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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11538 ***
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. XIX. NO. 531.] SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1832. [PRICE 2d
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+[Illustration: PONTEFRACT CASTLE, 1648.]
+
+
+PONTEFRACT CASTLE.
+
+
+Pontrefact, a place of considerable note in English history, is situated
+about two miles south-west from Ferrybridge, nine miles nearly east from
+Wakefield, and fifteen miles north-west from Doncaster, in Yorkshire. The
+origin of the town is unknown; and the etymology of its name has been a
+matter of dispute, in which figures a monkish legend ascribing the name of
+Ponsfractus, or Pontefract, to the breaking of a bridge, and the fall of
+many persons into the river Aire, who were miraculously saved by St.
+William, Archbishop of York. The river Ouse and the city of York, however,
+put in a stronger claim as the scene of this miracle, and unfortunately
+for Pontefract, the town is so named in charters of fifty-three years'
+date before the miracle is pretended to have been performed. Still the
+etymology is referable to the breaking down of "_some bridge_," (_pons_,
+bridge; _fractus_, broken,) but this unravelment is not antiquarian.
+Camden says, that in the Saxon times, the name of this town was Kirkby,
+which was changed by the Normans to Pontefract, because of a broken bridge
+that was there. But as there is no river within two miles of the place,
+this bridge appears to have been built over the Wash, which lies about a
+quarter of a mile to the east of the Castle. Other researches prove
+Pontefract to have been a secondary and subordinate Roman station.
+
+The history of the Castle is, of course, involved in that of the manor.
+The town is stated to have been a burgh in the time of Edward the
+Confessor; but how long it had enjoyed this privilege is uncertain.[1]
+After the Conquest, this manor, with 150 others, or the greatest part of
+so many in Yorkshire, besides ten in Nottinghamshire, and four in
+Lincolnshire, were given by William to Hildebert, or Ilbert de Lacy, one
+of his Norman followers, who _built the Castle_. The work occupied twelve
+years, and it was finished in 1080. The labour and expense of its erection
+was so great, that no person unless in the possession of a princely
+fortune, could have completed a work of such magnitude. Hildebert was
+succeeded by his son Robert, commonly called Robert de Pontefract, from
+his being born at that town. Robert enjoyed his vast possessions in peace
+during the reign of William Rufus; but after the accession of Henry I. he
+with more ambition than prudence, joined with Robert, Duke of Normandy,
+the King's brother, who claimed the crown of England. In consequence of
+this transaction, Robert de Lacy was banished the realm, and the castle
+and honour of Pontefract were given by the King to Henry Traverse, and
+afterwards to Henry De-laval.[2] Robert de Lacy was, however, restored
+after a few years exile, and the property continued in the Lacy family
+till the year 1193, when another Robert de Lacy dying without issue, the
+estate and honour of Pontefract devolved on his uterine sister Aubrey de
+Lisours, who carried these estates of the Lacys by marriage to Richard
+Fitz-Eustace, constable of Chester. Thence they descended to John
+Fitz-Eustace, who accompanied Richard I. in his crusade, and is said to
+have died at Tyre in Palestine. Roger, his eldest son, also in the crusade,
+succeeded to his honour and estates. He was present with Richard at the
+memorable siege of Acre. On his return to England he was the first of his
+family that took the name of Lacy, in which Pontefract Castle continued
+till 1310, when Henry de Lacy, through default of male issue, left his
+possessions to his daughter and heiress, Alice, who was married to Thomas,
+Earl of Lancaster; and, in case of a failure of issue from that marriage,
+he entailed them on the King and his heirs.
+
+The Earl of Lancaster, it will be remembered, became embroiled with Edward
+II. and his minion Gaveston, who partly through the interference of
+Lancaster, was beheaded at Warwick after a siege in Scarborough Custle.
+The King swore vengeance for the death of his favourite, which led this
+weak sovereign into a long series of dissentions with the barons, at the
+head of whom, was the Earl of Lancaster. Both parties now flew to arms,
+but Lancaster soon found himself ill supported by his compeers, and
+marching northward for reinforcements from the celebrated Bruce, King of
+Scotland, the King in the meantime, sent the Earl of Surrey and Kent to
+besiege the castle of Pontefract, which surrendered at the first summons.
+Lancaster was next closely pursued by the king with great superiority of
+numbers. "The earl, endeavouring to rally his troops, was taken prisoner,
+with ninety-five barons and knights, and carried to the castle of
+Pontefract, where he was imprisoned in a tower which Leland says he had
+newly made towards the abbey," This tower was square: its wall of great
+strength, being 10-1/2 feet thick; nor was there any other entrance into
+the interior than by a hole or trap-door in the floor of the turret: so
+that the prisoner must have been let down into this abode of darkness,
+from whence there could be no possible mode of escape; the room was
+twenty-five feet square. A few days after, the King being at Pontefract
+ordered him to be arraigned in the hall of the castle, before a small
+number of peers, among whom were the Spencers, his mortal enemies. The
+earl was condemned to be hanged, drawn, and quartered; but the punishment
+was changed to decapitation. After sentence was passed, he said, "Shall I
+die without answer?" He was not, however, permitted to speak; but a
+certain Gascoign took him away, and having put an old hood over his head,
+set him on a lean mare without a bridle. Being attended by a Dominican
+friar as his confessor, he was carried out of the town amidst the insults
+of the people; and there beheaded. Thus fell Thomas, Earl of Lancaster,
+the first Prince of the Blood, being uncle to Edward II. who condemned him
+to death. Several of his adherents were hanged at Pontefract.
+
+The next royal blood that stained Pontefract castle was that of King
+Richard II. who was here murdered or starved to death; though there is a
+tradition that it was merely given out that Richard had starved himself to
+death, and that he escaped from Pontefract to Mull, whence he shortly
+proceeded to the mainland of Scotland, where, for nineteen years, he was
+entertained in an honourable but secret captivity.[3] The matter remains
+in tragic darkness.[4] In the succeeding reign of Henry IV. Richard
+Scroope, archbishop of York, being taken prisoner, was in Pontefract
+castle, condemned to death. Next in the calendar of atrocities committed
+within these drear walls, were the murders of Anthony Woodville, Earl
+Rivers; Richard, Lord Grey; Sir Thomas Vaughan; and Sir Richard Hawse, in
+1483; by Richard III., whom Shakspeare makes to whine forth:
+
+
+ O Pomfret, Pomfret! O thou bloody prison!
+ Fatal and ominous to noble peers!
+ Within the guilty closure of thy walls,
+ Richard II. here was hack'd to death;
+ And for more slander to thy dismal seat,
+ We give to thee our guiltless blood to drink.
+
+
+We may now pass over matters of minor importance in the history of
+Pontefract to the time of Charles I. In the King's contest with his
+Parliament, this was the last fortress that held out for the unfortunate
+monarch. At Christmas 1644, Sir Thomas Fairfax laid siege to the castle,
+and on Jan. 19, following, after an incessant cannonade of three days, a
+breach was made: the brave garrison would not surrender; the besiegers
+mined, but the besieged counter-mined, and the work of slaughter went on
+till the garrison were greatly reduced. At length the Parliamentarians
+were attacked and repulsed by a reinforcement of Royalists from Oxford,
+and thus ended the first siege of Pontefract. In March, 1645, the enemy
+again took possession of the town, and after three months cannonade, the
+garrison being reduced almost to a state of famine, surrendered the castle
+by an honourable capitulation on June 20. Sir Thomas Fairfax was appointed
+governor, and he thinking the royal party to be subdued, appointed a
+colonel as his substitute, with a garrison of 100 men. The royalists next
+by stratagem recovered Pontefract, of which Sir John Digby was appointed
+governor.
+
+The third and final siege of this fine castle commenced in October, 1648.
+General Rainsborough was appointed to the command of the army, but he
+being previously intercepted at Doncaster, Oliver Cromwell undertook to
+conduct the siege. After having remained a month before the fortress,
+without making any impression on its massy walls, Cromwell joined the
+grand army under Fairfax, and General Lambert being appointed commander in
+chief of the forces before the castle, arrived at Pontefract on the 4th of
+December.
+
+The ENGRAVING represents the castle precisely at this period. It is copied
+from a large print taken from a drawing found in the possession of a
+descendant of the Fairfax family of Denton; in one angle is the following
+memorandum: "Governor Morris commanded in the Castle. General Lambert
+commanded the Siege, being appointed thereto on the death of General
+Rainsborough, who was intercepted and killed at Doncaster, by a party from
+the Castle, as he was going to take command."
+
+General Lambert raised new works, and vigorously pushed the siege; but the
+besieged held out. On January 30, 1649, the King was beheaded; and the
+news no sooner reached Pontefract, than the royalist garrison proclaimed
+his son Charles II. and made a vigorous and destructive sally against
+their enemies. The Parliamentarians, however, prevailed, and on March 25,
+1649, the garrison being reduced from 500 or 600 to 100 men, surrendered
+by capitulation. Six of the principal Royalists were excepted from mercy:
+two escaped, but were retaken and executed at York; the third was killed
+in a sortie; and the three others concealing themselves among the ruins of
+the castle, escaped after the surrender; and two of the last lived to see
+the Restoration.
+
+This third siege was the most destructive to the castle: the tremendous
+artillery had shattered its massive walls; and its demolition was
+completed by order of Parliament. Within two months after its reduction,
+the buildings were unroofed, and all the materials sold. Thus was this
+princely fortress reduced to a heap of ruins.
+
+The Castle of Pontefract was built on an elevated rock, commanding
+extensive and picturesque views. The north-west prospect takes in the
+beautiful vale along which flows the Aire, skirted by woods and
+plantations. It is bounded only by the hills of Craven. The north and east
+prospect is more extensive, but the scenery is not equally striking and
+impressive. The towers of York Minster are distinctly seen, and the
+prospect is only bounded by the limits of vision. To the east--while the
+eye follows the course of the Aire towards the Humber, the fertility of
+the country, the spires of churches, and two considerable hills, Brayton
+Barf, and Hambleton Haugh, which rise in the midst of a plain, and one of
+which is covered with wood, increase the beauty of the scene. The
+south-east view includes part of the counties of Lincoln and Nottingham.
+To the south and south-west, the towering hills of Derbyshire, stretching
+towards Lancashire, form the horizon, while the foreground is a
+picturesque country variegated with handsome residences.
+
+The Castle, by its situation, as well as by its structure, was rendered
+almost impregnable. It was not commanded by any contiguous hills, and it
+could only be taken by blockade.
+
+By referring to the Engraving, the reader will better understand this
+defence. The outworks are there distinctly shown with the respective posts
+and guards: indeed, these lines exhibit a fine specimen of fortification.
+The quadrangular enclosure on the crest of the hill, in the lower part of
+the Engraving, represents Lamberts' Fort Royal. To the right is the
+approach to the castle by the south gate to the barbican, crossed by a
+wall, with the middle gate, with the east gate at the extremity of the
+line. We next approach, the ballium, or castle yard through the Porter's
+Lodge of two towers with a portcullis. The wall of the castle-yard, it
+will be seen, has a parapet, and is flanked with towers, and the chapel to
+the right of the Lodge. East and West of the yard is seen the
+semi-circular moat or ditch; and on an eminence near the western extremity
+of the ballium, stands the keep or round tower, the walls of which are
+said to have been twenty-one feet thick. The state rooms are on the second
+story. The dungeons of the towers are terrific even in description: one
+was about 15 feet deep, and scarcely six feet square, without any
+admission of light. The whole area occupied by the Pontrefact fortress
+seems to have been about 7 acres, now converted into garden ground.
+
+The church seen within the work is that of All Saints, or Allhallows, a
+Gothic structure, probably of the time of Henry III., and almost destroyed
+in the sieges of the castle.
+
+Pontefract must be numbered in our recollections of childhood; since here
+were grown whole fields of liquorice root, from the extract of which are
+made. _Pontefract Cakes_, impressed with the arms--three lions passant
+gardant, surmounted with a helmet, full-forward, open faced, and
+garde-visure. We have likewise seen them impressed with the celebrated
+fortress, and the motto "Post mortem patris pro filio,"--after the death
+of the father--for the son--denoting the loyalty of the Pontefract
+Royalists in proclaiming Charles II. at the death of his father.
+
+
+ [1] The present Borough of Pontefract was incorporated by Richard
+ III., and has sent Members to Parliament since the reign of
+ James I.
+
+ [2] Dugdale Bar. vol. i p. 99.
+
+ [3] This tradition is moulded into a pleasing tale entitled "the White
+ Rose in Mull," in the Scottish Annual, the _Chameleon_, noticed by
+ us a few weeks since.
+
+ [4] Shakspeare lays Scene v. of Act. v. of Richard II. in a dungeon of
+ Pomfret Castle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"LACONICS," GUESSES AT TRUTH, &c.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+It is the interest of an indolent man to be honest: for it requires
+considerable trouble and finesse, to deceive others successfully.
+
+Money was a wise contrivance to place fools somewhat on a level with men
+of sense.
+
+It will be observed, that people have generally the identical faults and
+vices they accuse others of; we may instance cowardice.
+
+Wherever a proposition is self-evident, it is but weakening its strength
+to bring forward arguments in its support.
+
+It is a melancholy reflection that a glass of wine will do more towards
+raising the spirits, than the finest composition ever penned.
+
+It is a great mistake in physiognomists to take outward signs as evidences
+of feeling: the seat of real sensation is within.
+
+Wherever art has travelled out of her proper sphere to ape nature, she has
+proved herself but a miserable mimic, even in her most approved efforts.
+
+We must not allow ourselves to dwell too seriously on life; for otherwise
+we shall be tempted to forego all our plans, to indulge in no future
+wishes, and, in short, to live on in torpid apathy.
+
+Books are at last the best companions: they instruct us in silence without
+any display of superiority, and they attend the pace of each man's
+capacity, without reproaching him for his want of comprehension.
+
+A disgust of life frequently proceeds from sheer vanity, or a wish to be
+supposed incapable of deriving gratification from the ordinary routine of
+happiness.
+
+It sometimes happens that with men as well as animals, that evidences of
+spirit are only the effect of excited fear.
+
+(_To be continued_.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LAW INSTITUTION.[1]
+
+
+(At the time of our last publication we were not aware that any
+architectural details of the building in Chancery-lane had appeared. We
+now find that the _Legal Observer_ contained such description in March
+last, "collected," says the editor, "with some pains and trouble." A
+correspondent dropped the _Observer_ leaf into our letter-box in the
+course of last week; but, unfortunately, the communication did not reach
+us in time for insertion with our Engraving. Good news, we know, usually
+comes upon crutches, but we hope our thanks will reach this correspondent
+at a better pace.)
+
+The style of architecture of the principal front in Chancery-lane is
+purely Grecian. The details and proportions appear to have been founded
+upon the best examples of the Ionic order in Athens and Asia Minor,[2] but
+they are not servilely copied from any of them.
+
+Mr. Vulliamy, the architect for the Institution, has thrown into this
+front the true spirit of the originals; and the effect which the
+harmonious proportions of the building produce on the spectator, when
+viewing it from Chancery-lane, must have been the result of much
+observation and experience in ancient and classic models.
+
+This front, extending nearly sixty feet in width, is of Portland stone. It
+consists of four columns and two antae, of the Grecian Ionic order,
+supporting an entablature and pediment, and forming together one grand
+portico. To give the requisite elevation, the columns and antae are raised
+upon pedestals; these, as well as the basement story and podium of the
+inner wall of the portico, are of Aberdeen granite; the columns and the
+rest of the front are formed of large blocks of Portland stone. In the
+front wall, within the portico, there are two ranges of windows above the
+basement.
+
+The front in Bell-yard extends nearly eighty feet, and will be finished
+with Roman cement, in imitation of stone. It will have a portico of two
+columns, and two antae of Portland stone, of the height of the ground
+story, which is very lofty, and the width of the entire compartment of the
+front. From the interior requiring to be divided into several rooms, this
+front must have many windows. The elevation is formed more upon the models
+of modern domestic architecture than of ancient public buildings, and
+resembles, in its general appearance, one of the palazzi in the Strada
+Balbi at Genoa, in the Corso at Rome, or in the Toledo at Naples. In its
+details, however, the extravagancies of the middle ages, and the often
+elegant frivolities of the _cinque cento_ period, have been avoided, and
+the breadth and simplicity of Greek models have still been followed.
+
+The ground plan of the building, by its general arrangement, divides
+itself into three parts, which may be distinguished under the heads of the
+_Library_, the _Hall_, and the _Club Room_. The first of these (that
+towards Chancery-lane) consists, on the ground floor, of a first and
+second vestibule, and staircase to the Library, the Secretary's Room, and
+Registry Office; and above these on the first floor, the Library,
+occupying the height of two stories.
+
+The _Library_ is a large and lofty room, fifty-five feet by thirty-one and
+a half, and twenty-three and a half high, divided by a screen of columns
+and pilasters of scagliola, into two unequal parts, the first forming a
+sort of ante-library to the other; both are surrounded by bookcases of oak,
+and a gallery runs round the whole, above which is another range of
+bookcases.
+
+The principal light is obtained from a large lantern-light in the ceiling;
+but there is a range of windows (double sashed, and glazed with plate
+glass) towards Chancery-lane, which also admit light into the lower part.
+
+All the floors in the building are made fire-proof, generally by being
+arched with brick; but that of the Library is rendered secure from fire by
+the ceilings of the vestibules underneath being formed of real stone,
+supported on iron girders and bearers, and divided into panels and
+compartments after the manner of the roofs of the peristyles of the
+ancient temples.
+
+There are three entrances from Chancery-lane: that in the centre is
+exclusively for members, and leads to all parts of the building; that on
+the right for persons going to the Registry Office; and also for persons
+having to speak to members; that on the left leads down to the Office for
+the deposit of deeds, and to the strong rooms.
+
+The second division consists of the _Hall_ and its appurtenances. It is
+above thirty feet high, and fifty-seven feet and a half long; and on each
+side it has wings or recesses, behind insulated columns of scagliola, in
+imitation of Egyptian granite. Within these, and at the back of the
+columns, are galleries; the staircases to which are concealed in the
+angles. There are three fireplaces in the Hall; one in the centre,
+opposite the principal entrance, and one in the centre of each of the
+recesses. The Hall is lighted by a lantern-light forty feet long and
+twenty-four feet wide.
+
+The third division is next Bell-yard: it is subdivided into two parts. In
+the first of these are three entrances from Bell-yard. That in the centre
+is exclusively for the members; that to the left leads to the staircase to
+the Secretary's apartments; and the other, to the right of the centre, is
+for strangers to enter who have business to transact in any of the rooms
+appropriated to public business. On the ground floor of this part of the
+third division is a large Committee Room, and an ante or waiting room
+adjoining, and the great staircase to the rooms above. On the first floor
+are the rooms for meetings on matters of business connected with the law;
+and above these are the Secretary's apartments.
+
+The second part of the third division contains, on the ground floor, the
+_Club Room_, which occupies all the ground floor: it will be divided by
+columns and pilasters of scagliola, and decorated with a paneled ceiling
+and appropriate ornaments. Its dimensions are fifty feet by twenty-seven,
+and eighteen feet high. On the first floor are rooms of different
+dimensions for dinner parties; and over these, rooms for the resident
+officers. In the basement story of this part of the building are the
+Kitchen and other domestic offices for the use of the Club.
+
+The office for the deposit of deeds is in the basement story, next to
+Chancery-lane.
+
+In the remaining parts of the basement story of the building are fifty-two
+strong rooms, with iron doors, for the deposit of deeds, which are well
+ventilated and fire-proof; their average size is six feet and a half by
+seven feet and a half, but some are larger, and others rather less, than
+these dimensions. The whole are secured by one double iron door, with a
+very strong lock and master-key.
+
+
+ [1] In our last we erroneously stated the whole of this building as
+ the work of Messrs. Lee, for £9,214.; only part of the carcase,
+ containing the Hall, Library, &c. being contracted for by those
+ builders for the above sum. Other contracts have since been made
+ for the completion of the building; of these, the principal is
+ with Messrs. Baker and Son (the builders of the King's library
+ and new galleries of the British Museum, &c.) who have executed
+ the beautiful finishings of the interior: these contracts amount
+ to upwards of £12,000.
+
+ Other contracts have been made with the above parties for the
+ erection of the Club House, and Dining Rooms, &c., situate in
+ Bell Yard, which is an addition subsequently made to the original
+ building.
+
+ [2] The best remains of Ionic buildings at Athens are the temples of
+ Erecthens and Minerva Pulias in the Acropolis, and the little
+ temple on the banks of the Ilissus; but in Asia Minor the examples
+ of this order are far more numerous; and some of the finest are to
+ be found amongst the magnificent ruins at Brauchidia, at Priene,
+ and at Teos, &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+VAPOUR-BATHS.
+
+
+Among the remedies for cholera, or perhaps we should rather say attempted
+remedies, the vapour-bath is conspicuous over all the other means of cure,
+external and internal: stimulants, frictions, rubefacients, blisters, have
+that for their indirect object which the vapour-bath accomplishes directly,
+namely, to produce heat on the surface of the body, and thus restore that
+correspondence between the temperature of the interior and exterior parts,
+which in the disease is so strangely disturbed. There are two difficulties
+in the application of the vapour-bath, which are not easily overcome. When
+applied to the patient in the ordinary way, from the nature of the heat,
+the upper surface of the body is scorched, while the back is almost cold.
+Now in cholera, the application of heat to the back is of essential
+importance. In the whole of the machines for applying the bath, the
+patient is exposed to more or less tossing about; which, from the extreme
+prostration of strength in cholera patients, is always injurious; and as
+the patient must, when taken from the bath, be replaced on a comparatively
+cold bed, the sudden change will often do more ill than the bath will do
+good. To these must be added, in a disease which chiefly affects the poor,
+another item, forming an important drawback on the utility of the ordinary
+vapour-bath,--the application of it is attended with no inconsiderable
+expense. A machine which should obviate these objections, was a
+desideratum; and we think such a one has been invented by Mr. Burnet, of
+Golden Square. It is so simple as to be easily described without a diagram,
+and so well adapted to the end, and so easy and cheap in application, that
+we think we shall be rendering an acceptable service to our readers in
+describing it. The best way to effect this is to show the steps of its
+application.
+
+We suppose the patient lying on his back in bed. The two sides of a
+framework, about 6-1/2 by 2-1/2 feet, are placed one on each side of him;
+five or six broad canvass straps, which are meant to support his body, are
+placed beneath him by a couple of attendants; two transverse pieces of
+wood are then introduced at the foot and head, to extend the framework;
+and the cross straps, by means of eyelet-holes, are attached to the sides,
+by a row of common brass pins. This is the work of about a minute. One
+attendant then raises the frame at the head, while the other introduces a
+couple of feet about nine inches long into the frame; and this done, the
+foot is raised in a similar way, and similarly supported; a board is then
+fitted to the foot, through a hole in the centre of which the chimney of
+the heating apparatus passes; the blankets are closely tucked round the
+patient and the frame; the lamp is applied, and the process of bathing
+commences. In this way, it will be seen that the patient is suspended in
+the heated air, which is moreover applied to the back in the first
+instance; there is no fatigue incurred; and when perspiration has been
+generated and carried on as long as is deemed expedient, he is let down
+again, without difficulty or danger, into his heated bed, and surrounded
+with the warm blankets employed in the bath itself. The room in which we
+saw the experiment performed, was at a temperature of 43° Fahrenheit; the
+clothes of the bed were of the same temperature: the lamp is conical, and
+has no tube; the wick is merely inserted in it; the charge is two ounces
+of spirits of wine. In ten minutes after the lamp had been applied, the
+thermometer at the foot of the frame on which the patient is made to
+recline, was 136°; at the head, 116°; on the blanket, which covered the
+bed, 96°. Were the vapour applied above the patient instead of under him,
+the difference between the heat at the breast and back would be at least
+40°. The temperature once raised, may be kept up at a very small expense;
+so that the whole price of the bath, continued for half an hour or three
+quarters of an hour, will not exceed eightpence or ninepence. There is a
+very simple expedient, by which, when the temperature of the chamber
+formed by the frame of the bath is once raised sufficiently high, steam,
+either simple or medicated, may be introduced, and the lamp apparatus may
+be applied either at the foot, the head, or the side, as is most
+convenient. The grand recommendation, however, of the bath, is the
+applicability of the vapour to the entire surface of the body; the
+simplicity and ease of the application, both to the assistants and the
+patient; the exclusion of the possibility of cold; and its cheapness. In
+all these points of view, we look on it as a valuable invention.
+
+_Spectator_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+NOTES OF A READER
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DECLINE OF THE DRAMA.
+
+
+One thing which I am unable to interpret among the oddities of the English,
+is their inconsistency respecting dramatic entertainments. I have never
+yet been present where two or three of my countrymen were gathered
+together, that, after a wrangling review of the weather, they did not turn
+their conversation upon the theatres. There is no topic more universally
+discussed than the decadence of the drama, or the engagements, merits,
+and adventures of the performers. Neither the Lord Chancellor nor the
+Archbishop of Canterbury is ever so familiarly known by name and person
+to the public, as the first tragedian and comedian of the day; and the
+theatrical belles and heroines are either elevated to the peerage by
+matrimony, or lowered by the undertaker into Westminster Abbey. As some
+French Vaudevillist observed, "Moliere was denied in France the rights of
+sepulture, while
+
+
+ "Garrick repose à côté de leur rois!"
+
+
+Yet, notwithstanding all this clamour of popularity--all this
+infatuation--there is no branch of the arts so grossly neglected in
+England as the drama. It is no longer the fashion in London to attend the
+theatres. Owing partly to the increase of private amusements, and partly
+to the late hours gradually adopted during the reign of George the Fourth,
+the custom of play-going has declined among the higher classes, and
+naturally produces the reaction of bad pieces and indifferent performers.
+Even a clever actor, when satisfied that he is to receive judgment from an
+unrefined and uneducated audience, will degenerate and grow slovenly; and
+from what I have observed of the London stage, I see it is the custom to
+daub for the galleries, or to creep through the business under cover of a
+cold, tame mediocrity. Without the slightest patronage from the court or
+substantial encouragement from the fosterers of literary merit, these
+luckless personages are expected to attempt the same exertions and intense
+study, which is rewarded, in foreign countries, by the most flattering and
+judicious attention; as well as by a pension, to cheer the infirmities of
+old age. Although tolerably well paid by his manager, the English actor
+has the mortification of being tyrannized and insulted by the gallery, and
+overlooked by the higher classes. A few persons of rank and fortune are
+provided with private boxes at the national theatres; but these are
+usually let by the night to plebeian tenants. It is rare indeed to observe
+a family of distinction in the dress circle of either Drury Lane or Covent
+Garden; while the French play is never deficient in a fashionable audience.
+
+The Opera, too, is nightly becoming more crowded; while at the two patent
+theatres "a beggarly account of empty boxes," and an equally beggarly
+account of flat, stale, and unprofitable performances, greets me whenever
+I am rash enough to take my post of observation. Lady Romford has a
+private box, which she visits only in preference to staying at a still
+duller home, on a disengaged evening; and Bagot occasionally drags me to
+the play, to make my foreign ignorance and inexperience a pretext for
+following Lady Clara to a spot which no one seems to visit without an
+apology. People in society give as many reasons for having done so strange
+a thing as go to see the new tragedy, as they would invent in Paris to
+excuse a similar omission.
+
+Since the Kemble munia, and the Byron mania, there has been a general
+affectation of indifference towards poetry and the drama; your true
+fashionable never mentions either without ridicule--the natural
+consequence of previously exaggerated enthusiasm.
+
+But above all the absurdities connected with this national weakness,
+stands that of the public prints. So much importance is given by the
+newspapers to every thing relating to the histrionic art, that we are
+daily informed of the whereabout of all the third-rate performers of the
+minor theatres; that "Mr. Smith, of Sadler's Wells, is engaged to Mr.
+Ducrow for the ensuing season;" or that "Miss Brown, belonging to the
+ballet department of the Surrey theatre, has sprained her ankle." While
+two thirds of a leading print are occupied with details of the Reform Bill,
+or a debate on some constitutional question,--or while the foreign
+intelligence of two sieges and a battle is concentrated with a degree of
+terseness worthy a telegraph, half a column is devoted to the plot of a
+new melo-drama at the Coburg; or to a cut and dried criticism upon the
+nine hundredth representation of _Hamlet_--beginning with the "immortal
+bard," and ending with the waistcoats of the grave-digger!--_The Opera, a
+Novel_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EUGENE ARAM.
+
+
+The recollection of this man is still preserved at Lynn, in Norfolk, at
+which town he was for some time usher at the grammar-school. A small room
+at the back of the house, in which he slept, was, until these last few
+years, (when it was pulled down and rebuilt,) mysteriously pointed to by
+the little urchins as they passed up to bed of a cold, ghost-enticing
+night, as the chamber in which the "usher, who was hanged for murder," was
+used to sleep.
+
+The tradition which remains of his character is, that he was "a man of
+loneliness and mystery," sullen and reserved; that on half-holy-days, and
+when his duties would allow, he strayed solitary and cheerless, as if to
+avoid the world, amongst the flat uninteresting marshes which are situated
+on the opposite side of the river Ouse.
+
+At Lynn the character of Aram was, until his apprehension, unexceptionable;
+but after that event, circumstances were then called to mind which seemed
+to indicate a naturally dark character; but whether these were all
+strictly founded in truth, or magnified suspicions arising from the
+appaling circumstances of the crime of which he was convicted, I am unable
+to determine. The following, derived from unquestionable authority, having
+been related by Dr. L., who was master of the grammar-school at the time,
+may serve as a sample:--there can be no doubt but that the worthy Dr.
+himself believed his suspicions well founded, as he used to tremble when
+he related it. It was customary for the parents of the scholars, on an
+appointed day, to dine with the master, at which time it was expected they
+would bring with them the amount of their bills. It was late at night,
+after one of such meetings, that Dr. L. was awakened by a noise at his
+bed-room door; he rose up, and going into the passage which led to the
+staircase, but which was not in the direct way from Aram's bed room to the
+ground-floor, he discovered the usher _dressed_. Having questioned him as
+to the object of his rising at that unseasonable hour, Aram confusedly
+answered that he had been taken unwell, and had been obliged to go do down
+stairs. The Dr. then retired, unsuspiciously, to bed. From the combined
+circumstances of the noise at the door, his great agitation and confusion,
+and from his being found in the passage, the worthy Dr., in later years,
+had no doubt, that, from its being known to Aram that a considerable sum
+of money was in his bed-room, Aram intended nothing less than to rob him;
+and no doubt, continued the narrator, he _would_ have murdered me too, if
+it had been rendered necessary, from my discovering or opposing him.
+
+The spot just at the entrance to the play-ground, at which Aram was taken
+into custody by two strange men from Yorkshire, is still remarked, and
+generally by the young scholar in a tremulous whisper.--_Literary Gazette_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NATURALIST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+AGENCY OF MAN IN EXTINGUISHING OR SPREADING SPECIES.
+
+
+Let us make some inquiries into the extent of the influence which the
+progress of society has exerted, during the last seven or eight centuries,
+in altering the distribution of our indigenous British animals. Dr.
+Fleming has prosecuted this inquiry with his usual zeal and ability, and
+in a memoir on the subject has enumerated the best authenticated examples
+of the decrease or extirpation of certain species during a period when our
+population has made the most rapid advances. We shall offer a brief
+outline of his results.
+
+The stag, as well as the fallow-deer, and the roe, were formerly so
+abundant that, according to Lesley, from five hundred to a thousand were
+sometimes slain at a hunting-match; but the native races would already
+have been extinguished, had they not been carefully preserved in certain
+forests. The otter, the marten, and the polecat, were also in sufficient
+numbers to be pursued for the sake of their fur; but they have now been
+reduced within very narrow bounds. The wild cat and fox have also been
+sacrificed throughout the greater part of the country, for the security of
+the poultry-yard or the fold. Badgers have been expelled from nearly every
+district which at former periods they inhabited.
+
+Besides these, which have been driven out from some haunts, and everywhere
+reduced in number, there are some which have been wholly extirpated; such
+as the ancient breed of indigenous horses, the wild boar and the wild oxen,
+of which last, however, a few remains are still preserved in the parks of
+some of our nobility. The beaver, which was eagerly sought after for its
+fur, had become scarce at the close of the ninth century, and, by the
+twelfth century, was only to be met with, according to Giraldus de Barri,
+in one river in Wales, and another in Scotland. The wolf, once so much
+dreaded by our ancestors, is said to have maintained its ground in Ireland
+so late as the beginning of the eighteenth century (1710,) though it had
+been extirpated in Scotland thirty years before, and in England at a much
+earlier period. The bear, which in Wales was regarded as a beast of the
+chase equal to the hare or the boar, only perished as a native of Scotland
+in the year 1057.
+
+Many native birds of prey have also been the subjects of unremitting
+persecution. The eagles, larger hawks, and ravens, have disappeared from
+the more cultivated districts. The haunts of the mallard, the snipe, the
+redshank, and the bittern, have been drained equally with the summer
+dwellings of the lapwing and the curlew. But these species still linger in
+some portion of the British isles; whereas the large capercailzies, or
+wood grouse, formerly natives of the pine forests of Ireland and Scotland,
+have been destroyed within the last fifty years. The egret and the crane,
+which appear to have been formerly very common in Scotland, are now only
+occasional visitants.
+
+The bustard (_Otis tarda_,) observes Graves in his _British Ornithology_,
+"was formerly seen in the downs and heaths of various parts of our island,
+in flocks of forty or fifty birds; whereas it is now a circumstance of
+rare occurrence to meet with a single individual." Bewick also remarks,
+"that they were formerly more common in this island than at present; they
+are now found only in the open counties of the south and east, in the
+plains of Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, and some parts of Yorkshire." In the few
+years that have elapsed since Bewick wrote, this bird has entirely
+disappeared from Wiltshire and Dorsetshire.
+
+These changes, we may observe, are derived from very imperfect memorials,
+and relate only to the larger and more conspicuous animals inhabiting a
+small spot on the globe; but they cannot fail to exalt our conception of
+the enormous revolutions which, in the course of several thousand years,
+the whole human species must have effected.
+
+The kangaroo and the emu are retreating rapidly before the progress of
+colonization in Australia; and it scarcely admits of doubt, that the
+general cultivation of that country must lead to the extirpation of both.
+The most striking example of the loss, even within the last two centuries,
+of a remarkable species, is that of the dodo--a bird first seen by the
+Dutch when they landed on the Isle of France, at that time uninhabited,
+immediately after the discovery of the passage to the East Indies by the
+Cape of Good Hope. It was of a large size and singular form; its wings
+short, like those of an ostrich, and wholly incapable of sustaining its
+heavy body even for a short flight. In its general appearance it differed
+from the ostrich, cassowary, or any known bird.
+
+Many naturalists gave figures of the dodo after the commencement of the
+seventeenth century; and there is a painting of it in the British Museum,
+which is said to have been taken from a living individual. Beneath the
+painting is a leg, in a fine state of preservation, which ornithologists
+are agreed cannot belong to any other known bird. In the museum at Oxford,
+also, there is a foot and a head, in an imperfect state, but M. Cuvier
+doubts the identy of this species with that of which the painting is
+preserved in London.
+
+In spite of the most active search, during the last century, no
+information respecting the dodo was obtained, and some authors have gone
+so far as to pretend that it never existed; but amongst a great mass of
+satisfactory evidence in favour of the recent existence of this species,
+we may mention that an assemblage of fossil bones were recently discovered,
+under a bed of lava, in the Isle of France, and sent to the Paris museum
+by M. Desjardins. They almost all belonged to a large living species of
+land-tortoise, called _Testudu Indica_, but amongst them were the head,
+sternum, and humerus of the dodo. M. Cuvier showed me these valuable
+remains in Paris, and assured me that they left no doubt in his mind that
+the huge bird was one of the gallinaceous tribe.
+
+Next to the direct agency of man, his indirect influence in multiplying
+the numbers of large herbivorous quadrupeds of domesticated races, may be
+regarded as one of the most obviate causes of the extermination of species.
+On this, and on several other grounds, the introduction of the horse, ox,
+and other mammalia, into America, and their rapid propagation over that
+continent within the last three centuries, is a fact of great importance
+in natural history. The extraordinary herds of wild cattle and horses
+which overran the plains of South America, sprang from a very few pairs
+first carried over by the Spaniards; and they prove that the wide
+geographical range of large species in great continents does not
+necessarily imply that they have existed there from remote periods.
+Humboldt observes, in his Travels, on the authority of Azara, that it is
+believed there exist, in the Pampas of Buenos Ayres, twelve million cows
+and three million horses, without comprising in this enumeration the
+cattle that have no acknowledged proprietor. In the Llanos of Caraccas,
+the rich hateros, or proprietors of pastoral farms, are entirely ignorant
+of the number of cattle they possess. The young are branded with a mark
+peculiar to each herd, and some of the most wealthy owners mark as many as
+fourteen thousand a year. In the northern plains, from the Orinoco to the
+lake of Maracaybo, M. Depons reckoned that one million two hundred
+thousand oxen, one hundred and eighty thousand horses, and ninety thousand
+mules, wandered at large. In some parts of the valley of the Mississippi,
+especially in the country of the Osage Indians, wild horses are immensely
+numerous.
+
+The establishment of black cattle in America dates from Columbus's second
+voyage to St. Domingo. They there multiplied rapidly; and that island
+presently became a kind of nursery from which these animals were
+successively transported to various parts of the continental coast, and
+from thence into the interior. Notwithstanding these numerous exportations,
+in twenty-seven years after the discovery of the island, herds of four
+thousand head, as we learn from Oviedo, were not uncommon, and there were
+even some that amounted to eight thousand. In 1587, the number of hides
+exported from St. Domingo alone, according to Acosta's report, was
+thirty-five thousand four hundred and forty-four; and in the same year
+there were exported sixty-four thousand three hundred and fifty from the
+ports of New Spain. This was in the sixty-fifth year after the taking of
+Mexico, previous to which event the Spaniards, who came into that country,
+had not been able to engage in any thing else than war. All our readers
+are aware that these animals are now established throughout the American
+continent, from Canada to Paraguay.
+
+The ass has thriven very generally in the New World; and we learn from
+Ulloa, that in Quito they ran wild, and multiplied in amazing numbers, so
+as to become a nuisance. They grazed together in herds, and, when attacked,
+defended themselves with their mouths. If a horse happened to stray into
+the places where they fed, they all fell upon him, and did not cease
+biting and kicking till they left him dead.
+
+The first hogs were carried to America by Columbus, and established in the
+island of St. Domingo the year following its discovery in November, 1493.
+In succeeding years they were introduced into other places where the
+Spaniards settled; and, in the space of half a century, they were found
+established in the New World, from the latitude of 25 deg. north, to the
+40th deg. of south latitude. Sheep, also, and goats have multiplied
+enormously in the New World, as have also the cat and the rat, which last,
+as we before stated, has been imported unintentionally in ships. The dogs
+introduced by man, which have at different periods become wild in America,
+hunted in packs like the wolf and the jackal, destroying not only hogs,
+but the calves and foals of the wild cattle and horses.
+
+Ulloa in his voyage, and Buffon on the authority of old writers, relate a
+fact which illustrates very clearly the principle before explained by us,
+of the check which the increase of one animal necessarily offers to that
+of another. The Spaniards had introduced goats into the island of Juan
+Fernandez, where they became so prolific as to furnish the pirates who
+infested those seas with provisions. In order to cut off this resource
+from the bucaneers, a number of dogs were turned loose into the island;
+and so numerous did they become in their turn, that they destroyed the
+goats in every accessible part, after which the number of the wild dogs
+again decreased.
+
+As an example of the rapidity with which a large tract may become peopled
+by the offspring of a single pair of quadrupeds, we may mention that in
+the year 1773, thirteen rein-deer were exported from Norway, only three of
+which reached Iceland. These were turned loose into the mountains of
+Guldbringe Syssel, where they multiplied so greatly, in the course of
+forty years, that it was not uncommon to meet with herds consisting of
+from forty to one hundred in various districts.--_Lyell's Geology_, vol.
+ii.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NOVELIST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CONFESSION OF SERVENTIUS.
+
+(_Concluded from page 46_.)
+
+
+That evening, Father Dominick, our excellent priest, and my tutor in the
+classics, was closeted for a length of time with my afflicted nominal
+parents; and two days afterwards taking me with him to his monastery, he
+introduced me to the superior, as an orphan, the child of dear and
+particular friends, confided by them to his charge for education upon
+their death-bed, and with a distinct understanding that I was not bound to
+take upon myself monastic vows, the superior allowed me to remain with him
+as a boarder. Serventius and Artemisia I never more beheld, and every
+inquiry respecting them which I ventured to make of Father Dominick, was
+checked with a strange, sad look, and an admonition to mention them no
+more. Seven long and peaceful years, I spent in the monastery; and at the
+expiration of that period, was placed by my guardian in the house of the
+celebrated Doctor Sanazio of Padua, as a student of medicine. Here, novel
+and delightful studies, speculations, and scenes, opened upon my
+inquisitive, ardent mind, and amused my enthusiastic imagination. Sanazio
+was regarded in learned Padua, as little less than a demi-god; at certain
+hours he visited his patients, amongst whom might generally be numbered
+three-fourths of the population of Padua; at certain hours, his own
+mansion was crowded like the audience-hall of some mighty potentate, with
+supplicants for food and physic; three evenings in the week were devoted
+by him to intense study in his own secret, solitary chamber; and upon the
+alternate three, he received the visits of those who desired to consult
+him upon abstruse points, only properly to be solved by an acquaintance
+with the occult sciences. In brief, my honoured master, I soon discovered,
+was reckoned a very fair conjuror; he consulted the stars, drew horoscopes,
+cast nativities, was learned in the expositions of dreams and omens,
+undertook to give information respecting lost property, and matrimonial
+prospects; composed, and dispensed charms and philtres, and proved himself,
+as I have hinted, a capital astrologer, and something more. How Sanazio,
+who certainly was a very extraordinary man, acquired his multifarious
+information, unless really by supernatural agency, I am at a loss to
+discover. Ignatius Druso, my fellow student, was of opinion that he only
+dexterously availed himself in the evening of the news which he had
+gathered from his patients in the morning; and that his familiars were no
+more than a few active emissaries, for whose espionage and additional
+gleanings of town news, it answered to him well, to pay. Ever partial to
+romance, I did not readily fall in with Druso's sober view of this subject,
+and the longer I lived with Doctor Sanazio, the more occasion had I to
+doubt the correctness of his opinion, because some things occurred of
+which my master obtained immediate and accurate knowledge, whilst I am
+perfectly certain that no human tongue had divulged them to him; take the
+following incident as an example:--Druso and myself were accustomed, on
+those evenings which Sanazio spent in his sanctum, to visit patients in
+his stead, to range over the town, to go to places of public amusement, or
+to conclude our meritorious labours at a tavern. Being one night at this
+latter place, an old woman entered, and inquiring whether I were Master
+Serventius, Doctor Sanazio's pupil, slipped a billet and a piece of gold
+into my hand and desired me to follow her. I did so, without hesitation,
+and whilst behind my guide, contrived to peruse the note by moon-light,
+which contained these words:
+
+"I am sick,--of the heart's mortal sickness;--relieve it, and great shall
+be thy recompense."
+
+Perplexed, yet amused, by what promised an adventure, I followed my
+ancient guide into a house whose exterior was sufficiently humble; but,
+having ascended a steep flight of stairs, she threw open the door of a
+chamber in which they terminated, and I found myself not only in a
+richly-furnished apartment, but in the presence of a lady, young as
+immortal Hebe, and fair as day. I saw at a glance that her ills were those
+of the mind only, and ere she had opened her lips to detail them and
+engage me in her cause, I had vowed, heart and soul, to be her champion.
+Having complimented me upon the high character she had heard of my prowess,
+understanding, and principles, she informed me, with little circumlocution,
+that various unhappy family circumstances had rendered it necessary for
+her to seek friends amongst strangers; that she was a novice of the
+Convent of St. Anne, but on the eve of profession, and that having long
+been under an engagement of marriage with a young gentleman of family,
+respecting whom her relations had used her very deceitfully and cruelly,
+she had fixed upon me as a person little likely to be subjected to
+suspicion on her account, to aid Signor Fernandez in the difficult and
+hazardous enterprise, which she said must be a work of time and prudence,
+of carrying her off from the convent. Having obtained my promise to this
+effect, she detailed her plans, and furnished me with the means of
+continual communication with her lover and herself. I returned home,
+highly elated at the trust reposed in me, at the importance which I had
+acquired in my own eyes, and at the prospect of a handsome remuneration
+for my services, from the lovely object of them. Sanazio, with lamp in
+hand, and arrayed in his night attire, to my great terror and surprise,
+opened the door to me himself; it was very late, Druso had long since
+returned without me, and in order to allay the storm which I saw gathering
+upon mine ancient master's brow, I slipped the gold given to me by the
+confidante of beautiful Antonia, into his unreluctant hand.
+
+"Unhappy youth!" exclaimed Sanazio, "beware of aiding the nun, lest thou
+bring upon her and upon thyself the fate of Artemisia and Serventius."
+
+These words so alarmed me that I nearly fainted; for how, in the name of
+all things holy and gracious, came Sanazio to know in whose society I had
+passed the last hour, and what was the subject of our conversation? His
+terrible allusion too, to those lost loved ones, of whose untimely fate I
+was still so ignorant, strangely troubled my conscious breast. Let me be
+brief, the hours of my ill-fated existence are fast wearing away, and I
+have yet more to relate. To Ignatius Druso I was obliged to confide my
+secret, because his assistance, in the furtherance of plans which were
+always requiring, from little immaterial circumstances, some slight
+alterations, was found necessary; and it must here suffice those to know,
+who shall, after my destruction do me the melancholy favour of perusing
+this retrospective record, that some months after Antonia had taken the
+veil, I succeeded in restoring her to the arms of her lover, witnessed
+their private nuptials, visited them in their new residence, a villa in a
+secluded spot far from Padua, and received my promised recompense. "Young
+man! you've ruined yourself; and your fatal destiny is sealed!" were the
+remarkable words of Sanazio, on the morning after the completion of my
+enterprise, but long ere the elopement of the new devotee became publicly
+known. However, he never reverted to the subject, not even upon his
+death-bed; and after the learned doctor's decease, when I came into the
+whole of his practice, and no small portion of his fame, I was easy, for
+the memory of that sacrilege had passed away.
+
+Ignatius Druso, like myself, resided in Padua, but soon quitted the
+medical profession, disgusted, I fancy, at finding that I had become a
+second Sanazio, whilst he commanded little or no attention: still we were
+friends, nor did I suspect that the germs of envy and malice were sown in
+his bosom, and that I had trusted him with one secret, or more, too much.
+"Serventius, my son," had said the venerable Sanazio to me upon his
+death-bed, "your ardent desire of knowledge and discreet use of it,
+encourage me ere I quit this world, to entrust you with the grand arcanum
+of our art; as yet, you know not the secret of my success, but take then
+this hint and improve upon it. Can he repair a piece of mechanism, who is
+ignorant of its make, its parts, and how they act upon, and affect one
+another? Behold this key; it is that of my laboratory, and may it indeed
+open the door of knowledge to you."
+
+After Sanazio's decease, curiosity quickly led me to his study: I was
+alone, and the shades of evening were stealing over the earth: conceive
+then my utter dismay and superstitious horror upon suddenly entering, what
+I could but suppose to be a charnel-house! Its effluvium was intolerable,
+and well accounted for by (loathsome spectacle!) a disorderly collection
+of human fragments in various stages of preservation and decay! A dozen
+grisly skeletons grinned upon me from pedestals round the room, and in the
+centre of it, the half dissected body of a man, stretched upon a large
+lava slab, supported by tressels, was more horrible and odious than all. I
+now comprehended the full meaning of Sanazio's dying words and secret; but
+received at the same time, a shock which to this day I have not recovered;
+I found myself compelled to make Druso my confidant in this matter, and my
+companion in some of my first attempts at following the hideous occupation
+recommended by my deceased friend. By degrees I grew accustomed to the
+horrors of the room and of my employment. Druso, who found himself better
+engaged in courting the living than in cutting up the dead, was no longer
+necessary to me in the prosecution of my hateful studies, and kept aloof,
+but I soon discovered the value of them, in my increase of knowledge,
+employment, and reputation. At last an epidemic raged in Padua, proving
+very fatal; Ignatius, alarmed for the safety of his Phaedera, who was
+attacked, applied to me, and I cured her. Some time afterwards, the
+ungrateful wretch rushed into my laboratory, claiming the body upon which
+I was operating, as that of a young man, cousin to Phaedera, which had
+miraculously disappeared just previous to the day intended for its
+interment. The features of the poor wretch were too much disfigured to
+render possible his recognition by them, but Druso swore to its being the
+body of Marcus, from a scar on the left leg, which had been wounded
+severely by a quoit. Of course I refused to resign, that, for which I had
+paid a handsome price, and to reveal the names of those from whom I
+purchased it. So Druso dragged me before the Supreme Council, impeached me
+of sacrilege in the affair of the nun, of theft, and of violating the
+sanctity of the tomb, of barbarously mutilating the dead, and of applying
+their lacerated remains to the unholy purposes of sorcery! and on these
+counts have I been indicted, found guilty, and sentenced to be burnt as a
+sacrilegious heretic, an unnatural robber, and a formidable wizard!
+Antonia, the mother of seven children, is to be--like the unchaste
+vestal--immured! Oh Heaven! whilst Druso the Informer, receiving at the
+same time the portion of a prince for his venal treachery, will celebrate
+his union with Phaedera, amidst the shrieks and groans of his expiring
+victims!
+
+I cannot now proceed: ere I am bound to the fatal stake, methinks I shall
+die of shame, grief, and terror. And did the friends of my infancy, my
+parents, suffer as I shall suffer? Then, welcome death! welcome, hated
+dawn of my last day, for innocence and truth are banished from the earth!
+Hark! the key turning in the lock of my cell! Hark! those boding and
+pitying voices without! Father Dominick! Servilius! Andrea! kindest! best!
+--I die--but I die innocent, the victim only-----Hah! to burn--burn--burn!
+Gracious Heaven! pardon the strife of nature! My brain whirls!--my eyes
+cloud!--my black, dry, swollen lips,--throat--bosom--heart--O mother of
+God!--O! Saviour--Redeemer--pardon, pardon!--Father of Mercies,---receive
+me!
+
+_Great Marlow, Bucks._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SCENES FROM THE (OLD) FRENCH REVOLUTION.
+
+(_From the "Quarterly" Review of Madame Junot's Memoirs_.)
+
+
+About the beginning of the revolution, a working-man, by name Thirion, had
+established himself in a little stall (in Paris,) where he carried on his
+business as a mender of carpets. He called one morning to ask M. Permon's
+(a Royalist[1]) custom, but was civilly told that the family had long
+employed a tradesman of his class, and could not change for a stranger:
+the man took the refusal so insolently, that he was at last turned out of
+doors, vowing revenge. M. Permon, the ports being still open, makes a run
+over to London to place some money in our funds. Meantime "the Sections
+are organized," and Thirion becomes "Secretaire, Greffier, President, je
+ne scai quoi, de la notre." The morning after his return to Paris, M.
+Permon had just risen, when footsteps were heard loud on the staircase,
+and in burst Citizen Thirion, two other patriots of the Sectional
+Committee, and the carpetman's shopboy. (Madame Junot's Narrative
+commences here.)
+
+"My father was shaving himself. Naturally quick tempered, his impatience
+was extreme when he recognised the individual, and he was imprudent enough
+to make a menacing gesture the moment they broke into his dressing-room.
+'I am here to see the law enforced,' cries Thirion, on seeing my father
+advance with the razor in his hand. 'Well, what law is it that chooses so
+worthy an organ?'--'I am here to learn your age, your pursuits, and to
+interrogate you as to your journey to Coblentz.' My father, who had from
+the first word felt the most violent disposition to toss the man down
+stairs, shivered with rage; but, at last, he composed himself, wiped his
+chin, laid down his razor, and, crossing his arms, placed himself full in
+front of Thirion: then, measuring him from the utmost height of his tall
+and elegant person, he said, 'You wish to know my age?'--'Yes, such are my
+orders.'--Where is the order?' said my father, extending his hand. 'It is
+enough for you to know that I am sent hither by the committee of my
+section: my orders are sufficiently proved by my presence.'--Ah! you think
+so; I am of a different opinion. Your presence here is nothing but an
+insult, unless you have a judiciary order to justify it; show it me, and I
+shall forget the name of the man, to see only the public functionary.'
+Thirion raised his voice as my father lowered his--'What is your
+age?--What was the object of your going to Coblentz?'----My father seizes
+a large bamboo, and makes it whistle over Thirion's head--at that moment
+my mother rushes in, and succeeds in dragging him into another room, and
+restoring him to something like calmness. I remember she placed me in his
+arms, whispering to me to entreat him to _think of me_. Meantime, Thirion
+had drawn up his _procès verbal_, and withdrawn:--he left me weeping
+without knowing why I wept, but I saw that my mother and my sister were in
+tears too. My father sat pale, trembling with anger,--everything about us
+had a desolate aspect."
+
+The family escape from Paris--and it was time. Violent alternations of
+fear, anger, sorrow, terror, and disgust, with frequent disguises, flights,
+and all sorts of changes of residence, at length wear out the health and
+spirits of M. Permon--a man, apparently, who united dull enough intellect
+with all the vivacity of a Frenchman's mere temperament; and he dies in
+obscurity long before anything like order is re-established. We need not
+dwell on the particular fortunes of a not very interesting set of people;
+but may quote one or two more specimens of the sort of scenes which fill
+the greater part of the first of these volumes. Our authoress and her
+sister are at one time separated from their parents, and placed in an
+obscure _pension_ in the Faubourg (no longer _St._) Antoine. Their brother,
+a very young man, has also remained in Paris, and frequently visits them
+in their retreat.
+
+"We could not but observe, that for some days he had been very melancholy,
+and that he was getting more and more so. We asked the reason, and he told
+us at last that the section had denounced my father in a very alarming
+style. We fell a-crying, my sister and I. Albert consoled us as well as he
+could, but it was easy to see that the denunciation was not all--that some
+immediate danger fixed his fears. We knew afterwards, in effect, that a
+report had been spread of the arrest of my parents at Limoges--happily a
+false one. The horizon meanwhile was taking a bloody tint. Judge of my
+brother's anxiety! he came every day in a cabriolet, which my father had
+had built just before these late events; it was an elegant one, very lofty,
+of the kind called _wiski._ Already he had been all but insulted by the
+populace in driving through the faubourg; but liveries had not yet
+altogether disappeared, and nothing would persuade him to listen to our
+remonstrances, and make the domestic put off his. Thus it was on the 31st
+of August, when he came to see us as usual."
+
+"There was about the boarding-house a man charged with all the rough work,
+by name Jaquemart, a fellow that could do everything--but the most
+atrocious of countenances. 'The sight of that man makes me sick,' said
+Albert; 'I am sure he will end in something tragic.'"
+
+"One day, shortly after we went to the _pension_, Jaquemart was bringing
+in a load of wood, when my brother drove at the speed of his horse into
+the entrance. He saw the man had a burden that would hardly allow him to
+get out of the way in time--cried _'Gare!'_--perceived that his efforts
+were in vain--and pulled back his horse so sharply as to run much risk of
+wounding the animal, and, indeed, of being thrown out himself, owing to
+the extraordinary elevation of the _wiski_. Jaquemart, however, escaped by
+this means with a scratch on his leg; his eyes were good, he saw what
+Albert had done to master his horse, and vowed gratitude."
+
+"The 31st of August the man had nothing to do about the house, yet he kept
+lounging at the gate, or in the court, all day long. It was late ere
+Albert came--he had been waiting for him, and whispered, as he alighted,
+'Stay here to-night to take care of your sisters--don't go home.' Albert
+looked at him with astonishment; he had, indeed, perceived symptoms of
+some commotion, but fancied, as most of Paris did, that it would be
+directed against the Temple. 'What is your meaning?' said he. 'I entreat
+you to stay here--you will be near your sisters; and if there be need for
+another hand, mine shall not be far off--very well!--we shall be there.'
+Albert pressed him with questions, but could extract nothing; and after
+giving the man some money, persisted; in returning home as usual."
+
+"All know the frightful story of the day after this. Albert's anxiety for
+us makes him brave every danger, and he comes to us again. The first
+person he sees at our door is Jaquemart, in the costume of the most
+atrocious of bandits; our ladies had not dared to bid him go away, but his
+appearance made them tremble. 'I did not desire you to come hither, but to
+stay here,' he said; 'why have I not been obeyed?' 'Why do you speak
+so--was this house particularly menaced?' 'I know nothing of that--at such
+a moment one should fear everything.'"
+
+"We heard groans, weeping, all Paris had not been at _the massacre_. It
+was late. They pressed Albert to stay, but he would not. He promised,
+however, to come back next morning.----That day he was obliged to stay
+at home till about three o'clock, arranging and burning papers. He then
+came out to visit us, and found himself in the midst of crowds of men,
+drunken and bloody; many were naked to the waist, their breasts covered
+with blood. They carried fragments of clothing on their pikes and
+sabres--their faces were inflamed, their eyes haggard, the whole scene
+hideous. These groups became more and more frequent and numerous as he
+advanced. In mortal anxiety for us, he determined to push through
+everything, and, urging his horse to its speed, reached at length the
+front of the Hôtel Beaumarchais. There he was stopped by an immense
+crowd--always the same figures naked and bloodstained, but here their
+looks were those of enraged fiends. They shout, they scream, they sing,
+they dance--the saturnalia of hell. On seeing Albert's cabriolet, they
+redoubled their cries--'An aristocrat! give it him, give it him!' In a
+moment the cabriolet is surrounded, and from the midst of the crowd an
+object rises and moves towards him. His agitation perplexes his view--he
+perceives long fair tresses dabbled with blood--a countenance beautiful
+even yet. It approaches--it is thrust upon his face; he recognises the
+features--it is the head of Madame de Lamballe!"
+
+"The servant whips the horse with all the strength of his arm. The
+generous animal, with the instinctive horror of his race for dead bodies,
+springs with redoubled speed from the spectacle of horror. The frightful
+trophy, and the cannibals that bore it, had been overturned in the
+mud--screams and imprecations pursued Albert, stretched senseless at the
+bottom of the cabriolet. The servant had kept the reins, and whipped the
+more fiercely, because he could perceive, from the motion of the carriage,
+that some one had got up behind it, and hoped that the rapidity of its
+progress would shake him off."
+
+"In a few minutes Albert reached our door--judge of our alarm!--pale,
+still quite senseless, not breathing. The moment the cabriolet stopped,
+the man behind jumped down, took my brother in his arms, as if he had been
+a child, and carried him into the house. It was Jaquemart. 'The monsters,'
+said he, 'the monsters! the poor young man, they have killed him too.'
+What could Jaquemart have been doing in such a garb, and among such a
+troop o' ruffians?"
+
+
+ [1] And father of Madame Junot.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+The Paris correspondent of the _Court Journal_ gives the following
+incident at the King's Ball, about a fortnight since. I happened to be
+near his majesty when he addressed himself to an Englishman, wearing the
+Cross of Three Days. "Where did you signalize yourself, sir?" inquired the
+monarch. "At the Tuilleries, sire," was the answer. "_C'est aux braves de
+Juillet que je dois ma couronne_," said his majesty. The gentleman thus
+honoured was M. Bennis,[1] in whose literary establishment the king seems
+to take much interest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+GUTTING THE FISH.
+
+
+One evening a red-headed Connaught swell, of no small aristocratic
+pretensions in his own eyes, sent his servant, whom he had just imported
+from the long-horned kingdom, in all the rough majesty of a creature fresh
+from the "wilds," to purchase a hundred of oysters on the City-quay. Paddy
+staid so long away, that Squire Trigger got quite impatient and unhappy
+lest his "body man" might have slipt into the Liffey; however, to his
+infinite relief, Paddy soon made his appearance, puffing and blowing like
+a disabled bellows, but carrying his load seemingly in great triumph.
+"Well, Pat," cried the master, "what the devil kept you so long?" "Long! a
+thin, may be it's what you'd have me to come home with half my _arrant?_"
+says Pat. "Half the oysters?" says the master. "No; but too much of the
+_fish_." says Pat. "What fish?" says he. "The oysters, to be sure," says
+Pat. "What do you mean, blockhead?" says he. "I mean," says Pat, "that
+there was no use with loading myself with more nor was useful."
+"Will you explain yourself?" says he. "I will," says Pat laying down his
+load. "Well then, you see, plaise your Honour, as I was coming home along
+the quay, mighty peaceable, who should I meet but Shammus Maginnis; 'Good
+morrow, Shamien,' sis I; 'Good morrow kindly, Paudeen,' sis he; 'What is
+it you have in the sack?' sis he; 'A _Cwt_. of oysters,' sis I; 'Let us
+look at them,' says he; 'I will, and welcome,' sis I; 'Orah! thunder and
+pratees!' sis he, openin the sack an examinin them; 'who _sowld_ you
+these?' 'One Tom Kinahan that keeps a small ship there below,' sis I;
+'Musha then, bad luck to that same Tom that _sowld_ the likes to you,' sis
+he; 'Arrah, why, avic?' sis I; 'To make a _Bolshour_ ov you an give thim
+to you without gutting thim,' sis he; 'An arn't they gutted, Jim, aroon,'
+sis I; 'Oh! bad luck to the one o' thim,' sis he; 'Musha then,' sis I,
+'what the dhoul will I do at all at all, fur the master will be mad;' 'Do!'
+sis he, 'why I'd rather do the thing for you mysel nor you should lose
+your place,' sis he; so wid that he begins to gut them wid his knife,
+_nate_ and _clain_, an afeereed ov dirtying the flags, begor, he
+swallowed the guts himself from beginnin to ind, tal he had thim as dacent
+as you see thim here"--dashing down at his master's feet his bag of oyster
+shells, to the no small amazement of the Connaught worthy, as you may
+suppose.--_Dublin Comet_.
+
+
+ [1] The agent for the MIRROR, in Paris.--ED. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FAMILIAR SCIENCE.
+
+
+This Day was published, with many Engravings, price 5_s_.,
+
+ ARCANA OF SCIENCE,
+ AND
+ ANNUAL REGISTER of the USEFUL ARTS,
+ for 1832:
+
+Abridged from the Transactions of Public Societies, and Scientific
+Journals, British and Foreign, for the past year.
+
+This volume will contain all the Important Facts in the year 1831--in the
+
+ MECHANIC ARTS,
+ CHEMICAL SCIENCE,
+ ZOOLOGY,
+ BOTANY,
+ MINERALOGY,
+ GEOLOGY,
+ METEOROLOGY,
+ RURAL ECONOMY,
+ GARDENING.
+ DOMESTIC ECONOMY,
+ USEFUL AND ELEGANT ARTS,
+ GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERIES,
+ MISCELLANEOUS SCIENTIFIC INFORMATION.
+
+Printing for John Limbird, 143, Strand; of whom may be had volumes (upon
+the same plan) for 1828, price 4_s_. 6_d_., 1829--30--31, price 5_s_. each.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Printed and Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, (near Somerset House,)
+London; sold by ERNEST FLEISCHER, 626, New Market, Leipsic. G.G. Bennis,
+55, Rue Neuve, St. Augustin, Paris; and by all Newsmen and Booksellers._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement,
+and Instruction., by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11538 ***
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+ <title>The Mirror of Literature, Volume XIX. No. 531.</title>
+
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11538 ***</div>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page49"
+ name="page49">
+ </a>[pg 49]
+</span>
+
+ <h1>THE MIRROR<br />
+ OF<br />
+ LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.</h1>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <table width="100%" summary="Volume, Number, and Date">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left"><b>Vol. XIX. No. 531.]</b></td>
+ <td align="center"><b>SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1832.</b></td>
+ <td align="right"><b>[PRICE 2d.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>PONTEFRACT CASTLE, 1648.</h2>
+
+<div class="figure" style="width:100%;"><a href="images/531-001.png">
+<img width = "100%" src="images/531-001.png" alt="PONTEFRACT CASTLE, 1648." /></a></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page50"
+ name="page50">
+ </a>[pg 50]
+</span>
+
+<h2>PONTEFRACT CASTLE.</h2>
+<p>
+Pontrefact, a place of considerable note in English history, is situated
+about two miles south-west from Ferrybridge, nine miles nearly east from
+Wakefield, and fifteen miles north-west from Doncaster, in Yorkshire. The
+origin of the town is unknown; and the etymology of its name has been a
+matter of dispute, in which figures a monkish legend ascribing the name of
+Ponsfractus, or Pontefract, to the breaking of a bridge, and the fall of
+many persons into the river Aire, who were miraculously saved by St.
+William, Archbishop of York. The river Ouse and the city of York, however,
+put in a stronger claim as the scene of this miracle, and unfortunately
+for Pontefract, the town is so named in charters of fifty-three years'
+date before the miracle is pretended to have been performed. Still the
+etymology is referable to the breaking down of "<i>some bridge</i>," (<i>pons</i>,
+bridge; <i>fractus</i>, broken,) but this unravelment is not antiquarian.
+Camden says, that in the Saxon times, the name of this town was Kirkby,
+which was changed by the Normans to Pontefract, because of a broken bridge
+that was there. But as there is no river within two miles of the place,
+this bridge appears to have been built over the Wash, which lies about a
+quarter of a mile to the east of the Castle. Other researches prove
+Pontefract to have been a secondary and subordinate Roman station.
+</p>
+<p>
+The history of the Castle is, of course, involved in that of the manor.
+The town is stated to have been a burgh in the time of Edward the
+Confessor; but how long it had enjoyed this privilege is uncertain.
+<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1">
+</a>
+<sup>
+<a href="#footnote1">1</a>
+</sup>
+
+After the Conquest, this manor, with 150 others, or the greatest part of
+so many in Yorkshire, besides ten in Nottinghamshire, and four in
+Lincolnshire, were given by William to Hildebert, or Ilbert de Lacy, one
+of his Norman followers, who <i>built the Castle</i>. The work occupied twelve
+years, and it was finished in 1080. The labour and expense of its erection
+was so great, that no person unless in the possession of a princely
+fortune, could have completed a work of such magnitude. Hildebert was
+succeeded by his son Robert, commonly called Robert de Pontefract, from
+his being born at that town. Robert enjoyed his vast possessions in peace
+during the reign of William Rufus; but after the accession of Henry I. he
+with more ambition than prudence, joined with Robert, Duke of Normandy,
+the King's brother, who claimed the crown of England. In consequence of
+this transaction, Robert de Lacy was banished the realm, and the castle
+and honour of Pontefract were given by the King to Henry Traverse, and
+afterwards to Henry De-laval.
+<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a>
+ <sup><a href="#footnote2">2</a>
+</sup>
+ Robert de Lacy was, however, restored
+after a few years exile, and the property continued in the Lacy family
+till the year 1193, when another Robert de Lacy dying without issue, the
+estate and honour of Pontefract devolved on his uterine sister Aubrey de
+Lisours, who carried these estates of the Lacys by marriage to Richard
+Fitz-Eustace, constable of Chester. Thence they descended to John
+Fitz-Eustace, who accompanied Richard I. in his crusade, and is said to
+have died at Tyre in Palestine. Roger, his eldest son, also in the crusade,
+succeeded to his honour and estates. He was present with Richard at the
+memorable siege of Acre. On his return to England he was the first of his
+family that took the name of Lacy, in which Pontefract Castle continued
+till 1310, when Henry de Lacy, through default of male issue, left his
+possessions to his daughter and heiress, Alice, who was married to Thomas,
+Earl of Lancaster; and, in case of a failure of issue from that marriage,
+he entailed them on the King and his heirs.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Earl of Lancaster, it will be remembered, became embroiled with Edward
+II. and his minion Gaveston, who partly through the interference of
+Lancaster, was beheaded at Warwick after a siege in Scarborough Custle.
+The King swore vengeance for the death of his favourite, which led this
+weak sovereign into a long series of dissentions with the barons, at the
+head of whom, was the Earl of Lancaster. Both parties now flew to arms,
+but Lancaster soon found himself ill supported by his compeers, and
+marching northward for reinforcements from the celebrated Bruce, King of
+Scotland, the King in the meantime, sent the Earl of Surrey and Kent to
+besiege the castle of Pontefract, which surrendered at the first summons.
+Lancaster was next closely pursued by the king with great superiority of
+numbers. "The earl, endeavouring to rally his troops, was taken prisoner,
+with ninety-five barons and knights, and carried to the castle of
+Pontefract, where he was imprisoned in a tower which Leland says he had
+newly made towards the abbey," This tower was square: its wall of great
+strength, being 10-1/2 feet thick; nor was there
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page51"
+ name="page51">
+ </a>[pg 51]
+</span>
+ any other entrance into
+the interior than by a hole or trap-door in the floor of the turret: so
+that the prisoner must have been let down into this abode of darkness,
+from whence there could be no possible mode of escape; the room was
+twenty-five feet square. A few days after, the King being at Pontefract
+ordered him to be arraigned in the hall of the castle, before a small
+number of peers, among whom were the Spencers, his mortal enemies. The
+earl was condemned to be hanged, drawn, and quartered; but the punishment
+was changed to decapitation. After sentence was passed, he said, "Shall I
+die without answer?" He was not, however, permitted to speak; but a
+certain Gascoign took him away, and having put an old hood over his head,
+set him on a lean mare without a bridle. Being attended by a Dominican
+friar as his confessor, he was carried out of the town amidst the insults
+of the people; and there beheaded. Thus fell Thomas, Earl of Lancaster,
+the first Prince of the Blood, being uncle to Edward II. who condemned him
+to death. Several of his adherents were hanged at Pontefract.
+</p>
+<p>
+The next royal blood that stained Pontefract castle was that of King
+Richard II. who was here murdered or starved to death; though there is a
+tradition that it was merely given out that Richard had starved himself to
+death, and that he escaped from Pontefract to Mull, whence he shortly
+proceeded to the mainland of Scotland, where, for nineteen years, he was
+entertained in an honourable but secret captivity.
+<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a>
+ <sup><a href="#footnote3">3</a></sup>
+
+ The matter remains
+in tragic darkness.
+<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a>
+ <sup>
+ <a href="#footnote4">4</a>
+ </sup>
+
+ In the succeeding reign of Henry IV. Richard
+Scroope, archbishop of York, being taken prisoner, was in Pontefract
+castle, condemned to death. Next in the calendar of atrocities committed
+within these drear walls, were the murders of Anthony Woodville, Earl
+Rivers; Richard, Lord Grey; Sir Thomas Vaughan; and Sir Richard Hawse, in
+1483; by Richard III., whom Shakspeare makes to whine forth:
+</p>
+<div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>O Pomfret, Pomfret! O thou bloody prison!</p>
+ <p>Fatal and ominous to noble peers!</p>
+ <p>Within the guilty closure of thy walls,</p>
+ <p>Richard II. here was hack'd to death;</p>
+ <p>And for more slander to thy dismal seat,</p>
+ <p>We give to thee our guiltless blood to drink.</p>
+ </div>
+</div>
+<p>
+We may now pass over matters of minor importance in the history of
+Pontefract to the time of Charles I. In the King's contest with his
+Parliament, this was the last fortress that held out for the unfortunate
+monarch. At Christmas 1644, Sir Thomas Fairfax laid siege to the castle,
+and on Jan. 19, following, after an incessant cannonade of three days, a
+breach was made: the brave garrison would not surrender; the besiegers
+mined, but the besieged counter-mined, and the work of slaughter went on
+till the garrison were greatly reduced. At length the Parliamentarians
+were attacked and repulsed by a reinforcement of Royalists from Oxford,
+and thus ended the first siege of Pontefract. In March, 1645, the enemy
+again took possession of the town, and after three months cannonade, the
+garrison being reduced almost to a state of famine, surrendered the castle
+by an honourable capitulation on June 20. Sir Thomas Fairfax was appointed
+governor, and he thinking the royal party to be subdued, appointed a
+colonel as his substitute, with a garrison of 100 men. The royalists next
+by stratagem recovered Pontefract, of which Sir John Digby was appointed
+governor.
+</p>
+<p>
+The third and final siege of this fine castle commenced in October, 1648.
+General Rainsborough was appointed to the command of the army, but he
+being previously intercepted at Doncaster, Oliver Cromwell undertook to
+conduct the siege. After having remained a month before the fortress,
+without making any impression on its massy walls, Cromwell joined the
+grand army under Fairfax, and General Lambert being appointed commander in
+chief of the forces before the castle, arrived at Pontefract on the 4th of
+December.
+</p>
+<p>
+The ENGRAVING represents the castle precisely at this period. It is copied
+from a large print taken from a drawing found in the possession of a
+descendant of the Fairfax family of Denton; in one angle is the following
+memorandum: "Governor Morris commanded in the Castle. General Lambert
+commanded the Siege, being appointed thereto on the death of General
+Rainsborough, who was intercepted and killed at Doncaster, by a party from
+the Castle, as he was going to take command."
+</p>
+<p>
+General Lambert raised new works, and vigorously pushed the siege; but the
+besieged held out. On January 30, 1649, the King was beheaded; and the
+news no sooner reached Pontefract, than the royalist garrison proclaimed
+his son Charles II. and made a vigorous and destructive sally against
+their enemies. The Parliamentarians, however,
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page52"
+ name="page52">
+ </a>[pg 52]
+</span>
+ prevailed, and on March 25,
+1649, the garrison being reduced from 500 or 600 to 100 men, surrendered
+by capitulation. Six of the principal Royalists were excepted from mercy:
+two escaped, but were retaken and executed at York; the third was killed
+in a sortie; and the three others concealing themselves among the ruins of
+the castle, escaped after the surrender; and two of the last lived to see
+the Restoration.
+</p>
+<p>
+This third siege was the most destructive to the castle: the tremendous
+artillery had shattered its massive walls; and its demolition was
+completed by order of Parliament. Within two months after its reduction,
+the buildings were unroofed, and all the materials sold. Thus was this
+princely fortress reduced to a heap of ruins.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Castle of Pontefract was built on an elevated rock, commanding
+extensive and picturesque views. The north-west prospect takes in the
+beautiful vale along which flows the Aire, skirted by woods and
+plantations. It is bounded only by the hills of Craven. The north and east
+prospect is more extensive, but the scenery is not equally striking and
+impressive. The towers of York Minster are distinctly seen, and the
+prospect is only bounded by the limits of vision. To the east&mdash;while the
+eye follows the course of the Aire towards the Humber, the fertility of
+the country, the spires of churches, and two considerable hills, Brayton
+Barf, and Hambleton Haugh, which rise in the midst of a plain, and one of
+which is covered with wood, increase the beauty of the scene. The
+south-east view includes part of the counties of Lincoln and Nottingham.
+To the south and south-west, the towering hills of Derbyshire, stretching
+towards Lancashire, form the horizon, while the foreground is a
+picturesque country variegated with handsome residences.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Castle, by its situation, as well as by its structure, was rendered
+almost impregnable. It was not commanded by any contiguous hills, and it
+could only be taken by blockade.
+</p>
+<p>
+By referring to the Engraving, the reader will better understand this
+defence. The outworks are there distinctly shown with the respective posts
+and guards: indeed, these lines exhibit a fine specimen of fortification.
+The quadrangular enclosure on the crest of the hill, in the lower part of
+the Engraving, represents Lamberts' Fort Royal. To the right is the
+approach to the castle by the south gate to the barbican, crossed by a
+wall, with the middle gate, with the east gate at the extremity of the
+line. We next approach, the ballium, or castle yard through the Porter's
+Lodge of two towers with a portcullis. The wall of the castle-yard, it
+will be seen, has a parapet, and is flanked with towers, and the chapel to
+the right of the Lodge. East and West of the yard is seen the
+semi-circular moat or ditch; and on an eminence near the western extremity
+of the ballium, stands the keep or round tower, the walls of which are
+said to have been twenty-one feet thick. The state rooms are on the second
+story. The dungeons of the towers are terrific even in description: one
+was about 15 feet deep, and scarcely six feet square, without any
+admission of light. The whole area occupied by the Pontrefact fortress
+seems to have been about 7 acres, now converted into garden ground.
+</p>
+<p>
+The church seen within the work is that of All Saints, or Allhallows, a
+Gothic structure, probably of the time of Henry III., and almost destroyed
+in the sieges of the castle.
+</p>
+<p>
+Pontefract must be numbered in our recollections of childhood; since here
+were grown whole fields of liquorice root, from the extract of which are
+made. <i>Pontefract Cakes</i>, impressed with the arms&mdash;three lions passant
+gardant, surmounted with a helmet, full-forward, open faced, and
+garde-visure. We have likewise seen them impressed with the celebrated
+fortress, and the motto "Post mortem patris pro filio,"&mdash;after the death
+of the father&mdash;for the son&mdash;denoting the loyalty of the Pontefract
+Royalists in proclaiming Charles II. at the death of his father.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3>"LACONICS," GUESSES AT TRUTH, &amp;c.</h3>
+
+<h4><i>(For the Mirror.)</i></h4>
+<p>
+It is the interest of an indolent man to be honest: for it requires
+considerable trouble and finesse, to deceive others successfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+Money was a wise contrivance to place fools somewhat on a level with men
+of sense.
+</p>
+<p>
+It will be observed, that people have generally the identical faults and
+vices they accuse others of; we may instance cowardice.
+</p>
+<p>
+Wherever a proposition is self-evident, it is but weakening its strength
+to bring forward arguments in its support.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is a melancholy reflection that a glass of wine will do more towards
+raising
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page53"
+ name="page53">
+ </a>[pg 53]
+</span>
+ the spirits, than the finest composition ever penned.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is a great mistake in physiognomists to take outward signs as evidences
+of feeling: the seat of real sensation is within.
+</p>
+<p>
+Wherever art has travelled out of her proper sphere to ape nature, she has
+proved herself but a miserable mimic, even in her most approved efforts.
+</p>
+<p>
+We must not allow ourselves to dwell too seriously on life; for otherwise
+we shall be tempted to forego all our plans, to indulge in no future
+wishes, and, in short, to live on in torpid apathy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Books are at last the best companions: they instruct us in silence without
+any display of superiority, and they attend the pace of each man's
+capacity, without reproaching him for his want of comprehension.
+</p>
+<p>
+A disgust of life frequently proceeds from sheer vanity, or a wish to be
+supposed incapable of deriving gratification from the ordinary routine of
+happiness.
+</p>
+<p>
+It sometimes happens that with men as well as animals, that evidences of
+spirit are only the effect of excited fear.
+</p>
+<p>
+<i>(To be continued.)</i>
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h3>THE LAW INSTITUTION.
+<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a>
+<sup><a href="#footnote5">5</a></sup>
+
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+(At the time of our last publication we were not aware that any
+architectural details of the building in Chancery-lane had appeared. We
+now find that the <i>Legal Observer</i> contained such description in March
+last, "collected," says the editor, "with some pains and trouble." A
+correspondent dropped the <i>Observer</i> leaf into our letter-box in the
+course of last week; but, unfortunately, the communication did not reach
+us in time for insertion with our Engraving. Good news, we know, usually
+comes upon crutches, but we hope our thanks will reach this correspondent
+at a better pace.)
+</p>
+<p>
+The style of architecture of the principal front in Chancery-lane is
+purely Grecian. The details and proportions appear to have been founded
+upon the best examples of the Ionic order in Athens and Asia Minor,
+<a id="footnotetag6"
+ name="footnotetag6"></a>
+ <sup><a href="#footnote6">6</a></sup>
+
+ but
+they are not servilely copied from any of them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Vulliamy, the architect for the Institution, has thrown into this
+front the true spirit of the originals; and the effect which the
+harmonious proportions of the building produce on the spectator, when
+viewing it from Chancery-lane, must have been the result of much
+observation and experience in ancient and classic models.
+</p>
+<p>
+This front, extending nearly sixty feet in width, is of Portland stone. It
+consists of four columns and two antae, of the Grecian Ionic order,
+supporting an entablature and pediment, and forming together one grand
+portico. To give the requisite elevation, the columns and antae are raised
+upon pedestals; these, as well as the basement story and podium of the
+inner wall of the portico, are of Aberdeen granite; the columns and the
+rest of the front are formed of large blocks of Portland stone. In the
+front wall, within the portico, there are two ranges of windows above the
+basement.
+</p>
+<p>
+The front in Bell-yard extends nearly eighty feet, and will be finished
+with Roman cement, in imitation of stone. It will have a portico of two
+columns, and two antae of Portland stone, of the height of the ground
+story, which is very lofty, and the width of the entire compartment of the
+front. From the interior requiring to be divided into several rooms, this
+front must have many windows. The elevation is formed more upon the models
+of modern domestic architecture than of ancient public buildings, and
+resembles, in its general appearance, one of the palazzi in the Strada
+Balbi at Genoa, in the Corso at Rome, or in the Toledo at Naples. In its
+details, however, the extravagancies of the middle ages, and the often
+elegant frivolities of the <i>cinque cento</i> period, have been avoided, and
+the breadth and simplicity of Greek models have still been followed.
+</p>
+<p>
+The ground plan of the building, by its general arrangement, divides
+itself into three parts, which may be distinguished under the heads of the
+<i>Library</i>, the <i>Hall</i>, and the <i>Club Room</i>. The first of these (that
+towards Chancery-lane) consists, on the ground floor, of a first
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page54"
+ name="page54">
+ </a>[pg 54]
+</span>
+ and
+second vestibule, and staircase to the Library, the Secretary's Room, and
+Registry Office; and above these on the first floor, the Library,
+occupying the height of two stories.
+</p>
+<p>
+The <i>Library</i> is a large and lofty room, fifty-five feet by thirty-one and
+a half, and twenty-three and a half high, divided by a screen of columns
+and pilasters of scagliola, into two unequal parts, the first forming a
+sort of ante-library to the other; both are surrounded by bookcases of oak,
+and a gallery runs round the whole, above which is another range of
+bookcases.
+</p>
+<p>
+The principal light is obtained from a large lantern-light in the ceiling;
+but there is a range of windows (double sashed, and glazed with plate
+glass) towards Chancery-lane, which also admit light into the lower part.
+</p>
+<p>
+All the floors in the building are made fire-proof, generally by being
+arched with brick; but that of the Library is rendered secure from fire by
+the ceilings of the vestibules underneath being formed of real stone,
+supported on iron girders and bearers, and divided into panels and
+compartments after the manner of the roofs of the peristyles of the
+ancient temples.
+</p>
+<p>
+There are three entrances from Chancery-lane: that in the centre is
+exclusively for members, and leads to all parts of the building; that on
+the right for persons going to the Registry Office; and also for persons
+having to speak to members; that on the left leads down to the Office for
+the deposit of deeds, and to the strong rooms.
+</p>
+<p>
+The second division consists of the <i>Hall</i> and its appurtenances. It is
+above thirty feet high, and fifty-seven feet and a half long; and on each
+side it has wings or recesses, behind insulated columns of scagliola, in
+imitation of Egyptian granite. Within these, and at the back of the
+columns, are galleries; the staircases to which are concealed in the
+angles. There are three fireplaces in the Hall; one in the centre,
+opposite the principal entrance, and one in the centre of each of the
+recesses. The Hall is lighted by a lantern-light forty feet long and
+twenty-four feet wide.
+</p>
+<p>
+The third division is next Bell-yard: it is subdivided into two parts. In
+the first of these are three entrances from Bell-yard. That in the centre
+is exclusively for the members; that to the left leads to the staircase to
+the Secretary's apartments; and the other, to the right of the centre, is
+for strangers to enter who have business to transact in any of the rooms
+appropriated to public business. On the ground floor of this part of the
+third division is a large Committee Room, and an ante or waiting room
+adjoining, and the great staircase to the rooms above. On the first floor
+are the rooms for meetings on matters of business connected with the law;
+and above these are the Secretary's apartments.
+</p>
+<p>
+The second part of the third division contains, on the ground floor, the
+<i>Club Room</i>, which occupies all the ground floor: it will be divided by
+columns and pilasters of scagliola, and decorated with a paneled ceiling
+and appropriate ornaments. Its dimensions are fifty feet by twenty-seven,
+and eighteen feet high. On the first floor are rooms of different
+dimensions for dinner parties; and over these, rooms for the resident
+officers. In the basement story of this part of the building are the
+Kitchen and other domestic offices for the use of the Club.
+</p>
+<p>
+The office for the deposit of deeds is in the basement story, next to
+Chancery-lane.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the remaining parts of the basement story of the building are fifty-two
+strong rooms, with iron doors, for the deposit of deeds, which are well
+ventilated and fire-proof; their average size is six feet and a half by
+seven feet and a half, but some are larger, and others rather less, than
+these dimensions. The whole are secured by one double iron door, with a
+very strong lock and master-key.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>VAPOUR-BATHS.</h3>
+
+<p>
+Among the remedies for cholera, or perhaps we should rather say attempted
+remedies, the vapour-bath is conspicuous over all the other means of cure,
+external and internal: stimulants, frictions, rubefacients, blisters, have
+that for their indirect object which the vapour-bath accomplishes directly,
+namely, to produce heat on the surface of the body, and thus restore that
+correspondence between the temperature of the interior and exterior parts,
+which in the disease is so strangely disturbed. There are two difficulties
+in the application of the vapour-bath, which are not easily overcome. When
+applied to the patient in the ordinary way, from the nature of the heat,
+the upper surface of the body is scorched, while the back is almost cold.
+Now in cholera, the application of heat to the back is of essential
+importance. In the whole of the machines for applying the bath, the
+patient is exposed to
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page55"
+ name="page55">
+ </a>[pg 55]
+</span>
+ more or less tossing about; which, from the extreme
+prostration of strength in cholera patients, is always injurious; and as
+the patient must, when taken from the bath, be replaced on a comparatively
+cold bed, the sudden change will often do more ill than the bath will do
+good. To these must be added, in a disease which chiefly affects the poor,
+another item, forming an important drawback on the utility of the ordinary
+vapour-bath,&mdash;the application of it is attended with no inconsiderable
+expense. A machine which should obviate these objections, was a
+desideratum; and we think such a one has been invented by Mr. Burnet, of
+Golden Square. It is so simple as to be easily described without a diagram,
+and so well adapted to the end, and so easy and cheap in application, that
+we think we shall be rendering an acceptable service to our readers in
+describing it. The best way to effect this is to show the steps of its
+application.
+</p>
+<p>
+We suppose the patient lying on his back in bed. The two sides of a
+framework, about 6-1/2 by 2-1/2 feet, are placed one on each side of him;
+five or six broad canvass straps, which are meant to support his body, are
+placed beneath him by a couple of attendants; two transverse pieces of
+wood are then introduced at the foot and head, to extend the framework;
+and the cross straps, by means of eyelet-holes, are attached to the sides,
+by a row of common brass pins. This is the work of about a minute. One
+attendant then raises the frame at the head, while the other introduces a
+couple of feet about nine inches long into the frame; and this done, the
+foot is raised in a similar way, and similarly supported; a board is then
+fitted to the foot, through a hole in the centre of which the chimney of
+the heating apparatus passes; the blankets are closely tucked round the
+patient and the frame; the lamp is applied, and the process of bathing
+commences. In this way, it will be seen that the patient is suspended in
+the heated air, which is moreover applied to the back in the first
+instance; there is no fatigue incurred; and when perspiration has been
+generated and carried on as long as is deemed expedient, he is let down
+again, without difficulty or danger, into his heated bed, and surrounded
+with the warm blankets employed in the bath itself. The room in which we
+saw the experiment performed, was at a temperature of 43° Fahrenheit; the
+clothes of the bed were of the same temperature: the lamp is conical, and
+has no tube; the wick is merely inserted in it; the charge is two ounces
+of spirits of wine. In ten minutes after the lamp had been applied, the
+thermometer at the foot of the frame on which the patient is made to
+recline, was 136°; at the head, 116°; on the blanket, which covered the
+bed, 96°. Were the vapour applied above the patient instead of under him,
+the difference between the heat at the breast and back would be at least
+40°. The temperature once raised, may be kept up at a very small expense;
+so that the whole price of the bath, continued for half an hour or three
+quarters of an hour, will not exceed eightpence or ninepence. There is a
+very simple expedient, by which, when the temperature of the chamber
+formed by the frame of the bath is once raised sufficiently high, steam,
+either simple or medicated, may be introduced, and the lamp apparatus may
+be applied either at the foot, the head, or the side, as is most
+convenient. The grand recommendation, however, of the bath, is the
+applicability of the vapour to the entire surface of the body; the
+simplicity and ease of the application, both to the assistants and the
+patient; the exclusion of the possibility of cold; and its cheapness. In
+all these points of view, we look on it as a valuable invention.
+</p>
+<p>
+<i>Spectator</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>NOTES OF A READER</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>DECLINE OF THE DRAMA.</h3>
+
+<p>
+One thing which I am unable to interpret among the oddities of the English,
+is their inconsistency respecting dramatic entertainments. I have never
+yet been present where two or three of my countrymen were gathered
+together, that, after a wrangling review of the weather, they did not turn
+their conversation upon the theatres. There is no topic more universally
+discussed than the decadence of the drama, or the engagements, merits, and
+adventures of the performers. Neither the Lord Chancellor nor the
+Archbishop of Canterbury is ever so familiarly known by name and person to
+the public, as the first tragedian and comedian of the day; and the
+theatrical belles and heroines are either elevated to the peerage by
+matrimony, or lowered by the undertaker into Westminster Abbey. As some
+French Vaudevillist observed, "Moliere was denied in France the rights of
+sepulture, while
+</p>
+<div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"Garrick repose à côté de leur rois!"</p>
+ </div>
+</div>
+<p>
+Yet, notwithstanding all this clamour of popularity&mdash;all this
+infatuation&mdash;there
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page56"
+ name="page56">
+ </a>[pg 56]
+</span>
+ is no branch of the arts so grossly neglected in
+England as the drama. It is no longer the fashion in London to attend the
+theatres. Owing partly to the increase of private amusements, and partly
+to the late hours gradually adopted during the reign of George the Fourth,
+the custom of play-going has declined among the higher classes, and
+naturally produces the reaction of bad pieces and indifferent performers.
+Even a clever actor, when satisfied that he is to receive judgment from an
+unrefined and uneducated audience, will degenerate and grow slovenly; and
+from what I have observed of the London stage, I see it is the custom to
+daub for the galleries, or to creep through the business under cover of a
+cold, tame mediocrity. Without the slightest patronage from the court or
+substantial encouragement from the fosterers of literary merit, these
+luckless personages are expected to attempt the same exertions and intense
+study, which is rewarded, in foreign countries, by the most flattering and
+judicious attention; as well as by a pension, to cheer the infirmities of
+old age. Although tolerably well paid by his manager, the English actor
+has the mortification of being tyrannized and insulted by the gallery, and
+overlooked by the higher classes. A few persons of rank and fortune are
+provided with private boxes at the national theatres; but these are
+usually let by the night to plebeian tenants. It is rare indeed to observe
+a family of distinction in the dress circle of either Drury Lane or Covent
+Garden; while the French play is never deficient in a fashionable audience.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Opera, too, is nightly becoming more crowded; while at the two patent
+theatres "a beggarly account of empty boxes," and an equally beggarly
+account of flat, stale, and unprofitable performances, greets me whenever
+I am rash enough to take my post of observation. Lady Romford has a
+private box, which she visits only in preference to staying at a still
+duller home, on a disengaged evening; and Bagot occasionally drags me to
+the play, to make my foreign ignorance and inexperience a pretext for
+following Lady Clara to a spot which no one seems to visit without an
+apology. People in society give as many reasons for having done so strange
+a thing as go to see the new tragedy, as they would invent in Paris to
+excuse a similar omission.
+</p>
+<p>
+Since the Kemble munia, and the Byron mania, there has been a general
+affectation of indifference towards poetry and the drama; your true
+fashionable never mentions either without ridicule&mdash;the natural
+consequence of previously exaggerated enthusiasm.
+</p>
+<p>
+But above all the absurdities connected with this national weakness,
+stands that of the public prints. So much importance is given by the
+newspapers to every thing relating to the histrionic art, that we are
+daily informed of the whereabout of all the third-rate performers of the
+minor theatres; that "Mr. Smith, of Sadler's Wells, is engaged to Mr.
+Ducrow for the ensuing season;" or that "Miss Brown, belonging to the
+ballet department of the Surrey theatre, has sprained her ankle." While
+two thirds of a leading print are occupied with details of the Reform Bill,
+or a debate on some constitutional question,&mdash;or while the foreign
+intelligence of two sieges and a battle is concentrated with a degree of
+terseness worthy a telegraph, half a column is devoted to the plot of a
+new melo-drama at the Coburg; or to a cut and dried criticism upon the
+nine hundredth representation of <i>Hamlet</i>&mdash;beginning with the "immortal
+bard," and ending with the waistcoats of the grave-digger!&mdash;<i>The Opera, a
+Novel</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+<h3>EUGENE ARAM.</h3>
+
+<p>
+The recollection of this man is still preserved at Lynn, in Norfolk, at
+which town he was for some time usher at the grammar-school. A small room
+at the back of the house, in which he slept, was, until these last few
+years, (when it was pulled down and rebuilt,) mysteriously pointed to by
+the little urchins as they passed up to bed of a cold, ghost-enticing
+night, as the chamber in which the "usher, who was hanged for murder," was
+used to sleep.
+</p>
+<p>
+The tradition which remains of his character is, that he was "a man of
+loneliness and mystery," sullen and reserved; that on half-holy-days, and
+when his duties would allow, he strayed solitary and cheerless, as if to
+avoid the world, amongst the flat uninteresting marshes which are situated
+on the opposite side of the river Ouse.
+</p>
+<p>
+At Lynn the character of Aram was, until his apprehension, unexceptionable;
+but after that event, circumstances were then called to mind which seemed
+to indicate a naturally dark character; but whether these were all
+strictly founded in truth, or magnified suspicions arising from the
+appaling circumstances of the crime of which he was convicted, I am unable
+to determine. The following, derived from unquestionable authority,
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page57"
+ name="page57">
+ </a>[pg 57]
+</span>
+ having
+been related by Dr. L., who was master of the grammar-school at the time,
+may serve as a sample:&mdash;there can be no doubt but that the worthy Dr.
+himself believed his suspicions well founded, as he used to tremble when
+he related it. It was customary for the parents of the scholars, on an
+appointed day, to dine with the master, at which time it was expected they
+would bring with them the amount of their bills. It was late at night,
+after one of such meetings, that Dr. L. was awakened by a noise at his
+bed-room door; he rose up, and going into the passage which led to the
+staircase, but which was not in the direct way from Aram's bed room to the
+ground-floor, he discovered the usher <i>dressed</i>. Having questioned him as
+to the object of his rising at that unseasonable hour, Aram confusedly
+answered that he had been taken unwell, and had been obliged to go do down
+stairs. The Dr. then retired, unsuspiciously, to bed. From the combined
+circumstances of the noise at the door, his great agitation and confusion,
+and from his being found in the passage, the worthy Dr., in later years,
+had no doubt, that, from its being known to Aram that a considerable sum
+of money was in his bed-room, Aram intended nothing less than to rob him;
+and no doubt, continued the narrator, he <i>would</i> have murdered me too, if
+it had been rendered necessary, from my discovering or opposing him.
+</p>
+<p>
+The spot just at the entrance to the play-ground, at which Aram was taken
+into custody by two strange men from Yorkshire, is still remarked, and
+generally by the young scholar in a tremulous whisper.&mdash;<i>Literary Gazette</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>THE NATURALIST.</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>AGENCY OF MAN IN EXTINGUISHING OR SPREADING SPECIES.</h3>
+
+<p>
+Let us make some inquiries into the extent of the influence which the
+progress of society has exerted, during the last seven or eight centuries,
+in altering the distribution of our indigenous British animals. Dr.
+Fleming has prosecuted this inquiry with his usual zeal and ability, and
+in a memoir on the subject has enumerated the best authenticated examples
+of the decrease or extirpation of certain species during a period when our
+population has made the most rapid advances. We shall offer a brief
+outline of his results.
+</p>
+<p>
+The stag, as well as the fallow-deer, and the roe, were formerly so
+abundant that, according to Lesley, from five hundred to a thousand were
+sometimes slain at a hunting-match; but the native races would already
+have been extinguished, had they not been carefully preserved in certain
+forests. The otter, the marten, and the polecat, were also in sufficient
+numbers to be pursued for the sake of their fur; but they have now been
+reduced within very narrow bounds. The wild cat and fox have also been
+sacrificed throughout the greater part of the country, for the security of
+the poultry-yard or the fold. Badgers have been expelled from nearly every
+district which at former periods they inhabited.
+</p>
+<p>
+Besides these, which have been driven out from some haunts, and everywhere
+reduced in number, there are some which have been wholly extirpated; such
+as the ancient breed of indigenous horses, the wild boar and the wild oxen,
+of which last, however, a few remains are still preserved in the parks of
+some of our nobility. The beaver, which was eagerly sought after for its
+fur, had become scarce at the close of the ninth century, and, by the
+twelfth century, was only to be met with, according to Giraldus de Barri,
+in one river in Wales, and another in Scotland. The wolf, once so much
+dreaded by our ancestors, is said to have maintained its ground in Ireland
+so late as the beginning of the eighteenth century (1710,) though it had
+been extirpated in Scotland thirty years before, and in England at a much
+earlier period. The bear, which in Wales was regarded as a beast of the
+chase equal to the hare or the boar, only perished as a native of Scotland
+in the year 1057.
+</p>
+<p>
+Many native birds of prey have also been the subjects of unremitting
+persecution. The eagles, larger hawks, and ravens, have disappeared from
+the more cultivated districts. The haunts of the mallard, the snipe, the
+redshank, and the bittern, have been drained equally with the summer
+dwellings of the lapwing and the curlew. But these species still linger in
+some portion of the British isles; whereas the large capercailzies, or
+wood grouse, formerly natives of the pine forests of Ireland and Scotland,
+have been destroyed within the last fifty years. The egret and the crane,
+which appear to have been formerly very common in Scotland, are now only
+occasional visitants.
+</p>
+<p>
+The bustard (<i>Otis tarda</i>,) observes Graves in his <i>British Ornithology</i>,
+"was formerly seen in the downs and heaths of various parts of our island,
+in flocks of forty or fifty birds; whereas it is now
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page58"
+ name="page58">
+ </a>[pg 58]
+</span>
+ a circumstance of
+rare occurrence to meet with a single individual." Bewick also remarks,
+"that they were formerly more common in this island than at present; they
+are now found only in the open counties of the south and east, in the
+plains of Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, and some parts of Yorkshire." In the few
+years that have elapsed since Bewick wrote, this bird has entirely
+disappeared from Wiltshire and Dorsetshire.
+</p>
+<p>
+These changes, we may observe, are derived from very imperfect memorials,
+and relate only to the larger and more conspicuous animals inhabiting a
+small spot on the globe; but they cannot fail to exalt our conception of
+the enormous revolutions which, in the course of several thousand years,
+the whole human species must have effected.
+</p>
+<p>
+The kangaroo and the emu are retreating rapidly before the progress of
+colonization in Australia; and it scarcely admits of doubt, that the
+general cultivation of that country must lead to the extirpation of both.
+The most striking example of the loss, even within the last two centuries,
+of a remarkable species, is that of the dodo&mdash;a bird first seen by the
+Dutch when they landed on the Isle of France, at that time uninhabited,
+immediately after the discovery of the passage to the East Indies by the
+Cape of Good Hope. It was of a large size and singular form; its wings
+short, like those of an ostrich, and wholly incapable of sustaining its
+heavy body even for a short flight. In its general appearance it differed
+from the ostrich, cassowary, or any known bird.
+</p>
+<p>
+Many naturalists gave figures of the dodo after the commencement of the
+seventeenth century; and there is a painting of it in the British Museum,
+which is said to have been taken from a living individual. Beneath the
+painting is a leg, in a fine state of preservation, which ornithologists
+are agreed cannot belong to any other known bird. In the museum at Oxford,
+also, there is a foot and a head, in an imperfect state, but M. Cuvier
+doubts the identy of this species with that of which the painting is
+preserved in London.
+</p>
+<p>
+In spite of the most active search, during the last century, no
+information respecting the dodo was obtained, and some authors have gone
+so far as to pretend that it never existed; but amongst a great mass of
+satisfactory evidence in favour of the recent existence of this species,
+we may mention that an assemblage of fossil bones were recently discovered,
+under a bed of lava, in the Isle of France, and sent to the Paris museum
+by M. Desjardins. They almost all belonged to a large living species of
+land-tortoise, called <i>Testudu Indica</i>, but amongst them were the head,
+sternum, and humerus of the dodo. M. Cuvier showed me these valuable
+remains in Paris, and assured me that they left no doubt in his mind that
+the huge bird was one of the gallinaceous tribe.
+</p>
+<p>
+Next to the direct agency of man, his indirect influence in multiplying
+the numbers of large herbivorous quadrupeds of domesticated races, may be
+regarded as one of the most obviate causes of the extermination of species.
+On this, and on several other grounds, the introduction of the horse, ox,
+and other mammalia, into America, and their rapid propagation over that
+continent within the last three centuries, is a fact of great importance
+in natural history. The extraordinary herds of wild cattle and horses
+which overran the plains of South America, sprang from a very few pairs
+first carried over by the Spaniards; and they prove that the wide
+geographical range of large species in great continents does not
+necessarily imply that they have existed there from remote periods.
+Humboldt observes, in his Travels, on the authority of Azara, that it is
+believed there exist, in the Pampas of Buenos Ayres, twelve million cows
+and three million horses, without comprising in this enumeration the
+cattle that have no acknowledged proprietor. In the Llanos of Caraccas,
+the rich hateros, or proprietors of pastoral farms, are entirely ignorant
+of the number of cattle they possess. The young are branded with a mark
+peculiar to each herd, and some of the most wealthy owners mark as many as
+fourteen thousand a year. In the northern plains, from the Orinoco to the
+lake of Maracaybo, M. Depons reckoned that one million two hundred
+thousand oxen, one hundred and eighty thousand horses, and ninety thousand
+mules, wandered at large. In some parts of the valley of the Mississippi,
+especially in the country of the Osage Indians, wild horses are immensely
+numerous.
+</p>
+<p>
+The establishment of black cattle in America dates from Columbus's second
+voyage to St. Domingo. They there multiplied rapidly; and that island
+presently became a kind of nursery from which these animals were
+successively transported to various parts of the continental coast, and
+from thence into the interior. Notwithstanding these numerous exportations,
+in twenty-seven years after the discovery of the island, herds of four
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page59"
+ name="page59">
+ </a>[pg 59]
+</span>
+thousand head, as we learn from Oviedo, were not uncommon, and there were
+even some that amounted to eight thousand. In 1587, the number of hides
+exported from St. Domingo alone, according to Acosta's report, was
+thirty-five thousand four hundred and forty-four; and in the same year
+there were exported sixty-four thousand three hundred and fifty from the
+ports of New Spain. This was in the sixty-fifth year after the taking of
+Mexico, previous to which event the Spaniards, who came into that country,
+had not been able to engage in any thing else than war. All our readers
+are aware that these animals are now established throughout the American
+continent, from Canada to Paraguay.
+</p>
+<p>
+The ass has thriven very generally in the New World; and we learn from
+Ulloa, that in Quito they ran wild, and multiplied in amazing numbers, so
+as to become a nuisance. They grazed together in herds, and, when attacked,
+defended themselves with their mouths. If a horse happened to stray into
+the places where they fed, they all fell upon him, and did not cease
+biting and kicking till they left him dead.
+</p>
+<p>
+The first hogs were carried to America by Columbus, and established in the
+island of St. Domingo the year following its discovery in November, 1493.
+In succeeding years they were introduced into other places where the
+Spaniards settled; and, in the space of half a century, they were found
+established in the New World, from the latitude of 25 deg. north, to the
+40th deg. of south latitude. Sheep, also, and goats have multiplied
+enormously in the New World, as have also the cat and the rat, which last,
+as we before stated, has been imported unintentionally in ships. The dogs
+introduced by man, which have at different periods become wild in America,
+hunted in packs like the wolf and the jackal, destroying not only hogs,
+but the calves and foals of the wild cattle and horses.
+</p>
+<p>
+Ulloa in his voyage, and Buffon on the authority of old writers, relate a
+fact which illustrates very clearly the principle before explained by us,
+of the check which the increase of one animal necessarily offers to that
+of another. The Spaniards had introduced goats into the island of Juan
+Fernandez, where they became so prolific as to furnish the pirates who
+infested those seas with provisions. In order to cut off this resource
+from the bucaneers, a number of dogs were turned loose into the island;
+and so numerous did they become in their turn, that they destroyed the
+goats in every accessible part, after which the number of the wild dogs
+again decreased.
+</p>
+<p>
+As an example of the rapidity with which a large tract may become peopled
+by the offspring of a single pair of quadrupeds, we may mention that in
+the year 1773, thirteen rein-deer were exported from Norway, only three of
+which reached Iceland. These were turned loose into the mountains of
+Guldbringe Syssel, where they multiplied so greatly, in the course of
+forty years, that it was not uncommon to meet with herds consisting of
+from forty to one hundred in various districts.&mdash;<i>Lyell's Geology</i>, vol.
+ii.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>THE NOVELIST.</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>THE CONFESSION OF SERVENTIUS.</h3>
+<h4><i>(Concluded from page 46.)</i></h4>
+
+<p>
+That evening, Father Dominick, our excellent priest, and my tutor in the
+classics, was closeted for a length of time with my afflicted nominal
+parents; and two days afterwards taking me with him to his monastery, he
+introduced me to the superior, as an orphan, the child of dear and
+particular friends, confided by them to his charge for education upon
+their death-bed, and with a distinct understanding that I was not bound to
+take upon myself monastic vows, the superior allowed me to remain with him
+as a boarder. Serventius and Artemisia I never more beheld, and every
+inquiry respecting them which I ventured to make of Father Dominick, was
+checked with a strange, sad look, and an admonition to mention them no
+more. Seven long and peaceful years, I spent in the monastery; and at the
+expiration of that period, was placed by my guardian in the house of the
+celebrated Doctor Sanazio of Padua, as a student of medicine. Here, novel
+and delightful studies, speculations, and scenes, opened upon my
+inquisitive, ardent mind, and amused my enthusiastic imagination. Sanazio
+was regarded in learned Padua, as little less than a demi-god; at certain
+hours he visited his patients, amongst whom might generally be numbered
+three-fourths of the population of Padua; at certain hours, his own
+mansion was crowded like the audience-hall of some mighty potentate, with
+supplicants for food and physic; three evenings in the week were devoted
+by him to intense study in his own secret, solitary chamber; and upon the
+alternate three, he received the visits of those who desired to consult
+him upon abstruse
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page60"
+ name="page60">
+ </a>[pg 60]
+</span>
+ points, only properly to be solved by an acquaintance
+with the occult sciences. In brief, my honoured master, I soon discovered,
+was reckoned a very fair conjuror; he consulted the stars, drew horoscopes,
+cast nativities, was learned in the expositions of dreams and omens,
+undertook to give information respecting lost property, and matrimonial
+prospects; composed, and dispensed charms and philtres, and proved himself,
+as I have hinted, a capital astrologer, and something more. How Sanazio,
+who certainly was a very extraordinary man, acquired his multifarious
+information, unless really by supernatural agency, I am at a loss to
+discover. Ignatius Druso, my fellow student, was of opinion that he only
+dexterously availed himself in the evening of the news which he had
+gathered from his patients in the morning; and that his familiars were no
+more than a few active emissaries, for whose espionage and additional
+gleanings of town news, it answered to him well, to pay. Ever partial to
+romance, I did not readily fall in with Druso's sober view of this subject,
+and the longer I lived with Doctor Sanazio, the more occasion had I to
+doubt the correctness of his opinion, because some things occurred of
+which my master obtained immediate and accurate knowledge, whilst I am
+perfectly certain that no human tongue had divulged them to him; take the
+following incident as an example:&mdash;Druso and myself were accustomed, on
+those evenings which Sanazio spent in his sanctum, to visit patients in
+his stead, to range over the town, to go to places of public amusement, or
+to conclude our meritorious labours at a tavern. Being one night at this
+latter place, an old woman entered, and inquiring whether I were Master
+Serventius, Doctor Sanazio's pupil, slipped a billet and a piece of gold
+into my hand and desired me to follow her. I did so, without hesitation,
+and whilst behind my guide, contrived to peruse the note by moon-light,
+which contained these words:
+</p>
+<p>
+"I am sick,&mdash;of the heart's mortal sickness;&mdash;relieve it, and great shall
+be thy recompense."
+</p>
+<p>
+Perplexed, yet amused, by what promised an adventure, I followed my
+ancient guide into a house whose exterior was sufficiently humble; but,
+having ascended a steep flight of stairs, she threw open the door of a
+chamber in which they terminated, and I found myself not only in a
+richly-furnished apartment, but in the presence of a lady, young as
+immortal Hebe, and fair as day. I saw at a glance that her ills were those
+of the mind only, and ere she had opened her lips to detail them and
+engage me in her cause, I had vowed, heart and soul, to be her champion.
+Having complimented me upon the high character she had heard of my prowess,
+understanding, and principles, she informed me, with little circumlocution,
+that various unhappy family circumstances had rendered it necessary for
+her to seek friends amongst strangers; that she was a novice of the
+Convent of St. Anne, but on the eve of profession, and that having long
+been under an engagement of marriage with a young gentleman of family,
+respecting whom her relations had used her very deceitfully and cruelly,
+she had fixed upon me as a person little likely to be subjected to
+suspicion on her account, to aid Signor Fernandez in the difficult and
+hazardous enterprise, which she said must be a work of time and prudence,
+of carrying her off from the convent. Having obtained my promise to this
+effect, she detailed her plans, and furnished me with the means of
+continual communication with her lover and herself. I returned home,
+highly elated at the trust reposed in me, at the importance which I had
+acquired in my own eyes, and at the prospect of a handsome remuneration
+for my services, from the lovely object of them. Sanazio, with lamp in
+hand, and arrayed in his night attire, to my great terror and surprise,
+opened the door to me himself; it was very late, Druso had long since
+returned without me, and in order to allay the storm which I saw gathering
+upon mine ancient master's brow, I slipped the gold given to me by the
+confidante of beautiful Antonia, into his unreluctant hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Unhappy youth!" exclaimed Sanazio, "beware of aiding the nun, lest thou
+bring upon her and upon thyself the fate of Artemisia and Serventius."
+</p>
+<p>
+These words so alarmed me that I nearly fainted; for how, in the name of
+all things holy and gracious, came Sanazio to know in whose society I had
+passed the last hour, and what was the subject of our conversation? His
+terrible allusion too, to those lost loved ones, of whose untimely fate I
+was still so ignorant, strangely troubled my conscious breast. Let me be
+brief, the hours of my ill-fated existence are fast wearing away, and I
+have yet more to relate. To Ignatius Druso I was obliged to confide my
+secret, because his assistance, in the furtherance of plans which were
+always requiring, from little immaterial circumstances, some slight
+alterations, was found necessary; and it must here
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page61"
+ name="page61">
+ </a>[pg 61]
+</span>
+ suffice those to know,
+who shall, after my destruction do me the melancholy favour of perusing
+this retrospective record, that some months after Antonia had taken the
+veil, I succeeded in restoring her to the arms of her lover, witnessed
+their private nuptials, visited them in their new residence, a villa in a
+secluded spot far from Padua, and received my promised recompense. "Young
+man! you've ruined yourself; and your fatal destiny is sealed!" were the
+remarkable words of Sanazio, on the morning after the completion of my
+enterprise, but long ere the elopement of the new devotee became publicly
+known. However, he never reverted to the subject, not even upon his
+death-bed; and after the learned doctor's decease, when I came into the
+whole of his practice, and no small portion of his fame, I was easy, for
+the memory of that sacrilege had passed away.
+</p>
+<p>
+Ignatius Druso, like myself, resided in Padua, but soon quitted the
+medical profession, disgusted, I fancy, at finding that I had become a
+second Sanazio, whilst he commanded little or no attention: still we were
+friends, nor did I suspect that the germs of envy and malice were sown in
+his bosom, and that I had trusted him with one secret, or more, too much.
+"Serventius, my son," had said the venerable Sanazio to me upon his
+death-bed, "your ardent desire of knowledge and discreet use of it,
+encourage me ere I quit this world, to entrust you with the grand arcanum
+of our art; as yet, you know not the secret of my success, but take then
+this hint and improve upon it. Can he repair a piece of mechanism, who is
+ignorant of its make, its parts, and how they act upon, and affect one
+another? Behold this key; it is that of my laboratory, and may it indeed
+open the door of knowledge to you."
+</p>
+<p>
+After Sanazio's decease, curiosity quickly led me to his study: I was
+alone, and the shades of evening were stealing over the earth: conceive
+then my utter dismay and superstitious horror upon suddenly entering, what
+I could but suppose to be a charnel-house! Its effluvium was intolerable,
+and well accounted for by (loathsome spectacle!) a disorderly collection
+of human fragments in various stages of preservation and decay! A dozen
+grisly skeletons grinned upon me from pedestals round the room, and in the
+centre of it, the half dissected body of a man, stretched upon a large
+lava slab, supported by tressels, was more horrible and odious than all. I
+now comprehended the full meaning of Sanazio's dying words and secret; but
+received at the same time, a shock which to this day I have not recovered;
+I found myself compelled to make Druso my confidant in this matter, and my
+companion in some of my first attempts at following the hideous occupation
+recommended by my deceased friend. By degrees I grew accustomed to the
+horrors of the room and of my employment. Druso, who found himself better
+engaged in courting the living than in cutting up the dead, was no longer
+necessary to me in the prosecution of my hateful studies, and kept aloof,
+but I soon discovered the value of them, in my increase of knowledge,
+employment, and reputation. At last an epidemic raged in Padua, proving
+very fatal; Ignatius, alarmed for the safety of his Phaedera, who was
+attacked, applied to me, and I cured her. Some time afterwards, the
+ungrateful wretch rushed into my laboratory, claiming the body upon which
+I was operating, as that of a young man, cousin to Phaedera, which had
+miraculously disappeared just previous to the day intended for its
+interment. The features of the poor wretch were too much disfigured to
+render possible his recognition by them, but Druso swore to its being the
+body of Marcus, from a scar on the left leg, which had been wounded
+severely by a quoit. Of course I refused to resign, that, for which I had
+paid a handsome price, and to reveal the names of those from whom I
+purchased it. So Druso dragged me before the Supreme Council, impeached me
+of sacrilege in the affair of the nun, of theft, and of violating the
+sanctity of the tomb, of barbarously mutilating the dead, and of applying
+their lacerated remains to the unholy purposes of sorcery! and on these
+counts have I been indicted, found guilty, and sentenced to be burnt as a
+sacrilegious heretic, an unnatural robber, and a formidable wizard!
+Antonia, the mother of seven children, is to be&mdash;like the unchaste
+vestal&mdash;immured! Oh Heaven! whilst Druso the Informer, receiving at the
+same time the portion of a prince for his venal treachery, will celebrate
+his union with Phaedera, amidst the shrieks and groans of his expiring
+victims!
+</p>
+<p>
+I cannot now proceed: ere I am bound to the fatal stake, methinks I shall
+die of shame, grief, and terror. And did the friends of my infancy, my
+parents, suffer as I shall suffer? Then, welcome death! welcome, hated
+dawn of my last day, for innocence and truth are banished from the earth!
+Hark! the key
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page62"
+ name="page62">
+ </a>[pg 62]
+</span> turning in the lock of my cell! Hark! those boding and
+pitying voices without! Father Dominick! Servilius! Andrea! kindest! best!
+&mdash;I die&mdash;but I die innocent, the victim only&mdash;&mdash;-Hah! to burn&mdash;burn&mdash;burn!
+Gracious Heaven! pardon the strife of nature! My brain whirls!&mdash;my eyes
+cloud!&mdash;my black, dry, swollen lips,&mdash;throat&mdash;bosom&mdash;heart&mdash;O mother of
+God!&mdash;O! Saviour&mdash;Redeemer&mdash;pardon, pardon!&mdash;Father of Mercies,&mdash;-receive
+me!
+</p>
+<p>
+<i>Great Marlow, Bucks.</i>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>SCENES FROM THE (OLD) FRENCH REVOLUTION.</h3>
+<h4><i>(From the "Quarterly" Review of Madame Junot's Memoirs.)</i></h4>
+
+<p>
+About the beginning of the revolution, a working-man, by name Thirion, had
+established himself in a little stall (in Paris,) where he carried on his
+business as a mender of carpets. He called one morning to ask M. Permon's
+(a Royalist
+<a id="footnotetag7"
+ name="footnotetag7"></a>
+ <sup><a href="#footnote7">7</a></sup>
+
+) custom, but was civilly told that the family had long
+employed a tradesman of his class, and could not change for a stranger:
+the man took the refusal so insolently, that he was at last turned out of
+doors, vowing revenge. M. Permon, the ports being still open, makes a run
+over to London to place some money in our funds. Meantime "the Sections
+are organized," and Thirion becomes "Secretaire, Greffier, President, je
+ne scai quoi, de la notre." The morning after his return to Paris, M.
+Permon had just risen, when footsteps were heard loud on the staircase,
+and in burst Citizen Thirion, two other patriots of the Sectional
+Committee, and the carpetman's shopboy. (Madame Junot's Narrative
+commences here.)
+</p>
+<p>
+"My father was shaving himself. Naturally quick tempered, his impatience
+was extreme when he recognised the individual, and he was imprudent enough
+to make a menacing gesture the moment they broke into his dressing-room.
+'I am here to see the law enforced,' cries Thirion, on seeing my father
+advance with the razor in his hand. 'Well, what law is it that chooses so
+worthy an organ?'&mdash;'I am here to learn your age, your pursuits, and to
+interrogate you as to your journey to Coblentz.' My father, who had from
+the first word felt the most violent disposition to toss the man down
+stairs, shivered with rage; but, at last, he composed himself, wiped his
+chin, laid down his razor, and, crossing his arms, placed himself full in
+front of Thirion: then, measuring him from the utmost height of his tall
+and elegant person, he said, 'You wish to know my age?'&mdash;'Yes, such are my
+orders.'&mdash;Where is the order?' said my father, extending his hand. 'It is
+enough for you to know that I am sent hither by the committee of my
+section: my orders are sufficiently proved by my presence.'&mdash;Ah! you think
+so; I am of a different opinion. Your presence here is nothing but an
+insult, unless you have a judiciary order to justify it; show it me, and I
+shall forget the name of the man, to see only the public functionary.'
+Thirion raised his voice as my father lowered his&mdash;'What is your
+age?&mdash;What was the object of your going to Coblentz?'&mdash;&mdash;My father seizes
+a large bamboo, and makes it whistle over Thirion's head&mdash;at that moment
+my mother rushes in, and succeeds in dragging him into another room, and
+restoring him to something like calmness. I remember she placed me in his
+arms, whispering to me to entreat him to <i>think of me</i>. Meantime, Thirion
+had drawn up his <i>procès verbal</i>, and withdrawn:&mdash;he left me weeping
+without knowing why I wept, but I saw that my mother and my sister were in
+tears too. My father sat pale, trembling with anger,&mdash;everything about us
+had a desolate aspect."
+</p>
+<p>
+The family escape from Paris&mdash;and it was time. Violent alternations of
+fear, anger, sorrow, terror, and disgust, with frequent disguises, flights,
+and all sorts of changes of residence, at length wear out the health and
+spirits of M. Permon&mdash;a man, apparently, who united dull enough intellect
+with all the vivacity of a Frenchman's mere temperament; and he dies in
+obscurity long before anything like order is re-established. We need not
+dwell on the particular fortunes of a not very interesting set of people;
+but may quote one or two more specimens of the sort of scenes which fill
+the greater part of the first of these volumes. Our authoress and her
+sister are at one time separated from their parents, and placed in an
+obscure <i>pension</i> in the Faubourg (no longer <i>St.</i>) Antoine. Their brother,
+a very young man, has also remained in Paris, and frequently visits them
+in their retreat.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We could not but observe, that for some days he had been very melancholy,
+and that he was getting more and more so. We asked the reason, and he told
+us at last that the section had denounced my father in a very alarming
+style. We
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page63"
+ name="page63">
+ </a>[pg 63]
+</span>
+ fell a-crying, my sister and I. Albert consoled us as well as he
+could, but it was easy to see that the denunciation was not all&mdash;that some
+immediate danger fixed his fears. We knew afterwards, in effect, that a
+report had been spread of the arrest of my parents at Limoges&mdash;happily a
+false one. The horizon meanwhile was taking a bloody tint. Judge of my
+brother's anxiety! he came every day in a cabriolet, which my father had
+had built just before these late events; it was an elegant one, very lofty,
+of the kind called <i>wiski.</i> Already he had been all but insulted by the
+populace in driving through the faubourg; but liveries had not yet
+altogether disappeared, and nothing would persuade him to listen to our
+remonstrances, and make the domestic put off his. Thus it was on the 31st
+of August, when he came to see us as usual."
+</p>
+<p>
+"There was about the boarding-house a man charged with all the rough work,
+by name Jaquemart, a fellow that could do everything&mdash;but the most
+atrocious of countenances. 'The sight of that man makes me sick,' said
+Albert; 'I am sure he will end in something tragic.'"
+</p>
+<p>
+"One day, shortly after we went to the <i>pension</i>, Jaquemart was bringing
+in a load of wood, when my brother drove at the speed of his horse into
+the entrance. He saw the man had a burden that would hardly allow him to
+get out of the way in time&mdash;cried <i>'Gare!'</i>&mdash;perceived that his efforts
+were in vain&mdash;and pulled back his horse so sharply as to run much risk of
+wounding the animal, and, indeed, of being thrown out himself, owing to
+the extraordinary elevation of the <i>wiski</i>. Jaquemart, however, escaped by
+this means with a scratch on his leg; his eyes were good, he saw what
+Albert had done to master his horse, and vowed gratitude."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The 31st of August the man had nothing to do about the house, yet he kept
+lounging at the gate, or in the court, all day long. It was late ere
+Albert came&mdash;he had been waiting for him, and whispered, as he alighted,
+'Stay here to-night to take care of your sisters&mdash;don't go home.' Albert
+looked at him with astonishment; he had, indeed, perceived symptoms of
+some commotion, but fancied, as most of Paris did, that it would be
+directed against the Temple. 'What is your meaning?' said he. 'I entreat
+you to stay here&mdash;you will be near your sisters; and if there be need for
+another hand, mine shall not be far off&mdash;very well!&mdash;we shall be there.'
+Albert pressed him with questions, but could extract nothing; and after
+giving the man some money, persisted; in returning home as usual."
+</p>
+<p>
+"All know the frightful story of the day after this. Albert's anxiety for
+us makes him brave every danger, and he comes to us again. The first
+person he sees at our door is Jaquemart, in the costume of the most
+atrocious of bandits; our ladies had not dared to bid him go away, but his
+appearance made them tremble. 'I did not desire you to come hither, but to
+stay here,' he said; 'why have I not been obeyed?' 'Why do you speak
+so&mdash;was this house particularly menaced?' 'I know nothing of that&mdash;at such
+a moment one should fear everything.'"
+</p>
+<p>
+"We heard groans, weeping, all Paris had not been at <i>the massacre</i>. It
+was late. They pressed Albert to stay, but he would not. He promised,
+however, to come back next morning.&mdash;&mdash;That day he was obliged to stay at
+home till about three o'clock, arranging and burning papers. He then came
+out to visit us, and found himself in the midst of crowds of men, drunken
+and bloody; many were naked to the waist, their breasts covered with blood.
+They carried fragments of clothing on their pikes and sabres&mdash;their faces
+were inflamed, their eyes haggard, the whole scene hideous. These groups
+became more and more frequent and numerous as he advanced. In mortal
+anxiety for us, he determined to push through everything, and, urging his
+horse to its speed, reached at length the front of the Hôtel Beaumarchais.
+There he was stopped by an immense crowd&mdash;always the same figures naked
+and bloodstained, but here their looks were those of enraged fiends. They
+shout, they scream, they sing, they dance&mdash;the saturnalia of hell. On
+seeing Albert's cabriolet, they redoubled their cries&mdash;'An aristocrat!
+give it him, give it him!' In a moment the cabriolet is surrounded, and
+from the midst of the crowd an object rises and moves towards him. His
+agitation perplexes his view&mdash;he perceives long fair tresses dabbled with
+blood&mdash;a countenance beautiful even yet. It approaches&mdash;it is thrust upon
+his face; he recognises the features&mdash;it is the head of Madame de Lamballe!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The servant whips the horse with all the strength of his arm. The
+generous animal, with the instinctive horror of his race for dead bodies,
+springs with redoubled speed from the spectacle of horror. The frightful
+trophy, and the cannibals that bore it, had been overturned in the
+mud&mdash;screams and imprecations pursued Albert, stretched
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page64"
+ name="page64">
+ </a>[pg 64]
+</span>
+ senseless at the
+bottom of the cabriolet. The servant had kept the reins, and whipped the
+more fiercely, because he could perceive, from the motion of the carriage,
+that some one had got up behind it, and hoped that the rapidity of its
+progress would shake him off."
+</p>
+<p>
+"In a few minutes Albert reached our door&mdash;judge of our alarm!&mdash;pale,
+still quite senseless, not breathing. The moment the cabriolet stopped,
+the man behind jumped down, took my brother in his arms, as if he had been
+a child, and carried him into the house. It was Jaquemart. 'The monsters,'
+said he, 'the monsters! the poor young man, they have killed him too.'
+What could Jaquemart have been doing in such a garb, and among such a
+troop o' ruffians?"
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>THE GATHERER.</h2>
+
+<p>
+The Paris correspondent of the <i>Court Journal</i> gives the following
+incident at the King's Ball, about a fortnight since. I happened to be
+near his majesty when he addressed himself to an Englishman, wearing the
+Cross of Three Days. "Where did you signalize yourself, sir?" inquired the
+monarch. "At the Tuilleries, sire," was the answer. "<i>C'est aux braves de
+Juillet que je dois ma couronne</i>," said his majesty. The gentleman thus
+honoured was M. Bennis,
+<a id="footnotetag8"
+ name="footnotetag8"></a>
+ <sup><a href="#footnote8">8</a></sup>
+ in whose literary establishment the king seems
+to take much interest.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+<h3>GUTTING THE FISH.</h3>
+
+<p>
+One evening a red-headed Connaught swell, of no small aristocratic
+pretensions in his own eyes, sent his servant, whom he had just imported
+from the long-horned kingdom, in all the rough majesty of a creature fresh
+from the "wilds," to purchase a hundred of oysters on the City-quay. Paddy
+staid so long away, that Squire Trigger got quite impatient and unhappy
+lest his "body man" might have slipt into the Liffey; however, to his
+infinite relief, Paddy soon made his appearance, puffing and blowing like
+a disabled bellows, but carrying his load seemingly in great triumph.
+"Well, Pat," cried the master, "what the devil kept you so long?" "Long! a
+thin, may be it's what you'd have me to come home with half my <i>arrant?</i>"
+says Pat. "Half the oysters?" says the master. "No; but too much of the
+<i>fish</i>." says Pat. "What fish?" says he. "The oysters, to be sure," says
+Pat. "What do you mean, blockhead?" says he. "I mean," says Pat, "that
+there was no use with loading myself with more nor was useful."
+"Will you explain yourself?" says he. "I will," says Pat laying down his
+load. "Well then, you see, plaise your Honour, as I was coming home along
+the quay, mighty peaceable, who should I meet but Shammus Maginnis; 'Good
+morrow, Shamien,' sis I; 'Good morrow kindly, Paudeen,' sis he; 'What is
+it you have in the sack?' sis he; 'A <i>Cwt</i>. of oysters,' sis I; 'Let us
+look at them,' says he; 'I will, and welcome,' sis I; 'Orah! thunder and
+pratees!' sis he, openin the sack an examinin them; 'who <i>sowld</i> you
+these?' 'One Tom Kinahan that keeps a small ship there below,' sis I;
+'Musha then, bad luck to that same Tom that <i>sowld</i> the likes to you,' sis
+he; 'Arrah, why, avic?' sis I; 'To make a <i>Bolshour</i> ov you an give thim
+to you without gutting thim,' sis he; 'An arn't they gutted, Jim, aroon,'
+sis I; 'Oh! bad luck to the one o' thim,' sis he; 'Musha then,' sis I,
+'what the dhoul will I do at all at all, fur the master will be mad;' 'Do!'
+sis he, 'why I'd rather do the thing for you mysel nor you should lose
+your place,' sis he; so wid that he begins to gut them wid his knife,
+<i>nate</i> and <i>clain</i>, an afeereed ov dirtying the flags, begor, he
+swallowed the guts himself from beginnin to ind, tal he had thim as dacent
+as you see thim here"&mdash;dashing down at his master's feet his bag of oyster
+shells, to the no small amazement of the Connaught worthy, as you may
+suppose.&mdash;<i>Dublin Comet</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+<h3>FAMILIAR SCIENCE.</h3>
+<p>
+This Day was published, with many Engravings, price 5<i>s</i>.,
+</p>
+<pre>
+ ARCANA OF SCIENCE,
+ AND
+ ANNUAL REGISTER of the USEFUL ARTS,
+ for 1832:
+</pre>
+<p>
+Abridged from the Transactions of Public Societies, and Scientific
+Journals, British and Foreign, for the past year.
+</p>
+<p>
+*** This volume will contain all the Important Facts in the year 1831&mdash;in
+the
+</p>
+<pre>
+ MECHANIC ARTS,
+ CHEMICAL SCIENCE,
+ ZOOLOGY,
+ BOTANY,
+ MINERALOGY,
+ GEOLOGY,
+ METEOROLOGY,
+ RURAL ECONOMY,
+ GARDENING.
+ DOMESTIC ECONOMY,
+ USEFUL AND ELEGANT ARTS,
+ GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERIES,
+ MISCELLANEOUS SCIENTIFIC INFORMATION.
+</pre>
+<p>
+Printing for John Limbird, 143, Strand; of whom may be had volumes (upon
+the same plan) for 1828, price 4<i>s</i>. 6<i>d</i>., 1829&mdash;30&mdash;31, price 5<i>s</i>. each.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1" name="footnote1">
+ </a><b>Footnote 1</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ The present Borough of Pontefract was incorporated by Richard III.,
+ and has sent Members to Parliament since the reign of James I.
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2" name="footnote2">
+ </a><b>Footnote 2</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ Dugdale Bar. vol. i p. 99.
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3" name="footnote3">
+ </a><b>Footnote 3</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ This tradition is moulded into a pleasing tale entitled "the White
+ Rose in Mull," in the Scottish Annual, the <i>Chameleon</i>, noticed by us
+ a few weeks since.
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4" name="footnote4">
+ </a><b>Footnote 4</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ Shakspeare lays Scene v. of Act. v. of Richard II. in a dungeon of
+ Pomfret Castle.
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5" name="footnote5">
+ </a><b>Footnote 5</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag5">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ In our last we erroneously stated the whole of this building as the
+ work of Messrs. Lee, for £9,214.; only part of the carcase, containing
+ the Hall, Library, &amp;c. being contracted for by those builders for the
+ above sum. Other contracts have since been made for the completion of
+ the building; of these, the principal is with Messrs. Baker and Son
+ (the builders of the King's library and new galleries of the British
+ Museum, &amp;c.) who have executed the beautiful finishings of the
+ interior: these contracts amount to upwards of £12,000.
+ <p>
+ Other contracts have been made with the above parties for the erection
+ of the Club House, and Dining Rooms, &amp;c., situate in Bell Yard, which
+ is an addition subsequently made to the original building.
+ </p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote6" name="footnote6">
+ </a><b>Footnote 6</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag6">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ The best remains of Ionic buildings at Athens are the temples of
+ Erecthens and Minerva Pulias in the Acropolis, and the little temple
+ on the banks of the Ilissus; but in Asia Minor the examples of this
+ order are far more numerous; and some of the finest are to be found
+ amongst the magnificent ruins at Brauchidia, at Priene, and at Teos,
+ &amp;c.
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote7" name="footnote7">
+ </a><b>Footnote 7</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag7">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ And father of Madame Junot.
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote8" name="footnote8">
+ </a><b>Footnote 8</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag8">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ The agent for the MIRROR, in Paris.&mdash;ED. M.
+</blockquote>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>
+<i>Printed and Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, (near Somerset House,)
+London; sold by ERNEST FLEISCHER, 626, New Market, Leipsic. G.G. Bennis,
+55, Rue Neuve, St. Augustin, Paris; and by all Newsmen and Booksellers.</i>
+</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11538 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #11538 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/11538)
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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 19, No. 531, Saturday, January 28, 1832.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: March 11, 2004 [EBook #11538]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE ***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. XIX. NO. 531.] SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1832. [PRICE 2d
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+[Illustration: PONTEFRACT CASTLE, 1648.]
+
+
+PONTEFRACT CASTLE.
+
+
+Pontrefact, a place of considerable note in English history, is situated
+about two miles south-west from Ferrybridge, nine miles nearly east from
+Wakefield, and fifteen miles north-west from Doncaster, in Yorkshire. The
+origin of the town is unknown; and the etymology of its name has been a
+matter of dispute, in which figures a monkish legend ascribing the name of
+Ponsfractus, or Pontefract, to the breaking of a bridge, and the fall of
+many persons into the river Aire, who were miraculously saved by St.
+William, Archbishop of York. The river Ouse and the city of York, however,
+put in a stronger claim as the scene of this miracle, and unfortunately
+for Pontefract, the town is so named in charters of fifty-three years'
+date before the miracle is pretended to have been performed. Still the
+etymology is referable to the breaking down of "_some bridge_," (_pons_,
+bridge; _fractus_, broken,) but this unravelment is not antiquarian.
+Camden says, that in the Saxon times, the name of this town was Kirkby,
+which was changed by the Normans to Pontefract, because of a broken bridge
+that was there. But as there is no river within two miles of the place,
+this bridge appears to have been built over the Wash, which lies about a
+quarter of a mile to the east of the Castle. Other researches prove
+Pontefract to have been a secondary and subordinate Roman station.
+
+The history of the Castle is, of course, involved in that of the manor.
+The town is stated to have been a burgh in the time of Edward the
+Confessor; but how long it had enjoyed this privilege is uncertain.[1]
+After the Conquest, this manor, with 150 others, or the greatest part of
+so many in Yorkshire, besides ten in Nottinghamshire, and four in
+Lincolnshire, were given by William to Hildebert, or Ilbert de Lacy, one
+of his Norman followers, who _built the Castle_. The work occupied twelve
+years, and it was finished in 1080. The labour and expense of its erection
+was so great, that no person unless in the possession of a princely
+fortune, could have completed a work of such magnitude. Hildebert was
+succeeded by his son Robert, commonly called Robert de Pontefract, from
+his being born at that town. Robert enjoyed his vast possessions in peace
+during the reign of William Rufus; but after the accession of Henry I. he
+with more ambition than prudence, joined with Robert, Duke of Normandy,
+the King's brother, who claimed the crown of England. In consequence of
+this transaction, Robert de Lacy was banished the realm, and the castle
+and honour of Pontefract were given by the King to Henry Traverse, and
+afterwards to Henry De-laval.[2] Robert de Lacy was, however, restored
+after a few years exile, and the property continued in the Lacy family
+till the year 1193, when another Robert de Lacy dying without issue, the
+estate and honour of Pontefract devolved on his uterine sister Aubrey de
+Lisours, who carried these estates of the Lacys by marriage to Richard
+Fitz-Eustace, constable of Chester. Thence they descended to John
+Fitz-Eustace, who accompanied Richard I. in his crusade, and is said to
+have died at Tyre in Palestine. Roger, his eldest son, also in the crusade,
+succeeded to his honour and estates. He was present with Richard at the
+memorable siege of Acre. On his return to England he was the first of his
+family that took the name of Lacy, in which Pontefract Castle continued
+till 1310, when Henry de Lacy, through default of male issue, left his
+possessions to his daughter and heiress, Alice, who was married to Thomas,
+Earl of Lancaster; and, in case of a failure of issue from that marriage,
+he entailed them on the King and his heirs.
+
+The Earl of Lancaster, it will be remembered, became embroiled with Edward
+II. and his minion Gaveston, who partly through the interference of
+Lancaster, was beheaded at Warwick after a siege in Scarborough Custle.
+The King swore vengeance for the death of his favourite, which led this
+weak sovereign into a long series of dissentions with the barons, at the
+head of whom, was the Earl of Lancaster. Both parties now flew to arms,
+but Lancaster soon found himself ill supported by his compeers, and
+marching northward for reinforcements from the celebrated Bruce, King of
+Scotland, the King in the meantime, sent the Earl of Surrey and Kent to
+besiege the castle of Pontefract, which surrendered at the first summons.
+Lancaster was next closely pursued by the king with great superiority of
+numbers. "The earl, endeavouring to rally his troops, was taken prisoner,
+with ninety-five barons and knights, and carried to the castle of
+Pontefract, where he was imprisoned in a tower which Leland says he had
+newly made towards the abbey," This tower was square: its wall of great
+strength, being 10-1/2 feet thick; nor was there any other entrance into
+the interior than by a hole or trap-door in the floor of the turret: so
+that the prisoner must have been let down into this abode of darkness,
+from whence there could be no possible mode of escape; the room was
+twenty-five feet square. A few days after, the King being at Pontefract
+ordered him to be arraigned in the hall of the castle, before a small
+number of peers, among whom were the Spencers, his mortal enemies. The
+earl was condemned to be hanged, drawn, and quartered; but the punishment
+was changed to decapitation. After sentence was passed, he said, "Shall I
+die without answer?" He was not, however, permitted to speak; but a
+certain Gascoign took him away, and having put an old hood over his head,
+set him on a lean mare without a bridle. Being attended by a Dominican
+friar as his confessor, he was carried out of the town amidst the insults
+of the people; and there beheaded. Thus fell Thomas, Earl of Lancaster,
+the first Prince of the Blood, being uncle to Edward II. who condemned him
+to death. Several of his adherents were hanged at Pontefract.
+
+The next royal blood that stained Pontefract castle was that of King
+Richard II. who was here murdered or starved to death; though there is a
+tradition that it was merely given out that Richard had starved himself to
+death, and that he escaped from Pontefract to Mull, whence he shortly
+proceeded to the mainland of Scotland, where, for nineteen years, he was
+entertained in an honourable but secret captivity.[3] The matter remains
+in tragic darkness.[4] In the succeeding reign of Henry IV. Richard
+Scroope, archbishop of York, being taken prisoner, was in Pontefract
+castle, condemned to death. Next in the calendar of atrocities committed
+within these drear walls, were the murders of Anthony Woodville, Earl
+Rivers; Richard, Lord Grey; Sir Thomas Vaughan; and Sir Richard Hawse, in
+1483; by Richard III., whom Shakspeare makes to whine forth:
+
+
+ O Pomfret, Pomfret! O thou bloody prison!
+ Fatal and ominous to noble peers!
+ Within the guilty closure of thy walls,
+ Richard II. here was hack'd to death;
+ And for more slander to thy dismal seat,
+ We give to thee our guiltless blood to drink.
+
+
+We may now pass over matters of minor importance in the history of
+Pontefract to the time of Charles I. In the King's contest with his
+Parliament, this was the last fortress that held out for the unfortunate
+monarch. At Christmas 1644, Sir Thomas Fairfax laid siege to the castle,
+and on Jan. 19, following, after an incessant cannonade of three days, a
+breach was made: the brave garrison would not surrender; the besiegers
+mined, but the besieged counter-mined, and the work of slaughter went on
+till the garrison were greatly reduced. At length the Parliamentarians
+were attacked and repulsed by a reinforcement of Royalists from Oxford,
+and thus ended the first siege of Pontefract. In March, 1645, the enemy
+again took possession of the town, and after three months cannonade, the
+garrison being reduced almost to a state of famine, surrendered the castle
+by an honourable capitulation on June 20. Sir Thomas Fairfax was appointed
+governor, and he thinking the royal party to be subdued, appointed a
+colonel as his substitute, with a garrison of 100 men. The royalists next
+by stratagem recovered Pontefract, of which Sir John Digby was appointed
+governor.
+
+The third and final siege of this fine castle commenced in October, 1648.
+General Rainsborough was appointed to the command of the army, but he
+being previously intercepted at Doncaster, Oliver Cromwell undertook to
+conduct the siege. After having remained a month before the fortress,
+without making any impression on its massy walls, Cromwell joined the
+grand army under Fairfax, and General Lambert being appointed commander in
+chief of the forces before the castle, arrived at Pontefract on the 4th of
+December.
+
+The ENGRAVING represents the castle precisely at this period. It is copied
+from a large print taken from a drawing found in the possession of a
+descendant of the Fairfax family of Denton; in one angle is the following
+memorandum: "Governor Morris commanded in the Castle. General Lambert
+commanded the Siege, being appointed thereto on the death of General
+Rainsborough, who was intercepted and killed at Doncaster, by a party from
+the Castle, as he was going to take command."
+
+General Lambert raised new works, and vigorously pushed the siege; but the
+besieged held out. On January 30, 1649, the King was beheaded; and the
+news no sooner reached Pontefract, than the royalist garrison proclaimed
+his son Charles II. and made a vigorous and destructive sally against
+their enemies. The Parliamentarians, however, prevailed, and on March 25,
+1649, the garrison being reduced from 500 or 600 to 100 men, surrendered
+by capitulation. Six of the principal Royalists were excepted from mercy:
+two escaped, but were retaken and executed at York; the third was killed
+in a sortie; and the three others concealing themselves among the ruins of
+the castle, escaped after the surrender; and two of the last lived to see
+the Restoration.
+
+This third siege was the most destructive to the castle: the tremendous
+artillery had shattered its massive walls; and its demolition was
+completed by order of Parliament. Within two months after its reduction,
+the buildings were unroofed, and all the materials sold. Thus was this
+princely fortress reduced to a heap of ruins.
+
+The Castle of Pontefract was built on an elevated rock, commanding
+extensive and picturesque views. The north-west prospect takes in the
+beautiful vale along which flows the Aire, skirted by woods and
+plantations. It is bounded only by the hills of Craven. The north and east
+prospect is more extensive, but the scenery is not equally striking and
+impressive. The towers of York Minster are distinctly seen, and the
+prospect is only bounded by the limits of vision. To the east--while the
+eye follows the course of the Aire towards the Humber, the fertility of
+the country, the spires of churches, and two considerable hills, Brayton
+Barf, and Hambleton Haugh, which rise in the midst of a plain, and one of
+which is covered with wood, increase the beauty of the scene. The
+south-east view includes part of the counties of Lincoln and Nottingham.
+To the south and south-west, the towering hills of Derbyshire, stretching
+towards Lancashire, form the horizon, while the foreground is a
+picturesque country variegated with handsome residences.
+
+The Castle, by its situation, as well as by its structure, was rendered
+almost impregnable. It was not commanded by any contiguous hills, and it
+could only be taken by blockade.
+
+By referring to the Engraving, the reader will better understand this
+defence. The outworks are there distinctly shown with the respective posts
+and guards: indeed, these lines exhibit a fine specimen of fortification.
+The quadrangular enclosure on the crest of the hill, in the lower part of
+the Engraving, represents Lamberts' Fort Royal. To the right is the
+approach to the castle by the south gate to the barbican, crossed by a
+wall, with the middle gate, with the east gate at the extremity of the
+line. We next approach, the ballium, or castle yard through the Porter's
+Lodge of two towers with a portcullis. The wall of the castle-yard, it
+will be seen, has a parapet, and is flanked with towers, and the chapel to
+the right of the Lodge. East and West of the yard is seen the
+semi-circular moat or ditch; and on an eminence near the western extremity
+of the ballium, stands the keep or round tower, the walls of which are
+said to have been twenty-one feet thick. The state rooms are on the second
+story. The dungeons of the towers are terrific even in description: one
+was about 15 feet deep, and scarcely six feet square, without any
+admission of light. The whole area occupied by the Pontrefact fortress
+seems to have been about 7 acres, now converted into garden ground.
+
+The church seen within the work is that of All Saints, or Allhallows, a
+Gothic structure, probably of the time of Henry III., and almost destroyed
+in the sieges of the castle.
+
+Pontefract must be numbered in our recollections of childhood; since here
+were grown whole fields of liquorice root, from the extract of which are
+made. _Pontefract Cakes_, impressed with the arms--three lions passant
+gardant, surmounted with a helmet, full-forward, open faced, and
+garde-visure. We have likewise seen them impressed with the celebrated
+fortress, and the motto "Post mortem patris pro filio,"--after the death
+of the father--for the son--denoting the loyalty of the Pontefract
+Royalists in proclaiming Charles II. at the death of his father.
+
+
+ [1] The present Borough of Pontefract was incorporated by Richard
+ III., and has sent Members to Parliament since the reign of
+ James I.
+
+ [2] Dugdale Bar. vol. i p. 99.
+
+ [3] This tradition is moulded into a pleasing tale entitled "the White
+ Rose in Mull," in the Scottish Annual, the _Chameleon_, noticed by
+ us a few weeks since.
+
+ [4] Shakspeare lays Scene v. of Act. v. of Richard II. in a dungeon of
+ Pomfret Castle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"LACONICS," GUESSES AT TRUTH, &c.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+It is the interest of an indolent man to be honest: for it requires
+considerable trouble and finesse, to deceive others successfully.
+
+Money was a wise contrivance to place fools somewhat on a level with men
+of sense.
+
+It will be observed, that people have generally the identical faults and
+vices they accuse others of; we may instance cowardice.
+
+Wherever a proposition is self-evident, it is but weakening its strength
+to bring forward arguments in its support.
+
+It is a melancholy reflection that a glass of wine will do more towards
+raising the spirits, than the finest composition ever penned.
+
+It is a great mistake in physiognomists to take outward signs as evidences
+of feeling: the seat of real sensation is within.
+
+Wherever art has travelled out of her proper sphere to ape nature, she has
+proved herself but a miserable mimic, even in her most approved efforts.
+
+We must not allow ourselves to dwell too seriously on life; for otherwise
+we shall be tempted to forego all our plans, to indulge in no future
+wishes, and, in short, to live on in torpid apathy.
+
+Books are at last the best companions: they instruct us in silence without
+any display of superiority, and they attend the pace of each man's
+capacity, without reproaching him for his want of comprehension.
+
+A disgust of life frequently proceeds from sheer vanity, or a wish to be
+supposed incapable of deriving gratification from the ordinary routine of
+happiness.
+
+It sometimes happens that with men as well as animals, that evidences of
+spirit are only the effect of excited fear.
+
+(_To be continued_.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LAW INSTITUTION.[1]
+
+
+(At the time of our last publication we were not aware that any
+architectural details of the building in Chancery-lane had appeared. We
+now find that the _Legal Observer_ contained such description in March
+last, "collected," says the editor, "with some pains and trouble." A
+correspondent dropped the _Observer_ leaf into our letter-box in the
+course of last week; but, unfortunately, the communication did not reach
+us in time for insertion with our Engraving. Good news, we know, usually
+comes upon crutches, but we hope our thanks will reach this correspondent
+at a better pace.)
+
+The style of architecture of the principal front in Chancery-lane is
+purely Grecian. The details and proportions appear to have been founded
+upon the best examples of the Ionic order in Athens and Asia Minor,[2] but
+they are not servilely copied from any of them.
+
+Mr. Vulliamy, the architect for the Institution, has thrown into this
+front the true spirit of the originals; and the effect which the
+harmonious proportions of the building produce on the spectator, when
+viewing it from Chancery-lane, must have been the result of much
+observation and experience in ancient and classic models.
+
+This front, extending nearly sixty feet in width, is of Portland stone. It
+consists of four columns and two antae, of the Grecian Ionic order,
+supporting an entablature and pediment, and forming together one grand
+portico. To give the requisite elevation, the columns and antae are raised
+upon pedestals; these, as well as the basement story and podium of the
+inner wall of the portico, are of Aberdeen granite; the columns and the
+rest of the front are formed of large blocks of Portland stone. In the
+front wall, within the portico, there are two ranges of windows above the
+basement.
+
+The front in Bell-yard extends nearly eighty feet, and will be finished
+with Roman cement, in imitation of stone. It will have a portico of two
+columns, and two antae of Portland stone, of the height of the ground
+story, which is very lofty, and the width of the entire compartment of the
+front. From the interior requiring to be divided into several rooms, this
+front must have many windows. The elevation is formed more upon the models
+of modern domestic architecture than of ancient public buildings, and
+resembles, in its general appearance, one of the palazzi in the Strada
+Balbi at Genoa, in the Corso at Rome, or in the Toledo at Naples. In its
+details, however, the extravagancies of the middle ages, and the often
+elegant frivolities of the _cinque cento_ period, have been avoided, and
+the breadth and simplicity of Greek models have still been followed.
+
+The ground plan of the building, by its general arrangement, divides
+itself into three parts, which may be distinguished under the heads of the
+_Library_, the _Hall_, and the _Club Room_. The first of these (that
+towards Chancery-lane) consists, on the ground floor, of a first and
+second vestibule, and staircase to the Library, the Secretary's Room, and
+Registry Office; and above these on the first floor, the Library,
+occupying the height of two stories.
+
+The _Library_ is a large and lofty room, fifty-five feet by thirty-one and
+a half, and twenty-three and a half high, divided by a screen of columns
+and pilasters of scagliola, into two unequal parts, the first forming a
+sort of ante-library to the other; both are surrounded by bookcases of oak,
+and a gallery runs round the whole, above which is another range of
+bookcases.
+
+The principal light is obtained from a large lantern-light in the ceiling;
+but there is a range of windows (double sashed, and glazed with plate
+glass) towards Chancery-lane, which also admit light into the lower part.
+
+All the floors in the building are made fire-proof, generally by being
+arched with brick; but that of the Library is rendered secure from fire by
+the ceilings of the vestibules underneath being formed of real stone,
+supported on iron girders and bearers, and divided into panels and
+compartments after the manner of the roofs of the peristyles of the
+ancient temples.
+
+There are three entrances from Chancery-lane: that in the centre is
+exclusively for members, and leads to all parts of the building; that on
+the right for persons going to the Registry Office; and also for persons
+having to speak to members; that on the left leads down to the Office for
+the deposit of deeds, and to the strong rooms.
+
+The second division consists of the _Hall_ and its appurtenances. It is
+above thirty feet high, and fifty-seven feet and a half long; and on each
+side it has wings or recesses, behind insulated columns of scagliola, in
+imitation of Egyptian granite. Within these, and at the back of the
+columns, are galleries; the staircases to which are concealed in the
+angles. There are three fireplaces in the Hall; one in the centre,
+opposite the principal entrance, and one in the centre of each of the
+recesses. The Hall is lighted by a lantern-light forty feet long and
+twenty-four feet wide.
+
+The third division is next Bell-yard: it is subdivided into two parts. In
+the first of these are three entrances from Bell-yard. That in the centre
+is exclusively for the members; that to the left leads to the staircase to
+the Secretary's apartments; and the other, to the right of the centre, is
+for strangers to enter who have business to transact in any of the rooms
+appropriated to public business. On the ground floor of this part of the
+third division is a large Committee Room, and an ante or waiting room
+adjoining, and the great staircase to the rooms above. On the first floor
+are the rooms for meetings on matters of business connected with the law;
+and above these are the Secretary's apartments.
+
+The second part of the third division contains, on the ground floor, the
+_Club Room_, which occupies all the ground floor: it will be divided by
+columns and pilasters of scagliola, and decorated with a paneled ceiling
+and appropriate ornaments. Its dimensions are fifty feet by twenty-seven,
+and eighteen feet high. On the first floor are rooms of different
+dimensions for dinner parties; and over these, rooms for the resident
+officers. In the basement story of this part of the building are the
+Kitchen and other domestic offices for the use of the Club.
+
+The office for the deposit of deeds is in the basement story, next to
+Chancery-lane.
+
+In the remaining parts of the basement story of the building are fifty-two
+strong rooms, with iron doors, for the deposit of deeds, which are well
+ventilated and fire-proof; their average size is six feet and a half by
+seven feet and a half, but some are larger, and others rather less, than
+these dimensions. The whole are secured by one double iron door, with a
+very strong lock and master-key.
+
+
+ [1] In our last we erroneously stated the whole of this building as
+ the work of Messrs. Lee, for £9,214.; only part of the carcase,
+ containing the Hall, Library, &c. being contracted for by those
+ builders for the above sum. Other contracts have since been made
+ for the completion of the building; of these, the principal is
+ with Messrs. Baker and Son (the builders of the King's library
+ and new galleries of the British Museum, &c.) who have executed
+ the beautiful finishings of the interior: these contracts amount
+ to upwards of £12,000.
+
+ Other contracts have been made with the above parties for the
+ erection of the Club House, and Dining Rooms, &c., situate in
+ Bell Yard, which is an addition subsequently made to the original
+ building.
+
+ [2] The best remains of Ionic buildings at Athens are the temples of
+ Erecthens and Minerva Pulias in the Acropolis, and the little
+ temple on the banks of the Ilissus; but in Asia Minor the examples
+ of this order are far more numerous; and some of the finest are to
+ be found amongst the magnificent ruins at Brauchidia, at Priene,
+ and at Teos, &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+VAPOUR-BATHS.
+
+
+Among the remedies for cholera, or perhaps we should rather say attempted
+remedies, the vapour-bath is conspicuous over all the other means of cure,
+external and internal: stimulants, frictions, rubefacients, blisters, have
+that for their indirect object which the vapour-bath accomplishes directly,
+namely, to produce heat on the surface of the body, and thus restore that
+correspondence between the temperature of the interior and exterior parts,
+which in the disease is so strangely disturbed. There are two difficulties
+in the application of the vapour-bath, which are not easily overcome. When
+applied to the patient in the ordinary way, from the nature of the heat,
+the upper surface of the body is scorched, while the back is almost cold.
+Now in cholera, the application of heat to the back is of essential
+importance. In the whole of the machines for applying the bath, the
+patient is exposed to more or less tossing about; which, from the extreme
+prostration of strength in cholera patients, is always injurious; and as
+the patient must, when taken from the bath, be replaced on a comparatively
+cold bed, the sudden change will often do more ill than the bath will do
+good. To these must be added, in a disease which chiefly affects the poor,
+another item, forming an important drawback on the utility of the ordinary
+vapour-bath,--the application of it is attended with no inconsiderable
+expense. A machine which should obviate these objections, was a
+desideratum; and we think such a one has been invented by Mr. Burnet, of
+Golden Square. It is so simple as to be easily described without a diagram,
+and so well adapted to the end, and so easy and cheap in application, that
+we think we shall be rendering an acceptable service to our readers in
+describing it. The best way to effect this is to show the steps of its
+application.
+
+We suppose the patient lying on his back in bed. The two sides of a
+framework, about 6-1/2 by 2-1/2 feet, are placed one on each side of him;
+five or six broad canvass straps, which are meant to support his body, are
+placed beneath him by a couple of attendants; two transverse pieces of
+wood are then introduced at the foot and head, to extend the framework;
+and the cross straps, by means of eyelet-holes, are attached to the sides,
+by a row of common brass pins. This is the work of about a minute. One
+attendant then raises the frame at the head, while the other introduces a
+couple of feet about nine inches long into the frame; and this done, the
+foot is raised in a similar way, and similarly supported; a board is then
+fitted to the foot, through a hole in the centre of which the chimney of
+the heating apparatus passes; the blankets are closely tucked round the
+patient and the frame; the lamp is applied, and the process of bathing
+commences. In this way, it will be seen that the patient is suspended in
+the heated air, which is moreover applied to the back in the first
+instance; there is no fatigue incurred; and when perspiration has been
+generated and carried on as long as is deemed expedient, he is let down
+again, without difficulty or danger, into his heated bed, and surrounded
+with the warm blankets employed in the bath itself. The room in which we
+saw the experiment performed, was at a temperature of 43° Fahrenheit; the
+clothes of the bed were of the same temperature: the lamp is conical, and
+has no tube; the wick is merely inserted in it; the charge is two ounces
+of spirits of wine. In ten minutes after the lamp had been applied, the
+thermometer at the foot of the frame on which the patient is made to
+recline, was 136°; at the head, 116°; on the blanket, which covered the
+bed, 96°. Were the vapour applied above the patient instead of under him,
+the difference between the heat at the breast and back would be at least
+40°. The temperature once raised, may be kept up at a very small expense;
+so that the whole price of the bath, continued for half an hour or three
+quarters of an hour, will not exceed eightpence or ninepence. There is a
+very simple expedient, by which, when the temperature of the chamber
+formed by the frame of the bath is once raised sufficiently high, steam,
+either simple or medicated, may be introduced, and the lamp apparatus may
+be applied either at the foot, the head, or the side, as is most
+convenient. The grand recommendation, however, of the bath, is the
+applicability of the vapour to the entire surface of the body; the
+simplicity and ease of the application, both to the assistants and the
+patient; the exclusion of the possibility of cold; and its cheapness. In
+all these points of view, we look on it as a valuable invention.
+
+_Spectator_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+NOTES OF A READER
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DECLINE OF THE DRAMA.
+
+
+One thing which I am unable to interpret among the oddities of the English,
+is their inconsistency respecting dramatic entertainments. I have never
+yet been present where two or three of my countrymen were gathered
+together, that, after a wrangling review of the weather, they did not turn
+their conversation upon the theatres. There is no topic more universally
+discussed than the decadence of the drama, or the engagements, merits,
+and adventures of the performers. Neither the Lord Chancellor nor the
+Archbishop of Canterbury is ever so familiarly known by name and person
+to the public, as the first tragedian and comedian of the day; and the
+theatrical belles and heroines are either elevated to the peerage by
+matrimony, or lowered by the undertaker into Westminster Abbey. As some
+French Vaudevillist observed, "Moliere was denied in France the rights of
+sepulture, while
+
+
+ "Garrick repose à côté de leur rois!"
+
+
+Yet, notwithstanding all this clamour of popularity--all this
+infatuation--there is no branch of the arts so grossly neglected in
+England as the drama. It is no longer the fashion in London to attend the
+theatres. Owing partly to the increase of private amusements, and partly
+to the late hours gradually adopted during the reign of George the Fourth,
+the custom of play-going has declined among the higher classes, and
+naturally produces the reaction of bad pieces and indifferent performers.
+Even a clever actor, when satisfied that he is to receive judgment from an
+unrefined and uneducated audience, will degenerate and grow slovenly; and
+from what I have observed of the London stage, I see it is the custom to
+daub for the galleries, or to creep through the business under cover of a
+cold, tame mediocrity. Without the slightest patronage from the court or
+substantial encouragement from the fosterers of literary merit, these
+luckless personages are expected to attempt the same exertions and intense
+study, which is rewarded, in foreign countries, by the most flattering and
+judicious attention; as well as by a pension, to cheer the infirmities of
+old age. Although tolerably well paid by his manager, the English actor
+has the mortification of being tyrannized and insulted by the gallery, and
+overlooked by the higher classes. A few persons of rank and fortune are
+provided with private boxes at the national theatres; but these are
+usually let by the night to plebeian tenants. It is rare indeed to observe
+a family of distinction in the dress circle of either Drury Lane or Covent
+Garden; while the French play is never deficient in a fashionable audience.
+
+The Opera, too, is nightly becoming more crowded; while at the two patent
+theatres "a beggarly account of empty boxes," and an equally beggarly
+account of flat, stale, and unprofitable performances, greets me whenever
+I am rash enough to take my post of observation. Lady Romford has a
+private box, which she visits only in preference to staying at a still
+duller home, on a disengaged evening; and Bagot occasionally drags me to
+the play, to make my foreign ignorance and inexperience a pretext for
+following Lady Clara to a spot which no one seems to visit without an
+apology. People in society give as many reasons for having done so strange
+a thing as go to see the new tragedy, as they would invent in Paris to
+excuse a similar omission.
+
+Since the Kemble munia, and the Byron mania, there has been a general
+affectation of indifference towards poetry and the drama; your true
+fashionable never mentions either without ridicule--the natural
+consequence of previously exaggerated enthusiasm.
+
+But above all the absurdities connected with this national weakness,
+stands that of the public prints. So much importance is given by the
+newspapers to every thing relating to the histrionic art, that we are
+daily informed of the whereabout of all the third-rate performers of the
+minor theatres; that "Mr. Smith, of Sadler's Wells, is engaged to Mr.
+Ducrow for the ensuing season;" or that "Miss Brown, belonging to the
+ballet department of the Surrey theatre, has sprained her ankle." While
+two thirds of a leading print are occupied with details of the Reform Bill,
+or a debate on some constitutional question,--or while the foreign
+intelligence of two sieges and a battle is concentrated with a degree of
+terseness worthy a telegraph, half a column is devoted to the plot of a
+new melo-drama at the Coburg; or to a cut and dried criticism upon the
+nine hundredth representation of _Hamlet_--beginning with the "immortal
+bard," and ending with the waistcoats of the grave-digger!--_The Opera, a
+Novel_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EUGENE ARAM.
+
+
+The recollection of this man is still preserved at Lynn, in Norfolk, at
+which town he was for some time usher at the grammar-school. A small room
+at the back of the house, in which he slept, was, until these last few
+years, (when it was pulled down and rebuilt,) mysteriously pointed to by
+the little urchins as they passed up to bed of a cold, ghost-enticing
+night, as the chamber in which the "usher, who was hanged for murder," was
+used to sleep.
+
+The tradition which remains of his character is, that he was "a man of
+loneliness and mystery," sullen and reserved; that on half-holy-days, and
+when his duties would allow, he strayed solitary and cheerless, as if to
+avoid the world, amongst the flat uninteresting marshes which are situated
+on the opposite side of the river Ouse.
+
+At Lynn the character of Aram was, until his apprehension, unexceptionable;
+but after that event, circumstances were then called to mind which seemed
+to indicate a naturally dark character; but whether these were all
+strictly founded in truth, or magnified suspicions arising from the
+appaling circumstances of the crime of which he was convicted, I am unable
+to determine. The following, derived from unquestionable authority, having
+been related by Dr. L., who was master of the grammar-school at the time,
+may serve as a sample:--there can be no doubt but that the worthy Dr.
+himself believed his suspicions well founded, as he used to tremble when
+he related it. It was customary for the parents of the scholars, on an
+appointed day, to dine with the master, at which time it was expected they
+would bring with them the amount of their bills. It was late at night,
+after one of such meetings, that Dr. L. was awakened by a noise at his
+bed-room door; he rose up, and going into the passage which led to the
+staircase, but which was not in the direct way from Aram's bed room to the
+ground-floor, he discovered the usher _dressed_. Having questioned him as
+to the object of his rising at that unseasonable hour, Aram confusedly
+answered that he had been taken unwell, and had been obliged to go do down
+stairs. The Dr. then retired, unsuspiciously, to bed. From the combined
+circumstances of the noise at the door, his great agitation and confusion,
+and from his being found in the passage, the worthy Dr., in later years,
+had no doubt, that, from its being known to Aram that a considerable sum
+of money was in his bed-room, Aram intended nothing less than to rob him;
+and no doubt, continued the narrator, he _would_ have murdered me too, if
+it had been rendered necessary, from my discovering or opposing him.
+
+The spot just at the entrance to the play-ground, at which Aram was taken
+into custody by two strange men from Yorkshire, is still remarked, and
+generally by the young scholar in a tremulous whisper.--_Literary Gazette_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NATURALIST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+AGENCY OF MAN IN EXTINGUISHING OR SPREADING SPECIES.
+
+
+Let us make some inquiries into the extent of the influence which the
+progress of society has exerted, during the last seven or eight centuries,
+in altering the distribution of our indigenous British animals. Dr.
+Fleming has prosecuted this inquiry with his usual zeal and ability, and
+in a memoir on the subject has enumerated the best authenticated examples
+of the decrease or extirpation of certain species during a period when our
+population has made the most rapid advances. We shall offer a brief
+outline of his results.
+
+The stag, as well as the fallow-deer, and the roe, were formerly so
+abundant that, according to Lesley, from five hundred to a thousand were
+sometimes slain at a hunting-match; but the native races would already
+have been extinguished, had they not been carefully preserved in certain
+forests. The otter, the marten, and the polecat, were also in sufficient
+numbers to be pursued for the sake of their fur; but they have now been
+reduced within very narrow bounds. The wild cat and fox have also been
+sacrificed throughout the greater part of the country, for the security of
+the poultry-yard or the fold. Badgers have been expelled from nearly every
+district which at former periods they inhabited.
+
+Besides these, which have been driven out from some haunts, and everywhere
+reduced in number, there are some which have been wholly extirpated; such
+as the ancient breed of indigenous horses, the wild boar and the wild oxen,
+of which last, however, a few remains are still preserved in the parks of
+some of our nobility. The beaver, which was eagerly sought after for its
+fur, had become scarce at the close of the ninth century, and, by the
+twelfth century, was only to be met with, according to Giraldus de Barri,
+in one river in Wales, and another in Scotland. The wolf, once so much
+dreaded by our ancestors, is said to have maintained its ground in Ireland
+so late as the beginning of the eighteenth century (1710,) though it had
+been extirpated in Scotland thirty years before, and in England at a much
+earlier period. The bear, which in Wales was regarded as a beast of the
+chase equal to the hare or the boar, only perished as a native of Scotland
+in the year 1057.
+
+Many native birds of prey have also been the subjects of unremitting
+persecution. The eagles, larger hawks, and ravens, have disappeared from
+the more cultivated districts. The haunts of the mallard, the snipe, the
+redshank, and the bittern, have been drained equally with the summer
+dwellings of the lapwing and the curlew. But these species still linger in
+some portion of the British isles; whereas the large capercailzies, or
+wood grouse, formerly natives of the pine forests of Ireland and Scotland,
+have been destroyed within the last fifty years. The egret and the crane,
+which appear to have been formerly very common in Scotland, are now only
+occasional visitants.
+
+The bustard (_Otis tarda_,) observes Graves in his _British Ornithology_,
+"was formerly seen in the downs and heaths of various parts of our island,
+in flocks of forty or fifty birds; whereas it is now a circumstance of
+rare occurrence to meet with a single individual." Bewick also remarks,
+"that they were formerly more common in this island than at present; they
+are now found only in the open counties of the south and east, in the
+plains of Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, and some parts of Yorkshire." In the few
+years that have elapsed since Bewick wrote, this bird has entirely
+disappeared from Wiltshire and Dorsetshire.
+
+These changes, we may observe, are derived from very imperfect memorials,
+and relate only to the larger and more conspicuous animals inhabiting a
+small spot on the globe; but they cannot fail to exalt our conception of
+the enormous revolutions which, in the course of several thousand years,
+the whole human species must have effected.
+
+The kangaroo and the emu are retreating rapidly before the progress of
+colonization in Australia; and it scarcely admits of doubt, that the
+general cultivation of that country must lead to the extirpation of both.
+The most striking example of the loss, even within the last two centuries,
+of a remarkable species, is that of the dodo--a bird first seen by the
+Dutch when they landed on the Isle of France, at that time uninhabited,
+immediately after the discovery of the passage to the East Indies by the
+Cape of Good Hope. It was of a large size and singular form; its wings
+short, like those of an ostrich, and wholly incapable of sustaining its
+heavy body even for a short flight. In its general appearance it differed
+from the ostrich, cassowary, or any known bird.
+
+Many naturalists gave figures of the dodo after the commencement of the
+seventeenth century; and there is a painting of it in the British Museum,
+which is said to have been taken from a living individual. Beneath the
+painting is a leg, in a fine state of preservation, which ornithologists
+are agreed cannot belong to any other known bird. In the museum at Oxford,
+also, there is a foot and a head, in an imperfect state, but M. Cuvier
+doubts the identy of this species with that of which the painting is
+preserved in London.
+
+In spite of the most active search, during the last century, no
+information respecting the dodo was obtained, and some authors have gone
+so far as to pretend that it never existed; but amongst a great mass of
+satisfactory evidence in favour of the recent existence of this species,
+we may mention that an assemblage of fossil bones were recently discovered,
+under a bed of lava, in the Isle of France, and sent to the Paris museum
+by M. Desjardins. They almost all belonged to a large living species of
+land-tortoise, called _Testudu Indica_, but amongst them were the head,
+sternum, and humerus of the dodo. M. Cuvier showed me these valuable
+remains in Paris, and assured me that they left no doubt in his mind that
+the huge bird was one of the gallinaceous tribe.
+
+Next to the direct agency of man, his indirect influence in multiplying
+the numbers of large herbivorous quadrupeds of domesticated races, may be
+regarded as one of the most obviate causes of the extermination of species.
+On this, and on several other grounds, the introduction of the horse, ox,
+and other mammalia, into America, and their rapid propagation over that
+continent within the last three centuries, is a fact of great importance
+in natural history. The extraordinary herds of wild cattle and horses
+which overran the plains of South America, sprang from a very few pairs
+first carried over by the Spaniards; and they prove that the wide
+geographical range of large species in great continents does not
+necessarily imply that they have existed there from remote periods.
+Humboldt observes, in his Travels, on the authority of Azara, that it is
+believed there exist, in the Pampas of Buenos Ayres, twelve million cows
+and three million horses, without comprising in this enumeration the
+cattle that have no acknowledged proprietor. In the Llanos of Caraccas,
+the rich hateros, or proprietors of pastoral farms, are entirely ignorant
+of the number of cattle they possess. The young are branded with a mark
+peculiar to each herd, and some of the most wealthy owners mark as many as
+fourteen thousand a year. In the northern plains, from the Orinoco to the
+lake of Maracaybo, M. Depons reckoned that one million two hundred
+thousand oxen, one hundred and eighty thousand horses, and ninety thousand
+mules, wandered at large. In some parts of the valley of the Mississippi,
+especially in the country of the Osage Indians, wild horses are immensely
+numerous.
+
+The establishment of black cattle in America dates from Columbus's second
+voyage to St. Domingo. They there multiplied rapidly; and that island
+presently became a kind of nursery from which these animals were
+successively transported to various parts of the continental coast, and
+from thence into the interior. Notwithstanding these numerous exportations,
+in twenty-seven years after the discovery of the island, herds of four
+thousand head, as we learn from Oviedo, were not uncommon, and there were
+even some that amounted to eight thousand. In 1587, the number of hides
+exported from St. Domingo alone, according to Acosta's report, was
+thirty-five thousand four hundred and forty-four; and in the same year
+there were exported sixty-four thousand three hundred and fifty from the
+ports of New Spain. This was in the sixty-fifth year after the taking of
+Mexico, previous to which event the Spaniards, who came into that country,
+had not been able to engage in any thing else than war. All our readers
+are aware that these animals are now established throughout the American
+continent, from Canada to Paraguay.
+
+The ass has thriven very generally in the New World; and we learn from
+Ulloa, that in Quito they ran wild, and multiplied in amazing numbers, so
+as to become a nuisance. They grazed together in herds, and, when attacked,
+defended themselves with their mouths. If a horse happened to stray into
+the places where they fed, they all fell upon him, and did not cease
+biting and kicking till they left him dead.
+
+The first hogs were carried to America by Columbus, and established in the
+island of St. Domingo the year following its discovery in November, 1493.
+In succeeding years they were introduced into other places where the
+Spaniards settled; and, in the space of half a century, they were found
+established in the New World, from the latitude of 25 deg. north, to the
+40th deg. of south latitude. Sheep, also, and goats have multiplied
+enormously in the New World, as have also the cat and the rat, which last,
+as we before stated, has been imported unintentionally in ships. The dogs
+introduced by man, which have at different periods become wild in America,
+hunted in packs like the wolf and the jackal, destroying not only hogs,
+but the calves and foals of the wild cattle and horses.
+
+Ulloa in his voyage, and Buffon on the authority of old writers, relate a
+fact which illustrates very clearly the principle before explained by us,
+of the check which the increase of one animal necessarily offers to that
+of another. The Spaniards had introduced goats into the island of Juan
+Fernandez, where they became so prolific as to furnish the pirates who
+infested those seas with provisions. In order to cut off this resource
+from the bucaneers, a number of dogs were turned loose into the island;
+and so numerous did they become in their turn, that they destroyed the
+goats in every accessible part, after which the number of the wild dogs
+again decreased.
+
+As an example of the rapidity with which a large tract may become peopled
+by the offspring of a single pair of quadrupeds, we may mention that in
+the year 1773, thirteen rein-deer were exported from Norway, only three of
+which reached Iceland. These were turned loose into the mountains of
+Guldbringe Syssel, where they multiplied so greatly, in the course of
+forty years, that it was not uncommon to meet with herds consisting of
+from forty to one hundred in various districts.--_Lyell's Geology_, vol.
+ii.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NOVELIST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CONFESSION OF SERVENTIUS.
+
+(_Concluded from page 46_.)
+
+
+That evening, Father Dominick, our excellent priest, and my tutor in the
+classics, was closeted for a length of time with my afflicted nominal
+parents; and two days afterwards taking me with him to his monastery, he
+introduced me to the superior, as an orphan, the child of dear and
+particular friends, confided by them to his charge for education upon
+their death-bed, and with a distinct understanding that I was not bound to
+take upon myself monastic vows, the superior allowed me to remain with him
+as a boarder. Serventius and Artemisia I never more beheld, and every
+inquiry respecting them which I ventured to make of Father Dominick, was
+checked with a strange, sad look, and an admonition to mention them no
+more. Seven long and peaceful years, I spent in the monastery; and at the
+expiration of that period, was placed by my guardian in the house of the
+celebrated Doctor Sanazio of Padua, as a student of medicine. Here, novel
+and delightful studies, speculations, and scenes, opened upon my
+inquisitive, ardent mind, and amused my enthusiastic imagination. Sanazio
+was regarded in learned Padua, as little less than a demi-god; at certain
+hours he visited his patients, amongst whom might generally be numbered
+three-fourths of the population of Padua; at certain hours, his own
+mansion was crowded like the audience-hall of some mighty potentate, with
+supplicants for food and physic; three evenings in the week were devoted
+by him to intense study in his own secret, solitary chamber; and upon the
+alternate three, he received the visits of those who desired to consult
+him upon abstruse points, only properly to be solved by an acquaintance
+with the occult sciences. In brief, my honoured master, I soon discovered,
+was reckoned a very fair conjuror; he consulted the stars, drew horoscopes,
+cast nativities, was learned in the expositions of dreams and omens,
+undertook to give information respecting lost property, and matrimonial
+prospects; composed, and dispensed charms and philtres, and proved himself,
+as I have hinted, a capital astrologer, and something more. How Sanazio,
+who certainly was a very extraordinary man, acquired his multifarious
+information, unless really by supernatural agency, I am at a loss to
+discover. Ignatius Druso, my fellow student, was of opinion that he only
+dexterously availed himself in the evening of the news which he had
+gathered from his patients in the morning; and that his familiars were no
+more than a few active emissaries, for whose espionage and additional
+gleanings of town news, it answered to him well, to pay. Ever partial to
+romance, I did not readily fall in with Druso's sober view of this subject,
+and the longer I lived with Doctor Sanazio, the more occasion had I to
+doubt the correctness of his opinion, because some things occurred of
+which my master obtained immediate and accurate knowledge, whilst I am
+perfectly certain that no human tongue had divulged them to him; take the
+following incident as an example:--Druso and myself were accustomed, on
+those evenings which Sanazio spent in his sanctum, to visit patients in
+his stead, to range over the town, to go to places of public amusement, or
+to conclude our meritorious labours at a tavern. Being one night at this
+latter place, an old woman entered, and inquiring whether I were Master
+Serventius, Doctor Sanazio's pupil, slipped a billet and a piece of gold
+into my hand and desired me to follow her. I did so, without hesitation,
+and whilst behind my guide, contrived to peruse the note by moon-light,
+which contained these words:
+
+"I am sick,--of the heart's mortal sickness;--relieve it, and great shall
+be thy recompense."
+
+Perplexed, yet amused, by what promised an adventure, I followed my
+ancient guide into a house whose exterior was sufficiently humble; but,
+having ascended a steep flight of stairs, she threw open the door of a
+chamber in which they terminated, and I found myself not only in a
+richly-furnished apartment, but in the presence of a lady, young as
+immortal Hebe, and fair as day. I saw at a glance that her ills were those
+of the mind only, and ere she had opened her lips to detail them and
+engage me in her cause, I had vowed, heart and soul, to be her champion.
+Having complimented me upon the high character she had heard of my prowess,
+understanding, and principles, she informed me, with little circumlocution,
+that various unhappy family circumstances had rendered it necessary for
+her to seek friends amongst strangers; that she was a novice of the
+Convent of St. Anne, but on the eve of profession, and that having long
+been under an engagement of marriage with a young gentleman of family,
+respecting whom her relations had used her very deceitfully and cruelly,
+she had fixed upon me as a person little likely to be subjected to
+suspicion on her account, to aid Signor Fernandez in the difficult and
+hazardous enterprise, which she said must be a work of time and prudence,
+of carrying her off from the convent. Having obtained my promise to this
+effect, she detailed her plans, and furnished me with the means of
+continual communication with her lover and herself. I returned home,
+highly elated at the trust reposed in me, at the importance which I had
+acquired in my own eyes, and at the prospect of a handsome remuneration
+for my services, from the lovely object of them. Sanazio, with lamp in
+hand, and arrayed in his night attire, to my great terror and surprise,
+opened the door to me himself; it was very late, Druso had long since
+returned without me, and in order to allay the storm which I saw gathering
+upon mine ancient master's brow, I slipped the gold given to me by the
+confidante of beautiful Antonia, into his unreluctant hand.
+
+"Unhappy youth!" exclaimed Sanazio, "beware of aiding the nun, lest thou
+bring upon her and upon thyself the fate of Artemisia and Serventius."
+
+These words so alarmed me that I nearly fainted; for how, in the name of
+all things holy and gracious, came Sanazio to know in whose society I had
+passed the last hour, and what was the subject of our conversation? His
+terrible allusion too, to those lost loved ones, of whose untimely fate I
+was still so ignorant, strangely troubled my conscious breast. Let me be
+brief, the hours of my ill-fated existence are fast wearing away, and I
+have yet more to relate. To Ignatius Druso I was obliged to confide my
+secret, because his assistance, in the furtherance of plans which were
+always requiring, from little immaterial circumstances, some slight
+alterations, was found necessary; and it must here suffice those to know,
+who shall, after my destruction do me the melancholy favour of perusing
+this retrospective record, that some months after Antonia had taken the
+veil, I succeeded in restoring her to the arms of her lover, witnessed
+their private nuptials, visited them in their new residence, a villa in a
+secluded spot far from Padua, and received my promised recompense. "Young
+man! you've ruined yourself; and your fatal destiny is sealed!" were the
+remarkable words of Sanazio, on the morning after the completion of my
+enterprise, but long ere the elopement of the new devotee became publicly
+known. However, he never reverted to the subject, not even upon his
+death-bed; and after the learned doctor's decease, when I came into the
+whole of his practice, and no small portion of his fame, I was easy, for
+the memory of that sacrilege had passed away.
+
+Ignatius Druso, like myself, resided in Padua, but soon quitted the
+medical profession, disgusted, I fancy, at finding that I had become a
+second Sanazio, whilst he commanded little or no attention: still we were
+friends, nor did I suspect that the germs of envy and malice were sown in
+his bosom, and that I had trusted him with one secret, or more, too much.
+"Serventius, my son," had said the venerable Sanazio to me upon his
+death-bed, "your ardent desire of knowledge and discreet use of it,
+encourage me ere I quit this world, to entrust you with the grand arcanum
+of our art; as yet, you know not the secret of my success, but take then
+this hint and improve upon it. Can he repair a piece of mechanism, who is
+ignorant of its make, its parts, and how they act upon, and affect one
+another? Behold this key; it is that of my laboratory, and may it indeed
+open the door of knowledge to you."
+
+After Sanazio's decease, curiosity quickly led me to his study: I was
+alone, and the shades of evening were stealing over the earth: conceive
+then my utter dismay and superstitious horror upon suddenly entering, what
+I could but suppose to be a charnel-house! Its effluvium was intolerable,
+and well accounted for by (loathsome spectacle!) a disorderly collection
+of human fragments in various stages of preservation and decay! A dozen
+grisly skeletons grinned upon me from pedestals round the room, and in the
+centre of it, the half dissected body of a man, stretched upon a large
+lava slab, supported by tressels, was more horrible and odious than all. I
+now comprehended the full meaning of Sanazio's dying words and secret; but
+received at the same time, a shock which to this day I have not recovered;
+I found myself compelled to make Druso my confidant in this matter, and my
+companion in some of my first attempts at following the hideous occupation
+recommended by my deceased friend. By degrees I grew accustomed to the
+horrors of the room and of my employment. Druso, who found himself better
+engaged in courting the living than in cutting up the dead, was no longer
+necessary to me in the prosecution of my hateful studies, and kept aloof,
+but I soon discovered the value of them, in my increase of knowledge,
+employment, and reputation. At last an epidemic raged in Padua, proving
+very fatal; Ignatius, alarmed for the safety of his Phaedera, who was
+attacked, applied to me, and I cured her. Some time afterwards, the
+ungrateful wretch rushed into my laboratory, claiming the body upon which
+I was operating, as that of a young man, cousin to Phaedera, which had
+miraculously disappeared just previous to the day intended for its
+interment. The features of the poor wretch were too much disfigured to
+render possible his recognition by them, but Druso swore to its being the
+body of Marcus, from a scar on the left leg, which had been wounded
+severely by a quoit. Of course I refused to resign, that, for which I had
+paid a handsome price, and to reveal the names of those from whom I
+purchased it. So Druso dragged me before the Supreme Council, impeached me
+of sacrilege in the affair of the nun, of theft, and of violating the
+sanctity of the tomb, of barbarously mutilating the dead, and of applying
+their lacerated remains to the unholy purposes of sorcery! and on these
+counts have I been indicted, found guilty, and sentenced to be burnt as a
+sacrilegious heretic, an unnatural robber, and a formidable wizard!
+Antonia, the mother of seven children, is to be--like the unchaste
+vestal--immured! Oh Heaven! whilst Druso the Informer, receiving at the
+same time the portion of a prince for his venal treachery, will celebrate
+his union with Phaedera, amidst the shrieks and groans of his expiring
+victims!
+
+I cannot now proceed: ere I am bound to the fatal stake, methinks I shall
+die of shame, grief, and terror. And did the friends of my infancy, my
+parents, suffer as I shall suffer? Then, welcome death! welcome, hated
+dawn of my last day, for innocence and truth are banished from the earth!
+Hark! the key turning in the lock of my cell! Hark! those boding and
+pitying voices without! Father Dominick! Servilius! Andrea! kindest! best!
+--I die--but I die innocent, the victim only-----Hah! to burn--burn--burn!
+Gracious Heaven! pardon the strife of nature! My brain whirls!--my eyes
+cloud!--my black, dry, swollen lips,--throat--bosom--heart--O mother of
+God!--O! Saviour--Redeemer--pardon, pardon!--Father of Mercies,---receive
+me!
+
+_Great Marlow, Bucks._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SCENES FROM THE (OLD) FRENCH REVOLUTION.
+
+(_From the "Quarterly" Review of Madame Junot's Memoirs_.)
+
+
+About the beginning of the revolution, a working-man, by name Thirion, had
+established himself in a little stall (in Paris,) where he carried on his
+business as a mender of carpets. He called one morning to ask M. Permon's
+(a Royalist[1]) custom, but was civilly told that the family had long
+employed a tradesman of his class, and could not change for a stranger:
+the man took the refusal so insolently, that he was at last turned out of
+doors, vowing revenge. M. Permon, the ports being still open, makes a run
+over to London to place some money in our funds. Meantime "the Sections
+are organized," and Thirion becomes "Secretaire, Greffier, President, je
+ne scai quoi, de la notre." The morning after his return to Paris, M.
+Permon had just risen, when footsteps were heard loud on the staircase,
+and in burst Citizen Thirion, two other patriots of the Sectional
+Committee, and the carpetman's shopboy. (Madame Junot's Narrative
+commences here.)
+
+"My father was shaving himself. Naturally quick tempered, his impatience
+was extreme when he recognised the individual, and he was imprudent enough
+to make a menacing gesture the moment they broke into his dressing-room.
+'I am here to see the law enforced,' cries Thirion, on seeing my father
+advance with the razor in his hand. 'Well, what law is it that chooses so
+worthy an organ?'--'I am here to learn your age, your pursuits, and to
+interrogate you as to your journey to Coblentz.' My father, who had from
+the first word felt the most violent disposition to toss the man down
+stairs, shivered with rage; but, at last, he composed himself, wiped his
+chin, laid down his razor, and, crossing his arms, placed himself full in
+front of Thirion: then, measuring him from the utmost height of his tall
+and elegant person, he said, 'You wish to know my age?'--'Yes, such are my
+orders.'--Where is the order?' said my father, extending his hand. 'It is
+enough for you to know that I am sent hither by the committee of my
+section: my orders are sufficiently proved by my presence.'--Ah! you think
+so; I am of a different opinion. Your presence here is nothing but an
+insult, unless you have a judiciary order to justify it; show it me, and I
+shall forget the name of the man, to see only the public functionary.'
+Thirion raised his voice as my father lowered his--'What is your
+age?--What was the object of your going to Coblentz?'----My father seizes
+a large bamboo, and makes it whistle over Thirion's head--at that moment
+my mother rushes in, and succeeds in dragging him into another room, and
+restoring him to something like calmness. I remember she placed me in his
+arms, whispering to me to entreat him to _think of me_. Meantime, Thirion
+had drawn up his _procès verbal_, and withdrawn:--he left me weeping
+without knowing why I wept, but I saw that my mother and my sister were in
+tears too. My father sat pale, trembling with anger,--everything about us
+had a desolate aspect."
+
+The family escape from Paris--and it was time. Violent alternations of
+fear, anger, sorrow, terror, and disgust, with frequent disguises, flights,
+and all sorts of changes of residence, at length wear out the health and
+spirits of M. Permon--a man, apparently, who united dull enough intellect
+with all the vivacity of a Frenchman's mere temperament; and he dies in
+obscurity long before anything like order is re-established. We need not
+dwell on the particular fortunes of a not very interesting set of people;
+but may quote one or two more specimens of the sort of scenes which fill
+the greater part of the first of these volumes. Our authoress and her
+sister are at one time separated from their parents, and placed in an
+obscure _pension_ in the Faubourg (no longer _St._) Antoine. Their brother,
+a very young man, has also remained in Paris, and frequently visits them
+in their retreat.
+
+"We could not but observe, that for some days he had been very melancholy,
+and that he was getting more and more so. We asked the reason, and he told
+us at last that the section had denounced my father in a very alarming
+style. We fell a-crying, my sister and I. Albert consoled us as well as he
+could, but it was easy to see that the denunciation was not all--that some
+immediate danger fixed his fears. We knew afterwards, in effect, that a
+report had been spread of the arrest of my parents at Limoges--happily a
+false one. The horizon meanwhile was taking a bloody tint. Judge of my
+brother's anxiety! he came every day in a cabriolet, which my father had
+had built just before these late events; it was an elegant one, very lofty,
+of the kind called _wiski._ Already he had been all but insulted by the
+populace in driving through the faubourg; but liveries had not yet
+altogether disappeared, and nothing would persuade him to listen to our
+remonstrances, and make the domestic put off his. Thus it was on the 31st
+of August, when he came to see us as usual."
+
+"There was about the boarding-house a man charged with all the rough work,
+by name Jaquemart, a fellow that could do everything--but the most
+atrocious of countenances. 'The sight of that man makes me sick,' said
+Albert; 'I am sure he will end in something tragic.'"
+
+"One day, shortly after we went to the _pension_, Jaquemart was bringing
+in a load of wood, when my brother drove at the speed of his horse into
+the entrance. He saw the man had a burden that would hardly allow him to
+get out of the way in time--cried _'Gare!'_--perceived that his efforts
+were in vain--and pulled back his horse so sharply as to run much risk of
+wounding the animal, and, indeed, of being thrown out himself, owing to
+the extraordinary elevation of the _wiski_. Jaquemart, however, escaped by
+this means with a scratch on his leg; his eyes were good, he saw what
+Albert had done to master his horse, and vowed gratitude."
+
+"The 31st of August the man had nothing to do about the house, yet he kept
+lounging at the gate, or in the court, all day long. It was late ere
+Albert came--he had been waiting for him, and whispered, as he alighted,
+'Stay here to-night to take care of your sisters--don't go home.' Albert
+looked at him with astonishment; he had, indeed, perceived symptoms of
+some commotion, but fancied, as most of Paris did, that it would be
+directed against the Temple. 'What is your meaning?' said he. 'I entreat
+you to stay here--you will be near your sisters; and if there be need for
+another hand, mine shall not be far off--very well!--we shall be there.'
+Albert pressed him with questions, but could extract nothing; and after
+giving the man some money, persisted; in returning home as usual."
+
+"All know the frightful story of the day after this. Albert's anxiety for
+us makes him brave every danger, and he comes to us again. The first
+person he sees at our door is Jaquemart, in the costume of the most
+atrocious of bandits; our ladies had not dared to bid him go away, but his
+appearance made them tremble. 'I did not desire you to come hither, but to
+stay here,' he said; 'why have I not been obeyed?' 'Why do you speak
+so--was this house particularly menaced?' 'I know nothing of that--at such
+a moment one should fear everything.'"
+
+"We heard groans, weeping, all Paris had not been at _the massacre_. It
+was late. They pressed Albert to stay, but he would not. He promised,
+however, to come back next morning.----That day he was obliged to stay
+at home till about three o'clock, arranging and burning papers. He then
+came out to visit us, and found himself in the midst of crowds of men,
+drunken and bloody; many were naked to the waist, their breasts covered
+with blood. They carried fragments of clothing on their pikes and
+sabres--their faces were inflamed, their eyes haggard, the whole scene
+hideous. These groups became more and more frequent and numerous as he
+advanced. In mortal anxiety for us, he determined to push through
+everything, and, urging his horse to its speed, reached at length the
+front of the Hôtel Beaumarchais. There he was stopped by an immense
+crowd--always the same figures naked and bloodstained, but here their
+looks were those of enraged fiends. They shout, they scream, they sing,
+they dance--the saturnalia of hell. On seeing Albert's cabriolet, they
+redoubled their cries--'An aristocrat! give it him, give it him!' In a
+moment the cabriolet is surrounded, and from the midst of the crowd an
+object rises and moves towards him. His agitation perplexes his view--he
+perceives long fair tresses dabbled with blood--a countenance beautiful
+even yet. It approaches--it is thrust upon his face; he recognises the
+features--it is the head of Madame de Lamballe!"
+
+"The servant whips the horse with all the strength of his arm. The
+generous animal, with the instinctive horror of his race for dead bodies,
+springs with redoubled speed from the spectacle of horror. The frightful
+trophy, and the cannibals that bore it, had been overturned in the
+mud--screams and imprecations pursued Albert, stretched senseless at the
+bottom of the cabriolet. The servant had kept the reins, and whipped the
+more fiercely, because he could perceive, from the motion of the carriage,
+that some one had got up behind it, and hoped that the rapidity of its
+progress would shake him off."
+
+"In a few minutes Albert reached our door--judge of our alarm!--pale,
+still quite senseless, not breathing. The moment the cabriolet stopped,
+the man behind jumped down, took my brother in his arms, as if he had been
+a child, and carried him into the house. It was Jaquemart. 'The monsters,'
+said he, 'the monsters! the poor young man, they have killed him too.'
+What could Jaquemart have been doing in such a garb, and among such a
+troop o' ruffians?"
+
+
+ [1] And father of Madame Junot.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+The Paris correspondent of the _Court Journal_ gives the following
+incident at the King's Ball, about a fortnight since. I happened to be
+near his majesty when he addressed himself to an Englishman, wearing the
+Cross of Three Days. "Where did you signalize yourself, sir?" inquired the
+monarch. "At the Tuilleries, sire," was the answer. "_C'est aux braves de
+Juillet que je dois ma couronne_," said his majesty. The gentleman thus
+honoured was M. Bennis,[1] in whose literary establishment the king seems
+to take much interest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+GUTTING THE FISH.
+
+
+One evening a red-headed Connaught swell, of no small aristocratic
+pretensions in his own eyes, sent his servant, whom he had just imported
+from the long-horned kingdom, in all the rough majesty of a creature fresh
+from the "wilds," to purchase a hundred of oysters on the City-quay. Paddy
+staid so long away, that Squire Trigger got quite impatient and unhappy
+lest his "body man" might have slipt into the Liffey; however, to his
+infinite relief, Paddy soon made his appearance, puffing and blowing like
+a disabled bellows, but carrying his load seemingly in great triumph.
+"Well, Pat," cried the master, "what the devil kept you so long?" "Long! a
+thin, may be it's what you'd have me to come home with half my _arrant?_"
+says Pat. "Half the oysters?" says the master. "No; but too much of the
+_fish_." says Pat. "What fish?" says he. "The oysters, to be sure," says
+Pat. "What do you mean, blockhead?" says he. "I mean," says Pat, "that
+there was no use with loading myself with more nor was useful."
+"Will you explain yourself?" says he. "I will," says Pat laying down his
+load. "Well then, you see, plaise your Honour, as I was coming home along
+the quay, mighty peaceable, who should I meet but Shammus Maginnis; 'Good
+morrow, Shamien,' sis I; 'Good morrow kindly, Paudeen,' sis he; 'What is
+it you have in the sack?' sis he; 'A _Cwt_. of oysters,' sis I; 'Let us
+look at them,' says he; 'I will, and welcome,' sis I; 'Orah! thunder and
+pratees!' sis he, openin the sack an examinin them; 'who _sowld_ you
+these?' 'One Tom Kinahan that keeps a small ship there below,' sis I;
+'Musha then, bad luck to that same Tom that _sowld_ the likes to you,' sis
+he; 'Arrah, why, avic?' sis I; 'To make a _Bolshour_ ov you an give thim
+to you without gutting thim,' sis he; 'An arn't they gutted, Jim, aroon,'
+sis I; 'Oh! bad luck to the one o' thim,' sis he; 'Musha then,' sis I,
+'what the dhoul will I do at all at all, fur the master will be mad;' 'Do!'
+sis he, 'why I'd rather do the thing for you mysel nor you should lose
+your place,' sis he; so wid that he begins to gut them wid his knife,
+_nate_ and _clain_, an afeereed ov dirtying the flags, begor, he
+swallowed the guts himself from beginnin to ind, tal he had thim as dacent
+as you see thim here"--dashing down at his master's feet his bag of oyster
+shells, to the no small amazement of the Connaught worthy, as you may
+suppose.--_Dublin Comet_.
+
+
+ [1] The agent for the MIRROR, in Paris.--ED. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FAMILIAR SCIENCE.
+
+
+This Day was published, with many Engravings, price 5_s_.,
+
+ ARCANA OF SCIENCE,
+ AND
+ ANNUAL REGISTER of the USEFUL ARTS,
+ for 1832:
+
+Abridged from the Transactions of Public Societies, and Scientific
+Journals, British and Foreign, for the past year.
+
+This volume will contain all the Important Facts in the year 1831--in the
+
+ MECHANIC ARTS,
+ CHEMICAL SCIENCE,
+ ZOOLOGY,
+ BOTANY,
+ MINERALOGY,
+ GEOLOGY,
+ METEOROLOGY,
+ RURAL ECONOMY,
+ GARDENING.
+ DOMESTIC ECONOMY,
+ USEFUL AND ELEGANT ARTS,
+ GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERIES,
+ MISCELLANEOUS SCIENTIFIC INFORMATION.
+
+Printing for John Limbird, 143, Strand; of whom may be had volumes (upon
+the same plan) for 1828, price 4_s_. 6_d_., 1829--30--31, price 5_s_. each.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Printed and Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, (near Somerset House,)
+London; sold by ERNEST FLEISCHER, 626, New Market, Leipsic. G.G. Bennis,
+55, Rue Neuve, St. Augustin, Paris; and by all Newsmen and Booksellers._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement,
+and Instruction., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 11538-8.txt or 11538-8.zip *****
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+ <title>The Mirror of Literature, Volume XIX. No. 531.</title>
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+
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+ .poem p {margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
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+
+<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 19, No. 531, Saturday, January 28, 1832.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: March 11, 2004 [EBook #11538]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE ***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page49"
+ name="page49">
+ </a>[pg 49]
+</span>
+
+ <h1>THE MIRROR<br />
+ OF<br />
+ LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.</h1>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <table width="100%" summary="Volume, Number, and Date">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left"><b>Vol. XIX. No. 531.]</b></td>
+ <td align="center"><b>SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1832.</b></td>
+ <td align="right"><b>[PRICE 2d.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<h2>PONTEFRACT CASTLE, 1648.</h2>
+
+<div class="figure" style="width:100%;"><a href="images/531-001.png">
+<img width = "100%" src="images/531-001.png" alt="PONTEFRACT CASTLE, 1648." /></a></div>
+
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page50"
+ name="page50">
+ </a>[pg 50]
+</span>
+
+<h2>PONTEFRACT CASTLE.</h2>
+<p>
+Pontrefact, a place of considerable note in English history, is situated
+about two miles south-west from Ferrybridge, nine miles nearly east from
+Wakefield, and fifteen miles north-west from Doncaster, in Yorkshire. The
+origin of the town is unknown; and the etymology of its name has been a
+matter of dispute, in which figures a monkish legend ascribing the name of
+Ponsfractus, or Pontefract, to the breaking of a bridge, and the fall of
+many persons into the river Aire, who were miraculously saved by St.
+William, Archbishop of York. The river Ouse and the city of York, however,
+put in a stronger claim as the scene of this miracle, and unfortunately
+for Pontefract, the town is so named in charters of fifty-three years'
+date before the miracle is pretended to have been performed. Still the
+etymology is referable to the breaking down of "<i>some bridge</i>," (<i>pons</i>,
+bridge; <i>fractus</i>, broken,) but this unravelment is not antiquarian.
+Camden says, that in the Saxon times, the name of this town was Kirkby,
+which was changed by the Normans to Pontefract, because of a broken bridge
+that was there. But as there is no river within two miles of the place,
+this bridge appears to have been built over the Wash, which lies about a
+quarter of a mile to the east of the Castle. Other researches prove
+Pontefract to have been a secondary and subordinate Roman station.
+</p>
+<p>
+The history of the Castle is, of course, involved in that of the manor.
+The town is stated to have been a burgh in the time of Edward the
+Confessor; but how long it had enjoyed this privilege is uncertain.
+<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1">
+</a>
+<sup>
+<a href="#footnote1">1</a>
+</sup>
+
+After the Conquest, this manor, with 150 others, or the greatest part of
+so many in Yorkshire, besides ten in Nottinghamshire, and four in
+Lincolnshire, were given by William to Hildebert, or Ilbert de Lacy, one
+of his Norman followers, who <i>built the Castle</i>. The work occupied twelve
+years, and it was finished in 1080. The labour and expense of its erection
+was so great, that no person unless in the possession of a princely
+fortune, could have completed a work of such magnitude. Hildebert was
+succeeded by his son Robert, commonly called Robert de Pontefract, from
+his being born at that town. Robert enjoyed his vast possessions in peace
+during the reign of William Rufus; but after the accession of Henry I. he
+with more ambition than prudence, joined with Robert, Duke of Normandy,
+the King's brother, who claimed the crown of England. In consequence of
+this transaction, Robert de Lacy was banished the realm, and the castle
+and honour of Pontefract were given by the King to Henry Traverse, and
+afterwards to Henry De-laval.
+<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a>
+ <sup><a href="#footnote2">2</a>
+</sup>
+ Robert de Lacy was, however, restored
+after a few years exile, and the property continued in the Lacy family
+till the year 1193, when another Robert de Lacy dying without issue, the
+estate and honour of Pontefract devolved on his uterine sister Aubrey de
+Lisours, who carried these estates of the Lacys by marriage to Richard
+Fitz-Eustace, constable of Chester. Thence they descended to John
+Fitz-Eustace, who accompanied Richard I. in his crusade, and is said to
+have died at Tyre in Palestine. Roger, his eldest son, also in the crusade,
+succeeded to his honour and estates. He was present with Richard at the
+memorable siege of Acre. On his return to England he was the first of his
+family that took the name of Lacy, in which Pontefract Castle continued
+till 1310, when Henry de Lacy, through default of male issue, left his
+possessions to his daughter and heiress, Alice, who was married to Thomas,
+Earl of Lancaster; and, in case of a failure of issue from that marriage,
+he entailed them on the King and his heirs.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Earl of Lancaster, it will be remembered, became embroiled with Edward
+II. and his minion Gaveston, who partly through the interference of
+Lancaster, was beheaded at Warwick after a siege in Scarborough Custle.
+The King swore vengeance for the death of his favourite, which led this
+weak sovereign into a long series of dissentions with the barons, at the
+head of whom, was the Earl of Lancaster. Both parties now flew to arms,
+but Lancaster soon found himself ill supported by his compeers, and
+marching northward for reinforcements from the celebrated Bruce, King of
+Scotland, the King in the meantime, sent the Earl of Surrey and Kent to
+besiege the castle of Pontefract, which surrendered at the first summons.
+Lancaster was next closely pursued by the king with great superiority of
+numbers. "The earl, endeavouring to rally his troops, was taken prisoner,
+with ninety-five barons and knights, and carried to the castle of
+Pontefract, where he was imprisoned in a tower which Leland says he had
+newly made towards the abbey," This tower was square: its wall of great
+strength, being 10-1/2 feet thick; nor was there
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page51"
+ name="page51">
+ </a>[pg 51]
+</span>
+ any other entrance into
+the interior than by a hole or trap-door in the floor of the turret: so
+that the prisoner must have been let down into this abode of darkness,
+from whence there could be no possible mode of escape; the room was
+twenty-five feet square. A few days after, the King being at Pontefract
+ordered him to be arraigned in the hall of the castle, before a small
+number of peers, among whom were the Spencers, his mortal enemies. The
+earl was condemned to be hanged, drawn, and quartered; but the punishment
+was changed to decapitation. After sentence was passed, he said, "Shall I
+die without answer?" He was not, however, permitted to speak; but a
+certain Gascoign took him away, and having put an old hood over his head,
+set him on a lean mare without a bridle. Being attended by a Dominican
+friar as his confessor, he was carried out of the town amidst the insults
+of the people; and there beheaded. Thus fell Thomas, Earl of Lancaster,
+the first Prince of the Blood, being uncle to Edward II. who condemned him
+to death. Several of his adherents were hanged at Pontefract.
+</p>
+<p>
+The next royal blood that stained Pontefract castle was that of King
+Richard II. who was here murdered or starved to death; though there is a
+tradition that it was merely given out that Richard had starved himself to
+death, and that he escaped from Pontefract to Mull, whence he shortly
+proceeded to the mainland of Scotland, where, for nineteen years, he was
+entertained in an honourable but secret captivity.
+<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a>
+ <sup><a href="#footnote3">3</a></sup>
+
+ The matter remains
+in tragic darkness.
+<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a>
+ <sup>
+ <a href="#footnote4">4</a>
+ </sup>
+
+ In the succeeding reign of Henry IV. Richard
+Scroope, archbishop of York, being taken prisoner, was in Pontefract
+castle, condemned to death. Next in the calendar of atrocities committed
+within these drear walls, were the murders of Anthony Woodville, Earl
+Rivers; Richard, Lord Grey; Sir Thomas Vaughan; and Sir Richard Hawse, in
+1483; by Richard III., whom Shakspeare makes to whine forth:
+</p>
+<div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>O Pomfret, Pomfret! O thou bloody prison!</p>
+ <p>Fatal and ominous to noble peers!</p>
+ <p>Within the guilty closure of thy walls,</p>
+ <p>Richard II. here was hack'd to death;</p>
+ <p>And for more slander to thy dismal seat,</p>
+ <p>We give to thee our guiltless blood to drink.</p>
+ </div>
+</div>
+<p>
+We may now pass over matters of minor importance in the history of
+Pontefract to the time of Charles I. In the King's contest with his
+Parliament, this was the last fortress that held out for the unfortunate
+monarch. At Christmas 1644, Sir Thomas Fairfax laid siege to the castle,
+and on Jan. 19, following, after an incessant cannonade of three days, a
+breach was made: the brave garrison would not surrender; the besiegers
+mined, but the besieged counter-mined, and the work of slaughter went on
+till the garrison were greatly reduced. At length the Parliamentarians
+were attacked and repulsed by a reinforcement of Royalists from Oxford,
+and thus ended the first siege of Pontefract. In March, 1645, the enemy
+again took possession of the town, and after three months cannonade, the
+garrison being reduced almost to a state of famine, surrendered the castle
+by an honourable capitulation on June 20. Sir Thomas Fairfax was appointed
+governor, and he thinking the royal party to be subdued, appointed a
+colonel as his substitute, with a garrison of 100 men. The royalists next
+by stratagem recovered Pontefract, of which Sir John Digby was appointed
+governor.
+</p>
+<p>
+The third and final siege of this fine castle commenced in October, 1648.
+General Rainsborough was appointed to the command of the army, but he
+being previously intercepted at Doncaster, Oliver Cromwell undertook to
+conduct the siege. After having remained a month before the fortress,
+without making any impression on its massy walls, Cromwell joined the
+grand army under Fairfax, and General Lambert being appointed commander in
+chief of the forces before the castle, arrived at Pontefract on the 4th of
+December.
+</p>
+<p>
+The ENGRAVING represents the castle precisely at this period. It is copied
+from a large print taken from a drawing found in the possession of a
+descendant of the Fairfax family of Denton; in one angle is the following
+memorandum: "Governor Morris commanded in the Castle. General Lambert
+commanded the Siege, being appointed thereto on the death of General
+Rainsborough, who was intercepted and killed at Doncaster, by a party from
+the Castle, as he was going to take command."
+</p>
+<p>
+General Lambert raised new works, and vigorously pushed the siege; but the
+besieged held out. On January 30, 1649, the King was beheaded; and the
+news no sooner reached Pontefract, than the royalist garrison proclaimed
+his son Charles II. and made a vigorous and destructive sally against
+their enemies. The Parliamentarians, however,
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page52"
+ name="page52">
+ </a>[pg 52]
+</span>
+ prevailed, and on March 25,
+1649, the garrison being reduced from 500 or 600 to 100 men, surrendered
+by capitulation. Six of the principal Royalists were excepted from mercy:
+two escaped, but were retaken and executed at York; the third was killed
+in a sortie; and the three others concealing themselves among the ruins of
+the castle, escaped after the surrender; and two of the last lived to see
+the Restoration.
+</p>
+<p>
+This third siege was the most destructive to the castle: the tremendous
+artillery had shattered its massive walls; and its demolition was
+completed by order of Parliament. Within two months after its reduction,
+the buildings were unroofed, and all the materials sold. Thus was this
+princely fortress reduced to a heap of ruins.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Castle of Pontefract was built on an elevated rock, commanding
+extensive and picturesque views. The north-west prospect takes in the
+beautiful vale along which flows the Aire, skirted by woods and
+plantations. It is bounded only by the hills of Craven. The north and east
+prospect is more extensive, but the scenery is not equally striking and
+impressive. The towers of York Minster are distinctly seen, and the
+prospect is only bounded by the limits of vision. To the east&mdash;while the
+eye follows the course of the Aire towards the Humber, the fertility of
+the country, the spires of churches, and two considerable hills, Brayton
+Barf, and Hambleton Haugh, which rise in the midst of a plain, and one of
+which is covered with wood, increase the beauty of the scene. The
+south-east view includes part of the counties of Lincoln and Nottingham.
+To the south and south-west, the towering hills of Derbyshire, stretching
+towards Lancashire, form the horizon, while the foreground is a
+picturesque country variegated with handsome residences.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Castle, by its situation, as well as by its structure, was rendered
+almost impregnable. It was not commanded by any contiguous hills, and it
+could only be taken by blockade.
+</p>
+<p>
+By referring to the Engraving, the reader will better understand this
+defence. The outworks are there distinctly shown with the respective posts
+and guards: indeed, these lines exhibit a fine specimen of fortification.
+The quadrangular enclosure on the crest of the hill, in the lower part of
+the Engraving, represents Lamberts' Fort Royal. To the right is the
+approach to the castle by the south gate to the barbican, crossed by a
+wall, with the middle gate, with the east gate at the extremity of the
+line. We next approach, the ballium, or castle yard through the Porter's
+Lodge of two towers with a portcullis. The wall of the castle-yard, it
+will be seen, has a parapet, and is flanked with towers, and the chapel to
+the right of the Lodge. East and West of the yard is seen the
+semi-circular moat or ditch; and on an eminence near the western extremity
+of the ballium, stands the keep or round tower, the walls of which are
+said to have been twenty-one feet thick. The state rooms are on the second
+story. The dungeons of the towers are terrific even in description: one
+was about 15 feet deep, and scarcely six feet square, without any
+admission of light. The whole area occupied by the Pontrefact fortress
+seems to have been about 7 acres, now converted into garden ground.
+</p>
+<p>
+The church seen within the work is that of All Saints, or Allhallows, a
+Gothic structure, probably of the time of Henry III., and almost destroyed
+in the sieges of the castle.
+</p>
+<p>
+Pontefract must be numbered in our recollections of childhood; since here
+were grown whole fields of liquorice root, from the extract of which are
+made. <i>Pontefract Cakes</i>, impressed with the arms&mdash;three lions passant
+gardant, surmounted with a helmet, full-forward, open faced, and
+garde-visure. We have likewise seen them impressed with the celebrated
+fortress, and the motto "Post mortem patris pro filio,"&mdash;after the death
+of the father&mdash;for the son&mdash;denoting the loyalty of the Pontefract
+Royalists in proclaiming Charles II. at the death of his father.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<h3>"LACONICS," GUESSES AT TRUTH, &amp;c.</h3>
+
+<h4><i>(For the Mirror.)</i></h4>
+<p>
+It is the interest of an indolent man to be honest: for it requires
+considerable trouble and finesse, to deceive others successfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+Money was a wise contrivance to place fools somewhat on a level with men
+of sense.
+</p>
+<p>
+It will be observed, that people have generally the identical faults and
+vices they accuse others of; we may instance cowardice.
+</p>
+<p>
+Wherever a proposition is self-evident, it is but weakening its strength
+to bring forward arguments in its support.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is a melancholy reflection that a glass of wine will do more towards
+raising
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page53"
+ name="page53">
+ </a>[pg 53]
+</span>
+ the spirits, than the finest composition ever penned.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is a great mistake in physiognomists to take outward signs as evidences
+of feeling: the seat of real sensation is within.
+</p>
+<p>
+Wherever art has travelled out of her proper sphere to ape nature, she has
+proved herself but a miserable mimic, even in her most approved efforts.
+</p>
+<p>
+We must not allow ourselves to dwell too seriously on life; for otherwise
+we shall be tempted to forego all our plans, to indulge in no future
+wishes, and, in short, to live on in torpid apathy.
+</p>
+<p>
+Books are at last the best companions: they instruct us in silence without
+any display of superiority, and they attend the pace of each man's
+capacity, without reproaching him for his want of comprehension.
+</p>
+<p>
+A disgust of life frequently proceeds from sheer vanity, or a wish to be
+supposed incapable of deriving gratification from the ordinary routine of
+happiness.
+</p>
+<p>
+It sometimes happens that with men as well as animals, that evidences of
+spirit are only the effect of excited fear.
+</p>
+<p>
+<i>(To be continued.)</i>
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h3>THE LAW INSTITUTION.
+<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a>
+<sup><a href="#footnote5">5</a></sup>
+
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+(At the time of our last publication we were not aware that any
+architectural details of the building in Chancery-lane had appeared. We
+now find that the <i>Legal Observer</i> contained such description in March
+last, "collected," says the editor, "with some pains and trouble." A
+correspondent dropped the <i>Observer</i> leaf into our letter-box in the
+course of last week; but, unfortunately, the communication did not reach
+us in time for insertion with our Engraving. Good news, we know, usually
+comes upon crutches, but we hope our thanks will reach this correspondent
+at a better pace.)
+</p>
+<p>
+The style of architecture of the principal front in Chancery-lane is
+purely Grecian. The details and proportions appear to have been founded
+upon the best examples of the Ionic order in Athens and Asia Minor,
+<a id="footnotetag6"
+ name="footnotetag6"></a>
+ <sup><a href="#footnote6">6</a></sup>
+
+ but
+they are not servilely copied from any of them.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Vulliamy, the architect for the Institution, has thrown into this
+front the true spirit of the originals; and the effect which the
+harmonious proportions of the building produce on the spectator, when
+viewing it from Chancery-lane, must have been the result of much
+observation and experience in ancient and classic models.
+</p>
+<p>
+This front, extending nearly sixty feet in width, is of Portland stone. It
+consists of four columns and two antae, of the Grecian Ionic order,
+supporting an entablature and pediment, and forming together one grand
+portico. To give the requisite elevation, the columns and antae are raised
+upon pedestals; these, as well as the basement story and podium of the
+inner wall of the portico, are of Aberdeen granite; the columns and the
+rest of the front are formed of large blocks of Portland stone. In the
+front wall, within the portico, there are two ranges of windows above the
+basement.
+</p>
+<p>
+The front in Bell-yard extends nearly eighty feet, and will be finished
+with Roman cement, in imitation of stone. It will have a portico of two
+columns, and two antae of Portland stone, of the height of the ground
+story, which is very lofty, and the width of the entire compartment of the
+front. From the interior requiring to be divided into several rooms, this
+front must have many windows. The elevation is formed more upon the models
+of modern domestic architecture than of ancient public buildings, and
+resembles, in its general appearance, one of the palazzi in the Strada
+Balbi at Genoa, in the Corso at Rome, or in the Toledo at Naples. In its
+details, however, the extravagancies of the middle ages, and the often
+elegant frivolities of the <i>cinque cento</i> period, have been avoided, and
+the breadth and simplicity of Greek models have still been followed.
+</p>
+<p>
+The ground plan of the building, by its general arrangement, divides
+itself into three parts, which may be distinguished under the heads of the
+<i>Library</i>, the <i>Hall</i>, and the <i>Club Room</i>. The first of these (that
+towards Chancery-lane) consists, on the ground floor, of a first
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page54"
+ name="page54">
+ </a>[pg 54]
+</span>
+ and
+second vestibule, and staircase to the Library, the Secretary's Room, and
+Registry Office; and above these on the first floor, the Library,
+occupying the height of two stories.
+</p>
+<p>
+The <i>Library</i> is a large and lofty room, fifty-five feet by thirty-one and
+a half, and twenty-three and a half high, divided by a screen of columns
+and pilasters of scagliola, into two unequal parts, the first forming a
+sort of ante-library to the other; both are surrounded by bookcases of oak,
+and a gallery runs round the whole, above which is another range of
+bookcases.
+</p>
+<p>
+The principal light is obtained from a large lantern-light in the ceiling;
+but there is a range of windows (double sashed, and glazed with plate
+glass) towards Chancery-lane, which also admit light into the lower part.
+</p>
+<p>
+All the floors in the building are made fire-proof, generally by being
+arched with brick; but that of the Library is rendered secure from fire by
+the ceilings of the vestibules underneath being formed of real stone,
+supported on iron girders and bearers, and divided into panels and
+compartments after the manner of the roofs of the peristyles of the
+ancient temples.
+</p>
+<p>
+There are three entrances from Chancery-lane: that in the centre is
+exclusively for members, and leads to all parts of the building; that on
+the right for persons going to the Registry Office; and also for persons
+having to speak to members; that on the left leads down to the Office for
+the deposit of deeds, and to the strong rooms.
+</p>
+<p>
+The second division consists of the <i>Hall</i> and its appurtenances. It is
+above thirty feet high, and fifty-seven feet and a half long; and on each
+side it has wings or recesses, behind insulated columns of scagliola, in
+imitation of Egyptian granite. Within these, and at the back of the
+columns, are galleries; the staircases to which are concealed in the
+angles. There are three fireplaces in the Hall; one in the centre,
+opposite the principal entrance, and one in the centre of each of the
+recesses. The Hall is lighted by a lantern-light forty feet long and
+twenty-four feet wide.
+</p>
+<p>
+The third division is next Bell-yard: it is subdivided into two parts. In
+the first of these are three entrances from Bell-yard. That in the centre
+is exclusively for the members; that to the left leads to the staircase to
+the Secretary's apartments; and the other, to the right of the centre, is
+for strangers to enter who have business to transact in any of the rooms
+appropriated to public business. On the ground floor of this part of the
+third division is a large Committee Room, and an ante or waiting room
+adjoining, and the great staircase to the rooms above. On the first floor
+are the rooms for meetings on matters of business connected with the law;
+and above these are the Secretary's apartments.
+</p>
+<p>
+The second part of the third division contains, on the ground floor, the
+<i>Club Room</i>, which occupies all the ground floor: it will be divided by
+columns and pilasters of scagliola, and decorated with a paneled ceiling
+and appropriate ornaments. Its dimensions are fifty feet by twenty-seven,
+and eighteen feet high. On the first floor are rooms of different
+dimensions for dinner parties; and over these, rooms for the resident
+officers. In the basement story of this part of the building are the
+Kitchen and other domestic offices for the use of the Club.
+</p>
+<p>
+The office for the deposit of deeds is in the basement story, next to
+Chancery-lane.
+</p>
+<p>
+In the remaining parts of the basement story of the building are fifty-two
+strong rooms, with iron doors, for the deposit of deeds, which are well
+ventilated and fire-proof; their average size is six feet and a half by
+seven feet and a half, but some are larger, and others rather less, than
+these dimensions. The whole are secured by one double iron door, with a
+very strong lock and master-key.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>VAPOUR-BATHS.</h3>
+
+<p>
+Among the remedies for cholera, or perhaps we should rather say attempted
+remedies, the vapour-bath is conspicuous over all the other means of cure,
+external and internal: stimulants, frictions, rubefacients, blisters, have
+that for their indirect object which the vapour-bath accomplishes directly,
+namely, to produce heat on the surface of the body, and thus restore that
+correspondence between the temperature of the interior and exterior parts,
+which in the disease is so strangely disturbed. There are two difficulties
+in the application of the vapour-bath, which are not easily overcome. When
+applied to the patient in the ordinary way, from the nature of the heat,
+the upper surface of the body is scorched, while the back is almost cold.
+Now in cholera, the application of heat to the back is of essential
+importance. In the whole of the machines for applying the bath, the
+patient is exposed to
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page55"
+ name="page55">
+ </a>[pg 55]
+</span>
+ more or less tossing about; which, from the extreme
+prostration of strength in cholera patients, is always injurious; and as
+the patient must, when taken from the bath, be replaced on a comparatively
+cold bed, the sudden change will often do more ill than the bath will do
+good. To these must be added, in a disease which chiefly affects the poor,
+another item, forming an important drawback on the utility of the ordinary
+vapour-bath,&mdash;the application of it is attended with no inconsiderable
+expense. A machine which should obviate these objections, was a
+desideratum; and we think such a one has been invented by Mr. Burnet, of
+Golden Square. It is so simple as to be easily described without a diagram,
+and so well adapted to the end, and so easy and cheap in application, that
+we think we shall be rendering an acceptable service to our readers in
+describing it. The best way to effect this is to show the steps of its
+application.
+</p>
+<p>
+We suppose the patient lying on his back in bed. The two sides of a
+framework, about 6-1/2 by 2-1/2 feet, are placed one on each side of him;
+five or six broad canvass straps, which are meant to support his body, are
+placed beneath him by a couple of attendants; two transverse pieces of
+wood are then introduced at the foot and head, to extend the framework;
+and the cross straps, by means of eyelet-holes, are attached to the sides,
+by a row of common brass pins. This is the work of about a minute. One
+attendant then raises the frame at the head, while the other introduces a
+couple of feet about nine inches long into the frame; and this done, the
+foot is raised in a similar way, and similarly supported; a board is then
+fitted to the foot, through a hole in the centre of which the chimney of
+the heating apparatus passes; the blankets are closely tucked round the
+patient and the frame; the lamp is applied, and the process of bathing
+commences. In this way, it will be seen that the patient is suspended in
+the heated air, which is moreover applied to the back in the first
+instance; there is no fatigue incurred; and when perspiration has been
+generated and carried on as long as is deemed expedient, he is let down
+again, without difficulty or danger, into his heated bed, and surrounded
+with the warm blankets employed in the bath itself. The room in which we
+saw the experiment performed, was at a temperature of 43° Fahrenheit; the
+clothes of the bed were of the same temperature: the lamp is conical, and
+has no tube; the wick is merely inserted in it; the charge is two ounces
+of spirits of wine. In ten minutes after the lamp had been applied, the
+thermometer at the foot of the frame on which the patient is made to
+recline, was 136°; at the head, 116°; on the blanket, which covered the
+bed, 96°. Were the vapour applied above the patient instead of under him,
+the difference between the heat at the breast and back would be at least
+40°. The temperature once raised, may be kept up at a very small expense;
+so that the whole price of the bath, continued for half an hour or three
+quarters of an hour, will not exceed eightpence or ninepence. There is a
+very simple expedient, by which, when the temperature of the chamber
+formed by the frame of the bath is once raised sufficiently high, steam,
+either simple or medicated, may be introduced, and the lamp apparatus may
+be applied either at the foot, the head, or the side, as is most
+convenient. The grand recommendation, however, of the bath, is the
+applicability of the vapour to the entire surface of the body; the
+simplicity and ease of the application, both to the assistants and the
+patient; the exclusion of the possibility of cold; and its cheapness. In
+all these points of view, we look on it as a valuable invention.
+</p>
+<p>
+<i>Spectator</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>NOTES OF A READER</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>DECLINE OF THE DRAMA.</h3>
+
+<p>
+One thing which I am unable to interpret among the oddities of the English,
+is their inconsistency respecting dramatic entertainments. I have never
+yet been present where two or three of my countrymen were gathered
+together, that, after a wrangling review of the weather, they did not turn
+their conversation upon the theatres. There is no topic more universally
+discussed than the decadence of the drama, or the engagements, merits, and
+adventures of the performers. Neither the Lord Chancellor nor the
+Archbishop of Canterbury is ever so familiarly known by name and person to
+the public, as the first tragedian and comedian of the day; and the
+theatrical belles and heroines are either elevated to the peerage by
+matrimony, or lowered by the undertaker into Westminster Abbey. As some
+French Vaudevillist observed, "Moliere was denied in France the rights of
+sepulture, while
+</p>
+<div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"Garrick repose à côté de leur rois!"</p>
+ </div>
+</div>
+<p>
+Yet, notwithstanding all this clamour of popularity&mdash;all this
+infatuation&mdash;there
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page56"
+ name="page56">
+ </a>[pg 56]
+</span>
+ is no branch of the arts so grossly neglected in
+England as the drama. It is no longer the fashion in London to attend the
+theatres. Owing partly to the increase of private amusements, and partly
+to the late hours gradually adopted during the reign of George the Fourth,
+the custom of play-going has declined among the higher classes, and
+naturally produces the reaction of bad pieces and indifferent performers.
+Even a clever actor, when satisfied that he is to receive judgment from an
+unrefined and uneducated audience, will degenerate and grow slovenly; and
+from what I have observed of the London stage, I see it is the custom to
+daub for the galleries, or to creep through the business under cover of a
+cold, tame mediocrity. Without the slightest patronage from the court or
+substantial encouragement from the fosterers of literary merit, these
+luckless personages are expected to attempt the same exertions and intense
+study, which is rewarded, in foreign countries, by the most flattering and
+judicious attention; as well as by a pension, to cheer the infirmities of
+old age. Although tolerably well paid by his manager, the English actor
+has the mortification of being tyrannized and insulted by the gallery, and
+overlooked by the higher classes. A few persons of rank and fortune are
+provided with private boxes at the national theatres; but these are
+usually let by the night to plebeian tenants. It is rare indeed to observe
+a family of distinction in the dress circle of either Drury Lane or Covent
+Garden; while the French play is never deficient in a fashionable audience.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Opera, too, is nightly becoming more crowded; while at the two patent
+theatres "a beggarly account of empty boxes," and an equally beggarly
+account of flat, stale, and unprofitable performances, greets me whenever
+I am rash enough to take my post of observation. Lady Romford has a
+private box, which she visits only in preference to staying at a still
+duller home, on a disengaged evening; and Bagot occasionally drags me to
+the play, to make my foreign ignorance and inexperience a pretext for
+following Lady Clara to a spot which no one seems to visit without an
+apology. People in society give as many reasons for having done so strange
+a thing as go to see the new tragedy, as they would invent in Paris to
+excuse a similar omission.
+</p>
+<p>
+Since the Kemble munia, and the Byron mania, there has been a general
+affectation of indifference towards poetry and the drama; your true
+fashionable never mentions either without ridicule&mdash;the natural
+consequence of previously exaggerated enthusiasm.
+</p>
+<p>
+But above all the absurdities connected with this national weakness,
+stands that of the public prints. So much importance is given by the
+newspapers to every thing relating to the histrionic art, that we are
+daily informed of the whereabout of all the third-rate performers of the
+minor theatres; that "Mr. Smith, of Sadler's Wells, is engaged to Mr.
+Ducrow for the ensuing season;" or that "Miss Brown, belonging to the
+ballet department of the Surrey theatre, has sprained her ankle." While
+two thirds of a leading print are occupied with details of the Reform Bill,
+or a debate on some constitutional question,&mdash;or while the foreign
+intelligence of two sieges and a battle is concentrated with a degree of
+terseness worthy a telegraph, half a column is devoted to the plot of a
+new melo-drama at the Coburg; or to a cut and dried criticism upon the
+nine hundredth representation of <i>Hamlet</i>&mdash;beginning with the "immortal
+bard," and ending with the waistcoats of the grave-digger!&mdash;<i>The Opera, a
+Novel</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+<h3>EUGENE ARAM.</h3>
+
+<p>
+The recollection of this man is still preserved at Lynn, in Norfolk, at
+which town he was for some time usher at the grammar-school. A small room
+at the back of the house, in which he slept, was, until these last few
+years, (when it was pulled down and rebuilt,) mysteriously pointed to by
+the little urchins as they passed up to bed of a cold, ghost-enticing
+night, as the chamber in which the "usher, who was hanged for murder," was
+used to sleep.
+</p>
+<p>
+The tradition which remains of his character is, that he was "a man of
+loneliness and mystery," sullen and reserved; that on half-holy-days, and
+when his duties would allow, he strayed solitary and cheerless, as if to
+avoid the world, amongst the flat uninteresting marshes which are situated
+on the opposite side of the river Ouse.
+</p>
+<p>
+At Lynn the character of Aram was, until his apprehension, unexceptionable;
+but after that event, circumstances were then called to mind which seemed
+to indicate a naturally dark character; but whether these were all
+strictly founded in truth, or magnified suspicions arising from the
+appaling circumstances of the crime of which he was convicted, I am unable
+to determine. The following, derived from unquestionable authority,
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page57"
+ name="page57">
+ </a>[pg 57]
+</span>
+ having
+been related by Dr. L., who was master of the grammar-school at the time,
+may serve as a sample:&mdash;there can be no doubt but that the worthy Dr.
+himself believed his suspicions well founded, as he used to tremble when
+he related it. It was customary for the parents of the scholars, on an
+appointed day, to dine with the master, at which time it was expected they
+would bring with them the amount of their bills. It was late at night,
+after one of such meetings, that Dr. L. was awakened by a noise at his
+bed-room door; he rose up, and going into the passage which led to the
+staircase, but which was not in the direct way from Aram's bed room to the
+ground-floor, he discovered the usher <i>dressed</i>. Having questioned him as
+to the object of his rising at that unseasonable hour, Aram confusedly
+answered that he had been taken unwell, and had been obliged to go do down
+stairs. The Dr. then retired, unsuspiciously, to bed. From the combined
+circumstances of the noise at the door, his great agitation and confusion,
+and from his being found in the passage, the worthy Dr., in later years,
+had no doubt, that, from its being known to Aram that a considerable sum
+of money was in his bed-room, Aram intended nothing less than to rob him;
+and no doubt, continued the narrator, he <i>would</i> have murdered me too, if
+it had been rendered necessary, from my discovering or opposing him.
+</p>
+<p>
+The spot just at the entrance to the play-ground, at which Aram was taken
+into custody by two strange men from Yorkshire, is still remarked, and
+generally by the young scholar in a tremulous whisper.&mdash;<i>Literary Gazette</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>THE NATURALIST.</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>AGENCY OF MAN IN EXTINGUISHING OR SPREADING SPECIES.</h3>
+
+<p>
+Let us make some inquiries into the extent of the influence which the
+progress of society has exerted, during the last seven or eight centuries,
+in altering the distribution of our indigenous British animals. Dr.
+Fleming has prosecuted this inquiry with his usual zeal and ability, and
+in a memoir on the subject has enumerated the best authenticated examples
+of the decrease or extirpation of certain species during a period when our
+population has made the most rapid advances. We shall offer a brief
+outline of his results.
+</p>
+<p>
+The stag, as well as the fallow-deer, and the roe, were formerly so
+abundant that, according to Lesley, from five hundred to a thousand were
+sometimes slain at a hunting-match; but the native races would already
+have been extinguished, had they not been carefully preserved in certain
+forests. The otter, the marten, and the polecat, were also in sufficient
+numbers to be pursued for the sake of their fur; but they have now been
+reduced within very narrow bounds. The wild cat and fox have also been
+sacrificed throughout the greater part of the country, for the security of
+the poultry-yard or the fold. Badgers have been expelled from nearly every
+district which at former periods they inhabited.
+</p>
+<p>
+Besides these, which have been driven out from some haunts, and everywhere
+reduced in number, there are some which have been wholly extirpated; such
+as the ancient breed of indigenous horses, the wild boar and the wild oxen,
+of which last, however, a few remains are still preserved in the parks of
+some of our nobility. The beaver, which was eagerly sought after for its
+fur, had become scarce at the close of the ninth century, and, by the
+twelfth century, was only to be met with, according to Giraldus de Barri,
+in one river in Wales, and another in Scotland. The wolf, once so much
+dreaded by our ancestors, is said to have maintained its ground in Ireland
+so late as the beginning of the eighteenth century (1710,) though it had
+been extirpated in Scotland thirty years before, and in England at a much
+earlier period. The bear, which in Wales was regarded as a beast of the
+chase equal to the hare or the boar, only perished as a native of Scotland
+in the year 1057.
+</p>
+<p>
+Many native birds of prey have also been the subjects of unremitting
+persecution. The eagles, larger hawks, and ravens, have disappeared from
+the more cultivated districts. The haunts of the mallard, the snipe, the
+redshank, and the bittern, have been drained equally with the summer
+dwellings of the lapwing and the curlew. But these species still linger in
+some portion of the British isles; whereas the large capercailzies, or
+wood grouse, formerly natives of the pine forests of Ireland and Scotland,
+have been destroyed within the last fifty years. The egret and the crane,
+which appear to have been formerly very common in Scotland, are now only
+occasional visitants.
+</p>
+<p>
+The bustard (<i>Otis tarda</i>,) observes Graves in his <i>British Ornithology</i>,
+"was formerly seen in the downs and heaths of various parts of our island,
+in flocks of forty or fifty birds; whereas it is now
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page58"
+ name="page58">
+ </a>[pg 58]
+</span>
+ a circumstance of
+rare occurrence to meet with a single individual." Bewick also remarks,
+"that they were formerly more common in this island than at present; they
+are now found only in the open counties of the south and east, in the
+plains of Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, and some parts of Yorkshire." In the few
+years that have elapsed since Bewick wrote, this bird has entirely
+disappeared from Wiltshire and Dorsetshire.
+</p>
+<p>
+These changes, we may observe, are derived from very imperfect memorials,
+and relate only to the larger and more conspicuous animals inhabiting a
+small spot on the globe; but they cannot fail to exalt our conception of
+the enormous revolutions which, in the course of several thousand years,
+the whole human species must have effected.
+</p>
+<p>
+The kangaroo and the emu are retreating rapidly before the progress of
+colonization in Australia; and it scarcely admits of doubt, that the
+general cultivation of that country must lead to the extirpation of both.
+The most striking example of the loss, even within the last two centuries,
+of a remarkable species, is that of the dodo&mdash;a bird first seen by the
+Dutch when they landed on the Isle of France, at that time uninhabited,
+immediately after the discovery of the passage to the East Indies by the
+Cape of Good Hope. It was of a large size and singular form; its wings
+short, like those of an ostrich, and wholly incapable of sustaining its
+heavy body even for a short flight. In its general appearance it differed
+from the ostrich, cassowary, or any known bird.
+</p>
+<p>
+Many naturalists gave figures of the dodo after the commencement of the
+seventeenth century; and there is a painting of it in the British Museum,
+which is said to have been taken from a living individual. Beneath the
+painting is a leg, in a fine state of preservation, which ornithologists
+are agreed cannot belong to any other known bird. In the museum at Oxford,
+also, there is a foot and a head, in an imperfect state, but M. Cuvier
+doubts the identy of this species with that of which the painting is
+preserved in London.
+</p>
+<p>
+In spite of the most active search, during the last century, no
+information respecting the dodo was obtained, and some authors have gone
+so far as to pretend that it never existed; but amongst a great mass of
+satisfactory evidence in favour of the recent existence of this species,
+we may mention that an assemblage of fossil bones were recently discovered,
+under a bed of lava, in the Isle of France, and sent to the Paris museum
+by M. Desjardins. They almost all belonged to a large living species of
+land-tortoise, called <i>Testudu Indica</i>, but amongst them were the head,
+sternum, and humerus of the dodo. M. Cuvier showed me these valuable
+remains in Paris, and assured me that they left no doubt in his mind that
+the huge bird was one of the gallinaceous tribe.
+</p>
+<p>
+Next to the direct agency of man, his indirect influence in multiplying
+the numbers of large herbivorous quadrupeds of domesticated races, may be
+regarded as one of the most obviate causes of the extermination of species.
+On this, and on several other grounds, the introduction of the horse, ox,
+and other mammalia, into America, and their rapid propagation over that
+continent within the last three centuries, is a fact of great importance
+in natural history. The extraordinary herds of wild cattle and horses
+which overran the plains of South America, sprang from a very few pairs
+first carried over by the Spaniards; and they prove that the wide
+geographical range of large species in great continents does not
+necessarily imply that they have existed there from remote periods.
+Humboldt observes, in his Travels, on the authority of Azara, that it is
+believed there exist, in the Pampas of Buenos Ayres, twelve million cows
+and three million horses, without comprising in this enumeration the
+cattle that have no acknowledged proprietor. In the Llanos of Caraccas,
+the rich hateros, or proprietors of pastoral farms, are entirely ignorant
+of the number of cattle they possess. The young are branded with a mark
+peculiar to each herd, and some of the most wealthy owners mark as many as
+fourteen thousand a year. In the northern plains, from the Orinoco to the
+lake of Maracaybo, M. Depons reckoned that one million two hundred
+thousand oxen, one hundred and eighty thousand horses, and ninety thousand
+mules, wandered at large. In some parts of the valley of the Mississippi,
+especially in the country of the Osage Indians, wild horses are immensely
+numerous.
+</p>
+<p>
+The establishment of black cattle in America dates from Columbus's second
+voyage to St. Domingo. They there multiplied rapidly; and that island
+presently became a kind of nursery from which these animals were
+successively transported to various parts of the continental coast, and
+from thence into the interior. Notwithstanding these numerous exportations,
+in twenty-seven years after the discovery of the island, herds of four
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page59"
+ name="page59">
+ </a>[pg 59]
+</span>
+thousand head, as we learn from Oviedo, were not uncommon, and there were
+even some that amounted to eight thousand. In 1587, the number of hides
+exported from St. Domingo alone, according to Acosta's report, was
+thirty-five thousand four hundred and forty-four; and in the same year
+there were exported sixty-four thousand three hundred and fifty from the
+ports of New Spain. This was in the sixty-fifth year after the taking of
+Mexico, previous to which event the Spaniards, who came into that country,
+had not been able to engage in any thing else than war. All our readers
+are aware that these animals are now established throughout the American
+continent, from Canada to Paraguay.
+</p>
+<p>
+The ass has thriven very generally in the New World; and we learn from
+Ulloa, that in Quito they ran wild, and multiplied in amazing numbers, so
+as to become a nuisance. They grazed together in herds, and, when attacked,
+defended themselves with their mouths. If a horse happened to stray into
+the places where they fed, they all fell upon him, and did not cease
+biting and kicking till they left him dead.
+</p>
+<p>
+The first hogs were carried to America by Columbus, and established in the
+island of St. Domingo the year following its discovery in November, 1493.
+In succeeding years they were introduced into other places where the
+Spaniards settled; and, in the space of half a century, they were found
+established in the New World, from the latitude of 25 deg. north, to the
+40th deg. of south latitude. Sheep, also, and goats have multiplied
+enormously in the New World, as have also the cat and the rat, which last,
+as we before stated, has been imported unintentionally in ships. The dogs
+introduced by man, which have at different periods become wild in America,
+hunted in packs like the wolf and the jackal, destroying not only hogs,
+but the calves and foals of the wild cattle and horses.
+</p>
+<p>
+Ulloa in his voyage, and Buffon on the authority of old writers, relate a
+fact which illustrates very clearly the principle before explained by us,
+of the check which the increase of one animal necessarily offers to that
+of another. The Spaniards had introduced goats into the island of Juan
+Fernandez, where they became so prolific as to furnish the pirates who
+infested those seas with provisions. In order to cut off this resource
+from the bucaneers, a number of dogs were turned loose into the island;
+and so numerous did they become in their turn, that they destroyed the
+goats in every accessible part, after which the number of the wild dogs
+again decreased.
+</p>
+<p>
+As an example of the rapidity with which a large tract may become peopled
+by the offspring of a single pair of quadrupeds, we may mention that in
+the year 1773, thirteen rein-deer were exported from Norway, only three of
+which reached Iceland. These were turned loose into the mountains of
+Guldbringe Syssel, where they multiplied so greatly, in the course of
+forty years, that it was not uncommon to meet with herds consisting of
+from forty to one hundred in various districts.&mdash;<i>Lyell's Geology</i>, vol.
+ii.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>THE NOVELIST.</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>THE CONFESSION OF SERVENTIUS.</h3>
+<h4><i>(Concluded from page 46.)</i></h4>
+
+<p>
+That evening, Father Dominick, our excellent priest, and my tutor in the
+classics, was closeted for a length of time with my afflicted nominal
+parents; and two days afterwards taking me with him to his monastery, he
+introduced me to the superior, as an orphan, the child of dear and
+particular friends, confided by them to his charge for education upon
+their death-bed, and with a distinct understanding that I was not bound to
+take upon myself monastic vows, the superior allowed me to remain with him
+as a boarder. Serventius and Artemisia I never more beheld, and every
+inquiry respecting them which I ventured to make of Father Dominick, was
+checked with a strange, sad look, and an admonition to mention them no
+more. Seven long and peaceful years, I spent in the monastery; and at the
+expiration of that period, was placed by my guardian in the house of the
+celebrated Doctor Sanazio of Padua, as a student of medicine. Here, novel
+and delightful studies, speculations, and scenes, opened upon my
+inquisitive, ardent mind, and amused my enthusiastic imagination. Sanazio
+was regarded in learned Padua, as little less than a demi-god; at certain
+hours he visited his patients, amongst whom might generally be numbered
+three-fourths of the population of Padua; at certain hours, his own
+mansion was crowded like the audience-hall of some mighty potentate, with
+supplicants for food and physic; three evenings in the week were devoted
+by him to intense study in his own secret, solitary chamber; and upon the
+alternate three, he received the visits of those who desired to consult
+him upon abstruse
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page60"
+ name="page60">
+ </a>[pg 60]
+</span>
+ points, only properly to be solved by an acquaintance
+with the occult sciences. In brief, my honoured master, I soon discovered,
+was reckoned a very fair conjuror; he consulted the stars, drew horoscopes,
+cast nativities, was learned in the expositions of dreams and omens,
+undertook to give information respecting lost property, and matrimonial
+prospects; composed, and dispensed charms and philtres, and proved himself,
+as I have hinted, a capital astrologer, and something more. How Sanazio,
+who certainly was a very extraordinary man, acquired his multifarious
+information, unless really by supernatural agency, I am at a loss to
+discover. Ignatius Druso, my fellow student, was of opinion that he only
+dexterously availed himself in the evening of the news which he had
+gathered from his patients in the morning; and that his familiars were no
+more than a few active emissaries, for whose espionage and additional
+gleanings of town news, it answered to him well, to pay. Ever partial to
+romance, I did not readily fall in with Druso's sober view of this subject,
+and the longer I lived with Doctor Sanazio, the more occasion had I to
+doubt the correctness of his opinion, because some things occurred of
+which my master obtained immediate and accurate knowledge, whilst I am
+perfectly certain that no human tongue had divulged them to him; take the
+following incident as an example:&mdash;Druso and myself were accustomed, on
+those evenings which Sanazio spent in his sanctum, to visit patients in
+his stead, to range over the town, to go to places of public amusement, or
+to conclude our meritorious labours at a tavern. Being one night at this
+latter place, an old woman entered, and inquiring whether I were Master
+Serventius, Doctor Sanazio's pupil, slipped a billet and a piece of gold
+into my hand and desired me to follow her. I did so, without hesitation,
+and whilst behind my guide, contrived to peruse the note by moon-light,
+which contained these words:
+</p>
+<p>
+"I am sick,&mdash;of the heart's mortal sickness;&mdash;relieve it, and great shall
+be thy recompense."
+</p>
+<p>
+Perplexed, yet amused, by what promised an adventure, I followed my
+ancient guide into a house whose exterior was sufficiently humble; but,
+having ascended a steep flight of stairs, she threw open the door of a
+chamber in which they terminated, and I found myself not only in a
+richly-furnished apartment, but in the presence of a lady, young as
+immortal Hebe, and fair as day. I saw at a glance that her ills were those
+of the mind only, and ere she had opened her lips to detail them and
+engage me in her cause, I had vowed, heart and soul, to be her champion.
+Having complimented me upon the high character she had heard of my prowess,
+understanding, and principles, she informed me, with little circumlocution,
+that various unhappy family circumstances had rendered it necessary for
+her to seek friends amongst strangers; that she was a novice of the
+Convent of St. Anne, but on the eve of profession, and that having long
+been under an engagement of marriage with a young gentleman of family,
+respecting whom her relations had used her very deceitfully and cruelly,
+she had fixed upon me as a person little likely to be subjected to
+suspicion on her account, to aid Signor Fernandez in the difficult and
+hazardous enterprise, which she said must be a work of time and prudence,
+of carrying her off from the convent. Having obtained my promise to this
+effect, she detailed her plans, and furnished me with the means of
+continual communication with her lover and herself. I returned home,
+highly elated at the trust reposed in me, at the importance which I had
+acquired in my own eyes, and at the prospect of a handsome remuneration
+for my services, from the lovely object of them. Sanazio, with lamp in
+hand, and arrayed in his night attire, to my great terror and surprise,
+opened the door to me himself; it was very late, Druso had long since
+returned without me, and in order to allay the storm which I saw gathering
+upon mine ancient master's brow, I slipped the gold given to me by the
+confidante of beautiful Antonia, into his unreluctant hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Unhappy youth!" exclaimed Sanazio, "beware of aiding the nun, lest thou
+bring upon her and upon thyself the fate of Artemisia and Serventius."
+</p>
+<p>
+These words so alarmed me that I nearly fainted; for how, in the name of
+all things holy and gracious, came Sanazio to know in whose society I had
+passed the last hour, and what was the subject of our conversation? His
+terrible allusion too, to those lost loved ones, of whose untimely fate I
+was still so ignorant, strangely troubled my conscious breast. Let me be
+brief, the hours of my ill-fated existence are fast wearing away, and I
+have yet more to relate. To Ignatius Druso I was obliged to confide my
+secret, because his assistance, in the furtherance of plans which were
+always requiring, from little immaterial circumstances, some slight
+alterations, was found necessary; and it must here
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page61"
+ name="page61">
+ </a>[pg 61]
+</span>
+ suffice those to know,
+who shall, after my destruction do me the melancholy favour of perusing
+this retrospective record, that some months after Antonia had taken the
+veil, I succeeded in restoring her to the arms of her lover, witnessed
+their private nuptials, visited them in their new residence, a villa in a
+secluded spot far from Padua, and received my promised recompense. "Young
+man! you've ruined yourself; and your fatal destiny is sealed!" were the
+remarkable words of Sanazio, on the morning after the completion of my
+enterprise, but long ere the elopement of the new devotee became publicly
+known. However, he never reverted to the subject, not even upon his
+death-bed; and after the learned doctor's decease, when I came into the
+whole of his practice, and no small portion of his fame, I was easy, for
+the memory of that sacrilege had passed away.
+</p>
+<p>
+Ignatius Druso, like myself, resided in Padua, but soon quitted the
+medical profession, disgusted, I fancy, at finding that I had become a
+second Sanazio, whilst he commanded little or no attention: still we were
+friends, nor did I suspect that the germs of envy and malice were sown in
+his bosom, and that I had trusted him with one secret, or more, too much.
+"Serventius, my son," had said the venerable Sanazio to me upon his
+death-bed, "your ardent desire of knowledge and discreet use of it,
+encourage me ere I quit this world, to entrust you with the grand arcanum
+of our art; as yet, you know not the secret of my success, but take then
+this hint and improve upon it. Can he repair a piece of mechanism, who is
+ignorant of its make, its parts, and how they act upon, and affect one
+another? Behold this key; it is that of my laboratory, and may it indeed
+open the door of knowledge to you."
+</p>
+<p>
+After Sanazio's decease, curiosity quickly led me to his study: I was
+alone, and the shades of evening were stealing over the earth: conceive
+then my utter dismay and superstitious horror upon suddenly entering, what
+I could but suppose to be a charnel-house! Its effluvium was intolerable,
+and well accounted for by (loathsome spectacle!) a disorderly collection
+of human fragments in various stages of preservation and decay! A dozen
+grisly skeletons grinned upon me from pedestals round the room, and in the
+centre of it, the half dissected body of a man, stretched upon a large
+lava slab, supported by tressels, was more horrible and odious than all. I
+now comprehended the full meaning of Sanazio's dying words and secret; but
+received at the same time, a shock which to this day I have not recovered;
+I found myself compelled to make Druso my confidant in this matter, and my
+companion in some of my first attempts at following the hideous occupation
+recommended by my deceased friend. By degrees I grew accustomed to the
+horrors of the room and of my employment. Druso, who found himself better
+engaged in courting the living than in cutting up the dead, was no longer
+necessary to me in the prosecution of my hateful studies, and kept aloof,
+but I soon discovered the value of them, in my increase of knowledge,
+employment, and reputation. At last an epidemic raged in Padua, proving
+very fatal; Ignatius, alarmed for the safety of his Phaedera, who was
+attacked, applied to me, and I cured her. Some time afterwards, the
+ungrateful wretch rushed into my laboratory, claiming the body upon which
+I was operating, as that of a young man, cousin to Phaedera, which had
+miraculously disappeared just previous to the day intended for its
+interment. The features of the poor wretch were too much disfigured to
+render possible his recognition by them, but Druso swore to its being the
+body of Marcus, from a scar on the left leg, which had been wounded
+severely by a quoit. Of course I refused to resign, that, for which I had
+paid a handsome price, and to reveal the names of those from whom I
+purchased it. So Druso dragged me before the Supreme Council, impeached me
+of sacrilege in the affair of the nun, of theft, and of violating the
+sanctity of the tomb, of barbarously mutilating the dead, and of applying
+their lacerated remains to the unholy purposes of sorcery! and on these
+counts have I been indicted, found guilty, and sentenced to be burnt as a
+sacrilegious heretic, an unnatural robber, and a formidable wizard!
+Antonia, the mother of seven children, is to be&mdash;like the unchaste
+vestal&mdash;immured! Oh Heaven! whilst Druso the Informer, receiving at the
+same time the portion of a prince for his venal treachery, will celebrate
+his union with Phaedera, amidst the shrieks and groans of his expiring
+victims!
+</p>
+<p>
+I cannot now proceed: ere I am bound to the fatal stake, methinks I shall
+die of shame, grief, and terror. And did the friends of my infancy, my
+parents, suffer as I shall suffer? Then, welcome death! welcome, hated
+dawn of my last day, for innocence and truth are banished from the earth!
+Hark! the key
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page62"
+ name="page62">
+ </a>[pg 62]
+</span> turning in the lock of my cell! Hark! those boding and
+pitying voices without! Father Dominick! Servilius! Andrea! kindest! best!
+&mdash;I die&mdash;but I die innocent, the victim only&mdash;&mdash;-Hah! to burn&mdash;burn&mdash;burn!
+Gracious Heaven! pardon the strife of nature! My brain whirls!&mdash;my eyes
+cloud!&mdash;my black, dry, swollen lips,&mdash;throat&mdash;bosom&mdash;heart&mdash;O mother of
+God!&mdash;O! Saviour&mdash;Redeemer&mdash;pardon, pardon!&mdash;Father of Mercies,&mdash;-receive
+me!
+</p>
+<p>
+<i>Great Marlow, Bucks.</i>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>SCENES FROM THE (OLD) FRENCH REVOLUTION.</h3>
+<h4><i>(From the "Quarterly" Review of Madame Junot's Memoirs.)</i></h4>
+
+<p>
+About the beginning of the revolution, a working-man, by name Thirion, had
+established himself in a little stall (in Paris,) where he carried on his
+business as a mender of carpets. He called one morning to ask M. Permon's
+(a Royalist
+<a id="footnotetag7"
+ name="footnotetag7"></a>
+ <sup><a href="#footnote7">7</a></sup>
+
+) custom, but was civilly told that the family had long
+employed a tradesman of his class, and could not change for a stranger:
+the man took the refusal so insolently, that he was at last turned out of
+doors, vowing revenge. M. Permon, the ports being still open, makes a run
+over to London to place some money in our funds. Meantime "the Sections
+are organized," and Thirion becomes "Secretaire, Greffier, President, je
+ne scai quoi, de la notre." The morning after his return to Paris, M.
+Permon had just risen, when footsteps were heard loud on the staircase,
+and in burst Citizen Thirion, two other patriots of the Sectional
+Committee, and the carpetman's shopboy. (Madame Junot's Narrative
+commences here.)
+</p>
+<p>
+"My father was shaving himself. Naturally quick tempered, his impatience
+was extreme when he recognised the individual, and he was imprudent enough
+to make a menacing gesture the moment they broke into his dressing-room.
+'I am here to see the law enforced,' cries Thirion, on seeing my father
+advance with the razor in his hand. 'Well, what law is it that chooses so
+worthy an organ?'&mdash;'I am here to learn your age, your pursuits, and to
+interrogate you as to your journey to Coblentz.' My father, who had from
+the first word felt the most violent disposition to toss the man down
+stairs, shivered with rage; but, at last, he composed himself, wiped his
+chin, laid down his razor, and, crossing his arms, placed himself full in
+front of Thirion: then, measuring him from the utmost height of his tall
+and elegant person, he said, 'You wish to know my age?'&mdash;'Yes, such are my
+orders.'&mdash;Where is the order?' said my father, extending his hand. 'It is
+enough for you to know that I am sent hither by the committee of my
+section: my orders are sufficiently proved by my presence.'&mdash;Ah! you think
+so; I am of a different opinion. Your presence here is nothing but an
+insult, unless you have a judiciary order to justify it; show it me, and I
+shall forget the name of the man, to see only the public functionary.'
+Thirion raised his voice as my father lowered his&mdash;'What is your
+age?&mdash;What was the object of your going to Coblentz?'&mdash;&mdash;My father seizes
+a large bamboo, and makes it whistle over Thirion's head&mdash;at that moment
+my mother rushes in, and succeeds in dragging him into another room, and
+restoring him to something like calmness. I remember she placed me in his
+arms, whispering to me to entreat him to <i>think of me</i>. Meantime, Thirion
+had drawn up his <i>procès verbal</i>, and withdrawn:&mdash;he left me weeping
+without knowing why I wept, but I saw that my mother and my sister were in
+tears too. My father sat pale, trembling with anger,&mdash;everything about us
+had a desolate aspect."
+</p>
+<p>
+The family escape from Paris&mdash;and it was time. Violent alternations of
+fear, anger, sorrow, terror, and disgust, with frequent disguises, flights,
+and all sorts of changes of residence, at length wear out the health and
+spirits of M. Permon&mdash;a man, apparently, who united dull enough intellect
+with all the vivacity of a Frenchman's mere temperament; and he dies in
+obscurity long before anything like order is re-established. We need not
+dwell on the particular fortunes of a not very interesting set of people;
+but may quote one or two more specimens of the sort of scenes which fill
+the greater part of the first of these volumes. Our authoress and her
+sister are at one time separated from their parents, and placed in an
+obscure <i>pension</i> in the Faubourg (no longer <i>St.</i>) Antoine. Their brother,
+a very young man, has also remained in Paris, and frequently visits them
+in their retreat.
+</p>
+<p>
+"We could not but observe, that for some days he had been very melancholy,
+and that he was getting more and more so. We asked the reason, and he told
+us at last that the section had denounced my father in a very alarming
+style. We
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page63"
+ name="page63">
+ </a>[pg 63]
+</span>
+ fell a-crying, my sister and I. Albert consoled us as well as he
+could, but it was easy to see that the denunciation was not all&mdash;that some
+immediate danger fixed his fears. We knew afterwards, in effect, that a
+report had been spread of the arrest of my parents at Limoges&mdash;happily a
+false one. The horizon meanwhile was taking a bloody tint. Judge of my
+brother's anxiety! he came every day in a cabriolet, which my father had
+had built just before these late events; it was an elegant one, very lofty,
+of the kind called <i>wiski.</i> Already he had been all but insulted by the
+populace in driving through the faubourg; but liveries had not yet
+altogether disappeared, and nothing would persuade him to listen to our
+remonstrances, and make the domestic put off his. Thus it was on the 31st
+of August, when he came to see us as usual."
+</p>
+<p>
+"There was about the boarding-house a man charged with all the rough work,
+by name Jaquemart, a fellow that could do everything&mdash;but the most
+atrocious of countenances. 'The sight of that man makes me sick,' said
+Albert; 'I am sure he will end in something tragic.'"
+</p>
+<p>
+"One day, shortly after we went to the <i>pension</i>, Jaquemart was bringing
+in a load of wood, when my brother drove at the speed of his horse into
+the entrance. He saw the man had a burden that would hardly allow him to
+get out of the way in time&mdash;cried <i>'Gare!'</i>&mdash;perceived that his efforts
+were in vain&mdash;and pulled back his horse so sharply as to run much risk of
+wounding the animal, and, indeed, of being thrown out himself, owing to
+the extraordinary elevation of the <i>wiski</i>. Jaquemart, however, escaped by
+this means with a scratch on his leg; his eyes were good, he saw what
+Albert had done to master his horse, and vowed gratitude."
+</p>
+<p>
+"The 31st of August the man had nothing to do about the house, yet he kept
+lounging at the gate, or in the court, all day long. It was late ere
+Albert came&mdash;he had been waiting for him, and whispered, as he alighted,
+'Stay here to-night to take care of your sisters&mdash;don't go home.' Albert
+looked at him with astonishment; he had, indeed, perceived symptoms of
+some commotion, but fancied, as most of Paris did, that it would be
+directed against the Temple. 'What is your meaning?' said he. 'I entreat
+you to stay here&mdash;you will be near your sisters; and if there be need for
+another hand, mine shall not be far off&mdash;very well!&mdash;we shall be there.'
+Albert pressed him with questions, but could extract nothing; and after
+giving the man some money, persisted; in returning home as usual."
+</p>
+<p>
+"All know the frightful story of the day after this. Albert's anxiety for
+us makes him brave every danger, and he comes to us again. The first
+person he sees at our door is Jaquemart, in the costume of the most
+atrocious of bandits; our ladies had not dared to bid him go away, but his
+appearance made them tremble. 'I did not desire you to come hither, but to
+stay here,' he said; 'why have I not been obeyed?' 'Why do you speak
+so&mdash;was this house particularly menaced?' 'I know nothing of that&mdash;at such
+a moment one should fear everything.'"
+</p>
+<p>
+"We heard groans, weeping, all Paris had not been at <i>the massacre</i>. It
+was late. They pressed Albert to stay, but he would not. He promised,
+however, to come back next morning.&mdash;&mdash;That day he was obliged to stay at
+home till about three o'clock, arranging and burning papers. He then came
+out to visit us, and found himself in the midst of crowds of men, drunken
+and bloody; many were naked to the waist, their breasts covered with blood.
+They carried fragments of clothing on their pikes and sabres&mdash;their faces
+were inflamed, their eyes haggard, the whole scene hideous. These groups
+became more and more frequent and numerous as he advanced. In mortal
+anxiety for us, he determined to push through everything, and, urging his
+horse to its speed, reached at length the front of the Hôtel Beaumarchais.
+There he was stopped by an immense crowd&mdash;always the same figures naked
+and bloodstained, but here their looks were those of enraged fiends. They
+shout, they scream, they sing, they dance&mdash;the saturnalia of hell. On
+seeing Albert's cabriolet, they redoubled their cries&mdash;'An aristocrat!
+give it him, give it him!' In a moment the cabriolet is surrounded, and
+from the midst of the crowd an object rises and moves towards him. His
+agitation perplexes his view&mdash;he perceives long fair tresses dabbled with
+blood&mdash;a countenance beautiful even yet. It approaches&mdash;it is thrust upon
+his face; he recognises the features&mdash;it is the head of Madame de Lamballe!"
+</p>
+<p>
+"The servant whips the horse with all the strength of his arm. The
+generous animal, with the instinctive horror of his race for dead bodies,
+springs with redoubled speed from the spectacle of horror. The frightful
+trophy, and the cannibals that bore it, had been overturned in the
+mud&mdash;screams and imprecations pursued Albert, stretched
+<span class="pagenum">
+ <a id="page64"
+ name="page64">
+ </a>[pg 64]
+</span>
+ senseless at the
+bottom of the cabriolet. The servant had kept the reins, and whipped the
+more fiercely, because he could perceive, from the motion of the carriage,
+that some one had got up behind it, and hoped that the rapidity of its
+progress would shake him off."
+</p>
+<p>
+"In a few minutes Albert reached our door&mdash;judge of our alarm!&mdash;pale,
+still quite senseless, not breathing. The moment the cabriolet stopped,
+the man behind jumped down, took my brother in his arms, as if he had been
+a child, and carried him into the house. It was Jaquemart. 'The monsters,'
+said he, 'the monsters! the poor young man, they have killed him too.'
+What could Jaquemart have been doing in such a garb, and among such a
+troop o' ruffians?"
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>THE GATHERER.</h2>
+
+<p>
+The Paris correspondent of the <i>Court Journal</i> gives the following
+incident at the King's Ball, about a fortnight since. I happened to be
+near his majesty when he addressed himself to an Englishman, wearing the
+Cross of Three Days. "Where did you signalize yourself, sir?" inquired the
+monarch. "At the Tuilleries, sire," was the answer. "<i>C'est aux braves de
+Juillet que je dois ma couronne</i>," said his majesty. The gentleman thus
+honoured was M. Bennis,
+<a id="footnotetag8"
+ name="footnotetag8"></a>
+ <sup><a href="#footnote8">8</a></sup>
+ in whose literary establishment the king seems
+to take much interest.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+<h3>GUTTING THE FISH.</h3>
+
+<p>
+One evening a red-headed Connaught swell, of no small aristocratic
+pretensions in his own eyes, sent his servant, whom he had just imported
+from the long-horned kingdom, in all the rough majesty of a creature fresh
+from the "wilds," to purchase a hundred of oysters on the City-quay. Paddy
+staid so long away, that Squire Trigger got quite impatient and unhappy
+lest his "body man" might have slipt into the Liffey; however, to his
+infinite relief, Paddy soon made his appearance, puffing and blowing like
+a disabled bellows, but carrying his load seemingly in great triumph.
+"Well, Pat," cried the master, "what the devil kept you so long?" "Long! a
+thin, may be it's what you'd have me to come home with half my <i>arrant?</i>"
+says Pat. "Half the oysters?" says the master. "No; but too much of the
+<i>fish</i>." says Pat. "What fish?" says he. "The oysters, to be sure," says
+Pat. "What do you mean, blockhead?" says he. "I mean," says Pat, "that
+there was no use with loading myself with more nor was useful."
+"Will you explain yourself?" says he. "I will," says Pat laying down his
+load. "Well then, you see, plaise your Honour, as I was coming home along
+the quay, mighty peaceable, who should I meet but Shammus Maginnis; 'Good
+morrow, Shamien,' sis I; 'Good morrow kindly, Paudeen,' sis he; 'What is
+it you have in the sack?' sis he; 'A <i>Cwt</i>. of oysters,' sis I; 'Let us
+look at them,' says he; 'I will, and welcome,' sis I; 'Orah! thunder and
+pratees!' sis he, openin the sack an examinin them; 'who <i>sowld</i> you
+these?' 'One Tom Kinahan that keeps a small ship there below,' sis I;
+'Musha then, bad luck to that same Tom that <i>sowld</i> the likes to you,' sis
+he; 'Arrah, why, avic?' sis I; 'To make a <i>Bolshour</i> ov you an give thim
+to you without gutting thim,' sis he; 'An arn't they gutted, Jim, aroon,'
+sis I; 'Oh! bad luck to the one o' thim,' sis he; 'Musha then,' sis I,
+'what the dhoul will I do at all at all, fur the master will be mad;' 'Do!'
+sis he, 'why I'd rather do the thing for you mysel nor you should lose
+your place,' sis he; so wid that he begins to gut them wid his knife,
+<i>nate</i> and <i>clain</i>, an afeereed ov dirtying the flags, begor, he
+swallowed the guts himself from beginnin to ind, tal he had thim as dacent
+as you see thim here"&mdash;dashing down at his master's feet his bag of oyster
+shells, to the no small amazement of the Connaught worthy, as you may
+suppose.&mdash;<i>Dublin Comet</i>.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+<h3>FAMILIAR SCIENCE.</h3>
+<p>
+This Day was published, with many Engravings, price 5<i>s</i>.,
+</p>
+<pre>
+ ARCANA OF SCIENCE,
+ AND
+ ANNUAL REGISTER of the USEFUL ARTS,
+ for 1832:
+</pre>
+<p>
+Abridged from the Transactions of Public Societies, and Scientific
+Journals, British and Foreign, for the past year.
+</p>
+<p>
+*** This volume will contain all the Important Facts in the year 1831&mdash;in
+the
+</p>
+<pre>
+ MECHANIC ARTS,
+ CHEMICAL SCIENCE,
+ ZOOLOGY,
+ BOTANY,
+ MINERALOGY,
+ GEOLOGY,
+ METEOROLOGY,
+ RURAL ECONOMY,
+ GARDENING.
+ DOMESTIC ECONOMY,
+ USEFUL AND ELEGANT ARTS,
+ GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERIES,
+ MISCELLANEOUS SCIENTIFIC INFORMATION.
+</pre>
+<p>
+Printing for John Limbird, 143, Strand; of whom may be had volumes (upon
+the same plan) for 1828, price 4<i>s</i>. 6<i>d</i>., 1829&mdash;30&mdash;31, price 5<i>s</i>. each.
+</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1" name="footnote1">
+ </a><b>Footnote 1</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ The present Borough of Pontefract was incorporated by Richard III.,
+ and has sent Members to Parliament since the reign of James I.
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2" name="footnote2">
+ </a><b>Footnote 2</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ Dugdale Bar. vol. i p. 99.
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3" name="footnote3">
+ </a><b>Footnote 3</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ This tradition is moulded into a pleasing tale entitled "the White
+ Rose in Mull," in the Scottish Annual, the <i>Chameleon</i>, noticed by us
+ a few weeks since.
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4" name="footnote4">
+ </a><b>Footnote 4</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ Shakspeare lays Scene v. of Act. v. of Richard II. in a dungeon of
+ Pomfret Castle.
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5" name="footnote5">
+ </a><b>Footnote 5</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag5">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ In our last we erroneously stated the whole of this building as the
+ work of Messrs. Lee, for £9,214.; only part of the carcase, containing
+ the Hall, Library, &amp;c. being contracted for by those builders for the
+ above sum. Other contracts have since been made for the completion of
+ the building; of these, the principal is with Messrs. Baker and Son
+ (the builders of the King's library and new galleries of the British
+ Museum, &amp;c.) who have executed the beautiful finishings of the
+ interior: these contracts amount to upwards of £12,000.
+ <p>
+ Other contracts have been made with the above parties for the erection
+ of the Club House, and Dining Rooms, &amp;c., situate in Bell Yard, which
+ is an addition subsequently made to the original building.
+ </p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote6" name="footnote6">
+ </a><b>Footnote 6</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag6">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ The best remains of Ionic buildings at Athens are the temples of
+ Erecthens and Minerva Pulias in the Acropolis, and the little temple
+ on the banks of the Ilissus; but in Asia Minor the examples of this
+ order are far more numerous; and some of the finest are to be found
+ amongst the magnificent ruins at Brauchidia, at Priene, and at Teos,
+ &amp;c.
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote7" name="footnote7">
+ </a><b>Footnote 7</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag7">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ And father of Madame Junot.
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote8" name="footnote8">
+ </a><b>Footnote 8</b>:
+ <a href="#footnotetag8">
+ (return)
+ </a>
+ The agent for the MIRROR, in Paris.&mdash;ED. M.
+</blockquote>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>
+<i>Printed and Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, (near Somerset House,)
+London; sold by ERNEST FLEISCHER, 626, New Market, Leipsic. G.G. Bennis,
+55, Rue Neuve, St. Augustin, Paris; and by all Newsmen and Booksellers.</i>
+</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement,
+and Instruction., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE ***
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+</body>
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+
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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 19, No. 531, Saturday, January 28, 1832.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: March 11, 2004 [EBook #11538]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE ***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. XIX. NO. 531.] SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1832. [PRICE 2d
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+[Illustration: PONTEFRACT CASTLE, 1648.]
+
+
+PONTEFRACT CASTLE.
+
+
+Pontrefact, a place of considerable note in English history, is situated
+about two miles south-west from Ferrybridge, nine miles nearly east from
+Wakefield, and fifteen miles north-west from Doncaster, in Yorkshire. The
+origin of the town is unknown; and the etymology of its name has been a
+matter of dispute, in which figures a monkish legend ascribing the name of
+Ponsfractus, or Pontefract, to the breaking of a bridge, and the fall of
+many persons into the river Aire, who were miraculously saved by St.
+William, Archbishop of York. The river Ouse and the city of York, however,
+put in a stronger claim as the scene of this miracle, and unfortunately
+for Pontefract, the town is so named in charters of fifty-three years'
+date before the miracle is pretended to have been performed. Still the
+etymology is referable to the breaking down of "_some bridge_," (_pons_,
+bridge; _fractus_, broken,) but this unravelment is not antiquarian.
+Camden says, that in the Saxon times, the name of this town was Kirkby,
+which was changed by the Normans to Pontefract, because of a broken bridge
+that was there. But as there is no river within two miles of the place,
+this bridge appears to have been built over the Wash, which lies about a
+quarter of a mile to the east of the Castle. Other researches prove
+Pontefract to have been a secondary and subordinate Roman station.
+
+The history of the Castle is, of course, involved in that of the manor.
+The town is stated to have been a burgh in the time of Edward the
+Confessor; but how long it had enjoyed this privilege is uncertain.[1]
+After the Conquest, this manor, with 150 others, or the greatest part of
+so many in Yorkshire, besides ten in Nottinghamshire, and four in
+Lincolnshire, were given by William to Hildebert, or Ilbert de Lacy, one
+of his Norman followers, who _built the Castle_. The work occupied twelve
+years, and it was finished in 1080. The labour and expense of its erection
+was so great, that no person unless in the possession of a princely
+fortune, could have completed a work of such magnitude. Hildebert was
+succeeded by his son Robert, commonly called Robert de Pontefract, from
+his being born at that town. Robert enjoyed his vast possessions in peace
+during the reign of William Rufus; but after the accession of Henry I. he
+with more ambition than prudence, joined with Robert, Duke of Normandy,
+the King's brother, who claimed the crown of England. In consequence of
+this transaction, Robert de Lacy was banished the realm, and the castle
+and honour of Pontefract were given by the King to Henry Traverse, and
+afterwards to Henry De-laval.[2] Robert de Lacy was, however, restored
+after a few years exile, and the property continued in the Lacy family
+till the year 1193, when another Robert de Lacy dying without issue, the
+estate and honour of Pontefract devolved on his uterine sister Aubrey de
+Lisours, who carried these estates of the Lacys by marriage to Richard
+Fitz-Eustace, constable of Chester. Thence they descended to John
+Fitz-Eustace, who accompanied Richard I. in his crusade, and is said to
+have died at Tyre in Palestine. Roger, his eldest son, also in the crusade,
+succeeded to his honour and estates. He was present with Richard at the
+memorable siege of Acre. On his return to England he was the first of his
+family that took the name of Lacy, in which Pontefract Castle continued
+till 1310, when Henry de Lacy, through default of male issue, left his
+possessions to his daughter and heiress, Alice, who was married to Thomas,
+Earl of Lancaster; and, in case of a failure of issue from that marriage,
+he entailed them on the King and his heirs.
+
+The Earl of Lancaster, it will be remembered, became embroiled with Edward
+II. and his minion Gaveston, who partly through the interference of
+Lancaster, was beheaded at Warwick after a siege in Scarborough Custle.
+The King swore vengeance for the death of his favourite, which led this
+weak sovereign into a long series of dissentions with the barons, at the
+head of whom, was the Earl of Lancaster. Both parties now flew to arms,
+but Lancaster soon found himself ill supported by his compeers, and
+marching northward for reinforcements from the celebrated Bruce, King of
+Scotland, the King in the meantime, sent the Earl of Surrey and Kent to
+besiege the castle of Pontefract, which surrendered at the first summons.
+Lancaster was next closely pursued by the king with great superiority of
+numbers. "The earl, endeavouring to rally his troops, was taken prisoner,
+with ninety-five barons and knights, and carried to the castle of
+Pontefract, where he was imprisoned in a tower which Leland says he had
+newly made towards the abbey," This tower was square: its wall of great
+strength, being 10-1/2 feet thick; nor was there any other entrance into
+the interior than by a hole or trap-door in the floor of the turret: so
+that the prisoner must have been let down into this abode of darkness,
+from whence there could be no possible mode of escape; the room was
+twenty-five feet square. A few days after, the King being at Pontefract
+ordered him to be arraigned in the hall of the castle, before a small
+number of peers, among whom were the Spencers, his mortal enemies. The
+earl was condemned to be hanged, drawn, and quartered; but the punishment
+was changed to decapitation. After sentence was passed, he said, "Shall I
+die without answer?" He was not, however, permitted to speak; but a
+certain Gascoign took him away, and having put an old hood over his head,
+set him on a lean mare without a bridle. Being attended by a Dominican
+friar as his confessor, he was carried out of the town amidst the insults
+of the people; and there beheaded. Thus fell Thomas, Earl of Lancaster,
+the first Prince of the Blood, being uncle to Edward II. who condemned him
+to death. Several of his adherents were hanged at Pontefract.
+
+The next royal blood that stained Pontefract castle was that of King
+Richard II. who was here murdered or starved to death; though there is a
+tradition that it was merely given out that Richard had starved himself to
+death, and that he escaped from Pontefract to Mull, whence he shortly
+proceeded to the mainland of Scotland, where, for nineteen years, he was
+entertained in an honourable but secret captivity.[3] The matter remains
+in tragic darkness.[4] In the succeeding reign of Henry IV. Richard
+Scroope, archbishop of York, being taken prisoner, was in Pontefract
+castle, condemned to death. Next in the calendar of atrocities committed
+within these drear walls, were the murders of Anthony Woodville, Earl
+Rivers; Richard, Lord Grey; Sir Thomas Vaughan; and Sir Richard Hawse, in
+1483; by Richard III., whom Shakspeare makes to whine forth:
+
+
+ O Pomfret, Pomfret! O thou bloody prison!
+ Fatal and ominous to noble peers!
+ Within the guilty closure of thy walls,
+ Richard II. here was hack'd to death;
+ And for more slander to thy dismal seat,
+ We give to thee our guiltless blood to drink.
+
+
+We may now pass over matters of minor importance in the history of
+Pontefract to the time of Charles I. In the King's contest with his
+Parliament, this was the last fortress that held out for the unfortunate
+monarch. At Christmas 1644, Sir Thomas Fairfax laid siege to the castle,
+and on Jan. 19, following, after an incessant cannonade of three days, a
+breach was made: the brave garrison would not surrender; the besiegers
+mined, but the besieged counter-mined, and the work of slaughter went on
+till the garrison were greatly reduced. At length the Parliamentarians
+were attacked and repulsed by a reinforcement of Royalists from Oxford,
+and thus ended the first siege of Pontefract. In March, 1645, the enemy
+again took possession of the town, and after three months cannonade, the
+garrison being reduced almost to a state of famine, surrendered the castle
+by an honourable capitulation on June 20. Sir Thomas Fairfax was appointed
+governor, and he thinking the royal party to be subdued, appointed a
+colonel as his substitute, with a garrison of 100 men. The royalists next
+by stratagem recovered Pontefract, of which Sir John Digby was appointed
+governor.
+
+The third and final siege of this fine castle commenced in October, 1648.
+General Rainsborough was appointed to the command of the army, but he
+being previously intercepted at Doncaster, Oliver Cromwell undertook to
+conduct the siege. After having remained a month before the fortress,
+without making any impression on its massy walls, Cromwell joined the
+grand army under Fairfax, and General Lambert being appointed commander in
+chief of the forces before the castle, arrived at Pontefract on the 4th of
+December.
+
+The ENGRAVING represents the castle precisely at this period. It is copied
+from a large print taken from a drawing found in the possession of a
+descendant of the Fairfax family of Denton; in one angle is the following
+memorandum: "Governor Morris commanded in the Castle. General Lambert
+commanded the Siege, being appointed thereto on the death of General
+Rainsborough, who was intercepted and killed at Doncaster, by a party from
+the Castle, as he was going to take command."
+
+General Lambert raised new works, and vigorously pushed the siege; but the
+besieged held out. On January 30, 1649, the King was beheaded; and the
+news no sooner reached Pontefract, than the royalist garrison proclaimed
+his son Charles II. and made a vigorous and destructive sally against
+their enemies. The Parliamentarians, however, prevailed, and on March 25,
+1649, the garrison being reduced from 500 or 600 to 100 men, surrendered
+by capitulation. Six of the principal Royalists were excepted from mercy:
+two escaped, but were retaken and executed at York; the third was killed
+in a sortie; and the three others concealing themselves among the ruins of
+the castle, escaped after the surrender; and two of the last lived to see
+the Restoration.
+
+This third siege was the most destructive to the castle: the tremendous
+artillery had shattered its massive walls; and its demolition was
+completed by order of Parliament. Within two months after its reduction,
+the buildings were unroofed, and all the materials sold. Thus was this
+princely fortress reduced to a heap of ruins.
+
+The Castle of Pontefract was built on an elevated rock, commanding
+extensive and picturesque views. The north-west prospect takes in the
+beautiful vale along which flows the Aire, skirted by woods and
+plantations. It is bounded only by the hills of Craven. The north and east
+prospect is more extensive, but the scenery is not equally striking and
+impressive. The towers of York Minster are distinctly seen, and the
+prospect is only bounded by the limits of vision. To the east--while the
+eye follows the course of the Aire towards the Humber, the fertility of
+the country, the spires of churches, and two considerable hills, Brayton
+Barf, and Hambleton Haugh, which rise in the midst of a plain, and one of
+which is covered with wood, increase the beauty of the scene. The
+south-east view includes part of the counties of Lincoln and Nottingham.
+To the south and south-west, the towering hills of Derbyshire, stretching
+towards Lancashire, form the horizon, while the foreground is a
+picturesque country variegated with handsome residences.
+
+The Castle, by its situation, as well as by its structure, was rendered
+almost impregnable. It was not commanded by any contiguous hills, and it
+could only be taken by blockade.
+
+By referring to the Engraving, the reader will better understand this
+defence. The outworks are there distinctly shown with the respective posts
+and guards: indeed, these lines exhibit a fine specimen of fortification.
+The quadrangular enclosure on the crest of the hill, in the lower part of
+the Engraving, represents Lamberts' Fort Royal. To the right is the
+approach to the castle by the south gate to the barbican, crossed by a
+wall, with the middle gate, with the east gate at the extremity of the
+line. We next approach, the ballium, or castle yard through the Porter's
+Lodge of two towers with a portcullis. The wall of the castle-yard, it
+will be seen, has a parapet, and is flanked with towers, and the chapel to
+the right of the Lodge. East and West of the yard is seen the
+semi-circular moat or ditch; and on an eminence near the western extremity
+of the ballium, stands the keep or round tower, the walls of which are
+said to have been twenty-one feet thick. The state rooms are on the second
+story. The dungeons of the towers are terrific even in description: one
+was about 15 feet deep, and scarcely six feet square, without any
+admission of light. The whole area occupied by the Pontrefact fortress
+seems to have been about 7 acres, now converted into garden ground.
+
+The church seen within the work is that of All Saints, or Allhallows, a
+Gothic structure, probably of the time of Henry III., and almost destroyed
+in the sieges of the castle.
+
+Pontefract must be numbered in our recollections of childhood; since here
+were grown whole fields of liquorice root, from the extract of which are
+made. _Pontefract Cakes_, impressed with the arms--three lions passant
+gardant, surmounted with a helmet, full-forward, open faced, and
+garde-visure. We have likewise seen them impressed with the celebrated
+fortress, and the motto "Post mortem patris pro filio,"--after the death
+of the father--for the son--denoting the loyalty of the Pontefract
+Royalists in proclaiming Charles II. at the death of his father.
+
+
+ [1] The present Borough of Pontefract was incorporated by Richard
+ III., and has sent Members to Parliament since the reign of
+ James I.
+
+ [2] Dugdale Bar. vol. i p. 99.
+
+ [3] This tradition is moulded into a pleasing tale entitled "the White
+ Rose in Mull," in the Scottish Annual, the _Chameleon_, noticed by
+ us a few weeks since.
+
+ [4] Shakspeare lays Scene v. of Act. v. of Richard II. in a dungeon of
+ Pomfret Castle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"LACONICS," GUESSES AT TRUTH, &c.
+
+(_For the Mirror_.)
+
+
+It is the interest of an indolent man to be honest: for it requires
+considerable trouble and finesse, to deceive others successfully.
+
+Money was a wise contrivance to place fools somewhat on a level with men
+of sense.
+
+It will be observed, that people have generally the identical faults and
+vices they accuse others of; we may instance cowardice.
+
+Wherever a proposition is self-evident, it is but weakening its strength
+to bring forward arguments in its support.
+
+It is a melancholy reflection that a glass of wine will do more towards
+raising the spirits, than the finest composition ever penned.
+
+It is a great mistake in physiognomists to take outward signs as evidences
+of feeling: the seat of real sensation is within.
+
+Wherever art has travelled out of her proper sphere to ape nature, she has
+proved herself but a miserable mimic, even in her most approved efforts.
+
+We must not allow ourselves to dwell too seriously on life; for otherwise
+we shall be tempted to forego all our plans, to indulge in no future
+wishes, and, in short, to live on in torpid apathy.
+
+Books are at last the best companions: they instruct us in silence without
+any display of superiority, and they attend the pace of each man's
+capacity, without reproaching him for his want of comprehension.
+
+A disgust of life frequently proceeds from sheer vanity, or a wish to be
+supposed incapable of deriving gratification from the ordinary routine of
+happiness.
+
+It sometimes happens that with men as well as animals, that evidences of
+spirit are only the effect of excited fear.
+
+(_To be continued_.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LAW INSTITUTION.[1]
+
+
+(At the time of our last publication we were not aware that any
+architectural details of the building in Chancery-lane had appeared. We
+now find that the _Legal Observer_ contained such description in March
+last, "collected," says the editor, "with some pains and trouble." A
+correspondent dropped the _Observer_ leaf into our letter-box in the
+course of last week; but, unfortunately, the communication did not reach
+us in time for insertion with our Engraving. Good news, we know, usually
+comes upon crutches, but we hope our thanks will reach this correspondent
+at a better pace.)
+
+The style of architecture of the principal front in Chancery-lane is
+purely Grecian. The details and proportions appear to have been founded
+upon the best examples of the Ionic order in Athens and Asia Minor,[2] but
+they are not servilely copied from any of them.
+
+Mr. Vulliamy, the architect for the Institution, has thrown into this
+front the true spirit of the originals; and the effect which the
+harmonious proportions of the building produce on the spectator, when
+viewing it from Chancery-lane, must have been the result of much
+observation and experience in ancient and classic models.
+
+This front, extending nearly sixty feet in width, is of Portland stone. It
+consists of four columns and two antae, of the Grecian Ionic order,
+supporting an entablature and pediment, and forming together one grand
+portico. To give the requisite elevation, the columns and antae are raised
+upon pedestals; these, as well as the basement story and podium of the
+inner wall of the portico, are of Aberdeen granite; the columns and the
+rest of the front are formed of large blocks of Portland stone. In the
+front wall, within the portico, there are two ranges of windows above the
+basement.
+
+The front in Bell-yard extends nearly eighty feet, and will be finished
+with Roman cement, in imitation of stone. It will have a portico of two
+columns, and two antae of Portland stone, of the height of the ground
+story, which is very lofty, and the width of the entire compartment of the
+front. From the interior requiring to be divided into several rooms, this
+front must have many windows. The elevation is formed more upon the models
+of modern domestic architecture than of ancient public buildings, and
+resembles, in its general appearance, one of the palazzi in the Strada
+Balbi at Genoa, in the Corso at Rome, or in the Toledo at Naples. In its
+details, however, the extravagancies of the middle ages, and the often
+elegant frivolities of the _cinque cento_ period, have been avoided, and
+the breadth and simplicity of Greek models have still been followed.
+
+The ground plan of the building, by its general arrangement, divides
+itself into three parts, which may be distinguished under the heads of the
+_Library_, the _Hall_, and the _Club Room_. The first of these (that
+towards Chancery-lane) consists, on the ground floor, of a first and
+second vestibule, and staircase to the Library, the Secretary's Room, and
+Registry Office; and above these on the first floor, the Library,
+occupying the height of two stories.
+
+The _Library_ is a large and lofty room, fifty-five feet by thirty-one and
+a half, and twenty-three and a half high, divided by a screen of columns
+and pilasters of scagliola, into two unequal parts, the first forming a
+sort of ante-library to the other; both are surrounded by bookcases of oak,
+and a gallery runs round the whole, above which is another range of
+bookcases.
+
+The principal light is obtained from a large lantern-light in the ceiling;
+but there is a range of windows (double sashed, and glazed with plate
+glass) towards Chancery-lane, which also admit light into the lower part.
+
+All the floors in the building are made fire-proof, generally by being
+arched with brick; but that of the Library is rendered secure from fire by
+the ceilings of the vestibules underneath being formed of real stone,
+supported on iron girders and bearers, and divided into panels and
+compartments after the manner of the roofs of the peristyles of the
+ancient temples.
+
+There are three entrances from Chancery-lane: that in the centre is
+exclusively for members, and leads to all parts of the building; that on
+the right for persons going to the Registry Office; and also for persons
+having to speak to members; that on the left leads down to the Office for
+the deposit of deeds, and to the strong rooms.
+
+The second division consists of the _Hall_ and its appurtenances. It is
+above thirty feet high, and fifty-seven feet and a half long; and on each
+side it has wings or recesses, behind insulated columns of scagliola, in
+imitation of Egyptian granite. Within these, and at the back of the
+columns, are galleries; the staircases to which are concealed in the
+angles. There are three fireplaces in the Hall; one in the centre,
+opposite the principal entrance, and one in the centre of each of the
+recesses. The Hall is lighted by a lantern-light forty feet long and
+twenty-four feet wide.
+
+The third division is next Bell-yard: it is subdivided into two parts. In
+the first of these are three entrances from Bell-yard. That in the centre
+is exclusively for the members; that to the left leads to the staircase to
+the Secretary's apartments; and the other, to the right of the centre, is
+for strangers to enter who have business to transact in any of the rooms
+appropriated to public business. On the ground floor of this part of the
+third division is a large Committee Room, and an ante or waiting room
+adjoining, and the great staircase to the rooms above. On the first floor
+are the rooms for meetings on matters of business connected with the law;
+and above these are the Secretary's apartments.
+
+The second part of the third division contains, on the ground floor, the
+_Club Room_, which occupies all the ground floor: it will be divided by
+columns and pilasters of scagliola, and decorated with a paneled ceiling
+and appropriate ornaments. Its dimensions are fifty feet by twenty-seven,
+and eighteen feet high. On the first floor are rooms of different
+dimensions for dinner parties; and over these, rooms for the resident
+officers. In the basement story of this part of the building are the
+Kitchen and other domestic offices for the use of the Club.
+
+The office for the deposit of deeds is in the basement story, next to
+Chancery-lane.
+
+In the remaining parts of the basement story of the building are fifty-two
+strong rooms, with iron doors, for the deposit of deeds, which are well
+ventilated and fire-proof; their average size is six feet and a half by
+seven feet and a half, but some are larger, and others rather less, than
+these dimensions. The whole are secured by one double iron door, with a
+very strong lock and master-key.
+
+
+ [1] In our last we erroneously stated the whole of this building as
+ the work of Messrs. Lee, for L9,214.; only part of the carcase,
+ containing the Hall, Library, &c. being contracted for by those
+ builders for the above sum. Other contracts have since been made
+ for the completion of the building; of these, the principal is
+ with Messrs. Baker and Son (the builders of the King's library
+ and new galleries of the British Museum, &c.) who have executed
+ the beautiful finishings of the interior: these contracts amount
+ to upwards of L12,000.
+
+ Other contracts have been made with the above parties for the
+ erection of the Club House, and Dining Rooms, &c., situate in
+ Bell Yard, which is an addition subsequently made to the original
+ building.
+
+ [2] The best remains of Ionic buildings at Athens are the temples of
+ Erecthens and Minerva Pulias in the Acropolis, and the little
+ temple on the banks of the Ilissus; but in Asia Minor the examples
+ of this order are far more numerous; and some of the finest are to
+ be found amongst the magnificent ruins at Brauchidia, at Priene,
+ and at Teos, &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+VAPOUR-BATHS.
+
+
+Among the remedies for cholera, or perhaps we should rather say attempted
+remedies, the vapour-bath is conspicuous over all the other means of cure,
+external and internal: stimulants, frictions, rubefacients, blisters, have
+that for their indirect object which the vapour-bath accomplishes directly,
+namely, to produce heat on the surface of the body, and thus restore that
+correspondence between the temperature of the interior and exterior parts,
+which in the disease is so strangely disturbed. There are two difficulties
+in the application of the vapour-bath, which are not easily overcome. When
+applied to the patient in the ordinary way, from the nature of the heat,
+the upper surface of the body is scorched, while the back is almost cold.
+Now in cholera, the application of heat to the back is of essential
+importance. In the whole of the machines for applying the bath, the
+patient is exposed to more or less tossing about; which, from the extreme
+prostration of strength in cholera patients, is always injurious; and as
+the patient must, when taken from the bath, be replaced on a comparatively
+cold bed, the sudden change will often do more ill than the bath will do
+good. To these must be added, in a disease which chiefly affects the poor,
+another item, forming an important drawback on the utility of the ordinary
+vapour-bath,--the application of it is attended with no inconsiderable
+expense. A machine which should obviate these objections, was a
+desideratum; and we think such a one has been invented by Mr. Burnet, of
+Golden Square. It is so simple as to be easily described without a diagram,
+and so well adapted to the end, and so easy and cheap in application, that
+we think we shall be rendering an acceptable service to our readers in
+describing it. The best way to effect this is to show the steps of its
+application.
+
+We suppose the patient lying on his back in bed. The two sides of a
+framework, about 6-1/2 by 2-1/2 feet, are placed one on each side of him;
+five or six broad canvass straps, which are meant to support his body, are
+placed beneath him by a couple of attendants; two transverse pieces of
+wood are then introduced at the foot and head, to extend the framework;
+and the cross straps, by means of eyelet-holes, are attached to the sides,
+by a row of common brass pins. This is the work of about a minute. One
+attendant then raises the frame at the head, while the other introduces a
+couple of feet about nine inches long into the frame; and this done, the
+foot is raised in a similar way, and similarly supported; a board is then
+fitted to the foot, through a hole in the centre of which the chimney of
+the heating apparatus passes; the blankets are closely tucked round the
+patient and the frame; the lamp is applied, and the process of bathing
+commences. In this way, it will be seen that the patient is suspended in
+the heated air, which is moreover applied to the back in the first
+instance; there is no fatigue incurred; and when perspiration has been
+generated and carried on as long as is deemed expedient, he is let down
+again, without difficulty or danger, into his heated bed, and surrounded
+with the warm blankets employed in the bath itself. The room in which we
+saw the experiment performed, was at a temperature of 43 deg. Fahrenheit; the
+clothes of the bed were of the same temperature: the lamp is conical, and
+has no tube; the wick is merely inserted in it; the charge is two ounces
+of spirits of wine. In ten minutes after the lamp had been applied, the
+thermometer at the foot of the frame on which the patient is made to
+recline, was 136 deg.; at the head, 116 deg.; on the blanket, which covered the
+bed, 96 deg.. Were the vapour applied above the patient instead of under him,
+the difference between the heat at the breast and back would be at least
+40 deg.. The temperature once raised, may be kept up at a very small expense;
+so that the whole price of the bath, continued for half an hour or three
+quarters of an hour, will not exceed eightpence or ninepence. There is a
+very simple expedient, by which, when the temperature of the chamber
+formed by the frame of the bath is once raised sufficiently high, steam,
+either simple or medicated, may be introduced, and the lamp apparatus may
+be applied either at the foot, the head, or the side, as is most
+convenient. The grand recommendation, however, of the bath, is the
+applicability of the vapour to the entire surface of the body; the
+simplicity and ease of the application, both to the assistants and the
+patient; the exclusion of the possibility of cold; and its cheapness. In
+all these points of view, we look on it as a valuable invention.
+
+_Spectator_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+NOTES OF A READER
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DECLINE OF THE DRAMA.
+
+
+One thing which I am unable to interpret among the oddities of the English,
+is their inconsistency respecting dramatic entertainments. I have never
+yet been present where two or three of my countrymen were gathered
+together, that, after a wrangling review of the weather, they did not turn
+their conversation upon the theatres. There is no topic more universally
+discussed than the decadence of the drama, or the engagements, merits,
+and adventures of the performers. Neither the Lord Chancellor nor the
+Archbishop of Canterbury is ever so familiarly known by name and person
+to the public, as the first tragedian and comedian of the day; and the
+theatrical belles and heroines are either elevated to the peerage by
+matrimony, or lowered by the undertaker into Westminster Abbey. As some
+French Vaudevillist observed, "Moliere was denied in France the rights of
+sepulture, while
+
+
+ "Garrick repose a cote de leur rois!"
+
+
+Yet, notwithstanding all this clamour of popularity--all this
+infatuation--there is no branch of the arts so grossly neglected in
+England as the drama. It is no longer the fashion in London to attend the
+theatres. Owing partly to the increase of private amusements, and partly
+to the late hours gradually adopted during the reign of George the Fourth,
+the custom of play-going has declined among the higher classes, and
+naturally produces the reaction of bad pieces and indifferent performers.
+Even a clever actor, when satisfied that he is to receive judgment from an
+unrefined and uneducated audience, will degenerate and grow slovenly; and
+from what I have observed of the London stage, I see it is the custom to
+daub for the galleries, or to creep through the business under cover of a
+cold, tame mediocrity. Without the slightest patronage from the court or
+substantial encouragement from the fosterers of literary merit, these
+luckless personages are expected to attempt the same exertions and intense
+study, which is rewarded, in foreign countries, by the most flattering and
+judicious attention; as well as by a pension, to cheer the infirmities of
+old age. Although tolerably well paid by his manager, the English actor
+has the mortification of being tyrannized and insulted by the gallery, and
+overlooked by the higher classes. A few persons of rank and fortune are
+provided with private boxes at the national theatres; but these are
+usually let by the night to plebeian tenants. It is rare indeed to observe
+a family of distinction in the dress circle of either Drury Lane or Covent
+Garden; while the French play is never deficient in a fashionable audience.
+
+The Opera, too, is nightly becoming more crowded; while at the two patent
+theatres "a beggarly account of empty boxes," and an equally beggarly
+account of flat, stale, and unprofitable performances, greets me whenever
+I am rash enough to take my post of observation. Lady Romford has a
+private box, which she visits only in preference to staying at a still
+duller home, on a disengaged evening; and Bagot occasionally drags me to
+the play, to make my foreign ignorance and inexperience a pretext for
+following Lady Clara to a spot which no one seems to visit without an
+apology. People in society give as many reasons for having done so strange
+a thing as go to see the new tragedy, as they would invent in Paris to
+excuse a similar omission.
+
+Since the Kemble munia, and the Byron mania, there has been a general
+affectation of indifference towards poetry and the drama; your true
+fashionable never mentions either without ridicule--the natural
+consequence of previously exaggerated enthusiasm.
+
+But above all the absurdities connected with this national weakness,
+stands that of the public prints. So much importance is given by the
+newspapers to every thing relating to the histrionic art, that we are
+daily informed of the whereabout of all the third-rate performers of the
+minor theatres; that "Mr. Smith, of Sadler's Wells, is engaged to Mr.
+Ducrow for the ensuing season;" or that "Miss Brown, belonging to the
+ballet department of the Surrey theatre, has sprained her ankle." While
+two thirds of a leading print are occupied with details of the Reform Bill,
+or a debate on some constitutional question,--or while the foreign
+intelligence of two sieges and a battle is concentrated with a degree of
+terseness worthy a telegraph, half a column is devoted to the plot of a
+new melo-drama at the Coburg; or to a cut and dried criticism upon the
+nine hundredth representation of _Hamlet_--beginning with the "immortal
+bard," and ending with the waistcoats of the grave-digger!--_The Opera, a
+Novel_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+EUGENE ARAM.
+
+
+The recollection of this man is still preserved at Lynn, in Norfolk, at
+which town he was for some time usher at the grammar-school. A small room
+at the back of the house, in which he slept, was, until these last few
+years, (when it was pulled down and rebuilt,) mysteriously pointed to by
+the little urchins as they passed up to bed of a cold, ghost-enticing
+night, as the chamber in which the "usher, who was hanged for murder," was
+used to sleep.
+
+The tradition which remains of his character is, that he was "a man of
+loneliness and mystery," sullen and reserved; that on half-holy-days, and
+when his duties would allow, he strayed solitary and cheerless, as if to
+avoid the world, amongst the flat uninteresting marshes which are situated
+on the opposite side of the river Ouse.
+
+At Lynn the character of Aram was, until his apprehension, unexceptionable;
+but after that event, circumstances were then called to mind which seemed
+to indicate a naturally dark character; but whether these were all
+strictly founded in truth, or magnified suspicions arising from the
+appaling circumstances of the crime of which he was convicted, I am unable
+to determine. The following, derived from unquestionable authority, having
+been related by Dr. L., who was master of the grammar-school at the time,
+may serve as a sample:--there can be no doubt but that the worthy Dr.
+himself believed his suspicions well founded, as he used to tremble when
+he related it. It was customary for the parents of the scholars, on an
+appointed day, to dine with the master, at which time it was expected they
+would bring with them the amount of their bills. It was late at night,
+after one of such meetings, that Dr. L. was awakened by a noise at his
+bed-room door; he rose up, and going into the passage which led to the
+staircase, but which was not in the direct way from Aram's bed room to the
+ground-floor, he discovered the usher _dressed_. Having questioned him as
+to the object of his rising at that unseasonable hour, Aram confusedly
+answered that he had been taken unwell, and had been obliged to go do down
+stairs. The Dr. then retired, unsuspiciously, to bed. From the combined
+circumstances of the noise at the door, his great agitation and confusion,
+and from his being found in the passage, the worthy Dr., in later years,
+had no doubt, that, from its being known to Aram that a considerable sum
+of money was in his bed-room, Aram intended nothing less than to rob him;
+and no doubt, continued the narrator, he _would_ have murdered me too, if
+it had been rendered necessary, from my discovering or opposing him.
+
+The spot just at the entrance to the play-ground, at which Aram was taken
+into custody by two strange men from Yorkshire, is still remarked, and
+generally by the young scholar in a tremulous whisper.--_Literary Gazette_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NATURALIST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+AGENCY OF MAN IN EXTINGUISHING OR SPREADING SPECIES.
+
+
+Let us make some inquiries into the extent of the influence which the
+progress of society has exerted, during the last seven or eight centuries,
+in altering the distribution of our indigenous British animals. Dr.
+Fleming has prosecuted this inquiry with his usual zeal and ability, and
+in a memoir on the subject has enumerated the best authenticated examples
+of the decrease or extirpation of certain species during a period when our
+population has made the most rapid advances. We shall offer a brief
+outline of his results.
+
+The stag, as well as the fallow-deer, and the roe, were formerly so
+abundant that, according to Lesley, from five hundred to a thousand were
+sometimes slain at a hunting-match; but the native races would already
+have been extinguished, had they not been carefully preserved in certain
+forests. The otter, the marten, and the polecat, were also in sufficient
+numbers to be pursued for the sake of their fur; but they have now been
+reduced within very narrow bounds. The wild cat and fox have also been
+sacrificed throughout the greater part of the country, for the security of
+the poultry-yard or the fold. Badgers have been expelled from nearly every
+district which at former periods they inhabited.
+
+Besides these, which have been driven out from some haunts, and everywhere
+reduced in number, there are some which have been wholly extirpated; such
+as the ancient breed of indigenous horses, the wild boar and the wild oxen,
+of which last, however, a few remains are still preserved in the parks of
+some of our nobility. The beaver, which was eagerly sought after for its
+fur, had become scarce at the close of the ninth century, and, by the
+twelfth century, was only to be met with, according to Giraldus de Barri,
+in one river in Wales, and another in Scotland. The wolf, once so much
+dreaded by our ancestors, is said to have maintained its ground in Ireland
+so late as the beginning of the eighteenth century (1710,) though it had
+been extirpated in Scotland thirty years before, and in England at a much
+earlier period. The bear, which in Wales was regarded as a beast of the
+chase equal to the hare or the boar, only perished as a native of Scotland
+in the year 1057.
+
+Many native birds of prey have also been the subjects of unremitting
+persecution. The eagles, larger hawks, and ravens, have disappeared from
+the more cultivated districts. The haunts of the mallard, the snipe, the
+redshank, and the bittern, have been drained equally with the summer
+dwellings of the lapwing and the curlew. But these species still linger in
+some portion of the British isles; whereas the large capercailzies, or
+wood grouse, formerly natives of the pine forests of Ireland and Scotland,
+have been destroyed within the last fifty years. The egret and the crane,
+which appear to have been formerly very common in Scotland, are now only
+occasional visitants.
+
+The bustard (_Otis tarda_,) observes Graves in his _British Ornithology_,
+"was formerly seen in the downs and heaths of various parts of our island,
+in flocks of forty or fifty birds; whereas it is now a circumstance of
+rare occurrence to meet with a single individual." Bewick also remarks,
+"that they were formerly more common in this island than at present; they
+are now found only in the open counties of the south and east, in the
+plains of Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, and some parts of Yorkshire." In the few
+years that have elapsed since Bewick wrote, this bird has entirely
+disappeared from Wiltshire and Dorsetshire.
+
+These changes, we may observe, are derived from very imperfect memorials,
+and relate only to the larger and more conspicuous animals inhabiting a
+small spot on the globe; but they cannot fail to exalt our conception of
+the enormous revolutions which, in the course of several thousand years,
+the whole human species must have effected.
+
+The kangaroo and the emu are retreating rapidly before the progress of
+colonization in Australia; and it scarcely admits of doubt, that the
+general cultivation of that country must lead to the extirpation of both.
+The most striking example of the loss, even within the last two centuries,
+of a remarkable species, is that of the dodo--a bird first seen by the
+Dutch when they landed on the Isle of France, at that time uninhabited,
+immediately after the discovery of the passage to the East Indies by the
+Cape of Good Hope. It was of a large size and singular form; its wings
+short, like those of an ostrich, and wholly incapable of sustaining its
+heavy body even for a short flight. In its general appearance it differed
+from the ostrich, cassowary, or any known bird.
+
+Many naturalists gave figures of the dodo after the commencement of the
+seventeenth century; and there is a painting of it in the British Museum,
+which is said to have been taken from a living individual. Beneath the
+painting is a leg, in a fine state of preservation, which ornithologists
+are agreed cannot belong to any other known bird. In the museum at Oxford,
+also, there is a foot and a head, in an imperfect state, but M. Cuvier
+doubts the identy of this species with that of which the painting is
+preserved in London.
+
+In spite of the most active search, during the last century, no
+information respecting the dodo was obtained, and some authors have gone
+so far as to pretend that it never existed; but amongst a great mass of
+satisfactory evidence in favour of the recent existence of this species,
+we may mention that an assemblage of fossil bones were recently discovered,
+under a bed of lava, in the Isle of France, and sent to the Paris museum
+by M. Desjardins. They almost all belonged to a large living species of
+land-tortoise, called _Testudu Indica_, but amongst them were the head,
+sternum, and humerus of the dodo. M. Cuvier showed me these valuable
+remains in Paris, and assured me that they left no doubt in his mind that
+the huge bird was one of the gallinaceous tribe.
+
+Next to the direct agency of man, his indirect influence in multiplying
+the numbers of large herbivorous quadrupeds of domesticated races, may be
+regarded as one of the most obviate causes of the extermination of species.
+On this, and on several other grounds, the introduction of the horse, ox,
+and other mammalia, into America, and their rapid propagation over that
+continent within the last three centuries, is a fact of great importance
+in natural history. The extraordinary herds of wild cattle and horses
+which overran the plains of South America, sprang from a very few pairs
+first carried over by the Spaniards; and they prove that the wide
+geographical range of large species in great continents does not
+necessarily imply that they have existed there from remote periods.
+Humboldt observes, in his Travels, on the authority of Azara, that it is
+believed there exist, in the Pampas of Buenos Ayres, twelve million cows
+and three million horses, without comprising in this enumeration the
+cattle that have no acknowledged proprietor. In the Llanos of Caraccas,
+the rich hateros, or proprietors of pastoral farms, are entirely ignorant
+of the number of cattle they possess. The young are branded with a mark
+peculiar to each herd, and some of the most wealthy owners mark as many as
+fourteen thousand a year. In the northern plains, from the Orinoco to the
+lake of Maracaybo, M. Depons reckoned that one million two hundred
+thousand oxen, one hundred and eighty thousand horses, and ninety thousand
+mules, wandered at large. In some parts of the valley of the Mississippi,
+especially in the country of the Osage Indians, wild horses are immensely
+numerous.
+
+The establishment of black cattle in America dates from Columbus's second
+voyage to St. Domingo. They there multiplied rapidly; and that island
+presently became a kind of nursery from which these animals were
+successively transported to various parts of the continental coast, and
+from thence into the interior. Notwithstanding these numerous exportations,
+in twenty-seven years after the discovery of the island, herds of four
+thousand head, as we learn from Oviedo, were not uncommon, and there were
+even some that amounted to eight thousand. In 1587, the number of hides
+exported from St. Domingo alone, according to Acosta's report, was
+thirty-five thousand four hundred and forty-four; and in the same year
+there were exported sixty-four thousand three hundred and fifty from the
+ports of New Spain. This was in the sixty-fifth year after the taking of
+Mexico, previous to which event the Spaniards, who came into that country,
+had not been able to engage in any thing else than war. All our readers
+are aware that these animals are now established throughout the American
+continent, from Canada to Paraguay.
+
+The ass has thriven very generally in the New World; and we learn from
+Ulloa, that in Quito they ran wild, and multiplied in amazing numbers, so
+as to become a nuisance. They grazed together in herds, and, when attacked,
+defended themselves with their mouths. If a horse happened to stray into
+the places where they fed, they all fell upon him, and did not cease
+biting and kicking till they left him dead.
+
+The first hogs were carried to America by Columbus, and established in the
+island of St. Domingo the year following its discovery in November, 1493.
+In succeeding years they were introduced into other places where the
+Spaniards settled; and, in the space of half a century, they were found
+established in the New World, from the latitude of 25 deg. north, to the
+40th deg. of south latitude. Sheep, also, and goats have multiplied
+enormously in the New World, as have also the cat and the rat, which last,
+as we before stated, has been imported unintentionally in ships. The dogs
+introduced by man, which have at different periods become wild in America,
+hunted in packs like the wolf and the jackal, destroying not only hogs,
+but the calves and foals of the wild cattle and horses.
+
+Ulloa in his voyage, and Buffon on the authority of old writers, relate a
+fact which illustrates very clearly the principle before explained by us,
+of the check which the increase of one animal necessarily offers to that
+of another. The Spaniards had introduced goats into the island of Juan
+Fernandez, where they became so prolific as to furnish the pirates who
+infested those seas with provisions. In order to cut off this resource
+from the bucaneers, a number of dogs were turned loose into the island;
+and so numerous did they become in their turn, that they destroyed the
+goats in every accessible part, after which the number of the wild dogs
+again decreased.
+
+As an example of the rapidity with which a large tract may become peopled
+by the offspring of a single pair of quadrupeds, we may mention that in
+the year 1773, thirteen rein-deer were exported from Norway, only three of
+which reached Iceland. These were turned loose into the mountains of
+Guldbringe Syssel, where they multiplied so greatly, in the course of
+forty years, that it was not uncommon to meet with herds consisting of
+from forty to one hundred in various districts.--_Lyell's Geology_, vol.
+ii.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NOVELIST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CONFESSION OF SERVENTIUS.
+
+(_Concluded from page 46_.)
+
+
+That evening, Father Dominick, our excellent priest, and my tutor in the
+classics, was closeted for a length of time with my afflicted nominal
+parents; and two days afterwards taking me with him to his monastery, he
+introduced me to the superior, as an orphan, the child of dear and
+particular friends, confided by them to his charge for education upon
+their death-bed, and with a distinct understanding that I was not bound to
+take upon myself monastic vows, the superior allowed me to remain with him
+as a boarder. Serventius and Artemisia I never more beheld, and every
+inquiry respecting them which I ventured to make of Father Dominick, was
+checked with a strange, sad look, and an admonition to mention them no
+more. Seven long and peaceful years, I spent in the monastery; and at the
+expiration of that period, was placed by my guardian in the house of the
+celebrated Doctor Sanazio of Padua, as a student of medicine. Here, novel
+and delightful studies, speculations, and scenes, opened upon my
+inquisitive, ardent mind, and amused my enthusiastic imagination. Sanazio
+was regarded in learned Padua, as little less than a demi-god; at certain
+hours he visited his patients, amongst whom might generally be numbered
+three-fourths of the population of Padua; at certain hours, his own
+mansion was crowded like the audience-hall of some mighty potentate, with
+supplicants for food and physic; three evenings in the week were devoted
+by him to intense study in his own secret, solitary chamber; and upon the
+alternate three, he received the visits of those who desired to consult
+him upon abstruse points, only properly to be solved by an acquaintance
+with the occult sciences. In brief, my honoured master, I soon discovered,
+was reckoned a very fair conjuror; he consulted the stars, drew horoscopes,
+cast nativities, was learned in the expositions of dreams and omens,
+undertook to give information respecting lost property, and matrimonial
+prospects; composed, and dispensed charms and philtres, and proved himself,
+as I have hinted, a capital astrologer, and something more. How Sanazio,
+who certainly was a very extraordinary man, acquired his multifarious
+information, unless really by supernatural agency, I am at a loss to
+discover. Ignatius Druso, my fellow student, was of opinion that he only
+dexterously availed himself in the evening of the news which he had
+gathered from his patients in the morning; and that his familiars were no
+more than a few active emissaries, for whose espionage and additional
+gleanings of town news, it answered to him well, to pay. Ever partial to
+romance, I did not readily fall in with Druso's sober view of this subject,
+and the longer I lived with Doctor Sanazio, the more occasion had I to
+doubt the correctness of his opinion, because some things occurred of
+which my master obtained immediate and accurate knowledge, whilst I am
+perfectly certain that no human tongue had divulged them to him; take the
+following incident as an example:--Druso and myself were accustomed, on
+those evenings which Sanazio spent in his sanctum, to visit patients in
+his stead, to range over the town, to go to places of public amusement, or
+to conclude our meritorious labours at a tavern. Being one night at this
+latter place, an old woman entered, and inquiring whether I were Master
+Serventius, Doctor Sanazio's pupil, slipped a billet and a piece of gold
+into my hand and desired me to follow her. I did so, without hesitation,
+and whilst behind my guide, contrived to peruse the note by moon-light,
+which contained these words:
+
+"I am sick,--of the heart's mortal sickness;--relieve it, and great shall
+be thy recompense."
+
+Perplexed, yet amused, by what promised an adventure, I followed my
+ancient guide into a house whose exterior was sufficiently humble; but,
+having ascended a steep flight of stairs, she threw open the door of a
+chamber in which they terminated, and I found myself not only in a
+richly-furnished apartment, but in the presence of a lady, young as
+immortal Hebe, and fair as day. I saw at a glance that her ills were those
+of the mind only, and ere she had opened her lips to detail them and
+engage me in her cause, I had vowed, heart and soul, to be her champion.
+Having complimented me upon the high character she had heard of my prowess,
+understanding, and principles, she informed me, with little circumlocution,
+that various unhappy family circumstances had rendered it necessary for
+her to seek friends amongst strangers; that she was a novice of the
+Convent of St. Anne, but on the eve of profession, and that having long
+been under an engagement of marriage with a young gentleman of family,
+respecting whom her relations had used her very deceitfully and cruelly,
+she had fixed upon me as a person little likely to be subjected to
+suspicion on her account, to aid Signor Fernandez in the difficult and
+hazardous enterprise, which she said must be a work of time and prudence,
+of carrying her off from the convent. Having obtained my promise to this
+effect, she detailed her plans, and furnished me with the means of
+continual communication with her lover and herself. I returned home,
+highly elated at the trust reposed in me, at the importance which I had
+acquired in my own eyes, and at the prospect of a handsome remuneration
+for my services, from the lovely object of them. Sanazio, with lamp in
+hand, and arrayed in his night attire, to my great terror and surprise,
+opened the door to me himself; it was very late, Druso had long since
+returned without me, and in order to allay the storm which I saw gathering
+upon mine ancient master's brow, I slipped the gold given to me by the
+confidante of beautiful Antonia, into his unreluctant hand.
+
+"Unhappy youth!" exclaimed Sanazio, "beware of aiding the nun, lest thou
+bring upon her and upon thyself the fate of Artemisia and Serventius."
+
+These words so alarmed me that I nearly fainted; for how, in the name of
+all things holy and gracious, came Sanazio to know in whose society I had
+passed the last hour, and what was the subject of our conversation? His
+terrible allusion too, to those lost loved ones, of whose untimely fate I
+was still so ignorant, strangely troubled my conscious breast. Let me be
+brief, the hours of my ill-fated existence are fast wearing away, and I
+have yet more to relate. To Ignatius Druso I was obliged to confide my
+secret, because his assistance, in the furtherance of plans which were
+always requiring, from little immaterial circumstances, some slight
+alterations, was found necessary; and it must here suffice those to know,
+who shall, after my destruction do me the melancholy favour of perusing
+this retrospective record, that some months after Antonia had taken the
+veil, I succeeded in restoring her to the arms of her lover, witnessed
+their private nuptials, visited them in their new residence, a villa in a
+secluded spot far from Padua, and received my promised recompense. "Young
+man! you've ruined yourself; and your fatal destiny is sealed!" were the
+remarkable words of Sanazio, on the morning after the completion of my
+enterprise, but long ere the elopement of the new devotee became publicly
+known. However, he never reverted to the subject, not even upon his
+death-bed; and after the learned doctor's decease, when I came into the
+whole of his practice, and no small portion of his fame, I was easy, for
+the memory of that sacrilege had passed away.
+
+Ignatius Druso, like myself, resided in Padua, but soon quitted the
+medical profession, disgusted, I fancy, at finding that I had become a
+second Sanazio, whilst he commanded little or no attention: still we were
+friends, nor did I suspect that the germs of envy and malice were sown in
+his bosom, and that I had trusted him with one secret, or more, too much.
+"Serventius, my son," had said the venerable Sanazio to me upon his
+death-bed, "your ardent desire of knowledge and discreet use of it,
+encourage me ere I quit this world, to entrust you with the grand arcanum
+of our art; as yet, you know not the secret of my success, but take then
+this hint and improve upon it. Can he repair a piece of mechanism, who is
+ignorant of its make, its parts, and how they act upon, and affect one
+another? Behold this key; it is that of my laboratory, and may it indeed
+open the door of knowledge to you."
+
+After Sanazio's decease, curiosity quickly led me to his study: I was
+alone, and the shades of evening were stealing over the earth: conceive
+then my utter dismay and superstitious horror upon suddenly entering, what
+I could but suppose to be a charnel-house! Its effluvium was intolerable,
+and well accounted for by (loathsome spectacle!) a disorderly collection
+of human fragments in various stages of preservation and decay! A dozen
+grisly skeletons grinned upon me from pedestals round the room, and in the
+centre of it, the half dissected body of a man, stretched upon a large
+lava slab, supported by tressels, was more horrible and odious than all. I
+now comprehended the full meaning of Sanazio's dying words and secret; but
+received at the same time, a shock which to this day I have not recovered;
+I found myself compelled to make Druso my confidant in this matter, and my
+companion in some of my first attempts at following the hideous occupation
+recommended by my deceased friend. By degrees I grew accustomed to the
+horrors of the room and of my employment. Druso, who found himself better
+engaged in courting the living than in cutting up the dead, was no longer
+necessary to me in the prosecution of my hateful studies, and kept aloof,
+but I soon discovered the value of them, in my increase of knowledge,
+employment, and reputation. At last an epidemic raged in Padua, proving
+very fatal; Ignatius, alarmed for the safety of his Phaedera, who was
+attacked, applied to me, and I cured her. Some time afterwards, the
+ungrateful wretch rushed into my laboratory, claiming the body upon which
+I was operating, as that of a young man, cousin to Phaedera, which had
+miraculously disappeared just previous to the day intended for its
+interment. The features of the poor wretch were too much disfigured to
+render possible his recognition by them, but Druso swore to its being the
+body of Marcus, from a scar on the left leg, which had been wounded
+severely by a quoit. Of course I refused to resign, that, for which I had
+paid a handsome price, and to reveal the names of those from whom I
+purchased it. So Druso dragged me before the Supreme Council, impeached me
+of sacrilege in the affair of the nun, of theft, and of violating the
+sanctity of the tomb, of barbarously mutilating the dead, and of applying
+their lacerated remains to the unholy purposes of sorcery! and on these
+counts have I been indicted, found guilty, and sentenced to be burnt as a
+sacrilegious heretic, an unnatural robber, and a formidable wizard!
+Antonia, the mother of seven children, is to be--like the unchaste
+vestal--immured! Oh Heaven! whilst Druso the Informer, receiving at the
+same time the portion of a prince for his venal treachery, will celebrate
+his union with Phaedera, amidst the shrieks and groans of his expiring
+victims!
+
+I cannot now proceed: ere I am bound to the fatal stake, methinks I shall
+die of shame, grief, and terror. And did the friends of my infancy, my
+parents, suffer as I shall suffer? Then, welcome death! welcome, hated
+dawn of my last day, for innocence and truth are banished from the earth!
+Hark! the key turning in the lock of my cell! Hark! those boding and
+pitying voices without! Father Dominick! Servilius! Andrea! kindest! best!
+--I die--but I die innocent, the victim only-----Hah! to burn--burn--burn!
+Gracious Heaven! pardon the strife of nature! My brain whirls!--my eyes
+cloud!--my black, dry, swollen lips,--throat--bosom--heart--O mother of
+God!--O! Saviour--Redeemer--pardon, pardon!--Father of Mercies,---receive
+me!
+
+_Great Marlow, Bucks._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SCENES FROM THE (OLD) FRENCH REVOLUTION.
+
+(_From the "Quarterly" Review of Madame Junot's Memoirs_.)
+
+
+About the beginning of the revolution, a working-man, by name Thirion, had
+established himself in a little stall (in Paris,) where he carried on his
+business as a mender of carpets. He called one morning to ask M. Permon's
+(a Royalist[1]) custom, but was civilly told that the family had long
+employed a tradesman of his class, and could not change for a stranger:
+the man took the refusal so insolently, that he was at last turned out of
+doors, vowing revenge. M. Permon, the ports being still open, makes a run
+over to London to place some money in our funds. Meantime "the Sections
+are organized," and Thirion becomes "Secretaire, Greffier, President, je
+ne scai quoi, de la notre." The morning after his return to Paris, M.
+Permon had just risen, when footsteps were heard loud on the staircase,
+and in burst Citizen Thirion, two other patriots of the Sectional
+Committee, and the carpetman's shopboy. (Madame Junot's Narrative
+commences here.)
+
+"My father was shaving himself. Naturally quick tempered, his impatience
+was extreme when he recognised the individual, and he was imprudent enough
+to make a menacing gesture the moment they broke into his dressing-room.
+'I am here to see the law enforced,' cries Thirion, on seeing my father
+advance with the razor in his hand. 'Well, what law is it that chooses so
+worthy an organ?'--'I am here to learn your age, your pursuits, and to
+interrogate you as to your journey to Coblentz.' My father, who had from
+the first word felt the most violent disposition to toss the man down
+stairs, shivered with rage; but, at last, he composed himself, wiped his
+chin, laid down his razor, and, crossing his arms, placed himself full in
+front of Thirion: then, measuring him from the utmost height of his tall
+and elegant person, he said, 'You wish to know my age?'--'Yes, such are my
+orders.'--Where is the order?' said my father, extending his hand. 'It is
+enough for you to know that I am sent hither by the committee of my
+section: my orders are sufficiently proved by my presence.'--Ah! you think
+so; I am of a different opinion. Your presence here is nothing but an
+insult, unless you have a judiciary order to justify it; show it me, and I
+shall forget the name of the man, to see only the public functionary.'
+Thirion raised his voice as my father lowered his--'What is your
+age?--What was the object of your going to Coblentz?'----My father seizes
+a large bamboo, and makes it whistle over Thirion's head--at that moment
+my mother rushes in, and succeeds in dragging him into another room, and
+restoring him to something like calmness. I remember she placed me in his
+arms, whispering to me to entreat him to _think of me_. Meantime, Thirion
+had drawn up his _proces verbal_, and withdrawn:--he left me weeping
+without knowing why I wept, but I saw that my mother and my sister were in
+tears too. My father sat pale, trembling with anger,--everything about us
+had a desolate aspect."
+
+The family escape from Paris--and it was time. Violent alternations of
+fear, anger, sorrow, terror, and disgust, with frequent disguises, flights,
+and all sorts of changes of residence, at length wear out the health and
+spirits of M. Permon--a man, apparently, who united dull enough intellect
+with all the vivacity of a Frenchman's mere temperament; and he dies in
+obscurity long before anything like order is re-established. We need not
+dwell on the particular fortunes of a not very interesting set of people;
+but may quote one or two more specimens of the sort of scenes which fill
+the greater part of the first of these volumes. Our authoress and her
+sister are at one time separated from their parents, and placed in an
+obscure _pension_ in the Faubourg (no longer _St._) Antoine. Their brother,
+a very young man, has also remained in Paris, and frequently visits them
+in their retreat.
+
+"We could not but observe, that for some days he had been very melancholy,
+and that he was getting more and more so. We asked the reason, and he told
+us at last that the section had denounced my father in a very alarming
+style. We fell a-crying, my sister and I. Albert consoled us as well as he
+could, but it was easy to see that the denunciation was not all--that some
+immediate danger fixed his fears. We knew afterwards, in effect, that a
+report had been spread of the arrest of my parents at Limoges--happily a
+false one. The horizon meanwhile was taking a bloody tint. Judge of my
+brother's anxiety! he came every day in a cabriolet, which my father had
+had built just before these late events; it was an elegant one, very lofty,
+of the kind called _wiski._ Already he had been all but insulted by the
+populace in driving through the faubourg; but liveries had not yet
+altogether disappeared, and nothing would persuade him to listen to our
+remonstrances, and make the domestic put off his. Thus it was on the 31st
+of August, when he came to see us as usual."
+
+"There was about the boarding-house a man charged with all the rough work,
+by name Jaquemart, a fellow that could do everything--but the most
+atrocious of countenances. 'The sight of that man makes me sick,' said
+Albert; 'I am sure he will end in something tragic.'"
+
+"One day, shortly after we went to the _pension_, Jaquemart was bringing
+in a load of wood, when my brother drove at the speed of his horse into
+the entrance. He saw the man had a burden that would hardly allow him to
+get out of the way in time--cried _'Gare!'_--perceived that his efforts
+were in vain--and pulled back his horse so sharply as to run much risk of
+wounding the animal, and, indeed, of being thrown out himself, owing to
+the extraordinary elevation of the _wiski_. Jaquemart, however, escaped by
+this means with a scratch on his leg; his eyes were good, he saw what
+Albert had done to master his horse, and vowed gratitude."
+
+"The 31st of August the man had nothing to do about the house, yet he kept
+lounging at the gate, or in the court, all day long. It was late ere
+Albert came--he had been waiting for him, and whispered, as he alighted,
+'Stay here to-night to take care of your sisters--don't go home.' Albert
+looked at him with astonishment; he had, indeed, perceived symptoms of
+some commotion, but fancied, as most of Paris did, that it would be
+directed against the Temple. 'What is your meaning?' said he. 'I entreat
+you to stay here--you will be near your sisters; and if there be need for
+another hand, mine shall not be far off--very well!--we shall be there.'
+Albert pressed him with questions, but could extract nothing; and after
+giving the man some money, persisted; in returning home as usual."
+
+"All know the frightful story of the day after this. Albert's anxiety for
+us makes him brave every danger, and he comes to us again. The first
+person he sees at our door is Jaquemart, in the costume of the most
+atrocious of bandits; our ladies had not dared to bid him go away, but his
+appearance made them tremble. 'I did not desire you to come hither, but to
+stay here,' he said; 'why have I not been obeyed?' 'Why do you speak
+so--was this house particularly menaced?' 'I know nothing of that--at such
+a moment one should fear everything.'"
+
+"We heard groans, weeping, all Paris had not been at _the massacre_. It
+was late. They pressed Albert to stay, but he would not. He promised,
+however, to come back next morning.----That day he was obliged to stay
+at home till about three o'clock, arranging and burning papers. He then
+came out to visit us, and found himself in the midst of crowds of men,
+drunken and bloody; many were naked to the waist, their breasts covered
+with blood. They carried fragments of clothing on their pikes and
+sabres--their faces were inflamed, their eyes haggard, the whole scene
+hideous. These groups became more and more frequent and numerous as he
+advanced. In mortal anxiety for us, he determined to push through
+everything, and, urging his horse to its speed, reached at length the
+front of the Hotel Beaumarchais. There he was stopped by an immense
+crowd--always the same figures naked and bloodstained, but here their
+looks were those of enraged fiends. They shout, they scream, they sing,
+they dance--the saturnalia of hell. On seeing Albert's cabriolet, they
+redoubled their cries--'An aristocrat! give it him, give it him!' In a
+moment the cabriolet is surrounded, and from the midst of the crowd an
+object rises and moves towards him. His agitation perplexes his view--he
+perceives long fair tresses dabbled with blood--a countenance beautiful
+even yet. It approaches--it is thrust upon his face; he recognises the
+features--it is the head of Madame de Lamballe!"
+
+"The servant whips the horse with all the strength of his arm. The
+generous animal, with the instinctive horror of his race for dead bodies,
+springs with redoubled speed from the spectacle of horror. The frightful
+trophy, and the cannibals that bore it, had been overturned in the
+mud--screams and imprecations pursued Albert, stretched senseless at the
+bottom of the cabriolet. The servant had kept the reins, and whipped the
+more fiercely, because he could perceive, from the motion of the carriage,
+that some one had got up behind it, and hoped that the rapidity of its
+progress would shake him off."
+
+"In a few minutes Albert reached our door--judge of our alarm!--pale,
+still quite senseless, not breathing. The moment the cabriolet stopped,
+the man behind jumped down, took my brother in his arms, as if he had been
+a child, and carried him into the house. It was Jaquemart. 'The monsters,'
+said he, 'the monsters! the poor young man, they have killed him too.'
+What could Jaquemart have been doing in such a garb, and among such a
+troop o' ruffians?"
+
+
+ [1] And father of Madame Junot.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+The Paris correspondent of the _Court Journal_ gives the following
+incident at the King's Ball, about a fortnight since. I happened to be
+near his majesty when he addressed himself to an Englishman, wearing the
+Cross of Three Days. "Where did you signalize yourself, sir?" inquired the
+monarch. "At the Tuilleries, sire," was the answer. "_C'est aux braves de
+Juillet que je dois ma couronne_," said his majesty. The gentleman thus
+honoured was M. Bennis,[1] in whose literary establishment the king seems
+to take much interest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+GUTTING THE FISH.
+
+
+One evening a red-headed Connaught swell, of no small aristocratic
+pretensions in his own eyes, sent his servant, whom he had just imported
+from the long-horned kingdom, in all the rough majesty of a creature fresh
+from the "wilds," to purchase a hundred of oysters on the City-quay. Paddy
+staid so long away, that Squire Trigger got quite impatient and unhappy
+lest his "body man" might have slipt into the Liffey; however, to his
+infinite relief, Paddy soon made his appearance, puffing and blowing like
+a disabled bellows, but carrying his load seemingly in great triumph.
+"Well, Pat," cried the master, "what the devil kept you so long?" "Long! a
+thin, may be it's what you'd have me to come home with half my _arrant?_"
+says Pat. "Half the oysters?" says the master. "No; but too much of the
+_fish_." says Pat. "What fish?" says he. "The oysters, to be sure," says
+Pat. "What do you mean, blockhead?" says he. "I mean," says Pat, "that
+there was no use with loading myself with more nor was useful."
+"Will you explain yourself?" says he. "I will," says Pat laying down his
+load. "Well then, you see, plaise your Honour, as I was coming home along
+the quay, mighty peaceable, who should I meet but Shammus Maginnis; 'Good
+morrow, Shamien,' sis I; 'Good morrow kindly, Paudeen,' sis he; 'What is
+it you have in the sack?' sis he; 'A _Cwt_. of oysters,' sis I; 'Let us
+look at them,' says he; 'I will, and welcome,' sis I; 'Orah! thunder and
+pratees!' sis he, openin the sack an examinin them; 'who _sowld_ you
+these?' 'One Tom Kinahan that keeps a small ship there below,' sis I;
+'Musha then, bad luck to that same Tom that _sowld_ the likes to you,' sis
+he; 'Arrah, why, avic?' sis I; 'To make a _Bolshour_ ov you an give thim
+to you without gutting thim,' sis he; 'An arn't they gutted, Jim, aroon,'
+sis I; 'Oh! bad luck to the one o' thim,' sis he; 'Musha then,' sis I,
+'what the dhoul will I do at all at all, fur the master will be mad;' 'Do!'
+sis he, 'why I'd rather do the thing for you mysel nor you should lose
+your place,' sis he; so wid that he begins to gut them wid his knife,
+_nate_ and _clain_, an afeereed ov dirtying the flags, begor, he
+swallowed the guts himself from beginnin to ind, tal he had thim as dacent
+as you see thim here"--dashing down at his master's feet his bag of oyster
+shells, to the no small amazement of the Connaught worthy, as you may
+suppose.--_Dublin Comet_.
+
+
+ [1] The agent for the MIRROR, in Paris.--ED. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+FAMILIAR SCIENCE.
+
+
+This Day was published, with many Engravings, price 5_s_.,
+
+ ARCANA OF SCIENCE,
+ AND
+ ANNUAL REGISTER of the USEFUL ARTS,
+ for 1832:
+
+Abridged from the Transactions of Public Societies, and Scientific
+Journals, British and Foreign, for the past year.
+
+This volume will contain all the Important Facts in the year 1831--in the
+
+ MECHANIC ARTS,
+ CHEMICAL SCIENCE,
+ ZOOLOGY,
+ BOTANY,
+ MINERALOGY,
+ GEOLOGY,
+ METEOROLOGY,
+ RURAL ECONOMY,
+ GARDENING.
+ DOMESTIC ECONOMY,
+ USEFUL AND ELEGANT ARTS,
+ GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERIES,
+ MISCELLANEOUS SCIENTIFIC INFORMATION.
+
+Printing for John Limbird, 143, Strand; of whom may be had volumes (upon
+the same plan) for 1828, price 4_s_. 6_d_., 1829--30--31, price 5_s_. each.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Printed and Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, (near Somerset House,)
+London; sold by ERNEST FLEISCHER, 626, New Market, Leipsic. G.G. Bennis,
+55, Rue Neuve, St. Augustin, Paris; and by all Newsmen and Booksellers._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement,
+and Instruction., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE ***
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