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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction, Vol. 19, Issue 549 (Supplementary issue) , by Various
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction, Vol. 19,
+Issue 549 (Supplementary issue)
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: April 2, 2004 [eBook #11871]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE,
+AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION, VOL. 19, ISSUE 549 (SUPPLEMENTARY ISSUE) ***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Sandra Brown, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustration.
+ See 11871-h.htm or 11871-h.zip:
+ (http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/1/1/8/7/11871/11871-h/11871-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/1/1/8/7/11871/11871-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. 19, No. 549] SUPPLEMENTARY NUMBER [PRICE 2_d_.
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE ALHAMBRA, IN SPAIN
+
+[Illustration: GENERAL VIEW.]
+
+[Illustration: Palace of Charles V., see page 340.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Accumulated novelties from Books published within the past month
+ have led to the publication of the present Supplement. Although
+ its contents have not been drawn from works of unfettered fancy,
+ it is hoped they will be found to blend the real with the
+ imaginative in such a degree as to render their knowledge not the
+ less useful for its being amusive. The Engravings are perhaps as
+ appropriate as attractive; since they illustrate, and the artists
+ hope not unworthily, the _New Sketch Book_ of WASHINGTON IRVING.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ALHAMBRA.
+
+ by Geoffrey Crayon, Author Of The Sketch Book, &c.
+
+What! Washington Irving, or, as the title-page will have it, Geoffrey
+Crayon, in SPAIN, wandering up and down the deserted halls of the
+Alhambra, and weaving its legendary lore with thick coming fancies
+into sketches of enchanting interest. The origin of the work, (the
+_New Sketch Book_,) as it has been inappropriately styled, is told in
+the dedication to David Wilkie, Esq., R.A. Mr. Irving and the great
+artist just named were fellow travellers on the continent a few years
+since. In their rambles about some of the old cities of Spain, they
+were more than once struck with scenes and incidents which reminded
+them of passages in the "Arabian Nights." The painter urged Mr.
+Irving to write something that should illustrate those peculiarities,
+"something in the Haroun Alrasched style" that should have a dash of
+that Arabian spice which pervades every thing in Spain. The author set
+to work, _con amore,_ and has produced two goodly volumes, with a
+few "Arabesque" sketches and tales founded on popular traditions. His
+_study_ was THE ALHAMBRA, which must have inspired him for his task.
+To quote his own words: "how many legends and traditions, true and
+fabulous; how many songs and romances, Spanish and Arabian, of love
+and war, and chivalry, are associated with this romantic pile." The
+Governor of the Alhambra gave Mr. Irving and his companion, permission
+to occupy his vacant apartments in the Moorish Palace. "My companion,"
+says the author, "was soon summoned away by the duties of his station;
+but I remained for several months, spellbound in the old enchanted
+pile."
+
+Such is the plan or frame of the work before us. It has induced us to
+select the Embellishments on the annexed page; and their description,
+from so graceful a pencil as that of the author, will, we hope,
+bespeak the favour of the reader.
+
+"The Alhambra is an ancient fortress or castellated palace of the
+Moorish kings of Granada, where they held dominion over this their
+boasted terrestrial paradise, and made their last stand for empire in
+Spain. The palace occupies but a portion of the fortress, the walls of
+which, studded with towers, stretch irregularly round the whole crest
+of a lofty hill that overlooks the city, and forms a spur of the
+Sierra Nevada, or snowy mountain.
+
+"In the time of the Moors, the fortress was capable of containing
+an army of forty thousand men within its precincts, and served
+occasionally as a stronghold of the sovereigns against their
+rebellious subjects. After the kingdom had passed into the hands
+of the Christians, the Alhambra continued a royal demesne, and was
+occasionally inhabited by the Castilian monarchs. The Emperor Charles
+V. began a sumptuous palace within its walls, but was deterred from
+completing it by repeated shocks of earthquakes. The last royal
+residents were Philip V. and his beautiful queen Elizabetta of Parma,
+early in the eighteenth century. Great preparations were made for
+their reception. The palace and gardens were placed in a state of
+repair, and a new suite of apartments erected, and decorated by
+artists brought from Italy. The sojourn of the sovereigns was
+transient, and after their departure the palace once more became
+desolate. Still the place was maintained with some military state. The
+governor held it immediately from the crown, its jurisdiction extended
+down into the suburbs of the city, and was independent of the captain
+general of Granada. A considerable garrison was kept up, the governor
+had his apartments in the front of the old Moorish palace, and never
+descended into Granada without some military parade. The fortress, in
+fact, was a little town of itself, having several streets of houses
+within its walls, together with a Franciscan convent and a parochial
+church.
+
+"The desertion of the court, however, was a fatal blow to the
+Alhambra. Its beautiful halls became desolate, and some of them fell
+to ruin; the gardens were destroyed, and the fountains ceased to play.
+By degrees the dwellings became filled up with a loose and lawless
+population; contrabandistas, who availed themselves of its independent
+jurisdiction to carry on a wide and daring course of smuggling, and
+thieves and rogues of all sorts, who made this their place of refuge
+from whence they might depredate upon Granada and its vicinity. The
+strong arm of government at length interfered: the whole community was
+thoroughly sifted; none were suffered to remain but such as were of
+honest character, and had legitimate right to a residence; the greater
+part of the houses were demolished and a mere hamlet left, with
+the parochial church and the Franciscan convent. During the recent
+troubles in Spain, when Granada was in the hands of the French,
+the Alhambra was garrisoned by their troops, and the palace was
+occasionally inhabited by the French commander. With that enlightened
+taste which has ever distinguished the French nation in their
+conquests, this monument of Moorish elegance and grandeur was rescued
+from the absolute ruin and desolation that were overwhelming it. The
+roofs were repaired, the saloons and galleries protected from the
+weather, the gardens cultivated, the water courses restored, the
+fountains once more made to throw up their sparkling showers; and
+Spain may thank her invaders for having preserved to her the most
+beautiful and interesting of her historical monuments.
+
+"On the departure of the French they blew up several towers of the
+outer wall, and left the fortifications scarcely tenable. Since that
+time the military importance of the post is at an end. The garrison is
+a handful of invalid soldiers, whose principal duty is to guard some
+of the outer towers, which serve occasionally as a prison of state;
+and the governor, abandoning the lofty hill of the Alhambra, resides
+in the centre of Granada, for the more convenient dispatch of his
+official duties.
+
+
+Interior of the Alhambra
+
+
+"The Alhambra has been so often and so minutely described by
+travellers, that a mere sketch will, probably, be sufficient for the
+reader to refresh his recollection; I will give, therefore, a brief
+account of our visit to it the morning after our arrival in Granada.
+
+"Leaving our posada of La Espada, we traversed the renowned square of
+the Vivarrambla, once the scene of Moorish jousts and tournaments, now
+a crowded market-place. From thence we proceeded along the Zacatin,
+the main street of what, in the time of the Moors, was the Great
+Bazaar, where the small shops and narrow allies still retain the
+Oriental character. Crossing an open place in front of the palace of
+the captain-general, we ascended a confined and winding street, the
+name of which reminded us of the chivalric days of Granada. It is
+called the Calle, or street of the Gomeres, from a Moorish family
+famous in chronicle and song. This street led up to a massive gateway
+of Grecian architecture, built by Charles V. forming the entrance to
+the domains of the Alhambra.
+
+"At the gate were two or three ragged and superannuated soldiers,
+dozing on a stone bench, the successors of the Zegris and the
+Abencerrages; while a tall meagre varlet, whose rusty-brown cloak was
+evidently intended to conceal the ragged state of his nether garments,
+was lounging in the sunshine and gossiping with an ancient sentinel on
+duty. He joined us as we entered the gate, and offered his services to
+show us the fortress.
+
+"I have a traveller's dislike to officious ciceroni, and did
+not-altogether like the garb of the applicant.
+
+"'You are well acquainted with the place, I presume?'
+
+"'Ninguno mas; pues Senor, soy hijo de la Alhambra.'--(Nobody better;
+in fact, Sir, I am a son of the Alhambra!)
+
+"The common Spaniards have certainly a most poetical way of expressing
+themselves. 'A son of the Alhambra!' the appellation caught me at
+once; the very tattered garb of my new acquaintance assumed a dignity
+in my eyes. It was emblematic of the fortunes of the place, and
+befitted the progeny of a ruin.
+
+"I put some farther questions to him, and found that his title was
+legitimate. His family had lived in the fortress from generation to
+generation ever since the time of the conquest. His name was Mateo
+Ximenes. 'Then, perhaps,' said I, 'you may be a descendant from the
+great Cardinal Ximenes?'--'Dios Sabe! God knows, Senor! It may be so.
+We are the oldest family in the Alhambra,--_Christianos Viejos_, old
+Christians, without any taint of Moor or Jew. I know we belong to some
+great family or other, but I forget whom. My father knows all about
+it: he has the coat-of-arms hanging up in his cottage, up in the
+fortress.' There is not any Spaniard, however poor, but has some claim
+to high pedigree. The first title of this ragged worthy, however, had
+completely captivated me, so I gladly accepted the services of the
+'son of the Alhambra.'
+
+"We now found ourselves in a deep narrow ravine, filled with beautiful
+groves, with a steep avenue, and various footpaths winding through it,
+bordered with stone seats, and ornamented with fountains. To our left,
+we beheld the towers of the Alhambra beetling above us; to our right,
+on the opposite side of the ravine, we were equally dominated by
+rival towers on a rocky eminence. These, we were told, were the Torres
+Vermejos, or vermilion towers, so called from their ruddy hue. No one
+knows their origin. They are of a date much anterior to the Alhambra:
+some suppose them to have been built by the Romans; others, by some
+wandering colony of Phoenicians. Ascending the steep and shady avenue,
+we arrived at the foot of a huge square Moorish tower; forming a kind
+of barbican, through which passed the main entrance to the fortress.
+Within the barbican was another group of veteran invalids, one
+mounting guard at the portal, while the rest, wrapped in their
+tattered cloaks, slept on the stone benches. This portal is called the
+Gate of Justice, from the tribunal held within its porch during the
+Moslem domination, for the immediate trial of petty causes: a custom
+common to the Oriental nations, and occasionally alluded to in the
+Sacred Scriptures.
+
+"The great vestibule or porch of the gate, is formed by an immense
+Arabian arch, of the horse-shoe form, which springs to half the height
+of the tower. On the key-stone of this arch is engraven a gigantic
+hand. Within the vestibule, on the key-stone of the portal, is
+sculptured, in like manner, a gigantic key. Those who pretend to some
+knowledge of Mahometan symbols, affirm that the hand is the emblem of
+doctrine, and the key of faith; the latter, they add, was emblazoned
+on the standard of the Moslems when they subdued Andalusia, in
+opposition to the Christian emblem of the Cross. A different
+explanation, however, was given by the legitimate son of the Alhambra,
+and one more in unison with the notions of the common people, who
+attach something of mystery and magic to every thing Moorish, and have
+all kind of superstitions connected with this old Moslem fortress.
+
+"According to Mateo, it was a tradition handed down from the oldest
+inhabitants, and which he had from his father and grandfather,
+that the hand and key were magical devices on which the fate of the
+Alhambra depended. The Moorish King who built it was a great magician,
+or, as some believed, had sold himself to the devil, and had laid
+the whole fortress under a magic spell. By this means it had remained
+standing for several hundred years, in defiance of storms and
+earthquakes, while almost all other buildings of the Moors had fallen
+to ruin, and disappeared. This spell, the tradition went on to say,
+would last until the hand on the outer arch should reach down and
+grasp the key, when the whole pile would tumble to pieces, and all the
+treasures buried beneath it by the Moors would be revealed.
+
+"Notwithstanding this ominous prediction, we ventured to pass through
+the spell-bound gateway, feeling some little assurance against magic
+art in the protection of the Virgin, a statue of whom we observed
+above the portal.
+
+"After passing through the barbican, we ascended a narrow lane,
+winding between walls, and came on an open esplanade within the
+fortress, called the Plaza de los Algibes, or Place of the Cisterns,
+from great reservoirs which undermine it, cut in the living rock by
+the Moors for the supply of the fortress. Here, also, is a well of
+immense depth, furnishing the purest and coldest of water; another
+monument of the delicate taste of the Moors, who were indefatigable in
+their exertions to obtain that element in its crystal purity.
+
+"In front of this esplanade is the splendid pile commenced by Charles
+V., intended, it is said, to eclipse the residence of the Moslem
+kings. With all its grandeur and architectural merit, it appeared
+to us like an arrogant intrusion, and, passing by it, we entered
+a simple, unostentatious portal, opening into the interior of the
+Moorish palace.
+
+"The transition was almost magical: it seemed as if we were at once
+transported into other times and another realm, and were treading the
+scenes of Arabian story. We found ourselves in a great court, paved
+with white marble, and decorated at each end with light Moorish
+peristyles: it is called the Court of the Alberca. In the centre was
+an immense basin or fish-pond, a hundred and thirty feet in length by
+thirty in breadth, stocked with gold-fish and bordered by hedges of
+roses. At the upper end of this court rose the great Tower of Comares.
+
+"From the lower end we passed through a Moorish archway into the
+renowned Court of Lions. There is no part of the edifice that gives
+us a more complete idea of its original beauty and magnificence than
+this, for none has suffered so little from the ravages of time. In
+the centre stands the fountain famous in song and story. The alabaster
+basins still shed their diamond drops; and the twelve lions, which
+support them, cast forth their crystal streams as in the days of
+Boabdil. The court is laid out in flower-beds, and surrounded by light
+Arabian arcades of open filagree work, supported by slender pillars
+of white marble. The architecture, like that of all the other parts
+of the palace, is characterized by elegance rather than grandeur;
+bespeaking a delicate and graceful taste, and a disposition to
+indolent enjoyment. When one looks upon the fairy tracery of the
+peristyles, and the apparently fragile fretwork of the walls, it is
+difficult to believe that so much has survived the wear and tear of
+centuries, the shocks of earthquakes, the violence of war, and the
+quiet, though no less baneful, pilferrings of the tasteful traveller:
+it is almost sufficient to excuse the popular tradition, that the
+whole is protected by a magic charm.
+
+"On one side of the court, a portal, richly adorned, opens into a
+lofty hall, paved with white marble, and called the Hall of the Two
+Sisters. A cupola, or lantern, admits a tempered light from above, and
+a free circulation of air. The lower part of the walls is encrusted
+with beautiful Moorish tiles, on some of which are emblazoned the
+escutcheons of the Moorish monarchs: the upper part is faced with the
+fine stucco-work invented at Damascus, consisting of large plates,
+cast in moulds, and artfully joined, so as to have the appearance of
+having been laboriously sculptured by the hand into light relievos
+and fanciful arabesques, intermingled with texts of the Koran,
+and poetical inscriptions in Arabian and Cufic character. These
+decorations of the walls and cupolas are richly gilded, and the
+interstices pencilled with lapis-lazuli, and other brilliant and
+enduring colours. On each side of the hall are recesses for ottomans
+and couches. Above the inner porch is a balcony, which communicated
+with the women's apartments. The latticed 'jalousies' still remain,
+from whence the dark-eyed beauties of the haram might gaze unseen upon
+the entertainments of the hall below.
+
+"It is impossible to contemplate this once favourite abode of Oriental
+manners without feeling the early associations of Arabian romance,
+and almost expecting to see the white arm of some mysterious princess
+beckoning from the balcony, or some dark eye sparkling through the
+lattice. The abode of beauty is here, as if it had been inhabited but
+yesterday; but where are the Zoraydas and Lindaraxas?
+
+"On the opposite side of the Court of Lions, is the Hall of the
+Abencerrages; so called from the gallant cavaliers of that illustrious
+line who were here perfidiously massacred. There are some who doubt
+the whole truth of this story; but our humble attendant Mateo pointed
+out the very wicket of the portal through which they are said to have
+been introduced, one by one, and the white marble fountain in the
+centre of the hall where they were beheaded. He showed us also certain
+broad ruddy stains in the pavement, traces of their blood, which,
+according to popular belief, can never be effaced. Finding we listened
+to him with easy faith, he added, that there was often heard at night,
+in the Court of Lions, a low, confused sound, resembling the murmuring
+of a multitude; with now and then a faint tinkling, like the distant
+clank of chains. These noises are probably produced by the bubbling
+currents and tinkling falls of water, conducted under the pavement,
+through pipes and channels, to supply the fountains; but, according to
+the legend of the son of the Alhambra, they are made by the spirits
+of the murdered Abencerrages, who nightly haunt the scene of their
+suffering, and invoke the vengeance of Heaven on their destroyer.
+
+"From the Court of Lions we retraced our steps through the Court of
+the Alberca, or Great Fishpool; crossing which we proceeded to the
+Tower of Comares, so called from the name of the Arabian architect. It
+is of massive strength and lofty height, domineering over the rest
+of the edifice, and overhanging the steep hill-side, which descends
+abruptly to the banks of the Darro. A Moorish archway admitted us into
+a vast and lofty hall, which occupies the interior of the tower, and
+was the grand audience chamber of the Moslem monarchs, thence
+called the Hall of Ambassadors. It still bears the traces of past
+magnificence. The walls are richly stuccoed and decorated with
+arabesques; the vaulted ceiling of cedar-wood, almost lost in
+obscurity, from its height, still gleams with rich gilding, and the
+brilliant tints of the Arabian pencil. On three sides of the saloon
+are deep windows cut through the immense thickness of the walls, the
+balconies of which look down upon the verdant valley of the Darro, the
+streets and convents of the Albaycin, and command a prospect of the
+distant Vega.
+
+"I might go on to describe minutely the other delightful apartments of
+this side of the palace; the Tocador, or toilet of the queen, an
+open belvidere, on the summit of a tower, where the Moorish sultanas
+enjoyed the pure breezes from the mountain, and the prospect of
+the surrounding paradise; the secluded little patio, or garden of
+Lindaraxa, with its alabaster fountain, its thickets of roses and
+myrtles, of citrons and oranges; the cool halls and grottoes of
+the baths, where the glare and heat of day are tempered into a soft
+mysterious light, and a pervading freshness.
+
+"While the city below pants with the noontide heat, and the parched
+vega trembles to the eye, the delicate airs from the Sierra Nevada,
+play through these lofty halls, bringing with them the sweetness of
+the surrounding gardens. Every thing invites to that indolent repose,
+the bliss of southern climes; and while the half-shut eye looks out
+from shaded balconies upon the glittering landscape, the ear is lulled
+by the rustling of groves, and the murmur of running streams." Here we
+must end.
+
+The Sketches bear the very perfection of romance in their titles. Yes,
+expectant reader, think of the Alhambra by Moonlight--A Ramble
+among the Hills--Legend of the Arabian Astrologer--The Tower of Las
+Infantas--Legends of the three beautiful Princesses--The Pilgrim of
+Love--The Rose of the Alhambra,--the two discreet Statues, &c. &c.
+What hours of spell-bound delight do these two volumes lock up, yet
+we hope but for a short season, from all who would vary "life's dull
+round" with romantic lore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+NATURAL HISTORY.
+
+The remarkably attractive Number of the _Magazine of Natural History_
+for the present month enables us to checker our sheet with a page or
+two of facts which will be interesting to every inquiring mind.
+
+Hail at Lausanne.
+
+"At Lausanne, on the 14th of July, 1831, about 8 P.M., we witnessed
+one of those hail-storms which, every summer, cause such ravages in
+the south of Europe. A great proportion of the hailstones were as
+big as hen's eggs, and some even bigger: seven nearly filled a common
+dinner plate. They were mostly oval or globular; but one piece,
+brought to us after the storm, was flat and square, full 2 in. long,
+as many broad, and three quarters of an inch thick, with several
+projecting knobs of ice as big as large hazel nuts. This mass exactly
+resembled a piece of uniformly transparent ice, but the oval and
+globular masses had the same conformation as has often been described
+in these hailstones, and on which Volta founded his ingenious but
+untenable theory of their formation. In the centre of each was a
+small, white, opaque nucleus, the size of a pea, and evidently one of
+the hailstones usually seen in England, to which the French give the
+name of _gresil_, confining the term _grele_ to the larger masses of
+ice now under our observation. This nucleus of _gresil_ was
+enclosed in a coat about half an inch thick of ice considerably more
+transparent than it, but still somewhat opaque, as though of snow
+melted and then frozen again, and externally the rest of the mass was
+of ice perfectly transparent, and as compact and hard as possible,
+resounding like a pebble, and not breaking when thrown on the floor.
+The inhabitants of Lausanne, aware that the cinereous and puffed up
+appearance of the clouds charged with this tremendous aerial artillery
+portended more than a mere thunder-storm, had adopted the precaution
+of closing their Venetian shutters; but such windows as were deprived
+of this protection had almost every pane broken: and much damage was
+done to the tiles of all the houses, and to the gardens and vineyards;
+but less than might have been expected, owing to the short duration of
+the storm, which did not last longer than seven or eight minutes, and
+to the circumstance of the hailstones not being very numerous."--(W.
+Spence.)
+
+Cedar Wood.
+
+"The _cedar_ has been recommended, among other woods, for the purpose
+of constructing drawers for cabinets of insects. Let the inexperienced
+collector be warned that this is, perhaps, the _very worst_ wood that
+can be employed for the purpose; a strong effluvia, or sometimes
+a resinous gum, exudes from the wood of the cedar, which is apt to
+settle in blotches on the wings of the specimens, especially of the
+more delicate Lepidoptera, and entirely discharges the colour. The
+Rev. Mr. Bree once had a whole collection of lepidopterous insects
+utterly spoiled from having been deposited in cedar drawers; and
+he has understood, also, that the insects in the British Museum,
+collected, he believes, chiefly by Dr. Leach, have been greatly
+injured from the same cause. Possibly, however, cedar wood, after it
+has been thoroughly well seasoned, may be less liable to produce these
+injurious effects."
+
+Habits of the Common Snake in Captivity.
+
+A Staffordshire Correspondent writes thus familiarly:
+
+"This has been a remarkably good season, both for vegetables and
+animals. It has been a singular time for adders, snakes, and lizards;
+I never saw so many as I have seen this year in all my life. I have
+been trying, a great part of this summer, to domesticate a common
+snake, and make it familiar with me and my children; but all to
+no purpose, notwithstanding I favoured it with my most particular
+attention. It was a most beautiful creature, only 2 ft. 7 in. long. I
+did not know how long it had been without food when I caught it; but
+I presented it with frogs, toads, worms, beetles, spiders, mice, and
+every other delicacy of the season. I also tried to charm it with
+music, and my children stroked and caressed it; but all in vain:
+it would be no more familiar with any of us than if we had been the
+greatest strangers to it, or even its greatest enemies. I kept it in
+an old barrel, out of doors, for the first three weeks: during that
+time, I can aver, it ate nothing; but, after a very wet night, it
+seemed to suffer from the cold. I then put it into a glass vessel, and
+set it on the parlour chimney-piece, covering the vessel with a piece
+of silk gauze. I caught two live mice, and put them in to it; but they
+would sooner have died of hunger than the snake would have eaten them:
+they sat shivering on its back, while it lay coiled up as round as a
+ball of worstep. I gave the mice some boiled potatoes, which they eat:
+but the snake would eat neither the mice nor the potatoes. My
+children frequently took it out in their hands, to show it to their
+schoolfellows; but my wife, and some others, could not bear the sight
+of it. I one day took it in my hand, and opened its mouth with a
+penknife, to show a gentleman how different it was from that of the
+adder, which I had dead by me: its teeth being no more formidable
+or terrific than the teeth of a trout or eel; while the mouth of the
+adder had two fangs, like the claws of a cat, attached to the roof of
+the mouth, no way connected with its jaw-teeth. While examining the
+snake in this manner, it began to smell most horridly, and filled the
+room with an abominable odour; I also felt, or thought I felt, a kind
+of prickly numbness in the hand I held it in, and did so for some
+weeks afterwards. In struggling for its liberty, it twisted itself
+round my arm, and discharged its excrements on my coat-sleeve, which
+seemed nothing more than milk, or like the chalkings of a woodcock.
+It made its escape from me several times by boring a hole through the
+gauze; I had lost it for some days at one time, when at length it was
+observed peeping out of a mouse-hole behind one of the cellar steps.
+Whether it had caught any beetles or spiders in the cellar, I cannot
+say; but it looked as fierce as a hawk, and hissed and shook its
+tongue, as in open defiance. I could not think of hurting it by
+smoking it out with tobacco or brimstone; but called it my fiery
+dragon which guarded my ale cellar. At length I caught it, coiled up
+on one of the steps. I put it again into an American flour barrel;
+but it happened not to be the same as he had been in, and I observed a
+nail protruding through the staves about half way up. This, I suppose,
+he had made use of to help his escape; for he was missing one morning
+about ten o'clock: I had seen him at nine o'clock; so I thought he
+could not be far off. I looked about for him for half an hour, when I
+gave up the hunt in despair. However, at one o'clock, as the men were
+going from dinner, one of them observed the rogue hiding himself under
+a stone, fifty yards from the house. 'Dang my buttons,' said he, 'if
+here is not master's snake. He came back and told my wife, who
+told him to go and kill it. It happened to be _washing-day_: the
+washerwoman gave him a pailful of scalding soapsuds to throw on
+it; but whether he was most afraid of me or of the snake is still a
+question: however, the washerwoman brought it home with the tongs,
+and dropped it into the dolly-tub. It dashed round the tub with the
+velocity of lightning; my daughter, seeing its agony, snatched it out
+of the scalding liquid, but too late: it died in a few minutes. I
+was not at all angry with my wife: I had had my whim, and she had had
+hers. I had got all the knowledge I wanted to get; I had learned that
+it was of no use for a human being, who requires food three times a
+day, to domesticate an animal which can live weeks and months without
+food: for, as the saying is, 'Hunger will tame any thing;' and without
+hunger you can tame nothing. I have also learned that the serpent,
+instead of being the emblem of wisdom, should have been an emblem of
+stupidity."
+
+"The stench emitted by the common snake, when molested, is
+superlatively noisome; and is given off so powerfully and copiously,
+that it infects the air around to a diameter of several yards. This I
+witnessed on observing a bitch dog kill a rather large snake; in which
+act two points beside the odour effused were notable. The coils of the
+snake formed, as it were, a circular wall; and in the circular space
+between it, the snake sunk its head, as if for protection. The dog's
+efforts were to catch and crush the head; and, shrivelling up her
+fleshy lips, 'which all the while ran froth,' she kept thrusting the
+points of her jaws into the circular pit aforesaid, and catching at
+and fracturing the head. During the progress of these acts, she, every
+few seconds, snorted, and shook off the froth, of which she seemed
+sedulously careful to free herself, and barked at the conquered snake.
+The dog was a most determined vermin-killer, and in rats, &c., quite
+an accomplished one; but snakes did not often come in her way."--J.D.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CURIOUS FACTS IN VEGETATION
+
+(From Part xiv. of _Knowledge for the People, or the Plain Why and
+Because._)
+
+Why is it improper to consider the turnip a real bulb?
+
+Because it is an intermediate stem which swells into a bulbous form.
+Turnips have not been cultivated in England, in fields, more than a
+century; but this agricultural practice now yields an annual return
+which probably exceeds the interest of our national debt.--_Sir Walter
+Scott._
+
+Why is the Cauliflower so named?
+
+Because of its origin from _caulis,_ the stalk of a herb. Colewort is
+of a similar origin.
+
+Why are the stems of the Cabbage tribe considered wholesome food?
+
+Because their acrid flavour is dipersed among an abundance of
+mucilage. Cabbages were commonly used among the ancients, and Cato
+wrote volumes on their nature. The Indians had so much veneration for
+them, that they swore by cabbages, and were therein as superstitious
+as the Egyptians, who gave divine honours to leeks and onions, for the
+great benefits which they said they received from them.--_Lemery on
+Food._
+
+Why do Cabbages emit a strong animal odour?
+
+Because they contain a great quantity of azote or nitrogen, one of the
+ultimate elements of animal matter, and strongly characterized in the
+destructive distillation of horn, hoofs, or bones.
+
+Why do not the leaves of the Cabbage remain wet, after being immersed
+in water, and again taken out of it?
+
+Because they are powdered with a slight layer of resinous matter,
+similar to that which covers certain fruits, and, in particular, plums
+and grapes. Their sea-green colour is also attributed to this resinous
+layer.
+
+Why is Quassia so called? Because it was named in honour of a negro,
+Quassia, a drunken doctor, who discovered the virtue of the wood in
+curing malignant fevers.
+
+Why is the Ice plant so called?
+
+Because its stem is covered with soft tubercles, or excrescences,
+which have a crystalline appearance.
+
+Why do the leaves of some trees fall very early?
+
+Because they are articulated to the branch; that is, they do not unite
+with it by the whole of their base, but are simply fixed to it by
+a kind of contraction or articulation; as in the maple and horse
+chestnut.
+
+Why do leaves fall at the approach of winter?
+
+Because a separation takes place, either in the foot-stalk, or more
+usually at its base, and the dying part quits the vigorous one, which
+is promoted by the weight of the leaf itself, or the action of the
+gales that blow in autumn on its expanded form. M. Richard explains
+the cause more philosophically: "Although the fall of the leaves
+generally takes place at the approach of winter, cold is not to be
+considered as the principal cause of this phenomenon. It is much more
+natural to attribute it to the cessation of vegetation, and the want
+of nourishment which the leaves experience at that season, when the
+course of the sap is interrupted. The vessels of the leaf contract,
+dry up, and soon after, that organ is detached from the twig on which
+it had been developed."
+
+Why do some trees, as the Oak, the Beech, and the Hornbeam, retain
+their leaves to a late period of autumn?
+
+Because the life of the twigs on which they grow is not sufficiently
+vigorous to throw them off, after the brown colour indicates that they
+are dead.
+
+Why have some plants been termed the Poor Man's Weather-glass?
+
+Because they shut up their flowers against the approach of rain.
+Linnaeus, however, thinks, that flowers lose their fine sensibility,
+after the anthers have performed their office, or when deprived of
+them artificially. Sir James Smith also observes, that some species
+are sometimes exhausted by continued wet; "and it is evident that
+very sudden thunder showers often take such flowers by surprise, the
+previous state of the atmosphere not having been such as to give them
+due warning."
+
+Many flowers have a regular time of opening and shutting. We have
+already mentioned the Marigold; the goat's-beard is vulgarly called
+"John go-to-bed at noon," from its closing at mid-day; and at the Cape
+of Good Hope there is a "four o'clock flower," because it invariably
+closes at that time. The common daisy is, however, a readier example,
+its name being a compound of day's and eye--Day's-eye, in which
+way, indeed, it is written by Ben Johnson. It regularly shuts after
+sun-set, to expand again with the morning light. Thus,--
+
+ The little dazie, that at evening closes.
+
+Spenser.
+
+ By a daisy, whose leaves spread,
+ Shut when Titian goes to bed.--_G. Withers._
+
+Leyden sings of moist or rainy weather foretold by daisies. Thus we
+may examine a whole field, and not find a daisy open, except such as
+have their flowering nearly over, and have in consequence lost their
+sensibility.
+
+The daisy is one of the pet flowers of the poets. Chaucer is ecstatic
+in its praise, and calls it his "owne hartes' rest;" Burns, "Wee,
+modest, crimson-tipped flower;" and Wordsworth, in beautiful and
+touching simplicity, has addressed several poems to "the poet's
+darling."
+
+Appended to Richard's valuable "Elements," is the _Horologium Florae,_
+(timepiece of Flora,) or a table of the hours at which certain plants
+expand and shut, at Upsal, 60 deg. north latitude. The earliest Meadow
+Salsafy opens from 3 to 4 A.M.; and closes from 9 to 10 A.M. The
+latest A.M. is the _Mesembryanthemum Modiflorum,_ (used in the
+manufacture of Maroquin leather,) which opens 10 to 11 A.M.,
+and closes at 12 P.M. The latest opening P.M. is the _Cactus
+Grandiflorus,_ 9 to 10 P.M., and closing at 12 P.M., thus remaining
+open only two or three hours. Other flowers, we may add, are
+so peculiarly delicate, as scarcely to bear the contact of the
+atmosphere.
+
+Forster, in his "Researches about Atmospheric Phenomena," notices
+several prognostics of the weather by plants. Thus, Chickweed has been
+said to be an excellent weather-guide. When the flower expands freely,
+no rain need be feared for a long time. In showery days the flower
+appears half concealed, and this state may be regarded as indicative
+of showery weather; when it is entirely shut, we may expect a rainy
+day. If the flowers of the Siberian sowthistle remain open all night,
+we may expect rain next day. Before showers, the trefoil contracts its
+leaves. Lord Bacon observes, that the trefoil has its stalk more
+erect against rain. He also mentions a small red flower, growing in
+stubble-fields, called by the country people _wincopipe_, which, if it
+opens in the morning, assures us of a fine day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+TRAVELS
+
+ _Pen and Pencil Sketches of India, being the Journal of a Tour
+ in India. By Captain Mundy._
+
+These are two very amusing volumes of scenes and situations full of
+stirring interest, as their criticships would say--for example the
+four extracts immediately following:
+
+Palankeen Travelling and a Sortie of Tigers.
+
+"To those unitiated into the mysteries of Indian travelling, the
+prospect of a journey of six hundred miles, night and day, in a hot
+climate, inclosed in a sort of coffin-like receptacle, carried on the
+shoulders of men, is somewhat alarming; but to one more accustomed to
+that method of locomotion, the palankeen would, perhaps, prove
+less fatiguing and harassing, for a long journey, than any other
+conveyance.
+
+"The horizontal or reclining position is naturally the most easy to
+the body; and the exhaustion consequent upon a journey in the heat of
+the day, generally secures to the traveller as much sleep during
+the cooller hours of the night, as the frequent interruptions of the
+bearers at the several stages will allow him to enjoy. I had laid in a
+good store of tea, sugar, and biscuits, a novel, some powder and shot,
+a gun, and a sword, and plenty of blankets, as a defence against
+the coldness of the night. Our baggage consisted of a dozen boxes
+(patarras) appended to bamboos, and carried by men: these, with two
+torch-bearers (mussalgees) to each palankeen, completed our cavalcade.
+
+"Nov. 24th, 7 A.M., reached Hazarebaug, a small station, about two
+hundred and twenty miles from Calcutta. It is a healthy spot; the
+earth sandy and rocky, presenting a strong contrast to the loomy and
+alluvial soil of Southern Bengal. From Rogonnathpore to Hazarebaug the
+road runs through an almost uninterrupted jungle, swarming with wild
+beasts. At this place we met with a hospitable friend, who stored our
+palankeens with provisions, after giving us a capital breakfast.
+
+"At eleven o'clock at night we entered the famous pass of Dunghye. The
+road bears the appearance of a deep sandy ravine; the banks are rocky
+and woody, and in many places quite overhung by the forest-trees. We
+had accomplished about half the defile, when I was suddenly and rudely
+awakened from a dozing sleep by the shock of my palankeen coming to
+the ground, and by the most discordant shouts and screams. I jumped
+out to ascertain the cause of the uproar, and found, on inquiry, that
+a foraging party of tigers--probably speculating upon picking up a
+straggling bearer--had sprung off the rocks, and dashed across the
+road, bounding between my palankeen and that of Colonel D., who was
+scarcely ten yards a-head. The bearers of both palankeens were all
+huddled together, bellowing like bedlamites, and the mussalgees waving
+their torches most vehemently. On mustering our forces, we discovered
+that two of our patarra-bearers were missing, and fearing that the
+tigers might pick them up, we dispatched four men with spare torches
+to bring them on. Meanwhile my friend and myself, having brought
+our palankeens together, armed ourselves with patience and a pair of
+pistols to await the result. The whole incident, with the time and
+scene, was highly interesting and wild, with just enough of the awful
+to give an additional piquancy. The night was dark and stormy, and the
+wind roared among the trees above our heads: the torches cast a red
+and flickering light on the rocks in our immediate neighbourhood, and
+just showed us enough of the depths of the forest to make the back
+ground more gloomy and unfathomable. The distant halloos of the men
+who were gone in search of their comrades, came faintly and wildly
+upon the breeze; and the occasional shots that we fired rang through
+the rocky jungle with an almost interminable echo. In about three
+quarters of an hour our bearers joined us, together with the two
+patarra-bearers. These latter, hearing the vociferations of our men,
+and guessing the cause, had quietly placed their boxes on the ground,
+about a mile in the rear of us, and seating themselves on their heels,
+had determined not to proceed until the break of day.
+
+"All being reported present, we resumed our journey, the men screaming
+chorus to scare our unwelcome visitors, whom I several times fancied
+I heard rustling among the brushwood on the road side, as though they
+were moving on our flanks in order to cut off any straggler who might
+drop astern. I never saw bearers go more expeditiously, or in more
+compact order, every man fearing to be the last in the cavalcade.[1]
+A sheet would have covered the whole party! The tigers, if they had
+calculated upon one of our number for their evening meal, must have
+gone supperless to their lair, for we mustered all our twenty-four men
+in the morning. A dak hurkarah (post messenger) had been carried
+off in the same spot two days before, probably by the same family of
+tigers, which according to the bearer's account, consisted of two old
+ones, and three cubs.
+
+[Footnote 1: It is said, that a tiger lying in wait for a string of
+passengers usually selects the last of the party.]
+
+Wild Beast Fights
+
+"Early in the morning, the whole party, including ladies, eager for
+the novel spectacle, mounted elephants, and repaired to the private
+gate of the royal palace, where the King met the Commander-in-Chief,
+and conducted him and his company to a palace in the park, in one of
+the courts of which the arena for the combats was prepared. In the
+centre was erected a gigantic cage of strong bamboos, about fifty
+feet high, and of like diameter, and rooffed with rope network. Sundry
+smaller cells, communicating by sliding doors with the main theatre,
+were tenanted by every species of the savagest inhabitants of
+the forest. In the large cage, crowded together, and presenting a
+formidable front of broad, shaggy foreheads well armed with horns,
+stood a group of buffaloes sternly awaiting the conflict, with their
+rear scientifically appuye against the bamboos. The trap-doors being
+lifted, two tigers, and the same number of bears and leopards, rushed
+into the centre. The buffaloes instantly commenced hostilities, and
+made complete shuttlecocks of the bears, who, however, finally
+escaped by climbing up the bamboos beyond the reach of their horned
+antagonists. The tigers, one of which was a beautiful animal, fared
+scarcely better; indeed, the odds were much against them, there
+being five buffaloes. They appeared, however to be no match for these
+powerful creatures, even single-handed, and showed little disposition
+to be the assaulters. The larger tiger was much gored in the head, and
+in return took a mouthful of his enemy's dewlap, but was finally (as
+the fancy would describe it) 'bored to the ropes and floored.' The
+leopards seemed throughout the conflict sedulously to avoid a breach
+of the peace.
+
+"A rhinoceros was next let loose in open courtyard, and the attendants
+attempted to induce him to pick a quarrel with a tiger who was chained
+to a ring. The rhinoceros appeared, however, to consider a fettered
+foe as quite beneath his enmity; and having once approached the tiger,
+and quietly surveyed him, as he writhed and growled, expecting the
+attack, turned suddenly round and trotted awkwardly off to the yard
+gate, where he capsized a palankeen which was carrying away a lady
+fatigued with the sight of these unfeminine sports.
+
+"A buffalo and tiger were the next combatants: they attacked
+furiously, the tiger springing at the first onset on the other's head,
+and tearing his neck severely; but he was quickly dismounted, and
+thrown with such violence as nearly to break his back, and quite to
+disable him from renewing the combat.
+
+"A small elephant was next impelled to attack a leopard. The battle
+was short and decisive; the former falling on his knees, and thrusting
+his blunted tusks nearly through his antagonist.
+
+"On our return from the beast fight a breakfast awaited us at the
+royal palace; and the white tablecloth being removed, quails, trained
+for the purpose, were placed upon the green cloth, and fought most
+gamely, after the manner of the English cockpit. This is an amusement
+much in fashion among the natives of rank, and they bet large sums on
+their birds, as they lounge luxuriously round, smoking their houkahs.
+
+Hunting with Leopards
+
+"The leopards are each accommodated with a flat-topped cart, without
+sides, drawn by two bullocks, and each animal has two attendants. They
+are loosely bound by a collar and rope to the back of the vehicle,
+and are also held by the keeper by a strap round the loins. A leathern
+hood covers their eyes. The antelopes being excessively timid and
+wild, the best way to enjoy the sport is to sit on the cart alongside
+the driver; for the vehicle being built like the hackeries of the
+peasants, to the sight of which the deer are accustomed, it is not
+difficult, by skilful management, to approach within two hundred yards
+of the game. On this occasion we had three chetahs in the field, and
+we proceeded towards the spot where the herd had been seen, in a line,
+with an interval of about one hundred yards between each cart. On
+emerging from a cotton-field, we came in sight of four antelopes, and
+my driver managed to get within one hundred yards of them ere they
+took alarm. The chetah was quickly unhooded, and loosed from his
+bonds; and as soon as he viewed the deer he dropped quietly off
+the cart, on the _opposite_ side to that on which they stood, and
+approached them at a slow, crouching canter, masking himself by
+every bush and inequality of ground which lay in in his way. As soon,
+however, as they began to show alarm, he quickened his pace, and was
+in the midst of the herd in a few bounds.
+
+"He singled out a doe, and ran it close for about two hundred yards,
+when he reached it with a blow of his paw, rolled it over, and in an
+instant was sucking the life-blood from its throat.
+
+"One of the other chetahs was slipped at the same time, but after
+making four or five desperate bounds, by which he nearly reached his
+prey, suddenly gave up the pursuit, and came growling sulkily back to
+his cart.
+
+"As soon as the deer is pulled down, a keeper runs up, hoods the
+chetah cuts the victim's throat, and receiving some of the blood in
+a wooden ladle, thrusts it under the leopard's nose. The antelope
+is then dragged away, and placed in a receptacle under the hackery,
+whilst the chetah is rewarded with a leg for his pains."[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: A pair of fine Chetahs, or Hunting Leopards, may be seen
+in the Gardens of the Zoological Society.--ED. M.]
+
+An Alligator in the Ganges.
+
+"A beautiful specimen of an alligator's head was here given by Mr.
+Alexander to Lord Combermere. He was rather a distinguished monster,
+having carried off at different occasions, six or eight brace of men
+from an indigo factory in the neighbourhood. A native, who had long
+laid wait for him, at length succeeded in slaying him with poisoned
+arrows. One of these notoriously ghaut-frequenting alligators is well
+nigh as rich a prize to the poor native who is fortunate enough to
+capture him, as a Spanish galleon is to a British frigate; for on
+ripping open his stomach, and over-hauling its freight, it is not
+unfrequently found to contain 'a choice assortment'--as the Calcutta
+advertisers have it--of gold, silver, or brass bangles and anklets,
+which have not been so expeditiously digested as their fair owners,
+victims of the monster's voracity. A little fat Brahminee child,
+'farci an ris,' must be a tempting and tender _bonne bouche_ to these
+river gourmands. Horrific legends such as the above, together with a
+great deal of valuable advice on the subject, were quite thrown away
+upon me; for ninety degrees of Fahrenheit, and the enticing blueness
+of the water generally betrayed me into a plunge every evening during
+my Gangetic voyage."
+
+Nocturnal Bathing.
+
+"On the occasion of a grand nocturnal bathing ceremony, held at the
+great tank called the Indra Daman, I went with a party of three or
+four others to witness the spectacle. The walls surrounding the pool
+and a cluster of picturesque pavilions in its centre were brilliantly
+lighted up with hundreds of cheraugs, or small oil-lamps, casting a
+flickering lustre upon the heads and shoulders of about five hundred
+men, women, and children, who were ducking and praying, _a corps
+perdu,_ in the water. As I glanced over the figures nearest to me,
+I discovered floating among the indifferent bathers two dead bodies,
+which had either been drowned in the confusion, or had purposely
+come to die on the edge of the sacred tank; the cool and apathetic
+survivors taking not the slightest notice of their soulless
+neighbours."
+
+King John at the Cape.
+
+"The largest house in Simon's Town, and, indeed, the greater part of
+the town itself, belongs to an Englishman of the name of Osbond,
+who, however, is more generally known by the dignified title of 'King
+John.' He was carpenter on board the sixty-gun ship Sceptre, which was
+wrecked off this coast some yearn ago. Like Juan, he escaped the sea,
+and like Juan he found a Haidee. Being well-favoured and sharp-witted,
+he won the heart and the hand of a wealthy Dutch widow, whose dollars
+he afterwards, in some bold but successful speculations, turned to
+good account. He is said to have laid out ten thousand pounds on
+these--to every one but himself--_inhospita littora._ King John is
+much respected."
+
+Population of Cape Town.
+
+"The variety of nations, and the numerous shades of complexion
+among the people in the streets of Cape Town, are very striking to
+a stranger. First may be remarked the substantial Dutchman, with his
+pretty, smiling, round-faced, and particularly well-dressed
+daughter: then the knot of 'Qui hi's,' sent to the Cape, per doctor's
+certificate, to husband their threadbare constitutions, and lavish
+their rupees: next the obsequious, smirking, money-making China-man,
+with his poking shoulders, and whip-like pig-tail: then the
+stout, squat Hottentots--who resemble the Dutch in but one
+characteristic!--and half castes of every intermediate tint between
+black and white. These are well relieved and contrasted by the
+tall, warlike figures and splendid costume of his Majesty's 72nd
+Highlanders, who, with the 98th regiment, form the garrison of Cape
+Town."
+
+Visit to the Residence of Napoleon at St. Helena.
+
+"We soon came in sight of the level plateau of the Longwood estate,
+the residence of the late emperor, and six miles from Plantation
+House. Here the country gradually assumes a more desolate and a wilder
+look; and the English visitor arrives at the unfortunate and unwelcome
+conclusion, that the best part of the island was not given to the
+illustrious captive. One cannot avoid agreeing with Sir W. Scott, that
+Plantation House should have been accorded to him, in spite of the
+detering reasons of its vicinity to the sea, and its sequestered
+situation. Longwood, however, has better roads, more space for riding
+or driving, and in summer must have been much cooler than the less
+sheltered parts of the isle. As we turned through the lodges the old
+house appeared at the end of an avenue of scrubby and weather-worn
+trees. It bears the exterior of a respectable farm-house, but is now
+fast running to decay. On entering a dirty courtyard, and quitting
+our horses, we were shown by some idlers into a square building, which
+once contained the bed-room, sitting-room, and bath of the _Empereur
+des Francois._ The partitions and floorings are now thrown down, and
+torn up, and the apartments occupied for six years by the hero before
+whom kings, emperors, and popes had quailed, are now tenanted by
+cart-horses!
+
+"Passing on with a groan, I entered a small chamber, with two windows
+looking towards the north. Between these windows are the marks of a
+fixed sofa: on that couch Napoleon died. The apartment is now occupied
+by a threshing machine; 'No bad emblem of its former tenant!' said
+a sacrilegious wag. Hence we were conducted onwards to a large room,
+which formerly contained a billiard-table, and whose front looks out
+upon a little latticed veranda, where the imperial peripatetic--I
+cannot style him philosopher--enjoyed the luxury of six paces to and
+fro,--his favourite promenade. The white-washed walls are scored with
+names of every nation; and the paper of the ceiling has been torn off
+in strips as holy relics. Many couplets, chiefly French, extolling and
+lamenting the departed hero, adorn or disfigure (according to their
+qualities) the plaster walls. The only lines that I can recall to
+mind--few are worth it--are the following, written ever the door, and
+signed '---- ----, Officier de la Garde Imperiale.'
+
+ "'Du grand Napoleon le nom toujours cite
+ Ira de bouche en bouche a la posterite!'"
+
+The writer doubtless possessed more spirit as a sabreur than as a
+poet.
+
+"The emperor's once well-kept garden,
+
+ "'And still where many a garden-flower grows wild,'
+
+"is now overgrown and choked with weeds. At the end of a walk still
+exists a small mound, on which it is said the hero of Lodi, Marengo,
+and Austerlitz, amused himself by erecting a mock battery. The little
+chunamed tank, in which he fed some fresh-water fish, is quite
+dried up; and the mud wall, through a hole in which he reconnoitered
+passers-by, is, like the great owner, returned to earth!"
+
+Captain Mundy's volumes are illustrated chiefly with sketches of
+Indian sports from the master-hand of Land-seer; and for spirit of
+execution they deserve to rank among the finest productions of this
+distinguished artist.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+RECENT FRENCH LITERATURE.
+
+A novel picture of Paris has lately appeared with the taking title
+of the _Hundred and One._ Its origin, as well as its subject, is
+interesting. It is a voluntary association of almost all the literary
+talent of France, for the benefit of an enterprising bookseller,
+whose affairs have, it seems, fallen into the sere, since the
+commercial embarrassments following on the Revolution. A hundred
+and one authors of all ranks and political opinions, philosophers,
+academicians, journalists, deputies, poets, artists, have combined
+in this work to pass in review before us the humours, follies and
+opinions of the French capital, painted in colours gay or grave,
+sketchy or elaborate, according to the manner or mood of the artist. A
+very amusing work, suitable to all tastes, is the result, and, by
+aid of the _Foreign Quarterly Review_, we are enabled to present
+the reader with a specimen sketch by Leon Guzlan, an author of some
+celebrity in this species of writing.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Several specimens have been ably translated in the
+Athenaeum.]
+
+VISIT TO THE MORGUE, AT PARIS.
+
+(The Morgue, we should premise, is an establishment in Paris for
+the reception of all persons found dead in the City or its environs.
+Thither it is the duty of the police to convey the bodies, where they
+are exposed in a hall open to the public for a stated time,[1] when,
+if not identified, and claimed, they are interred in the neighbouring
+cemetery.)
+
+[Footnote 1: The bodies are stripped, and placed on sloping slabs of
+marble; above each are hung the clothes of the deceased.]
+
+"After describing the exterior, the _Salle de l'Exposition_, which is
+the only portion of the building, of course, with which the public
+are acquainted, the writer conducts us into the inner recesses of this
+house of death, the apartments of the superintendant.
+
+"M. Perrin, is a little old man, who coughs incessantly. When I
+explained to him the object of my visit, he very politely offered to
+show me all the details of his administration, regretting much, as he
+said, that there was not so much variety as could be desired. 'But I
+will show you what I have--be pleased to walk up.'
+
+"As we were climbing the narrow stairs, and he was informing me that
+his establishment was connected both with the prefecture and the
+police, with the one on account of the local expenses, with the other
+from its connexion with the public health, we were obliged to stand
+close against the wall to allow a troop of young girls to pass, well
+dressed, gay, but shivering with the cold, which blew from the river
+through the chink which lighted the stair.
+
+"'These are four of my daughters. I have eight children. Francois, the
+keeper, has had four, and he has had the good fortune to get them all
+married. Francois is a kind father.'
+
+"'So,' said I, 'twelve children then have been born in the Morgue.
+Dreams of joy, and conjugal endearments, and parental delights, have
+been experienced in this chamber of death. Marriage with its orange
+flowers, baptism with its black robed sponsors, the communion, and the
+embroidered veil, love, religion, virtue, have had their home here as
+elsewhere. God has sown the seeds of happiness every where.'
+
+"'Papa, we are going to a distribution of prizes. My sisters are sure
+to get a prize. Don't weary, we will be back in good time.'
+
+"'Go, my children,'--and all four embraced him.
+
+"I thought of the body of the little Norman in the dreary room
+beneath, and of the mother who even now, perhaps, was anxiously
+looking for her from the window.
+
+"'This is the apartment of Francois'. Francois did the honours with
+the activity of a man who is not ashamed of his establishment. His
+room is comfortably furnished; two modern pendules mounted on
+bronze, a wardrobe with a Medusa's head, a high bed, and a handsome
+rose-coloured curtain. If the room was not overburdened with
+furniture, if there was not much of luxury, yet, to those not early
+accustomed to superfluities, it might even seem gay. It represented
+the tastes, opinions, and habits of its master. Vases of flowers threw
+a green reflection on the curtains, for Francois is fond of flowers.
+Among his gallery of portraits were those of Augereau and Kleber, both
+in long coats, leaning on immense sabres, with peruques and powder.
+Napoleon is there three times.
+
+"'Look at these jars,' said Francois, 'these are sweetmeats of
+my wife's making; she excels in sweetmeats.' I read upon them,
+'gooseberries of 1831.' We left Francois's apartment which forms the
+right wing of the Morgue, while the clerk's house is on the left, and
+entered the cabinet of administration of M. Perrin.
+
+"If Francois is fond of flowers, M. Perrin has the same penchant for
+hydraulics and the camera obscura; he draws, he makes jets from the
+Seine, by an ingenious piece of machinery of his own invention; while
+he was retouching his syphon, I asked permission to turn over the
+register, where suicides are ranged in two columns.
+
+"The fatal 'unknown' was the prevailing designation; 'brought here at
+three in the morning, skull fractured, _unknown;_' 'brought at twelve
+at night, drowned under the Pont des Arts, cards in his pocket,
+_unknown;_'--'young woman, pregnant, crushed by a fiacre at the corner
+of the Rue Mandar, _unknown_;'--'new born child found dead of cold,
+at the gate of an hotel, _unknown.'_
+
+"I said to M. Perrin that he must weary here very much occasionally
+during the long nights of winter.
+
+"'No,' replied he good humouredly, 'the children sing, we all work,
+Francois and I play at draughts or piquet; the worst of it is, we are
+sometimes interrupted; a knock comes, we must go down, get a stone
+ready, undress the new comer and register him: that spoils the game;
+we forget to mark the points.'
+
+"'And this is the way you generally spend your evenings?'--'Always,
+except when Francois has to go to Vaugirard at four o'clock: then
+he must go to bed earlier. Perhaps you do not know that our burying
+ground is at Vaugirard: as that burying ground is not much in fashion,
+we have been allowed to retain our privilege of having a fosse to
+ourselves.'
+
+"'I understand,--it is a fief of the Morgue.'
+
+"'You saw that chariot below near the entrance gate, in which the
+children were hiding themselves at play,--that is our hearse.'
+
+"'And rich or poor, all must make use of your conveyance? If for
+instance a suicide is recognised, his relations or friends may reclaim
+him, take him home, and bestow the rites of sepulture on him at his
+own house?'
+
+"'No, the Morgue does not give back what has been once deposited here.
+It allows the funeral ceremonies to be as pompous as they will, but
+they must all set out from hence; one end of the procession perhaps
+is at Notre Dame, while the other is starting from the Morgue. The
+Archbishop of Paris may be there; but Francois's place is fixed. It is
+the first.'
+
+"'And the priests of Notre Dame, do they never make any difficulty
+about administering the funeral rites to your dead?'
+
+"'Never!'
+
+"'Not even to the suicides?'
+
+"'There are no suicides for Notre Dame: one is drowned by accident,
+another killed by the bursting of a gun, a third has fallen from
+a scaffold. I invent the excuse, and the conscience of the priest
+accepts it. That's enough.'
+
+"So, thought I! Notre Dame, which formerly witnessed the execution at
+the stake of sorcerers, alchymists, and gipsies on the Grande Place,
+has now no word of reprobation for the carcass of the suicide, once
+allowed to rot on the ground, or be devoured by birds. She asks not
+here what was his faith. The priest says mildly, 'Peace be with you.'
+
+"We walked down, and Francois opened the first room, that which
+contains the dresses; habits of all shapes, all dimensions, hideously
+jumbled together; gaiters pinned to a sleeve, a shawl shading the neck
+of a coat; dresses of peasants, workmen, carters and brewers' frocks,
+women's gowns, all faded, discoloured, shapeless, flap against each
+other in the current of air which entered through the windows. There
+is something here appalling in the sight and sound of these objects,
+soulless, body-less, yet moving as if they had life, and presenting
+the form without the flesh. Your eye rests on a handkerchief, the
+property of some poor labourer, suddenly seized with the idea of
+suicide, after some day that he has wanted work.
+
+"Francois, who followed the direction of my eyes to see what
+impression the picture produced on me sighed heavily.
+
+"'Does it move you too,' said I? 'Are you discontented with your
+lot.--Unhappy?'
+
+"'Not exactly! But, Sir, formerly, you must know, the dresses, after
+being six months exhibited, became a perquisite of ours; we sold them.
+Now they talk of taking the dresses from us.'
+
+"I reassured Francois as to the intention of government, and assured
+him there was no talk of taking away the dresses.
+
+"The second room, that which adjoins the public exhibition room, is
+appropriated for the dissection of those, the mode of whose death
+appears to the police to be suspicious. Its only furniture is a marble
+table, on which the dissections take place, and a shelf on which are
+placed several bottles of chlorate. This room is immediately above
+the room of M. Perrin. The dissecting table above just answers to the
+girls' piano below.
+
+"In this room, which I crossed rapidly to avoid as much as possible
+the sight of a body extended on the plank, I saw the little girl, who
+had been stifled the night before in the diligence; she was a lovely
+child. The other figure was frightfully disfigured; scarcely even
+would his mother have recognised him.
+
+"There remained only the public room; it is narrow, ill aired; ten or
+twelve black and sloping stones receive the suicides, who are placed
+on it almost in a state of nudity; the places are seldom all occupied,
+except perhaps during a revolution. Then it is that the Morgue is
+recruited; two more days of glory and immortality in July, and the
+plague had been in Paris.
+
+"'It is true,' said M. Perrin, 'we worked hard during the three days,
+and we were allowed the use of two assistants. Corpses every where,
+within, without, at the gate, on the bank.'--
+
+"'And your girls?'
+
+"'During these days they did not leave their apartment, nor looked
+out to the street, nor to the river; besides, you are mistaken if you
+think the spectacle would have terrified them. Brought up here,
+they will walk at night without a light in front of the glass, which
+divides the corpses from the public, without trembling; we become
+accustomed to any thing.'
+
+"Methought I heard the poor children, so familiar with the idea of
+death, so accustomed to this domestic spectacle of their existence,
+asking innocently of the strangers whom they visited,--as one would
+ask where is your garden, your kitchen, or your cabinet,--'where do
+_you_ keep your dead here?'
+
+"These were all the facts I could gather with regard to the
+establishment. I was opening the glass door to breathe the fresh air
+again, when the entrance of the crowd drove me back into the interior;
+they were following a bier, on which lay a body, from which the water
+dripped in a long stream. From one of the hands which were closely
+clenched, the keeper detached a strip of coloured linen, and a
+fragment of lace. 'Ah!' said he, 'let me look, 'tis she!'
+
+"'Who is it?'
+
+"'The nurse who was here this morning; the nurse of the little Norman
+girl. Good! they may be buried together.' And M. Perrin put on
+his spectacles, opened his register, and wrote in his best
+current-hand--_unknown!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+POETRY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Maid of Elvar. By Allan Cunningham.
+
+This is one of the most gratifying "appearances" in the literature of
+the day. It reminds us that however the poet's harp may have remained
+unstrung, it has not lost its vigour or sweetness--its depth of
+feeling, or its melody of tone, and these too are ably sustained
+through nearly 600 stanzas in an exquisitely embellished narrative.
+The poem is "a song of other times;" the story is one of chivalrous
+love; the hero is a young warrior and poet; the Maid of Elvar offers
+a garland of gold for the best song in honour of one of his victories;
+"minstrels meet and sing, but the song of Eustace, though on another
+theme, is reckoned the best; the Maid hangs the gold chain round his
+neck, and retires, admiring the young stranger;" and thereby hangs the
+tale. As our limits will not allow us to detach a scene or incident,
+we must be content, for the present, with culling a few of the
+choicest flowers of the song.
+
+CIVIL WAR.
+
+ Woe, woe was ours. Chief drew his sword on chief:
+ Religion with her relique and her brand,
+ Made strife between our bosom-bones, and grief
+ And lawless joy abounded in the land;
+ Our glass of glory sank nigh its last sand;
+ Rank with its treason, priesthood with its craft,
+ Turned Scotland's war-lance to a willow-wand.
+ But war arose in Scotland--civil war;
+ Serf warred with chief, and father warred with son,
+ The church too warred with all: her evil star
+ That rules o'er sinking realms shone like the sun--
+ Her lights waxed dim and died out one by one--
+ Woe o'er the land hung like a funeral pall:
+ The sword the bold could brave, the coward shun,
+ But famine followed fast and fell on all--
+ Pale lips cried oft for food which came not at their call.
+
+RURAL PEACE.
+
+ Much mirth was theirs--war was no wonder then;
+ Dread fled with danger, and the cottage cocks,
+ The shepherd's war-pipe, called the sons of men
+ When morning's wheel threw bright dew from its spokes,
+ To pastures green to lead again their flocks;
+ The horn of harvest followed with its call;
+ Fast moved the sickle, and swift rose the shocks,
+ Behind the reapers like a golden wall--
+ Gravely the farmer smiled, by turns approving all.
+
+ The ripe corn waved in lone Dalgonar glen,
+ That, with its bosom basking in the sun,
+ Lies like a bird; the hum of working men
+ Joins with the sound of streams that southward run,
+ With fragrant holms atween: then mix in one
+ Beside a church, and round two ancient towers
+ Form a deep fosse. Here sire is heired by son,
+ And war comes never; ancle deep in flowers
+ In summer walk its dames among the sunny bowers.
+
+ He rose, find homeward by the slumbering stream
+ Walked with the morn-dew glistening on his shoon.
+ The sun was up, and his outbursting beam
+ Touched tower and tree and pasture hills aboon;
+ The stars were quenched, and vanished was the moon;
+ Loud lowed the herds and the glad partridge' cry
+ Made corn-fields musical as groves at noon;
+ Birds left the perch, bee following bee hummed by,
+ And gladness reigned on earth and brightness claimed the sky.
+
+MINSTRELSY.
+
+ I sing of days in which brave deeds of arms
+ And deeds of song went hand in hand: our kings
+ Heroic feelings had and owned the charms
+ Of minstrel lore--they loved the magic strings
+ More than the sceptre; still their kingdom rings
+ With their gay musings and their harpings high.
+ To noble deeds fair poesie lends wings;
+ She lifts them up from grovelling earth to sky,
+ And bids them sit in light, and live and never die.
+
+FAME.
+
+ Fame, fame--thou warrior's wish, thou poet's thought,
+ Thou bright delusion; like the rainbow thou
+ Glitterest, yet none may touch thee; thing of naught,
+ Star-high with heaven's own brightness on thy brow,
+ Blazoned and glorious I beheld thee grow--
+ Vision, begone,--for I am none of thine.
+ Of all that fills my heart and fancy now,
+ From dull oblivion not one word or line
+ Wilt thou touch with thy light and render it divine.
+
+ Even be it so. I sing not for thy smiles--
+ I sing to keep down sighs and ease the smart
+ Of care and sadness, and the daily toils
+ Which crush my soul and trample on my heart.
+ Far mightier spirits of the inspired art
+ Are mute and nameless, mid the muse in grief
+ Calls from the eastern to the western airt,
+ On tale, tradition, ballad, song, and chief
+ On thee, to give their names one passage bright and brief.
+ She calls in vain; like to a shooting star
+ Their storied rhymes shone brightly in their birth,
+ And shot a dazzling lustre near and far;
+ Then darkened, died, as all things else on earth.
+
+EVENING.
+
+ The sun
+ Behind the mountain's summit slowly sank;
+ Crows came in clouds down from the moorlands dun,
+ And darkened all the pine-trees, rank on rank;
+ The homeward milch-cows at the fountains drank;
+ Swains dropt the sickle, hinds unloosed the car--
+ The twin hares sported on the clover-bank,
+ And with the shepherd o'er the upland far,
+ Came out the round pale moon, and star succeeding star.
+ Star followed star, though yet day's golden light
+ Upon the hills and headlands faintly stream'd;
+ To their own pine the twin-doves took their flight;
+ From crag and cliff the clamorous seamews screamed,
+ In glade and glen the cottage windows gleam'd;
+ Larks left the cloud, for flight the grey owl sat;
+ The founts and lakes up silver radiance steamed;
+ Winging his twilight journey, hummed the gnat--
+ The drowsy beetle droned, and skimmed the wavering bat.
+
+THE MAID'S FIRST LOVE.
+
+ The maiden heard a light foot on the floor,
+ And sidelong looked, and there before her stood
+ Young Eustace Graeme: far from the pasture moor
+ He came: the fragrance of the dale and wood
+ Was scenting all his garments green and good.
+ A sudden flush when tie the maiden saw,
+ Burned through his temples, kindled up his blood--
+ His stifling breath waxed nigh too tight to draw,
+ He bowed, and silent stood in wonderment and awe.
+
+ The father smiled, the mother smiled. Now why
+ Are her eyes downcast and his white brow glowing?
+ Say, have they vowed while heaven was witness by
+ With all her radiant lights like fountains flowing,
+ To love while water runs and woods are growing,
+ And stars glowed conscious of the compact pure?
+ They never woo'd, nor, love for love bestowing.
+ Met with the moonshine in the green-wood bow'r,
+ Nor looked and sighed, and looked and drank love by the hour.
+
+ Yet they have met. Though not fools of the flock,
+ On whom love like the tiger gives one bound.
+ And then the heart is rent--a thunderstroke
+ That makes men dust before they hear the sound--
+ A shaft that leaves dark venom in the wound--
+ A frost that all the buds of manhood nips--
+ A sea of passion in which true love's drowned--
+ A demon strangling virtue in his grips--
+ A day when reason's son is quenched in dread eclipse.
+
+ True gentle love is like the summer dew,
+ Which falls around when all is still and hush--
+ And falls unseen until its bright drops strew
+ With odours, herb and flower, and bank, and bush
+ O love, when womanhood is in the flush,
+ And man's a young and an unspotted thing!
+ His first breathed word and her half conscious blush,
+ Are fair us light in heaven, or flowers in spring--
+ The first hour of true love is worth our worshipping.
+
+LOVE OF COUNTRY.
+
+ "I would not leave old Scotland's mountain gray,
+ Her hills, her cots, her halls, her groves of pine,
+ Dark though they be: yon glen, yon broomy brae,
+ Yon wild fox cleugh, yon eagle cliffs outline
+ An hour like this--this white right-hand of thine,
+ And of thy dark eyes such a gracious glance,
+ As I got now, for all beyond the line,
+ And all the glory gained by sword or lance,
+ In gallant England, Spain, or olive vales of France."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_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._
+
+
+
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