+up the army in the following order: Three oblong columns or masses of
+infantry, armed with lances, arranged on the same front, with intervals
+betwixt them formed his first line. Of these Edward Bruce had the
+guidance of the right wing, James Douglas and Walter, the Steward of
+Scotland, of the left, and Thomas Randolph of the central division.
+These three commanders had their orders to permit no English troops to
+pass their front, in order to gain Stirling. The second line, forming
+one column or mass, consisted of the men of the isles, under Bruce's
+faithful friend and ally, the insular prince Angus, his own men of
+Carrick, and those of Argyle and Cantire. With these the king posted
+himself in order to carry support and assistance wherever it might be
+required. With himself also he kept in the rear a select body of horse,
+the greater part of whom he designed for executing a particular service.
+The followers of the camp were dismissed with the baggage, to station
+themselves behind an eminence to the rear of the Scottish army, still
+called the Gillies' (that is, the servants') hill....
+
+"On the morning of St. Barnaby, called the Bright, being the 24th of
+June, 1314, Edward advanced in full form to the attack of the Scots,
+whom he found in their position of the preceding evening. The Vanguard
+of the English, consisting of the archers and bill-men, or lancers,
+comprehending almost all the infantry of the army, advanced, under the
+command of the Earls of Gloucester and Hereford, who also had a fine
+body of men at arms to support their column. All the remainder of the
+English troops, consisting of nine battles, or separate divisions, were
+so straitened by the narrowness of the ground, that, to the eye of the
+Scots, they seemed to form one very large body, gleaming with flashes of
+armour, and dark with the number of banners which floated over them.
+Edward himself commanded this tremendous array, and, in order to guard
+his person, was attended by four hundred chosen men at arms. Immediately
+around the King waited Sir Aymer de Valence, that Earl of Pembroke who
+defeated Bruce at Methven Wood, but was now to see a very different day;
+Sir Giles de Argentine, a Knight of St. John of Jerusalem, who was
+accounted, for his deeds in Palestine and elsewhere, one of the best
+Knights that lived; and Sir Ingram Umfraville, an Anglicised
+Scottishman, also famed for his skill in arms.
+
+"As the Scottish saw the immense display of their enemies rolling
+towards them like a surging ocean, they were called on to join in an
+appeal to Heaven against the strength of human foes.--Maurice, the Abbot
+of Inchaffray, bare-headed and bare-footed, walked along the Scottish
+line, and conferred his benediction on the soldiers, who knelt to
+receive it, and to worship the power in whose name it was bestowed.
+
+"During this time the King of England was questioning Umfraville
+about the purpose of his opponents. "Will they," said Edward, "abide
+battle?"--"They assuredly will," replied Umfraville; "and to engage them
+with advantage, your Highness were best order a seeming retreat, and
+draw them out of their strong ground." Edward rejected this counsel,
+and observing the Scottish soldiers kneel down, joyfully exclaimed,
+"They crave mercy."--"It is from Heaven, not from your Highness,"
+answered Umfraville: "on that field they will win or die." The King
+then commanded the charge to be sounded, and the attack to take place.
+
+"The Earls of Gloucester and Hereford charged the Scots left wing, under
+Edward Bruce, with their men at arms; but some rivalry between these two
+great Lords induced them to hurry to the charge with more of emulation
+than of discretion, and arriving at the shock disordered and out of
+breath, they were unable to force the deep ranks of the spearmen; many
+horses were thrown down, and their masters left at the mercy of the
+enemy. The other three divisions of the Scottish army attacked the mass
+of the English infantry, who resisted courageously. The English archers,
+as at the battle of Falkirk, now began to show their formidable skill,
+at the expense of the Scottish spearmen; but for this Bruce was
+prepared. He commanded Sir Robert Keith, the Marshal of Scotland, with
+those four hundred men at arms whom he had kept in reserve for the
+purpose, to make a circuit, and charge the English bowmen in the flank.
+This was done with a celerity and precision which dispersed the whole
+archery, who, having neither stakes nor other barrier to keep off the
+horse, nor long weapons to repel them, were cut down at pleasure, and
+almost without resistance.
+
+"The battle continued to rage, but with disadvantage to the English.
+The Scottish archers had now an opportunity of galling their infantry
+without opposition; and it would appear that King Edward could find no
+means of bringing any part of his numerous centre or rear-guard to the
+support of those in the front, who were engaged at disadvantage.
+
+"Bruce, seeing the confusion thicken, now placed himself at the head of
+the reserve, and addressing Angus of the Isles in the words, "My hope is
+constant in thee," rushed into the engagement followed by all the troops
+he had hitherto kept in reserve. The effect of such an effort, reserved
+for a favourable moment, failed not to be decisive. Those of the English
+who had been staggered were now constrained to retreat; those who were
+already in retreat took to actual flight. At this critical moment, the
+camp-followers of the Scottish army, seized with curiosity to see how
+the day went, or perhaps desirous to have a share of the plunder,
+suddenly showed themselves on the ridge of the Gillies'-hill, in the
+rear of the Scottish line of battle; and as they displayed cloths and
+horse-coverings upon poles for ensigns, they bore in the eyes of the
+English the terrors of an army with banners. The belief that they beheld
+the rise of an ambuscade, or the arrival of a new army of Scots, gave
+the last impulse of terror, and all fled now, even those who had before
+resisted. The slaughter was immense; the deep ravine of Bannockburn, to
+the south of the field of battle, lying in the direction taken by most
+of the fugitives, was almost choked and bridged over with the slain,
+the difficulty of the ground retarding the fugitive horsemen till the
+lancers were upon them. Others, and in great numbers, rushed into the
+river Forth, in the blindness of terror, and perished there. No less
+than twenty-seven Barons fell in the field; the Earl of Gloucester was
+at the head of the fatal list: young, brave, and high-born, when he saw
+the day was lost, he rode headlong on the Scottish spears, and was
+slain. Sir Robert Clifford, renowned in the Scottish wars, was also
+killed. Two hundred Knights and seven hundred Esquires, of high birth
+and blood, graced the list of slaughter with the noblest names of
+England; and thirty thousand of the common file filled up the fatal
+roll.
+
+"Edward, among whose weaknesses we cannot number cowardice, was
+reluctantly forced from the bloody field by the Earl of Pembroke. The
+noble Sir Giles de Argentine considered it as his duty to attend the
+King until he saw him in personal safety, then observing that "it was
+not his own wont to fly," turned back, rushed again into the battle,
+cried his war-cry, galloped boldly against the victorious Scots, and was
+slain, according to his wish, with his face to the enemy. Edward must
+have been bewildered in the confusion of the field, for instead of
+directing his course southerly to Linlithgow, from which he came, he
+rode northward to Stirling, and demanded admittance. Philip de Mowbray,
+the governor, remonstrated against this rash step, reminding the
+unfortunate Prince that he was obliged by his treaty to surrender the
+castle next day, as not having been relieved according to the
+conditions.
+
+"Edward was therefore obliged to take the southern road; and he must
+have made a considerable circuit to avoid the Scottish army. He was,
+however, discovered on his retreat, and pursued by Douglas with sixty
+horse, who were all that could be mustered for the service. The King, by
+a rapid and continued flight through a country in which his misfortunes
+must have changed many friends into enemies, at length gained the castle
+of Dunbar, where he was hospitably received by the Earl of March. From
+Dunbar Edward escaped almost alone to Berwick in a fishing skiff, having
+left behind him the finest army a King of England ever commanded.
+
+"The quantity of spoil gained by the victors at the battle of
+Bannockburn was inestimable, and the ransoms paid by the prisoners
+largely added to the mass of treasure. Five near relations to the
+Bruce--namely, his wife, her sister Christian, his daughter Marjory,
+the Bishop of Glasgow (Wishart), and the young Earl of Mar, the King's
+nephew, were exchanged against the Earl of Hereford, High Constable of
+England.
+
+"The Scottish loss was very small: Sir William Vipont and Sir Walter
+Ross were the only persons of consideration slain. Sir Edward Bruce is
+said to have been so much attached to the last of these knights as to
+have expressed his wish that the battle had remained unfought, so Ross
+had not died."
+
+The present volume contains 350 pages, in a very pleasing type, and a
+vignette title; and the style in which it is produced is uniformly
+worthy of the very responsible quarter whence it emanates.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE YOUNG LADY'S BOOK.
+
+
+This is indeed a _golden gift_ for any _demoiselle_ of our readers'
+acquaintance, for it blends the unusual qualities of elegance and
+usefulness of the highest order. It is described in the title as "A
+Manual of Elegant Recreations, Exercises and Pursuits," and numbers in
+its contents, Moral deportment--the Florist--Mineralogy, Conchology,
+Entomology, the Aviary, the Toilet, Embroidery, the Escrutoire,
+Painting, Music, Dancing, Archery, Riding, and the Ornamental Artist.
+Each of these subjects is treated of in separate chapters, in a neat
+style, slightly scientific, and highly amusive; and the whole are
+illustrated with upwards of _Six Hundred Engravings_, which are
+appropriately chosen and admirably executed. Botany, Conchology,
+Entomology, and the Aviary thus admit of scores of little cuts worked in
+with the type; the female accomplishments of Embroidery, ornamental card
+and basket work, contain many beautiful devices; and the "elegant
+recreations" of Dancing, Riding, &c. are equally well illustrated by the
+various forms, positions, &c.--Each subject has been treated of by a
+master or mistress of the respective art, but the uniformity with which
+the editor has marshalled them in his work, almost makes them resemble
+the productions of one hand. We need not point out the merit of this
+individual contribution; for the lady-pen must be omnipotent indeed
+which could write equally well on every branch of female accomplishment.
+By way of a seasonable extract we take part of a brief historical sketch
+prefixed to the Dancing instructions, and a few of the hints:--
+
+"From the death of Elizabeth, until after the restoration of Charles
+II., the turbulence of the times, and the peculiar character of the age,
+prevented this art, which flourishes only in 'the bowers of peace and
+joy,' from making much progress; but in the days of the merry monarch
+it began to revive, and advanced more, or less, in all the succeeding
+reigns. The celebrated Beau Nash, who was, for a long time, M.C. at
+Bath, may be considered the founder of modern ball-room dancing; which,
+however, has been divested of much of its cold formality, and improved
+in various other respects since the time of that singular person. It is,
+nevertheless, a matter of regret, that the graceful and stately Minuet
+has been entirely abandoned in favour of the more recently-invented
+dances.
+
+"The French country dances, or Contre-Danses (from the parties being
+placed opposite to each other,) since called Quadrilles (from their
+having four sides) which approximate nearly to the Cotillon, were
+first introduced to France about the middle of Lewis the Fifteenth's
+reign. Previously to this period, the dances most in vogue were La
+Perigourdine, La Matelotte, La Pavane, Les Forlanes, Minuets, &c.
+Quadrilles, when first introduced, were danced by four persons only:
+four more were soon added, and thus the complete square was formed; but
+the figures were materially different from those of the present period.
+The gentlemen advanced with the opposite ladies, menaced each other with
+the fore-finger, and retired clapping their hands three times; they then
+turned hands of four, turned their own partners, and grand rond of all
+concluded the figure. The Vauxhall d'Hiver was, at that time, the most
+fashionable place of resort: the pupils of the Royal Academy were
+engaged to execute new dances; a full and effective band performed the
+most fashionable airs, and new figures were at length introduced and
+announced as a source of attraction; but this place was soon pulled
+down, and re-built on the ground now occupied by the Theatre du
+Vaudeville. The establishment failed, and the proprietor became a
+bankrupt. A short time after, it was re-opened by another speculator;
+but on such a scale, as merely to attract the working classes of the
+community. The band was now composed of a set of miserable scrapers, who
+played in unison, and continually in the key of G sharp; amid the sounds
+which emanated from their instruments, the jangling of a tambourin, and
+the shrill notes of a fife were occasionally heard. Thus did things
+continue until the French Revolution; when, about the time the Executive
+Directory was formed, the splendid apartments of the Hotel de Richelieu
+were opened for the reception of the higher classes, who had then but
+few opportunities of meeting to 'trip it on the light fantastic toe.'
+Monsieur Hullin, then of the Opera, was selected to form a band of
+twenty-four musicians, from among those of the highest talent in the
+various theatres: he found no difficulty in this, as they were paid in
+paper-money, then of little or no value; whereas, the administrators of
+the Richelieu establishment paid in specie. The tunes were composed in
+different keys, with full orchestral accompaniments, by Monsieur Hullin;
+and the contrast thus produced to the abominable style which had so long
+existed, commenced a new era in dancing: the old figures were abolished,
+and stage-steps were adopted;--Pas de Zephyrs, Pas de Bourres, Ballotes,
+Jetes Battus, &c. were among the most popular. Minuets and Forlanes were
+still continued; but Monsieur Vestris displaced the latter by the
+Gavotte, which he taught to Monsieur Trenis and Madame de Choiseul, who
+first danced it at a fete given by a lady of celebrity, at the Hotel de
+Valentinois, Rue St. Lazar, on the 16th of August, 1797; at this fete,
+Monsieur Hullin introduced an entirely new set of figures of his own
+composition.--These elicited general approbation: they were danced at
+all parties, and still retain pre-eminence. The names of Pantalon,
+L'Ete, La Poule, La Trenis, &c. which were given to the tunes, have been
+applied to the figures. The figure of La Trenis, was introduced by
+Monsieur Trenis's desire, it being part of the figure from a Gavotte,
+danced in the then favourite ballet of Nina.
+
+"To the French we are indebted for rather an ingenious, but in the
+opinion of many professional dancers, an useless invention, by which it
+was proposed, that as the steps in dancing are not very numerous,
+although they may be infinitely combined, that characters might be made
+use of to express the various steps and figures of a dance, in the same
+manner as words and sentences are expressed by letters; or what is more
+closely analogous, as the musical characters are employed to represent
+to the eye the sounds of an air. The well-known Monsieur Beauchamp, and
+a French dancing-master, each laid claim to be the original inventer
+of this art; and the consequence was a law suit, in which, however,
+judgment was pronounced in favour of the former. The art has been
+introduced into this country, but without success. An English
+dancing-master has also, we believe, with considerable labour and
+ingenuity, devised a plan somewhat similar to that of the French author:
+diagrams being proposed to represent the figures, or steps, instead of
+characters.
+
+"There are a variety of dances to which the term National may, with some
+propriety, be applied. Among the most celebrated of these are,--the
+Italian Tarantula, the German Waltz, and the Spanish Bolero. To dwell on
+their peculiarities would, however, as it appears to us, be useless: the
+first is rarely exhibited, even on the stage: the second, although it
+still retains much of its original character, has, in this country, been
+modified into the Waltz Country Dance, and all the objections which it
+encountered, on its first introduction, seem to have been gradually
+overcome, since it assumed its present popular form; and the graceful
+Bolero is restricted to the theatre only, being never introduced to the
+English ball-room.
+
+"The manner of walking well is an object which all young ladies should
+be anxious to acquire; but, unfortunately, it is a point too much
+neglected. In the drawing-room, the ball-room, or during the promenade,
+an elegant deportment, a 'poetry of motion,'--is, and ever will be,
+appreciated. The step ought not to exceed the length of the foot; the
+leg should be put forward, without stiffness, in about the fourth
+position; but without any effort to turn the foot out, as it will tend
+to throw the body awry, and give the person an appearance of being a
+professional dancer. The head should be kept up and the chest open: the
+body will then attain an advantageous position, and that steadiness so
+much required in good walking. The arms should fall in their natural
+position, and all their movements and oppositions to the feet be easy
+and unconstrained. The employment of soldiers to teach young ladies how
+to walk, which, we are sorry to say, is a practice adopted by many
+parents and heads of seminaries, is much to be deprecated. The stiffness
+acquired under regimental tuition, is adverse to all the principles of
+grace, and annihilates that buoyant lightness which is so conducive to
+ease and elegance in the young."
+
+Besides the host of cuts incorporated with the text, each art has a
+whole page embellishment exquisitely engraved on wood; the designs of
+which are the very acme of taste. The head and tail, and letter pieces
+of the chapters are in equally good taste; and taken altogether,
+the "Young Lady's Book," either as a production of usefulness or
+illustratration of art, is the finest production of its day. It has
+been erroneously noticed, from its publication at this season, as an
+"Annual," but it displays infinitely more pains-taking than either of
+those elaborate productions--and is, we should judge, neither the labour
+of one or two years.
+
+We had almost overlooked the imitative Mechlin lace-facings, which would
+deceive any Nottingham factor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE ZOOLOGICAL KEEPSAKE.
+
+
+The design of this "Annual" is good, we may say, very good; but we are
+alike bound to confess that the execution falls short of the idea. It
+contains an account of the Gardens and Museum of the Zoological Society,
+but this is too much interlarded with digressions. All the introductory
+matter might have been omitted with advantage to the author as well as
+the public. The descriptions are divided by poetical pieces, which serve
+as _reliefs_, one of which we extract:--
+
+
+THE LOST LAMB; OR, THE CHILD SAVED.
+
+BY H.C. DEAKIN, ESQ.
+
+_Author of "Portraits of the Dead."_
+
+
+ Morn rose upon the purple hills,
+ In all his pomp display'd;
+ Flash'd forth like stars a hundred rills,
+ In valley, plain, and glade.
+ The foaming mist, day's chilly shrine,
+ Into the clouds upcurl'd,
+ Forth broke in majesty divine
+ The Grampians' giant world.
+
+ It was a glorious sight to view
+ Those mountain forms unfold,--
+ The Heavens above intensely blue,
+ The plains beneath like gold.
+ Day woke, a thousand songs arose,
+ Morn's orisons on high,
+ Earth's universal heart o'erflows
+ To Him beyond the sky.
+
+ The shepherd roused him from his sleep,
+ And down the vale be hied,
+ Like guardian good, to count his sheep,
+ His _firstling_ by his side.
+ His firstling! 'twas his only child--
+ A boy of three years old,
+ The father's weary hours beguiled
+ Whilst watching o'er his fold.
+
+ And many an hour the child and he
+ Joy'd o'er the vale together;
+ It was a lovely thing to see
+ That child among the heather.
+ The vale is pass'd, the mountains rear
+ Their rugged cliffs in air,
+ He must ascend to view more near
+ His distant fleecy care.
+
+ "My child! the flowers are bright for thee,
+ The daisy's pearl'd with dew;
+ Go, share them with the honey-bee,
+ Till I return for you,
+ Thy dog and mine with thee shall stay
+ Whilst I the flock am counting,"--
+ He said, and took his tedious way,
+ The hilly green sward mounting.
+
+ O'er crag and cliff the father toil'd,
+ Unconscious pass'd the hours:
+ He for a time forgot the child
+ He'd left among the flowers.
+ The boiling clouds come down and veil
+ Valley, and wood, and plain;
+ Then fears the father's heart assail,
+ He will descend again.
+
+ Morn melted into noon, and night
+ Dark on the shepherd shone,
+ Terror in vain impels his flight,
+ His child!--his child is gone!
+ He calls upon his darling's name,
+ His dog in vain he calls;
+ He hears naught but the eagle's scream,
+ Or roar of waterfalls.
+
+ He rushes home--he is not there--
+ With agony and woe;
+ He hunts him in the cold night air,
+ O'er hill and vale below.
+ Morn rose--the faithful dog appears,
+ He whines for food so mild,
+ The father hied him through his tears,
+ And said, "Tray, where's my child?"
+
+ Thrice rose the morn--the father's heart
+ With grief was almost dead;
+ But every morn the dog appeared,
+ And whined and begged for bread.
+ Yet through the night and through the day,
+ The dog was never seen--
+ "He is not wont to stay away,
+ Where can the dog have been?"
+
+ On the fourth morn this faithful friend,
+ As usual whined for meat--
+ They mark the way his footsteps tend,
+ And follow his retreat.
+ They watch him to a cave beside
+ The Grampians' craggy base--
+ Behold! the shepherd's wandering child
+ Within the dog's embrace.
+
+ He springs--he weeps away his cares,
+ He cries aloud with joy--
+ He kneels, he sobs to heaven his prayers,
+ For his redeemed boy.
+ Then, turning, hugs his favourite hound,
+ The trusty, true, and bold,
+ By whom was saved, through whom was found
+ The _firstling_ of his fold!
+
+
+The Engravings, which are very numerous, are exclusively on wood. A few
+of them are views in the Regent's Park Gardens; but in point of
+execution, we think the best is a Portrait of the Satyr, or "_Happy_
+Jerry," at Cross's Menagerie. Though by no means one of nature's
+favourites, he appears to possess the companionable qualities of
+sitting in a chair, smoking a pipe, and drinking spirits and water, and
+appearing to understand every look, word, and action of his keeper;
+indeed, so thoroughly contented is the creature, that he has obtained
+the name of "Happy Jerry."
+
+To speak _zoologically_, next year we hope the artist and editor will
+put their best feet foremost, and improve upon the present volume. The
+design is one of the best for a Juvenile Annual--for who does not
+recollect the very amusing game of "Birds, Beasts, and Fishes, and
+sometimes Insects and Reptiles." What a menagerie of guessing novelties
+would have been a _Zoological Keepsake_ in our school days.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER.
+
+ A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.
+SHAKSPEARE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SPILLING THE SALT.
+
+
+It is a curious fact, though not generally known, that the popular
+superstition of overturning the salt at table being unlucky, originated
+in a picture of the Last Supper, by Leonardo da Vinci, in which Judas
+Iscariot is represented as overturning the salt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+KANGAROOS.
+
+
+"I have been much entertained during my wanderings through the country
+adjoining this town, in observing the singular habits and extreme
+sagacity of the kangaroos. I have noticed several who carried in their
+fore paws a sort of umbrella, or fan, which they held so as to protect
+their head and shoulders from the violence of the sun. One day I slipped
+a brace of large greyhounds at a female who carried one of these useful
+appendages, which she soon dropped and escaped: it was formed of a large
+bough, over which some large leaves were spread, and fastened on simply
+by the shoots of the bough sticking into the leaf."--_From a letter
+dated Hobart's Town, February_, 1829.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE EARL OF MANSFIELD.
+
+
+"When he was at Westminster School, Lady Kinnoul, in one of the
+vacations, invited him to her home, where, observing him with a pen in
+his hand, and seemingly thoughtful, she asked him if he was writing his
+theme, and what in plain English the theme was? The school-boy's smart
+answer rather surprised her Ladyship--'What is that to you?' She
+replied--'How can you be so rude? I asked you very civilly a plain
+question, and did not expect from a school-boy such a pert answer.' The
+reply was, 'Indeed, my Lady, I can only answer once more, 'What is that
+to you?' In reality the theme was--_Quid ad te pertinet!"--From
+Holliday's Life of the Earl of Mansfield_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"IN SPITE OF HIS TEETH."
+
+
+King John once demanded of a certain Jew ten thousand marks, on refusal
+of which, he ordered one of the Israelite's teeth to be drawn every day
+till he should consent. The Jew lost seven, and then paid the required
+sum. Hence the phrase--"In spite of his teeth."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SWAN RIVER.
+
+
+A gentleman who had just arrived in town met an Hibernian friend, and
+with anxious solicitude asked him "where the best bed was to be got?"
+"By my soul," said the Emeralder, with a Kilmainham look, "I'm tould at
+the _Swan River_, where there's nothing but _down_."
+
+W.C.R.R.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SIAMESE YOUTHS.
+
+
+QUERY.--Would not the _law_ be the most profitable profession for the
+Siamese Youths? They might plead _pro_ and _con_, and take _fees_ from
+_plaintiff_ and _defendant_. If raised to the Bench, they might receive
+the salary of _one_ Judge, but act as _two_, thereby saving the nation
+some money in these _hard_ times of _cash_ payments, and please all
+parties, _one_ summing up for plaintiff and the _other_ for defendant.
+
+P.T.W.
+
+N.B. They appear very good natured, although they _huffed_ me _twice_ at
+draughts.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WITH the present Number is published a SUPPLEMENT, containing a
+Steel-plate PORTRAIT of THOMAS CAMPBELL, ESQ. and a copious MEMOIR; with
+Title, Preface, and Index to Vol. xiv.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement,
+and Instruction, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIRROR OF LITERATURE, NO. 406 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 11460.txt or 11460.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
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