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| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 04:37:15 -0700 |
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| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 04:37:15 -0700 |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/11568-0.txt b/11568-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f59292b --- /dev/null +++ b/11568-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1700 @@ +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11568 *** + +THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION. + +VOL. XX. NO. 562.] SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1832. [PRICE 2d. + + * * * * * + + +FALLS OF THE GENESEE. + + +[Illustration: Falls of the Genesee.] + + +The Genesee is one of the most picturesque rivers of North America. +Its name is indeed characteristic: the word Genesee being formed from +the Indian for _Pleasant Valley,_ which term is very descriptive of +the river and its vicinity. Its falls have not the majestic extent +of the Niagara; but their beauty compensates for the absence of such +grandeur. + +The Genesee, the principal natural feature of its district, rises +on the _Grand Plateau_ or table-land of Western Pennsylvania, runs +through New York, and flows into Lake Ontario, at Port Genesee, six +miles below Rochester. At the distance of six miles from its mouth are +falls of 96 feet, and one mile higher up, other falls of 75 feet.[1] +Above these it is navigable for boats nearly 70 miles, where are other +two falls, of 60 and 90 feet, one mile apart, in Nunda, south of +Leicester. At the head of the Genesee is a tract six miles square, +embracing waters, some of which flow into the gulf of Mexico, others +into Chesapeake Bay, and others into the Gulf of St. Lawrence. This +tract is probably elevated 1,600 or 1,700 feet above the tide waters +of the Atlantic Ocean. + + [1] It may be as well here to quote the formation of Cataracts + and Cascades, from Maltebrun's valuable _System of Universal + Geography._ "It is only the sloping of the land which can at first + cause water to flow; but an impulse having been once communicated + to the mass, the pressure alone of the water will keep it in + motion, even if there were no declivity at all. Many great rivers, + in fact, flow with an almost interruptible declivity. Rivers which + descend from primitive mountains into secondary lands, often form + _cascades and cataracts_. Such are the cataracts of the Nile, + of the Ganges, and some other great rivers, which, according to + Desmarest, evidently mark the limits of the ancient land. + Cataracts are also formed by lakes: of this description are the + celebrated Falls of the Niagara; but the most picturesque falls + are those of rapid rivers, bordered by trees and precipitous + rocks. Sometimes we see a body of water, which, before it arrives + at the bottom, is broken and dissipated into showers, like the + Staubbach, (see _Mirror,_ vol. xiv. p. 385.); sometimes it forms + a watery arch, projected from a rampart of rock, under which the + traveller may pass dryshod, as the "falling spring" of Virginia; + in one place, in a granite district, we see the Trolhetta, and the + Rhine not far from its source, urge on their foaming billows + among the pointed rocks; in another, amidst lands of a calcareous + formation, we see the Czettina and the Kerka, rolling down + from terrace to terrace, and presenting sometimes a sheet, and + sometimes a wall, of water. Some magnificent cascades have been + formed, at least in part, by the hands of man: the cascades of + Velino, near Terni, have been attributed to Pope Clement VIII.; + other cataracts, like those of Tunguska, in Siberia, have + gradually lost their elevation by the wearing away of the rocks, + and have now only a rapid descent."--_Maltebrun_, vol. i. + +The Engraving includes the falls of the river, with the village +of Rochester, seven miles south of Lake Ontario. This place, for +population, extent, and trade, will soon rank among the American +cities: it was not settled until about the close of the last war; +its progress was slow until the year 1820, from which period it has +rapidly improved. In 1830 it contained upwards of 12,000 inhabitants: +the first census of the village was taken in December, 1815, when the +number of inhabitants was three hundred and thirty-one. The aqueduct +which takes the Erie canal across the river forms a prominent object +of interest to all travellers. It is of hewn stone, containing eleven +arches of 50 feet span: its length is 800 feet, but a considerable +part of each end is hidden from view by mills erected since its +construction. + +On the brink of the island which separates the main stream of the +river from that produced by the waste water from the mill-race, +will be seen _a scaffold or platform_ from which an eccentric but +courageous adventurer, named _Sam Patch_, made a desperate leap into +the gulf beneath. Patch had obtained some celebrity in freaks of this +description, though his feats be not recorded, like the hot-brained +patriotism of Marcus Curtius in olden history. At the fall of Niagara, +Patch had before made two leaps in safety--one of 80 and the other of +130 feet, in a vast gulf, foaming and tost aloft from the commotion +produced by a fall of nearly 200 feet. In November, 1829, Patch +visited Rochester to astonish the citizens by a leap from the falls. +His first attempt was successful, and in the presence of thousands of +spectators he leaped from the scaffold to which we have directed the +attention of the reader, a distance of 100 feet, into the abyss, in +safety. He was advertised to repeat the feat in a few days, or, as he +prophetically announced it his "last jump," meaning his last jump that +season. The scaffold was duly erected, 25 feet in height, and Patch, +an hour after the time was announced, made his appearance. A multitude +had collected to witness the feat; the day was unusually cold, and Sam +was intoxicated. The river was low, and the falls near him on either +side were bare. Sam threw himself off, and the waters (to quote the +bathos of a New York newspaper) "received him in their cold embrace. +The tide bubbled as the life left the body, and then the stillness of +death, indeed, sat upon the bosom of the waters." His body was found +past the spring at the mouth of the river, seven miles below where +he made his fatal leap. It had passed over two falls of 125 feet +combined, yet was not much injured. A black handkerchief taken from +his neck while on the scaffold, and tied about the body, was still +there. He is stated to have had perfect command of himself while in +the air; and, says the journalist already quoted, "had he not been +given to habits of intoxication, he might have astonished the world, +perhaps for years, with the greatest feats ever performed by man." + +The Genesee river waters one of the finest tracts of land in the state +of New York. Its alluvial flats are extensive, and very fertile. These +are either natural prairies, or Indian clearings, (of which, however, +the present Indians have no tradition,) and lying, to an extent of +many thousand acres, between the villages of Genesee, Moscow, and +Mount Morris, which now crown the declivities of their surrounding +uplands; and, contrasting their smooth verdure with the shaggy hills +that bound the horizon, and their occasional clumps of spreading +trees, with the tall and naked relics of the forest, nothing can +be more agreeable to the eye, long accustomed to the uninterrupted +prospect of a level and wooded country. + + * * * * * + + + +SONG FROM THE ALBUM OF A POET. + +_By G.R. Carter._ + + +THE HOMEWARD VOYAGE. + + + Away o'er the dancing wave, + Like the wings of the white seamew; + How proudly the hearts of the youthful brave + Their dreams of bliss renew! + + And as on the pathless deep, + The bark by the gale is driven, + How glorious it is with the stars to keep + A watch on the beautiful heaven. + + The winds o'er the ocean bear + Rich fragrance from the flow'rs, + That bloom on the sward, and sparkle there + Like stars in their dark blue bow'rs. + + The visions of those that sail + O'er the wave with its snow-white foam, + Are haunted with scenes of the beauteous vale + That encloses their peaceful home. + + They have wander'd through groves of the west, + Illumed with the fire-flies' light; + But their native land kindles a charm in each breast, + Unwaken'd by regions more bright. + + The haunts that were dear to the heart + As an exquisite dream of romance, + Strew thoughts, like sweet flow'rs, round its holiest part, + And their fancy-bound spirits entrance. + + Then away with the fluttering sail! + And away with the bounding wave! + While the musical sounds of the ocean-gale + Are wafted around the brave! + + * * * * * + + +Ray wittily observes that an obscure and prolix author may not +improperly be compared to a Cuttle-fish, since he may be said to hide +himself under his own ink. + + * * * * * + + +LINES + +FROM THE GERMAN OF KÖRNER. + + +_Written on the morning of the Battle of Dänneberg._ + + + Doubt-beladen, dim and hoary, + O'er us breaks the mighty day, + And the sunbeam, cold and gory, + Lights us on our fearful way. + In the womb of coming hours, + Destinies of empires lie, + Now the scale ascends, now lowers, + Now is thrown the noble die. + Brothers, the hour with warning is rife; + Faithful in death as you're faithful in life, + Be firm, and be bound by the holiest tie, + + In the shadows of the night, + Lie behind us shame and scorn; + Lies the slave's exulting might, + Who the German oak has torn. + Speech disgrac'd in future story, + Shrines polluted (shall it be?) + To dishonour pledg'd our glory, + German brothers, set it free. + Brothers, your hands, let your vengeance be burning, + By your actions, the curses of heaven be turning, + On, on, set your country's Palladium free. + + Hope, the brightest, is before us, + And the future's golden time, + Joys, which heaven will restore us, + Freedom's holiness sublime. + German bards and artists' powers, + Woman's truth, and fond caress, + Fame eternal shall be ours, + Beauty's smile our toils shall bless. + Yet 'tis a deed that the bravest might shake, + Life and our heart's blood are set on the stake; + Death alone points out the road to success. + + God! united we will dare it; + Firm this heart shall meet its fate, + To the altar thus I bear it, + And my coming doom await. + Fatherland, for thee we perish, + At thy fell command 'tis done, + May our loved ones ever cherish + Freedom, which our blood has won. + Liberty, grow o'er each oak-shadow'd plain, + Grow o'er the tombs of thy warriors slain, + Fatherland, hear thou the oath we have sworn. + + Brothers, towards your hearts' best treasures, + Cast one look, on earth the last, + Turn then from those once prized pleasures, + Wither'd by the hostile blast. + Though your eyes be dim with weeping, + Tears like these are not from fear, + Trust to God's own holy keeping, + With your last kiss, all that's dear. + All lips that pray for us, all hearts that we rend + With parting, O father, to thee we commend, + Protect them and shield them from wrongs and despair.--H. + + * * * * * + + +EQUANIMITY OF TEMPER. + + +Goodness of temper may be defined, to use the happy imagery of Gray, +"as the sunshine of the heart." It is a more valuable bosom-attendant +under the pressure of poverty and adversity, and when we are +approaching the confines of infirmity and old age, than when we are +revelling in the full tide of plenty, amid the exuberant strength and +freshness of youth. Lord Bacon, who has analyzed some of the human +accompaniments so well, is silent as to the softening sway and +pleasing influence of this choice attuner of the human mind. But +Shaftesbury, the illustrious author of the _Characteristics_, was so +enamoured of it, that he terms "gravity (its counterpart,) the essence +of imposture;" and so it is, for to what purpose does a man store his +brain with knowledge, and the profitable burden of the sciences, if he +gathers only superciliousness and pride from the hedge of learning? +instead of the milder traits of general affection, and the open +qualities of social feelings. I remember, when a youth, I was +extremely fond of attending the House of Commons, to hear the debates; +and I shall never forget the repulsive loftiness which I thought +marked the physiognomy of Pitt; harsh and unbending, like a settled +frost, he seemed wrapped in the mantle of egotism and sublunary +conceit; and it was from the uninviting expression of this great man's +countenance, that I first drew my conceptions as to how a proud and +unsociable man looked. With very different emotions I was wont to +survey the mild but expressive features of his great opponent, Fox: +there was a placidity mixed up with the graver lines of thought and +reflection, that would have invited a child to take him by the hand; +indeed, the witchcraft of Mr. Fox's temper was such, that it formed a +triumphant source of gratulation in the circle of his friends, from +the panegyric of the late Earl of Carlisle, during his boyish days at +Eton, to the prouder posthumous circles of fame with which the elegant +author of _The Pleasures of Memory_, has entwined his sympathetic +recollections. The late Mr. Whitbread, although an unflinching +advocate for the people's rights, and an incorruptible patriot in +the true sense of the word, was unpopular in his office as a country +magistrate, owing to a tone of severity he generally used to those +around him. The wife of that indefatigable toiler in the Christian +field, John Wesley, was so acid and acrimonious in her temper, that +that mild advocate for spiritual affection, found it impossible to +live with her. Rousseau was tormented by such a host of ungovernable +passions, that he became a burden to himself and to every one around +him. Lord Byron suffered a badness of temper to corrode him in the +flower of his days. Contrasted with this unpleasing part of the +perspective, let us quote the names of a few wise and good men, who +have been proverbial for the goodness of their tempers; as Shakspeare, +Francis I., and Henry IV. of France; "the great and good Lord +Lyttleton," as he is called to the present day; John Howard, +Goldsmith, Sir Samuel Romilly, Franklin, Thomson, the poet, +Sheridan,[2] and Sir Walter Scott. The late Sir William Curtis was +known to be one of the best tempered men of his day, which made him a +great favourite with the late king. I remember a little incident of +Sir William's good-nature, which occurred about a year after he had +been Lord Mayor. In alighting from his carriage, a little out of the +regular line, near the Mansion House, upon some day of festivity, he +happened inadvertently, with the skirts of his coat, to brush down a +few apples from a poor woman's stall, on the side of the pavement. Sir +William was in full dress, but instead of passing on with the hauteur +which characterizes so many of his aldermanic brethren, he set himself +to the task of assisting the poor creature to collect her scattered +fruit; and on parting, observing some of her apples were a little +soiled by the dirt, he drew his hand from his pocket and generously +gave her a shilling. This was too good an incident for John Bull to +lose: a crowd assembled, hurraed, and cried out, "Well done, Billy," +at which the good-natured baronet looked back and laughed. How much +more pleasing is it to tell of such demeanour than of the foolish +pride of the late Sir John Eamer, who turned away one of his +travellers merely because he had in one instance used his bootjack. + + [2] May we not, however, say the friendless Sheridan? + +_The Author of "A Tradesman's Lays."_ + + * * * * * + +Probably our correspondent may recollect Sir William and the orange, +at one of the contested City elections. A "greasy rogue" before the +hustings, seeing the baronet candidate take an orange from his pocket, +_put up_ for the fruit, with the cry "Give us that orange, Billy." Sir +William threw him the fruit, which the fellow had no sooner sucked +dry, than he began bawling with increased energy, "No Curtis," "No +Billy," etc. Such an ungrateful act would have soured even Seneca; but +Sir William merely gave a smile, with a good-natured shake of the +head. Sir William Curtis possessed a much greater share of shrewdness +and good sense than the vulgar ever gave him credit for. At the +Sessions' dinners, he would keep up the ball of conversation with the +judges and gentlemen of the bar, in a fuller vein than either of his +brother aldermen. It is true that he had wealth and distinction, +all which his fellow citizens at table did not enjoy; and these +possessions, we know, are wonderful helps to confidence, if they do +not lead the holder on to assurance.--Ed. M. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE SKETCH BOOK. + + * * * * * + +EXTRACTS FROM THE ORIGINAL LETTERS OF AN OFFICER IN INDIA.[3] + + +_THE SIGHT OF A TIGER._[4] + + +Secunderabad, 1828. + +A short time since, a brother sub. in my regiment was riding out round +some hills adjoining the cantonment, when a _cheetar_, small tiger +(or panther,) pounced on his dog. Seeing his poor favourite in the +cheetar's mouth, like a mouse in Minette's, he put spurs to his horse, +rode after the beast, and so frightened him, that he dropped the dog +and made off. Three of us, including myself, then agreed to sit up +that night, and watch for the tiger, feeling assured that his haunt +was not far from our cantonment. So we started late at night, armed +_cap-à -pied_, and each as fierce in heart as ten tigers; arrived +at the appointed spot, and having selected a convenient place for +concealment, we picketed a sheep, brought with us purposely to entice +the cheetar from his lair. Singular to relate, this poor animal, as if +instinctively aware of its critical situation, was as mute as if +it had been mouthless, and during two or three hours in which we +tormented it, to make it utter a cry, our efforts were of no avail. +Hour after hour slipped away, still no cheetar; and about three +o'clock in the morning, wearied with our fruitless vigil, we all began +to drop asleep. I believe I was wrapped in a most leaden slumber, and +dreaming of anything but watching for, and hunting tigers, when I was +aroused by the most unnatural, unearthly, and infernal roaring ever +heard. This was our friend, and for his reception, starting upon our +feet, we were all immediately ready; but the cunning creature who +had no idea of becoming our victim, made off, with the most hideous +howlings, to the shelter of a neighbouring eminence; when sufficient +daylight appeared, we followed the direction of his voice, and had the +felicity of seeing him perched on the summit of an immense high rock, +just before us, placidly watching our movements. We were here, too far +from him to venture a shot, but immediately began ascending, when the +creature seeing us approach, rose, opened his ugly red mouth in a +desperate yawn, and stretched himself with the utmost _nonchalance_, +being, it seems, little less weary than ourselves. We presented, but +did not fire, because at that very moment, setting up his tail, and +howling horribly, he disappeared behind the rock. Quick as thought +we followed him, but to our great disappointment and chagrin, he had +retreated into one of the numerous caverns formed in that ugly place, +by huge masses of rock, piled one upon the other. Into some of these +dangerous places, however, we descended, sometimes creeping, sometimes +walking, in search of our foe; but not finding him, at length returned +to breakfast, which I thought the most agreeable and sensible part of +the affair. Some wit passed amongst us respecting the propriety of +changing the name _cheetar_, into _cheat-us_; but were, on the whole, +not pleased by the failure of our expedition; and I have only favoured +you with this _romantic_ incident in the life of a sub. as a specimen +of the sort of amusement we meet with in quarters. + + [3] Communicated by M.L.B., Great Marlow, Bucks. + + [4] Vide _Mirror_, vol. xviii. p. 343.--_Note_. + +_Natural Zoological Garden_. + +SECUNDERABAD, 1828. + +Your description of the London Zoological Garden, reminds me that +there is, what I suppose I must term, a most beautiful _Zoological +Hill_, just one mile and a half from the spot whence I now write; on +this I often take my recreation, much to the alarm of its inhabitants; +viz. sundry cheetars, bore-butchers, (or leopards) hyenas, wolves, +jackalls, foxes, hares, partridges, etc.; but not being a very capital +shot, I have seldom made much devastation amongst them. Under the hill +are swamps and paddy-fields, which abound in snipe and other game. +Now, is not this a Zoological Garden on the grandest scale? + +H.C.B. + + * * * * * + + + + +OLD POETS. + + * * * * * + +BALLAD OF AGINCOURT. + +(_From "England's Heroical Epistles[5]._") + + Faire stood the wind for France, + When we, our sayles advance, + Nor now to proue our chance + Longer will tarry; + But putting to the mayne, + At Kaux, the mouth of Sene, + With all his martiall trayne, + Landed King Harry. + + And taking many a fort, + Furnished in warlike sort, + Marcheth towards Agincourt, + In happy houre. + Skirmishing day by day, + With those that stop'd his way, + Where the French gen'ral lay + With all his power. + + Which in his hight of pride. + King Henry to deride, + His ransom to prouide, + To our king sending. + Which he neglects the while, + As from a nation vile, + Yet with an angry smile, + Their fall portending. + + And turning to his men, + Quoth our brave Henry, then, + "Though they to one be ten, + Be not amazed, + Yet have we well begunne, + Battells so bravely wonne, + Have ever to the sonne, + By fame beene raysed." + + "And for myself," quoth he, + "This my full rest shall be, + England ne'er mourn for me, + Nor more esteem me. + Victor I will remaine, + Or on this earth be slaine, + Never shall shee sustaine + Losse to redeeme me." + + Poiters and Cressy tell, + When most their pride did swell, + Under our swords they fell. + + No lesse our skill is, + Then when oure grandsire great, + Clayming the regall seate, + By many a warlike feate, + Lop'd the French lillies. + + The Duke of York so dread, + The vaward led, + Wich the maine Henry sped, + Amongst his Hench_men_, + Excester had the rere, + A brauer man not there, + O Lord, how hot they were, + On the false Frenchmen. + + They now to fight are gone, + Armour on armour shone, + Drumme now to drumme did grone, + To hear was wonder, + That with cryes they make, + The very earth did shake, + Thunder to thunder. + + Well it thine age became + O noble Erpingham, + Which didst the signall ayme, + To our hid forces; + When from a meadow by, + Like a storme suddenly, + The English archery + Struck the French horses. + + With Spanish Ewgh so strong, + Arrowes a cloth yard long, + That like to serpents stung, + Piercing the weather. + None from his fellow starts, + But playing manly parts, + And like true English hearts, + Stuck close together. + + When downe their bowes they threw, + And forth their bilbowes drew, + And on the French they flew, + Not one was tardie; + Armes were from shoulders sent, + Scalpes to the teeth were rent, + Down the French pesants went, + Our men were hardie. + + This while oure noble king, + His broad sword brandishing, + Downe the French host did ding, + As to o'erwhelme it. + And many a deep wound lent, + His armes with bloud besprent, + And many a cruel dent + Bruised his helmet. + + Glo'ster, that duke so good, + Next of the royal blood, + For famous England stood, + With his braue brother, + Clarence, in steele so bright, + Though but a maiden knight. + Yet in that furious light + Scarce such another. + + Warwick, in bloud did wade, + Oxford, the foe inuade, + And cruel slaughter made; + Still as they ran up, + Suffolk, his axe did ply, + Beavmont and Willovghby, + Ferres and Tanhope. + + Upon Saint Crispin's day, + Fought was this noble fray, + Which fame did not delay, + To England to carry. + O when shall English men, + With such acts fill a pen, + Or England breed againe + Such a King Harry. + + [5] A Collection of Poems of the Sixteenth Century.--Communicated + by J.F., of Gray's Inn. We thank our Correspondent for the + present, and shall be happy to receive further specimens from the + same source. + + * * * * * + + + + +SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY + + * * * * * + +AMERICAN IMPROVEMENTS. + + +[The very recent publication of the ninth volume of the Encyclopaedia +Americana[6] enables us to lay before our readers the following +interesting notices, connected with the national weal and internal +economy of the United States of North America.] + +_Navy_.--Since the late war, the growth and improvement of our navy +has kept pace with our national prosperity. We could now put to sea, +in a few mouths, with a dozen ships of the line; the most spacious, +efficient, best, and most beautiful constructions that ever traversed +the ocean. This is not merely an American conceit, but an admitted +fact in Europe, where our models are studiously copied. In the United +States, a maximum and uniform calibre of cannon has been lately +determined on and adopted. Instead of the variety of length, form, +and calibre still used in other navies, and almost equal to the Great +Michael with her "bassils, mynards, hagters, culverings, flings, +falcons, double dogs, and pestilent serpenters," our ships offer flush +and uniform decks, sheers free from hills, hollows, and excrescences, +and complete, unbroken batteries of thirty-two or forty-two pounders. +Thus has been realized an important desideratum--the greatest possible +power to do execution coupled with the greatest simplification of the +means. + + [6] Philadelphia, Carey and Lea, 1832. + +But, while we have thus improved upon the hitherto practised means of +naval warfare, we are threatened with a total change. This is by the +introduction of bombs, discharged horizontally, instead of shot from +common cannon. So certain are those who have turned their attention to +this subject that the change must take place, that, in France, they +are already speculating on the means of excluding these destructive +missiles from a ship's sides, by casing them in a cuirass of iron. Nor +are these ideas the mere offspring of idle speculation. Experiments +have been tried on hulks, by bombs projected horizontally, with +terrible effect. If the projectile lodged in a mast, in exploding it +overturned it, with all its yards and rigging; if in the side, the +ports were opened into each other; or, when near the water, an immense +chasm was opened, causing the vessel to sink immediately. If it should +not explode until it fell spent upon deck, besides doing the injury +of an ordinary ball, it would then burst, scattering smoke, fire, and +death, on every side. When this comes to pass, it would seem that +the naval profession would cease to be very desirable. Nevertheless, +experience has, in all ages, shown that, the more destructive are the +engines used in war, and the more it is improved and systematized, the +less is the loss of life. Salamis and Lepanto can either of them +alone count many times the added victims of the Nile, Trafalgar, and +Navarino. + +One effect of the predicted change in naval war, it is said, will be +the substitution of small vessels for the larger ones now in use. The +three decker presents many times the surface of the schooner, +while her superior number of cannon does not confer a commensurate +advantage; for ten bombs, projected into the side of a ship, would be +almost as efficacious to her destruction as a hundred. As forming part +of a system of defence for our coast, the bomb-cannon, mounted on +steamers, which can take their position at will, would be terribly +formidable. With them--to say nothing of torpedoes and submarine +navigation--we need never more be blockaded and annoyed as formerly. +Hence peaceful nations will be most gainers by this change of system; +but it is not enough that we should be capable of raising a blockade: +we are a commercial people: our merchant ships visit every sea, and +our men-of-war must follow and protect them there. + +_Newspapers_.--No country has so many newspapers as the United States. +The following table, arranged for the American Almanac of 1830, is +corrected from the Traveller, and contains a statement of the number +of newspapers published in the colonies at the commencement of the +revolution; and also the number of newspapers and other periodical +works, in the United States, in 1810 and 1828. + + STATES. 1775. 1810. 1828. + Maine 29 + Massachusetts 7 32 78 + New Hampshire 1 12 17 + Vermont 14 21 + Rhode Island 2 7 14 + Connecticut 4 11 33 + New York 4 66 161 + New Jersey 8 22 + Pennsylvania 9 71 185 + Delaware 2 4 + Maryland 2 21 37 + District of Columbia 6 9 + Virginia 2 23 34 + North Carolina 2 10 20 + South Carolina 3 10 16 + Georgia 1 13 18 + Florida 1 2 + Alabama 10 + Mississippi 4 6 + Louisiana 10 9 + Tennessee 6 8 + Kentucky 17 23 + Ohio 14 66 + Indiana 17 + Michigan 2 + Illinois 4 + Missouri 5 + Arkansas 1 + Cherokee Nation 1 + + Total 37 358 802 + +The present number, however, amounts to about a thousand. Thus the +state of New York is mentioned in the table as having 161 newspapers; +but a late publication states that there are 193, exclusive of +religious journals. New York has 1,913,508 inhabitants. There are +about 50 daily newspapers in the United States, two-thirds of which +are considered to give a fair profit. The North American colonies, in +the year 1720, had only seven newspapers: in 1810, the United States +had 359; in 1826, they had 640; in 1830, 1,000, with a population +of 13,000,000; so that they have more newspapers than the whole 190 +millions of Europe. + +In drawing a comparison between the newspapers of the three freest +countries, France, England, and the United States, we find, as we have +just said, those of the last country to be the most numerous, while +some of the French papers have the largest subscription; and the whole +establishment of a first-rate London paper is the most complete. Its +activity is immense. When Canning sent British troops to Portugal, in +1826, we know that some papers sent reporters with the army. The zeal +of the New York papers also deserves to be mentioned, which send +out their news-boats, even fifty miles to sea, to board approaching +vessels, and obtain the news that they bring. The papers of the large +Atlantic cities are also remarkable for their detailed accounts of +arrivals, and the particulars of shipping news, interesting to the +commercial world, in which they are much more minute than the English. +From the immense number of different papers in the United States, it +results that the number of subscribers to each is limited, 2,000 being +considered a respectable list. One paper, therefore, is not able to +unite the talent of many able men, as is the case in France. There +men of the first rank in literature or politics occasionally, or at +regular periods, contribute articles. In the United States, few papers +have more than one editor, who generally writes upon almost all +subjects himself. This circumstance necessarily makes the papers less +spirited and able than some of the foreign journals, but is attended +with this advantage, that no particular set of men is enabled to +exercise a predominant influence by means of these periodicals. Their +abundance neutralizes their effects. Declamation and sophistry are +made comparatively harmless by running in a thousand conflicting +currents. + +_Paper-making_.--The manufacture of paper has of late rapidly +increased in the United States. According to an estimate in 1829, the +whole quantity made in this country amounted to about five to seven +millions a year, and employed from ten to eleven thousand persons. +Rags are not imported from Italy and Germany to the same amount as +formerly, because people here save them more carefully; and the value +of the rags, junk, etc., saved annually in the United States, is +believed to amount to two millions of dollars. Machines for making +paper of any length are much employed in the United States. The +quality of American paper has also improved; but, as paper becomes +much better by keeping, it is difficult to have it of the best quality +in this country, the interest of capital being too high. The paper +used here for printing compares very disadvantageously with that of +England. Much wrapping paper is now made of straw, and paper for +tracing through is prepared in Germany from the poplar tree. A letter +of Mr. Brand, formerly a civil officer in Upper Provence, in France +(which contains many pine forests), dated Feb. 12, 1830, has been +published in the French papers, containing an account of his +successful experiments to make coarse paper of the pine tree. The +experiments of others have led to the same results. Any of our +readers, interested in this subject, can find Mr. Brand's letter in +the _Courrier Francais_ of Nov. 27, 1830, a French paper published +in New York. In salt-works near Hull, Massachusetts, in which the +sea-water is made to flow slowly over sheds of pine, in order to +evaporate, the writer found large quantities of a white substance--the +fibres of the pine wood dissolved and carried off by the brine--which +seemed to require nothing but glue to convert it into paper. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE NATURALIST + + * * * * * + + +THE CUTTLE-FISH + + +Is one of the most curious creatures of "the watery kingdom." It is +popularly termed a fish, though it is, in fact, a worm, belonging to +the order termed _Mollusca, (Molluscus_, soft,) from the body being of +a pulpy substance and having no skeleton. It differs in many respects +from other animals of its class, particularly with regard to its +internal structure, the perfect formation of the viscera, eyes, and +even organs of hearing. Moreover, "it has three hearts, two of which +are placed at the root of the two branchiae (or gills); they receive +the blood from the body, and propel it into the branchiae. The +returning veins open into the middle heart, from which the aorta +proceeds."[7] Of Cuttle-fish there are several species. That +represented in the annexed Cut is the common or officinal Cuttle-fish, +(_Sepia officinalis_, Lin). It consists of a soft, pulpy, body, with +processes or arms, which are furnished with small holes or suckers, +by means of which the animal fixes itself in the manner of +cupping-glasses. These holes increase with the age of the animal; and +in some species amount to upwards of one thousand. The arms are often +torn or nipped off by shell or other fishes, but the animal has the +power of speedily reproducing the limbs. By means of the suckers the +Cuttle-fish usually affects its locomotion. "It swims at freedom in +the bosom of the sea, moving by sudden and irregular jerks, the body +being nearly in a perpendicular position, and the head directed +downwards and backwards. Some species have a fleshy, muscular fin +on each side, by aid of which they accomplish these apparently +inconvenient motions; but, at least, an equal number of them are +finless, and yet can swim with perhaps little less agility. Lamarck, +indeed, denies this, and says that these can only trail themselves +along the bottom by means of the suckers. This is probably their +usual mode of proceeding; that it is not their only one, we have the +positive affirmation of other observers."[8] Serviceable as these arms +undoubtedly are to the Cuttle-fish, Blumenbach thinks it questionable +whether they can be considered as organs of touch, in the more limited +sense to which he has confined that term.[9] + + +THE CUTTLE-FISH. + + +[Illustration: The Cuttle-fish.] + + +The jaws of the Cuttle-fish, it should be observed, are fixed in the +body because there is no head to which they can be articulated. They +are of horny substance, and resemble the bill of a parrot. They are in +the centre of the under part of the body, surrounded by the arms. By +means of these parts, the shell-fish which are taken for food, are +completely triturated. + + [7] Cuvier. + + [8] Nat. Hist. Molluscous Animals, Mag. Nat. Hist. vol. iii. + p. 527. + + [9] Manual Comp. Anat. p. 263. + +We now come to the most peculiar parts of the structure of the +Cuttle-fish, viz. the _ear and eye_, inasmuch as it is the only animal +of its class, in which any thing has hitherto been discovered, at +all like an organ of hearing, or that has been shown to possess true +eyes.[10] The ears consist of two oval cavities, in the cartilaginous +ring, to which the large arms of the animal are affixed. In each of +these is a small bag, containing a bony substance, and receiving the +termination of the nerves, like those of the vestibulum (or cavity +in the bone of the ear) in fishes. The nature of the eyes cannot be +disputed. "They resemble, on the whole, those of red-blooded animals, +particularly fishes; they are at least incomparably more like them +than the eyes of any known insects; yet they are distinguished by +several extraordinary peculiarities. The front of the eye-ball is +covered with a loose membrane instead of a cornea; the iris is +composed of a firm substance; and a process projects from the upper +margin of the pupil, which gives that membrane a semilunar form."[11] +The exterior coat or ball is remarkably strong, so as to seem almost +calcareous, and is, when taken out, of a brilliant pearl colour; it +is worn in some parts of Italy, and in the Grecian islands by way of +artificial pearl in necklaces. + + [10] In all other worms the eyes are entirely wanting, or their + existence is very doubtful. Whether the black points at the + extremities of what Swammerdam calls the horns of the common + snail, are organs which really possess the power of vision, + is still problematical. + + [11] Blumenbach, Man. Comp. Anat. p. 305. + +Next we may notice the curious provision by which the Cuttle-fish is +enabled to elude the pursuit of its enemies in the "vasty deep." This +consists of a black, inky fluid, (erroneously supposed to be the +bile,) which is contained in a bag beneath the body. The fluid itself +is thick, but miscible with water to such a degree, that a very small +quantity will colour a vast bulk of water.[12] Thus, the comparatively +small Cuttle-fish may darken the element about the acute eye of the +whale. What omniscience is displayed in this single provision, as well +as in the faculty possessed by the Cuttle-fish of reproducing its +mutilated arms! All Nature beams with such beneficence, and abounds +with such instances of divine love for every creature, however humble: +in observing these provisions, how often are we reminded of the +benefits conferred by the same omniscience upon our own species. It is +thus, by the investigation of natural history, that we are led to +the contemplation of the sublimest subjects; thus that man with God +himself holds converse. + + +BONE, OR PLATE. + + +[Illustration: Bone, or Plate.] + + +The "bone" of the Cuttle-fish now claims attention. This is a +complicated calcareous plate, lodged in a peculiar cavity of the back, +which it materially strengthens. This plate has long been known in +the shop of the apothecary under the name of Cuttle-fish bone: an +observant reader may have noticed scores of these plates in glasses +labelled _Os Sepiae_. Reduced to powder, they were formerly used as an +absorbent, but they are now chiefly sought after for the purpose of +polishing the softer metals. It is however improper to call this plate +bone, since, in composition, "it is exactly similar to _shell_, and +consists of various membranes, hardened by carbonate of lime, (the +principal material of shell,) without the smallest mixture of +phosphate of lime,[13] or the chief material of bone." + + [12] According to Cuvier, the Indian ink, from China, is made of + this fluid, as was the ink of the Romans. It has been supposed, + and not without a considerable degree of probability, that the + celebrated plain, but wholesome dish, the black broth of Sparta, + was no other than a kind of Cuttle-fish soup, in which the black + liquor of the animal was always added as an ingredient; being, + when fresh, of very agreeable taste.--_Shaw's Zoology_. + + [13] Mr. Hatchett, in Philos. Trans. + + +EGGS. + + +[Illustration: Eggs.] + + +Lastly, are the _ovaria_, or egg-bags of the Cuttle-fish, which are +popularly called _sea-grapes_. The female fish deposits her eggs +in numerous clusters, on the stalks of fuci, on corals, about the +projecting sides of rocks, or on any other convenient substances. +These eggs, which are of the size of small filberts, are of a black +colour. + +The most remarkable species of Cuttle-fish inhabits the British seas; +and, although seldom taken, its bone or plate is cast ashore on +different parts of the coast from the south of England to the Zetland +Isles. We have picked up scores of these plates and bunches of the +egg-bags or grapes, after rough weather on the beach between Worthing +and Rottingdean; but we never found a single fish. + +The Cuttle-fish was esteemed a delicacy by the ancients, and the +moderns equally prize it. Captain Cook speaks highly of a soup he made +from it; and the fish is eaten at the present day by the Italians, and +by the Greeks, during Lent. We take the most edible species to be the +_octopodia_, or eight-armed, found particularly large in the East +Indies and the Gulf of Mexico. The common species here figured, when +full-grown, measures about two feet in length, is of a pale blueish +brown colour, with the skin marked by numerous dark purple specks. + +The Cuttle-fish is described by some naturalists, as naked or +shell-less. It is often found attached to the shell of the Paper +Nautilus, which it is said to use as a sail. It is, however, very +doubtful whether the Cuttle-fish has a shell of its own. There is a +controversy upon the subject. Aristotle, and our contemporary, Home, +maintain it to be parasitical: Cuvier and Ferrusac, non-parasitical; +but the curious reader will find the _pro_ and _con._--the majority +and minority--in the _Magazine of Natural History_, vol. iii. p. 535. + + * * * * * + + + + +NOTES OF A READER. + + * * * * * + +SERVANTS IN INDIA. + + +[Captain Skinner, in his _Excursions in India_, makes the following +sensible observations on the tyranny over servants in India:] + +There are throughout the mountains many of the sacred shrubs of the +Hindoos, which give great delight, as my servants fall in with them. +They pick the leaves; and running with them to me, cry, "See, sir, +see, our holy plants are here!" and congratulate each other on having +found some indication of a better land than they are generally +inclined to consider the country of the Pariahs. The happiness these +simple remembrances shed over the whole party is so enlivening, that +every distress and fatigue seems to be forgotten. When we behold a +servant approaching with a sprig of the _Dona_ in his hand, we hail it +as the olive-branch, that denotes peace and good-will for the rest of +the day, if, as must sometimes be the case, they have been in any way +interrupted. + +Even these little incidents speak so warmly in favour of the Hindoo +disposition, that, in spite of much that may be uncongenial to an +European in their character, they cannot fail to inspire him with +esteem, if not affection. I wish that many of my countrymen would +learn to believe that the natives are endowed with feelings, and +surely they may gather such an inference from many a similar trait +to the one I have related. Hardness of heart can never be allied +to artless simplicity: that mind must possess a higher degree of +sensibility and refinement, that can unlock its long-confined +recollections by so light a spring as a wild flower. + +I have often witnessed, with wonder and sorrow, an English gentleman +stoop to the basest tyranny over his servants, without even the poor +excuse of anger, and frequently from no other reason than because he +could not understand their language. The question, from the answer +being unintelligible, is instantly followed by a blow. Such scenes are +becoming more rare, and indeed are seldom acted but by the younger +members of society; they are too frequent notwithstanding: and should +any thing that has fallen from me here, induce the cruelly-disposed to +reflect a little upon the impropriety and mischief of their conduct, +when about to raise the hand against a native, and save one stripe +to the passive people who are so much at the mercy of their masters' +tempers, I shall indeed be proud. + +[Again, speaking of the condition of servants, Captain Skinner +remarks--] + +It is impossible to view some members of the despised class without +sorrow and pity, particularly those who are attached, in the lowest +offices, to the establishments of the Europeans. They are the most +melancholy race of beings, always alone, and apparently unhappy: they +are scouted from the presence even of their fellow-servants. None but +the mind of a poet could imagine such outcasts venturing to raise +their thoughts to the beauty of a Brahmin's daughter; and a touching +tale in such creative fancy, no doubt, it would make, for, from their +outward appearances, I do not perceive why they should not be endowed +with minds as sensitive at least as those of the castes above them. +There are among them some very stout and handsome men; and it is +ridiculous to see sometimes all their strength devoted to the charge +of a sickly puppy;--to take care of dogs being their principal +occupation! + +Our attention has been drawn to the above passage in Captain Skinner's +work, by its ready illustration of the views and conclusions of the +late Dr. Knox, in his invaluable _Spirit of Despotism_, Section 2, +"Oriental manners, and the ideas imbibed in youth, both in the East +and West Indies, favourable to the spirit of despotism." How forcibly +applicable, on the present occasion, is the following extract:--"from +the intercourse of England with the East and West Indies, it is to be +feared that something of a more servile spirit has been derived than +was known among those who established the free constitutions of +Europe, and than would have been adopted, or patiently borne, in ages +of virtuous simplicity. A very numerous part of our countrymen spend +their most susceptible age in those countries, where despotic manners +remarkably prevail. They are themselves, when invested with office, +treated by the natives with an idolatrous degree of reverence, which +teaches them to expect a similar submission to their will, on their +return to their own country. They have been accustomed to look up to +personages greatly their superiors in rank and riches, with awe; and +to look down on their inferiors in _property_ with supreme contempt, +as slaves of their will and ministers of their luxury. Equal laws and +equal liberty at home appear to them saucy claims of the poor and the +vulgar, which tend to divest riches of one of the greatest charms, +over-bearing dominion. We do, indeed, import gorgeous silks and +luscious sweets from the Indies, but we import, at the same time, the +spirit of despotism, which adds deformity to the purple robe, and +bitterness to the honied beverage." "That _Oriental_ manners are +unfavourable to liberty, is, I believe, universally conceded. The +natives of the East Indies entertain not the idea of independence. +They treat the Europeans, who go among them to acquire their riches, +with a respect similar to the abject submission which they pay to +their native despots. Young men, who in England scarcely possessed +the rank of the gentry, are waited upon in India, with more attentive +servility than is paid or required in many courts of Europe. Kings of +England seldom assume the state enjoyed by an East India governor, or +even by subordinate officers. Enriched at an early age, the adventurer +returns to England. His property admits him to the higher circles +of fashionable life. He aims at rivalling or excelling all the +old nobility in the splendour of his mansions, the finery of his +carriages, the number of his liveried train, the profusion of his +tables, in every unmanly indulgence which an empty vanity can covet, +and a full purse procure. Such a man, when he looks from the window of +his superb mansion, and sees the people pass, cannot endure the idea, +that they are of as much consequence as himself in the eye of the law; +and that he dares not insult or oppress the unfortunate being who +rakes his kennel or sweeps his chimney." + + * * * * * + + +FALL OF ROBESPIERRE. + + +It is well known, that during the revolutionary troubles of France, +not only all the churches were closed, but the Catholic and Protestant +worship entirely forbidden; and, after the constitution of 1795, it +was at the hazard of one's life that either the mass was heard, or +any religious duty performed. It is evident that Robespierre, who +unquestionably had a design which is now generally understood, was +desirous, on the day of the fête of the Supreme Being, to bring back +public opinion to the worship of the Deity. Eight months before, +we had seen the Bishop of Paris, accompanied by his clergy, appear +voluntarily at the bar of the Convention, to abjure the Christian +faith and the Catholic religion. But it is not as generally known, +that at that period Robespierre was not omnipotent, and could not +carry his desires into effect. Numerous factions then disputed with +him the supreme authority. It was not till the end of 1793, and the +beginning of 1794, that his power was so completely established that +he could venture to act up to his intentions. + +Robespierre was then desirous to establish the worship of the Supreme +Being, and the belief of the immortality of the soul. He felt that +irreligion is the soul of anarchy, and it was not anarchy but +despotism which he desired; and yet the very day after that +magnificent fête in honour of the Supreme Being, a man of the highest +celebrity in science, and as distinguished for virtue and probity as +philosophic genius, Lavoisier, was led out to the scaffold. On the day +following that, Madame Elizabeth, that Princess whom the executioners +could not guillotine, till they had turned aside their eyes from the +sight of her angelic visage, stained the same axe with her blood!--And +a month after, Robespierre, who wished to restore order for his own +purposes--who wished to still the bloody waves which for years had +inundated the state, felt that all his efforts would be in vain if +the masses who supported his power were not restrained and directed, +because without order nothing but ravages and destruction can prevail. +To ensure the government of the masses, it was indispensable that +morality, religion, and belief should be established--and, to affect +the multitude, that religion should be clothed in external forms. "My +friend," said Voltaire, to the atheist Damilaville, "after you have +supped on well-dressed partridges, drunk your sparkling champaigne, +and slept on cushions of down in the arms of your mistress, I have +no fear of you, though you do not believe in God.---But if you are +perishing of hunger, and I meet you in the corner of a wood, I would +rather dispense with your company." But when Robespierre wished to +bring back to something like discipline the crew of the vessel which +was fast driving on the breakers, he found the thing was not so easy +as he imagined. To destroy is easy--to rebuild is the difficulty. He +was omnipotent to do evil; but the day that he gave the first sign +of a disposition to return to order, the hands which he himself +had stained with blood, marked his forehead with the fatal sign of +destruction. + +--_Memoirs of the Duchess of Abrantes._ + + * * * * * + + +SOUNDS DURING THE NIGHT. + + +The great audibility of sounds during the night is a phenomenon of +considerable interest, and one which had been observed even by the +ancients. In crowded cities or in their vicinity, the effect was +generally ascribed to the rest of animated beings, while in localities +where such an explanation was inapplicable, it was supposed to arise +from a favourable direction of the prevailing wind. Baron Humboldt +was particularly struck with this phenomenon when he first heard the +rushing of the great cataracts of the Orinoco in the plain which +surrounds the mission of the Apures. These sounds he regarded as +three times louder during the night than during the day. Some authors +ascribed this fact to the cessation of the humming of insects, the +singing of birds, and the action of the wind on the leaves of the +trees, but M. Humboldt justly maintains that this cannot be the cause +of it on the Orinoco, where the buzz of insects is much louder in the +night than in the day, and where the breeze never rises till after +sunset. Hence he was led to ascribe the phenomenon to the perfect +transparency and uniform density of the air, which can exist only at +night after the heat of the ground has been uniformly diffused through +the atmosphere. When the rays of the sun have been beating on the +ground during the day, currents of hot air of different temperatures, +and consequently of different densities, are constantly ascending from +the ground and mixing with the cold air above. The air thus ceases +to be a homogeneous medium, and every person must have observed the +effects of it upon objects seen through it which are very indistinctly +visible, and have a tremulous motion, as if they were "dancing in +the air." The very same effect is perceived when we look at objects +through spirits and water that are not perfectly mixed, or when we +view distant objects over a red hot poker or over a flame. In all +these cases the light suffers refraction in passing from a medium of +one density into a medium of a different density, and the refracted +rays are constantly changing their direction as the different currents +rise in succession. Analogous effects are produced when sound passes +through a mixed medium, whether it consists of two different mediums +or of one medium where portions of it have different densities. As +sound moves with different velocities through media of different +densities, the wave which produces the sound will be partly reflected +in passing from one medium to the other, and the direction of the +transmitted wave changed; and hence in passing through such media +different portions of the wave will reach the ear at different times, +and thus destroy the sharpness and distinctness of the sound. This +may be proved by many striking facts. If we put a bell in a receiver +containing a mixture of hydrogen gas and atmospheric air, the sound of +the bell can scarcely be heard. During a shower of rain or of snow, +noises are greatly deadened, and when sound is transmitted along an +iron wire or an iron pipe of sufficient length, we actually hear two +sounds, one transmitted more rapidly through the solid, and the other +more slowly through the air. The same property is well illustrated by +an elegant and easily repeated experiment of Chladni's. When sparkling +champagne is poured into a tall glass till it is half full, the glass +loses its power of ringing by a stroke upon its edge, and emits only +a disagreeable and a puffy sound. This effect will continue while the +wine is filled with bubbles of air, or as long as the effervescence +lasts; but when the effervescence begins to subside, the sound becomes +clearer and clearer, and the glass rings as usual when the air-bubbles +have vanished. If we reproduce the effervescence by stirring the +champagne with a piece of bread the glass will again cease to ring. +The same experiment will succeed with other effervescing fluids.--_Sir +David Brewster_. + + * * * * * + +No man is so insignificant as to be sure his example can do no hurt. + +--_Lord Clarendon._ + + * * * * * + + + + +THE PUBLIC JOURNALS. + + * * * * * + + +PADDY FOOSHANE'S FRICASSEE. + + +Paddy Fooshane kept a shebeen house at Barleymount Cross, in which he +sold whisky--from which his Majesty did not derive any large portion +of his revenues--ale, and provisions. One evening a number of friends, +returning from a funeral---all neighbours too--stopt at his house, +"because they were in grief," to drink a drop. There was Andy Agar, a +stout, rattling fellow, the natural son of a gentleman residing near +there; Jack Shea, who was afterwards transported for running away with +Biddy Lawlor; Tim Cournane, who, by reason of being on his keeping, +was privileged to carry a gun; Owen Connor, a march-of-intellect +man, who wished to enlighten proctors by making them swallow their +processes; and a number of other "good boys." The night began to "rain +cats and dogs," and there was no stirring out; so the cards were +called for, a roaring fire was made down, and the whisky and ale began +to flow. After due observation, and several experiments, a space large +enough for the big table, and free from the drop down, was discovered. +Here six persons, including Andy, Jack, Tim--with his gun between his +legs--and Owen, sat to play for a pig's head, of which the living +owner, in the parlour below, testified, by frequent grunts, his +displeasure at this unceremonious disposal of his property. + +Card-playing is very thirsty, and the boys were anxious to keep out +the wet; so that long before the pig's head was decided, a messenger +had been dispatched several times to Killarney, a distance of four +English miles, for a pint of whisky each time. The ale also went +merrily round, until most of the men were quite stupid, their faces +swoln, and their eyes red and heavy. The contest at length was +decided; but a quarrel about the skill of the respective parties +succeeded, and threatened broken heads at one time. At last Jack Shea +swore they must have something to eat;----him but he was starved with +drink, and he must get some rashers somewhere or other. Every one +declared the same; and Paddy was ordered to cook some _griskins_ +forthwith. Paddy was completely nonplussed:--all the provisions were +gone, and yet his guests were not to be trifled with. He made a +hundred excuses--"'Twas late--'twas dry now--and there was nothing in +the house; sure they ate and drank enough." But all in vain. The ould +sinner was threatened with instant death if he delayed. So Paddy +called a council of war in the parlour, consisting of his wife and +himself. + +"Agrah, Jillen, agrah, what will we do with these? Is there any meat +in the tub? Where is the tongue? If it was yours, Jillen, we'd give +them enough of it; but I mane the cow's." (aside.) + +"Sure the proctors got the tongue ere yesterday, and you know there +an't a bit in the tub. Oh the murtherin villains! and I'll engage +'twill be no good for us, after all my white bread and the whisky. +That it may pison 'em!" + +"Amen! Jillen; but don't curse them. After all, where's the meat? I'm +sure that Andy will kill me if we don't make it out any how;--and he +hasn't a penny to pay for it. You could drive the mail coach, Jillen, +through his breeches pocket without jolting over a ha'penny. Coming, +coming; d'ye hear 'em?" + +"Oh, they'll murther us. Sure if we had any of the tripe I sent +yesterday to the gauger." + +"Eh! What's that you say? I declare to God here's Andy getting up. +We must do something. _Thonom an dhiaoul_, I have it. Jillen run and +bring me the leather breeches; run woman, alive! Where's the block and +the hatchet? Go up and tell 'em you're putting down the pot." + +Jillen pacified the uproar in the kitchen by loud promises, and +returned to Paddy. The use of the leather breeches passed her +comprehension; but Paddy actually took up the leather breeches, tore +away the lining with great care, chopped the leather with the hatchet +on the block, and put it into the pot as tripes. Considering the +situation in which Andy and his friends were, and the appetite of the +Irish peasantry for meat in any shape--"a bone" being their _summum +bonum_--the risk was very little. If discovered, however, Paddy's +safety was much worse than doubtful, as no people in the world have a +greater horror of any unusual food. One of the most deadly modes of +revenge they can employ is to give an enemy dog's or cat's flesh; and +there have been instances where the persons who have eaten it, on +being informed of the fact, have gone mad. But Paddy's habit of +practical jokes, from which nothing could wean him, and his anger at +their conduct, along with the fear he was in did not allow him to +hesitate a moment. Jillen remonstrated in vain. "Hould your tongue, +you foolish woman. They're all as blind as the pig there. They'll +never find it out. Bad luck to 'em too, my leather breeches! that I +gave a pound note and a hog for in Cork. See how nothing else would +satisfy 'em!" The meat at length was ready. Paddy drowned it in +butter, threw out the potatoes on the table, and served it up smoking +hot with the greatest gravity. + +"By ----," says Jack Shea, "that's fine stuff! How a man would dig a +trench after that." + +"I'll take a priest's oath," answered Tim Cohill, the most irritable +of men, but whose temper was something softened by the rich steam;-- + +"Yet, Tim, what's a priest's oath? I never heard that." + +"Why, sure, every one knows you didn't ever hear of anything of good." + +"I say you lie, Tim, you rascal." + +Tim was on his legs in a few moments, and a general battle was about +to begin; but the appetite was too strong, and the quarrel was +settled; Tim having been appeased by being allowed to explain a +priest's oath. According to him, a priest's oath was this:--He was +surrounded by books, which were gradually piled up until they reached +his lips. He then kissed the uppermost, and swore by all to the +bottom. As soon as the admiration excited by his explanation, in those +who were capable of hearing Tim, had ceased, all fell to work; and +certainly, if the tripes had been of ordinary texture, drunk as was +the party, they would soon have disappeared. After gnawing at them for +some time, "Well," says Owen Connor, "that I mightn't!--but these are +the quarest tripes I ever eat. It must be she was very ould." + +"By ----," says Andy, taking a piece from his mouth to which he had +been paying his addresses for the last half hour, "I'd as soon be +eating leather. She was a bull, man; I can't find the soft end at all +of it." + +"And that's true for you, Andy," said the man of the gun; "and 'tis +the greatest shame they hadn't a bull-bait to make him tinder. Paddy, +was it from Jack Clifford's bull you got 'em? They'd do for wadding, +they're so tough." + +"I'll tell you, Tim, where I got them--'twas out of Lord Shannon's +great cow at Cork, the great fat cow that the Lord Mayor bought for +the Lord Lieutenant--_Asda churp naur hagushch_."[14] + + [14] May it never come out of his body! + +"Amen, I pray God! Paddy. Out of Lord Shandon's cow? near the steeple, +I suppose; the great cow that couldn't walk with tallow. By ----, +these are fine tripes. They'll make a man very strong. Andy, give me +two or three _libbhers_ more of 'em." + +"Well, see that! out of Lord Shandon's cow: I wonder what they gave +her, Paddy. That I mightn't!--but these would eat a pit of potatoes. +Any how, they're good for the teeth. Paddy, what's the reason they +send all the good mate from Cork to the Blacks?" + +But before Paddy could answer this question, Andy, who had been +endeavouring to help Tim, uttered a loud "_Thonom an dhiaoul!_ what's +this? Isn't this flannel?" The fact was, he had found a piece of +the lining, which Paddy, in his hurry, had not removed; and all was +confusion. Every eye was turned to Paddy; but with wonderful quickness +he said "'Tis the book tripe, _agragal_, don't you see?"--and actually +persuaded them to it. + +"Well, any how," says Tim, "it had the taste of wool." + +"May this choke me," says Jack Shea, "if I didn't think that 'twas a +piece of a leather breeches when I saw Andy _chawing_ it." + +This was a shot between wind and water to Paddy. His self-possession +was nearly altogether lost, and he could do no more than turn it off +by a faint laugh. But it jarred most unpleasantly on Andy's nerves. +After looking at Paddy for some time with a very ominous look, he +said, "_Yirroo Pandhrig_ of the tricks, if I thought you were going on +with any work here, my soul and my guts to the devil if I would not +cut you into garters. By the vestment I'd make a _furhurmeen_ of you." + +"Is it I, Andy? That the hands may fall off me!" + +But Tim Cohill made a most seasonable diversion. "Andy, when you die, +you'll be the death of one fool, any how. What do you know that wasn't +ever in Cork itself about tripes. I never ate such mate in my life; +and 'twould be good for every poor man in the County of Kerry if he +had a tub of it." + +Tim's tone of authority, and the character he had got for learning, +silenced every doubt, and all laid siege to the tripes again. But +after some time, Andy was observed gazing with the most astonished +curiosity into the plate before him. His eyes were rivetted on +something; at last he touched it with his knife, arid exclaimed, +"_Kirhappa, dar dhia!_"--[A button by G--.] + +"What's that you say?" burst from all! and every one rose in the best +manner he could, to learn the meaning of the button. + +"Oh, the villain of the world!" roared Andy, "I'm pisoned! Where's the +pike? For God's sake Jack, run for the priest, or I'm a dead man with +the breeches. Where is he?--yeer bloods won't ye catch him, and I +pisoned?" + +The fact was, Andy had met one of the knee-buttons sewed into a piece +of the tripe, and it was impossible for him to fail discovering the +cheat. The rage, however, was not confined to Andy. As soon as it was +understood what had been done, there was an universal rush for Paddy +and Jillen; but Paddy was much too cunning to be caught, after the +narrow escape he had of it before. The moment after the discovery of +the lining, that he could do so without suspicion, he stole from the +table, left the house, and hid himself. Jillen did the same; and +nothing remained for the eaters, to vent their rage, but breaking +every thing in the cabin; which was done in the utmost fury. Andy, +however, continued watching for Paddy with a gun, a whole month after. +He might be seen prowling along the ditches near the shebeen-house, +waiting for a shot at him. Not that he would have scrupled to enter +it, were he likely to find Paddy there; but the latter was completely +on the _shuchraun_, and never visited his cabin except by stealth. It +was in one of those visits that Andy hoped to catch him. + +--_Tait's Edinburgh Magazine_. + + * * * * * + + +CONVERSATIONS WITH LORD BYRON. + +_By the Countess of Blessington_. + + +One of our first rides with Lord Byron was to Nervi, a village on +the sea-coast, most romantically situated, and each turn of the road +presenting various and beautiful prospects. They were all familiar to +him, and he failed not to point them out, but in very sober terms, +never allowing any thing like enthusiasm in his expressions, though +many of the views might have excited it. + +His appearance on horseback was not advantageous, and he seemed +aware of it, for he made many excuses for his dress and equestrian +appointments. His horse was literally covered with various trappings, +in the way of cavesons, martingales, and Heaven knows how many other +(to me) unknown inventions. The saddle was _à la Hussarde_ with +holsters, in which he always carried pistols. His dress consisted of +a nankeen jacket and trousers, which appeared to have shrunk from +washing; the jacket embroidered in the same colour, and with three +rows of buttons; the waist very short, the back very narrow, and the +sleeves set in as they used to be ten or fifteen years before; a black +stock, very narrow; a dark-blue velvet cap with a shade, and a very +rich gold band and large gold tassel at the crown; nankeen gaiters, +and a pair of blue spectacles, completed his costume, which was any +thing but becoming. This was his general dress of a morning for +riding, but I have seen it changed for a green tartan plaid jacket. He +did not ride well, which surprised us, as, from the frequent allusions +to horsemanship in his works, we expected to find him almost a Nimrod, +It was evident that he had _pretensions_ on this point, though he +certainly was what I should call a timid rider. When his horse made a +false step, which was not unfrequent, he seemed discomposed; and when +we came to any bad part of the road, he immediately checked his course +and walked his horse very slowly, though there really was nothing to +make even a lady nervous. Finding that I could perfectly manage (or +what he called _bully_) a very highly-dressed horse that I daily rode, +he became extremely anxious to buy it; asked me a thousand questions +as to how I had acquired such a perfect command of it, &c. &c. and +entreated, as the greatest favour, that I would resign it to him as a +charger to take to Greece, declaring he never would part with it, &c. +As I was by no means a bold rider, we were rather amused at observing +Lord Byron's opinion of my courage; and as he seemed so anxious for +the horse, I agreed to let him have it when he was to embark. From +this time he paid particular attention to the movements of poor +Mameluke (the name of the horse), and said he should now feel +confidence in action with so steady a charger. + +_April_--. Lord Byron dined with us today. During dinner he was as +usual gay, spoke in terms of the warmest commendation of Sir Walter +Scott, not only as an author, but as a man, and dwelt with apparent +delight on his novels, declaring that he had read and re-read them +over and over again, and always with increased pleasure. He said +that he quite equalled, nay, in his opinion, surpassed Cervantes. In +talking of Sir Walter's private character, goodness of heart, &c., +Lord Byron became more animated than I had ever seen him; his colour +changed from its general pallid tint to a more lively hue, and his +eyes became humid: never had he appeared to such advantage, and it +might easily be seen that every expression he uttered proceeded from +his heart. Poor Byron!--for poor he is even with all his genius, rank, +and wealth--had he lived more with men like Scott, whose openness of +character and steady principle had convinced him that they were in +earnest in _their goodness_, and not _making believe_, (as he always +suspects good people to be,) his life might be different and happier! +Byron is so acute an observer that nothing escapes him; all the shades +of selfishness and vanity are exposed to his searching glance, and the +misfortune is, (and a serious one it is to him,) that when he finds +these, and alas! they are to be found on every side, they disgust +and prevent his giving credit to the many good qualities that often +accompany them. He declares he can sooner pardon crimes, because they +proceed from the passions, than these minor vices, that spring from +egotism and self-conceit. We had a long argument this evening on the +subject, which ended, like most arguments, by leaving both of the same +opinion as when it commenced. I endeavoured to prove that crimes were +not only injurious to the perpetrators, but often ruinous to the +innocent, and productive of misery to friends and relations, whereas +selfishness and vanity carried with them their own punishment, the +first depriving the person of all sympathy, and the second exposing +him to ridicule which to the vain is a heavy punishment, but that +their effects were not destructive to society as are crimes. + +He laughed when I told him that having heard him so often declaim +against vanity, and detect it so often in his friends, I began to +suspect he knew the malady by having had it himself, and that I had +observed through life, that those persons who had the most vanity were +the most severe against that failing in their friends. He wished to +impress upon me that he was not vain, and gave various proofs to +establish this; but I produced against him his boasts of swimming, his +evident desire of being considered more _un homme de societe_ than a +poet, and other little examples, when he laughingly pleaded guilty, +and promised to be more merciful towards his friends. + +Byron attempted to be gay, but the effort was not successful, and he +wished us good night with a trepidation of manner that marked his +feelings. And this is the man that I have heard considered unfeeling! +How often are our best qualities turned against us, and made the +instruments for wounding us in the most vulnerable part, until, +ashamed of betraying our susceptibility, we affect an insensibility +we are far from possessing, and, while we deceive others, nourish in +secret the feelings that prey _only_ on our own hearts! + +--_New Monthly Magazine._ + + * * * * * + + + + +THE GATHERER. + + +_Canary Birds._--In Germany and the Tyrol, from whence the rest of +Europe is principally supplied with Canary birds, the apparatus for +breeding Canaries is both large and expensive. A capacious building +is erected for them, with a square space at each end, and holes +communicating with these spaces. In these outlets are planted such +trees as the birds prefer. The bottom is strewed with sand, on which +are cast rapeseed, chickweed, and such other food as they like. +Throughout the inner compartment, which is kept dark, are placed +bowers for the birds to build in, care being taken that the breeding +birds are guarded from the intrusion of the rest. Four Tyrolese +usually take over to England about sixteen hundred of these birds; and +though they carry them on their backs nearly a thousand miles, and pay +twenty pounds for them originally, they can sell them at 5_s_. each. + +_Braithwaite's Steam Fire Engine_--will deliver about 9,000 gallons +of water per hour to an elevation of 90 feet. The time of getting the +machine into action, from the moment of igniting the fuel, (the water +being cold,) is 18 minutes. As soon as an alarm is given, the fire is +kindled, and the bellows, attached to the engine, are worked by hand. +By the time the horses are harnessed in, the fuel is thoroughly +ignited, and the bellows are then worked by the motion of the wheels +of the engine. By the time of arriving at the fire, preparing the +hoses, &c. the steam is ready. + +Fisher, bishop of Rochester, was accustomed to style his church his +wife, declaring that he would never exchange her for one that was +richer. He was a zealous adherent of Pope Paul III. who created him +a cardinal. The king, Henry VIII., on learning that Fisher would not +refuse the dignity, exclaimed, in a passion, "Yea! is he so lusty? +Well, let the pope send him a hat when he will. Mother of God! he +shall wear it on his shoulders, for I will leave him never a head to +set it on." + +_Flax_ is not uncommon in the greenhouses about Philadelphia, but +we have not heard of any experiments with it in the open +air.--_Encyclopaedia Americana._ + +_The Schoolmaster wanted in the East._--Mr. Madden, in his travels +in Turkey, Egypt, Nubia, and Palestine, says:--"In all my travels, I +could only meet one woman who could read and write, and that was in +Damietta; she was a Levantine Christian, and her peculiar talent was +looked upon as something superhuman." + +La Fontaine had but one son, whom, at the age of 14, he placed in the +hands of Harlay, archbishop of Paris, who promised to provide for him. +After a long absence, La Fontaine met this youth at the house of a +friend, and being pleased with his conversation, was told that it was +his own son. "Ah," said he, "I am very glad of it." + +_Universal Genius._--Rivernois thus describes the character of +Fontenelle: "When Fontenelle appeared on the field, all the prizes +were already distributed, all the palms already gathered: the prize of +universality alone remained, Fontenelle determined to attempt it, and +he was successful. He is not only a metaphysician with Malebranche, a +natural philosopher with Newton, a legislator with Peter the Great, a +statesman with D'Argenson; he is everything with everybody." + +_Forest Schools._--There are a number of forest academies in Germany, +particularly in the small states of central Germany, in the Hartz, +Thuringia, &c. The principal branches taught in them are the +following:--forest botany, mineralogy, zoology, chemistry; by which +the learner is taught the natural history of forests, and the mutual +relations, &c. of the different kingdoms of nature. He is also +instructed in the care and chase of game, and in the surveying and +cultivation of forests, so as to understand the mode of raising all +kinds of wood, and supplying a new growth as fast as the old is taken +away. The pupil is too instructed in the administration of the forest +taxes and police, and all that relates to forests considered as a +branch of revenue. + +_The Weather._--Meteorological journals are now given in most +magazines. The first statement of this kind was communicated by Dr. +Fothergill to the Gentleman's Magazine, and consisted of a monthly +account of the weather and diseases of London. The latter information +is now monopolized by the parish-clerks. + +_Goethe._--The wife of a Silesian peasant, being obliged to go to +Saxony, and hearing that she had travelled (on foot) more than half +the distance to Goethe's residence, whose works she had read with the +liveliest interest, continued her journey to Weimar for the sake of +seeing him. Goethe declared that the true character of his works had +never been better understood than by this woman. He gave her his +portrait. + +_Liverpool and Manchester Railway._--The Company has reported the +following result: + + Passengers entered in the Company's + books during the half-year + ending June 30, 1831 £188,726 + + Ditto, ditto, ending December + 31, 1831 256,321 + + Increase £67,595 + +Being upwards of 33 per cent. increase of the first six months of the +year, and upwards of 135 per cent. increase on the travellers between +the two towns during the corresponding months, previously to opening +the railway.--_Gordon, on Steam Carriages._ + +_Caliga._--This was the name of the Roman soldier's shoe, made in the +sandal fashion. The sole was of wood, and stuck full of nails. Caius +Caesar Caligula, the fourth Roman Emperor, the son of Germanicus and +Agrippina, derived his surname from "Caliga," as having been born in +the army, and afterwards bred up in the habit of a common soldier; he +wore this military shoe in conformity to those of the common soldiers, +with a view of engaging their affections. The caliga was the badge, or +symbol of a soldier; whence to take away the caliga and belt, imported +a dismissal or cashiering. P.T.W. + +_The Damary Oak-tree._--At Blandford Forum, Dorsetshire, stood the +famous Damary Oak, which was rooted up for firing in 1755. It measured +75 feet high, and the branches extended 72 feet; the trunk at the +bottom was 68 feet in circumference, and 23 feet in diameter. It had +a cavity in its trunk 15 feet wide. Ale was sold in it till after the +Restoration; and when the town was burnt down in 1731, it served as an +abode for one family.--_Family Topographer_, vol. ii. + +_Brent Tor Church, Devonshire, situate upon a rock._--On Brent Tor is +a church, in which is appositely inscribed from Scripture, "Upon this +rock will I build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail +against it." It is said that the parishioners make weekly atonement +for their sins, for they cannot go to the church without the previous +penance of climbing the steep; and the pastor is frequently obliged to +humble himself upon his hands and knees before he can reach the house +of prayer. Tradition says it was erected by a merchant to commemorate +his escape from shipwreck on the coast, in consequence of this Tor +serving as a guide to the pilot. There is not sufficient earth to bury +the dead. At the foot of the Tor resided, in 1809, Sarah Williams, +aged 109 years. She never lived further out of the parish of Brent +Tor, than the adjoining one: she had had twelve children, and a few +years before her death cut five new teeth.--Ibid. + +_The Dairyman's Daughter._--In Arreton churchyard, Isle of Wight, is +a tombstone, erected in 1822, by subscription, to mark the grave of +Elizabeth Wallbridge, the humble individual whose story of piety and +virtue, written by the Rev. Leigh Richmond, under the title of the +"Dairyman's Daughter," has attained an almost unexampled circulation. +Her cottage at Branston, about a mile distant, is much visited.--Ibid. + +_Singular distribution of common land in Somersetshire_.--In the +parishes of Congresbury and Puxton were two large pieces of common +land, called East and West Dolemoors (from the Saxon word dol, a +portion or share,) which were occupied till within these few years in +the following manner:---The land was divided into single acres, each +bearing a peculiar mark, cut in the turf, such as a horn, an ox, a +horse, a cross, an oven, &c. On the Saturday before Old Midsummer +Day, the several proprietors of contiguous estates, or their tenants, +assembled on these commons, with a number of apples marked with +similar figures, which were distributed by a boy to each of the +commoners from a bag. At the close of the distribution, each person +repaired to the allotment with the figure corresponding to the one +upon his apple, and took possession of it for the ensuing year. Four +acres were reserved to pay the expenses of an entertainment at the +house of the overseer of the Dolemoors, where the evening was spent in +festivity.--Ibid. + +_Anna Maria, Countess of Shrewsbury._--At Avington Park, in Hampshire, +resided the notorious and infamous Anna-Maria, Countess of Shrewsbury, +who held the horse of the Duke of Buckingham while he fought and +killed her husband. Charles II frequently made it the scene of his +licentious pleasures; and the old green-house is said to have been the +apartment in which the royal sensualist was entertained.--Ibid. + + * * * * * + +_Erratum_--In the lines, by J. Kinder, on a Withered Primrose, in our +last, verse ii. line 2--for "gust of the storm" read "_jest_ of the +storm." + + * * * * * + +_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 11568 *** diff --git a/11568-h/11568-h.htm b/11568-h/11568-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bdec7cc --- /dev/null +++ b/11568-h/11568-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,2270 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> + +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> +<head> + <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" + content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" /> + + <title>The Mirror of Literature, Issue 562.</title> + <style type="text/css"> + /*<![CDATA[*/ + + <!-- + body {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;} + p {text-align: justify;} + blockquote {text-align: justify;} + h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {text-align: center;} + pre {font-size: 0.7em;} + + hr {text-align: center; width: 50%;} + html>body hr {margin-right: 25%; margin-left: 25%; width: 50%;} + hr.full {width: 100%;} + html>body hr.full {margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 0%; width: 100%;} + hr.short {text-align: center; width: 20%;} + html>body hr.short {margin-right: 40%; margin-left: 40%; width: 20%;} + + .note, .footnote + {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;} + + span.pagenum + {position: absolute; left: 1%; right: 91%; font-size: 8pt;} + + .poem + {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; margin-bottom: 1em; text-align: left;} + .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;} + .poem p {margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;} + .poem p.i2 {margin-left: 1em;} + .poem p.i4 {margin-left: 2em;} + .poem p.i6 {margin-left: 3em;} + .poem p.i8 {margin-left: 4em;} + .poem p.i10 {margin-left: 5em;} + + .figure + {padding: 1em; margin: 0; text-align: center; font-size: 0.8em; margin: auto;} + .figure img + {border: none;} + .figure p + + .side { float:right; + font-size: 75%; + width: 25%; + padding-left:10px; + border-left: dashed thin; + margin-left: 10px; + text-align: left; + text-indent: 0; + font-weight: bold; + font-style: italic;} + --> + /*]]>*/ + </style> +</head> + +<body> +<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11568 ***</div> + + <hr class="full" /> + + <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. XX. NO. 562.]</b></td> + + <td align="center"><b>SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, + 1832.</b></td> + + <td align="right"><b>[PRICE 2d.</b></td> + </tr> + </table> + <hr class="full" /> + + <div class="figcenter" + style="width:100%;"> + <a href="images/562-1.png"><img width="100%" + src="images/562-1.png" + alt="" /></a> + + <h3>FALLS OF THE GENESEE.</h3> + </div> + <hr class="full" /> + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page97" + id="page97"></a>[pg 97]</span> + + <p>The Genesee is one of the most picturesque rivers of North + America. Its name is indeed characteristic: the word Genesee + being formed from the Indian for <i>Pleasant Valley,</i> which + term is very descriptive of the river and its vicinity. Its + falls have not the majestic extent of the Niagara; but their + beauty compensates for the absence of such grandeur.</p> + + <p>The Genesee, the principal natural feature of its district, + rises on the <i>Grand Plateau</i> or table-land of Western + Pennsylvania, runs through New York, and flows into Lake + Ontario, at Port Genesee, six miles below Rochester. At the + distance of six miles from its mouth are falls of 96 feet, and + one mile higher up, other falls of 75 feet.<a id="footnotetag1" + name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a> + Above <span class="pagenum"><a name="page98" + id="page98"></a>[pg 98]</span> these it is navigable for + boats nearly 70 miles, where are other two falls, of 60 and + 90 feet, one mile apart, in Nunda, south of Leicester. At + the head of the Genesee is a tract six miles square, + embracing waters, some of which flow into the gulf of + Mexico, others into Chesapeake Bay, and others into the Gulf + of St. Lawrence. This tract is probably elevated 1,600 or + 1,700 feet above the tide waters of the Atlantic Ocean.</p> + + <p>The Engraving includes the falls of the river, with the + village of Rochester, seven miles south of Lake Ontario. This + place, for population, extent, and trade, will soon rank among + the American cities: it was not settled until about the close + of the last war; its progress was slow until the year 1820, + from which period it has rapidly improved. In 1830 it contained + upwards of 12,000 inhabitants: the first census of the village + was taken in December, 1815, when the number of inhabitants was + three hundred and thirty-one. The aqueduct which takes the Erie + canal across the river forms a prominent object of interest to + all travellers. It is of hewn stone, containing eleven arches + of 50 feet span: its length is 800 feet, but a considerable + part of each end is hidden from view by mills erected since its + construction.</p> + + <p>On the brink of the island which separates the main stream + of the river from that produced by the waste water from the + mill-race, will be seen <i>a scaffold or platform</i> from + which an eccentric but courageous adventurer, named <i>Sam + Patch</i>, made a desperate leap into the gulf beneath. Patch + had obtained some celebrity in freaks of this description, + though his feats be not recorded, like the hot-brained + patriotism of Marcus Curtius in olden history. At the fall of + Niagara, Patch had before made two leaps in safety—one of + 80 and the other of 130 feet, in a vast gulf, foaming and tost + aloft from the commotion produced by a fall of nearly 200 feet. + In November, 1829, Patch visited Rochester to astonish the + citizens by a leap from the falls. His first attempt was + successful, and in the presence of thousands of spectators he + leaped from the scaffold to which we have directed the + attention of the reader, a distance of 100 feet, into the + abyss, in safety. He was advertised to repeat the feat in a few + days, or, as he prophetically announced it his "last jump," + meaning his last jump that season. The scaffold was duly + erected, 25 feet in height, and Patch, an hour after the time + was announced, made his appearance. A multitude had collected + to witness the feat; the day was unusually cold, and Sam was + intoxicated. The river was low, and the falls near him on + either side were bare. Sam threw himself off, and the waters + (to quote the bathos of a New York newspaper) "received him in + their cold embrace. The tide bubbled as the life left the body, + and then the stillness of death, indeed, sat upon the bosom of + the waters." His body was found past the spring at the mouth of + the river, seven miles below where he made his fatal leap. It + had passed over two falls of 125 feet combined, yet was not + much injured. A black handkerchief taken from his neck while on + the scaffold, and tied about the body, was still there. He is + stated to have had perfect command of himself while in the air; + and, says the journalist already quoted, "had he not been given + to habits of intoxication, he might have astonished the world, + perhaps for years, with the greatest feats ever performed by + man."</p> + + <p>The Genesee river waters one of the finest tracts of land in + the state of New York. Its alluvial flats are extensive, and + very fertile. These are either natural prairies, or Indian + clearings, (of which, however, the present Indians have no + tradition,) and lying, to an extent of many thousand acres, + between the villages of Genesee, Moscow, and Mount Morris, + which now crown the declivities of their surrounding uplands; + and, contrasting their smooth verdure with the shaggy hills + that bound the horizon, and their occasional clumps of + spreading trees, with the tall and naked relics of the forest, + nothing can be more agreeable to the eye, long accustomed to + the uninterrupted prospect of a level and wooded country.</p> + <hr /> + + <h3>SONG FROM THE ALBUM OF A POET.</h3> + + <h4><i>By G.R. Carter.</i></h4> + + <center>THE HOMEWARD VOYAGE.</center> + + <div class="poem"> + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Away o'er the dancing wave,</p> + + <p class="i2">Like the wings of the white seamew;</p> + + <p>How proudly the hearts of the youthful brave</p> + + <p class="i2">Their dreams of bliss renew!</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>And as on the pathless deep,</p> + + <p class="i2">The bark by the gale is driven,</p> + + <p>How glorious it is with the stars to keep</p> + + <p class="i2">A watch on the beautiful heaven.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>The winds o'er the ocean bear</p> + + <p class="i2">Rich fragrance from the flow'rs,</p> + + <p>That bloom on the sward, and sparkle there</p> + + <p class="i2">Like stars in their dark blue bow'rs.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>The visions of those that sail</p> + + <p class="i2">O'er the wave with its snow-white + foam,</p> + + <p>Are haunted with scenes of the beauteous vale</p> + + <p class="i2">That encloses their peaceful home.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>They have wander'd through groves of the west,</p> + + <p class="i2">Illumed with the fire-flies' light;</p> + + <p>But their native land kindles a charm in each + breast,</p> + + <p class="i2">Unwaken'd by regions more bright.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>The haunts that were dear to the heart</p> + + <p class="i2">As an exquisite dream of romance,</p> + + <p>Strew thoughts, like sweet flow'rs, round its + holiest part,</p> + + <p class="i2">And their fancy-bound spirits + entrance.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Then away with the fluttering sail!</p> + + <p class="i2">And away with the bounding wave!</p> + + <p>While the musical sounds of the ocean-gale</p> + + <p class="i2">Are wafted around the brave!</p> + </div> + </div> + <hr class="full" /> + + <p>Ray wittily observes that an obscure and prolix author may + not improperly be compared to a Cuttle-fish, since he may be + said to hide himself under his own ink.</p> + <hr class="full" /> + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page99" + id="page99"></a>[pg 99]</span> + + <h3>LINES</h3> + + <h3>FROM THE GERMAN OF KÖRNER.</h3> + + <h4><i>Written on the morning of the Battle of + Dänneberg.</i></h4> + + <div class="poem"> + <div class="stanza"> + <p class="i2">Doubt-beladen, dim and hoary,</p> + + <p class="i4">O'er us breaks the mighty day,</p> + + <p class="i2">And the sunbeam, cold and gory,</p> + + <p class="i4">Lights us on our fearful way.</p> + + <p class="i2">In the womb of coming hours,</p> + + <p class="i4">Destinies of empires lie,</p> + + <p class="i2">Now the scale ascends, now lowers,</p> + + <p class="i4">Now is thrown the noble die.</p> + + <p>Brothers, the hour with warning is rife;</p> + + <p>Faithful in death as you're faithful in life,</p> + + <p class="i2">Be firm, and be bound by the holiest + tie,</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p class="i2">In the shadows of the night,</p> + + <p class="i4">Lie behind us shame and scorn;</p> + + <p class="i2">Lies the slave's exulting might,</p> + + <p class="i4">Who the German oak has torn.</p> + + <p class="i2">Speech disgrac'd in future story,</p> + + <p class="i4">Shrines polluted (shall it be?)</p> + + <p class="i2">To dishonour pledg'd our glory,</p> + + <p class="i4">German brothers, set it free.</p> + + <p>Brothers, your hands, let your vengeance be + burning,</p> + + <p>By your actions, the curses of heaven be + turning,</p> + + <p class="i2">On, on, set your country's Palladium + free.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p class="i2">Hope, the brightest, is before us,</p> + + <p class="i4">And the future's golden time,</p> + + <p class="i2">Joys, which heaven will restore us,</p> + + <p class="i4">Freedom's holiness sublime.</p> + + <p class="i2">German bards and artists' powers,</p> + + <p class="i4">Woman's truth, and fond caress,</p> + + <p class="i2">Fame eternal shall be ours,</p> + + <p class="i4">Beauty's smile our toils shall bless.</p> + + <p>Yet 'tis a deed that the bravest might shake,</p> + + <p>Life and our heart's blood are set on the stake;</p> + + <p class="i2">Death alone points out the road to + success.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p class="i2">God! united we will dare it;</p> + + <p class="i4">Firm this heart shall meet its fate,</p> + + <p class="i2">To the altar thus I bear it,</p> + + <p class="i4">And my coming doom await.</p> + + <p class="i2">Fatherland, for thee we perish,</p> + + <p class="i4">At thy fell command 'tis done,</p> + + <p class="i2">May our loved ones ever cherish</p> + + <p class="i4">Freedom, which our blood has won.</p> + + <p>Liberty, grow o'er each oak-shadow'd plain,</p> + + <p>Grow o'er the tombs of thy warriors slain,</p> + + <p class="i2">Fatherland, hear thou the oath we have + sworn.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p class="i2">Brothers, towards your hearts' best + treasures,</p> + + <p class="i4">Cast one look, on earth the last,</p> + + <p class="i2">Turn then from those once prized + pleasures,</p> + + <p class="i4">Wither'd by the hostile blast.</p> + + <p class="i2">Though your eyes be dim with weeping,</p> + + <p class="i4">Tears like these are not from fear,</p> + + <p class="i2">Trust to God's own holy keeping,</p> + + <p class="i4">With your last kiss, all that's dear.</p> + + <p>All lips that pray for us, all hearts that we + rend</p> + + <p>With parting, O father, to thee we commend,</p> + + <p class="i2">Protect them and shield them from wrongs + and despair.</p> + + + </div> + </div> + <p>H.</p> + + <hr /> + + <h3>EQUANIMITY OF TEMPER.</h3> + + <p>Goodness of temper may be defined, to use the happy imagery + of Gray, "as the sunshine of the heart." It is a more valuable + bosom-attendant under the pressure of poverty and adversity, + and when we are approaching the confines of infirmity and old + age, than when we are revelling in the full tide of plenty, + amid the exuberant strength and freshness of youth. Lord Bacon, + who has analyzed some of the human accompaniments so well, is + silent as to the softening sway and pleasing influence of this + choice attuner of the human mind. But Shaftesbury, the + illustrious author of the <i>Characteristics</i>, was so + enamoured of it, that he terms "gravity (its counterpart,) the + essence of imposture;" and so it is, for to what purpose does a + man store his brain with knowledge, and the profitable burden + of the sciences, if he gathers only superciliousness and pride + from the hedge of learning? instead of the milder traits of + general affection, and the open qualities of social feelings. I + remember, when a youth, I was extremely fond of attending the + House of Commons, to hear the debates; and I shall never forget + the repulsive loftiness which I thought marked the physiognomy + of Pitt; harsh and unbending, like a settled frost, he seemed + wrapped in the mantle of egotism and sublunary conceit; and it + was from the uninviting expression of this great man's + countenance, that I first drew my conceptions as to how a proud + and unsociable man looked. With very different emotions I was + wont to survey the mild but expressive features of his great + opponent, Fox: there was a placidity mixed up with the graver + lines of thought and reflection, that would have invited a + child to take him by the hand; indeed, the witchcraft of Mr. + Fox's temper was such, that it formed a triumphant source of + gratulation in the circle of his friends, from the panegyric of + the late Earl of Carlisle, during his boyish days at Eton, to + the prouder posthumous circles of fame with which the elegant + author of <i>The Pleasures of Memory</i>, has entwined his + sympathetic recollections. The late Mr. Whitbread, although an + unflinching advocate for the people's rights, and an + incorruptible patriot in the true sense of the word, was + unpopular in his office as a country magistrate, owing to a + tone of severity he generally used to those around him. The + wife of that indefatigable toiler in the Christian field, John + Wesley, was so acid and acrimonious in her temper, that that + mild advocate for spiritual affection, found it impossible to + live with her. Rousseau was tormented by such a host of + ungovernable passions, that he became a burden to himself and + to every one around him. Lord Byron suffered a badness of + temper to corrode him in the flower of his days. Contrasted + with this unpleasing part of the perspective, let us quote the + names of a few wise and good men, who have been proverbial for + the goodness of their tempers; as Shakspeare, Francis I., and + Henry IV. of France; "the great and good Lord Lyttleton," as he + is called to the present day; John Howard, Goldsmith, Sir + Samuel Romilly, Franklin, Thomson, the poet, + Sheridan,<a id="footnotetag2" + name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a> + and Sir Walter Scott. The late Sir William Curtis was known + to be one of the best tempered men of his day, which made + him a great favourite with the late king. I remember a + little incident of Sir William's good-nature, which occurred + about a year <span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" + id="page100"></a>[pg 100]</span> after he had been Lord + Mayor. In alighting from his carriage, a little out of the + regular line, near the Mansion House, upon some day of + festivity, he happened inadvertently, with the skirts of his + coat, to brush down a few apples from a poor woman's stall, + on the side of the pavement. Sir William was in full dress, + but instead of passing on with the hauteur which + characterizes so many of his aldermanic brethren, he set + himself to the task of assisting the poor creature to + collect her scattered fruit; and on parting, observing some + of her apples were a little soiled by the dirt, he drew his + hand from his pocket and generously gave her a shilling. + This was too good an incident for John Bull to lose: a crowd + assembled, hurraed, and cried out, "Well done, Billy," at + which the good-natured baronet looked back and laughed. How + much more pleasing is it to tell of such demeanour than of + the foolish pride of the late Sir John Eamer, who turned + away one of his travellers merely because he had in one + instance used his bootjack.</p> + + <h4><i>The author of "A Tradesman's Lays."</i></h4> + <hr class="full" /> + + <p>Probably our correspondent may recollect Sir William and the + orange, at one of the contested City elections. A "greasy + rogue" before the hustings, seeing the baronet candidate take + an orange from his pocket, <i>put up</i> for the fruit, with + the cry "Give us that orange, Billy." Sir William threw him the + fruit, which the fellow had no sooner sucked dry, than he began + bawling with increased energy, "No Curtis," "No Billy," &c. + Such an ungrateful act would have soured even Seneca; but Sir + William merely gave a smile, with a good-natured shake of the + head. Sir William Curtis possessed a much greater share of + shrewdness and good sense than the vulgar ever gave him credit + for. At the Sessions' dinners, he would keep up the ball of + conversation with the judges and gentlemen of the bar, in a + fuller vein than either of his brother aldermen. It is true + that he had wealth and distinction, all which his fellow + citizens at table did not enjoy; and these possessions, we + know, are wonderful helps to confidence, if they do not lead + the holder on to assurance.—Ed. M.</p> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h2>The Sketch Book.</h2> + <hr /> + + <h3>EXTRACTS FROM THE ORIGINAL LETTERS OF AN OFFICER IN + INDIA.<a id="footnotetag3" + name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a></h3> + + <h4><i>The Sight of a Tiger.</i><a id="footnotetag4" + name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a></h4> + + <h4>Secunderabad, 1828.</h4> + + <p>A short time since, a brother sub. in my regiment was riding + out round some hills adjoining the cantonment, when a + <i>cheetar</i>, small tiger (or panther,) pounced on his dog. + Seeing his poor favourite in the cheetar's mouth, like a mouse + in Minette's, he put spurs to his horse, rode after the beast, + and so frightened him, that he dropped the dog and made off. + Three of us, including myself, then agreed to sit up that + night, and watch for the tiger, feeling assured that his haunt + was not far from our cantonment. So we started late at night, + armed <i>cap-à-pied</i>, and each as fierce in heart as + ten tigers; arrived at the appointed spot, and having selected + a convenient place for concealment, we picketed a sheep, + brought with us purposely to entice the cheetar from his lair. + Singular to relate, this poor animal, as if instinctively aware + of its critical situation, was as mute as if it had been + mouthless, and during two or three hours in which we tormented + it, to make it utter a cry, our efforts were of no avail. Hour + after hour slipped away, still no cheetar; and about three + o'clock in the morning, wearied with our fruitless vigil, we + all began to drop asleep. I believe I was wrapped in a most + leaden slumber, and dreaming of anything but watching for, and + hunting tigers, when I was aroused by the most unnatural, + unearthly, and infernal roaring ever heard. This was our + friend, and for his reception, starting upon our feet, we were + all immediately ready; but the cunning creature who had no idea + of becoming our victim, made off, with the most hideous + howlings, to the shelter of a neighbouring eminence; when + sufficient daylight appeared, we followed the direction of his + voice, and had the felicity of seeing him perched on the summit + of an immense high rock, just before us, placidly watching our + movements. We were here, too far from him to venture a shot, + but immediately began ascending, when the creature seeing us + approach, rose, opened his ugly red mouth in a desperate yawn, + and stretched himself with the utmost <i>nonchalance</i>, + being, it seems, little less weary than ourselves. We + presented, but did not fire, because at that very moment, + setting up his tail, and howling horribly, he disappeared + behind the rock. Quick as thought we followed him, but to our + great disappointment and chagrin, he had retreated into one of + the numerous caverns formed in that ugly place, by huge masses + of rock, piled one upon the other. Into some of these dangerous + places, however, we descended, sometimes creeping, sometimes + walking, in search of our foe; but not finding him, at length + returned to breakfast, which I thought the most agreeable and + sensible part of the affair. Some wit passed amongst us + respecting the propriety of changing the name <i>cheetar</i>, + into <i>cheat-us</i>; but were, on the whole, not pleased by + the failure of our expedition; and I have + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" + id="page101"></a>[pg 101]</span> only favoured you with this + <i>romantic</i> incident in the life of a sub. as a specimen + of the sort of amusement we meet with in quarters.</p> + + <p><i>Natural Zoological Garden</i>.</p> + + <p>Secunderabad, 1828.</p> + + <p>Your description of the London Zoological Garden, reminds me + that there is, what I suppose I must term, a most beautiful + <i>Zoological Hill</i>, just one mile and a half from the spot + whence I now write; on this I often take my recreation, much to + the alarm of its inhabitants; viz. sundry cheetars, + bore-butchers, (or leopards) hyenas, wolves, jackalls, foxes, + hares, partridges, etc.; but not being a very capital shot, I + have seldom made much devastation amongst them. Under the hill + are swamps and paddy-fields, which abound in snipe and other + game. Now, is not this a Zoological Garden on the grandest + scale?</p> + + <h4>H.C.B.</h4> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h2>Old Poets.</h2> + <hr /> + + <h3>BALLAD OF AGINCOURT.</h3> + + <h4><i>(From "England's Heroical Epistles<a id="footnotetag5" + name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a>.")</i></h4> + + <div class="poem"> + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Faire stood the wind for France,</p> + + <p>When we, our sayles advance,</p> + + <p>Nor now to proue our chance</p> + + <p class="i2">Longer will tarry;</p> + + <p>But putting to the mayne,</p> + + <p>At Kaux, the mouth of Sene,</p> + + <p>With all his martiall trayne,</p> + + <p class="i2">Landed King Harry.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>And taking many a fort,</p> + + <p>Furnished in warlike sort,</p> + + <p>Marcheth towards Agincourt,</p> + + <p class="i2">In happy houre.</p> + + <p>Skirmishing day by day,</p> + + <p>With those that stop'd his way,</p> + + <p>Where the French gen'ral lay</p> + + <p class="i2">With all his power.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Which in his hight of pride.</p> + + <p>King Henry to deride,</p> + + <p>His ransom to prouide,</p> + + <p class="i2">To our king sending.</p> + + <p>Which he neglects the while,</p> + + <p>As from a nation vile,</p> + + <p>Yet with an angry smile,</p> + + <p class="i2">Their fall portending.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>And turning to his men,</p> + + <p>Quoth our brave Henry, then,</p> + + <p>"Though they to one be ten,</p> + + <p class="i2">Be not amazed,</p> + + <p>Yet have we well begunne,</p> + + <p>Battells so bravely wonne,</p> + + <p>Have ever to the sonne,</p> + + <p class="i2">By fame beene raysed."</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>"And for myself," quoth he,</p> + + <p>"This my full rest shall be,</p> + + <p>England ne'er mourn for me,</p> + + <p class="i2">Nor more esteem me.</p> + + <p>Victor I will remaine,</p> + + <p>Or on this earth be slaine,</p> + + <p>Never shall shee sustaine</p> + + <p class="i2">Losse to redeeme me."</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Poiters and Cressy tell,</p> + + <p>When most their pride did swell,</p> + + <p>Under our swords they fell.</p> + + <p class="i2">No lesse our skill is,</p> + + <p>Then when oure grandsire great,</p> + + <p>Clayming the regall seate,</p> + + <p>By many a warlike feate,</p> + + <p class="i2">Lop'd the French lillies.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>The Duke of York so dread,</p> + + <p>The vaward led,</p> + + <p>Wich the maine Henry sped,</p> + + <p class="i2">Amongst his Hench<i>men</i>,</p> + + <p>Excester had the rere,</p> + + <p>A brauer man not there,</p> + + <p>O Lord, how hot they were,</p> + + <p class="i2">On the false Frenchmen.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>They now to fight are gone,</p> + + <p>Armour on armour shone,</p> + + <p>Drumme now to drumme did grone,</p> + + <p class="i2">To hear was wonder,</p> + + <p>That with cryes they make,</p> + + <p>The very earth did shake,</p> + + <p class="i2">Thunder to thunder.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Well it thine age became</p> + + <p>O noble Erpingham,</p> + + <p>Which didst the signall ayme,</p> + + <p class="i2">To our hid forces;</p> + + <p>When from a meadow by,</p> + + <p>Like a storme suddenly,</p> + + <p>The English archery</p> + + <p class="i2">Struck the French horses.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>With Spanish Ewgh so strong,</p> + + <p>Arrowes a cloth yard long,</p> + + <p>That like to serpents stung,</p> + + <p class="i2">Piercing the weather.</p> + + <p>None from his fellow starts,</p> + + <p>But playing manly parts,</p> + + <p>And like true English hearts,</p> + + <p class="i2">Stuck close together.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>When downe their bowes they threw,</p> + + <p>And forth their bilbowes drew,</p> + + <p>And on the French they flew,</p> + + <p class="i2">Not one was tardie;</p> + + <p>Armes were from shoulders sent,</p> + + <p>Scalpes to the teeth were rent,</p> + + <p>Down the French pesants went,</p> + + <p class="i2">Our men were hardie.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>This while oure noble king,</p> + + <p>His broad sword brandishing,</p> + + <p>Downe the French host did ding,</p> + + <p class="i2">As to o'erwhelme it.</p> + + <p>And many a deep wound lent,</p> + + <p>His armes with bloud besprent,</p> + + <p>And many a cruel dent</p> + + <p class="i2">Bruised his helmet.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Glo'ster, that duke so good,</p> + + <p>Next of the royal blood,</p> + + <p>For famous England stood,</p> + + <p class="i2">With his braue brother,</p> + + <p>Clarence, in steele so bright,</p> + + <p>Though but a maiden knight.</p> + + <p>Yet in that furious light</p> + + <p class="i2">Scarce such another.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Warwick, in bloud did wade,</p> + + <p>Oxford, the foe inuade,</p> + + <p>And cruel slaughter made;</p> + + <p class="i2">Still as they ran up,</p> + + <p>Suffolk, his axe did ply,</p> + + <p>Beavmont and Willovghby,</p> + + <p class="i2">Ferres and Tanhope.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Upon Saint Crispin's day,</p> + + <p>Fought was this noble fray,</p> + + <p>Which fame did not delay,</p> + + <p class="i2">To England to carry.</p> + + <p>O when shall English men,</p> + + <p>With such acts fill a pen,</p> + + <p>Or England breed againe</p> + + <p class="i2">Such a King Harry.</p> + </div> + </div> + <hr class="full" /> + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page102" + id="page102"></a>[pg 102]</span> + + <h2>Spirit of Discovery</h2> + <hr /> + + <h3>AMERICAN IMPROVEMENTS.</h3> + + <p>[The very recent publication of the ninth volume of the + Encyclopaedia Americana<a id="footnotetag6" + name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a> + enables us to lay before our readers the following + interesting notices, connected with the national weal and + internal economy of the United States of North America.]</p> + + <p><i>Navy</i>.—Since the late war, the growth and + improvement of our navy has kept pace with our national + prosperity. We could now put to sea, in a few mouths, with a + dozen ships of the line; the most spacious, efficient, best, + and most beautiful constructions that ever traversed the ocean. + This is not merely an American conceit, but an admitted fact in + Europe, where our models are studiously copied. In the United + States, a maximum and uniform calibre of cannon has been lately + determined on and adopted. Instead of the variety of length, + form, and calibre still used in other navies, and almost equal + to the Great Michael with her "bassils, mynards, hagters, + culverings, flings, falcons, double dogs, and pestilent + serpenters," our ships offer flush and uniform decks, sheers + free from hills, hollows, and excrescences, and complete, + unbroken batteries of thirty-two or forty-two pounders. Thus + has been realized an important desideratum—the greatest + possible power to do execution coupled with the greatest + simplification of the means.</p> + + <p>But, while we have thus improved upon the hitherto practised + means of naval warfare, we are threatened with a total change. + This is by the introduction of bombs, discharged horizontally, + instead of shot from common cannon. So certain are those who + have turned their attention to this subject that the change + must take place, that, in France, they are already speculating + on the means of excluding these destructive missiles from a + ship's sides, by casing them in a cuirass of iron. Nor are + these ideas the mere offspring of idle speculation. Experiments + have been tried on hulks, by bombs projected horizontally, with + terrible effect. If the projectile lodged in a mast, in + exploding it overturned it, with all its yards and rigging; if + in the side, the ports were opened into each other; or, when + near the water, an immense chasm was opened, causing the vessel + to sink immediately. If it should not explode until it fell + spent upon deck, besides doing the injury of an ordinary ball, + it would then burst, scattering smoke, fire, and death, on + every side. When this comes to pass, it would seem that the + naval profession would cease to be very desirable. + Nevertheless, experience has, in all ages, shown that, the more + destructive are the engines used in war, and the more it is + improved and systematized, the less is the loss of life. + Salamis and Lepanto can either of them alone count many times + the added victims of the Nile, Trafalgar, and Navarino.</p> + + <p>One effect of the predicted change in naval war, it is said, + will be the substitution of small vessels for the larger ones + now in use. The three decker presents many times the surface of + the schooner, while her superior number of cannon does not + confer a commensurate advantage; for ten bombs, projected into + the side of a ship, would be almost as efficacious to her + destruction as a hundred. As forming part of a system of + defence for our coast, the bomb-cannon, mounted on steamers, + which can take their position at will, would be terribly + formidable. With them—to say nothing of torpedoes and + submarine navigation—we need never more be blockaded and + annoyed as formerly. Hence peaceful nations will be most + gainers by this change of system; but it is not enough that we + should be capable of raising a blockade: we are a commercial + people: our merchant ships visit every sea, and our men-of-war + must follow and protect them there.</p> + + <p><i>Newspapers</i>.—No country has so many newspapers + as the United States. The following table, arranged for the + American Almanac of 1830, is corrected from the Traveller, and + contains a statement of the number of newspapers published in + the colonies at the commencement of the revolution; and also + the number of newspapers and other periodical works, in the + United States, in 1810 and 1828.</p> + <pre> + STATES. 1775. 1810. 1828. + Maine 29 + Massachusetts 7 32 78 + New Hampshire 1 12 17 + Vermont 14 21 + Rhode Island 2 7 14 + Connecticut 4 11 33 + New York 4 66 161 + New Jersey 8 22 + Pennsylvania 9 71 185 + Delaware 2 4 + Maryland 2 21 37 + District of Columbia 6 9 + Virginia 2 23 34 + North Carolina 2 10 20 + South Carolina 3 10 16 + Georgia 1 13 18 + Florida 1 2 + Alabama 10 + Mississippi 4 6 + Louisiana 10 9 + Tennessee 6 8 + Kentucky 17 23 + Ohio 14 66 + Indiana 17 + Michigan 2 + Illinois 4 + Missouri 5 + Arkansas 1 + Cherokee Nation 1 + + Total 37 358 802 +</pre> + + <p>The present number, however, amounts to about a thousand. + Thus the state of New <span class="pagenum"><a name="page103" + id="page103"></a>[pg 103]</span> York is mentioned in the + table as having 161 newspapers; but a late publication + states that there are 193, exclusive of religious journals. + New York has 1,913,508 inhabitants. There are about 50 daily + newspapers in the United States, two-thirds of which are + considered to give a fair profit. The North American + colonies, in the year 1720, had only seven newspapers: in + 1810, the United States had 359; in 1826, they had 640; in + 1830, 1,000, with a population of 13,000,000; so that they + have more newspapers than the whole 190 millions of + Europe.</p> + + <p>In drawing a comparison between the newspapers of the three + freest countries, France, England, and the United States, we + find, as we have just said, those of the last country to be the + most numerous, while some of the French papers have the largest + subscription; and the whole establishment of a first-rate + London paper is the most complete. Its activity is immense. + When Canning sent British troops to Portugal, in 1826, we know + that some papers sent reporters with the army. The zeal of the + New York papers also deserves to be mentioned, which send out + their news-boats, even fifty miles to sea, to board approaching + vessels, and obtain the news that they bring. The papers of the + large Atlantic cities are also remarkable for their detailed + accounts of arrivals, and the particulars of shipping news, + interesting to the commercial world, in which they are much + more minute than the English. From the immense number of + different papers in the United States, it results that the + number of subscribers to each is limited, 2,000 being + considered a respectable list. One paper, therefore, is not + able to unite the talent of many able men, as is the case in + France. There men of the first rank in literature or politics + occasionally, or at regular periods, contribute articles. In + the United States, few papers have more than one editor, who + generally writes upon almost all subjects himself. This + circumstance necessarily makes the papers less spirited and + able than some of the foreign journals, but is attended with + this advantage, that no particular set of men is enabled to + exercise a predominant influence by means of these periodicals. + Their abundance neutralizes their effects. Declamation and + sophistry are made comparatively harmless by running in a + thousand conflicting currents.</p> + + <p><i>Paper-making</i>.—The manufacture of paper has of + late rapidly increased in the United States. According to an + estimate in 1829, the whole quantity made in this country + amounted to about five to seven millions a year, and employed + from ten to eleven thousand persons. Rags are not imported from + Italy and Germany to the same amount as formerly, because + people here save them more carefully; and the value of the + rags, junk, &c., saved annually in the United States, is + believed to amount to two millions of dollars. Machines for + making paper of any length are much employed in the United + States. The quality of American paper has also improved; but, + as paper becomes much better by keeping, it is difficult to + have it of the best quality in this country, the interest of + capital being too high. The paper used here for printing + compares very disadvantageously with that of England. Much + wrapping paper is now made of straw, and paper for tracing + through is prepared in Germany from the poplar tree. A letter + of Mr. Brand, formerly a civil officer in Upper Provence, in + France (which contains many pine forests), dated Feb. 12, 1830, + has been published in the French papers, containing an account + of his successful experiments to make coarse paper of the pine + tree. The experiments of others have led to the same results. + Any of our readers, interested in this subject, can find Mr. + Brand's letter in the <i>Courrier Francais</i> of Nov. 27, + 1830, a French paper published in New York. In salt-works near + Hull, Massachusetts, in which the sea-water is made to flow + slowly over sheds of pine, in order to evaporate, the writer + found large quantities of a white substance—the fibres of + the pine wood dissolved and carried off by the + brine—which seemed to require nothing but glue to convert + it into paper.</p> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h2>The Naturalist</h2> + <hr /> + + <h3>THE CUTTLE-FISH</h3> + + <p>Is one of the most curious creatures of "the watery + kingdom." It is popularly termed a fish, though it is, in fact, + a worm, belonging to the order termed <i>Mollusca, + (Molluscus</i>, soft,) from the body being of a pulpy substance + and having no skeleton. It differs in many respects from other + animals of its class, particularly with regard to its internal + structure, the perfect formation of the viscera, eyes, and even + organs of hearing. Moreover, "it has three hearts, two of which + are placed at the root of the two branchiae (or gills); they + receive the blood from the body, and propel it into the + branchiae. The returning veins open into the middle heart, from + which the aorta proceeds."<a id="footnotetag7" + name="footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a> + Of Cuttle-fish there are several species. That represented + in the annexed Cut is the common or officinal Cuttle-fish, + (<i>Sepia officinalis</i>, Lin). It consists of a soft, + pulpy, body, with processes or arms, which are furnished + with small holes or suckers, by means of which the animal + fixes itself in the manner of cupping-glasses. These holes + increase with the age of the animal; and in some species + amount to upwards of one thousand. + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page104" + id="page104"></a>[pg 104]</span> The arms are often torn or + nipped off by shell or other fishes, but the animal has the + power of speedily reproducing the limbs. By means of the + suckers the Cuttle-fish usually affects its locomotion. "It + swims at freedom in the bosom of the sea, moving by sudden + and irregular jerks, the body being nearly in a + perpendicular position, and the head directed downwards and + backwards. Some species have a fleshy, muscular fin on each + side, by aid of which they accomplish these apparently + inconvenient motions; but, at least, an equal number of them + are finless, and yet can swim with perhaps little less + agility. Lamarck, indeed, denies this, and says that these + can only trail themselves along the bottom by means of the + suckers. This is probably their usual mode of proceeding; + that it is not their only one, we have the positive + affirmation of other observers."<a id="footnotetag8" + name="footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a> + Serviceable as these arms undoubtedly are to the + Cuttle-fish, Blumenbach thinks it questionable whether they + can be considered as organs of touch, in the more limited + sense to which he has confined that + term.<a id="footnotetag9" + name="footnotetag9"></a><a href="#footnote9"><sup>9</sup></a></p> + + + <div class="figcenter" + style="width:50%; float: left;"> + <a href="images/562-2.png"><img width="100%" + src="images/562-2.png" + alt="" /></a> + + <h3><i>The Cuttle-fish.</i></h3> + </div> + + + <p>The jaws of the Cuttle-fish, it should be observed, are + fixed in the body because there is no head to which they can be + articulated. They are of horny substance, and resemble the bill + of a parrot. They are in the centre of the under part of the + body, surrounded by the arms. By means of these parts, the + shell-fish which are taken for food, are completely + triturated.</p> + + <p>We now come to the most peculiar parts of the structure of + the Cuttle-fish, viz. the <i>ear and eye</i>, inasmuch as it is + the only animal of its class, in which any thing has hitherto + been discovered, at all like an organ of hearing, or that has + been shown to possess true eyes.<a id="footnotetag10" + name="footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10"><sup>10</sup></a> + The ears consist of two oval cavities, in the cartilaginous + ring, to which the large arms of the animal are affixed. In + each of these is a small bag, containing a bony substance, + and receiving the termination of the nerves, like those of + the vestibulum (or cavity in the bone of the ear) in fishes. + The nature of the eyes cannot be disputed. "They resemble, + on the whole, those of red-blooded animals, particularly + fishes; they are at least incomparably more like them than + the eyes of any known insects; yet they are distinguished by + several extraordinary peculiarities. The front of the + eye-ball is covered with a loose membrane instead of a + cornea; the iris is composed of a firm substance; and a + process projects from the upper margin of the pupil, which + gives that membrane a semilunar form."<a id="footnotetag11" + name="footnotetag11"></a><a href="#footnote11"><sup>11</sup></a> + The exterior coat or ball is remarkably strong, so as to + seem almost calcareous, and is, when taken out, of a + brilliant pearl colour; it is worn in some parts of Italy, + and in the Grecian islands by way of artificial pearl in + necklaces.</p> + + <p>Next we may notice the curious provision by which the + Cuttle-fish is enabled to elude the pursuit of its enemies in + the "vasty deep." This consists of a black, inky fluid, + (erroneously supposed to be the bile,) which is contained in a + bag beneath the body. The fluid itself is thick, but miscible + with water to such a degree, that a very small quantity will + colour a vast bulk of water.<a id="footnotetag12" + name="footnotetag12"></a><a href="#footnote12"><sup>12</sup></a> + Thus, the comparatively small Cuttle-fish may darken the + element about the acute eye of the whale. What omniscience + is displayed in this single provision, as well as in the + faculty possessed by the Cuttle-fish of reproducing its + mutilated arms! All Nature beams with such beneficence, and + abounds with such instances of divine love for every + creature, however humble: in observing these provisions, how + often are we reminded of the benefits conferred by the same + omniscience upon our own species. It is thus, by the + investigation of natural history, that we are led to the + contemplation of the sublimest subjects; thus that man with + God himself holds converse.</p> + + + <div class="figcenter" + style="width:50%; float: right;"> + <a href="images/562-3.png"><img width="100%" + src="images/562-3.png" + alt="" /></a> + + <h3>"Bone," or plate.</h3> + </div> + + + <p>The "bone" of the Cuttle-fish now claims attention. This is + a complicated calcareous plate, lodged in a peculiar cavity of + the back, which it materially strengthens. This plate has long + been known in the shop of the apothecary under the name of + Cuttle-fish bone: an observant reader may have noticed scores + of these plates in glasses labelled <i>Os Sepiae</i>. + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page105" + id="page105"></a>[pg 105]</span> Reduced to powder, they + were formerly used as an absorbent, but they are now chiefly + sought after for the purpose of polishing the softer metals. + It is however improper to call this plate bone, since, in + composition, "it is exactly similar to <i>shell</i>, and + consists of various membranes, hardened by carbonate of + lime, (the principal material of shell,) without the + smallest mixture of phosphate of lime,<a id="footnotetag13" + name="footnotetag13"></a><a href="#footnote13"><sup>13</sup></a> + (or the chief material of bone.)</p> + + + <div class="figcenter" + style="width:50%; float: left;"> + <a href="images/562-4.png"><img width="100%" + src="images/562-4.png" + alt="" /></a> + + <h3>Eggs.</h3> + </div> + + + <p>Lastly, are the <i>ovaria</i>, or egg-bags of the + Cuttle-fish, which are popularly called <i>sea-grapes</i>. The + female fish deposits her eggs in numerous clusters, on the + stalks of fuci, on corals, about the projecting sides of rocks, + or on any other convenient substances. These eggs, which are of + the size of small filberts, are of a black colour.</p> + + <p>The most remarkable species of Cuttle-fish inhabits the + British seas; and, although seldom taken, its bone or plate is + cast ashore on different parts of the coast from the south of + England to the Zetland Isles. We have picked up scores of these + plates and bunches of the egg-bags or grapes, after rough + weather on the beach between Worthing and Rottingdean; but we + never found a single fish.</p> + + <p>The Cuttle-fish was esteemed a delicacy by the ancients, and + the moderns equally prize it. Captain Cook speaks highly of a + soup he made from it; and the fish is eaten at the present day + by the Italians, and by the Greeks, during Lent. We take the + most edible species to be the <i>octopodia</i>, or eight-armed, + found particularly large in the East Indies and the Gulf of + Mexico. The common species here figured, when full-grown, + measures about two feet in length, is of a pale blueish brown + colour, with the skin marked by numerous dark purple + specks.</p> + + <p>The Cuttle-fish is described by some naturalists, as naked + or shell-less. It is often found attached to the shell of the + Paper Nautilus, which it is said to use as a sail. It is, + however, very doubtful whether the Cuttle-fish has a shell of + its own. There is a controversy upon the subject. Aristotle, + and our contemporary, Home, maintain it to be parasitical: + Cuvier and Ferrusac, non-parasitical; but the curious reader + will find the <i>pro</i> and <i>con.</i>—the majority and + minority—in the <i>Magazine of Natural History</i>, vol. + iii. p. 535.</p> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h2>Notes of a Reader.</h2> + <hr /> + + <h3>SERVANTS IN INDIA.</h3> + + <p>[Captain Skinner, in his <i>Excursions in India</i>, makes + the following sensible observations on the tyranny over + servants in India:]</p> + + <p>There are throughout the mountains many of the sacred shrubs + of the Hindoos, which give great delight, as my servants fall + in with them. They pick the leaves; and running with them to + me, cry, "See, sir, see, our holy plants are here!" and + congratulate each other on having found some indication of a + better land than they are generally inclined to consider the + country of the Pariahs. The happiness these simple remembrances + shed over the whole party is so enlivening, that every distress + and fatigue seems to be forgotten. When we behold a servant + approaching with a sprig of the <i>Dona</i> in his hand, we + hail it as the olive-branch, that denotes peace and good-will + for the rest of the day, if, as must sometimes be the case, + they have been in any way interrupted.</p> + + <p>Even these little incidents speak so warmly in favour of the + Hindoo disposition, that, in spite of much that may be + uncongenial to an European in their character, they cannot fail + to inspire him with esteem, if not affection. I wish that many + of my countrymen would learn to believe that the natives are + endowed with feelings, and surely they may gather such an + inference from many a similar trait to the one I have related. + Hardness of heart can never be allied to artless simplicity: + that mind must possess a higher degree of sensibility and + refinement, that can unlock its long-confined recollections by + so light a spring as a wild flower.</p> + + <p>I have often witnessed, with wonder and sorrow, an English + gentleman stoop to the basest tyranny over his servants, + without even the poor excuse of anger, and frequently from no + other reason than because he could not understand their + language. The question, from the answer being unintelligible, + is instantly followed by a blow. Such scenes are becoming more + rare, and indeed are seldom acted but by the younger members of + society; they are too frequent notwithstanding: and should any + thing that has fallen from me here, induce the cruelly-disposed + to reflect a little upon the impropriety and mischief of their + conduct, when about to raise the hand against a native, and + save one stripe to the passive people who are so much at the + mercy of their masters' tempers, I shall indeed be proud.</p> + + <p>[Again, speaking of the condition of servants, Captain + Skinner remarks—]</p> + + <p>It is impossible to view some members of the despised class + without sorrow and pity, particularly those who are attached, + in the lowest offices, to the establishments of the + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page106" + id="page106"></a>[pg 106]</span> Europeans. They are the + most melancholy race of beings, always alone, and apparently + unhappy: they are scouted from the presence even of their + fellow-servants. None but the mind of a poet could imagine + such outcasts venturing to raise their thoughts to the + beauty of a Brahmin's daughter; and a touching tale in such + creative fancy, no doubt, it would make, for, from their + outward appearances, I do not perceive why they should not + be endowed with minds as sensitive at least as those of the + castes above them. There are among them some very stout and + handsome men; and it is ridiculous to see sometimes all + their strength devoted to the charge of a sickly + puppy;—to take care of dogs being their principal + occupation!</p> + + <p>Our attention has been drawn to the above passage in Captain + Skinner's work, by its ready illustration of the views and + conclusions of the late Dr. Knox, in his invaluable <i>Spirit + of Despotism</i>, Section 2, "Oriental manners, and the ideas + imbibed in youth, both in the East and West Indies, favourable + to the spirit of despotism." How forcibly applicable, on the + present occasion, is the following extract:—"from the + intercourse of England with the East and West Indies, it is to + be feared that something of a more servile spirit has been + derived than was known among those who established the free + constitutions of Europe, and than would have been adopted, or + patiently borne, in ages of virtuous simplicity. A very + numerous part of our countrymen spend their most susceptible + age in those countries, where despotic manners remarkably + prevail. They are themselves, when invested with office, + treated by the natives with an idolatrous degree of reverence, + which teaches them to expect a similar submission to their + will, on their return to their own country. They have been + accustomed to look up to personages greatly their superiors in + rank and riches, with awe; and to look down on their inferiors + in <i>property</i> with supreme contempt, as slaves of their + will and ministers of their luxury. Equal laws and equal + liberty at home appear to them saucy claims of the poor and the + vulgar, which tend to divest riches of one of the greatest + charms, over-bearing dominion. We do, indeed, import gorgeous + silks and luscious sweets from the Indies, but we import, at + the same time, the spirit of despotism, which adds deformity to + the purple robe, and bitterness to the honied beverage." "That + <i>Oriental</i> manners are unfavourable to liberty, is, I + believe, universally conceded. The natives of the East Indies + entertain not the idea of independence. They treat the + Europeans, who go among them to acquire their riches, with a + respect similar to the abject submission which they pay to + their native despots. Young men, who in England scarcely + possessed the rank of the gentry, are waited upon in India, + with more attentive servility than is paid or required in many + courts of Europe. Kings of England seldom assume the state + enjoyed by an East India governor, or even by subordinate + officers. Enriched at an early age, the adventurer returns to + England. His property admits him to the higher circles of + fashionable life. He aims at rivalling or excelling all the old + nobility in the splendour of his mansions, the finery of his + carriages, the number of his liveried train, the profusion of + his tables, in every unmanly indulgence which an empty vanity + can covet, and a full purse procure. Such a man, when he looks + from the window of his superb mansion, and sees the people + pass, cannot endure the idea, that they are of as much + consequence as himself in the eye of the law; and that he dares + not insult or oppress the unfortunate being who rakes his + kennel or sweeps his chimney."</p> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h3>FALL OF ROBESPIERRE.</h3> + + <p>It is well known, that during the revolutionary troubles of + France, not only all the churches were closed, but the Catholic + and Protestant worship entirely forbidden; and, after the + constitution of 1795, it was at the hazard of one's life that + either the mass was heard, or any religious duty performed. It + is evident that Robespierre, who unquestionably had a design + which is now generally understood, was desirous, on the day of + the fête of the Supreme Being, to bring back public + opinion to the worship of the Deity. Eight months before, we + had seen the Bishop of Paris, accompanied by his clergy, appear + voluntarily at the bar of the Convention, to abjure the + Christian faith and the Catholic religion. But it is not as + generally known, that at that period Robespierre was not + omnipotent, and could not carry his desires into effect. + Numerous factions then disputed with him the supreme authority. + It was not till the end of 1793, and the beginning of 1794, + that his power was so completely established that he could + venture to act up to his intentions.</p> + + <p>Robespierre was then desirous to establish the worship of + the Supreme Being, and the belief of the immortality of the + soul. He felt that irreligion is the soul of anarchy, and it + was not anarchy but despotism which he desired; and yet the + very day after that magnificent fête in honour of the + Supreme Being, a man of the highest celebrity in science, and + as distinguished for virtue and probity as philosophic genius, + Lavoisier, was led out to the scaffold. On the day following + that, Madame Elizabeth, that Princess whom the executioners + could not guillotine, till they had turned aside their eyes + from the sight of her angelic visage, stained the same axe with + her blood!—And <span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" + id="page107"></a>[pg 107]</span> a month after, Robespierre, + who wished to restore order for his own purposes—who + wished to still the bloody waves which for years had + inundated the state, felt that all his efforts would be in + vain if the masses who supported his power were not + restrained and directed, because without order nothing but + ravages and destruction can prevail. To ensure the + government of the masses, it was indispensable that + morality, religion, and belief should be + established—and, to affect the multitude, that + religion should be clothed in external forms. "My friend," + said Voltaire, to the atheist Damilaville, "after you have + supped on well-dressed partridges, drunk your sparkling + champaigne, and slept on cushions of down in the arms of + your mistress, I have no fear of you, though you do not + believe in God.—-But if you are perishing of hunger, + and I meet you in the corner of a wood, I would rather + dispense with your company." But when Robespierre wished to + bring back to something like discipline the crew of the + vessel which was fast driving on the breakers, he found the + thing was not so easy as he imagined. To destroy is + easy—to rebuild is the difficulty. He was omnipotent + to do evil; but the day that he gave the first sign of a + disposition to return to order, the hands which he himself + had stained with blood, marked his forehead with the fatal + sign of destruction.</p> + + <h4>—<i>Memoirs of the Duchess of Abrantes.</i></h4> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h3>SOUNDS DURING THE NIGHT.</h3> + + <p>The great audibility of sounds during the night is a + phenomenon of considerable interest, and one which had been + observed even by the ancients. In crowded cities or in their + vicinity, the effect was generally ascribed to the rest of + animated beings, while in localities where such an explanation + was inapplicable, it was supposed to arise from a favourable + direction of the prevailing wind. Baron Humboldt was + particularly struck with this phenomenon when he first heard + the rushing of the great cataracts of the Orinoco in the plain + which surrounds the mission of the Apures. These sounds he + regarded as three times louder during the night than during the + day. Some authors ascribed this fact to the cessation of the + humming of insects, the singing of birds, and the action of the + wind on the leaves of the trees, but M. Humboldt justly + maintains that this cannot be the cause of it on the Orinoco, + where the buzz of insects is much louder in the night than in + the day, and where the breeze never rises till after sunset. + Hence he was led to ascribe the phenomenon to the perfect + transparency and uniform density of the air, which can exist + only at night after the heat of the ground has been uniformly + diffused through the atmosphere. When the rays of the sun have + been beating on the ground during the day, currents of hot air + of different temperatures, and consequently of different + densities, are constantly ascending from the ground and mixing + with the cold air above. The air thus ceases to be a + homogeneous medium, and every person must have observed the + effects of it upon objects seen through it which are very + indistinctly visible, and have a tremulous motion, as if they + were "dancing in the air." The very same effect is perceived + when we look at objects through spirits and water that are not + perfectly mixed, or when we view distant objects over a red hot + poker or over a flame. In all these cases the light suffers + refraction in passing from a medium of one density into a + medium of a different density, and the refracted rays are + constantly changing their direction as the different currents + rise in succession. Analogous effects are produced when sound + passes through a mixed medium, whether it consists of two + different mediums or of one medium where portions of it have + different densities. As sound moves with different velocities + through media of different densities, the wave which produces + the sound will be partly reflected in passing from one medium + to the other, and the direction of the transmitted wave + changed; and hence in passing through such media different + portions of the wave will reach the ear at different times, and + thus destroy the sharpness and distinctness of the sound. This + may be proved by many striking facts. If we put a bell in a + receiver containing a mixture of hydrogen gas and atmospheric + air, the sound of the bell can scarcely be heard. During a + shower of rain or of snow, noises are greatly deadened, and + when sound is transmitted along an iron wire or an iron pipe of + sufficient length, we actually hear two sounds, one transmitted + more rapidly through the solid, and the other more slowly + through the air. The same property is well illustrated by an + elegant and easily repeated experiment of Chladni's. When + sparkling champagne is poured into a tall glass till it is half + full, the glass loses its power of ringing by a stroke upon its + edge, and emits only a disagreeable and a puffy sound. This + effect will continue while the wine is filled with bubbles of + air, or as long as the effervescence lasts; but when the + effervescence begins to subside, the sound becomes clearer and + clearer, and the glass rings as usual when the air-bubbles have + vanished. If we reproduce the effervescence by stirring the + champagne with a piece of bread the glass will again cease to + ring. The same experiment will succeed with other effervescing + fluids.—<i>Sir David Brewster</i>.</p> + <hr class="full" /> + + <p>No man is so insignificant as to be sure his example can do + no hurt.</p> + + <h4>—<i>Lord Clarendon.</i></h4> + <hr class="full" /> + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" + id="page108"></a>[pg 108]</span> + + <h2>The Public Journals.</h2> + <hr /> + + <h3>PADDY FOOSHANE'S FRICASSEE.</h3> + + <p>Paddy Fooshane kept a shebeen house at Barleymount Cross, in + which he sold whisky—from which his Majesty did not + derive any large portion of his revenues—ale, and + provisions. One evening a number of friends, returning from a + funeral—-all neighbours too—stopt at his house, + "because they were in grief," to drink a drop. There was Andy + Agar, a stout, rattling fellow, the natural son of a gentleman + residing near there; Jack Shea, who was afterwards transported + for running away with Biddy Lawlor; Tim Cournane, who, by + reason of being on his keeping, was privileged to carry a gun; + Owen Connor, a march-of-intellect man, who wished to enlighten + proctors by making them swallow their processes; and a number + of other "good boys." The night began to "rain cats and dogs," + and there was no stirring out; so the cards were called for, a + roaring fire was made down, and the whisky and ale began to + flow. After due observation, and several experiments, a space + large enough for the big table, and free from the drop down, + was discovered. Here six persons, including Andy, Jack, + Tim—with his gun between his legs—and Owen, sat to + play for a pig's head, of which the living owner, in the + parlour below, testified, by frequent grunts, his displeasure + at this unceremonious disposal of his property.</p> + + <p>Card-playing is very thirsty, and the boys were anxious to + keep out the wet; so that long before the pig's head was + decided, a messenger had been dispatched several times to + Killarney, a distance of four English miles, for a pint of + whisky each time. The ale also went merrily round, until most + of the men were quite stupid, their faces swoln, and their eyes + red and heavy. The contest at length was decided; but a quarrel + about the skill of the respective parties succeeded, and + threatened broken heads at one time. At last Jack Shea swore + they must have something to eat;——him but he was + starved with drink, and he must get some rashers somewhere or + other. Every one declared the same; and Paddy was ordered to + cook some <i>griskins</i> forthwith. Paddy was completely + nonplussed:—all the provisions were gone, and yet his + guests were not to be trifled with. He made a hundred + excuses—"'Twas late—'twas dry now—and there + was nothing in the house; sure they ate and drank enough." But + all in vain. The ould sinner was threatened with instant death + if he delayed. So Paddy called a council of war in the parlour, + consisting of his wife and himself.</p> + + <p>"Agrah, Jillen, agrah, what will we do with these? Is there + any meat in the tub? Where is the tongue? If it was yours, + Jillen, we'd give them enough of it; but I mane the cow's." + (aside.)</p> + + <p>"Sure the proctors got the tongue ere yesterday, and you + know there an't a bit in the tub. Oh the murtherin villains! + and I'll engage 'twill be no good for us, after all my white + bread and the whisky. That it may pison 'em!"</p> + + <p>"Amen! Jillen; but don't curse them. After all, where's the + meat? I'm sure that Andy will kill me if we don't make it out + any how;—and he hasn't a penny to pay for it. You could + drive the mail coach, Jillen, through his breeches pocket + without jolting over a ha'penny. Coming, coming; d'ye hear + 'em?"</p> + + <p>"Oh, they'll murther us. Sure if we had any of the tripe I + sent yesterday to the gauger."</p> + + <p>"Eh! What's that you say? I declare to God here's Andy + getting up. We must do something. <i>Thonom an dhiaoul</i>, I + have it. Jillen run and bring me the leather breeches; run + woman, alive! Where's the block and the hatchet? Go up and tell + 'em you're putting down the pot."</p> + + <p>Jillen pacified the uproar in the kitchen by loud promises, + and returned to Paddy. The use of the leather breeches passed + her comprehension; but Paddy actually took up the leather + breeches, tore away the lining with great care, chopped the + leather with the hatchet on the block, and put it into the pot + as tripes. Considering the situation in which Andy and his + friends were, and the appetite of the Irish peasantry for meat + in any shape—"a bone" being their <i>summum + bonum</i>—the risk was very little. If discovered, + however, Paddy's safety was much worse than doubtful, as no + people in the world have a greater horror of any unusual food. + One of the most deadly modes of revenge they can employ is to + give an enemy dog's or cat's flesh; and there have been + instances where the persons who have eaten it, on being + informed of the fact, have gone mad. But Paddy's habit of + practical jokes, from which nothing could wean him, and his + anger at their conduct, along with the fear he was in did not + allow him to hesitate a moment. Jillen remonstrated in vain. + "Hould your tongue, you foolish woman. They're all as blind as + the pig there. They'll never find it out. Bad luck to 'em too, + my leather breeches! that I gave a pound note and a hog for in + Cork. See how nothing else would satisfy 'em!" The meat at + length was ready. Paddy drowned it in butter, threw out the + potatoes on the table, and served it up smoking hot with the + greatest gravity.</p> + + <p>"By ——," says Jack Shea, "that's fine stuff! How + a man would dig a trench after that."</p> + + <p>"I'll take a priest's oath," answered Tim Cohill, the most + irritable of men, but whose + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" + id="page109"></a>[pg 109]</span> temper was something + softened by the rich steam;—</p> + + <p>"Yet, Tim, what's a priest's oath? I never heard that."</p> + + <p>"Why, sure, every one knows you didn't ever hear of anything + of good."</p> + + <p>"I say you lie, Tim, you rascal."</p> + + <p>Tim was on his legs in a few moments, and a general battle + was about to begin; but the appetite was too strong, and the + quarrel was settled; Tim having been appeased by being allowed + to explain a priest's oath. According to him, a priest's oath + was this:—He was surrounded by books, which were + gradually piled up until they reached his lips. He then kissed + the uppermost, and swore by all to the bottom. As soon as the + admiration excited by his explanation, in those who were + capable of hearing Tim, had ceased, all fell to work; and + certainly, if the tripes had been of ordinary texture, drunk as + was the party, they would soon have disappeared. After gnawing + at them for some time, "Well," says Owen Connor, "that I + mightn't!—but these are the quarest tripes I ever eat. It + must be she was very ould."</p> + + <p>"By ——," says Andy, taking a piece from his + mouth to which he had been paying his addresses for the last + half hour, "I'd as soon be eating leather. She was a bull, man; + I can't find the soft end at all of it."</p> + + <p>"And that's true for you, Andy," said the man of the gun; + "and 'tis the greatest shame they hadn't a bull-bait to make + him tinder. Paddy, was it from Jack Clifford's bull you got + 'em? They'd do for wadding, they're so tough."</p> + + <p>"I'll tell you, Tim, where I got them—'twas out of + Lord Shannon's great cow at Cork, the great fat cow that the + Lord Mayor bought for the Lord Lieutenant—<i>Asda churp + naur hagushch</i>."<a id="footnotetag14" + name="footnotetag14"></a><a href="#footnote14"><sup>14</sup></a></p> + + <p>"Amen, I pray God! Paddy. Out of Lord Shandon's cow? near + the steeple, I suppose; the great cow that couldn't walk with + tallow. By ——, these are fine tripes. They'll make + a man very strong. Andy, give me two or three <i>libbhers</i> + more of 'em."</p> + + <p>"Well, see that! out of Lord Shandon's cow: I wonder what + they gave her, Paddy. That I mightn't!—but these would + eat a pit of potatoes. Any how, they're good for the teeth. + Paddy, what's the reason they send all the good mate from Cork + to the Blacks?"</p> + + <p>But before Paddy could answer this question, Andy, who had + been endeavouring to help Tim, uttered a loud "<i>Thonom an + dhiaoul!</i> what's this? Isn't this flannel?" The fact was, he + had found a piece of the lining, which Paddy, in his hurry, had + not removed; and all was confusion. Every eye was turned to + Paddy; but with wonderful quickness he said "'Tis the book + tripe, <i>agragal</i>, don't you see?"—and actually + persuaded them to it.</p> + + <p>"Well, any how," says Tim, "it had the taste of wool."</p> + + <p>"May this choke me," says Jack Shea, "if I didn't think that + 'twas a piece of a leather breeches when I saw Andy + <i>chawing</i> it."</p> + + <p>This was a shot between wind and water to Paddy. His + self-possession was nearly altogether lost, and he could do no + more than turn it off by a faint laugh. But it jarred most + unpleasantly on Andy's nerves. After looking at Paddy for some + time with a very ominous look, he said, "<i>Yirroo Pandhrig</i> + of the tricks, if I thought you were going on with any work + here, my soul and my guts to the devil if I would not cut you + into garters. By the vestment I'd make a <i>furhurmeen</i> of + you."</p> + + <p>"Is it I, Andy? That the hands may fall off me!"</p> + + <p>But Tim Cohill made a most seasonable diversion. "Andy, when + you die, you'll be the death of one fool, any how. What do you + know that wasn't ever in Cork itself about tripes. I never ate + such mate in my life; and 'twould be good for every poor man in + the County of Kerry if he had a tub of it."</p> + + <p>Tim's tone of authority, and the character he had got for + learning, silenced every doubt, and all laid siege to the + tripes again. But after some time, Andy was observed gazing + with the most astonished curiosity into the plate before him. + His eyes were rivetted on something; at last he touched it with + his knife, arid exclaimed, "<i>Kirhappa, dar + dhia!</i>"—[A button by G—.]</p> + + <p>"What's that you say?" burst from all! and every one rose in + the best manner he could, to learn the meaning of the + button.</p> + + <p>"Oh, the villain of the world!" roared Andy, "I'm pisoned! + Where's the pike? For God's sake Jack, run for the priest, or + I'm a dead man with the breeches. Where is he?—yeer + bloods won't ye catch him, and I pisoned?"</p> + + <p>The fact was, Andy had met one of the knee-buttons sewed + into a piece of the tripe, and it was impossible for him to + fail discovering the cheat. The rage, however, was not confined + to Andy. As soon as it was understood what had been done, there + was an universal rush for Paddy and Jillen; but Paddy was much + too cunning to be caught, after the narrow escape he had of it + before. The moment after the discovery of the lining, that he + could do so without suspicion, he stole from the table, left + the house, and hid himself. Jillen did the same; and nothing + remained for the eaters, to vent their rage, but breaking every + thing in the cabin; which was done in the utmost fury. Andy, + however, continued watching for Paddy with a gun, a whole month + after. He might be <span class="pagenum"><a name="page110" + id="page110"></a>[pg 110]</span> seen prowling along the + ditches near the shebeen-house, waiting for a shot at him. + Not that he would have scrupled to enter it, were he likely + to find Paddy there; but the latter was completely on the + <i>shuchraun</i>, and never visited his cabin except by + stealth. It was in one of those visits that Andy hoped to + catch him.</p> + + <h4>—<i>Tait's Edinburgh Magazine</i>.</h4> + <hr /> + + <h3>CONVERSATIONS WITH LORD BYRON.</h3> + + <h4><i>By the Countess of Blessington</i>.</h4> + + <p>One of our first rides with Lord Byron was to Nervi, a + village on the sea-coast, most romantically situated, and each + turn of the road presenting various and beautiful prospects. + They were all familiar to him, and he failed not to point them + out, but in very sober terms, never allowing any thing like + enthusiasm in his expressions, though many of the views might + have excited it.</p> + + <p>His appearance on horseback was not advantageous, and he + seemed aware of it, for he made many excuses for his dress and + equestrian appointments. His horse was literally covered with + various trappings, in the way of cavesons, martingales, and + Heaven knows how many other (to me) unknown inventions. The + saddle was <i>à la Hussarde</i> with holsters, in which + he always carried pistols. His dress consisted of a nankeen + jacket and trousers, which appeared to have shrunk from + washing; the jacket embroidered in the same colour, and with + three rows of buttons; the waist very short, the back very + narrow, and the sleeves set in as they used to be ten or + fifteen years before; a black stock, very narrow; a dark-blue + velvet cap with a shade, and a very rich gold band and large + gold tassel at the crown; nankeen gaiters, and a pair of blue + spectacles, completed his costume, which was any thing but + becoming. This was his general dress of a morning for riding, + but I have seen it changed for a green tartan plaid jacket. He + did not ride well, which surprised us, as, from the frequent + allusions to horsemanship in his works, we expected to find him + almost a Nimrod, It was evident that he had <i>pretensions</i> + on this point, though he certainly was what I should call a + timid rider. When his horse made a false step, which was not + unfrequent, he seemed discomposed; and when we came to any bad + part of the road, he immediately checked his course and walked + his horse very slowly, though there really was nothing to make + even a lady nervous. Finding that I could perfectly manage (or + what he called <i>bully</i>) a very highly-dressed horse that I + daily rode, he became extremely anxious to buy it; asked me a + thousand questions as to how I had acquired such a perfect + command of it, &c. &c. and entreated, as the greatest + favour, that I would resign it to him as a charger to take to + Greece, declaring he never would part with it, &c. As I was + by no means a bold rider, we were rather amused at observing + Lord Byron's opinion of my courage; and as he seemed so anxious + for the horse, I agreed to let him have it when he was to + embark. From this time he paid particular attention to the + movements of poor Mameluke (the name of the horse), and said he + should now feel confidence in action with so steady a + charger.</p> + + <p><i>April</i>—. Lord Byron dined with us today. During + dinner he was as usual gay, spoke in terms of the warmest + commendation of Sir Walter Scott, not only as an author, but as + a man, and dwelt with apparent delight on his novels, declaring + that he had read and re-read them over and over again, and + always with increased pleasure. He said that he quite equalled, + nay, in his opinion, surpassed Cervantes. In talking of Sir + Walter's private character, goodness of heart, &c., Lord + Byron became more animated than I had ever seen him; his colour + changed from its general pallid tint to a more lively hue, and + his eyes became humid: never had he appeared to such advantage, + and it might easily be seen that every expression he uttered + proceeded from his heart. Poor Byron!—for poor he is even + with all his genius, rank, and wealth—had he lived more + with men like Scott, whose openness of character and steady + principle had convinced him that they were in earnest in + <i>their goodness</i>, and not <i>making believe</i>, (as he + always suspects good people to be,) his life might be different + and happier! Byron is so acute an observer that nothing escapes + him; all the shades of selfishness and vanity are exposed to + his searching glance, and the misfortune is, (and a serious one + it is to him,) that when he finds these, and alas! they are to + be found on every side, they disgust and prevent his giving + credit to the many good qualities that often accompany them. He + declares he can sooner pardon crimes, because they proceed from + the passions, than these minor vices, that spring from egotism + and self-conceit. We had a long argument this evening on the + subject, which ended, like most arguments, by leaving both of + the same opinion as when it commenced. I endeavoured to prove + that crimes were not only injurious to the perpetrators, but + often ruinous to the innocent, and productive of misery to + friends and relations, whereas selfishness and vanity carried + with them their own punishment, the first depriving the person + of all sympathy, and the second exposing him to ridicule which + to the vain is a heavy punishment, but that their effects were + not destructive to society as are crimes.</p> + + <p>He laughed when I told him that having heard him so often + declaim against vanity, and detect it so often in his friends, + I began to suspect he knew the malady by having had it himself, + and that I had observed through life, that those persons who + had the most <span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" + id="page111"></a>[pg 111]</span> vanity were the most severe + against that failing in their friends. He wished to impress + upon me that he was not vain, and gave various proofs to + establish this; but I produced against him his boasts of + swimming, his evident desire of being considered more <i>un + homme de societe</i> than a poet, and other little examples, + when he laughingly pleaded guilty, and promised to be more + merciful towards his friends.</p> + + <p>Byron attempted to be gay, but the effort was not + successful, and he wished us good night with a trepidation of + manner that marked his feelings. And this is the man that I + have heard considered unfeeling! How often are our best + qualities turned against us, and made the instruments for + wounding us in the most vulnerable part, until, ashamed of + betraying our susceptibility, we affect an insensibility we are + far from possessing, and, while we deceive others, nourish in + secret the feelings that prey <i>only</i> on our own + hearts!</p> + + <h4>—<i>New Monthly Magazine.</i></h4> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h2>The Gatherer.</h2> + + <p><i>Canary Birds.</i>—In Germany and the Tyrol, from + whence the rest of Europe is principally supplied with Canary + birds, the apparatus for breeding Canaries is both large and + expensive. A capacious building is erected for them, with a + square space at each end, and holes communicating with these + spaces. In these outlets are planted such trees as the birds + prefer. The bottom is strewed with sand, on which are cast + rapeseed, chickweed, and such other food as they like. + Throughout the inner compartment, which is kept dark, are + placed bowers for the birds to build in, care being taken that + the breeding birds are guarded from the intrusion of the rest. + Four Tyrolese usually take over to England about sixteen + hundred of these birds; and though they carry them on their + backs nearly a thousand miles, and pay twenty pounds for them + originally, they can sell them at 5<i>s</i>. each.</p> + + <p><i>Braithwaite's Steam Fire Engine</i>—will deliver + about 9,000 gallons of water per hour to an elevation of 90 + feet. The time of getting the machine into action, from the + moment of igniting the fuel, (the water being cold,) is 18 + minutes. As soon as an alarm is given, the fire is kindled, and + the bellows, attached to the engine, are worked by hand. By the + time the horses are harnessed in, the fuel is thoroughly + ignited, and the bellows are then worked by the motion of the + wheels of the engine. By the time of arriving at the fire, + preparing the hoses, &c. the steam is ready.</p> + + <p>Fisher, bishop of Rochester, was accustomed to style his + church his wife, declaring that he would never exchange her for + one that was richer. He was a zealous adherent of Pope Paul + III. who created him a cardinal. The king, Henry VIII., on + learning that Fisher would not refuse the dignity, exclaimed, + in a passion, "Yea! is he so lusty? Well, let the pope send him + a hat when he will. Mother of God! he shall wear it on his + shoulders, for I will leave him never a head to set it on."</p> + + <p><i>Flax</i> is not uncommon in the greenhouses about + Philadelphia, but we have not heard of any experiments with it + in the open air.—<i>Encyclopaedia Americana.</i></p> + + <p><i>The Schoolmaster wanted in the East.</i>—Mr. + Madden, in his travels in Turkey, Egypt, Nubia, and Palestine, + says:—"In all my travels, I could only meet one woman who + could read and write, and that was in Damietta; she was a + Levantine Christian, and her peculiar talent was looked upon as + something superhuman."</p> + + <p>La Fontaine had but one son, whom, at the age of 14, he + placed in the hands of Harlay, archbishop of Paris, who + promised to provide for him. After a long absence, La Fontaine + met this youth at the house of a friend, and being pleased with + his conversation, was told that it was his own son. "Ah," said + he, "I am very glad of it."</p> + + <p><i>Universal Genius.</i>—Rivernois thus describes the + character of Fontenelle: "When Fontenelle appeared on the + field, all the prizes were already distributed, all the palms + already gathered: the prize of universality alone remained, + Fontenelle determined to attempt it, and he was successful. He + is not only a metaphysician with Malebranche, a natural + philosopher with Newton, a legislator with Peter the Great, a + statesman with D'Argenson; he is everything with + everybody."</p> + + <p><i>Forest Schools.</i>—There are a number of forest + academies in Germany, particularly in the small states of + central Germany, in the Hartz, Thuringia, &c. The principal + branches taught in them are the following:—forest botany, + mineralogy, zoology, chemistry; by which the learner is taught + the natural history of forests, and the mutual relations, + &c. of the different kingdoms of nature. He is also + instructed in the care and chase of game, and in the surveying + and cultivation of forests, so as to understand the mode of + raising all kinds of wood, and supplying a new growth as fast + as the old is taken away. The pupil is too instructed in the + administration of the forest taxes and police, and all that + relates to forests considered as a branch of revenue.</p> + + <p><i>The Weather.</i>—Meteorological journals are now + given in most magazines. The first statement of this kind was + communicated by Dr. Fothergill to the Gentleman's Magazine, and + consisted of a monthly account of the weather and diseases of + London. The latter <span class="pagenum"><a name="page112" + id="page112"></a>[pg 112]</span> information is now + monopolized by the parish-clerks.</p> + + <p><i>Goethe.</i>—The wife of a Silesian peasant, being + obliged to go to Saxony, and hearing that she had travelled (on + foot) more than half the distance to Goethe's residence, whose + works she had read with the liveliest interest, continued her + journey to Weimar for the sake of seeing him. Goethe declared + that the true character of his works had never been better + understood than by this woman. He gave her his portrait.</p> + + <p><i>Liverpool and Manchester Railway.</i>—The Company + has reported the following result:</p> + <pre> + Passengers entered in the Company's + books during the half-year + ending June 30, 1831 £188,726 + + Ditto, ditto, ending + December 31, 1831 256,321 + + Increase £67,595 +</pre> + + <p>Being upwards of 33 per cent. increase of the first six + months of the year, and upwards of 135 per cent. increase on + the travellers between the two towns during the corresponding + months, previously to opening the railway.—<i>Gordon, on + Steam Carriages.</i></p> + + <p><i>Caliga.</i>—This was the name of the Roman + soldier's shoe, made in the sandal fashion. The sole was of + wood, and stuck full of nails. Caius Caesar Caligula, the + fourth Roman Emperor, the son of Germanicus and Agrippina, + derived his surname from "Caliga," as having been born in the + army, and afterwards bred up in the habit of a common soldier; + he wore this military shoe in conformity to those of the common + soldiers, with a view of engaging their affections. The caliga + was the badge, or symbol of a soldier; whence to take away the + caliga and belt, imported a dismissal or cashiering. P.T.W.</p> + + <p><i>The Damary Oak-tree.</i>—At Blandford Forum, + Dorsetshire, stood the famous Damary Oak, which was rooted up + for firing in 1755. It measured 75 feet high, and the branches + extended 72 feet; the trunk at the bottom was 68 feet in + circumference, and 23 feet in diameter. It had a cavity in its + trunk 15 feet wide. Ale was sold in it till after the + Restoration; and when the town was burnt down in 1731, it + served as an abode for one family.—<i>Family + Topographer</i>, vol. ii.</p> + + <p><i>Brent Tor Church, Devonshire, situate upon a + rock.</i>—On Brent Tor is a church, in which is + appositely inscribed from Scripture, "Upon this rock will I + build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail + against it." It is said that the parishioners make weekly + atonement for their sins, for they cannot go to the church + without the previous penance of climbing the steep; and the + pastor is frequently obliged to humble himself upon his hands + and knees before he can reach the house of prayer. Tradition + says it was erected by a merchant to commemorate his escape + from shipwreck on the coast, in consequence of this Tor serving + as a guide to the pilot. There is not sufficient earth to bury + the dead. At the foot of the Tor resided, in 1809, Sarah + Williams, aged 109 years. She never lived further out of the + parish of Brent Tor, than the adjoining one: she had had twelve + children, and a few years before her death cut five new + teeth.—<i>Ibid.</i></p> + + <p><i>The Dairyman's Daughter.</i>—In Arreton churchyard, + Isle of Wight, is a tombstone, erected in 1822, by + subscription, to mark the grave of Elizabeth Wallbridge, the + humble individual whose story of piety and virtue, written by + the Rev. Leigh Richmond, under the title of the "Dairyman's + Daughter," has attained an almost unexampled circulation. Her + cottage at Branston, about a mile distant, is much + visited.—<i>Ibid.</i></p> + + <p><i>Singular distribution of common land in + Somersetshire</i>.—In the parishes of Congresbury and + Puxton were two large pieces of common land, called East and + West Dolemoors (from the Saxon word dol, a portion or share,) + which were occupied till within these few years in the + following manner:—-The land was divided into single + acres, each bearing a peculiar mark, cut in the turf, such as a + horn, an ox, a horse, a cross, an oven, &c. On the Saturday + before Old Midsummer Day, the several proprietors of contiguous + estates, or their tenants, assembled on these commons, with a + number of apples marked with similar figures, which were + distributed by a boy to each of the commoners from a bag. At + the close of the distribution, each person repaired to the + allotment with the figure corresponding to the one upon his + apple, and took possession of it for the ensuing year. Four + acres were reserved to pay the expenses of an entertainment at + the house of the overseer of the Dolemoors, where the evening + was spent in festivity.—<i>Ibid.</i></p> + + <p><i>Anna Maria, Countess of Shrewsbury.</i>—At Avington + Park, in Hampshire, resided the notorious and infamous + Anna-Maria, Countess of Shrewsbury, who held the horse of the + Duke of Buckingham while he fought and killed her husband. + Charles II frequently made it the scene of his licentious + pleasures; and the old green-house is said to have been the + apartment in which the royal sensualist was + entertained.—<i>Ibid.</i></p> + + + <hr class="full" /> + + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote1" + name="footnote1"></a> +<b>Footnote 1</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a> + <p>It may be as well here to quote the formation of + Cataracts and Cascades, from Maltebrun's valuable + <i>System of Universal Geography.</i> "It is only the + sloping of the land which can at first cause water to + flow; but an impulse having been once communicated to + the mass, the pressure alone of the water will keep it + in motion, even if there were no declivity at all. Many + great rivers, in fact, flow with an almost interruptible + declivity. Rivers which descend from primitive mountains + into secondary lands, often form <i>cascades and + cataracts</i>. Such are the cataracts of the Nile, of + the Ganges, and some other great rivers, which, + according to Desmarest, evidently mark the limits of the + ancient land. Cataracts are also formed by lakes: of + this description are the celebrated Falls of the + Niagara; but the most picturesque falls are those of + rapid rivers, bordered by trees and precipitous rocks. + Sometimes we see a body of water, which, before it + arrives at the bottom, is broken and dissipated into + showers, like the Staubbach, (see <i>Mirror,</i> vol. + xiv. p. 385.); sometimes it forms a watery arch, + projected from a rampart of rock, under which the + traveller may pass dryshod, as the "falling spring" of + Virginia; in one place, in a granite district, we see + the Trolhetta, and the Rhine not far from its source, + urge on their foaming billows among the pointed rocks; + in another, amidst lands of a calcareous formation, we + see the Czettina and the Kerka, rolling down from + terrace to terrace, and presenting sometimes a sheet, + and sometimes a wall, of water. Some magnificent + cascades have been formed, at least in part, by the + hands of man: the cascades of Velino, near Terni, have + been attributed to Pope Clement VIII.; other cataracts, + like those of Tunguska, in Siberia, have gradually lost + their elevation by the wearing away of the rocks, and + have now only a rapid descent."—<i>Maltebrun</i>, + vol. i.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote2" + name="footnote2"></a> +<b>Footnote 2</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a> + <p>May we not, however, say the friendless Sheridan?</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote3" + name="footnote3"></a> +<b>Footnote 3</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a> + <p>Communicated by M.L.B., Great Marlow, Bucks.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote4" + name="footnote4"></a> +<b>Footnote 4</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a> + <p>Vide <i>Mirror</i>, vol. xviii. p. + 343.—<i>Note</i>.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote5" + name="footnote5"></a> +<b>Footnote 5</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag5">(return)</a> + <p>A Collection of Poems of the Sixteenth + Century.—Communicated by J.F., of Gray's Inn. We + thank our Correspondent for the present, and shall be + happy to receive further specimens from the same + source.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote6" + name="footnote6"></a> +<b>Footnote 6</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag6">(return)</a> + <p>Philadelphia, Carey and Lea, 1832.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote7" + name="footnote7"></a> +<b>Footnote 7</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag7">(return)</a> + <p>Cuvier.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote8" + name="footnote8"></a> +<b>Footnote 8</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag8">(return)</a> + <p>Nat. Hist. Molluscous Animals, Mag. Nat. Hist. vol. iii. + p. 527.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote9" + name="footnote9"></a> +<b>Footnote 9</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag9">(return)</a> + <p>Manual Comp. Anat. p. 263.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote10" + name="footnote10"></a> +<b>Footnote 10</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag10">(return)</a> + <p>In all other worms the eyes are entirely wanting, or + their existence is very doubtful. Whether the black + points at the extremities of what Swammerdam calls the + horns of the common snail, are organs which really + possess the power of vision, is still problematical.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote11" + name="footnote11"></a> +<b>Footnote 11</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag11">(return)</a> + <p>Blumenbach, Man. Comp. Anat. p. 305.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote12" + name="footnote12"></a> +<b>Footnote 12</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag12">(return)</a> + <p>According to Cuvier, the Indian ink, from China, is made + of this fluid, as was the ink of the Romans. It has been + supposed, and not without a considerable degree of + probability, that the celebrated plain, but wholesome + dish, the black broth of Sparta, was no other than a + kind of Cuttle-fish soup, in which the black liquor of + the animal was always added as an ingredient; being, + when fresh, of very agreeable taste.—<i>Shaw's + Zoology</i>.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote13" + name="footnote13"></a> +<b>Footnote 13</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag13">(return)</a> + <p>Mr. Hatchett, in Philos. Trans.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote14" + name="footnote14"></a> +<b>Footnote 14</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag14">(return)</a> + <p>May it never come out of his body!</p> + </blockquote> + + <hr class="full" /> + + <p><i>Erratum</i>—In the lines, by J. Kinder, on a + Withered Primrose, in our last, verse ii. line 2—for + "gust of the storm" read "<i>jest</i> of the storm."</p> + <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 11568 ***</div> +</body> +</html> + diff --git a/11568-h/images/562-1.png b/11568-h/images/562-1.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a0146bc --- /dev/null +++ b/11568-h/images/562-1.png diff --git a/11568-h/images/562-2.png b/11568-h/images/562-2.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0369eef --- /dev/null +++ b/11568-h/images/562-2.png diff --git a/11568-h/images/562-3.png b/11568-h/images/562-3.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e53da9f --- /dev/null +++ b/11568-h/images/562-3.png diff --git a/11568-h/images/562-4.png b/11568-h/images/562-4.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4c59dfe --- /dev/null +++ b/11568-h/images/562-4.png diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8239461 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #11568 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/11568) diff --git a/old/11568-8.txt b/old/11568-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0d33050 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/11568-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2130 @@ +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 20, No. 562, Saturday, August 18, 1832. + +Author: Various + +Release Date: March 14, 2004 [EBook #11568] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE *** + + + + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Bill Walker and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team. + + + + + + + + + + + +THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION. + +VOL. XX. NO. 562.] SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1832. [PRICE 2d. + + * * * * * + + +FALLS OF THE GENESEE. + + +[Illustration: Falls of the Genesee.] + + +The Genesee is one of the most picturesque rivers of North America. +Its name is indeed characteristic: the word Genesee being formed from +the Indian for _Pleasant Valley,_ which term is very descriptive of +the river and its vicinity. Its falls have not the majestic extent +of the Niagara; but their beauty compensates for the absence of such +grandeur. + +The Genesee, the principal natural feature of its district, rises +on the _Grand Plateau_ or table-land of Western Pennsylvania, runs +through New York, and flows into Lake Ontario, at Port Genesee, six +miles below Rochester. At the distance of six miles from its mouth are +falls of 96 feet, and one mile higher up, other falls of 75 feet.[1] +Above these it is navigable for boats nearly 70 miles, where are other +two falls, of 60 and 90 feet, one mile apart, in Nunda, south of +Leicester. At the head of the Genesee is a tract six miles square, +embracing waters, some of which flow into the gulf of Mexico, others +into Chesapeake Bay, and others into the Gulf of St. Lawrence. This +tract is probably elevated 1,600 or 1,700 feet above the tide waters +of the Atlantic Ocean. + + [1] It may be as well here to quote the formation of Cataracts + and Cascades, from Maltebrun's valuable _System of Universal + Geography._ "It is only the sloping of the land which can at first + cause water to flow; but an impulse having been once communicated + to the mass, the pressure alone of the water will keep it in + motion, even if there were no declivity at all. Many great rivers, + in fact, flow with an almost interruptible declivity. Rivers which + descend from primitive mountains into secondary lands, often form + _cascades and cataracts_. Such are the cataracts of the Nile, + of the Ganges, and some other great rivers, which, according to + Desmarest, evidently mark the limits of the ancient land. + Cataracts are also formed by lakes: of this description are the + celebrated Falls of the Niagara; but the most picturesque falls + are those of rapid rivers, bordered by trees and precipitous + rocks. Sometimes we see a body of water, which, before it arrives + at the bottom, is broken and dissipated into showers, like the + Staubbach, (see _Mirror,_ vol. xiv. p. 385.); sometimes it forms + a watery arch, projected from a rampart of rock, under which the + traveller may pass dryshod, as the "falling spring" of Virginia; + in one place, in a granite district, we see the Trolhetta, and the + Rhine not far from its source, urge on their foaming billows + among the pointed rocks; in another, amidst lands of a calcareous + formation, we see the Czettina and the Kerka, rolling down + from terrace to terrace, and presenting sometimes a sheet, and + sometimes a wall, of water. Some magnificent cascades have been + formed, at least in part, by the hands of man: the cascades of + Velino, near Terni, have been attributed to Pope Clement VIII.; + other cataracts, like those of Tunguska, in Siberia, have + gradually lost their elevation by the wearing away of the rocks, + and have now only a rapid descent."--_Maltebrun_, vol. i. + +The Engraving includes the falls of the river, with the village +of Rochester, seven miles south of Lake Ontario. This place, for +population, extent, and trade, will soon rank among the American +cities: it was not settled until about the close of the last war; +its progress was slow until the year 1820, from which period it has +rapidly improved. In 1830 it contained upwards of 12,000 inhabitants: +the first census of the village was taken in December, 1815, when the +number of inhabitants was three hundred and thirty-one. The aqueduct +which takes the Erie canal across the river forms a prominent object +of interest to all travellers. It is of hewn stone, containing eleven +arches of 50 feet span: its length is 800 feet, but a considerable +part of each end is hidden from view by mills erected since its +construction. + +On the brink of the island which separates the main stream of the +river from that produced by the waste water from the mill-race, +will be seen _a scaffold or platform_ from which an eccentric but +courageous adventurer, named _Sam Patch_, made a desperate leap into +the gulf beneath. Patch had obtained some celebrity in freaks of this +description, though his feats be not recorded, like the hot-brained +patriotism of Marcus Curtius in olden history. At the fall of Niagara, +Patch had before made two leaps in safety--one of 80 and the other of +130 feet, in a vast gulf, foaming and tost aloft from the commotion +produced by a fall of nearly 200 feet. In November, 1829, Patch +visited Rochester to astonish the citizens by a leap from the falls. +His first attempt was successful, and in the presence of thousands of +spectators he leaped from the scaffold to which we have directed the +attention of the reader, a distance of 100 feet, into the abyss, in +safety. He was advertised to repeat the feat in a few days, or, as he +prophetically announced it his "last jump," meaning his last jump that +season. The scaffold was duly erected, 25 feet in height, and Patch, +an hour after the time was announced, made his appearance. A multitude +had collected to witness the feat; the day was unusually cold, and Sam +was intoxicated. The river was low, and the falls near him on either +side were bare. Sam threw himself off, and the waters (to quote the +bathos of a New York newspaper) "received him in their cold embrace. +The tide bubbled as the life left the body, and then the stillness of +death, indeed, sat upon the bosom of the waters." His body was found +past the spring at the mouth of the river, seven miles below where +he made his fatal leap. It had passed over two falls of 125 feet +combined, yet was not much injured. A black handkerchief taken from +his neck while on the scaffold, and tied about the body, was still +there. He is stated to have had perfect command of himself while in +the air; and, says the journalist already quoted, "had he not been +given to habits of intoxication, he might have astonished the world, +perhaps for years, with the greatest feats ever performed by man." + +The Genesee river waters one of the finest tracts of land in the state +of New York. Its alluvial flats are extensive, and very fertile. These +are either natural prairies, or Indian clearings, (of which, however, +the present Indians have no tradition,) and lying, to an extent of +many thousand acres, between the villages of Genesee, Moscow, and +Mount Morris, which now crown the declivities of their surrounding +uplands; and, contrasting their smooth verdure with the shaggy hills +that bound the horizon, and their occasional clumps of spreading +trees, with the tall and naked relics of the forest, nothing can +be more agreeable to the eye, long accustomed to the uninterrupted +prospect of a level and wooded country. + + * * * * * + + + +SONG FROM THE ALBUM OF A POET. + +_By G.R. Carter._ + + +THE HOMEWARD VOYAGE. + + + Away o'er the dancing wave, + Like the wings of the white seamew; + How proudly the hearts of the youthful brave + Their dreams of bliss renew! + + And as on the pathless deep, + The bark by the gale is driven, + How glorious it is with the stars to keep + A watch on the beautiful heaven. + + The winds o'er the ocean bear + Rich fragrance from the flow'rs, + That bloom on the sward, and sparkle there + Like stars in their dark blue bow'rs. + + The visions of those that sail + O'er the wave with its snow-white foam, + Are haunted with scenes of the beauteous vale + That encloses their peaceful home. + + They have wander'd through groves of the west, + Illumed with the fire-flies' light; + But their native land kindles a charm in each breast, + Unwaken'd by regions more bright. + + The haunts that were dear to the heart + As an exquisite dream of romance, + Strew thoughts, like sweet flow'rs, round its holiest part, + And their fancy-bound spirits entrance. + + Then away with the fluttering sail! + And away with the bounding wave! + While the musical sounds of the ocean-gale + Are wafted around the brave! + + * * * * * + + +Ray wittily observes that an obscure and prolix author may not +improperly be compared to a Cuttle-fish, since he may be said to hide +himself under his own ink. + + * * * * * + + +LINES + +FROM THE GERMAN OF KÖRNER. + + +_Written on the morning of the Battle of Dänneberg._ + + + Doubt-beladen, dim and hoary, + O'er us breaks the mighty day, + And the sunbeam, cold and gory, + Lights us on our fearful way. + In the womb of coming hours, + Destinies of empires lie, + Now the scale ascends, now lowers, + Now is thrown the noble die. + Brothers, the hour with warning is rife; + Faithful in death as you're faithful in life, + Be firm, and be bound by the holiest tie, + + In the shadows of the night, + Lie behind us shame and scorn; + Lies the slave's exulting might, + Who the German oak has torn. + Speech disgrac'd in future story, + Shrines polluted (shall it be?) + To dishonour pledg'd our glory, + German brothers, set it free. + Brothers, your hands, let your vengeance be burning, + By your actions, the curses of heaven be turning, + On, on, set your country's Palladium free. + + Hope, the brightest, is before us, + And the future's golden time, + Joys, which heaven will restore us, + Freedom's holiness sublime. + German bards and artists' powers, + Woman's truth, and fond caress, + Fame eternal shall be ours, + Beauty's smile our toils shall bless. + Yet 'tis a deed that the bravest might shake, + Life and our heart's blood are set on the stake; + Death alone points out the road to success. + + God! united we will dare it; + Firm this heart shall meet its fate, + To the altar thus I bear it, + And my coming doom await. + Fatherland, for thee we perish, + At thy fell command 'tis done, + May our loved ones ever cherish + Freedom, which our blood has won. + Liberty, grow o'er each oak-shadow'd plain, + Grow o'er the tombs of thy warriors slain, + Fatherland, hear thou the oath we have sworn. + + Brothers, towards your hearts' best treasures, + Cast one look, on earth the last, + Turn then from those once prized pleasures, + Wither'd by the hostile blast. + Though your eyes be dim with weeping, + Tears like these are not from fear, + Trust to God's own holy keeping, + With your last kiss, all that's dear. + All lips that pray for us, all hearts that we rend + With parting, O father, to thee we commend, + Protect them and shield them from wrongs and despair.--H. + + * * * * * + + +EQUANIMITY OF TEMPER. + + +Goodness of temper may be defined, to use the happy imagery of Gray, +"as the sunshine of the heart." It is a more valuable bosom-attendant +under the pressure of poverty and adversity, and when we are +approaching the confines of infirmity and old age, than when we are +revelling in the full tide of plenty, amid the exuberant strength and +freshness of youth. Lord Bacon, who has analyzed some of the human +accompaniments so well, is silent as to the softening sway and +pleasing influence of this choice attuner of the human mind. But +Shaftesbury, the illustrious author of the _Characteristics_, was so +enamoured of it, that he terms "gravity (its counterpart,) the essence +of imposture;" and so it is, for to what purpose does a man store his +brain with knowledge, and the profitable burden of the sciences, if he +gathers only superciliousness and pride from the hedge of learning? +instead of the milder traits of general affection, and the open +qualities of social feelings. I remember, when a youth, I was +extremely fond of attending the House of Commons, to hear the debates; +and I shall never forget the repulsive loftiness which I thought +marked the physiognomy of Pitt; harsh and unbending, like a settled +frost, he seemed wrapped in the mantle of egotism and sublunary +conceit; and it was from the uninviting expression of this great man's +countenance, that I first drew my conceptions as to how a proud and +unsociable man looked. With very different emotions I was wont to +survey the mild but expressive features of his great opponent, Fox: +there was a placidity mixed up with the graver lines of thought and +reflection, that would have invited a child to take him by the hand; +indeed, the witchcraft of Mr. Fox's temper was such, that it formed a +triumphant source of gratulation in the circle of his friends, from +the panegyric of the late Earl of Carlisle, during his boyish days at +Eton, to the prouder posthumous circles of fame with which the elegant +author of _The Pleasures of Memory_, has entwined his sympathetic +recollections. The late Mr. Whitbread, although an unflinching +advocate for the people's rights, and an incorruptible patriot in +the true sense of the word, was unpopular in his office as a country +magistrate, owing to a tone of severity he generally used to those +around him. The wife of that indefatigable toiler in the Christian +field, John Wesley, was so acid and acrimonious in her temper, that +that mild advocate for spiritual affection, found it impossible to +live with her. Rousseau was tormented by such a host of ungovernable +passions, that he became a burden to himself and to every one around +him. Lord Byron suffered a badness of temper to corrode him in the +flower of his days. Contrasted with this unpleasing part of the +perspective, let us quote the names of a few wise and good men, who +have been proverbial for the goodness of their tempers; as Shakspeare, +Francis I., and Henry IV. of France; "the great and good Lord +Lyttleton," as he is called to the present day; John Howard, +Goldsmith, Sir Samuel Romilly, Franklin, Thomson, the poet, +Sheridan,[2] and Sir Walter Scott. The late Sir William Curtis was +known to be one of the best tempered men of his day, which made him a +great favourite with the late king. I remember a little incident of +Sir William's good-nature, which occurred about a year after he had +been Lord Mayor. In alighting from his carriage, a little out of the +regular line, near the Mansion House, upon some day of festivity, he +happened inadvertently, with the skirts of his coat, to brush down a +few apples from a poor woman's stall, on the side of the pavement. Sir +William was in full dress, but instead of passing on with the hauteur +which characterizes so many of his aldermanic brethren, he set himself +to the task of assisting the poor creature to collect her scattered +fruit; and on parting, observing some of her apples were a little +soiled by the dirt, he drew his hand from his pocket and generously +gave her a shilling. This was too good an incident for John Bull to +lose: a crowd assembled, hurraed, and cried out, "Well done, Billy," +at which the good-natured baronet looked back and laughed. How much +more pleasing is it to tell of such demeanour than of the foolish +pride of the late Sir John Eamer, who turned away one of his +travellers merely because he had in one instance used his bootjack. + + [2] May we not, however, say the friendless Sheridan? + +_The Author of "A Tradesman's Lays."_ + + * * * * * + +Probably our correspondent may recollect Sir William and the orange, +at one of the contested City elections. A "greasy rogue" before the +hustings, seeing the baronet candidate take an orange from his pocket, +_put up_ for the fruit, with the cry "Give us that orange, Billy." Sir +William threw him the fruit, which the fellow had no sooner sucked +dry, than he began bawling with increased energy, "No Curtis," "No +Billy," etc. Such an ungrateful act would have soured even Seneca; but +Sir William merely gave a smile, with a good-natured shake of the +head. Sir William Curtis possessed a much greater share of shrewdness +and good sense than the vulgar ever gave him credit for. At the +Sessions' dinners, he would keep up the ball of conversation with the +judges and gentlemen of the bar, in a fuller vein than either of his +brother aldermen. It is true that he had wealth and distinction, +all which his fellow citizens at table did not enjoy; and these +possessions, we know, are wonderful helps to confidence, if they do +not lead the holder on to assurance.--Ed. M. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE SKETCH BOOK. + + * * * * * + +EXTRACTS FROM THE ORIGINAL LETTERS OF AN OFFICER IN INDIA.[3] + + +_THE SIGHT OF A TIGER._[4] + + +Secunderabad, 1828. + +A short time since, a brother sub. in my regiment was riding out round +some hills adjoining the cantonment, when a _cheetar_, small tiger +(or panther,) pounced on his dog. Seeing his poor favourite in the +cheetar's mouth, like a mouse in Minette's, he put spurs to his horse, +rode after the beast, and so frightened him, that he dropped the dog +and made off. Three of us, including myself, then agreed to sit up +that night, and watch for the tiger, feeling assured that his haunt +was not far from our cantonment. So we started late at night, armed +_cap-à-pied_, and each as fierce in heart as ten tigers; arrived +at the appointed spot, and having selected a convenient place for +concealment, we picketed a sheep, brought with us purposely to entice +the cheetar from his lair. Singular to relate, this poor animal, as if +instinctively aware of its critical situation, was as mute as if +it had been mouthless, and during two or three hours in which we +tormented it, to make it utter a cry, our efforts were of no avail. +Hour after hour slipped away, still no cheetar; and about three +o'clock in the morning, wearied with our fruitless vigil, we all began +to drop asleep. I believe I was wrapped in a most leaden slumber, and +dreaming of anything but watching for, and hunting tigers, when I was +aroused by the most unnatural, unearthly, and infernal roaring ever +heard. This was our friend, and for his reception, starting upon our +feet, we were all immediately ready; but the cunning creature who +had no idea of becoming our victim, made off, with the most hideous +howlings, to the shelter of a neighbouring eminence; when sufficient +daylight appeared, we followed the direction of his voice, and had the +felicity of seeing him perched on the summit of an immense high rock, +just before us, placidly watching our movements. We were here, too far +from him to venture a shot, but immediately began ascending, when the +creature seeing us approach, rose, opened his ugly red mouth in a +desperate yawn, and stretched himself with the utmost _nonchalance_, +being, it seems, little less weary than ourselves. We presented, but +did not fire, because at that very moment, setting up his tail, and +howling horribly, he disappeared behind the rock. Quick as thought +we followed him, but to our great disappointment and chagrin, he had +retreated into one of the numerous caverns formed in that ugly place, +by huge masses of rock, piled one upon the other. Into some of these +dangerous places, however, we descended, sometimes creeping, sometimes +walking, in search of our foe; but not finding him, at length returned +to breakfast, which I thought the most agreeable and sensible part of +the affair. Some wit passed amongst us respecting the propriety of +changing the name _cheetar_, into _cheat-us_; but were, on the whole, +not pleased by the failure of our expedition; and I have only favoured +you with this _romantic_ incident in the life of a sub. as a specimen +of the sort of amusement we meet with in quarters. + + [3] Communicated by M.L.B., Great Marlow, Bucks. + + [4] Vide _Mirror_, vol. xviii. p. 343.--_Note_. + +_Natural Zoological Garden_. + +SECUNDERABAD, 1828. + +Your description of the London Zoological Garden, reminds me that +there is, what I suppose I must term, a most beautiful _Zoological +Hill_, just one mile and a half from the spot whence I now write; on +this I often take my recreation, much to the alarm of its inhabitants; +viz. sundry cheetars, bore-butchers, (or leopards) hyenas, wolves, +jackalls, foxes, hares, partridges, etc.; but not being a very capital +shot, I have seldom made much devastation amongst them. Under the hill +are swamps and paddy-fields, which abound in snipe and other game. +Now, is not this a Zoological Garden on the grandest scale? + +H.C.B. + + * * * * * + + + + +OLD POETS. + + * * * * * + +BALLAD OF AGINCOURT. + +(_From "England's Heroical Epistles[5]._") + + Faire stood the wind for France, + When we, our sayles advance, + Nor now to proue our chance + Longer will tarry; + But putting to the mayne, + At Kaux, the mouth of Sene, + With all his martiall trayne, + Landed King Harry. + + And taking many a fort, + Furnished in warlike sort, + Marcheth towards Agincourt, + In happy houre. + Skirmishing day by day, + With those that stop'd his way, + Where the French gen'ral lay + With all his power. + + Which in his hight of pride. + King Henry to deride, + His ransom to prouide, + To our king sending. + Which he neglects the while, + As from a nation vile, + Yet with an angry smile, + Their fall portending. + + And turning to his men, + Quoth our brave Henry, then, + "Though they to one be ten, + Be not amazed, + Yet have we well begunne, + Battells so bravely wonne, + Have ever to the sonne, + By fame beene raysed." + + "And for myself," quoth he, + "This my full rest shall be, + England ne'er mourn for me, + Nor more esteem me. + Victor I will remaine, + Or on this earth be slaine, + Never shall shee sustaine + Losse to redeeme me." + + Poiters and Cressy tell, + When most their pride did swell, + Under our swords they fell. + + No lesse our skill is, + Then when oure grandsire great, + Clayming the regall seate, + By many a warlike feate, + Lop'd the French lillies. + + The Duke of York so dread, + The vaward led, + Wich the maine Henry sped, + Amongst his Hench_men_, + Excester had the rere, + A brauer man not there, + O Lord, how hot they were, + On the false Frenchmen. + + They now to fight are gone, + Armour on armour shone, + Drumme now to drumme did grone, + To hear was wonder, + That with cryes they make, + The very earth did shake, + Thunder to thunder. + + Well it thine age became + O noble Erpingham, + Which didst the signall ayme, + To our hid forces; + When from a meadow by, + Like a storme suddenly, + The English archery + Struck the French horses. + + With Spanish Ewgh so strong, + Arrowes a cloth yard long, + That like to serpents stung, + Piercing the weather. + None from his fellow starts, + But playing manly parts, + And like true English hearts, + Stuck close together. + + When downe their bowes they threw, + And forth their bilbowes drew, + And on the French they flew, + Not one was tardie; + Armes were from shoulders sent, + Scalpes to the teeth were rent, + Down the French pesants went, + Our men were hardie. + + This while oure noble king, + His broad sword brandishing, + Downe the French host did ding, + As to o'erwhelme it. + And many a deep wound lent, + His armes with bloud besprent, + And many a cruel dent + Bruised his helmet. + + Glo'ster, that duke so good, + Next of the royal blood, + For famous England stood, + With his braue brother, + Clarence, in steele so bright, + Though but a maiden knight. + Yet in that furious light + Scarce such another. + + Warwick, in bloud did wade, + Oxford, the foe inuade, + And cruel slaughter made; + Still as they ran up, + Suffolk, his axe did ply, + Beavmont and Willovghby, + Ferres and Tanhope. + + Upon Saint Crispin's day, + Fought was this noble fray, + Which fame did not delay, + To England to carry. + O when shall English men, + With such acts fill a pen, + Or England breed againe + Such a King Harry. + + [5] A Collection of Poems of the Sixteenth Century.--Communicated + by J.F., of Gray's Inn. We thank our Correspondent for the + present, and shall be happy to receive further specimens from the + same source. + + * * * * * + + + + +SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY + + * * * * * + +AMERICAN IMPROVEMENTS. + + +[The very recent publication of the ninth volume of the Encyclopaedia +Americana[6] enables us to lay before our readers the following +interesting notices, connected with the national weal and internal +economy of the United States of North America.] + +_Navy_.--Since the late war, the growth and improvement of our navy +has kept pace with our national prosperity. We could now put to sea, +in a few mouths, with a dozen ships of the line; the most spacious, +efficient, best, and most beautiful constructions that ever traversed +the ocean. This is not merely an American conceit, but an admitted +fact in Europe, where our models are studiously copied. In the United +States, a maximum and uniform calibre of cannon has been lately +determined on and adopted. Instead of the variety of length, form, +and calibre still used in other navies, and almost equal to the Great +Michael with her "bassils, mynards, hagters, culverings, flings, +falcons, double dogs, and pestilent serpenters," our ships offer flush +and uniform decks, sheers free from hills, hollows, and excrescences, +and complete, unbroken batteries of thirty-two or forty-two pounders. +Thus has been realized an important desideratum--the greatest possible +power to do execution coupled with the greatest simplification of the +means. + + [6] Philadelphia, Carey and Lea, 1832. + +But, while we have thus improved upon the hitherto practised means of +naval warfare, we are threatened with a total change. This is by the +introduction of bombs, discharged horizontally, instead of shot from +common cannon. So certain are those who have turned their attention to +this subject that the change must take place, that, in France, they +are already speculating on the means of excluding these destructive +missiles from a ship's sides, by casing them in a cuirass of iron. Nor +are these ideas the mere offspring of idle speculation. Experiments +have been tried on hulks, by bombs projected horizontally, with +terrible effect. If the projectile lodged in a mast, in exploding it +overturned it, with all its yards and rigging; if in the side, the +ports were opened into each other; or, when near the water, an immense +chasm was opened, causing the vessel to sink immediately. If it should +not explode until it fell spent upon deck, besides doing the injury +of an ordinary ball, it would then burst, scattering smoke, fire, and +death, on every side. When this comes to pass, it would seem that +the naval profession would cease to be very desirable. Nevertheless, +experience has, in all ages, shown that, the more destructive are the +engines used in war, and the more it is improved and systematized, the +less is the loss of life. Salamis and Lepanto can either of them +alone count many times the added victims of the Nile, Trafalgar, and +Navarino. + +One effect of the predicted change in naval war, it is said, will be +the substitution of small vessels for the larger ones now in use. The +three decker presents many times the surface of the schooner, +while her superior number of cannon does not confer a commensurate +advantage; for ten bombs, projected into the side of a ship, would be +almost as efficacious to her destruction as a hundred. As forming part +of a system of defence for our coast, the bomb-cannon, mounted on +steamers, which can take their position at will, would be terribly +formidable. With them--to say nothing of torpedoes and submarine +navigation--we need never more be blockaded and annoyed as formerly. +Hence peaceful nations will be most gainers by this change of system; +but it is not enough that we should be capable of raising a blockade: +we are a commercial people: our merchant ships visit every sea, and +our men-of-war must follow and protect them there. + +_Newspapers_.--No country has so many newspapers as the United States. +The following table, arranged for the American Almanac of 1830, is +corrected from the Traveller, and contains a statement of the number +of newspapers published in the colonies at the commencement of the +revolution; and also the number of newspapers and other periodical +works, in the United States, in 1810 and 1828. + + STATES. 1775. 1810. 1828. + Maine 29 + Massachusetts 7 32 78 + New Hampshire 1 12 17 + Vermont 14 21 + Rhode Island 2 7 14 + Connecticut 4 11 33 + New York 4 66 161 + New Jersey 8 22 + Pennsylvania 9 71 185 + Delaware 2 4 + Maryland 2 21 37 + District of Columbia 6 9 + Virginia 2 23 34 + North Carolina 2 10 20 + South Carolina 3 10 16 + Georgia 1 13 18 + Florida 1 2 + Alabama 10 + Mississippi 4 6 + Louisiana 10 9 + Tennessee 6 8 + Kentucky 17 23 + Ohio 14 66 + Indiana 17 + Michigan 2 + Illinois 4 + Missouri 5 + Arkansas 1 + Cherokee Nation 1 + + Total 37 358 802 + +The present number, however, amounts to about a thousand. Thus the +state of New York is mentioned in the table as having 161 newspapers; +but a late publication states that there are 193, exclusive of +religious journals. New York has 1,913,508 inhabitants. There are +about 50 daily newspapers in the United States, two-thirds of which +are considered to give a fair profit. The North American colonies, in +the year 1720, had only seven newspapers: in 1810, the United States +had 359; in 1826, they had 640; in 1830, 1,000, with a population +of 13,000,000; so that they have more newspapers than the whole 190 +millions of Europe. + +In drawing a comparison between the newspapers of the three freest +countries, France, England, and the United States, we find, as we have +just said, those of the last country to be the most numerous, while +some of the French papers have the largest subscription; and the whole +establishment of a first-rate London paper is the most complete. Its +activity is immense. When Canning sent British troops to Portugal, in +1826, we know that some papers sent reporters with the army. The zeal +of the New York papers also deserves to be mentioned, which send +out their news-boats, even fifty miles to sea, to board approaching +vessels, and obtain the news that they bring. The papers of the large +Atlantic cities are also remarkable for their detailed accounts of +arrivals, and the particulars of shipping news, interesting to the +commercial world, in which they are much more minute than the English. +From the immense number of different papers in the United States, it +results that the number of subscribers to each is limited, 2,000 being +considered a respectable list. One paper, therefore, is not able to +unite the talent of many able men, as is the case in France. There +men of the first rank in literature or politics occasionally, or at +regular periods, contribute articles. In the United States, few papers +have more than one editor, who generally writes upon almost all +subjects himself. This circumstance necessarily makes the papers less +spirited and able than some of the foreign journals, but is attended +with this advantage, that no particular set of men is enabled to +exercise a predominant influence by means of these periodicals. Their +abundance neutralizes their effects. Declamation and sophistry are +made comparatively harmless by running in a thousand conflicting +currents. + +_Paper-making_.--The manufacture of paper has of late rapidly +increased in the United States. According to an estimate in 1829, the +whole quantity made in this country amounted to about five to seven +millions a year, and employed from ten to eleven thousand persons. +Rags are not imported from Italy and Germany to the same amount as +formerly, because people here save them more carefully; and the value +of the rags, junk, etc., saved annually in the United States, is +believed to amount to two millions of dollars. Machines for making +paper of any length are much employed in the United States. The +quality of American paper has also improved; but, as paper becomes +much better by keeping, it is difficult to have it of the best quality +in this country, the interest of capital being too high. The paper +used here for printing compares very disadvantageously with that of +England. Much wrapping paper is now made of straw, and paper for +tracing through is prepared in Germany from the poplar tree. A letter +of Mr. Brand, formerly a civil officer in Upper Provence, in France +(which contains many pine forests), dated Feb. 12, 1830, has been +published in the French papers, containing an account of his +successful experiments to make coarse paper of the pine tree. The +experiments of others have led to the same results. Any of our +readers, interested in this subject, can find Mr. Brand's letter in +the _Courrier Francais_ of Nov. 27, 1830, a French paper published +in New York. In salt-works near Hull, Massachusetts, in which the +sea-water is made to flow slowly over sheds of pine, in order to +evaporate, the writer found large quantities of a white substance--the +fibres of the pine wood dissolved and carried off by the brine--which +seemed to require nothing but glue to convert it into paper. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE NATURALIST + + * * * * * + + +THE CUTTLE-FISH + + +Is one of the most curious creatures of "the watery kingdom." It is +popularly termed a fish, though it is, in fact, a worm, belonging to +the order termed _Mollusca, (Molluscus_, soft,) from the body being of +a pulpy substance and having no skeleton. It differs in many respects +from other animals of its class, particularly with regard to its +internal structure, the perfect formation of the viscera, eyes, and +even organs of hearing. Moreover, "it has three hearts, two of which +are placed at the root of the two branchiae (or gills); they receive +the blood from the body, and propel it into the branchiae. The +returning veins open into the middle heart, from which the aorta +proceeds."[7] Of Cuttle-fish there are several species. That +represented in the annexed Cut is the common or officinal Cuttle-fish, +(_Sepia officinalis_, Lin). It consists of a soft, pulpy, body, with +processes or arms, which are furnished with small holes or suckers, +by means of which the animal fixes itself in the manner of +cupping-glasses. These holes increase with the age of the animal; and +in some species amount to upwards of one thousand. The arms are often +torn or nipped off by shell or other fishes, but the animal has the +power of speedily reproducing the limbs. By means of the suckers the +Cuttle-fish usually affects its locomotion. "It swims at freedom in +the bosom of the sea, moving by sudden and irregular jerks, the body +being nearly in a perpendicular position, and the head directed +downwards and backwards. Some species have a fleshy, muscular fin +on each side, by aid of which they accomplish these apparently +inconvenient motions; but, at least, an equal number of them are +finless, and yet can swim with perhaps little less agility. Lamarck, +indeed, denies this, and says that these can only trail themselves +along the bottom by means of the suckers. This is probably their +usual mode of proceeding; that it is not their only one, we have the +positive affirmation of other observers."[8] Serviceable as these arms +undoubtedly are to the Cuttle-fish, Blumenbach thinks it questionable +whether they can be considered as organs of touch, in the more limited +sense to which he has confined that term.[9] + + +THE CUTTLE-FISH. + + +[Illustration: The Cuttle-fish.] + + +The jaws of the Cuttle-fish, it should be observed, are fixed in the +body because there is no head to which they can be articulated. They +are of horny substance, and resemble the bill of a parrot. They are in +the centre of the under part of the body, surrounded by the arms. By +means of these parts, the shell-fish which are taken for food, are +completely triturated. + + [7] Cuvier. + + [8] Nat. Hist. Molluscous Animals, Mag. Nat. Hist. vol. iii. + p. 527. + + [9] Manual Comp. Anat. p. 263. + +We now come to the most peculiar parts of the structure of the +Cuttle-fish, viz. the _ear and eye_, inasmuch as it is the only animal +of its class, in which any thing has hitherto been discovered, at +all like an organ of hearing, or that has been shown to possess true +eyes.[10] The ears consist of two oval cavities, in the cartilaginous +ring, to which the large arms of the animal are affixed. In each of +these is a small bag, containing a bony substance, and receiving the +termination of the nerves, like those of the vestibulum (or cavity +in the bone of the ear) in fishes. The nature of the eyes cannot be +disputed. "They resemble, on the whole, those of red-blooded animals, +particularly fishes; they are at least incomparably more like them +than the eyes of any known insects; yet they are distinguished by +several extraordinary peculiarities. The front of the eye-ball is +covered with a loose membrane instead of a cornea; the iris is +composed of a firm substance; and a process projects from the upper +margin of the pupil, which gives that membrane a semilunar form."[11] +The exterior coat or ball is remarkably strong, so as to seem almost +calcareous, and is, when taken out, of a brilliant pearl colour; it +is worn in some parts of Italy, and in the Grecian islands by way of +artificial pearl in necklaces. + + [10] In all other worms the eyes are entirely wanting, or their + existence is very doubtful. Whether the black points at the + extremities of what Swammerdam calls the horns of the common + snail, are organs which really possess the power of vision, + is still problematical. + + [11] Blumenbach, Man. Comp. Anat. p. 305. + +Next we may notice the curious provision by which the Cuttle-fish is +enabled to elude the pursuit of its enemies in the "vasty deep." This +consists of a black, inky fluid, (erroneously supposed to be the +bile,) which is contained in a bag beneath the body. The fluid itself +is thick, but miscible with water to such a degree, that a very small +quantity will colour a vast bulk of water.[12] Thus, the comparatively +small Cuttle-fish may darken the element about the acute eye of the +whale. What omniscience is displayed in this single provision, as well +as in the faculty possessed by the Cuttle-fish of reproducing its +mutilated arms! All Nature beams with such beneficence, and abounds +with such instances of divine love for every creature, however humble: +in observing these provisions, how often are we reminded of the +benefits conferred by the same omniscience upon our own species. It is +thus, by the investigation of natural history, that we are led to +the contemplation of the sublimest subjects; thus that man with God +himself holds converse. + + +BONE, OR PLATE. + + +[Illustration: Bone, or Plate.] + + +The "bone" of the Cuttle-fish now claims attention. This is a +complicated calcareous plate, lodged in a peculiar cavity of the back, +which it materially strengthens. This plate has long been known in +the shop of the apothecary under the name of Cuttle-fish bone: an +observant reader may have noticed scores of these plates in glasses +labelled _Os Sepiae_. Reduced to powder, they were formerly used as an +absorbent, but they are now chiefly sought after for the purpose of +polishing the softer metals. It is however improper to call this plate +bone, since, in composition, "it is exactly similar to _shell_, and +consists of various membranes, hardened by carbonate of lime, (the +principal material of shell,) without the smallest mixture of +phosphate of lime,[13] or the chief material of bone." + + [12] According to Cuvier, the Indian ink, from China, is made of + this fluid, as was the ink of the Romans. It has been supposed, + and not without a considerable degree of probability, that the + celebrated plain, but wholesome dish, the black broth of Sparta, + was no other than a kind of Cuttle-fish soup, in which the black + liquor of the animal was always added as an ingredient; being, + when fresh, of very agreeable taste.--_Shaw's Zoology_. + + [13] Mr. Hatchett, in Philos. Trans. + + +EGGS. + + +[Illustration: Eggs.] + + +Lastly, are the _ovaria_, or egg-bags of the Cuttle-fish, which are +popularly called _sea-grapes_. The female fish deposits her eggs +in numerous clusters, on the stalks of fuci, on corals, about the +projecting sides of rocks, or on any other convenient substances. +These eggs, which are of the size of small filberts, are of a black +colour. + +The most remarkable species of Cuttle-fish inhabits the British seas; +and, although seldom taken, its bone or plate is cast ashore on +different parts of the coast from the south of England to the Zetland +Isles. We have picked up scores of these plates and bunches of the +egg-bags or grapes, after rough weather on the beach between Worthing +and Rottingdean; but we never found a single fish. + +The Cuttle-fish was esteemed a delicacy by the ancients, and the +moderns equally prize it. Captain Cook speaks highly of a soup he made +from it; and the fish is eaten at the present day by the Italians, and +by the Greeks, during Lent. We take the most edible species to be the +_octopodia_, or eight-armed, found particularly large in the East +Indies and the Gulf of Mexico. The common species here figured, when +full-grown, measures about two feet in length, is of a pale blueish +brown colour, with the skin marked by numerous dark purple specks. + +The Cuttle-fish is described by some naturalists, as naked or +shell-less. It is often found attached to the shell of the Paper +Nautilus, which it is said to use as a sail. It is, however, very +doubtful whether the Cuttle-fish has a shell of its own. There is a +controversy upon the subject. Aristotle, and our contemporary, Home, +maintain it to be parasitical: Cuvier and Ferrusac, non-parasitical; +but the curious reader will find the _pro_ and _con._--the majority +and minority--in the _Magazine of Natural History_, vol. iii. p. 535. + + * * * * * + + + + +NOTES OF A READER. + + * * * * * + +SERVANTS IN INDIA. + + +[Captain Skinner, in his _Excursions in India_, makes the following +sensible observations on the tyranny over servants in India:] + +There are throughout the mountains many of the sacred shrubs of the +Hindoos, which give great delight, as my servants fall in with them. +They pick the leaves; and running with them to me, cry, "See, sir, +see, our holy plants are here!" and congratulate each other on having +found some indication of a better land than they are generally +inclined to consider the country of the Pariahs. The happiness these +simple remembrances shed over the whole party is so enlivening, that +every distress and fatigue seems to be forgotten. When we behold a +servant approaching with a sprig of the _Dona_ in his hand, we hail it +as the olive-branch, that denotes peace and good-will for the rest of +the day, if, as must sometimes be the case, they have been in any way +interrupted. + +Even these little incidents speak so warmly in favour of the Hindoo +disposition, that, in spite of much that may be uncongenial to an +European in their character, they cannot fail to inspire him with +esteem, if not affection. I wish that many of my countrymen would +learn to believe that the natives are endowed with feelings, and +surely they may gather such an inference from many a similar trait +to the one I have related. Hardness of heart can never be allied +to artless simplicity: that mind must possess a higher degree of +sensibility and refinement, that can unlock its long-confined +recollections by so light a spring as a wild flower. + +I have often witnessed, with wonder and sorrow, an English gentleman +stoop to the basest tyranny over his servants, without even the poor +excuse of anger, and frequently from no other reason than because he +could not understand their language. The question, from the answer +being unintelligible, is instantly followed by a blow. Such scenes are +becoming more rare, and indeed are seldom acted but by the younger +members of society; they are too frequent notwithstanding: and should +any thing that has fallen from me here, induce the cruelly-disposed to +reflect a little upon the impropriety and mischief of their conduct, +when about to raise the hand against a native, and save one stripe +to the passive people who are so much at the mercy of their masters' +tempers, I shall indeed be proud. + +[Again, speaking of the condition of servants, Captain Skinner +remarks--] + +It is impossible to view some members of the despised class without +sorrow and pity, particularly those who are attached, in the lowest +offices, to the establishments of the Europeans. They are the most +melancholy race of beings, always alone, and apparently unhappy: they +are scouted from the presence even of their fellow-servants. None but +the mind of a poet could imagine such outcasts venturing to raise +their thoughts to the beauty of a Brahmin's daughter; and a touching +tale in such creative fancy, no doubt, it would make, for, from their +outward appearances, I do not perceive why they should not be endowed +with minds as sensitive at least as those of the castes above them. +There are among them some very stout and handsome men; and it is +ridiculous to see sometimes all their strength devoted to the charge +of a sickly puppy;--to take care of dogs being their principal +occupation! + +Our attention has been drawn to the above passage in Captain Skinner's +work, by its ready illustration of the views and conclusions of the +late Dr. Knox, in his invaluable _Spirit of Despotism_, Section 2, +"Oriental manners, and the ideas imbibed in youth, both in the East +and West Indies, favourable to the spirit of despotism." How forcibly +applicable, on the present occasion, is the following extract:--"from +the intercourse of England with the East and West Indies, it is to be +feared that something of a more servile spirit has been derived than +was known among those who established the free constitutions of +Europe, and than would have been adopted, or patiently borne, in ages +of virtuous simplicity. A very numerous part of our countrymen spend +their most susceptible age in those countries, where despotic manners +remarkably prevail. They are themselves, when invested with office, +treated by the natives with an idolatrous degree of reverence, which +teaches them to expect a similar submission to their will, on their +return to their own country. They have been accustomed to look up to +personages greatly their superiors in rank and riches, with awe; and +to look down on their inferiors in _property_ with supreme contempt, +as slaves of their will and ministers of their luxury. Equal laws and +equal liberty at home appear to them saucy claims of the poor and the +vulgar, which tend to divest riches of one of the greatest charms, +over-bearing dominion. We do, indeed, import gorgeous silks and +luscious sweets from the Indies, but we import, at the same time, the +spirit of despotism, which adds deformity to the purple robe, and +bitterness to the honied beverage." "That _Oriental_ manners are +unfavourable to liberty, is, I believe, universally conceded. The +natives of the East Indies entertain not the idea of independence. +They treat the Europeans, who go among them to acquire their riches, +with a respect similar to the abject submission which they pay to +their native despots. Young men, who in England scarcely possessed +the rank of the gentry, are waited upon in India, with more attentive +servility than is paid or required in many courts of Europe. Kings of +England seldom assume the state enjoyed by an East India governor, or +even by subordinate officers. Enriched at an early age, the adventurer +returns to England. His property admits him to the higher circles +of fashionable life. He aims at rivalling or excelling all the +old nobility in the splendour of his mansions, the finery of his +carriages, the number of his liveried train, the profusion of his +tables, in every unmanly indulgence which an empty vanity can covet, +and a full purse procure. Such a man, when he looks from the window of +his superb mansion, and sees the people pass, cannot endure the idea, +that they are of as much consequence as himself in the eye of the law; +and that he dares not insult or oppress the unfortunate being who +rakes his kennel or sweeps his chimney." + + * * * * * + + +FALL OF ROBESPIERRE. + + +It is well known, that during the revolutionary troubles of France, +not only all the churches were closed, but the Catholic and Protestant +worship entirely forbidden; and, after the constitution of 1795, it +was at the hazard of one's life that either the mass was heard, or +any religious duty performed. It is evident that Robespierre, who +unquestionably had a design which is now generally understood, was +desirous, on the day of the fête of the Supreme Being, to bring back +public opinion to the worship of the Deity. Eight months before, +we had seen the Bishop of Paris, accompanied by his clergy, appear +voluntarily at the bar of the Convention, to abjure the Christian +faith and the Catholic religion. But it is not as generally known, +that at that period Robespierre was not omnipotent, and could not +carry his desires into effect. Numerous factions then disputed with +him the supreme authority. It was not till the end of 1793, and the +beginning of 1794, that his power was so completely established that +he could venture to act up to his intentions. + +Robespierre was then desirous to establish the worship of the Supreme +Being, and the belief of the immortality of the soul. He felt that +irreligion is the soul of anarchy, and it was not anarchy but +despotism which he desired; and yet the very day after that +magnificent fête in honour of the Supreme Being, a man of the highest +celebrity in science, and as distinguished for virtue and probity as +philosophic genius, Lavoisier, was led out to the scaffold. On the day +following that, Madame Elizabeth, that Princess whom the executioners +could not guillotine, till they had turned aside their eyes from the +sight of her angelic visage, stained the same axe with her blood!--And +a month after, Robespierre, who wished to restore order for his own +purposes--who wished to still the bloody waves which for years had +inundated the state, felt that all his efforts would be in vain if +the masses who supported his power were not restrained and directed, +because without order nothing but ravages and destruction can prevail. +To ensure the government of the masses, it was indispensable that +morality, religion, and belief should be established--and, to affect +the multitude, that religion should be clothed in external forms. "My +friend," said Voltaire, to the atheist Damilaville, "after you have +supped on well-dressed partridges, drunk your sparkling champaigne, +and slept on cushions of down in the arms of your mistress, I have +no fear of you, though you do not believe in God.---But if you are +perishing of hunger, and I meet you in the corner of a wood, I would +rather dispense with your company." But when Robespierre wished to +bring back to something like discipline the crew of the vessel which +was fast driving on the breakers, he found the thing was not so easy +as he imagined. To destroy is easy--to rebuild is the difficulty. He +was omnipotent to do evil; but the day that he gave the first sign +of a disposition to return to order, the hands which he himself +had stained with blood, marked his forehead with the fatal sign of +destruction. + +--_Memoirs of the Duchess of Abrantes._ + + * * * * * + + +SOUNDS DURING THE NIGHT. + + +The great audibility of sounds during the night is a phenomenon of +considerable interest, and one which had been observed even by the +ancients. In crowded cities or in their vicinity, the effect was +generally ascribed to the rest of animated beings, while in localities +where such an explanation was inapplicable, it was supposed to arise +from a favourable direction of the prevailing wind. Baron Humboldt +was particularly struck with this phenomenon when he first heard the +rushing of the great cataracts of the Orinoco in the plain which +surrounds the mission of the Apures. These sounds he regarded as +three times louder during the night than during the day. Some authors +ascribed this fact to the cessation of the humming of insects, the +singing of birds, and the action of the wind on the leaves of the +trees, but M. Humboldt justly maintains that this cannot be the cause +of it on the Orinoco, where the buzz of insects is much louder in the +night than in the day, and where the breeze never rises till after +sunset. Hence he was led to ascribe the phenomenon to the perfect +transparency and uniform density of the air, which can exist only at +night after the heat of the ground has been uniformly diffused through +the atmosphere. When the rays of the sun have been beating on the +ground during the day, currents of hot air of different temperatures, +and consequently of different densities, are constantly ascending from +the ground and mixing with the cold air above. The air thus ceases +to be a homogeneous medium, and every person must have observed the +effects of it upon objects seen through it which are very indistinctly +visible, and have a tremulous motion, as if they were "dancing in +the air." The very same effect is perceived when we look at objects +through spirits and water that are not perfectly mixed, or when we +view distant objects over a red hot poker or over a flame. In all +these cases the light suffers refraction in passing from a medium of +one density into a medium of a different density, and the refracted +rays are constantly changing their direction as the different currents +rise in succession. Analogous effects are produced when sound passes +through a mixed medium, whether it consists of two different mediums +or of one medium where portions of it have different densities. As +sound moves with different velocities through media of different +densities, the wave which produces the sound will be partly reflected +in passing from one medium to the other, and the direction of the +transmitted wave changed; and hence in passing through such media +different portions of the wave will reach the ear at different times, +and thus destroy the sharpness and distinctness of the sound. This +may be proved by many striking facts. If we put a bell in a receiver +containing a mixture of hydrogen gas and atmospheric air, the sound of +the bell can scarcely be heard. During a shower of rain or of snow, +noises are greatly deadened, and when sound is transmitted along an +iron wire or an iron pipe of sufficient length, we actually hear two +sounds, one transmitted more rapidly through the solid, and the other +more slowly through the air. The same property is well illustrated by +an elegant and easily repeated experiment of Chladni's. When sparkling +champagne is poured into a tall glass till it is half full, the glass +loses its power of ringing by a stroke upon its edge, and emits only +a disagreeable and a puffy sound. This effect will continue while the +wine is filled with bubbles of air, or as long as the effervescence +lasts; but when the effervescence begins to subside, the sound becomes +clearer and clearer, and the glass rings as usual when the air-bubbles +have vanished. If we reproduce the effervescence by stirring the +champagne with a piece of bread the glass will again cease to ring. +The same experiment will succeed with other effervescing fluids.--_Sir +David Brewster_. + + * * * * * + +No man is so insignificant as to be sure his example can do no hurt. + +--_Lord Clarendon._ + + * * * * * + + + + +THE PUBLIC JOURNALS. + + * * * * * + + +PADDY FOOSHANE'S FRICASSEE. + + +Paddy Fooshane kept a shebeen house at Barleymount Cross, in which he +sold whisky--from which his Majesty did not derive any large portion +of his revenues--ale, and provisions. One evening a number of friends, +returning from a funeral---all neighbours too--stopt at his house, +"because they were in grief," to drink a drop. There was Andy Agar, a +stout, rattling fellow, the natural son of a gentleman residing near +there; Jack Shea, who was afterwards transported for running away with +Biddy Lawlor; Tim Cournane, who, by reason of being on his keeping, +was privileged to carry a gun; Owen Connor, a march-of-intellect +man, who wished to enlighten proctors by making them swallow their +processes; and a number of other "good boys." The night began to "rain +cats and dogs," and there was no stirring out; so the cards were +called for, a roaring fire was made down, and the whisky and ale began +to flow. After due observation, and several experiments, a space large +enough for the big table, and free from the drop down, was discovered. +Here six persons, including Andy, Jack, Tim--with his gun between his +legs--and Owen, sat to play for a pig's head, of which the living +owner, in the parlour below, testified, by frequent grunts, his +displeasure at this unceremonious disposal of his property. + +Card-playing is very thirsty, and the boys were anxious to keep out +the wet; so that long before the pig's head was decided, a messenger +had been dispatched several times to Killarney, a distance of four +English miles, for a pint of whisky each time. The ale also went +merrily round, until most of the men were quite stupid, their faces +swoln, and their eyes red and heavy. The contest at length was +decided; but a quarrel about the skill of the respective parties +succeeded, and threatened broken heads at one time. At last Jack Shea +swore they must have something to eat;----him but he was starved with +drink, and he must get some rashers somewhere or other. Every one +declared the same; and Paddy was ordered to cook some _griskins_ +forthwith. Paddy was completely nonplussed:--all the provisions were +gone, and yet his guests were not to be trifled with. He made a +hundred excuses--"'Twas late--'twas dry now--and there was nothing in +the house; sure they ate and drank enough." But all in vain. The ould +sinner was threatened with instant death if he delayed. So Paddy +called a council of war in the parlour, consisting of his wife and +himself. + +"Agrah, Jillen, agrah, what will we do with these? Is there any meat +in the tub? Where is the tongue? If it was yours, Jillen, we'd give +them enough of it; but I mane the cow's." (aside.) + +"Sure the proctors got the tongue ere yesterday, and you know there +an't a bit in the tub. Oh the murtherin villains! and I'll engage +'twill be no good for us, after all my white bread and the whisky. +That it may pison 'em!" + +"Amen! Jillen; but don't curse them. After all, where's the meat? I'm +sure that Andy will kill me if we don't make it out any how;--and he +hasn't a penny to pay for it. You could drive the mail coach, Jillen, +through his breeches pocket without jolting over a ha'penny. Coming, +coming; d'ye hear 'em?" + +"Oh, they'll murther us. Sure if we had any of the tripe I sent +yesterday to the gauger." + +"Eh! What's that you say? I declare to God here's Andy getting up. +We must do something. _Thonom an dhiaoul_, I have it. Jillen run and +bring me the leather breeches; run woman, alive! Where's the block and +the hatchet? Go up and tell 'em you're putting down the pot." + +Jillen pacified the uproar in the kitchen by loud promises, and +returned to Paddy. The use of the leather breeches passed her +comprehension; but Paddy actually took up the leather breeches, tore +away the lining with great care, chopped the leather with the hatchet +on the block, and put it into the pot as tripes. Considering the +situation in which Andy and his friends were, and the appetite of the +Irish peasantry for meat in any shape--"a bone" being their _summum +bonum_--the risk was very little. If discovered, however, Paddy's +safety was much worse than doubtful, as no people in the world have a +greater horror of any unusual food. One of the most deadly modes of +revenge they can employ is to give an enemy dog's or cat's flesh; and +there have been instances where the persons who have eaten it, on +being informed of the fact, have gone mad. But Paddy's habit of +practical jokes, from which nothing could wean him, and his anger at +their conduct, along with the fear he was in did not allow him to +hesitate a moment. Jillen remonstrated in vain. "Hould your tongue, +you foolish woman. They're all as blind as the pig there. They'll +never find it out. Bad luck to 'em too, my leather breeches! that I +gave a pound note and a hog for in Cork. See how nothing else would +satisfy 'em!" The meat at length was ready. Paddy drowned it in +butter, threw out the potatoes on the table, and served it up smoking +hot with the greatest gravity. + +"By ----," says Jack Shea, "that's fine stuff! How a man would dig a +trench after that." + +"I'll take a priest's oath," answered Tim Cohill, the most irritable +of men, but whose temper was something softened by the rich steam;-- + +"Yet, Tim, what's a priest's oath? I never heard that." + +"Why, sure, every one knows you didn't ever hear of anything of good." + +"I say you lie, Tim, you rascal." + +Tim was on his legs in a few moments, and a general battle was about +to begin; but the appetite was too strong, and the quarrel was +settled; Tim having been appeased by being allowed to explain a +priest's oath. According to him, a priest's oath was this:--He was +surrounded by books, which were gradually piled up until they reached +his lips. He then kissed the uppermost, and swore by all to the +bottom. As soon as the admiration excited by his explanation, in those +who were capable of hearing Tim, had ceased, all fell to work; and +certainly, if the tripes had been of ordinary texture, drunk as was +the party, they would soon have disappeared. After gnawing at them for +some time, "Well," says Owen Connor, "that I mightn't!--but these are +the quarest tripes I ever eat. It must be she was very ould." + +"By ----," says Andy, taking a piece from his mouth to which he had +been paying his addresses for the last half hour, "I'd as soon be +eating leather. She was a bull, man; I can't find the soft end at all +of it." + +"And that's true for you, Andy," said the man of the gun; "and 'tis +the greatest shame they hadn't a bull-bait to make him tinder. Paddy, +was it from Jack Clifford's bull you got 'em? They'd do for wadding, +they're so tough." + +"I'll tell you, Tim, where I got them--'twas out of Lord Shannon's +great cow at Cork, the great fat cow that the Lord Mayor bought for +the Lord Lieutenant--_Asda churp naur hagushch_."[14] + + [14] May it never come out of his body! + +"Amen, I pray God! Paddy. Out of Lord Shandon's cow? near the steeple, +I suppose; the great cow that couldn't walk with tallow. By ----, +these are fine tripes. They'll make a man very strong. Andy, give me +two or three _libbhers_ more of 'em." + +"Well, see that! out of Lord Shandon's cow: I wonder what they gave +her, Paddy. That I mightn't!--but these would eat a pit of potatoes. +Any how, they're good for the teeth. Paddy, what's the reason they +send all the good mate from Cork to the Blacks?" + +But before Paddy could answer this question, Andy, who had been +endeavouring to help Tim, uttered a loud "_Thonom an dhiaoul!_ what's +this? Isn't this flannel?" The fact was, he had found a piece of +the lining, which Paddy, in his hurry, had not removed; and all was +confusion. Every eye was turned to Paddy; but with wonderful quickness +he said "'Tis the book tripe, _agragal_, don't you see?"--and actually +persuaded them to it. + +"Well, any how," says Tim, "it had the taste of wool." + +"May this choke me," says Jack Shea, "if I didn't think that 'twas a +piece of a leather breeches when I saw Andy _chawing_ it." + +This was a shot between wind and water to Paddy. His self-possession +was nearly altogether lost, and he could do no more than turn it off +by a faint laugh. But it jarred most unpleasantly on Andy's nerves. +After looking at Paddy for some time with a very ominous look, he +said, "_Yirroo Pandhrig_ of the tricks, if I thought you were going on +with any work here, my soul and my guts to the devil if I would not +cut you into garters. By the vestment I'd make a _furhurmeen_ of you." + +"Is it I, Andy? That the hands may fall off me!" + +But Tim Cohill made a most seasonable diversion. "Andy, when you die, +you'll be the death of one fool, any how. What do you know that wasn't +ever in Cork itself about tripes. I never ate such mate in my life; +and 'twould be good for every poor man in the County of Kerry if he +had a tub of it." + +Tim's tone of authority, and the character he had got for learning, +silenced every doubt, and all laid siege to the tripes again. But +after some time, Andy was observed gazing with the most astonished +curiosity into the plate before him. His eyes were rivetted on +something; at last he touched it with his knife, arid exclaimed, +"_Kirhappa, dar dhia!_"--[A button by G--.] + +"What's that you say?" burst from all! and every one rose in the best +manner he could, to learn the meaning of the button. + +"Oh, the villain of the world!" roared Andy, "I'm pisoned! Where's the +pike? For God's sake Jack, run for the priest, or I'm a dead man with +the breeches. Where is he?--yeer bloods won't ye catch him, and I +pisoned?" + +The fact was, Andy had met one of the knee-buttons sewed into a piece +of the tripe, and it was impossible for him to fail discovering the +cheat. The rage, however, was not confined to Andy. As soon as it was +understood what had been done, there was an universal rush for Paddy +and Jillen; but Paddy was much too cunning to be caught, after the +narrow escape he had of it before. The moment after the discovery of +the lining, that he could do so without suspicion, he stole from the +table, left the house, and hid himself. Jillen did the same; and +nothing remained for the eaters, to vent their rage, but breaking +every thing in the cabin; which was done in the utmost fury. Andy, +however, continued watching for Paddy with a gun, a whole month after. +He might be seen prowling along the ditches near the shebeen-house, +waiting for a shot at him. Not that he would have scrupled to enter +it, were he likely to find Paddy there; but the latter was completely +on the _shuchraun_, and never visited his cabin except by stealth. It +was in one of those visits that Andy hoped to catch him. + +--_Tait's Edinburgh Magazine_. + + * * * * * + + +CONVERSATIONS WITH LORD BYRON. + +_By the Countess of Blessington_. + + +One of our first rides with Lord Byron was to Nervi, a village on +the sea-coast, most romantically situated, and each turn of the road +presenting various and beautiful prospects. They were all familiar to +him, and he failed not to point them out, but in very sober terms, +never allowing any thing like enthusiasm in his expressions, though +many of the views might have excited it. + +His appearance on horseback was not advantageous, and he seemed +aware of it, for he made many excuses for his dress and equestrian +appointments. His horse was literally covered with various trappings, +in the way of cavesons, martingales, and Heaven knows how many other +(to me) unknown inventions. The saddle was _à la Hussarde_ with +holsters, in which he always carried pistols. His dress consisted of +a nankeen jacket and trousers, which appeared to have shrunk from +washing; the jacket embroidered in the same colour, and with three +rows of buttons; the waist very short, the back very narrow, and the +sleeves set in as they used to be ten or fifteen years before; a black +stock, very narrow; a dark-blue velvet cap with a shade, and a very +rich gold band and large gold tassel at the crown; nankeen gaiters, +and a pair of blue spectacles, completed his costume, which was any +thing but becoming. This was his general dress of a morning for +riding, but I have seen it changed for a green tartan plaid jacket. He +did not ride well, which surprised us, as, from the frequent allusions +to horsemanship in his works, we expected to find him almost a Nimrod, +It was evident that he had _pretensions_ on this point, though he +certainly was what I should call a timid rider. When his horse made a +false step, which was not unfrequent, he seemed discomposed; and when +we came to any bad part of the road, he immediately checked his course +and walked his horse very slowly, though there really was nothing to +make even a lady nervous. Finding that I could perfectly manage (or +what he called _bully_) a very highly-dressed horse that I daily rode, +he became extremely anxious to buy it; asked me a thousand questions +as to how I had acquired such a perfect command of it, &c. &c. and +entreated, as the greatest favour, that I would resign it to him as a +charger to take to Greece, declaring he never would part with it, &c. +As I was by no means a bold rider, we were rather amused at observing +Lord Byron's opinion of my courage; and as he seemed so anxious for +the horse, I agreed to let him have it when he was to embark. From +this time he paid particular attention to the movements of poor +Mameluke (the name of the horse), and said he should now feel +confidence in action with so steady a charger. + +_April_--. Lord Byron dined with us today. During dinner he was as +usual gay, spoke in terms of the warmest commendation of Sir Walter +Scott, not only as an author, but as a man, and dwelt with apparent +delight on his novels, declaring that he had read and re-read them +over and over again, and always with increased pleasure. He said +that he quite equalled, nay, in his opinion, surpassed Cervantes. In +talking of Sir Walter's private character, goodness of heart, &c., +Lord Byron became more animated than I had ever seen him; his colour +changed from its general pallid tint to a more lively hue, and his +eyes became humid: never had he appeared to such advantage, and it +might easily be seen that every expression he uttered proceeded from +his heart. Poor Byron!--for poor he is even with all his genius, rank, +and wealth--had he lived more with men like Scott, whose openness of +character and steady principle had convinced him that they were in +earnest in _their goodness_, and not _making believe_, (as he always +suspects good people to be,) his life might be different and happier! +Byron is so acute an observer that nothing escapes him; all the shades +of selfishness and vanity are exposed to his searching glance, and the +misfortune is, (and a serious one it is to him,) that when he finds +these, and alas! they are to be found on every side, they disgust +and prevent his giving credit to the many good qualities that often +accompany them. He declares he can sooner pardon crimes, because they +proceed from the passions, than these minor vices, that spring from +egotism and self-conceit. We had a long argument this evening on the +subject, which ended, like most arguments, by leaving both of the same +opinion as when it commenced. I endeavoured to prove that crimes were +not only injurious to the perpetrators, but often ruinous to the +innocent, and productive of misery to friends and relations, whereas +selfishness and vanity carried with them their own punishment, the +first depriving the person of all sympathy, and the second exposing +him to ridicule which to the vain is a heavy punishment, but that +their effects were not destructive to society as are crimes. + +He laughed when I told him that having heard him so often declaim +against vanity, and detect it so often in his friends, I began to +suspect he knew the malady by having had it himself, and that I had +observed through life, that those persons who had the most vanity were +the most severe against that failing in their friends. He wished to +impress upon me that he was not vain, and gave various proofs to +establish this; but I produced against him his boasts of swimming, his +evident desire of being considered more _un homme de societe_ than a +poet, and other little examples, when he laughingly pleaded guilty, +and promised to be more merciful towards his friends. + +Byron attempted to be gay, but the effort was not successful, and he +wished us good night with a trepidation of manner that marked his +feelings. And this is the man that I have heard considered unfeeling! +How often are our best qualities turned against us, and made the +instruments for wounding us in the most vulnerable part, until, +ashamed of betraying our susceptibility, we affect an insensibility +we are far from possessing, and, while we deceive others, nourish in +secret the feelings that prey _only_ on our own hearts! + +--_New Monthly Magazine._ + + * * * * * + + + + +THE GATHERER. + + +_Canary Birds._--In Germany and the Tyrol, from whence the rest of +Europe is principally supplied with Canary birds, the apparatus for +breeding Canaries is both large and expensive. A capacious building +is erected for them, with a square space at each end, and holes +communicating with these spaces. In these outlets are planted such +trees as the birds prefer. The bottom is strewed with sand, on which +are cast rapeseed, chickweed, and such other food as they like. +Throughout the inner compartment, which is kept dark, are placed +bowers for the birds to build in, care being taken that the breeding +birds are guarded from the intrusion of the rest. Four Tyrolese +usually take over to England about sixteen hundred of these birds; and +though they carry them on their backs nearly a thousand miles, and pay +twenty pounds for them originally, they can sell them at 5_s_. each. + +_Braithwaite's Steam Fire Engine_--will deliver about 9,000 gallons +of water per hour to an elevation of 90 feet. The time of getting the +machine into action, from the moment of igniting the fuel, (the water +being cold,) is 18 minutes. As soon as an alarm is given, the fire is +kindled, and the bellows, attached to the engine, are worked by hand. +By the time the horses are harnessed in, the fuel is thoroughly +ignited, and the bellows are then worked by the motion of the wheels +of the engine. By the time of arriving at the fire, preparing the +hoses, &c. the steam is ready. + +Fisher, bishop of Rochester, was accustomed to style his church his +wife, declaring that he would never exchange her for one that was +richer. He was a zealous adherent of Pope Paul III. who created him +a cardinal. The king, Henry VIII., on learning that Fisher would not +refuse the dignity, exclaimed, in a passion, "Yea! is he so lusty? +Well, let the pope send him a hat when he will. Mother of God! he +shall wear it on his shoulders, for I will leave him never a head to +set it on." + +_Flax_ is not uncommon in the greenhouses about Philadelphia, but +we have not heard of any experiments with it in the open +air.--_Encyclopaedia Americana._ + +_The Schoolmaster wanted in the East._--Mr. Madden, in his travels +in Turkey, Egypt, Nubia, and Palestine, says:--"In all my travels, I +could only meet one woman who could read and write, and that was in +Damietta; she was a Levantine Christian, and her peculiar talent was +looked upon as something superhuman." + +La Fontaine had but one son, whom, at the age of 14, he placed in the +hands of Harlay, archbishop of Paris, who promised to provide for him. +After a long absence, La Fontaine met this youth at the house of a +friend, and being pleased with his conversation, was told that it was +his own son. "Ah," said he, "I am very glad of it." + +_Universal Genius._--Rivernois thus describes the character of +Fontenelle: "When Fontenelle appeared on the field, all the prizes +were already distributed, all the palms already gathered: the prize of +universality alone remained, Fontenelle determined to attempt it, and +he was successful. He is not only a metaphysician with Malebranche, a +natural philosopher with Newton, a legislator with Peter the Great, a +statesman with D'Argenson; he is everything with everybody." + +_Forest Schools._--There are a number of forest academies in Germany, +particularly in the small states of central Germany, in the Hartz, +Thuringia, &c. The principal branches taught in them are the +following:--forest botany, mineralogy, zoology, chemistry; by which +the learner is taught the natural history of forests, and the mutual +relations, &c. of the different kingdoms of nature. He is also +instructed in the care and chase of game, and in the surveying and +cultivation of forests, so as to understand the mode of raising all +kinds of wood, and supplying a new growth as fast as the old is taken +away. The pupil is too instructed in the administration of the forest +taxes and police, and all that relates to forests considered as a +branch of revenue. + +_The Weather._--Meteorological journals are now given in most +magazines. The first statement of this kind was communicated by Dr. +Fothergill to the Gentleman's Magazine, and consisted of a monthly +account of the weather and diseases of London. The latter information +is now monopolized by the parish-clerks. + +_Goethe._--The wife of a Silesian peasant, being obliged to go to +Saxony, and hearing that she had travelled (on foot) more than half +the distance to Goethe's residence, whose works she had read with the +liveliest interest, continued her journey to Weimar for the sake of +seeing him. Goethe declared that the true character of his works had +never been better understood than by this woman. He gave her his +portrait. + +_Liverpool and Manchester Railway._--The Company has reported the +following result: + + Passengers entered in the Company's + books during the half-year + ending June 30, 1831 £188,726 + + Ditto, ditto, ending December + 31, 1831 256,321 + + Increase £67,595 + +Being upwards of 33 per cent. increase of the first six months of the +year, and upwards of 135 per cent. increase on the travellers between +the two towns during the corresponding months, previously to opening +the railway.--_Gordon, on Steam Carriages._ + +_Caliga._--This was the name of the Roman soldier's shoe, made in the +sandal fashion. The sole was of wood, and stuck full of nails. Caius +Caesar Caligula, the fourth Roman Emperor, the son of Germanicus and +Agrippina, derived his surname from "Caliga," as having been born in +the army, and afterwards bred up in the habit of a common soldier; he +wore this military shoe in conformity to those of the common soldiers, +with a view of engaging their affections. The caliga was the badge, or +symbol of a soldier; whence to take away the caliga and belt, imported +a dismissal or cashiering. P.T.W. + +_The Damary Oak-tree._--At Blandford Forum, Dorsetshire, stood the +famous Damary Oak, which was rooted up for firing in 1755. It measured +75 feet high, and the branches extended 72 feet; the trunk at the +bottom was 68 feet in circumference, and 23 feet in diameter. It had +a cavity in its trunk 15 feet wide. Ale was sold in it till after the +Restoration; and when the town was burnt down in 1731, it served as an +abode for one family.--_Family Topographer_, vol. ii. + +_Brent Tor Church, Devonshire, situate upon a rock._--On Brent Tor is +a church, in which is appositely inscribed from Scripture, "Upon this +rock will I build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail +against it." It is said that the parishioners make weekly atonement +for their sins, for they cannot go to the church without the previous +penance of climbing the steep; and the pastor is frequently obliged to +humble himself upon his hands and knees before he can reach the house +of prayer. Tradition says it was erected by a merchant to commemorate +his escape from shipwreck on the coast, in consequence of this Tor +serving as a guide to the pilot. There is not sufficient earth to bury +the dead. At the foot of the Tor resided, in 1809, Sarah Williams, +aged 109 years. She never lived further out of the parish of Brent +Tor, than the adjoining one: she had had twelve children, and a few +years before her death cut five new teeth.--Ibid. + +_The Dairyman's Daughter._--In Arreton churchyard, Isle of Wight, is +a tombstone, erected in 1822, by subscription, to mark the grave of +Elizabeth Wallbridge, the humble individual whose story of piety and +virtue, written by the Rev. Leigh Richmond, under the title of the +"Dairyman's Daughter," has attained an almost unexampled circulation. +Her cottage at Branston, about a mile distant, is much visited.--Ibid. + +_Singular distribution of common land in Somersetshire_.--In the +parishes of Congresbury and Puxton were two large pieces of common +land, called East and West Dolemoors (from the Saxon word dol, a +portion or share,) which were occupied till within these few years in +the following manner:---The land was divided into single acres, each +bearing a peculiar mark, cut in the turf, such as a horn, an ox, a +horse, a cross, an oven, &c. On the Saturday before Old Midsummer +Day, the several proprietors of contiguous estates, or their tenants, +assembled on these commons, with a number of apples marked with +similar figures, which were distributed by a boy to each of the +commoners from a bag. At the close of the distribution, each person +repaired to the allotment with the figure corresponding to the one +upon his apple, and took possession of it for the ensuing year. Four +acres were reserved to pay the expenses of an entertainment at the +house of the overseer of the Dolemoors, where the evening was spent in +festivity.--Ibid. + +_Anna Maria, Countess of Shrewsbury._--At Avington Park, in Hampshire, +resided the notorious and infamous Anna-Maria, Countess of Shrewsbury, +who held the horse of the Duke of Buckingham while he fought and +killed her husband. Charles II frequently made it the scene of his +licentious pleasures; and the old green-house is said to have been the +apartment in which the royal sensualist was entertained.--Ibid. + + * * * * * + +_Erratum_--In the lines, by J. Kinder, on a Withered Primrose, in our +last, verse ii. line 2--for "gust of the storm" read "_jest_ of the +storm." + + * * * * * + +_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 11568-8.txt or 11568-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/1/5/6/11568/ + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Bill Walker and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team. + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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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 20, No. 562, Saturday, August 18, 1832. + +Author: Various + +Release Date: March 14, 2004 [EBook #11568] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE *** + + + + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Bill Walker and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team. + + + + + + +</pre> + + <hr class="full" /> + + <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. XX. NO. 562.]</b></td> + + <td align="center"><b>SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, + 1832.</b></td> + + <td align="right"><b>[PRICE 2d.</b></td> + </tr> + </table> + <hr class="full" /> + + <div class="figcenter" + style="width:100%;"> + <a href="images/562-1.png"><img width="100%" + src="images/562-1.png" + alt="" /></a> + + <h3>FALLS OF THE GENESEE.</h3> + </div> + <hr class="full" /> + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page97" + id="page97"></a>[pg 97]</span> + + <p>The Genesee is one of the most picturesque rivers of North + America. Its name is indeed characteristic: the word Genesee + being formed from the Indian for <i>Pleasant Valley,</i> which + term is very descriptive of the river and its vicinity. Its + falls have not the majestic extent of the Niagara; but their + beauty compensates for the absence of such grandeur.</p> + + <p>The Genesee, the principal natural feature of its district, + rises on the <i>Grand Plateau</i> or table-land of Western + Pennsylvania, runs through New York, and flows into Lake + Ontario, at Port Genesee, six miles below Rochester. At the + distance of six miles from its mouth are falls of 96 feet, and + one mile higher up, other falls of 75 feet.<a id="footnotetag1" + name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a> + Above <span class="pagenum"><a name="page98" + id="page98"></a>[pg 98]</span> these it is navigable for + boats nearly 70 miles, where are other two falls, of 60 and + 90 feet, one mile apart, in Nunda, south of Leicester. At + the head of the Genesee is a tract six miles square, + embracing waters, some of which flow into the gulf of + Mexico, others into Chesapeake Bay, and others into the Gulf + of St. Lawrence. This tract is probably elevated 1,600 or + 1,700 feet above the tide waters of the Atlantic Ocean.</p> + + <p>The Engraving includes the falls of the river, with the + village of Rochester, seven miles south of Lake Ontario. This + place, for population, extent, and trade, will soon rank among + the American cities: it was not settled until about the close + of the last war; its progress was slow until the year 1820, + from which period it has rapidly improved. In 1830 it contained + upwards of 12,000 inhabitants: the first census of the village + was taken in December, 1815, when the number of inhabitants was + three hundred and thirty-one. The aqueduct which takes the Erie + canal across the river forms a prominent object of interest to + all travellers. It is of hewn stone, containing eleven arches + of 50 feet span: its length is 800 feet, but a considerable + part of each end is hidden from view by mills erected since its + construction.</p> + + <p>On the brink of the island which separates the main stream + of the river from that produced by the waste water from the + mill-race, will be seen <i>a scaffold or platform</i> from + which an eccentric but courageous adventurer, named <i>Sam + Patch</i>, made a desperate leap into the gulf beneath. Patch + had obtained some celebrity in freaks of this description, + though his feats be not recorded, like the hot-brained + patriotism of Marcus Curtius in olden history. At the fall of + Niagara, Patch had before made two leaps in safety—one of + 80 and the other of 130 feet, in a vast gulf, foaming and tost + aloft from the commotion produced by a fall of nearly 200 feet. + In November, 1829, Patch visited Rochester to astonish the + citizens by a leap from the falls. His first attempt was + successful, and in the presence of thousands of spectators he + leaped from the scaffold to which we have directed the + attention of the reader, a distance of 100 feet, into the + abyss, in safety. He was advertised to repeat the feat in a few + days, or, as he prophetically announced it his "last jump," + meaning his last jump that season. The scaffold was duly + erected, 25 feet in height, and Patch, an hour after the time + was announced, made his appearance. A multitude had collected + to witness the feat; the day was unusually cold, and Sam was + intoxicated. The river was low, and the falls near him on + either side were bare. Sam threw himself off, and the waters + (to quote the bathos of a New York newspaper) "received him in + their cold embrace. The tide bubbled as the life left the body, + and then the stillness of death, indeed, sat upon the bosom of + the waters." His body was found past the spring at the mouth of + the river, seven miles below where he made his fatal leap. It + had passed over two falls of 125 feet combined, yet was not + much injured. A black handkerchief taken from his neck while on + the scaffold, and tied about the body, was still there. He is + stated to have had perfect command of himself while in the air; + and, says the journalist already quoted, "had he not been given + to habits of intoxication, he might have astonished the world, + perhaps for years, with the greatest feats ever performed by + man."</p> + + <p>The Genesee river waters one of the finest tracts of land in + the state of New York. Its alluvial flats are extensive, and + very fertile. These are either natural prairies, or Indian + clearings, (of which, however, the present Indians have no + tradition,) and lying, to an extent of many thousand acres, + between the villages of Genesee, Moscow, and Mount Morris, + which now crown the declivities of their surrounding uplands; + and, contrasting their smooth verdure with the shaggy hills + that bound the horizon, and their occasional clumps of + spreading trees, with the tall and naked relics of the forest, + nothing can be more agreeable to the eye, long accustomed to + the uninterrupted prospect of a level and wooded country.</p> + <hr /> + + <h3>SONG FROM THE ALBUM OF A POET.</h3> + + <h4><i>By G.R. Carter.</i></h4> + + <center>THE HOMEWARD VOYAGE.</center> + + <div class="poem"> + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Away o'er the dancing wave,</p> + + <p class="i2">Like the wings of the white seamew;</p> + + <p>How proudly the hearts of the youthful brave</p> + + <p class="i2">Their dreams of bliss renew!</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>And as on the pathless deep,</p> + + <p class="i2">The bark by the gale is driven,</p> + + <p>How glorious it is with the stars to keep</p> + + <p class="i2">A watch on the beautiful heaven.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>The winds o'er the ocean bear</p> + + <p class="i2">Rich fragrance from the flow'rs,</p> + + <p>That bloom on the sward, and sparkle there</p> + + <p class="i2">Like stars in their dark blue bow'rs.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>The visions of those that sail</p> + + <p class="i2">O'er the wave with its snow-white + foam,</p> + + <p>Are haunted with scenes of the beauteous vale</p> + + <p class="i2">That encloses their peaceful home.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>They have wander'd through groves of the west,</p> + + <p class="i2">Illumed with the fire-flies' light;</p> + + <p>But their native land kindles a charm in each + breast,</p> + + <p class="i2">Unwaken'd by regions more bright.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>The haunts that were dear to the heart</p> + + <p class="i2">As an exquisite dream of romance,</p> + + <p>Strew thoughts, like sweet flow'rs, round its + holiest part,</p> + + <p class="i2">And their fancy-bound spirits + entrance.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Then away with the fluttering sail!</p> + + <p class="i2">And away with the bounding wave!</p> + + <p>While the musical sounds of the ocean-gale</p> + + <p class="i2">Are wafted around the brave!</p> + </div> + </div> + <hr class="full" /> + + <p>Ray wittily observes that an obscure and prolix author may + not improperly be compared to a Cuttle-fish, since he may be + said to hide himself under his own ink.</p> + <hr class="full" /> + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page99" + id="page99"></a>[pg 99]</span> + + <h3>LINES</h3> + + <h3>FROM THE GERMAN OF KÖRNER.</h3> + + <h4><i>Written on the morning of the Battle of + Dänneberg.</i></h4> + + <div class="poem"> + <div class="stanza"> + <p class="i2">Doubt-beladen, dim and hoary,</p> + + <p class="i4">O'er us breaks the mighty day,</p> + + <p class="i2">And the sunbeam, cold and gory,</p> + + <p class="i4">Lights us on our fearful way.</p> + + <p class="i2">In the womb of coming hours,</p> + + <p class="i4">Destinies of empires lie,</p> + + <p class="i2">Now the scale ascends, now lowers,</p> + + <p class="i4">Now is thrown the noble die.</p> + + <p>Brothers, the hour with warning is rife;</p> + + <p>Faithful in death as you're faithful in life,</p> + + <p class="i2">Be firm, and be bound by the holiest + tie,</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p class="i2">In the shadows of the night,</p> + + <p class="i4">Lie behind us shame and scorn;</p> + + <p class="i2">Lies the slave's exulting might,</p> + + <p class="i4">Who the German oak has torn.</p> + + <p class="i2">Speech disgrac'd in future story,</p> + + <p class="i4">Shrines polluted (shall it be?)</p> + + <p class="i2">To dishonour pledg'd our glory,</p> + + <p class="i4">German brothers, set it free.</p> + + <p>Brothers, your hands, let your vengeance be + burning,</p> + + <p>By your actions, the curses of heaven be + turning,</p> + + <p class="i2">On, on, set your country's Palladium + free.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p class="i2">Hope, the brightest, is before us,</p> + + <p class="i4">And the future's golden time,</p> + + <p class="i2">Joys, which heaven will restore us,</p> + + <p class="i4">Freedom's holiness sublime.</p> + + <p class="i2">German bards and artists' powers,</p> + + <p class="i4">Woman's truth, and fond caress,</p> + + <p class="i2">Fame eternal shall be ours,</p> + + <p class="i4">Beauty's smile our toils shall bless.</p> + + <p>Yet 'tis a deed that the bravest might shake,</p> + + <p>Life and our heart's blood are set on the stake;</p> + + <p class="i2">Death alone points out the road to + success.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p class="i2">God! united we will dare it;</p> + + <p class="i4">Firm this heart shall meet its fate,</p> + + <p class="i2">To the altar thus I bear it,</p> + + <p class="i4">And my coming doom await.</p> + + <p class="i2">Fatherland, for thee we perish,</p> + + <p class="i4">At thy fell command 'tis done,</p> + + <p class="i2">May our loved ones ever cherish</p> + + <p class="i4">Freedom, which our blood has won.</p> + + <p>Liberty, grow o'er each oak-shadow'd plain,</p> + + <p>Grow o'er the tombs of thy warriors slain,</p> + + <p class="i2">Fatherland, hear thou the oath we have + sworn.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p class="i2">Brothers, towards your hearts' best + treasures,</p> + + <p class="i4">Cast one look, on earth the last,</p> + + <p class="i2">Turn then from those once prized + pleasures,</p> + + <p class="i4">Wither'd by the hostile blast.</p> + + <p class="i2">Though your eyes be dim with weeping,</p> + + <p class="i4">Tears like these are not from fear,</p> + + <p class="i2">Trust to God's own holy keeping,</p> + + <p class="i4">With your last kiss, all that's dear.</p> + + <p>All lips that pray for us, all hearts that we + rend</p> + + <p>With parting, O father, to thee we commend,</p> + + <p class="i2">Protect them and shield them from wrongs + and despair.</p> + + + </div> + </div> + <p>H.</p> + + <hr /> + + <h3>EQUANIMITY OF TEMPER.</h3> + + <p>Goodness of temper may be defined, to use the happy imagery + of Gray, "as the sunshine of the heart." It is a more valuable + bosom-attendant under the pressure of poverty and adversity, + and when we are approaching the confines of infirmity and old + age, than when we are revelling in the full tide of plenty, + amid the exuberant strength and freshness of youth. Lord Bacon, + who has analyzed some of the human accompaniments so well, is + silent as to the softening sway and pleasing influence of this + choice attuner of the human mind. But Shaftesbury, the + illustrious author of the <i>Characteristics</i>, was so + enamoured of it, that he terms "gravity (its counterpart,) the + essence of imposture;" and so it is, for to what purpose does a + man store his brain with knowledge, and the profitable burden + of the sciences, if he gathers only superciliousness and pride + from the hedge of learning? instead of the milder traits of + general affection, and the open qualities of social feelings. I + remember, when a youth, I was extremely fond of attending the + House of Commons, to hear the debates; and I shall never forget + the repulsive loftiness which I thought marked the physiognomy + of Pitt; harsh and unbending, like a settled frost, he seemed + wrapped in the mantle of egotism and sublunary conceit; and it + was from the uninviting expression of this great man's + countenance, that I first drew my conceptions as to how a proud + and unsociable man looked. With very different emotions I was + wont to survey the mild but expressive features of his great + opponent, Fox: there was a placidity mixed up with the graver + lines of thought and reflection, that would have invited a + child to take him by the hand; indeed, the witchcraft of Mr. + Fox's temper was such, that it formed a triumphant source of + gratulation in the circle of his friends, from the panegyric of + the late Earl of Carlisle, during his boyish days at Eton, to + the prouder posthumous circles of fame with which the elegant + author of <i>The Pleasures of Memory</i>, has entwined his + sympathetic recollections. The late Mr. Whitbread, although an + unflinching advocate for the people's rights, and an + incorruptible patriot in the true sense of the word, was + unpopular in his office as a country magistrate, owing to a + tone of severity he generally used to those around him. The + wife of that indefatigable toiler in the Christian field, John + Wesley, was so acid and acrimonious in her temper, that that + mild advocate for spiritual affection, found it impossible to + live with her. Rousseau was tormented by such a host of + ungovernable passions, that he became a burden to himself and + to every one around him. Lord Byron suffered a badness of + temper to corrode him in the flower of his days. Contrasted + with this unpleasing part of the perspective, let us quote the + names of a few wise and good men, who have been proverbial for + the goodness of their tempers; as Shakspeare, Francis I., and + Henry IV. of France; "the great and good Lord Lyttleton," as he + is called to the present day; John Howard, Goldsmith, Sir + Samuel Romilly, Franklin, Thomson, the poet, + Sheridan,<a id="footnotetag2" + name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a> + and Sir Walter Scott. The late Sir William Curtis was known + to be one of the best tempered men of his day, which made + him a great favourite with the late king. I remember a + little incident of Sir William's good-nature, which occurred + about a year <span class="pagenum"><a name="page100" + id="page100"></a>[pg 100]</span> after he had been Lord + Mayor. In alighting from his carriage, a little out of the + regular line, near the Mansion House, upon some day of + festivity, he happened inadvertently, with the skirts of his + coat, to brush down a few apples from a poor woman's stall, + on the side of the pavement. Sir William was in full dress, + but instead of passing on with the hauteur which + characterizes so many of his aldermanic brethren, he set + himself to the task of assisting the poor creature to + collect her scattered fruit; and on parting, observing some + of her apples were a little soiled by the dirt, he drew his + hand from his pocket and generously gave her a shilling. + This was too good an incident for John Bull to lose: a crowd + assembled, hurraed, and cried out, "Well done, Billy," at + which the good-natured baronet looked back and laughed. How + much more pleasing is it to tell of such demeanour than of + the foolish pride of the late Sir John Eamer, who turned + away one of his travellers merely because he had in one + instance used his bootjack.</p> + + <h4><i>The author of "A Tradesman's Lays."</i></h4> + <hr class="full" /> + + <p>Probably our correspondent may recollect Sir William and the + orange, at one of the contested City elections. A "greasy + rogue" before the hustings, seeing the baronet candidate take + an orange from his pocket, <i>put up</i> for the fruit, with + the cry "Give us that orange, Billy." Sir William threw him the + fruit, which the fellow had no sooner sucked dry, than he began + bawling with increased energy, "No Curtis," "No Billy," &c. + Such an ungrateful act would have soured even Seneca; but Sir + William merely gave a smile, with a good-natured shake of the + head. Sir William Curtis possessed a much greater share of + shrewdness and good sense than the vulgar ever gave him credit + for. At the Sessions' dinners, he would keep up the ball of + conversation with the judges and gentlemen of the bar, in a + fuller vein than either of his brother aldermen. It is true + that he had wealth and distinction, all which his fellow + citizens at table did not enjoy; and these possessions, we + know, are wonderful helps to confidence, if they do not lead + the holder on to assurance.—Ed. M.</p> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h2>The Sketch Book.</h2> + <hr /> + + <h3>EXTRACTS FROM THE ORIGINAL LETTERS OF AN OFFICER IN + INDIA.<a id="footnotetag3" + name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a></h3> + + <h4><i>The Sight of a Tiger.</i><a id="footnotetag4" + name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a></h4> + + <h4>Secunderabad, 1828.</h4> + + <p>A short time since, a brother sub. in my regiment was riding + out round some hills adjoining the cantonment, when a + <i>cheetar</i>, small tiger (or panther,) pounced on his dog. + Seeing his poor favourite in the cheetar's mouth, like a mouse + in Minette's, he put spurs to his horse, rode after the beast, + and so frightened him, that he dropped the dog and made off. + Three of us, including myself, then agreed to sit up that + night, and watch for the tiger, feeling assured that his haunt + was not far from our cantonment. So we started late at night, + armed <i>cap-à-pied</i>, and each as fierce in heart as + ten tigers; arrived at the appointed spot, and having selected + a convenient place for concealment, we picketed a sheep, + brought with us purposely to entice the cheetar from his lair. + Singular to relate, this poor animal, as if instinctively aware + of its critical situation, was as mute as if it had been + mouthless, and during two or three hours in which we tormented + it, to make it utter a cry, our efforts were of no avail. Hour + after hour slipped away, still no cheetar; and about three + o'clock in the morning, wearied with our fruitless vigil, we + all began to drop asleep. I believe I was wrapped in a most + leaden slumber, and dreaming of anything but watching for, and + hunting tigers, when I was aroused by the most unnatural, + unearthly, and infernal roaring ever heard. This was our + friend, and for his reception, starting upon our feet, we were + all immediately ready; but the cunning creature who had no idea + of becoming our victim, made off, with the most hideous + howlings, to the shelter of a neighbouring eminence; when + sufficient daylight appeared, we followed the direction of his + voice, and had the felicity of seeing him perched on the summit + of an immense high rock, just before us, placidly watching our + movements. We were here, too far from him to venture a shot, + but immediately began ascending, when the creature seeing us + approach, rose, opened his ugly red mouth in a desperate yawn, + and stretched himself with the utmost <i>nonchalance</i>, + being, it seems, little less weary than ourselves. We + presented, but did not fire, because at that very moment, + setting up his tail, and howling horribly, he disappeared + behind the rock. Quick as thought we followed him, but to our + great disappointment and chagrin, he had retreated into one of + the numerous caverns formed in that ugly place, by huge masses + of rock, piled one upon the other. Into some of these dangerous + places, however, we descended, sometimes creeping, sometimes + walking, in search of our foe; but not finding him, at length + returned to breakfast, which I thought the most agreeable and + sensible part of the affair. Some wit passed amongst us + respecting the propriety of changing the name <i>cheetar</i>, + into <i>cheat-us</i>; but were, on the whole, not pleased by + the failure of our expedition; and I have + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page101" + id="page101"></a>[pg 101]</span> only favoured you with this + <i>romantic</i> incident in the life of a sub. as a specimen + of the sort of amusement we meet with in quarters.</p> + + <p><i>Natural Zoological Garden</i>.</p> + + <p>Secunderabad, 1828.</p> + + <p>Your description of the London Zoological Garden, reminds me + that there is, what I suppose I must term, a most beautiful + <i>Zoological Hill</i>, just one mile and a half from the spot + whence I now write; on this I often take my recreation, much to + the alarm of its inhabitants; viz. sundry cheetars, + bore-butchers, (or leopards) hyenas, wolves, jackalls, foxes, + hares, partridges, etc.; but not being a very capital shot, I + have seldom made much devastation amongst them. Under the hill + are swamps and paddy-fields, which abound in snipe and other + game. Now, is not this a Zoological Garden on the grandest + scale?</p> + + <h4>H.C.B.</h4> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h2>Old Poets.</h2> + <hr /> + + <h3>BALLAD OF AGINCOURT.</h3> + + <h4><i>(From "England's Heroical Epistles<a id="footnotetag5" + name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a>.")</i></h4> + + <div class="poem"> + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Faire stood the wind for France,</p> + + <p>When we, our sayles advance,</p> + + <p>Nor now to proue our chance</p> + + <p class="i2">Longer will tarry;</p> + + <p>But putting to the mayne,</p> + + <p>At Kaux, the mouth of Sene,</p> + + <p>With all his martiall trayne,</p> + + <p class="i2">Landed King Harry.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>And taking many a fort,</p> + + <p>Furnished in warlike sort,</p> + + <p>Marcheth towards Agincourt,</p> + + <p class="i2">In happy houre.</p> + + <p>Skirmishing day by day,</p> + + <p>With those that stop'd his way,</p> + + <p>Where the French gen'ral lay</p> + + <p class="i2">With all his power.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Which in his hight of pride.</p> + + <p>King Henry to deride,</p> + + <p>His ransom to prouide,</p> + + <p class="i2">To our king sending.</p> + + <p>Which he neglects the while,</p> + + <p>As from a nation vile,</p> + + <p>Yet with an angry smile,</p> + + <p class="i2">Their fall portending.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>And turning to his men,</p> + + <p>Quoth our brave Henry, then,</p> + + <p>"Though they to one be ten,</p> + + <p class="i2">Be not amazed,</p> + + <p>Yet have we well begunne,</p> + + <p>Battells so bravely wonne,</p> + + <p>Have ever to the sonne,</p> + + <p class="i2">By fame beene raysed."</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>"And for myself," quoth he,</p> + + <p>"This my full rest shall be,</p> + + <p>England ne'er mourn for me,</p> + + <p class="i2">Nor more esteem me.</p> + + <p>Victor I will remaine,</p> + + <p>Or on this earth be slaine,</p> + + <p>Never shall shee sustaine</p> + + <p class="i2">Losse to redeeme me."</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Poiters and Cressy tell,</p> + + <p>When most their pride did swell,</p> + + <p>Under our swords they fell.</p> + + <p class="i2">No lesse our skill is,</p> + + <p>Then when oure grandsire great,</p> + + <p>Clayming the regall seate,</p> + + <p>By many a warlike feate,</p> + + <p class="i2">Lop'd the French lillies.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>The Duke of York so dread,</p> + + <p>The vaward led,</p> + + <p>Wich the maine Henry sped,</p> + + <p class="i2">Amongst his Hench<i>men</i>,</p> + + <p>Excester had the rere,</p> + + <p>A brauer man not there,</p> + + <p>O Lord, how hot they were,</p> + + <p class="i2">On the false Frenchmen.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>They now to fight are gone,</p> + + <p>Armour on armour shone,</p> + + <p>Drumme now to drumme did grone,</p> + + <p class="i2">To hear was wonder,</p> + + <p>That with cryes they make,</p> + + <p>The very earth did shake,</p> + + <p class="i2">Thunder to thunder.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Well it thine age became</p> + + <p>O noble Erpingham,</p> + + <p>Which didst the signall ayme,</p> + + <p class="i2">To our hid forces;</p> + + <p>When from a meadow by,</p> + + <p>Like a storme suddenly,</p> + + <p>The English archery</p> + + <p class="i2">Struck the French horses.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>With Spanish Ewgh so strong,</p> + + <p>Arrowes a cloth yard long,</p> + + <p>That like to serpents stung,</p> + + <p class="i2">Piercing the weather.</p> + + <p>None from his fellow starts,</p> + + <p>But playing manly parts,</p> + + <p>And like true English hearts,</p> + + <p class="i2">Stuck close together.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>When downe their bowes they threw,</p> + + <p>And forth their bilbowes drew,</p> + + <p>And on the French they flew,</p> + + <p class="i2">Not one was tardie;</p> + + <p>Armes were from shoulders sent,</p> + + <p>Scalpes to the teeth were rent,</p> + + <p>Down the French pesants went,</p> + + <p class="i2">Our men were hardie.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>This while oure noble king,</p> + + <p>His broad sword brandishing,</p> + + <p>Downe the French host did ding,</p> + + <p class="i2">As to o'erwhelme it.</p> + + <p>And many a deep wound lent,</p> + + <p>His armes with bloud besprent,</p> + + <p>And many a cruel dent</p> + + <p class="i2">Bruised his helmet.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Glo'ster, that duke so good,</p> + + <p>Next of the royal blood,</p> + + <p>For famous England stood,</p> + + <p class="i2">With his braue brother,</p> + + <p>Clarence, in steele so bright,</p> + + <p>Though but a maiden knight.</p> + + <p>Yet in that furious light</p> + + <p class="i2">Scarce such another.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Warwick, in bloud did wade,</p> + + <p>Oxford, the foe inuade,</p> + + <p>And cruel slaughter made;</p> + + <p class="i2">Still as they ran up,</p> + + <p>Suffolk, his axe did ply,</p> + + <p>Beavmont and Willovghby,</p> + + <p class="i2">Ferres and Tanhope.</p> + </div> + + <div class="stanza"> + <p>Upon Saint Crispin's day,</p> + + <p>Fought was this noble fray,</p> + + <p>Which fame did not delay,</p> + + <p class="i2">To England to carry.</p> + + <p>O when shall English men,</p> + + <p>With such acts fill a pen,</p> + + <p>Or England breed againe</p> + + <p class="i2">Such a King Harry.</p> + </div> + </div> + <hr class="full" /> + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page102" + id="page102"></a>[pg 102]</span> + + <h2>Spirit of Discovery</h2> + <hr /> + + <h3>AMERICAN IMPROVEMENTS.</h3> + + <p>[The very recent publication of the ninth volume of the + Encyclopaedia Americana<a id="footnotetag6" + name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a> + enables us to lay before our readers the following + interesting notices, connected with the national weal and + internal economy of the United States of North America.]</p> + + <p><i>Navy</i>.—Since the late war, the growth and + improvement of our navy has kept pace with our national + prosperity. We could now put to sea, in a few mouths, with a + dozen ships of the line; the most spacious, efficient, best, + and most beautiful constructions that ever traversed the ocean. + This is not merely an American conceit, but an admitted fact in + Europe, where our models are studiously copied. In the United + States, a maximum and uniform calibre of cannon has been lately + determined on and adopted. Instead of the variety of length, + form, and calibre still used in other navies, and almost equal + to the Great Michael with her "bassils, mynards, hagters, + culverings, flings, falcons, double dogs, and pestilent + serpenters," our ships offer flush and uniform decks, sheers + free from hills, hollows, and excrescences, and complete, + unbroken batteries of thirty-two or forty-two pounders. Thus + has been realized an important desideratum—the greatest + possible power to do execution coupled with the greatest + simplification of the means.</p> + + <p>But, while we have thus improved upon the hitherto practised + means of naval warfare, we are threatened with a total change. + This is by the introduction of bombs, discharged horizontally, + instead of shot from common cannon. So certain are those who + have turned their attention to this subject that the change + must take place, that, in France, they are already speculating + on the means of excluding these destructive missiles from a + ship's sides, by casing them in a cuirass of iron. Nor are + these ideas the mere offspring of idle speculation. Experiments + have been tried on hulks, by bombs projected horizontally, with + terrible effect. If the projectile lodged in a mast, in + exploding it overturned it, with all its yards and rigging; if + in the side, the ports were opened into each other; or, when + near the water, an immense chasm was opened, causing the vessel + to sink immediately. If it should not explode until it fell + spent upon deck, besides doing the injury of an ordinary ball, + it would then burst, scattering smoke, fire, and death, on + every side. When this comes to pass, it would seem that the + naval profession would cease to be very desirable. + Nevertheless, experience has, in all ages, shown that, the more + destructive are the engines used in war, and the more it is + improved and systematized, the less is the loss of life. + Salamis and Lepanto can either of them alone count many times + the added victims of the Nile, Trafalgar, and Navarino.</p> + + <p>One effect of the predicted change in naval war, it is said, + will be the substitution of small vessels for the larger ones + now in use. The three decker presents many times the surface of + the schooner, while her superior number of cannon does not + confer a commensurate advantage; for ten bombs, projected into + the side of a ship, would be almost as efficacious to her + destruction as a hundred. As forming part of a system of + defence for our coast, the bomb-cannon, mounted on steamers, + which can take their position at will, would be terribly + formidable. With them—to say nothing of torpedoes and + submarine navigation—we need never more be blockaded and + annoyed as formerly. Hence peaceful nations will be most + gainers by this change of system; but it is not enough that we + should be capable of raising a blockade: we are a commercial + people: our merchant ships visit every sea, and our men-of-war + must follow and protect them there.</p> + + <p><i>Newspapers</i>.—No country has so many newspapers + as the United States. The following table, arranged for the + American Almanac of 1830, is corrected from the Traveller, and + contains a statement of the number of newspapers published in + the colonies at the commencement of the revolution; and also + the number of newspapers and other periodical works, in the + United States, in 1810 and 1828.</p> + <pre> + STATES. 1775. 1810. 1828. + Maine 29 + Massachusetts 7 32 78 + New Hampshire 1 12 17 + Vermont 14 21 + Rhode Island 2 7 14 + Connecticut 4 11 33 + New York 4 66 161 + New Jersey 8 22 + Pennsylvania 9 71 185 + Delaware 2 4 + Maryland 2 21 37 + District of Columbia 6 9 + Virginia 2 23 34 + North Carolina 2 10 20 + South Carolina 3 10 16 + Georgia 1 13 18 + Florida 1 2 + Alabama 10 + Mississippi 4 6 + Louisiana 10 9 + Tennessee 6 8 + Kentucky 17 23 + Ohio 14 66 + Indiana 17 + Michigan 2 + Illinois 4 + Missouri 5 + Arkansas 1 + Cherokee Nation 1 + + Total 37 358 802 +</pre> + + <p>The present number, however, amounts to about a thousand. + Thus the state of New <span class="pagenum"><a name="page103" + id="page103"></a>[pg 103]</span> York is mentioned in the + table as having 161 newspapers; but a late publication + states that there are 193, exclusive of religious journals. + New York has 1,913,508 inhabitants. There are about 50 daily + newspapers in the United States, two-thirds of which are + considered to give a fair profit. The North American + colonies, in the year 1720, had only seven newspapers: in + 1810, the United States had 359; in 1826, they had 640; in + 1830, 1,000, with a population of 13,000,000; so that they + have more newspapers than the whole 190 millions of + Europe.</p> + + <p>In drawing a comparison between the newspapers of the three + freest countries, France, England, and the United States, we + find, as we have just said, those of the last country to be the + most numerous, while some of the French papers have the largest + subscription; and the whole establishment of a first-rate + London paper is the most complete. Its activity is immense. + When Canning sent British troops to Portugal, in 1826, we know + that some papers sent reporters with the army. The zeal of the + New York papers also deserves to be mentioned, which send out + their news-boats, even fifty miles to sea, to board approaching + vessels, and obtain the news that they bring. The papers of the + large Atlantic cities are also remarkable for their detailed + accounts of arrivals, and the particulars of shipping news, + interesting to the commercial world, in which they are much + more minute than the English. From the immense number of + different papers in the United States, it results that the + number of subscribers to each is limited, 2,000 being + considered a respectable list. One paper, therefore, is not + able to unite the talent of many able men, as is the case in + France. There men of the first rank in literature or politics + occasionally, or at regular periods, contribute articles. In + the United States, few papers have more than one editor, who + generally writes upon almost all subjects himself. This + circumstance necessarily makes the papers less spirited and + able than some of the foreign journals, but is attended with + this advantage, that no particular set of men is enabled to + exercise a predominant influence by means of these periodicals. + Their abundance neutralizes their effects. Declamation and + sophistry are made comparatively harmless by running in a + thousand conflicting currents.</p> + + <p><i>Paper-making</i>.—The manufacture of paper has of + late rapidly increased in the United States. According to an + estimate in 1829, the whole quantity made in this country + amounted to about five to seven millions a year, and employed + from ten to eleven thousand persons. Rags are not imported from + Italy and Germany to the same amount as formerly, because + people here save them more carefully; and the value of the + rags, junk, &c., saved annually in the United States, is + believed to amount to two millions of dollars. Machines for + making paper of any length are much employed in the United + States. The quality of American paper has also improved; but, + as paper becomes much better by keeping, it is difficult to + have it of the best quality in this country, the interest of + capital being too high. The paper used here for printing + compares very disadvantageously with that of England. Much + wrapping paper is now made of straw, and paper for tracing + through is prepared in Germany from the poplar tree. A letter + of Mr. Brand, formerly a civil officer in Upper Provence, in + France (which contains many pine forests), dated Feb. 12, 1830, + has been published in the French papers, containing an account + of his successful experiments to make coarse paper of the pine + tree. The experiments of others have led to the same results. + Any of our readers, interested in this subject, can find Mr. + Brand's letter in the <i>Courrier Francais</i> of Nov. 27, + 1830, a French paper published in New York. In salt-works near + Hull, Massachusetts, in which the sea-water is made to flow + slowly over sheds of pine, in order to evaporate, the writer + found large quantities of a white substance—the fibres of + the pine wood dissolved and carried off by the + brine—which seemed to require nothing but glue to convert + it into paper.</p> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h2>The Naturalist</h2> + <hr /> + + <h3>THE CUTTLE-FISH</h3> + + <p>Is one of the most curious creatures of "the watery + kingdom." It is popularly termed a fish, though it is, in fact, + a worm, belonging to the order termed <i>Mollusca, + (Molluscus</i>, soft,) from the body being of a pulpy substance + and having no skeleton. It differs in many respects from other + animals of its class, particularly with regard to its internal + structure, the perfect formation of the viscera, eyes, and even + organs of hearing. Moreover, "it has three hearts, two of which + are placed at the root of the two branchiae (or gills); they + receive the blood from the body, and propel it into the + branchiae. The returning veins open into the middle heart, from + which the aorta proceeds."<a id="footnotetag7" + name="footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a> + Of Cuttle-fish there are several species. That represented + in the annexed Cut is the common or officinal Cuttle-fish, + (<i>Sepia officinalis</i>, Lin). It consists of a soft, + pulpy, body, with processes or arms, which are furnished + with small holes or suckers, by means of which the animal + fixes itself in the manner of cupping-glasses. These holes + increase with the age of the animal; and in some species + amount to upwards of one thousand. + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page104" + id="page104"></a>[pg 104]</span> The arms are often torn or + nipped off by shell or other fishes, but the animal has the + power of speedily reproducing the limbs. By means of the + suckers the Cuttle-fish usually affects its locomotion. "It + swims at freedom in the bosom of the sea, moving by sudden + and irregular jerks, the body being nearly in a + perpendicular position, and the head directed downwards and + backwards. Some species have a fleshy, muscular fin on each + side, by aid of which they accomplish these apparently + inconvenient motions; but, at least, an equal number of them + are finless, and yet can swim with perhaps little less + agility. Lamarck, indeed, denies this, and says that these + can only trail themselves along the bottom by means of the + suckers. This is probably their usual mode of proceeding; + that it is not their only one, we have the positive + affirmation of other observers."<a id="footnotetag8" + name="footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a> + Serviceable as these arms undoubtedly are to the + Cuttle-fish, Blumenbach thinks it questionable whether they + can be considered as organs of touch, in the more limited + sense to which he has confined that + term.<a id="footnotetag9" + name="footnotetag9"></a><a href="#footnote9"><sup>9</sup></a></p> + + + <div class="figcenter" + style="width:50%; float: left;"> + <a href="images/562-2.png"><img width="100%" + src="images/562-2.png" + alt="" /></a> + + <h3><i>The Cuttle-fish.</i></h3> + </div> + + + <p>The jaws of the Cuttle-fish, it should be observed, are + fixed in the body because there is no head to which they can be + articulated. They are of horny substance, and resemble the bill + of a parrot. They are in the centre of the under part of the + body, surrounded by the arms. By means of these parts, the + shell-fish which are taken for food, are completely + triturated.</p> + + <p>We now come to the most peculiar parts of the structure of + the Cuttle-fish, viz. the <i>ear and eye</i>, inasmuch as it is + the only animal of its class, in which any thing has hitherto + been discovered, at all like an organ of hearing, or that has + been shown to possess true eyes.<a id="footnotetag10" + name="footnotetag10"></a><a href="#footnote10"><sup>10</sup></a> + The ears consist of two oval cavities, in the cartilaginous + ring, to which the large arms of the animal are affixed. In + each of these is a small bag, containing a bony substance, + and receiving the termination of the nerves, like those of + the vestibulum (or cavity in the bone of the ear) in fishes. + The nature of the eyes cannot be disputed. "They resemble, + on the whole, those of red-blooded animals, particularly + fishes; they are at least incomparably more like them than + the eyes of any known insects; yet they are distinguished by + several extraordinary peculiarities. The front of the + eye-ball is covered with a loose membrane instead of a + cornea; the iris is composed of a firm substance; and a + process projects from the upper margin of the pupil, which + gives that membrane a semilunar form."<a id="footnotetag11" + name="footnotetag11"></a><a href="#footnote11"><sup>11</sup></a> + The exterior coat or ball is remarkably strong, so as to + seem almost calcareous, and is, when taken out, of a + brilliant pearl colour; it is worn in some parts of Italy, + and in the Grecian islands by way of artificial pearl in + necklaces.</p> + + <p>Next we may notice the curious provision by which the + Cuttle-fish is enabled to elude the pursuit of its enemies in + the "vasty deep." This consists of a black, inky fluid, + (erroneously supposed to be the bile,) which is contained in a + bag beneath the body. The fluid itself is thick, but miscible + with water to such a degree, that a very small quantity will + colour a vast bulk of water.<a id="footnotetag12" + name="footnotetag12"></a><a href="#footnote12"><sup>12</sup></a> + Thus, the comparatively small Cuttle-fish may darken the + element about the acute eye of the whale. What omniscience + is displayed in this single provision, as well as in the + faculty possessed by the Cuttle-fish of reproducing its + mutilated arms! All Nature beams with such beneficence, and + abounds with such instances of divine love for every + creature, however humble: in observing these provisions, how + often are we reminded of the benefits conferred by the same + omniscience upon our own species. It is thus, by the + investigation of natural history, that we are led to the + contemplation of the sublimest subjects; thus that man with + God himself holds converse.</p> + + + <div class="figcenter" + style="width:50%; float: right;"> + <a href="images/562-3.png"><img width="100%" + src="images/562-3.png" + alt="" /></a> + + <h3>"Bone," or plate.</h3> + </div> + + + <p>The "bone" of the Cuttle-fish now claims attention. This is + a complicated calcareous plate, lodged in a peculiar cavity of + the back, which it materially strengthens. This plate has long + been known in the shop of the apothecary under the name of + Cuttle-fish bone: an observant reader may have noticed scores + of these plates in glasses labelled <i>Os Sepiae</i>. + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page105" + id="page105"></a>[pg 105]</span> Reduced to powder, they + were formerly used as an absorbent, but they are now chiefly + sought after for the purpose of polishing the softer metals. + It is however improper to call this plate bone, since, in + composition, "it is exactly similar to <i>shell</i>, and + consists of various membranes, hardened by carbonate of + lime, (the principal material of shell,) without the + smallest mixture of phosphate of lime,<a id="footnotetag13" + name="footnotetag13"></a><a href="#footnote13"><sup>13</sup></a> + (or the chief material of bone.)</p> + + + <div class="figcenter" + style="width:50%; float: left;"> + <a href="images/562-4.png"><img width="100%" + src="images/562-4.png" + alt="" /></a> + + <h3>Eggs.</h3> + </div> + + + <p>Lastly, are the <i>ovaria</i>, or egg-bags of the + Cuttle-fish, which are popularly called <i>sea-grapes</i>. The + female fish deposits her eggs in numerous clusters, on the + stalks of fuci, on corals, about the projecting sides of rocks, + or on any other convenient substances. These eggs, which are of + the size of small filberts, are of a black colour.</p> + + <p>The most remarkable species of Cuttle-fish inhabits the + British seas; and, although seldom taken, its bone or plate is + cast ashore on different parts of the coast from the south of + England to the Zetland Isles. We have picked up scores of these + plates and bunches of the egg-bags or grapes, after rough + weather on the beach between Worthing and Rottingdean; but we + never found a single fish.</p> + + <p>The Cuttle-fish was esteemed a delicacy by the ancients, and + the moderns equally prize it. Captain Cook speaks highly of a + soup he made from it; and the fish is eaten at the present day + by the Italians, and by the Greeks, during Lent. We take the + most edible species to be the <i>octopodia</i>, or eight-armed, + found particularly large in the East Indies and the Gulf of + Mexico. The common species here figured, when full-grown, + measures about two feet in length, is of a pale blueish brown + colour, with the skin marked by numerous dark purple + specks.</p> + + <p>The Cuttle-fish is described by some naturalists, as naked + or shell-less. It is often found attached to the shell of the + Paper Nautilus, which it is said to use as a sail. It is, + however, very doubtful whether the Cuttle-fish has a shell of + its own. There is a controversy upon the subject. Aristotle, + and our contemporary, Home, maintain it to be parasitical: + Cuvier and Ferrusac, non-parasitical; but the curious reader + will find the <i>pro</i> and <i>con.</i>—the majority and + minority—in the <i>Magazine of Natural History</i>, vol. + iii. p. 535.</p> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h2>Notes of a Reader.</h2> + <hr /> + + <h3>SERVANTS IN INDIA.</h3> + + <p>[Captain Skinner, in his <i>Excursions in India</i>, makes + the following sensible observations on the tyranny over + servants in India:]</p> + + <p>There are throughout the mountains many of the sacred shrubs + of the Hindoos, which give great delight, as my servants fall + in with them. They pick the leaves; and running with them to + me, cry, "See, sir, see, our holy plants are here!" and + congratulate each other on having found some indication of a + better land than they are generally inclined to consider the + country of the Pariahs. The happiness these simple remembrances + shed over the whole party is so enlivening, that every distress + and fatigue seems to be forgotten. When we behold a servant + approaching with a sprig of the <i>Dona</i> in his hand, we + hail it as the olive-branch, that denotes peace and good-will + for the rest of the day, if, as must sometimes be the case, + they have been in any way interrupted.</p> + + <p>Even these little incidents speak so warmly in favour of the + Hindoo disposition, that, in spite of much that may be + uncongenial to an European in their character, they cannot fail + to inspire him with esteem, if not affection. I wish that many + of my countrymen would learn to believe that the natives are + endowed with feelings, and surely they may gather such an + inference from many a similar trait to the one I have related. + Hardness of heart can never be allied to artless simplicity: + that mind must possess a higher degree of sensibility and + refinement, that can unlock its long-confined recollections by + so light a spring as a wild flower.</p> + + <p>I have often witnessed, with wonder and sorrow, an English + gentleman stoop to the basest tyranny over his servants, + without even the poor excuse of anger, and frequently from no + other reason than because he could not understand their + language. The question, from the answer being unintelligible, + is instantly followed by a blow. Such scenes are becoming more + rare, and indeed are seldom acted but by the younger members of + society; they are too frequent notwithstanding: and should any + thing that has fallen from me here, induce the cruelly-disposed + to reflect a little upon the impropriety and mischief of their + conduct, when about to raise the hand against a native, and + save one stripe to the passive people who are so much at the + mercy of their masters' tempers, I shall indeed be proud.</p> + + <p>[Again, speaking of the condition of servants, Captain + Skinner remarks—]</p> + + <p>It is impossible to view some members of the despised class + without sorrow and pity, particularly those who are attached, + in the lowest offices, to the establishments of the + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page106" + id="page106"></a>[pg 106]</span> Europeans. They are the + most melancholy race of beings, always alone, and apparently + unhappy: they are scouted from the presence even of their + fellow-servants. None but the mind of a poet could imagine + such outcasts venturing to raise their thoughts to the + beauty of a Brahmin's daughter; and a touching tale in such + creative fancy, no doubt, it would make, for, from their + outward appearances, I do not perceive why they should not + be endowed with minds as sensitive at least as those of the + castes above them. There are among them some very stout and + handsome men; and it is ridiculous to see sometimes all + their strength devoted to the charge of a sickly + puppy;—to take care of dogs being their principal + occupation!</p> + + <p>Our attention has been drawn to the above passage in Captain + Skinner's work, by its ready illustration of the views and + conclusions of the late Dr. Knox, in his invaluable <i>Spirit + of Despotism</i>, Section 2, "Oriental manners, and the ideas + imbibed in youth, both in the East and West Indies, favourable + to the spirit of despotism." How forcibly applicable, on the + present occasion, is the following extract:—"from the + intercourse of England with the East and West Indies, it is to + be feared that something of a more servile spirit has been + derived than was known among those who established the free + constitutions of Europe, and than would have been adopted, or + patiently borne, in ages of virtuous simplicity. A very + numerous part of our countrymen spend their most susceptible + age in those countries, where despotic manners remarkably + prevail. They are themselves, when invested with office, + treated by the natives with an idolatrous degree of reverence, + which teaches them to expect a similar submission to their + will, on their return to their own country. They have been + accustomed to look up to personages greatly their superiors in + rank and riches, with awe; and to look down on their inferiors + in <i>property</i> with supreme contempt, as slaves of their + will and ministers of their luxury. Equal laws and equal + liberty at home appear to them saucy claims of the poor and the + vulgar, which tend to divest riches of one of the greatest + charms, over-bearing dominion. We do, indeed, import gorgeous + silks and luscious sweets from the Indies, but we import, at + the same time, the spirit of despotism, which adds deformity to + the purple robe, and bitterness to the honied beverage." "That + <i>Oriental</i> manners are unfavourable to liberty, is, I + believe, universally conceded. The natives of the East Indies + entertain not the idea of independence. They treat the + Europeans, who go among them to acquire their riches, with a + respect similar to the abject submission which they pay to + their native despots. Young men, who in England scarcely + possessed the rank of the gentry, are waited upon in India, + with more attentive servility than is paid or required in many + courts of Europe. Kings of England seldom assume the state + enjoyed by an East India governor, or even by subordinate + officers. Enriched at an early age, the adventurer returns to + England. His property admits him to the higher circles of + fashionable life. He aims at rivalling or excelling all the old + nobility in the splendour of his mansions, the finery of his + carriages, the number of his liveried train, the profusion of + his tables, in every unmanly indulgence which an empty vanity + can covet, and a full purse procure. Such a man, when he looks + from the window of his superb mansion, and sees the people + pass, cannot endure the idea, that they are of as much + consequence as himself in the eye of the law; and that he dares + not insult or oppress the unfortunate being who rakes his + kennel or sweeps his chimney."</p> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h3>FALL OF ROBESPIERRE.</h3> + + <p>It is well known, that during the revolutionary troubles of + France, not only all the churches were closed, but the Catholic + and Protestant worship entirely forbidden; and, after the + constitution of 1795, it was at the hazard of one's life that + either the mass was heard, or any religious duty performed. It + is evident that Robespierre, who unquestionably had a design + which is now generally understood, was desirous, on the day of + the fête of the Supreme Being, to bring back public + opinion to the worship of the Deity. Eight months before, we + had seen the Bishop of Paris, accompanied by his clergy, appear + voluntarily at the bar of the Convention, to abjure the + Christian faith and the Catholic religion. But it is not as + generally known, that at that period Robespierre was not + omnipotent, and could not carry his desires into effect. + Numerous factions then disputed with him the supreme authority. + It was not till the end of 1793, and the beginning of 1794, + that his power was so completely established that he could + venture to act up to his intentions.</p> + + <p>Robespierre was then desirous to establish the worship of + the Supreme Being, and the belief of the immortality of the + soul. He felt that irreligion is the soul of anarchy, and it + was not anarchy but despotism which he desired; and yet the + very day after that magnificent fête in honour of the + Supreme Being, a man of the highest celebrity in science, and + as distinguished for virtue and probity as philosophic genius, + Lavoisier, was led out to the scaffold. On the day following + that, Madame Elizabeth, that Princess whom the executioners + could not guillotine, till they had turned aside their eyes + from the sight of her angelic visage, stained the same axe with + her blood!—And <span class="pagenum"><a name="page107" + id="page107"></a>[pg 107]</span> a month after, Robespierre, + who wished to restore order for his own purposes—who + wished to still the bloody waves which for years had + inundated the state, felt that all his efforts would be in + vain if the masses who supported his power were not + restrained and directed, because without order nothing but + ravages and destruction can prevail. To ensure the + government of the masses, it was indispensable that + morality, religion, and belief should be + established—and, to affect the multitude, that + religion should be clothed in external forms. "My friend," + said Voltaire, to the atheist Damilaville, "after you have + supped on well-dressed partridges, drunk your sparkling + champaigne, and slept on cushions of down in the arms of + your mistress, I have no fear of you, though you do not + believe in God.—-But if you are perishing of hunger, + and I meet you in the corner of a wood, I would rather + dispense with your company." But when Robespierre wished to + bring back to something like discipline the crew of the + vessel which was fast driving on the breakers, he found the + thing was not so easy as he imagined. To destroy is + easy—to rebuild is the difficulty. He was omnipotent + to do evil; but the day that he gave the first sign of a + disposition to return to order, the hands which he himself + had stained with blood, marked his forehead with the fatal + sign of destruction.</p> + + <h4>—<i>Memoirs of the Duchess of Abrantes.</i></h4> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h3>SOUNDS DURING THE NIGHT.</h3> + + <p>The great audibility of sounds during the night is a + phenomenon of considerable interest, and one which had been + observed even by the ancients. In crowded cities or in their + vicinity, the effect was generally ascribed to the rest of + animated beings, while in localities where such an explanation + was inapplicable, it was supposed to arise from a favourable + direction of the prevailing wind. Baron Humboldt was + particularly struck with this phenomenon when he first heard + the rushing of the great cataracts of the Orinoco in the plain + which surrounds the mission of the Apures. These sounds he + regarded as three times louder during the night than during the + day. Some authors ascribed this fact to the cessation of the + humming of insects, the singing of birds, and the action of the + wind on the leaves of the trees, but M. Humboldt justly + maintains that this cannot be the cause of it on the Orinoco, + where the buzz of insects is much louder in the night than in + the day, and where the breeze never rises till after sunset. + Hence he was led to ascribe the phenomenon to the perfect + transparency and uniform density of the air, which can exist + only at night after the heat of the ground has been uniformly + diffused through the atmosphere. When the rays of the sun have + been beating on the ground during the day, currents of hot air + of different temperatures, and consequently of different + densities, are constantly ascending from the ground and mixing + with the cold air above. The air thus ceases to be a + homogeneous medium, and every person must have observed the + effects of it upon objects seen through it which are very + indistinctly visible, and have a tremulous motion, as if they + were "dancing in the air." The very same effect is perceived + when we look at objects through spirits and water that are not + perfectly mixed, or when we view distant objects over a red hot + poker or over a flame. In all these cases the light suffers + refraction in passing from a medium of one density into a + medium of a different density, and the refracted rays are + constantly changing their direction as the different currents + rise in succession. Analogous effects are produced when sound + passes through a mixed medium, whether it consists of two + different mediums or of one medium where portions of it have + different densities. As sound moves with different velocities + through media of different densities, the wave which produces + the sound will be partly reflected in passing from one medium + to the other, and the direction of the transmitted wave + changed; and hence in passing through such media different + portions of the wave will reach the ear at different times, and + thus destroy the sharpness and distinctness of the sound. This + may be proved by many striking facts. If we put a bell in a + receiver containing a mixture of hydrogen gas and atmospheric + air, the sound of the bell can scarcely be heard. During a + shower of rain or of snow, noises are greatly deadened, and + when sound is transmitted along an iron wire or an iron pipe of + sufficient length, we actually hear two sounds, one transmitted + more rapidly through the solid, and the other more slowly + through the air. The same property is well illustrated by an + elegant and easily repeated experiment of Chladni's. When + sparkling champagne is poured into a tall glass till it is half + full, the glass loses its power of ringing by a stroke upon its + edge, and emits only a disagreeable and a puffy sound. This + effect will continue while the wine is filled with bubbles of + air, or as long as the effervescence lasts; but when the + effervescence begins to subside, the sound becomes clearer and + clearer, and the glass rings as usual when the air-bubbles have + vanished. If we reproduce the effervescence by stirring the + champagne with a piece of bread the glass will again cease to + ring. The same experiment will succeed with other effervescing + fluids.—<i>Sir David Brewster</i>.</p> + <hr class="full" /> + + <p>No man is so insignificant as to be sure his example can do + no hurt.</p> + + <h4>—<i>Lord Clarendon.</i></h4> + <hr class="full" /> + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page108" + id="page108"></a>[pg 108]</span> + + <h2>The Public Journals.</h2> + <hr /> + + <h3>PADDY FOOSHANE'S FRICASSEE.</h3> + + <p>Paddy Fooshane kept a shebeen house at Barleymount Cross, in + which he sold whisky—from which his Majesty did not + derive any large portion of his revenues—ale, and + provisions. One evening a number of friends, returning from a + funeral—-all neighbours too—stopt at his house, + "because they were in grief," to drink a drop. There was Andy + Agar, a stout, rattling fellow, the natural son of a gentleman + residing near there; Jack Shea, who was afterwards transported + for running away with Biddy Lawlor; Tim Cournane, who, by + reason of being on his keeping, was privileged to carry a gun; + Owen Connor, a march-of-intellect man, who wished to enlighten + proctors by making them swallow their processes; and a number + of other "good boys." The night began to "rain cats and dogs," + and there was no stirring out; so the cards were called for, a + roaring fire was made down, and the whisky and ale began to + flow. After due observation, and several experiments, a space + large enough for the big table, and free from the drop down, + was discovered. Here six persons, including Andy, Jack, + Tim—with his gun between his legs—and Owen, sat to + play for a pig's head, of which the living owner, in the + parlour below, testified, by frequent grunts, his displeasure + at this unceremonious disposal of his property.</p> + + <p>Card-playing is very thirsty, and the boys were anxious to + keep out the wet; so that long before the pig's head was + decided, a messenger had been dispatched several times to + Killarney, a distance of four English miles, for a pint of + whisky each time. The ale also went merrily round, until most + of the men were quite stupid, their faces swoln, and their eyes + red and heavy. The contest at length was decided; but a quarrel + about the skill of the respective parties succeeded, and + threatened broken heads at one time. At last Jack Shea swore + they must have something to eat;——him but he was + starved with drink, and he must get some rashers somewhere or + other. Every one declared the same; and Paddy was ordered to + cook some <i>griskins</i> forthwith. Paddy was completely + nonplussed:—all the provisions were gone, and yet his + guests were not to be trifled with. He made a hundred + excuses—"'Twas late—'twas dry now—and there + was nothing in the house; sure they ate and drank enough." But + all in vain. The ould sinner was threatened with instant death + if he delayed. So Paddy called a council of war in the parlour, + consisting of his wife and himself.</p> + + <p>"Agrah, Jillen, agrah, what will we do with these? Is there + any meat in the tub? Where is the tongue? If it was yours, + Jillen, we'd give them enough of it; but I mane the cow's." + (aside.)</p> + + <p>"Sure the proctors got the tongue ere yesterday, and you + know there an't a bit in the tub. Oh the murtherin villains! + and I'll engage 'twill be no good for us, after all my white + bread and the whisky. That it may pison 'em!"</p> + + <p>"Amen! Jillen; but don't curse them. After all, where's the + meat? I'm sure that Andy will kill me if we don't make it out + any how;—and he hasn't a penny to pay for it. You could + drive the mail coach, Jillen, through his breeches pocket + without jolting over a ha'penny. Coming, coming; d'ye hear + 'em?"</p> + + <p>"Oh, they'll murther us. Sure if we had any of the tripe I + sent yesterday to the gauger."</p> + + <p>"Eh! What's that you say? I declare to God here's Andy + getting up. We must do something. <i>Thonom an dhiaoul</i>, I + have it. Jillen run and bring me the leather breeches; run + woman, alive! Where's the block and the hatchet? Go up and tell + 'em you're putting down the pot."</p> + + <p>Jillen pacified the uproar in the kitchen by loud promises, + and returned to Paddy. The use of the leather breeches passed + her comprehension; but Paddy actually took up the leather + breeches, tore away the lining with great care, chopped the + leather with the hatchet on the block, and put it into the pot + as tripes. Considering the situation in which Andy and his + friends were, and the appetite of the Irish peasantry for meat + in any shape—"a bone" being their <i>summum + bonum</i>—the risk was very little. If discovered, + however, Paddy's safety was much worse than doubtful, as no + people in the world have a greater horror of any unusual food. + One of the most deadly modes of revenge they can employ is to + give an enemy dog's or cat's flesh; and there have been + instances where the persons who have eaten it, on being + informed of the fact, have gone mad. But Paddy's habit of + practical jokes, from which nothing could wean him, and his + anger at their conduct, along with the fear he was in did not + allow him to hesitate a moment. Jillen remonstrated in vain. + "Hould your tongue, you foolish woman. They're all as blind as + the pig there. They'll never find it out. Bad luck to 'em too, + my leather breeches! that I gave a pound note and a hog for in + Cork. See how nothing else would satisfy 'em!" The meat at + length was ready. Paddy drowned it in butter, threw out the + potatoes on the table, and served it up smoking hot with the + greatest gravity.</p> + + <p>"By ——," says Jack Shea, "that's fine stuff! How + a man would dig a trench after that."</p> + + <p>"I'll take a priest's oath," answered Tim Cohill, the most + irritable of men, but whose + <span class="pagenum"><a name="page109" + id="page109"></a>[pg 109]</span> temper was something + softened by the rich steam;—</p> + + <p>"Yet, Tim, what's a priest's oath? I never heard that."</p> + + <p>"Why, sure, every one knows you didn't ever hear of anything + of good."</p> + + <p>"I say you lie, Tim, you rascal."</p> + + <p>Tim was on his legs in a few moments, and a general battle + was about to begin; but the appetite was too strong, and the + quarrel was settled; Tim having been appeased by being allowed + to explain a priest's oath. According to him, a priest's oath + was this:—He was surrounded by books, which were + gradually piled up until they reached his lips. He then kissed + the uppermost, and swore by all to the bottom. As soon as the + admiration excited by his explanation, in those who were + capable of hearing Tim, had ceased, all fell to work; and + certainly, if the tripes had been of ordinary texture, drunk as + was the party, they would soon have disappeared. After gnawing + at them for some time, "Well," says Owen Connor, "that I + mightn't!—but these are the quarest tripes I ever eat. It + must be she was very ould."</p> + + <p>"By ——," says Andy, taking a piece from his + mouth to which he had been paying his addresses for the last + half hour, "I'd as soon be eating leather. She was a bull, man; + I can't find the soft end at all of it."</p> + + <p>"And that's true for you, Andy," said the man of the gun; + "and 'tis the greatest shame they hadn't a bull-bait to make + him tinder. Paddy, was it from Jack Clifford's bull you got + 'em? They'd do for wadding, they're so tough."</p> + + <p>"I'll tell you, Tim, where I got them—'twas out of + Lord Shannon's great cow at Cork, the great fat cow that the + Lord Mayor bought for the Lord Lieutenant—<i>Asda churp + naur hagushch</i>."<a id="footnotetag14" + name="footnotetag14"></a><a href="#footnote14"><sup>14</sup></a></p> + + <p>"Amen, I pray God! Paddy. Out of Lord Shandon's cow? near + the steeple, I suppose; the great cow that couldn't walk with + tallow. By ——, these are fine tripes. They'll make + a man very strong. Andy, give me two or three <i>libbhers</i> + more of 'em."</p> + + <p>"Well, see that! out of Lord Shandon's cow: I wonder what + they gave her, Paddy. That I mightn't!—but these would + eat a pit of potatoes. Any how, they're good for the teeth. + Paddy, what's the reason they send all the good mate from Cork + to the Blacks?"</p> + + <p>But before Paddy could answer this question, Andy, who had + been endeavouring to help Tim, uttered a loud "<i>Thonom an + dhiaoul!</i> what's this? Isn't this flannel?" The fact was, he + had found a piece of the lining, which Paddy, in his hurry, had + not removed; and all was confusion. Every eye was turned to + Paddy; but with wonderful quickness he said "'Tis the book + tripe, <i>agragal</i>, don't you see?"—and actually + persuaded them to it.</p> + + <p>"Well, any how," says Tim, "it had the taste of wool."</p> + + <p>"May this choke me," says Jack Shea, "if I didn't think that + 'twas a piece of a leather breeches when I saw Andy + <i>chawing</i> it."</p> + + <p>This was a shot between wind and water to Paddy. His + self-possession was nearly altogether lost, and he could do no + more than turn it off by a faint laugh. But it jarred most + unpleasantly on Andy's nerves. After looking at Paddy for some + time with a very ominous look, he said, "<i>Yirroo Pandhrig</i> + of the tricks, if I thought you were going on with any work + here, my soul and my guts to the devil if I would not cut you + into garters. By the vestment I'd make a <i>furhurmeen</i> of + you."</p> + + <p>"Is it I, Andy? That the hands may fall off me!"</p> + + <p>But Tim Cohill made a most seasonable diversion. "Andy, when + you die, you'll be the death of one fool, any how. What do you + know that wasn't ever in Cork itself about tripes. I never ate + such mate in my life; and 'twould be good for every poor man in + the County of Kerry if he had a tub of it."</p> + + <p>Tim's tone of authority, and the character he had got for + learning, silenced every doubt, and all laid siege to the + tripes again. But after some time, Andy was observed gazing + with the most astonished curiosity into the plate before him. + His eyes were rivetted on something; at last he touched it with + his knife, arid exclaimed, "<i>Kirhappa, dar + dhia!</i>"—[A button by G—.]</p> + + <p>"What's that you say?" burst from all! and every one rose in + the best manner he could, to learn the meaning of the + button.</p> + + <p>"Oh, the villain of the world!" roared Andy, "I'm pisoned! + Where's the pike? For God's sake Jack, run for the priest, or + I'm a dead man with the breeches. Where is he?—yeer + bloods won't ye catch him, and I pisoned?"</p> + + <p>The fact was, Andy had met one of the knee-buttons sewed + into a piece of the tripe, and it was impossible for him to + fail discovering the cheat. The rage, however, was not confined + to Andy. As soon as it was understood what had been done, there + was an universal rush for Paddy and Jillen; but Paddy was much + too cunning to be caught, after the narrow escape he had of it + before. The moment after the discovery of the lining, that he + could do so without suspicion, he stole from the table, left + the house, and hid himself. Jillen did the same; and nothing + remained for the eaters, to vent their rage, but breaking every + thing in the cabin; which was done in the utmost fury. Andy, + however, continued watching for Paddy with a gun, a whole month + after. He might be <span class="pagenum"><a name="page110" + id="page110"></a>[pg 110]</span> seen prowling along the + ditches near the shebeen-house, waiting for a shot at him. + Not that he would have scrupled to enter it, were he likely + to find Paddy there; but the latter was completely on the + <i>shuchraun</i>, and never visited his cabin except by + stealth. It was in one of those visits that Andy hoped to + catch him.</p> + + <h4>—<i>Tait's Edinburgh Magazine</i>.</h4> + <hr /> + + <h3>CONVERSATIONS WITH LORD BYRON.</h3> + + <h4><i>By the Countess of Blessington</i>.</h4> + + <p>One of our first rides with Lord Byron was to Nervi, a + village on the sea-coast, most romantically situated, and each + turn of the road presenting various and beautiful prospects. + They were all familiar to him, and he failed not to point them + out, but in very sober terms, never allowing any thing like + enthusiasm in his expressions, though many of the views might + have excited it.</p> + + <p>His appearance on horseback was not advantageous, and he + seemed aware of it, for he made many excuses for his dress and + equestrian appointments. His horse was literally covered with + various trappings, in the way of cavesons, martingales, and + Heaven knows how many other (to me) unknown inventions. The + saddle was <i>à la Hussarde</i> with holsters, in which + he always carried pistols. His dress consisted of a nankeen + jacket and trousers, which appeared to have shrunk from + washing; the jacket embroidered in the same colour, and with + three rows of buttons; the waist very short, the back very + narrow, and the sleeves set in as they used to be ten or + fifteen years before; a black stock, very narrow; a dark-blue + velvet cap with a shade, and a very rich gold band and large + gold tassel at the crown; nankeen gaiters, and a pair of blue + spectacles, completed his costume, which was any thing but + becoming. This was his general dress of a morning for riding, + but I have seen it changed for a green tartan plaid jacket. He + did not ride well, which surprised us, as, from the frequent + allusions to horsemanship in his works, we expected to find him + almost a Nimrod, It was evident that he had <i>pretensions</i> + on this point, though he certainly was what I should call a + timid rider. When his horse made a false step, which was not + unfrequent, he seemed discomposed; and when we came to any bad + part of the road, he immediately checked his course and walked + his horse very slowly, though there really was nothing to make + even a lady nervous. Finding that I could perfectly manage (or + what he called <i>bully</i>) a very highly-dressed horse that I + daily rode, he became extremely anxious to buy it; asked me a + thousand questions as to how I had acquired such a perfect + command of it, &c. &c. and entreated, as the greatest + favour, that I would resign it to him as a charger to take to + Greece, declaring he never would part with it, &c. As I was + by no means a bold rider, we were rather amused at observing + Lord Byron's opinion of my courage; and as he seemed so anxious + for the horse, I agreed to let him have it when he was to + embark. From this time he paid particular attention to the + movements of poor Mameluke (the name of the horse), and said he + should now feel confidence in action with so steady a + charger.</p> + + <p><i>April</i>—. Lord Byron dined with us today. During + dinner he was as usual gay, spoke in terms of the warmest + commendation of Sir Walter Scott, not only as an author, but as + a man, and dwelt with apparent delight on his novels, declaring + that he had read and re-read them over and over again, and + always with increased pleasure. He said that he quite equalled, + nay, in his opinion, surpassed Cervantes. In talking of Sir + Walter's private character, goodness of heart, &c., Lord + Byron became more animated than I had ever seen him; his colour + changed from its general pallid tint to a more lively hue, and + his eyes became humid: never had he appeared to such advantage, + and it might easily be seen that every expression he uttered + proceeded from his heart. Poor Byron!—for poor he is even + with all his genius, rank, and wealth—had he lived more + with men like Scott, whose openness of character and steady + principle had convinced him that they were in earnest in + <i>their goodness</i>, and not <i>making believe</i>, (as he + always suspects good people to be,) his life might be different + and happier! Byron is so acute an observer that nothing escapes + him; all the shades of selfishness and vanity are exposed to + his searching glance, and the misfortune is, (and a serious one + it is to him,) that when he finds these, and alas! they are to + be found on every side, they disgust and prevent his giving + credit to the many good qualities that often accompany them. He + declares he can sooner pardon crimes, because they proceed from + the passions, than these minor vices, that spring from egotism + and self-conceit. We had a long argument this evening on the + subject, which ended, like most arguments, by leaving both of + the same opinion as when it commenced. I endeavoured to prove + that crimes were not only injurious to the perpetrators, but + often ruinous to the innocent, and productive of misery to + friends and relations, whereas selfishness and vanity carried + with them their own punishment, the first depriving the person + of all sympathy, and the second exposing him to ridicule which + to the vain is a heavy punishment, but that their effects were + not destructive to society as are crimes.</p> + + <p>He laughed when I told him that having heard him so often + declaim against vanity, and detect it so often in his friends, + I began to suspect he knew the malady by having had it himself, + and that I had observed through life, that those persons who + had the most <span class="pagenum"><a name="page111" + id="page111"></a>[pg 111]</span> vanity were the most severe + against that failing in their friends. He wished to impress + upon me that he was not vain, and gave various proofs to + establish this; but I produced against him his boasts of + swimming, his evident desire of being considered more <i>un + homme de societe</i> than a poet, and other little examples, + when he laughingly pleaded guilty, and promised to be more + merciful towards his friends.</p> + + <p>Byron attempted to be gay, but the effort was not + successful, and he wished us good night with a trepidation of + manner that marked his feelings. And this is the man that I + have heard considered unfeeling! How often are our best + qualities turned against us, and made the instruments for + wounding us in the most vulnerable part, until, ashamed of + betraying our susceptibility, we affect an insensibility we are + far from possessing, and, while we deceive others, nourish in + secret the feelings that prey <i>only</i> on our own + hearts!</p> + + <h4>—<i>New Monthly Magazine.</i></h4> + <hr class="full" /> + + <h2>The Gatherer.</h2> + + <p><i>Canary Birds.</i>—In Germany and the Tyrol, from + whence the rest of Europe is principally supplied with Canary + birds, the apparatus for breeding Canaries is both large and + expensive. A capacious building is erected for them, with a + square space at each end, and holes communicating with these + spaces. In these outlets are planted such trees as the birds + prefer. The bottom is strewed with sand, on which are cast + rapeseed, chickweed, and such other food as they like. + Throughout the inner compartment, which is kept dark, are + placed bowers for the birds to build in, care being taken that + the breeding birds are guarded from the intrusion of the rest. + Four Tyrolese usually take over to England about sixteen + hundred of these birds; and though they carry them on their + backs nearly a thousand miles, and pay twenty pounds for them + originally, they can sell them at 5<i>s</i>. each.</p> + + <p><i>Braithwaite's Steam Fire Engine</i>—will deliver + about 9,000 gallons of water per hour to an elevation of 90 + feet. The time of getting the machine into action, from the + moment of igniting the fuel, (the water being cold,) is 18 + minutes. As soon as an alarm is given, the fire is kindled, and + the bellows, attached to the engine, are worked by hand. By the + time the horses are harnessed in, the fuel is thoroughly + ignited, and the bellows are then worked by the motion of the + wheels of the engine. By the time of arriving at the fire, + preparing the hoses, &c. the steam is ready.</p> + + <p>Fisher, bishop of Rochester, was accustomed to style his + church his wife, declaring that he would never exchange her for + one that was richer. He was a zealous adherent of Pope Paul + III. who created him a cardinal. The king, Henry VIII., on + learning that Fisher would not refuse the dignity, exclaimed, + in a passion, "Yea! is he so lusty? Well, let the pope send him + a hat when he will. Mother of God! he shall wear it on his + shoulders, for I will leave him never a head to set it on."</p> + + <p><i>Flax</i> is not uncommon in the greenhouses about + Philadelphia, but we have not heard of any experiments with it + in the open air.—<i>Encyclopaedia Americana.</i></p> + + <p><i>The Schoolmaster wanted in the East.</i>—Mr. + Madden, in his travels in Turkey, Egypt, Nubia, and Palestine, + says:—"In all my travels, I could only meet one woman who + could read and write, and that was in Damietta; she was a + Levantine Christian, and her peculiar talent was looked upon as + something superhuman."</p> + + <p>La Fontaine had but one son, whom, at the age of 14, he + placed in the hands of Harlay, archbishop of Paris, who + promised to provide for him. After a long absence, La Fontaine + met this youth at the house of a friend, and being pleased with + his conversation, was told that it was his own son. "Ah," said + he, "I am very glad of it."</p> + + <p><i>Universal Genius.</i>—Rivernois thus describes the + character of Fontenelle: "When Fontenelle appeared on the + field, all the prizes were already distributed, all the palms + already gathered: the prize of universality alone remained, + Fontenelle determined to attempt it, and he was successful. He + is not only a metaphysician with Malebranche, a natural + philosopher with Newton, a legislator with Peter the Great, a + statesman with D'Argenson; he is everything with + everybody."</p> + + <p><i>Forest Schools.</i>—There are a number of forest + academies in Germany, particularly in the small states of + central Germany, in the Hartz, Thuringia, &c. The principal + branches taught in them are the following:—forest botany, + mineralogy, zoology, chemistry; by which the learner is taught + the natural history of forests, and the mutual relations, + &c. of the different kingdoms of nature. He is also + instructed in the care and chase of game, and in the surveying + and cultivation of forests, so as to understand the mode of + raising all kinds of wood, and supplying a new growth as fast + as the old is taken away. The pupil is too instructed in the + administration of the forest taxes and police, and all that + relates to forests considered as a branch of revenue.</p> + + <p><i>The Weather.</i>—Meteorological journals are now + given in most magazines. The first statement of this kind was + communicated by Dr. Fothergill to the Gentleman's Magazine, and + consisted of a monthly account of the weather and diseases of + London. The latter <span class="pagenum"><a name="page112" + id="page112"></a>[pg 112]</span> information is now + monopolized by the parish-clerks.</p> + + <p><i>Goethe.</i>—The wife of a Silesian peasant, being + obliged to go to Saxony, and hearing that she had travelled (on + foot) more than half the distance to Goethe's residence, whose + works she had read with the liveliest interest, continued her + journey to Weimar for the sake of seeing him. Goethe declared + that the true character of his works had never been better + understood than by this woman. He gave her his portrait.</p> + + <p><i>Liverpool and Manchester Railway.</i>—The Company + has reported the following result:</p> + <pre> + Passengers entered in the Company's + books during the half-year + ending June 30, 1831 £188,726 + + Ditto, ditto, ending + December 31, 1831 256,321 + + Increase £67,595 +</pre> + + <p>Being upwards of 33 per cent. increase of the first six + months of the year, and upwards of 135 per cent. increase on + the travellers between the two towns during the corresponding + months, previously to opening the railway.—<i>Gordon, on + Steam Carriages.</i></p> + + <p><i>Caliga.</i>—This was the name of the Roman + soldier's shoe, made in the sandal fashion. The sole was of + wood, and stuck full of nails. Caius Caesar Caligula, the + fourth Roman Emperor, the son of Germanicus and Agrippina, + derived his surname from "Caliga," as having been born in the + army, and afterwards bred up in the habit of a common soldier; + he wore this military shoe in conformity to those of the common + soldiers, with a view of engaging their affections. The caliga + was the badge, or symbol of a soldier; whence to take away the + caliga and belt, imported a dismissal or cashiering. P.T.W.</p> + + <p><i>The Damary Oak-tree.</i>—At Blandford Forum, + Dorsetshire, stood the famous Damary Oak, which was rooted up + for firing in 1755. It measured 75 feet high, and the branches + extended 72 feet; the trunk at the bottom was 68 feet in + circumference, and 23 feet in diameter. It had a cavity in its + trunk 15 feet wide. Ale was sold in it till after the + Restoration; and when the town was burnt down in 1731, it + served as an abode for one family.—<i>Family + Topographer</i>, vol. ii.</p> + + <p><i>Brent Tor Church, Devonshire, situate upon a + rock.</i>—On Brent Tor is a church, in which is + appositely inscribed from Scripture, "Upon this rock will I + build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail + against it." It is said that the parishioners make weekly + atonement for their sins, for they cannot go to the church + without the previous penance of climbing the steep; and the + pastor is frequently obliged to humble himself upon his hands + and knees before he can reach the house of prayer. Tradition + says it was erected by a merchant to commemorate his escape + from shipwreck on the coast, in consequence of this Tor serving + as a guide to the pilot. There is not sufficient earth to bury + the dead. At the foot of the Tor resided, in 1809, Sarah + Williams, aged 109 years. She never lived further out of the + parish of Brent Tor, than the adjoining one: she had had twelve + children, and a few years before her death cut five new + teeth.—<i>Ibid.</i></p> + + <p><i>The Dairyman's Daughter.</i>—In Arreton churchyard, + Isle of Wight, is a tombstone, erected in 1822, by + subscription, to mark the grave of Elizabeth Wallbridge, the + humble individual whose story of piety and virtue, written by + the Rev. Leigh Richmond, under the title of the "Dairyman's + Daughter," has attained an almost unexampled circulation. Her + cottage at Branston, about a mile distant, is much + visited.—<i>Ibid.</i></p> + + <p><i>Singular distribution of common land in + Somersetshire</i>.—In the parishes of Congresbury and + Puxton were two large pieces of common land, called East and + West Dolemoors (from the Saxon word dol, a portion or share,) + which were occupied till within these few years in the + following manner:—-The land was divided into single + acres, each bearing a peculiar mark, cut in the turf, such as a + horn, an ox, a horse, a cross, an oven, &c. On the Saturday + before Old Midsummer Day, the several proprietors of contiguous + estates, or their tenants, assembled on these commons, with a + number of apples marked with similar figures, which were + distributed by a boy to each of the commoners from a bag. At + the close of the distribution, each person repaired to the + allotment with the figure corresponding to the one upon his + apple, and took possession of it for the ensuing year. Four + acres were reserved to pay the expenses of an entertainment at + the house of the overseer of the Dolemoors, where the evening + was spent in festivity.—<i>Ibid.</i></p> + + <p><i>Anna Maria, Countess of Shrewsbury.</i>—At Avington + Park, in Hampshire, resided the notorious and infamous + Anna-Maria, Countess of Shrewsbury, who held the horse of the + Duke of Buckingham while he fought and killed her husband. + Charles II frequently made it the scene of his licentious + pleasures; and the old green-house is said to have been the + apartment in which the royal sensualist was + entertained.—<i>Ibid.</i></p> + + + <hr class="full" /> + + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote1" + name="footnote1"></a> +<b>Footnote 1</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a> + <p>It may be as well here to quote the formation of + Cataracts and Cascades, from Maltebrun's valuable + <i>System of Universal Geography.</i> "It is only the + sloping of the land which can at first cause water to + flow; but an impulse having been once communicated to + the mass, the pressure alone of the water will keep it + in motion, even if there were no declivity at all. Many + great rivers, in fact, flow with an almost interruptible + declivity. Rivers which descend from primitive mountains + into secondary lands, often form <i>cascades and + cataracts</i>. Such are the cataracts of the Nile, of + the Ganges, and some other great rivers, which, + according to Desmarest, evidently mark the limits of the + ancient land. Cataracts are also formed by lakes: of + this description are the celebrated Falls of the + Niagara; but the most picturesque falls are those of + rapid rivers, bordered by trees and precipitous rocks. + Sometimes we see a body of water, which, before it + arrives at the bottom, is broken and dissipated into + showers, like the Staubbach, (see <i>Mirror,</i> vol. + xiv. p. 385.); sometimes it forms a watery arch, + projected from a rampart of rock, under which the + traveller may pass dryshod, as the "falling spring" of + Virginia; in one place, in a granite district, we see + the Trolhetta, and the Rhine not far from its source, + urge on their foaming billows among the pointed rocks; + in another, amidst lands of a calcareous formation, we + see the Czettina and the Kerka, rolling down from + terrace to terrace, and presenting sometimes a sheet, + and sometimes a wall, of water. Some magnificent + cascades have been formed, at least in part, by the + hands of man: the cascades of Velino, near Terni, have + been attributed to Pope Clement VIII.; other cataracts, + like those of Tunguska, in Siberia, have gradually lost + their elevation by the wearing away of the rocks, and + have now only a rapid descent."—<i>Maltebrun</i>, + vol. i.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote2" + name="footnote2"></a> +<b>Footnote 2</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a> + <p>May we not, however, say the friendless Sheridan?</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote3" + name="footnote3"></a> +<b>Footnote 3</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a> + <p>Communicated by M.L.B., Great Marlow, Bucks.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote4" + name="footnote4"></a> +<b>Footnote 4</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a> + <p>Vide <i>Mirror</i>, vol. xviii. p. + 343.—<i>Note</i>.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote5" + name="footnote5"></a> +<b>Footnote 5</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag5">(return)</a> + <p>A Collection of Poems of the Sixteenth + Century.—Communicated by J.F., of Gray's Inn. We + thank our Correspondent for the present, and shall be + happy to receive further specimens from the same + source.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote6" + name="footnote6"></a> +<b>Footnote 6</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag6">(return)</a> + <p>Philadelphia, Carey and Lea, 1832.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote7" + name="footnote7"></a> +<b>Footnote 7</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag7">(return)</a> + <p>Cuvier.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote8" + name="footnote8"></a> +<b>Footnote 8</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag8">(return)</a> + <p>Nat. Hist. Molluscous Animals, Mag. Nat. Hist. vol. iii. + p. 527.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote9" + name="footnote9"></a> +<b>Footnote 9</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag9">(return)</a> + <p>Manual Comp. Anat. p. 263.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote10" + name="footnote10"></a> +<b>Footnote 10</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag10">(return)</a> + <p>In all other worms the eyes are entirely wanting, or + their existence is very doubtful. Whether the black + points at the extremities of what Swammerdam calls the + horns of the common snail, are organs which really + possess the power of vision, is still problematical.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote11" + name="footnote11"></a> +<b>Footnote 11</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag11">(return)</a> + <p>Blumenbach, Man. Comp. Anat. p. 305.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote12" + name="footnote12"></a> +<b>Footnote 12</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag12">(return)</a> + <p>According to Cuvier, the Indian ink, from China, is made + of this fluid, as was the ink of the Romans. It has been + supposed, and not without a considerable degree of + probability, that the celebrated plain, but wholesome + dish, the black broth of Sparta, was no other than a + kind of Cuttle-fish soup, in which the black liquor of + the animal was always added as an ingredient; being, + when fresh, of very agreeable taste.—<i>Shaw's + Zoology</i>.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote13" + name="footnote13"></a> +<b>Footnote 13</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag13">(return)</a> + <p>Mr. Hatchett, in Philos. Trans.</p> + </blockquote> + + <blockquote class="footnote"> + <a id="footnote14" + name="footnote14"></a> +<b>Footnote 14</b>: +<a href="#footnotetag14">(return)</a> + <p>May it never come out of his body!</p> + </blockquote> + + <hr class="full" /> + + <p><i>Erratum</i>—In the lines, by J. Kinder, on a + Withered Primrose, in our last, verse ii. line 2—for + "gust of the storm" read "<i>jest</i> of the storm."</p> + <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 *** + +***** This file should be named 11568-h.htm or 11568-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/1/5/6/11568/ + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Bill Walker and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team. + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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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 20, No. 562, Saturday, August 18, 1832. + +Author: Various + +Release Date: March 14, 2004 [EBook #11568] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE *** + + + + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Bill Walker and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team. + + + + + + + + + + + +THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION. + +VOL. XX. NO. 562.] SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1832. [PRICE 2d. + + * * * * * + + +FALLS OF THE GENESEE. + + +[Illustration: Falls of the Genesee.] + + +The Genesee is one of the most picturesque rivers of North America. +Its name is indeed characteristic: the word Genesee being formed from +the Indian for _Pleasant Valley,_ which term is very descriptive of +the river and its vicinity. Its falls have not the majestic extent +of the Niagara; but their beauty compensates for the absence of such +grandeur. + +The Genesee, the principal natural feature of its district, rises +on the _Grand Plateau_ or table-land of Western Pennsylvania, runs +through New York, and flows into Lake Ontario, at Port Genesee, six +miles below Rochester. At the distance of six miles from its mouth are +falls of 96 feet, and one mile higher up, other falls of 75 feet.[1] +Above these it is navigable for boats nearly 70 miles, where are other +two falls, of 60 and 90 feet, one mile apart, in Nunda, south of +Leicester. At the head of the Genesee is a tract six miles square, +embracing waters, some of which flow into the gulf of Mexico, others +into Chesapeake Bay, and others into the Gulf of St. Lawrence. This +tract is probably elevated 1,600 or 1,700 feet above the tide waters +of the Atlantic Ocean. + + [1] It may be as well here to quote the formation of Cataracts + and Cascades, from Maltebrun's valuable _System of Universal + Geography._ "It is only the sloping of the land which can at first + cause water to flow; but an impulse having been once communicated + to the mass, the pressure alone of the water will keep it in + motion, even if there were no declivity at all. Many great rivers, + in fact, flow with an almost interruptible declivity. Rivers which + descend from primitive mountains into secondary lands, often form + _cascades and cataracts_. Such are the cataracts of the Nile, + of the Ganges, and some other great rivers, which, according to + Desmarest, evidently mark the limits of the ancient land. + Cataracts are also formed by lakes: of this description are the + celebrated Falls of the Niagara; but the most picturesque falls + are those of rapid rivers, bordered by trees and precipitous + rocks. Sometimes we see a body of water, which, before it arrives + at the bottom, is broken and dissipated into showers, like the + Staubbach, (see _Mirror,_ vol. xiv. p. 385.); sometimes it forms + a watery arch, projected from a rampart of rock, under which the + traveller may pass dryshod, as the "falling spring" of Virginia; + in one place, in a granite district, we see the Trolhetta, and the + Rhine not far from its source, urge on their foaming billows + among the pointed rocks; in another, amidst lands of a calcareous + formation, we see the Czettina and the Kerka, rolling down + from terrace to terrace, and presenting sometimes a sheet, and + sometimes a wall, of water. Some magnificent cascades have been + formed, at least in part, by the hands of man: the cascades of + Velino, near Terni, have been attributed to Pope Clement VIII.; + other cataracts, like those of Tunguska, in Siberia, have + gradually lost their elevation by the wearing away of the rocks, + and have now only a rapid descent."--_Maltebrun_, vol. i. + +The Engraving includes the falls of the river, with the village +of Rochester, seven miles south of Lake Ontario. This place, for +population, extent, and trade, will soon rank among the American +cities: it was not settled until about the close of the last war; +its progress was slow until the year 1820, from which period it has +rapidly improved. In 1830 it contained upwards of 12,000 inhabitants: +the first census of the village was taken in December, 1815, when the +number of inhabitants was three hundred and thirty-one. The aqueduct +which takes the Erie canal across the river forms a prominent object +of interest to all travellers. It is of hewn stone, containing eleven +arches of 50 feet span: its length is 800 feet, but a considerable +part of each end is hidden from view by mills erected since its +construction. + +On the brink of the island which separates the main stream of the +river from that produced by the waste water from the mill-race, +will be seen _a scaffold or platform_ from which an eccentric but +courageous adventurer, named _Sam Patch_, made a desperate leap into +the gulf beneath. Patch had obtained some celebrity in freaks of this +description, though his feats be not recorded, like the hot-brained +patriotism of Marcus Curtius in olden history. At the fall of Niagara, +Patch had before made two leaps in safety--one of 80 and the other of +130 feet, in a vast gulf, foaming and tost aloft from the commotion +produced by a fall of nearly 200 feet. In November, 1829, Patch +visited Rochester to astonish the citizens by a leap from the falls. +His first attempt was successful, and in the presence of thousands of +spectators he leaped from the scaffold to which we have directed the +attention of the reader, a distance of 100 feet, into the abyss, in +safety. He was advertised to repeat the feat in a few days, or, as he +prophetically announced it his "last jump," meaning his last jump that +season. The scaffold was duly erected, 25 feet in height, and Patch, +an hour after the time was announced, made his appearance. A multitude +had collected to witness the feat; the day was unusually cold, and Sam +was intoxicated. The river was low, and the falls near him on either +side were bare. Sam threw himself off, and the waters (to quote the +bathos of a New York newspaper) "received him in their cold embrace. +The tide bubbled as the life left the body, and then the stillness of +death, indeed, sat upon the bosom of the waters." His body was found +past the spring at the mouth of the river, seven miles below where +he made his fatal leap. It had passed over two falls of 125 feet +combined, yet was not much injured. A black handkerchief taken from +his neck while on the scaffold, and tied about the body, was still +there. He is stated to have had perfect command of himself while in +the air; and, says the journalist already quoted, "had he not been +given to habits of intoxication, he might have astonished the world, +perhaps for years, with the greatest feats ever performed by man." + +The Genesee river waters one of the finest tracts of land in the state +of New York. Its alluvial flats are extensive, and very fertile. These +are either natural prairies, or Indian clearings, (of which, however, +the present Indians have no tradition,) and lying, to an extent of +many thousand acres, between the villages of Genesee, Moscow, and +Mount Morris, which now crown the declivities of their surrounding +uplands; and, contrasting their smooth verdure with the shaggy hills +that bound the horizon, and their occasional clumps of spreading +trees, with the tall and naked relics of the forest, nothing can +be more agreeable to the eye, long accustomed to the uninterrupted +prospect of a level and wooded country. + + * * * * * + + + +SONG FROM THE ALBUM OF A POET. + +_By G.R. Carter._ + + +THE HOMEWARD VOYAGE. + + + Away o'er the dancing wave, + Like the wings of the white seamew; + How proudly the hearts of the youthful brave + Their dreams of bliss renew! + + And as on the pathless deep, + The bark by the gale is driven, + How glorious it is with the stars to keep + A watch on the beautiful heaven. + + The winds o'er the ocean bear + Rich fragrance from the flow'rs, + That bloom on the sward, and sparkle there + Like stars in their dark blue bow'rs. + + The visions of those that sail + O'er the wave with its snow-white foam, + Are haunted with scenes of the beauteous vale + That encloses their peaceful home. + + They have wander'd through groves of the west, + Illumed with the fire-flies' light; + But their native land kindles a charm in each breast, + Unwaken'd by regions more bright. + + The haunts that were dear to the heart + As an exquisite dream of romance, + Strew thoughts, like sweet flow'rs, round its holiest part, + And their fancy-bound spirits entrance. + + Then away with the fluttering sail! + And away with the bounding wave! + While the musical sounds of the ocean-gale + Are wafted around the brave! + + * * * * * + + +Ray wittily observes that an obscure and prolix author may not +improperly be compared to a Cuttle-fish, since he may be said to hide +himself under his own ink. + + * * * * * + + +LINES + +FROM THE GERMAN OF KOeRNER. + + +_Written on the morning of the Battle of Daenneberg._ + + + Doubt-beladen, dim and hoary, + O'er us breaks the mighty day, + And the sunbeam, cold and gory, + Lights us on our fearful way. + In the womb of coming hours, + Destinies of empires lie, + Now the scale ascends, now lowers, + Now is thrown the noble die. + Brothers, the hour with warning is rife; + Faithful in death as you're faithful in life, + Be firm, and be bound by the holiest tie, + + In the shadows of the night, + Lie behind us shame and scorn; + Lies the slave's exulting might, + Who the German oak has torn. + Speech disgrac'd in future story, + Shrines polluted (shall it be?) + To dishonour pledg'd our glory, + German brothers, set it free. + Brothers, your hands, let your vengeance be burning, + By your actions, the curses of heaven be turning, + On, on, set your country's Palladium free. + + Hope, the brightest, is before us, + And the future's golden time, + Joys, which heaven will restore us, + Freedom's holiness sublime. + German bards and artists' powers, + Woman's truth, and fond caress, + Fame eternal shall be ours, + Beauty's smile our toils shall bless. + Yet 'tis a deed that the bravest might shake, + Life and our heart's blood are set on the stake; + Death alone points out the road to success. + + God! united we will dare it; + Firm this heart shall meet its fate, + To the altar thus I bear it, + And my coming doom await. + Fatherland, for thee we perish, + At thy fell command 'tis done, + May our loved ones ever cherish + Freedom, which our blood has won. + Liberty, grow o'er each oak-shadow'd plain, + Grow o'er the tombs of thy warriors slain, + Fatherland, hear thou the oath we have sworn. + + Brothers, towards your hearts' best treasures, + Cast one look, on earth the last, + Turn then from those once prized pleasures, + Wither'd by the hostile blast. + Though your eyes be dim with weeping, + Tears like these are not from fear, + Trust to God's own holy keeping, + With your last kiss, all that's dear. + All lips that pray for us, all hearts that we rend + With parting, O father, to thee we commend, + Protect them and shield them from wrongs and despair.--H. + + * * * * * + + +EQUANIMITY OF TEMPER. + + +Goodness of temper may be defined, to use the happy imagery of Gray, +"as the sunshine of the heart." It is a more valuable bosom-attendant +under the pressure of poverty and adversity, and when we are +approaching the confines of infirmity and old age, than when we are +revelling in the full tide of plenty, amid the exuberant strength and +freshness of youth. Lord Bacon, who has analyzed some of the human +accompaniments so well, is silent as to the softening sway and +pleasing influence of this choice attuner of the human mind. But +Shaftesbury, the illustrious author of the _Characteristics_, was so +enamoured of it, that he terms "gravity (its counterpart,) the essence +of imposture;" and so it is, for to what purpose does a man store his +brain with knowledge, and the profitable burden of the sciences, if he +gathers only superciliousness and pride from the hedge of learning? +instead of the milder traits of general affection, and the open +qualities of social feelings. I remember, when a youth, I was +extremely fond of attending the House of Commons, to hear the debates; +and I shall never forget the repulsive loftiness which I thought +marked the physiognomy of Pitt; harsh and unbending, like a settled +frost, he seemed wrapped in the mantle of egotism and sublunary +conceit; and it was from the uninviting expression of this great man's +countenance, that I first drew my conceptions as to how a proud and +unsociable man looked. With very different emotions I was wont to +survey the mild but expressive features of his great opponent, Fox: +there was a placidity mixed up with the graver lines of thought and +reflection, that would have invited a child to take him by the hand; +indeed, the witchcraft of Mr. Fox's temper was such, that it formed a +triumphant source of gratulation in the circle of his friends, from +the panegyric of the late Earl of Carlisle, during his boyish days at +Eton, to the prouder posthumous circles of fame with which the elegant +author of _The Pleasures of Memory_, has entwined his sympathetic +recollections. The late Mr. Whitbread, although an unflinching +advocate for the people's rights, and an incorruptible patriot in +the true sense of the word, was unpopular in his office as a country +magistrate, owing to a tone of severity he generally used to those +around him. The wife of that indefatigable toiler in the Christian +field, John Wesley, was so acid and acrimonious in her temper, that +that mild advocate for spiritual affection, found it impossible to +live with her. Rousseau was tormented by such a host of ungovernable +passions, that he became a burden to himself and to every one around +him. Lord Byron suffered a badness of temper to corrode him in the +flower of his days. Contrasted with this unpleasing part of the +perspective, let us quote the names of a few wise and good men, who +have been proverbial for the goodness of their tempers; as Shakspeare, +Francis I., and Henry IV. of France; "the great and good Lord +Lyttleton," as he is called to the present day; John Howard, +Goldsmith, Sir Samuel Romilly, Franklin, Thomson, the poet, +Sheridan,[2] and Sir Walter Scott. The late Sir William Curtis was +known to be one of the best tempered men of his day, which made him a +great favourite with the late king. I remember a little incident of +Sir William's good-nature, which occurred about a year after he had +been Lord Mayor. In alighting from his carriage, a little out of the +regular line, near the Mansion House, upon some day of festivity, he +happened inadvertently, with the skirts of his coat, to brush down a +few apples from a poor woman's stall, on the side of the pavement. Sir +William was in full dress, but instead of passing on with the hauteur +which characterizes so many of his aldermanic brethren, he set himself +to the task of assisting the poor creature to collect her scattered +fruit; and on parting, observing some of her apples were a little +soiled by the dirt, he drew his hand from his pocket and generously +gave her a shilling. This was too good an incident for John Bull to +lose: a crowd assembled, hurraed, and cried out, "Well done, Billy," +at which the good-natured baronet looked back and laughed. How much +more pleasing is it to tell of such demeanour than of the foolish +pride of the late Sir John Eamer, who turned away one of his +travellers merely because he had in one instance used his bootjack. + + [2] May we not, however, say the friendless Sheridan? + +_The Author of "A Tradesman's Lays."_ + + * * * * * + +Probably our correspondent may recollect Sir William and the orange, +at one of the contested City elections. A "greasy rogue" before the +hustings, seeing the baronet candidate take an orange from his pocket, +_put up_ for the fruit, with the cry "Give us that orange, Billy." Sir +William threw him the fruit, which the fellow had no sooner sucked +dry, than he began bawling with increased energy, "No Curtis," "No +Billy," etc. Such an ungrateful act would have soured even Seneca; but +Sir William merely gave a smile, with a good-natured shake of the +head. Sir William Curtis possessed a much greater share of shrewdness +and good sense than the vulgar ever gave him credit for. At the +Sessions' dinners, he would keep up the ball of conversation with the +judges and gentlemen of the bar, in a fuller vein than either of his +brother aldermen. It is true that he had wealth and distinction, +all which his fellow citizens at table did not enjoy; and these +possessions, we know, are wonderful helps to confidence, if they do +not lead the holder on to assurance.--Ed. M. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE SKETCH BOOK. + + * * * * * + +EXTRACTS FROM THE ORIGINAL LETTERS OF AN OFFICER IN INDIA.[3] + + +_THE SIGHT OF A TIGER._[4] + + +Secunderabad, 1828. + +A short time since, a brother sub. in my regiment was riding out round +some hills adjoining the cantonment, when a _cheetar_, small tiger +(or panther,) pounced on his dog. Seeing his poor favourite in the +cheetar's mouth, like a mouse in Minette's, he put spurs to his horse, +rode after the beast, and so frightened him, that he dropped the dog +and made off. Three of us, including myself, then agreed to sit up +that night, and watch for the tiger, feeling assured that his haunt +was not far from our cantonment. So we started late at night, armed +_cap-a-pied_, and each as fierce in heart as ten tigers; arrived +at the appointed spot, and having selected a convenient place for +concealment, we picketed a sheep, brought with us purposely to entice +the cheetar from his lair. Singular to relate, this poor animal, as if +instinctively aware of its critical situation, was as mute as if +it had been mouthless, and during two or three hours in which we +tormented it, to make it utter a cry, our efforts were of no avail. +Hour after hour slipped away, still no cheetar; and about three +o'clock in the morning, wearied with our fruitless vigil, we all began +to drop asleep. I believe I was wrapped in a most leaden slumber, and +dreaming of anything but watching for, and hunting tigers, when I was +aroused by the most unnatural, unearthly, and infernal roaring ever +heard. This was our friend, and for his reception, starting upon our +feet, we were all immediately ready; but the cunning creature who +had no idea of becoming our victim, made off, with the most hideous +howlings, to the shelter of a neighbouring eminence; when sufficient +daylight appeared, we followed the direction of his voice, and had the +felicity of seeing him perched on the summit of an immense high rock, +just before us, placidly watching our movements. We were here, too far +from him to venture a shot, but immediately began ascending, when the +creature seeing us approach, rose, opened his ugly red mouth in a +desperate yawn, and stretched himself with the utmost _nonchalance_, +being, it seems, little less weary than ourselves. We presented, but +did not fire, because at that very moment, setting up his tail, and +howling horribly, he disappeared behind the rock. Quick as thought +we followed him, but to our great disappointment and chagrin, he had +retreated into one of the numerous caverns formed in that ugly place, +by huge masses of rock, piled one upon the other. Into some of these +dangerous places, however, we descended, sometimes creeping, sometimes +walking, in search of our foe; but not finding him, at length returned +to breakfast, which I thought the most agreeable and sensible part of +the affair. Some wit passed amongst us respecting the propriety of +changing the name _cheetar_, into _cheat-us_; but were, on the whole, +not pleased by the failure of our expedition; and I have only favoured +you with this _romantic_ incident in the life of a sub. as a specimen +of the sort of amusement we meet with in quarters. + + [3] Communicated by M.L.B., Great Marlow, Bucks. + + [4] Vide _Mirror_, vol. xviii. p. 343.--_Note_. + +_Natural Zoological Garden_. + +SECUNDERABAD, 1828. + +Your description of the London Zoological Garden, reminds me that +there is, what I suppose I must term, a most beautiful _Zoological +Hill_, just one mile and a half from the spot whence I now write; on +this I often take my recreation, much to the alarm of its inhabitants; +viz. sundry cheetars, bore-butchers, (or leopards) hyenas, wolves, +jackalls, foxes, hares, partridges, etc.; but not being a very capital +shot, I have seldom made much devastation amongst them. Under the hill +are swamps and paddy-fields, which abound in snipe and other game. +Now, is not this a Zoological Garden on the grandest scale? + +H.C.B. + + * * * * * + + + + +OLD POETS. + + * * * * * + +BALLAD OF AGINCOURT. + +(_From "England's Heroical Epistles[5]._") + + Faire stood the wind for France, + When we, our sayles advance, + Nor now to proue our chance + Longer will tarry; + But putting to the mayne, + At Kaux, the mouth of Sene, + With all his martiall trayne, + Landed King Harry. + + And taking many a fort, + Furnished in warlike sort, + Marcheth towards Agincourt, + In happy houre. + Skirmishing day by day, + With those that stop'd his way, + Where the French gen'ral lay + With all his power. + + Which in his hight of pride. + King Henry to deride, + His ransom to prouide, + To our king sending. + Which he neglects the while, + As from a nation vile, + Yet with an angry smile, + Their fall portending. + + And turning to his men, + Quoth our brave Henry, then, + "Though they to one be ten, + Be not amazed, + Yet have we well begunne, + Battells so bravely wonne, + Have ever to the sonne, + By fame beene raysed." + + "And for myself," quoth he, + "This my full rest shall be, + England ne'er mourn for me, + Nor more esteem me. + Victor I will remaine, + Or on this earth be slaine, + Never shall shee sustaine + Losse to redeeme me." + + Poiters and Cressy tell, + When most their pride did swell, + Under our swords they fell. + + No lesse our skill is, + Then when oure grandsire great, + Clayming the regall seate, + By many a warlike feate, + Lop'd the French lillies. + + The Duke of York so dread, + The vaward led, + Wich the maine Henry sped, + Amongst his Hench_men_, + Excester had the rere, + A brauer man not there, + O Lord, how hot they were, + On the false Frenchmen. + + They now to fight are gone, + Armour on armour shone, + Drumme now to drumme did grone, + To hear was wonder, + That with cryes they make, + The very earth did shake, + Thunder to thunder. + + Well it thine age became + O noble Erpingham, + Which didst the signall ayme, + To our hid forces; + When from a meadow by, + Like a storme suddenly, + The English archery + Struck the French horses. + + With Spanish Ewgh so strong, + Arrowes a cloth yard long, + That like to serpents stung, + Piercing the weather. + None from his fellow starts, + But playing manly parts, + And like true English hearts, + Stuck close together. + + When downe their bowes they threw, + And forth their bilbowes drew, + And on the French they flew, + Not one was tardie; + Armes were from shoulders sent, + Scalpes to the teeth were rent, + Down the French pesants went, + Our men were hardie. + + This while oure noble king, + His broad sword brandishing, + Downe the French host did ding, + As to o'erwhelme it. + And many a deep wound lent, + His armes with bloud besprent, + And many a cruel dent + Bruised his helmet. + + Glo'ster, that duke so good, + Next of the royal blood, + For famous England stood, + With his braue brother, + Clarence, in steele so bright, + Though but a maiden knight. + Yet in that furious light + Scarce such another. + + Warwick, in bloud did wade, + Oxford, the foe inuade, + And cruel slaughter made; + Still as they ran up, + Suffolk, his axe did ply, + Beavmont and Willovghby, + Ferres and Tanhope. + + Upon Saint Crispin's day, + Fought was this noble fray, + Which fame did not delay, + To England to carry. + O when shall English men, + With such acts fill a pen, + Or England breed againe + Such a King Harry. + + [5] A Collection of Poems of the Sixteenth Century.--Communicated + by J.F., of Gray's Inn. We thank our Correspondent for the + present, and shall be happy to receive further specimens from the + same source. + + * * * * * + + + + +SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY + + * * * * * + +AMERICAN IMPROVEMENTS. + + +[The very recent publication of the ninth volume of the Encyclopaedia +Americana[6] enables us to lay before our readers the following +interesting notices, connected with the national weal and internal +economy of the United States of North America.] + +_Navy_.--Since the late war, the growth and improvement of our navy +has kept pace with our national prosperity. We could now put to sea, +in a few mouths, with a dozen ships of the line; the most spacious, +efficient, best, and most beautiful constructions that ever traversed +the ocean. This is not merely an American conceit, but an admitted +fact in Europe, where our models are studiously copied. In the United +States, a maximum and uniform calibre of cannon has been lately +determined on and adopted. Instead of the variety of length, form, +and calibre still used in other navies, and almost equal to the Great +Michael with her "bassils, mynards, hagters, culverings, flings, +falcons, double dogs, and pestilent serpenters," our ships offer flush +and uniform decks, sheers free from hills, hollows, and excrescences, +and complete, unbroken batteries of thirty-two or forty-two pounders. +Thus has been realized an important desideratum--the greatest possible +power to do execution coupled with the greatest simplification of the +means. + + [6] Philadelphia, Carey and Lea, 1832. + +But, while we have thus improved upon the hitherto practised means of +naval warfare, we are threatened with a total change. This is by the +introduction of bombs, discharged horizontally, instead of shot from +common cannon. So certain are those who have turned their attention to +this subject that the change must take place, that, in France, they +are already speculating on the means of excluding these destructive +missiles from a ship's sides, by casing them in a cuirass of iron. Nor +are these ideas the mere offspring of idle speculation. Experiments +have been tried on hulks, by bombs projected horizontally, with +terrible effect. If the projectile lodged in a mast, in exploding it +overturned it, with all its yards and rigging; if in the side, the +ports were opened into each other; or, when near the water, an immense +chasm was opened, causing the vessel to sink immediately. If it should +not explode until it fell spent upon deck, besides doing the injury +of an ordinary ball, it would then burst, scattering smoke, fire, and +death, on every side. When this comes to pass, it would seem that +the naval profession would cease to be very desirable. Nevertheless, +experience has, in all ages, shown that, the more destructive are the +engines used in war, and the more it is improved and systematized, the +less is the loss of life. Salamis and Lepanto can either of them +alone count many times the added victims of the Nile, Trafalgar, and +Navarino. + +One effect of the predicted change in naval war, it is said, will be +the substitution of small vessels for the larger ones now in use. The +three decker presents many times the surface of the schooner, +while her superior number of cannon does not confer a commensurate +advantage; for ten bombs, projected into the side of a ship, would be +almost as efficacious to her destruction as a hundred. As forming part +of a system of defence for our coast, the bomb-cannon, mounted on +steamers, which can take their position at will, would be terribly +formidable. With them--to say nothing of torpedoes and submarine +navigation--we need never more be blockaded and annoyed as formerly. +Hence peaceful nations will be most gainers by this change of system; +but it is not enough that we should be capable of raising a blockade: +we are a commercial people: our merchant ships visit every sea, and +our men-of-war must follow and protect them there. + +_Newspapers_.--No country has so many newspapers as the United States. +The following table, arranged for the American Almanac of 1830, is +corrected from the Traveller, and contains a statement of the number +of newspapers published in the colonies at the commencement of the +revolution; and also the number of newspapers and other periodical +works, in the United States, in 1810 and 1828. + + STATES. 1775. 1810. 1828. + Maine 29 + Massachusetts 7 32 78 + New Hampshire 1 12 17 + Vermont 14 21 + Rhode Island 2 7 14 + Connecticut 4 11 33 + New York 4 66 161 + New Jersey 8 22 + Pennsylvania 9 71 185 + Delaware 2 4 + Maryland 2 21 37 + District of Columbia 6 9 + Virginia 2 23 34 + North Carolina 2 10 20 + South Carolina 3 10 16 + Georgia 1 13 18 + Florida 1 2 + Alabama 10 + Mississippi 4 6 + Louisiana 10 9 + Tennessee 6 8 + Kentucky 17 23 + Ohio 14 66 + Indiana 17 + Michigan 2 + Illinois 4 + Missouri 5 + Arkansas 1 + Cherokee Nation 1 + + Total 37 358 802 + +The present number, however, amounts to about a thousand. Thus the +state of New York is mentioned in the table as having 161 newspapers; +but a late publication states that there are 193, exclusive of +religious journals. New York has 1,913,508 inhabitants. There are +about 50 daily newspapers in the United States, two-thirds of which +are considered to give a fair profit. The North American colonies, in +the year 1720, had only seven newspapers: in 1810, the United States +had 359; in 1826, they had 640; in 1830, 1,000, with a population +of 13,000,000; so that they have more newspapers than the whole 190 +millions of Europe. + +In drawing a comparison between the newspapers of the three freest +countries, France, England, and the United States, we find, as we have +just said, those of the last country to be the most numerous, while +some of the French papers have the largest subscription; and the whole +establishment of a first-rate London paper is the most complete. Its +activity is immense. When Canning sent British troops to Portugal, in +1826, we know that some papers sent reporters with the army. The zeal +of the New York papers also deserves to be mentioned, which send +out their news-boats, even fifty miles to sea, to board approaching +vessels, and obtain the news that they bring. The papers of the large +Atlantic cities are also remarkable for their detailed accounts of +arrivals, and the particulars of shipping news, interesting to the +commercial world, in which they are much more minute than the English. +From the immense number of different papers in the United States, it +results that the number of subscribers to each is limited, 2,000 being +considered a respectable list. One paper, therefore, is not able to +unite the talent of many able men, as is the case in France. There +men of the first rank in literature or politics occasionally, or at +regular periods, contribute articles. In the United States, few papers +have more than one editor, who generally writes upon almost all +subjects himself. This circumstance necessarily makes the papers less +spirited and able than some of the foreign journals, but is attended +with this advantage, that no particular set of men is enabled to +exercise a predominant influence by means of these periodicals. Their +abundance neutralizes their effects. Declamation and sophistry are +made comparatively harmless by running in a thousand conflicting +currents. + +_Paper-making_.--The manufacture of paper has of late rapidly +increased in the United States. According to an estimate in 1829, the +whole quantity made in this country amounted to about five to seven +millions a year, and employed from ten to eleven thousand persons. +Rags are not imported from Italy and Germany to the same amount as +formerly, because people here save them more carefully; and the value +of the rags, junk, etc., saved annually in the United States, is +believed to amount to two millions of dollars. Machines for making +paper of any length are much employed in the United States. The +quality of American paper has also improved; but, as paper becomes +much better by keeping, it is difficult to have it of the best quality +in this country, the interest of capital being too high. The paper +used here for printing compares very disadvantageously with that of +England. Much wrapping paper is now made of straw, and paper for +tracing through is prepared in Germany from the poplar tree. A letter +of Mr. Brand, formerly a civil officer in Upper Provence, in France +(which contains many pine forests), dated Feb. 12, 1830, has been +published in the French papers, containing an account of his +successful experiments to make coarse paper of the pine tree. The +experiments of others have led to the same results. Any of our +readers, interested in this subject, can find Mr. Brand's letter in +the _Courrier Francais_ of Nov. 27, 1830, a French paper published +in New York. In salt-works near Hull, Massachusetts, in which the +sea-water is made to flow slowly over sheds of pine, in order to +evaporate, the writer found large quantities of a white substance--the +fibres of the pine wood dissolved and carried off by the brine--which +seemed to require nothing but glue to convert it into paper. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE NATURALIST + + * * * * * + + +THE CUTTLE-FISH + + +Is one of the most curious creatures of "the watery kingdom." It is +popularly termed a fish, though it is, in fact, a worm, belonging to +the order termed _Mollusca, (Molluscus_, soft,) from the body being of +a pulpy substance and having no skeleton. It differs in many respects +from other animals of its class, particularly with regard to its +internal structure, the perfect formation of the viscera, eyes, and +even organs of hearing. Moreover, "it has three hearts, two of which +are placed at the root of the two branchiae (or gills); they receive +the blood from the body, and propel it into the branchiae. The +returning veins open into the middle heart, from which the aorta +proceeds."[7] Of Cuttle-fish there are several species. That +represented in the annexed Cut is the common or officinal Cuttle-fish, +(_Sepia officinalis_, Lin). It consists of a soft, pulpy, body, with +processes or arms, which are furnished with small holes or suckers, +by means of which the animal fixes itself in the manner of +cupping-glasses. These holes increase with the age of the animal; and +in some species amount to upwards of one thousand. The arms are often +torn or nipped off by shell or other fishes, but the animal has the +power of speedily reproducing the limbs. By means of the suckers the +Cuttle-fish usually affects its locomotion. "It swims at freedom in +the bosom of the sea, moving by sudden and irregular jerks, the body +being nearly in a perpendicular position, and the head directed +downwards and backwards. Some species have a fleshy, muscular fin +on each side, by aid of which they accomplish these apparently +inconvenient motions; but, at least, an equal number of them are +finless, and yet can swim with perhaps little less agility. Lamarck, +indeed, denies this, and says that these can only trail themselves +along the bottom by means of the suckers. This is probably their +usual mode of proceeding; that it is not their only one, we have the +positive affirmation of other observers."[8] Serviceable as these arms +undoubtedly are to the Cuttle-fish, Blumenbach thinks it questionable +whether they can be considered as organs of touch, in the more limited +sense to which he has confined that term.[9] + + +THE CUTTLE-FISH. + + +[Illustration: The Cuttle-fish.] + + +The jaws of the Cuttle-fish, it should be observed, are fixed in the +body because there is no head to which they can be articulated. They +are of horny substance, and resemble the bill of a parrot. They are in +the centre of the under part of the body, surrounded by the arms. By +means of these parts, the shell-fish which are taken for food, are +completely triturated. + + [7] Cuvier. + + [8] Nat. Hist. Molluscous Animals, Mag. Nat. Hist. vol. iii. + p. 527. + + [9] Manual Comp. Anat. p. 263. + +We now come to the most peculiar parts of the structure of the +Cuttle-fish, viz. the _ear and eye_, inasmuch as it is the only animal +of its class, in which any thing has hitherto been discovered, at +all like an organ of hearing, or that has been shown to possess true +eyes.[10] The ears consist of two oval cavities, in the cartilaginous +ring, to which the large arms of the animal are affixed. In each of +these is a small bag, containing a bony substance, and receiving the +termination of the nerves, like those of the vestibulum (or cavity +in the bone of the ear) in fishes. The nature of the eyes cannot be +disputed. "They resemble, on the whole, those of red-blooded animals, +particularly fishes; they are at least incomparably more like them +than the eyes of any known insects; yet they are distinguished by +several extraordinary peculiarities. The front of the eye-ball is +covered with a loose membrane instead of a cornea; the iris is +composed of a firm substance; and a process projects from the upper +margin of the pupil, which gives that membrane a semilunar form."[11] +The exterior coat or ball is remarkably strong, so as to seem almost +calcareous, and is, when taken out, of a brilliant pearl colour; it +is worn in some parts of Italy, and in the Grecian islands by way of +artificial pearl in necklaces. + + [10] In all other worms the eyes are entirely wanting, or their + existence is very doubtful. Whether the black points at the + extremities of what Swammerdam calls the horns of the common + snail, are organs which really possess the power of vision, + is still problematical. + + [11] Blumenbach, Man. Comp. Anat. p. 305. + +Next we may notice the curious provision by which the Cuttle-fish is +enabled to elude the pursuit of its enemies in the "vasty deep." This +consists of a black, inky fluid, (erroneously supposed to be the +bile,) which is contained in a bag beneath the body. The fluid itself +is thick, but miscible with water to such a degree, that a very small +quantity will colour a vast bulk of water.[12] Thus, the comparatively +small Cuttle-fish may darken the element about the acute eye of the +whale. What omniscience is displayed in this single provision, as well +as in the faculty possessed by the Cuttle-fish of reproducing its +mutilated arms! All Nature beams with such beneficence, and abounds +with such instances of divine love for every creature, however humble: +in observing these provisions, how often are we reminded of the +benefits conferred by the same omniscience upon our own species. It is +thus, by the investigation of natural history, that we are led to +the contemplation of the sublimest subjects; thus that man with God +himself holds converse. + + +BONE, OR PLATE. + + +[Illustration: Bone, or Plate.] + + +The "bone" of the Cuttle-fish now claims attention. This is a +complicated calcareous plate, lodged in a peculiar cavity of the back, +which it materially strengthens. This plate has long been known in +the shop of the apothecary under the name of Cuttle-fish bone: an +observant reader may have noticed scores of these plates in glasses +labelled _Os Sepiae_. Reduced to powder, they were formerly used as an +absorbent, but they are now chiefly sought after for the purpose of +polishing the softer metals. It is however improper to call this plate +bone, since, in composition, "it is exactly similar to _shell_, and +consists of various membranes, hardened by carbonate of lime, (the +principal material of shell,) without the smallest mixture of +phosphate of lime,[13] or the chief material of bone." + + [12] According to Cuvier, the Indian ink, from China, is made of + this fluid, as was the ink of the Romans. It has been supposed, + and not without a considerable degree of probability, that the + celebrated plain, but wholesome dish, the black broth of Sparta, + was no other than a kind of Cuttle-fish soup, in which the black + liquor of the animal was always added as an ingredient; being, + when fresh, of very agreeable taste.--_Shaw's Zoology_. + + [13] Mr. Hatchett, in Philos. Trans. + + +EGGS. + + +[Illustration: Eggs.] + + +Lastly, are the _ovaria_, or egg-bags of the Cuttle-fish, which are +popularly called _sea-grapes_. The female fish deposits her eggs +in numerous clusters, on the stalks of fuci, on corals, about the +projecting sides of rocks, or on any other convenient substances. +These eggs, which are of the size of small filberts, are of a black +colour. + +The most remarkable species of Cuttle-fish inhabits the British seas; +and, although seldom taken, its bone or plate is cast ashore on +different parts of the coast from the south of England to the Zetland +Isles. We have picked up scores of these plates and bunches of the +egg-bags or grapes, after rough weather on the beach between Worthing +and Rottingdean; but we never found a single fish. + +The Cuttle-fish was esteemed a delicacy by the ancients, and the +moderns equally prize it. Captain Cook speaks highly of a soup he made +from it; and the fish is eaten at the present day by the Italians, and +by the Greeks, during Lent. We take the most edible species to be the +_octopodia_, or eight-armed, found particularly large in the East +Indies and the Gulf of Mexico. The common species here figured, when +full-grown, measures about two feet in length, is of a pale blueish +brown colour, with the skin marked by numerous dark purple specks. + +The Cuttle-fish is described by some naturalists, as naked or +shell-less. It is often found attached to the shell of the Paper +Nautilus, which it is said to use as a sail. It is, however, very +doubtful whether the Cuttle-fish has a shell of its own. There is a +controversy upon the subject. Aristotle, and our contemporary, Home, +maintain it to be parasitical: Cuvier and Ferrusac, non-parasitical; +but the curious reader will find the _pro_ and _con._--the majority +and minority--in the _Magazine of Natural History_, vol. iii. p. 535. + + * * * * * + + + + +NOTES OF A READER. + + * * * * * + +SERVANTS IN INDIA. + + +[Captain Skinner, in his _Excursions in India_, makes the following +sensible observations on the tyranny over servants in India:] + +There are throughout the mountains many of the sacred shrubs of the +Hindoos, which give great delight, as my servants fall in with them. +They pick the leaves; and running with them to me, cry, "See, sir, +see, our holy plants are here!" and congratulate each other on having +found some indication of a better land than they are generally +inclined to consider the country of the Pariahs. The happiness these +simple remembrances shed over the whole party is so enlivening, that +every distress and fatigue seems to be forgotten. When we behold a +servant approaching with a sprig of the _Dona_ in his hand, we hail it +as the olive-branch, that denotes peace and good-will for the rest of +the day, if, as must sometimes be the case, they have been in any way +interrupted. + +Even these little incidents speak so warmly in favour of the Hindoo +disposition, that, in spite of much that may be uncongenial to an +European in their character, they cannot fail to inspire him with +esteem, if not affection. I wish that many of my countrymen would +learn to believe that the natives are endowed with feelings, and +surely they may gather such an inference from many a similar trait +to the one I have related. Hardness of heart can never be allied +to artless simplicity: that mind must possess a higher degree of +sensibility and refinement, that can unlock its long-confined +recollections by so light a spring as a wild flower. + +I have often witnessed, with wonder and sorrow, an English gentleman +stoop to the basest tyranny over his servants, without even the poor +excuse of anger, and frequently from no other reason than because he +could not understand their language. The question, from the answer +being unintelligible, is instantly followed by a blow. Such scenes are +becoming more rare, and indeed are seldom acted but by the younger +members of society; they are too frequent notwithstanding: and should +any thing that has fallen from me here, induce the cruelly-disposed to +reflect a little upon the impropriety and mischief of their conduct, +when about to raise the hand against a native, and save one stripe +to the passive people who are so much at the mercy of their masters' +tempers, I shall indeed be proud. + +[Again, speaking of the condition of servants, Captain Skinner +remarks--] + +It is impossible to view some members of the despised class without +sorrow and pity, particularly those who are attached, in the lowest +offices, to the establishments of the Europeans. They are the most +melancholy race of beings, always alone, and apparently unhappy: they +are scouted from the presence even of their fellow-servants. None but +the mind of a poet could imagine such outcasts venturing to raise +their thoughts to the beauty of a Brahmin's daughter; and a touching +tale in such creative fancy, no doubt, it would make, for, from their +outward appearances, I do not perceive why they should not be endowed +with minds as sensitive at least as those of the castes above them. +There are among them some very stout and handsome men; and it is +ridiculous to see sometimes all their strength devoted to the charge +of a sickly puppy;--to take care of dogs being their principal +occupation! + +Our attention has been drawn to the above passage in Captain Skinner's +work, by its ready illustration of the views and conclusions of the +late Dr. Knox, in his invaluable _Spirit of Despotism_, Section 2, +"Oriental manners, and the ideas imbibed in youth, both in the East +and West Indies, favourable to the spirit of despotism." How forcibly +applicable, on the present occasion, is the following extract:--"from +the intercourse of England with the East and West Indies, it is to be +feared that something of a more servile spirit has been derived than +was known among those who established the free constitutions of +Europe, and than would have been adopted, or patiently borne, in ages +of virtuous simplicity. A very numerous part of our countrymen spend +their most susceptible age in those countries, where despotic manners +remarkably prevail. They are themselves, when invested with office, +treated by the natives with an idolatrous degree of reverence, which +teaches them to expect a similar submission to their will, on their +return to their own country. They have been accustomed to look up to +personages greatly their superiors in rank and riches, with awe; and +to look down on their inferiors in _property_ with supreme contempt, +as slaves of their will and ministers of their luxury. Equal laws and +equal liberty at home appear to them saucy claims of the poor and the +vulgar, which tend to divest riches of one of the greatest charms, +over-bearing dominion. We do, indeed, import gorgeous silks and +luscious sweets from the Indies, but we import, at the same time, the +spirit of despotism, which adds deformity to the purple robe, and +bitterness to the honied beverage." "That _Oriental_ manners are +unfavourable to liberty, is, I believe, universally conceded. The +natives of the East Indies entertain not the idea of independence. +They treat the Europeans, who go among them to acquire their riches, +with a respect similar to the abject submission which they pay to +their native despots. Young men, who in England scarcely possessed +the rank of the gentry, are waited upon in India, with more attentive +servility than is paid or required in many courts of Europe. Kings of +England seldom assume the state enjoyed by an East India governor, or +even by subordinate officers. Enriched at an early age, the adventurer +returns to England. His property admits him to the higher circles +of fashionable life. He aims at rivalling or excelling all the +old nobility in the splendour of his mansions, the finery of his +carriages, the number of his liveried train, the profusion of his +tables, in every unmanly indulgence which an empty vanity can covet, +and a full purse procure. Such a man, when he looks from the window of +his superb mansion, and sees the people pass, cannot endure the idea, +that they are of as much consequence as himself in the eye of the law; +and that he dares not insult or oppress the unfortunate being who +rakes his kennel or sweeps his chimney." + + * * * * * + + +FALL OF ROBESPIERRE. + + +It is well known, that during the revolutionary troubles of France, +not only all the churches were closed, but the Catholic and Protestant +worship entirely forbidden; and, after the constitution of 1795, it +was at the hazard of one's life that either the mass was heard, or +any religious duty performed. It is evident that Robespierre, who +unquestionably had a design which is now generally understood, was +desirous, on the day of the fete of the Supreme Being, to bring back +public opinion to the worship of the Deity. Eight months before, +we had seen the Bishop of Paris, accompanied by his clergy, appear +voluntarily at the bar of the Convention, to abjure the Christian +faith and the Catholic religion. But it is not as generally known, +that at that period Robespierre was not omnipotent, and could not +carry his desires into effect. Numerous factions then disputed with +him the supreme authority. It was not till the end of 1793, and the +beginning of 1794, that his power was so completely established that +he could venture to act up to his intentions. + +Robespierre was then desirous to establish the worship of the Supreme +Being, and the belief of the immortality of the soul. He felt that +irreligion is the soul of anarchy, and it was not anarchy but +despotism which he desired; and yet the very day after that +magnificent fete in honour of the Supreme Being, a man of the highest +celebrity in science, and as distinguished for virtue and probity as +philosophic genius, Lavoisier, was led out to the scaffold. On the day +following that, Madame Elizabeth, that Princess whom the executioners +could not guillotine, till they had turned aside their eyes from the +sight of her angelic visage, stained the same axe with her blood!--And +a month after, Robespierre, who wished to restore order for his own +purposes--who wished to still the bloody waves which for years had +inundated the state, felt that all his efforts would be in vain if +the masses who supported his power were not restrained and directed, +because without order nothing but ravages and destruction can prevail. +To ensure the government of the masses, it was indispensable that +morality, religion, and belief should be established--and, to affect +the multitude, that religion should be clothed in external forms. "My +friend," said Voltaire, to the atheist Damilaville, "after you have +supped on well-dressed partridges, drunk your sparkling champaigne, +and slept on cushions of down in the arms of your mistress, I have +no fear of you, though you do not believe in God.---But if you are +perishing of hunger, and I meet you in the corner of a wood, I would +rather dispense with your company." But when Robespierre wished to +bring back to something like discipline the crew of the vessel which +was fast driving on the breakers, he found the thing was not so easy +as he imagined. To destroy is easy--to rebuild is the difficulty. He +was omnipotent to do evil; but the day that he gave the first sign +of a disposition to return to order, the hands which he himself +had stained with blood, marked his forehead with the fatal sign of +destruction. + +--_Memoirs of the Duchess of Abrantes._ + + * * * * * + + +SOUNDS DURING THE NIGHT. + + +The great audibility of sounds during the night is a phenomenon of +considerable interest, and one which had been observed even by the +ancients. In crowded cities or in their vicinity, the effect was +generally ascribed to the rest of animated beings, while in localities +where such an explanation was inapplicable, it was supposed to arise +from a favourable direction of the prevailing wind. Baron Humboldt +was particularly struck with this phenomenon when he first heard the +rushing of the great cataracts of the Orinoco in the plain which +surrounds the mission of the Apures. These sounds he regarded as +three times louder during the night than during the day. Some authors +ascribed this fact to the cessation of the humming of insects, the +singing of birds, and the action of the wind on the leaves of the +trees, but M. Humboldt justly maintains that this cannot be the cause +of it on the Orinoco, where the buzz of insects is much louder in the +night than in the day, and where the breeze never rises till after +sunset. Hence he was led to ascribe the phenomenon to the perfect +transparency and uniform density of the air, which can exist only at +night after the heat of the ground has been uniformly diffused through +the atmosphere. When the rays of the sun have been beating on the +ground during the day, currents of hot air of different temperatures, +and consequently of different densities, are constantly ascending from +the ground and mixing with the cold air above. The air thus ceases +to be a homogeneous medium, and every person must have observed the +effects of it upon objects seen through it which are very indistinctly +visible, and have a tremulous motion, as if they were "dancing in +the air." The very same effect is perceived when we look at objects +through spirits and water that are not perfectly mixed, or when we +view distant objects over a red hot poker or over a flame. In all +these cases the light suffers refraction in passing from a medium of +one density into a medium of a different density, and the refracted +rays are constantly changing their direction as the different currents +rise in succession. Analogous effects are produced when sound passes +through a mixed medium, whether it consists of two different mediums +or of one medium where portions of it have different densities. As +sound moves with different velocities through media of different +densities, the wave which produces the sound will be partly reflected +in passing from one medium to the other, and the direction of the +transmitted wave changed; and hence in passing through such media +different portions of the wave will reach the ear at different times, +and thus destroy the sharpness and distinctness of the sound. This +may be proved by many striking facts. If we put a bell in a receiver +containing a mixture of hydrogen gas and atmospheric air, the sound of +the bell can scarcely be heard. During a shower of rain or of snow, +noises are greatly deadened, and when sound is transmitted along an +iron wire or an iron pipe of sufficient length, we actually hear two +sounds, one transmitted more rapidly through the solid, and the other +more slowly through the air. The same property is well illustrated by +an elegant and easily repeated experiment of Chladni's. When sparkling +champagne is poured into a tall glass till it is half full, the glass +loses its power of ringing by a stroke upon its edge, and emits only +a disagreeable and a puffy sound. This effect will continue while the +wine is filled with bubbles of air, or as long as the effervescence +lasts; but when the effervescence begins to subside, the sound becomes +clearer and clearer, and the glass rings as usual when the air-bubbles +have vanished. If we reproduce the effervescence by stirring the +champagne with a piece of bread the glass will again cease to ring. +The same experiment will succeed with other effervescing fluids.--_Sir +David Brewster_. + + * * * * * + +No man is so insignificant as to be sure his example can do no hurt. + +--_Lord Clarendon._ + + * * * * * + + + + +THE PUBLIC JOURNALS. + + * * * * * + + +PADDY FOOSHANE'S FRICASSEE. + + +Paddy Fooshane kept a shebeen house at Barleymount Cross, in which he +sold whisky--from which his Majesty did not derive any large portion +of his revenues--ale, and provisions. One evening a number of friends, +returning from a funeral---all neighbours too--stopt at his house, +"because they were in grief," to drink a drop. There was Andy Agar, a +stout, rattling fellow, the natural son of a gentleman residing near +there; Jack Shea, who was afterwards transported for running away with +Biddy Lawlor; Tim Cournane, who, by reason of being on his keeping, +was privileged to carry a gun; Owen Connor, a march-of-intellect +man, who wished to enlighten proctors by making them swallow their +processes; and a number of other "good boys." The night began to "rain +cats and dogs," and there was no stirring out; so the cards were +called for, a roaring fire was made down, and the whisky and ale began +to flow. After due observation, and several experiments, a space large +enough for the big table, and free from the drop down, was discovered. +Here six persons, including Andy, Jack, Tim--with his gun between his +legs--and Owen, sat to play for a pig's head, of which the living +owner, in the parlour below, testified, by frequent grunts, his +displeasure at this unceremonious disposal of his property. + +Card-playing is very thirsty, and the boys were anxious to keep out +the wet; so that long before the pig's head was decided, a messenger +had been dispatched several times to Killarney, a distance of four +English miles, for a pint of whisky each time. The ale also went +merrily round, until most of the men were quite stupid, their faces +swoln, and their eyes red and heavy. The contest at length was +decided; but a quarrel about the skill of the respective parties +succeeded, and threatened broken heads at one time. At last Jack Shea +swore they must have something to eat;----him but he was starved with +drink, and he must get some rashers somewhere or other. Every one +declared the same; and Paddy was ordered to cook some _griskins_ +forthwith. Paddy was completely nonplussed:--all the provisions were +gone, and yet his guests were not to be trifled with. He made a +hundred excuses--"'Twas late--'twas dry now--and there was nothing in +the house; sure they ate and drank enough." But all in vain. The ould +sinner was threatened with instant death if he delayed. So Paddy +called a council of war in the parlour, consisting of his wife and +himself. + +"Agrah, Jillen, agrah, what will we do with these? Is there any meat +in the tub? Where is the tongue? If it was yours, Jillen, we'd give +them enough of it; but I mane the cow's." (aside.) + +"Sure the proctors got the tongue ere yesterday, and you know there +an't a bit in the tub. Oh the murtherin villains! and I'll engage +'twill be no good for us, after all my white bread and the whisky. +That it may pison 'em!" + +"Amen! Jillen; but don't curse them. After all, where's the meat? I'm +sure that Andy will kill me if we don't make it out any how;--and he +hasn't a penny to pay for it. You could drive the mail coach, Jillen, +through his breeches pocket without jolting over a ha'penny. Coming, +coming; d'ye hear 'em?" + +"Oh, they'll murther us. Sure if we had any of the tripe I sent +yesterday to the gauger." + +"Eh! What's that you say? I declare to God here's Andy getting up. +We must do something. _Thonom an dhiaoul_, I have it. Jillen run and +bring me the leather breeches; run woman, alive! Where's the block and +the hatchet? Go up and tell 'em you're putting down the pot." + +Jillen pacified the uproar in the kitchen by loud promises, and +returned to Paddy. The use of the leather breeches passed her +comprehension; but Paddy actually took up the leather breeches, tore +away the lining with great care, chopped the leather with the hatchet +on the block, and put it into the pot as tripes. Considering the +situation in which Andy and his friends were, and the appetite of the +Irish peasantry for meat in any shape--"a bone" being their _summum +bonum_--the risk was very little. If discovered, however, Paddy's +safety was much worse than doubtful, as no people in the world have a +greater horror of any unusual food. One of the most deadly modes of +revenge they can employ is to give an enemy dog's or cat's flesh; and +there have been instances where the persons who have eaten it, on +being informed of the fact, have gone mad. But Paddy's habit of +practical jokes, from which nothing could wean him, and his anger at +their conduct, along with the fear he was in did not allow him to +hesitate a moment. Jillen remonstrated in vain. "Hould your tongue, +you foolish woman. They're all as blind as the pig there. They'll +never find it out. Bad luck to 'em too, my leather breeches! that I +gave a pound note and a hog for in Cork. See how nothing else would +satisfy 'em!" The meat at length was ready. Paddy drowned it in +butter, threw out the potatoes on the table, and served it up smoking +hot with the greatest gravity. + +"By ----," says Jack Shea, "that's fine stuff! How a man would dig a +trench after that." + +"I'll take a priest's oath," answered Tim Cohill, the most irritable +of men, but whose temper was something softened by the rich steam;-- + +"Yet, Tim, what's a priest's oath? I never heard that." + +"Why, sure, every one knows you didn't ever hear of anything of good." + +"I say you lie, Tim, you rascal." + +Tim was on his legs in a few moments, and a general battle was about +to begin; but the appetite was too strong, and the quarrel was +settled; Tim having been appeased by being allowed to explain a +priest's oath. According to him, a priest's oath was this:--He was +surrounded by books, which were gradually piled up until they reached +his lips. He then kissed the uppermost, and swore by all to the +bottom. As soon as the admiration excited by his explanation, in those +who were capable of hearing Tim, had ceased, all fell to work; and +certainly, if the tripes had been of ordinary texture, drunk as was +the party, they would soon have disappeared. After gnawing at them for +some time, "Well," says Owen Connor, "that I mightn't!--but these are +the quarest tripes I ever eat. It must be she was very ould." + +"By ----," says Andy, taking a piece from his mouth to which he had +been paying his addresses for the last half hour, "I'd as soon be +eating leather. She was a bull, man; I can't find the soft end at all +of it." + +"And that's true for you, Andy," said the man of the gun; "and 'tis +the greatest shame they hadn't a bull-bait to make him tinder. Paddy, +was it from Jack Clifford's bull you got 'em? They'd do for wadding, +they're so tough." + +"I'll tell you, Tim, where I got them--'twas out of Lord Shannon's +great cow at Cork, the great fat cow that the Lord Mayor bought for +the Lord Lieutenant--_Asda churp naur hagushch_."[14] + + [14] May it never come out of his body! + +"Amen, I pray God! Paddy. Out of Lord Shandon's cow? near the steeple, +I suppose; the great cow that couldn't walk with tallow. By ----, +these are fine tripes. They'll make a man very strong. Andy, give me +two or three _libbhers_ more of 'em." + +"Well, see that! out of Lord Shandon's cow: I wonder what they gave +her, Paddy. That I mightn't!--but these would eat a pit of potatoes. +Any how, they're good for the teeth. Paddy, what's the reason they +send all the good mate from Cork to the Blacks?" + +But before Paddy could answer this question, Andy, who had been +endeavouring to help Tim, uttered a loud "_Thonom an dhiaoul!_ what's +this? Isn't this flannel?" The fact was, he had found a piece of +the lining, which Paddy, in his hurry, had not removed; and all was +confusion. Every eye was turned to Paddy; but with wonderful quickness +he said "'Tis the book tripe, _agragal_, don't you see?"--and actually +persuaded them to it. + +"Well, any how," says Tim, "it had the taste of wool." + +"May this choke me," says Jack Shea, "if I didn't think that 'twas a +piece of a leather breeches when I saw Andy _chawing_ it." + +This was a shot between wind and water to Paddy. His self-possession +was nearly altogether lost, and he could do no more than turn it off +by a faint laugh. But it jarred most unpleasantly on Andy's nerves. +After looking at Paddy for some time with a very ominous look, he +said, "_Yirroo Pandhrig_ of the tricks, if I thought you were going on +with any work here, my soul and my guts to the devil if I would not +cut you into garters. By the vestment I'd make a _furhurmeen_ of you." + +"Is it I, Andy? That the hands may fall off me!" + +But Tim Cohill made a most seasonable diversion. "Andy, when you die, +you'll be the death of one fool, any how. What do you know that wasn't +ever in Cork itself about tripes. I never ate such mate in my life; +and 'twould be good for every poor man in the County of Kerry if he +had a tub of it." + +Tim's tone of authority, and the character he had got for learning, +silenced every doubt, and all laid siege to the tripes again. But +after some time, Andy was observed gazing with the most astonished +curiosity into the plate before him. His eyes were rivetted on +something; at last he touched it with his knife, arid exclaimed, +"_Kirhappa, dar dhia!_"--[A button by G--.] + +"What's that you say?" burst from all! and every one rose in the best +manner he could, to learn the meaning of the button. + +"Oh, the villain of the world!" roared Andy, "I'm pisoned! Where's the +pike? For God's sake Jack, run for the priest, or I'm a dead man with +the breeches. Where is he?--yeer bloods won't ye catch him, and I +pisoned?" + +The fact was, Andy had met one of the knee-buttons sewed into a piece +of the tripe, and it was impossible for him to fail discovering the +cheat. The rage, however, was not confined to Andy. As soon as it was +understood what had been done, there was an universal rush for Paddy +and Jillen; but Paddy was much too cunning to be caught, after the +narrow escape he had of it before. The moment after the discovery of +the lining, that he could do so without suspicion, he stole from the +table, left the house, and hid himself. Jillen did the same; and +nothing remained for the eaters, to vent their rage, but breaking +every thing in the cabin; which was done in the utmost fury. Andy, +however, continued watching for Paddy with a gun, a whole month after. +He might be seen prowling along the ditches near the shebeen-house, +waiting for a shot at him. Not that he would have scrupled to enter +it, were he likely to find Paddy there; but the latter was completely +on the _shuchraun_, and never visited his cabin except by stealth. It +was in one of those visits that Andy hoped to catch him. + +--_Tait's Edinburgh Magazine_. + + * * * * * + + +CONVERSATIONS WITH LORD BYRON. + +_By the Countess of Blessington_. + + +One of our first rides with Lord Byron was to Nervi, a village on +the sea-coast, most romantically situated, and each turn of the road +presenting various and beautiful prospects. They were all familiar to +him, and he failed not to point them out, but in very sober terms, +never allowing any thing like enthusiasm in his expressions, though +many of the views might have excited it. + +His appearance on horseback was not advantageous, and he seemed +aware of it, for he made many excuses for his dress and equestrian +appointments. His horse was literally covered with various trappings, +in the way of cavesons, martingales, and Heaven knows how many other +(to me) unknown inventions. The saddle was _a la Hussarde_ with +holsters, in which he always carried pistols. His dress consisted of +a nankeen jacket and trousers, which appeared to have shrunk from +washing; the jacket embroidered in the same colour, and with three +rows of buttons; the waist very short, the back very narrow, and the +sleeves set in as they used to be ten or fifteen years before; a black +stock, very narrow; a dark-blue velvet cap with a shade, and a very +rich gold band and large gold tassel at the crown; nankeen gaiters, +and a pair of blue spectacles, completed his costume, which was any +thing but becoming. This was his general dress of a morning for +riding, but I have seen it changed for a green tartan plaid jacket. He +did not ride well, which surprised us, as, from the frequent allusions +to horsemanship in his works, we expected to find him almost a Nimrod, +It was evident that he had _pretensions_ on this point, though he +certainly was what I should call a timid rider. When his horse made a +false step, which was not unfrequent, he seemed discomposed; and when +we came to any bad part of the road, he immediately checked his course +and walked his horse very slowly, though there really was nothing to +make even a lady nervous. Finding that I could perfectly manage (or +what he called _bully_) a very highly-dressed horse that I daily rode, +he became extremely anxious to buy it; asked me a thousand questions +as to how I had acquired such a perfect command of it, &c. &c. and +entreated, as the greatest favour, that I would resign it to him as a +charger to take to Greece, declaring he never would part with it, &c. +As I was by no means a bold rider, we were rather amused at observing +Lord Byron's opinion of my courage; and as he seemed so anxious for +the horse, I agreed to let him have it when he was to embark. From +this time he paid particular attention to the movements of poor +Mameluke (the name of the horse), and said he should now feel +confidence in action with so steady a charger. + +_April_--. Lord Byron dined with us today. During dinner he was as +usual gay, spoke in terms of the warmest commendation of Sir Walter +Scott, not only as an author, but as a man, and dwelt with apparent +delight on his novels, declaring that he had read and re-read them +over and over again, and always with increased pleasure. He said +that he quite equalled, nay, in his opinion, surpassed Cervantes. In +talking of Sir Walter's private character, goodness of heart, &c., +Lord Byron became more animated than I had ever seen him; his colour +changed from its general pallid tint to a more lively hue, and his +eyes became humid: never had he appeared to such advantage, and it +might easily be seen that every expression he uttered proceeded from +his heart. Poor Byron!--for poor he is even with all his genius, rank, +and wealth--had he lived more with men like Scott, whose openness of +character and steady principle had convinced him that they were in +earnest in _their goodness_, and not _making believe_, (as he always +suspects good people to be,) his life might be different and happier! +Byron is so acute an observer that nothing escapes him; all the shades +of selfishness and vanity are exposed to his searching glance, and the +misfortune is, (and a serious one it is to him,) that when he finds +these, and alas! they are to be found on every side, they disgust +and prevent his giving credit to the many good qualities that often +accompany them. He declares he can sooner pardon crimes, because they +proceed from the passions, than these minor vices, that spring from +egotism and self-conceit. We had a long argument this evening on the +subject, which ended, like most arguments, by leaving both of the same +opinion as when it commenced. I endeavoured to prove that crimes were +not only injurious to the perpetrators, but often ruinous to the +innocent, and productive of misery to friends and relations, whereas +selfishness and vanity carried with them their own punishment, the +first depriving the person of all sympathy, and the second exposing +him to ridicule which to the vain is a heavy punishment, but that +their effects were not destructive to society as are crimes. + +He laughed when I told him that having heard him so often declaim +against vanity, and detect it so often in his friends, I began to +suspect he knew the malady by having had it himself, and that I had +observed through life, that those persons who had the most vanity were +the most severe against that failing in their friends. He wished to +impress upon me that he was not vain, and gave various proofs to +establish this; but I produced against him his boasts of swimming, his +evident desire of being considered more _un homme de societe_ than a +poet, and other little examples, when he laughingly pleaded guilty, +and promised to be more merciful towards his friends. + +Byron attempted to be gay, but the effort was not successful, and he +wished us good night with a trepidation of manner that marked his +feelings. And this is the man that I have heard considered unfeeling! +How often are our best qualities turned against us, and made the +instruments for wounding us in the most vulnerable part, until, +ashamed of betraying our susceptibility, we affect an insensibility +we are far from possessing, and, while we deceive others, nourish in +secret the feelings that prey _only_ on our own hearts! + +--_New Monthly Magazine._ + + * * * * * + + + + +THE GATHERER. + + +_Canary Birds._--In Germany and the Tyrol, from whence the rest of +Europe is principally supplied with Canary birds, the apparatus for +breeding Canaries is both large and expensive. A capacious building +is erected for them, with a square space at each end, and holes +communicating with these spaces. In these outlets are planted such +trees as the birds prefer. The bottom is strewed with sand, on which +are cast rapeseed, chickweed, and such other food as they like. +Throughout the inner compartment, which is kept dark, are placed +bowers for the birds to build in, care being taken that the breeding +birds are guarded from the intrusion of the rest. Four Tyrolese +usually take over to England about sixteen hundred of these birds; and +though they carry them on their backs nearly a thousand miles, and pay +twenty pounds for them originally, they can sell them at 5_s_. each. + +_Braithwaite's Steam Fire Engine_--will deliver about 9,000 gallons +of water per hour to an elevation of 90 feet. The time of getting the +machine into action, from the moment of igniting the fuel, (the water +being cold,) is 18 minutes. As soon as an alarm is given, the fire is +kindled, and the bellows, attached to the engine, are worked by hand. +By the time the horses are harnessed in, the fuel is thoroughly +ignited, and the bellows are then worked by the motion of the wheels +of the engine. By the time of arriving at the fire, preparing the +hoses, &c. the steam is ready. + +Fisher, bishop of Rochester, was accustomed to style his church his +wife, declaring that he would never exchange her for one that was +richer. He was a zealous adherent of Pope Paul III. who created him +a cardinal. The king, Henry VIII., on learning that Fisher would not +refuse the dignity, exclaimed, in a passion, "Yea! is he so lusty? +Well, let the pope send him a hat when he will. Mother of God! he +shall wear it on his shoulders, for I will leave him never a head to +set it on." + +_Flax_ is not uncommon in the greenhouses about Philadelphia, but +we have not heard of any experiments with it in the open +air.--_Encyclopaedia Americana._ + +_The Schoolmaster wanted in the East._--Mr. Madden, in his travels +in Turkey, Egypt, Nubia, and Palestine, says:--"In all my travels, I +could only meet one woman who could read and write, and that was in +Damietta; she was a Levantine Christian, and her peculiar talent was +looked upon as something superhuman." + +La Fontaine had but one son, whom, at the age of 14, he placed in the +hands of Harlay, archbishop of Paris, who promised to provide for him. +After a long absence, La Fontaine met this youth at the house of a +friend, and being pleased with his conversation, was told that it was +his own son. "Ah," said he, "I am very glad of it." + +_Universal Genius._--Rivernois thus describes the character of +Fontenelle: "When Fontenelle appeared on the field, all the prizes +were already distributed, all the palms already gathered: the prize of +universality alone remained, Fontenelle determined to attempt it, and +he was successful. He is not only a metaphysician with Malebranche, a +natural philosopher with Newton, a legislator with Peter the Great, a +statesman with D'Argenson; he is everything with everybody." + +_Forest Schools._--There are a number of forest academies in Germany, +particularly in the small states of central Germany, in the Hartz, +Thuringia, &c. The principal branches taught in them are the +following:--forest botany, mineralogy, zoology, chemistry; by which +the learner is taught the natural history of forests, and the mutual +relations, &c. of the different kingdoms of nature. He is also +instructed in the care and chase of game, and in the surveying and +cultivation of forests, so as to understand the mode of raising all +kinds of wood, and supplying a new growth as fast as the old is taken +away. The pupil is too instructed in the administration of the forest +taxes and police, and all that relates to forests considered as a +branch of revenue. + +_The Weather._--Meteorological journals are now given in most +magazines. The first statement of this kind was communicated by Dr. +Fothergill to the Gentleman's Magazine, and consisted of a monthly +account of the weather and diseases of London. The latter information +is now monopolized by the parish-clerks. + +_Goethe._--The wife of a Silesian peasant, being obliged to go to +Saxony, and hearing that she had travelled (on foot) more than half +the distance to Goethe's residence, whose works she had read with the +liveliest interest, continued her journey to Weimar for the sake of +seeing him. Goethe declared that the true character of his works had +never been better understood than by this woman. He gave her his +portrait. + +_Liverpool and Manchester Railway._--The Company has reported the +following result: + + Passengers entered in the Company's + books during the half-year + ending June 30, 1831 L188,726 + + Ditto, ditto, ending December + 31, 1831 256,321 + + Increase L67,595 + +Being upwards of 33 per cent. increase of the first six months of the +year, and upwards of 135 per cent. increase on the travellers between +the two towns during the corresponding months, previously to opening +the railway.--_Gordon, on Steam Carriages._ + +_Caliga._--This was the name of the Roman soldier's shoe, made in the +sandal fashion. The sole was of wood, and stuck full of nails. Caius +Caesar Caligula, the fourth Roman Emperor, the son of Germanicus and +Agrippina, derived his surname from "Caliga," as having been born in +the army, and afterwards bred up in the habit of a common soldier; he +wore this military shoe in conformity to those of the common soldiers, +with a view of engaging their affections. The caliga was the badge, or +symbol of a soldier; whence to take away the caliga and belt, imported +a dismissal or cashiering. P.T.W. + +_The Damary Oak-tree._--At Blandford Forum, Dorsetshire, stood the +famous Damary Oak, which was rooted up for firing in 1755. It measured +75 feet high, and the branches extended 72 feet; the trunk at the +bottom was 68 feet in circumference, and 23 feet in diameter. It had +a cavity in its trunk 15 feet wide. Ale was sold in it till after the +Restoration; and when the town was burnt down in 1731, it served as an +abode for one family.--_Family Topographer_, vol. ii. + +_Brent Tor Church, Devonshire, situate upon a rock._--On Brent Tor is +a church, in which is appositely inscribed from Scripture, "Upon this +rock will I build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail +against it." It is said that the parishioners make weekly atonement +for their sins, for they cannot go to the church without the previous +penance of climbing the steep; and the pastor is frequently obliged to +humble himself upon his hands and knees before he can reach the house +of prayer. Tradition says it was erected by a merchant to commemorate +his escape from shipwreck on the coast, in consequence of this Tor +serving as a guide to the pilot. There is not sufficient earth to bury +the dead. At the foot of the Tor resided, in 1809, Sarah Williams, +aged 109 years. She never lived further out of the parish of Brent +Tor, than the adjoining one: she had had twelve children, and a few +years before her death cut five new teeth.--Ibid. + +_The Dairyman's Daughter._--In Arreton churchyard, Isle of Wight, is +a tombstone, erected in 1822, by subscription, to mark the grave of +Elizabeth Wallbridge, the humble individual whose story of piety and +virtue, written by the Rev. Leigh Richmond, under the title of the +"Dairyman's Daughter," has attained an almost unexampled circulation. +Her cottage at Branston, about a mile distant, is much visited.--Ibid. + +_Singular distribution of common land in Somersetshire_.--In the +parishes of Congresbury and Puxton were two large pieces of common +land, called East and West Dolemoors (from the Saxon word dol, a +portion or share,) which were occupied till within these few years in +the following manner:---The land was divided into single acres, each +bearing a peculiar mark, cut in the turf, such as a horn, an ox, a +horse, a cross, an oven, &c. On the Saturday before Old Midsummer +Day, the several proprietors of contiguous estates, or their tenants, +assembled on these commons, with a number of apples marked with +similar figures, which were distributed by a boy to each of the +commoners from a bag. At the close of the distribution, each person +repaired to the allotment with the figure corresponding to the one +upon his apple, and took possession of it for the ensuing year. Four +acres were reserved to pay the expenses of an entertainment at the +house of the overseer of the Dolemoors, where the evening was spent in +festivity.--Ibid. + +_Anna Maria, Countess of Shrewsbury._--At Avington Park, in Hampshire, +resided the notorious and infamous Anna-Maria, Countess of Shrewsbury, +who held the horse of the Duke of Buckingham while he fought and +killed her husband. Charles II frequently made it the scene of his +licentious pleasures; and the old green-house is said to have been the +apartment in which the royal sensualist was entertained.--Ibid. + + * * * * * + +_Erratum_--In the lines, by J. Kinder, on a Withered Primrose, in our +last, verse ii. line 2--for "gust of the storm" read "_jest_ of the +storm." + + * * * * * + +_Printed and published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, (near Somerset +House,) London; sold by ERNEST FLEISCHER, 626, New Market, Leipsic; +G.G. 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