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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12676 ***
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. XVII, NO. 490.] SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1831. [PRICE 2d.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: OLD HOUSE IN SOUTHWARK.]
+
+
+This crazy, but not unpicturesque building, was taken down in the autumn
+of last year, in forming an approach to the New London Bridge. It stood
+on the eastern side of the High-street, and is worthy of record among
+the pleasing relics of antiquity, which it has ever been the object of
+_The Mirror_ to rescue from oblivion. Its style of architecture--that of
+the seventh Henry--is interesting: there is a florid picturesqueness in
+the carvings on the fronts of the first and second stories, and probably
+this ornament extended originally to the uppermost stories, which had
+subsequently been covered with plaster.
+
+We remember the house for the last twenty years, but cannot trace this
+or any other alteration in its front. The windows, it will be seen, are
+of different periods, those on the right-hand second and the left-hand
+third floor being of the oldest date.
+
+Apart from these attractions, and as a specimen of the olden domestic
+architecture of the metropolis, the annexed Cut bears an historic
+interest, in its having been the residence of the ill-starred Anne
+Boleyn, queen of Henry the Eighth. The interior was in palatial style,
+having been elaborately finished; and in one of the apartments, we learn
+that the royal arms were very conspicuous.
+
+In early times, Southwark was one of the most celebrated of the
+metropolitan suburbs; and it is much to be regretted that the liberality
+of our times has not encouraged the production of its ancient history.
+Every one at all familiar with London is aware of the antiquity of St.
+Saviour's Church, the original foundation of which was from the profits
+of a ferry over the Thames, whence its original name, St. Mary Overy, or
+"over the ferry." This was some time before the Conquest; but the church
+was principally rebuilt in the fourteenth century. We have spoken of its
+ancient fame elsewhere.[1] Bankside, its name in spiritual and secular
+story, is likewise of some note. The early Bishops of Winchester had a
+palace and _park_ here; remains of the former were laid open by a
+fire about seventeen years since. Then, who does not remember, in the
+love of sports and pastimes, the bull and bear-baiting theatres, and
+the uncouth glory of the Globe theatre, associated with the poet of all
+time--Shakspeare. Southwark was, therefore, a fitting site for a royal
+palace for occasional retirement, and its contiguity to the Thames must
+have enhanced its pleasantness.
+
+Miss Benger, in her agreeable _Memoirs of Anne Boleyn_, does not
+mention the Queen's abode in Southwark; but the date of the architecture
+of the annexed house, and its closer identification with Queen
+Elizabeth, render the first mentioned circumstance by no means
+improbable. Previous to the marriage of Anne Boleyn, we learn that Henry
+passed not a few of his leisure hours "in the delightful society of Anne
+Boleyn." "Every day they met and spent many hours in riding or walking
+together." Her family at this time resided at Durham House, on the site
+of the Adelphi, and Anne frequently made excursions with Henry in the
+vicinity of London.
+
+Of the antiquity of this district we could quote more proofs. The
+_galleried_ inn-yards, and among them that at which the Pilgrims
+sojourned on their road to Canterbury, are among them. In our last
+volume too, at page 160, we engraved an ancient Vault in Tooley-street,
+the remains of the "great house, builded of stone, with arched gates,
+which pertained to the Prior of Lewis, in Sussex, and was his lodging
+when he came to London." Not far from this was "another great House of
+Stone and Timber," which, in the thirteenth century, was held of John,
+"Earl Warren, by the Abbot of St. Augustins, at Canterbury." Stowe
+says--"It was an ancient piece of worke, and seemeth to be one of the
+first builded houses on that side of the river, over against the city:
+it was called the Abbot's Inne of St. Augustine in Southwark."
+
+There was also another "Inne" near this spot, which belonged to the
+Abbey of Battle, in Sussex, and formed the town residence of its Abbots.
+This stood on the banks of the Thames, between the Bridge House and
+Battle Bridge, which was so called, "for that it standeth on the ground,
+and over a water-course (flowing out of Thames) pertayning to that
+Abbey, and was therefore both builded and repayred by the Abbots of that
+house, as being hard adjoyning to the Abbot's lodging." Its situation
+is known by the landing-place called Battle Stairs. On the opposite
+side of Tooley-street is a low neighbourhood of meanly-built streets
+and passages, still denominated the Maze, from the intricacies of a
+labyrinth in the gardens of the Abbot of Battle's Inn, and which fronted
+its entrance-gate.
+
+With these few quotations of the ancient importance of Southwark, we can
+but repeat our regret that no regular history of this district has yet
+been published. There are three or four gentlemen resident there, whose
+antiquarian attainments highly qualify them for the task. The public
+would surely find them patronage.
+
+The Engraving is from an original sketch by an ingenious Correspondent,
+M.P. of Upton, near Windsor, whom we thank for this specimen of good
+taste. We are always happy to receive antiquarian illustrations of our
+Metropolis, and in this instance the zeal of the artist, who resides
+twenty miles distant, deserves special mention.
+
+
+ [1] See _Mirror_, vol. xiii. p. 227. Gower is buried here,
+ Fletcher and Messenger too; and not long since the bones of
+ Bishop Andrews chapels for the New London Bridge approach.--See
+ also _Mirror_, vol. xvi. p. 297.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PARLIAMENT.
+
+(_For the Mirror._)
+
+The following particulars, which have been gleaned from several
+sources, relating to the British Parliament, may be acceptable at the
+present time, when the English people are in hopes of a renovation of
+that Constitution which has been, and will still continue to be, the
+admiration of the civilized world:--The word Parliament was first
+used in 1265; and the Commons were admitted at this time, though not
+regularly represented. The parliament called at Shrewsbury, in 1283,
+by Edward I., was the first to which cities and towns were summoned to
+send representatives. It was also the first that granted aids towards
+the national defence of the three denominations of knights, citizens,
+and burgesses, as well as by the lords spiritual and temporal. In this
+parliament the representatives sat in a separate chamber from the barons
+and knights. The Commons consisted of two knights for each county, two
+representatives for the city of London, and two for each of the
+following twenty towns only:--
+
+Winchester, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, York, Bristol, Exeter, Lincoln,
+Canterbury, Carlisle, Norwich, Northampton, Nottingham, Scarborough,
+Grimsby, Lynn, Colchester, Yarmouth, Hereford, Chester, Shrewsbury,
+Worcester.
+
+
+From this it appears that there were not representatives of any towns in
+the counties of
+
+Westmoreland, Lancaster, Derby, Durham, Stafford, Warwick, Leicester,
+Rutland, Suffolk, Hertford, Bedford, Cambridge, Huntingdon, Buckingham,
+Berks, Oxford, Wilts, Somerset, Gloucester, Dorset, Sussex, Surrey.
+
+
+In after times, burghs that were summoned frequently prayed the Crown to
+be excused from sending representatives, on the account of their being
+compelled to pay 3s. 4d. a day to each member for his maintenance, while
+attending in his place; yet the allowance was made on a plan so strictly
+economical, that the knights of Berkshire were only allowed for six
+days, those for Bedfordshire for only five days, and those for Cornwall
+for only eleven days, when called to a parliament at York. Sheriffs,
+in their write for elections to parliament, sometimes omitted one
+or more burghs in a county, and at other times sent writs to the same
+burghs--and this, for aught known to the contrary, without instruction
+from the king or his council. Where burghs were poor, there were many
+such omissions, by favour of the sheriff, for a space of nearly three
+hundred years. Upon petition of the town of Torrington to Edward III.,
+in 1366, he directed a letter to the bailiff and good men of the town,
+excusing them "from the burden of sending two representatives to
+parliament, as they had never been obliged so to do till the 24th of his
+reign, when," says the king, "the sheriffs of Devonshire maliciously
+summoned them to send two members to parliament."
+
+Writs for the election of members to serve in the House of Commons are
+issued under different authorities upon a general election, and upon
+vacancies of particular seats during the continuance of a parliament.
+In the former case, the Lord Chancellor of Great Britain, pursuant to
+the order in council, causes the writs of elections to be issued for all
+places in England and Scotland to which such writs are usually sent. By
+the Articles and Act of Union with Ireland, the Lord Chancellor then,
+pursuant to the said orders, &c., causes writs to be issued and directed
+by the Clerk of the Crown in Ireland to the several counties, and such
+counties of cities and towns as send members to the united parliament.
+
+It is generally supposed that the circumstance of bishops, or other
+ecclesiastics having seats in the legislature, is peculiar to England.
+This is a mistake;--it was characteristic of the Scottish constitution
+for centuries previous to their connexion with England: so far back,
+indeed, if not much farther, as the twelfth century. It is stated, in
+ancient documents connected with the history of the county of Elgin, the
+authenticity of which cannot be doubted, that the Abbey of Kinloss was
+founded by David I., in January, 1150, and that the abbot was mitred,
+and had a seat in parliament.
+
+To the passing of a bill, the assent of the knights, citizens, and
+burgesses must be in person; but the lords may give their votes by
+proxy; and the reason is, that the barons always sat in parliament in
+their own right, as part of the _pares curtis_ of the king; and
+therefore, as they were allowed to serve by proxy in the wars, so had
+they leave to make proxies in parliament; but the commons coming only
+as representing the barones minores, and the soccage tenants in the
+country, and as representing the men of the cities, &c., they could not
+constitute proxies as representatives of others.
+
+When it is the pleasure of the Crown to dissolve a parliament, it is
+the constant practice immediately to summon another, and to make the
+dissolution of the old and the calling of the new simultaneous acts.
+By the Act of 7 and 8 of William III., c. xxv. s. I, forty days
+should intervene between the teste and return of the writs for a new
+parliament; but a longer time is necessary, and fifty days now
+intervene.
+
+Parliaments became triennial from the reigns of Edward III., but not
+until 1694 had any act passed to make such duration legal. In 1716 this
+was repealed, and the present act passed, making them septennial.
+
+W.G.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SIMPLE AMBITION.
+
+(_To the Editor._)
+
+
+The following anecdote was told me last summer, in the cabriolet of a
+diligence between Pau and Bayonne, and is very much at your service.
+EGOMET IPSE.
+
+
+About twenty-three years ago, the vane of Strasbourg Cathedral was
+struck by lightning, so that it hung on one side, threatening by its
+fall to endanger the lives of the people below. The alarm was so great,
+that the authorities, after a special consultation, posted bills about
+the streets, offering any reward that should be required to any one that
+would venture to ascend and strike off the vane. While the good citizens
+were reading this announcement, a peasant from the department of the
+Landes passed by, and being unable to read, he inquired the purport of
+the advertisement. When informed, he immediately offered his services
+for that purpose, and was conducted to the mayor and the bishop, who
+happened to be both in the Hôtel de Ville at the time. They questioned
+him, and fully acquainted him with the difficulties of the
+enterprise--such as the real height, and that the upper part of the
+spire could only be ascended by ladders on the outside. However, nothing
+daunted, he persisted in his resolution to perform the feat on the
+morrow. All Strasbourg was assembled in the open places of the city on
+the next day; and, although admiring his courage as they saw him ascend,
+they most prudently refrained from cheering him as he deserved. Few who
+were then shading their eyes from the sun, in order to gaze on the
+spire, but must have envied him the scene of surpassing loveliness that
+was spread below him, although it is probable that neither the green
+landscape fading into blue distance, the relics of ancient castles,
+nor the beautiful Rhine glittering in sunshine, detained his regards.
+He who at home, in his own barren and level sands, had been used to
+no greater elevations than his stilts, was now mounting like an eagle
+towards heaven, and admired by thousands. When he reached the summit,
+he deliberately seated himself on the highest stone, with one leg on
+each side of the vane; and while his clothes were visibly fluttered
+in a strong breeze at such an eminence, he, with a hammer and chisel,
+displaced the cross that had caused such alarm, It flew spinning to the
+earth, and, borne away by the wind, fell in a neighbouring field, where
+it sank twenty inches into the soil. The air was now rent with
+acclamations towards him,
+
+ Cui robur et aes triplex
+ Circa pectus erat--
+
+
+(for, be it remarked, he was the only person who had even proposed
+to effect its removal). On his descent, he was carried in triumph to
+the Hôtel de Ville. Being thanked by the authorities then and there
+assembled, and assured of their intense anxiety for his life ever since
+he had quitted the earth, he was asked what was the recompense he
+demanded? He modestly replied, "that if they were pleased with what
+he had performed, he hoped they would not think him presumptuous, but
+he should so much like to walk through the Arsenal, and see all its
+wonderful stores and docks!"--and they could not prevail upon him to
+ask more.
+
+A week afterwards he left Strasbourg, with twenty-five Napoleons in
+his pocket; and declared that he had never before spent his time so
+agreeably as he did in that city, for he had seen the Imperial Arsenal,
+the fortifications, and many other fine, as well as useful, sights, and
+had been continually feasted gratis by the rich and the great folks.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+RANSOMS.
+
+(_Concluded from page_ 149.)
+
+The queen of Edward III., after the battle of Durham, demanded of John
+Copland, David of Scotland; on his remonstrance that no one but the king
+had a right to his prisoner, Edward sent for him to Calais, and bestowed
+on him in return for his captive, £500, in land. The Scottish monarch
+paid, after an imprisonment of eleven years, 100,000 marks, and was
+dismissed. Charles de Blois, at the same period paid 700,000 crowns, and
+left his two sons as hostages. Michael de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk, paid
+£20,000. sterling, when only a simple knight. Duc d'Alençon gave for his
+freedom 200,000 crowns, and actually sold part of his estate to the Duc
+de Bretagne to pay it. Caprice often caused the detention of men in
+captivity, from their inability to comply with the absurd demands of
+their captors. Louis XI. refused to part with Wolfang Poulain, a
+Burgundian officer, unless he would purchase his redemption with some
+favourite hounds belonging to the Seigneur de Bossu. As Bossu did not
+feel sufficiently interested in his friend's welfare to comply with the
+king's wishes, and part with his dogs, some time elapsed before any
+treaty could be entered into, to restore Poulain to his country.
+
+This practice, though it undoubtedly contributed to soften the horrors
+of war, often caused hostilities to be undertaken on the most absurd and
+frivolous pretences. The English are represented by Comines as rejoicing
+in a war with France, from a recollection of the prices they obtained
+from the lords and princes they captured. Another bad effect may be
+traced to it, in the violations of safe conduct, the seizure of
+individuals during times of peace, which the middle ages so constantly
+exhibit. Oliver de Clisson, the Constable of France, on entering into a
+castle to examine its strength, at the request of the Duc de Bretagne,
+in 1387, was seized, and at first commanded to be thrown into the sea.
+The savage Breton afterwards being troubled in conscience, expressed his
+joy that his order had not been complied with, and released Clisson on
+the payment of 100,000 livres.
+
+During the wars of Edward III. and Philip, many a soldier of fortune
+amassed considerable opulence by the ransoming of his prisoners.
+Croquart, a famous leader of these companies, is related to have become
+extremely rich by the money he received from the ransoms of castles and
+towns. In the fourteenth century several Knights of Suabia having
+associated themselves together for chivalrous engagements, endeavoured
+to seize a rich Count of Wirtenburg, as a _means of procuring a noble
+sum of money for the ransom of himself and his family_. For this
+purpose they attacked him in his castle at Wildbad, but were repulsed.
+At Poictiers, the King of France was nearly torn to pieces by the
+soldiers in disputing for their prize. At the Bridge of Luissac,
+Carlonnet, the French commander, fell into the hands of the enemy, who
+were about to end the quarrel respecting his possession by putting him
+to death, when the timely arrival of an English knight rescued him from
+their power. At Agincourt, eighteen French gentlemen entered into an
+agreement to direct all their attacks against King Henry, most probably
+with a view of acquiring a fortune by his capture; hence the contest was
+the hottest about his person. After the battle of Nanci, and the death
+of the Duke of Burgundy, by the sword of Charles de Beaumont, the latter
+is said to have died of regret, when he became aware whom it was he had
+slain, and the loss he had sustained of a ducal ransom.
+
+Before quitting this subject, it may be observed that the value of a
+prisoner's liberty was a regularly transferable property. Coeur de Lion
+was sold to the emperor Henry; Philip Augustus bargained for him; and
+his ransom reduced England, from sea to sea, to the utmost distress.
+Louis XI. bought the bastard of Burgundy from Renè, Duc de Lorrain,
+for 10,000 crowns, and also William of Chalons, Prince of Orange, for
+20,000, from Sieur de Grosté. Joan of Arc was sold to the English for
+10,000 livres, and a pension of 300. In the case of the Earl of
+Pembroke, who became the property of Du Guescelin, as part of the
+purchase-money for some estates in Spain, he had sold to Henry, King of
+Castile, the constable lost his expected 120,000 livres by the death of
+his prisoner; as this nobleman was in a bad state of health, his bankers
+at Bruges wisely declined paying the money until he became _sound and
+in good condition_. (_Quand il serait sain, et en bon point._)
+The earl dying before he left France, Du Guescelin lost both his estates
+and money. One of the family of the Blois was presented to his
+favourite, the Duke of Ireland, by Richard II., who disposed of his
+master's bounty to Oliver de Clisson for 120,000 livres. Zizim, the
+brother of Bajazet, Emperor of the Turks, after being defeated by his
+brother in an attempt to seize the throne, fled to the Knights of Rhodes
+for succour. They, fearing the vengeance of the Sultan, transferred him
+to Louis XI. who fulfilled his trust faithfully, and kept him for the
+knights, though offered all the relics that the east abounded with, and
+even the kingdom of Jerusalem, by Bajazet, for his prisoner. After being
+given into the custody of the Pope by Louis, and a six years' residence
+at Rome, he was sent back to France, as the king had found out that he
+might be of service in his engagements with Constantinople; he was,
+however, not restored to his brother in the condition which the Flemings
+had stipulated the Earl of Pembroke to be restored; for before his
+redelivery to the French, he is supposed to have been poisoned.
+
+H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE EQUESTRIAN STATUE OF PETER THE GREAT.
+
+(_To the Editor._)
+
+
+This stands upon a rock, which was found in a morass near Lachta, in
+Karelin, at a distance of eleven versts, or about 41,250 English feet.
+The dimensions of this stone were found to be 21 feet by 42 in length,
+and 34 in breadth; its weight is calculated at 3,200,000 lbs. or 1,600
+tons. The mechanism for its conveyance was invented by Count Carbury,
+who went by the name of Chevalier Lascuri. A solid road was first made
+from the stone to the shore; then brass slips were inserted under the
+stone to go upon cannon balls of five inches diameter, in metal grooves,
+by windlasses worked by 400 men every day, 200 fathoms towards the place
+of destination. The water transport was performed by what are called
+camels in the dockyards of Petersburgh and Amsterdam.
+
+E.A.B
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SONNET TO HOPE.
+
+(_For The Mirror._)
+
+
+ As some lone pilgrim through Night's dreary scene,
+ With cautious steps scarce venturing on his way,
+ Views the chaste orb of Evening's soft-eyed Queen
+ Gild the blue east, and scare those mists away
+ Which from his sight each faithful light obscur'd,
+ And led him wildering, sinking pale with fear!
+ Not he more bless'd by Cynthia's light allur'd,
+ Onward his course with happier thoughts doth steer,
+ Than I, O Hope! blest cheerer of the soul!
+ Who, long in Sorrow's darkening clouds involv'd,
+ When black despair usurp'd mild Joy's control,
+ Saw thee, bright angel, fram'd of heavenly mould,
+ Dip thy gay pallet in the rainbow's hue,
+ And call each scene of Peace and Mirth to view.
+
+
+_The Author of "A Tradesman's Lays."_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The income of a Russian metropolitan does not exceed 800l. a-year; that
+of an archbishop, 600l.; and of a bishop, 500l.; sums apparently as
+small as persons of their rank can possibly subsist on, even in Russia.
+They are, however, allowed a considerable sum annually for purposes of
+charity.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE SKETCH-BOOK.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A SCENE FROM LIFE.
+
+(_For the Mirror._)
+
+ Truth is strange--stranger than fiction.
+ LORD BYRON.
+
+
+"And so the Fernlands is to be sold at last," I said, casually meeting
+Mr. Nibble, our under-sheriff--"Poor N----, I am grieved for him, he has
+struggled hard against oppression."
+
+"It is quite true, sir," replied the man of the law, "a horning came
+down last night, but it will answer no end--for Messrs. Sharke and
+Scrapepen, have advertised the whole of the property for public roup
+on Tuesday next."
+
+The Fernlands estate had been the family property of the N----s since
+the conquest for aught I know. The present representative, after having
+sent his sons out into the world, as all Scotchmen do, to fight their
+way, (one of whom by the by was accumulating a snug fortune in India)
+got involved in some commercial speculation, for which he was wholly
+unfitted, being anything but a business man. He was a worthy
+unsuspecting fellow, but at last saw his way clearer, and as he thought
+got out, though a very heavy loser. In consequence of this scrape he
+wrote to his son in India, to say, that unless he could remit him a
+large sum, which he named, it would be impossible to keep his ground
+at Fernlands.
+
+Very soon afterwards his late partner, who was a good sort of fellow
+too, failed, and N---- was paralyzed on receiving a letter from the
+attorney to the assignees to say, that not having regularly gazetted his
+retirement from the concern, he had rendered himself legally liable to
+the creditors of the late firm of ---- and Co., and unless N---- paid
+the balance which remained due after the assets of the bankrupt's estate
+had been ascertained, that immediate steps would be resorted to, to
+compel him. The matter soon got abroad, and all N----'s other creditors
+also pressed forward to crush him--well, to make a disagreeable story
+short, the end is as I have previously related. Poor N---- is to be
+ruined to pay another man's debts, after a vast deal to do with law and
+lawyers, and much heat on both sides.
+
+I had taken great interest in the matter from the first, and it was with
+deep feelings of sorrow that I saw this excellent family likely to be
+driven from the home of their forefathers, by the merciless and often
+unjust hand of the law. N---- was, I believe, generally liked, and no
+person in need, in the district where he resided, looked up to the
+_Laird_ for advice or assistance in vain. You may judge therefore
+of the public sensation. While these matters were pending, N---- looked
+with the deepest anxiety for the arrival of a letter from his son in
+India; and every day did he send his servant express to the little
+post-office at ----, but in vain.
+
+At last the fatal day of sale arrived. N----, in the depth of his
+distress had early sent for me to consult whether even at the eleventh
+hour something could not be done to avert the calamity. A sinking man
+catches at a straw. It wanted less than three hours of the time of sale
+when I entered the grounds of Fernlands. The gate was half off its
+hinges, the posts plastered with advertisements of the sale; and people,
+as always happens in such cases, were already pouring towards the house
+more from a motive of curiosity than from an intention of purchasing
+anything. As I advanced towards the scene of action, I could observe
+that the shrubberies were injured, and the rare plants and flowers
+which both N---- and his wife had valued so much--for they were fond
+of the study of nature--exhibited evident tokens of the mischief of
+the careless multitude thronging to the show. The day was clear and
+beautiful, the breeze played through the leafy wilderness with a joyous
+effect; the contrast between the peace and harmony of nature, and the
+discord and tumult of man and his deeds, was affecting. But such
+thoughts were soon chased away from my mind, as I advanced over a
+portion of the lawn towards the stables, I saw N----'s favourite mare,
+and the old pony, Jack, (whom I recollected as the companion of N----'s
+boys, and as tractable as a dog,) in the hands of a rascally sheriff's
+officer, who was showing them to a horse-dealer from a neighbouring
+town. The lawn in the front of the house was covered with straggling
+groups of people, either discussing the event of the day, or examining
+some of the furniture which was strewed there.
+
+"Eh, sirs!" said an old man, brushing a tear from his eye, "I never
+thoucht to ha' seen the like o' this day's wark--and my forbears have
+had a bit o' farm under the laird's a hundred an' saxteen year, and
+better nor kinder folk to the puir man never lived."
+
+Mr. Nibble, who was Messrs. Sharke's agent, was bustling about, and
+I found him engaged with a fat, pompous little fellow, the auctioneer,
+from a neighbouring town.
+
+"Sad business this, Mr. ----," said he, "Fernlands is in a sad taking
+about it, I believe, but things of this kind will occur, you know; and
+I always say what can't be cured must be endured, eh."
+
+I turned with an ill-concealed expression of disgust from this man, and
+entered the house in search of my friend, for N---- would not quit the
+old place to the last. There is something melancholy in viewing a sale
+at any time--the disarrangement of the furniture--the cheerless and
+chilling aspect of the rooms--the dirt, the bustle, and the heartless
+indifference one witnesses to the misfortunes of others--all come home
+forcibly to the feelings. After stumbling and striking my shins amongst
+piles of chairs, and furniture, and carpets, disposed in lots over the
+now comfortless apartments, I at last reached the study door where I had
+spent many a happy hour with N----. I entered; the room was stripped of
+part of its furniture, the books lying dispersed in heaps over the floor
+or on the massive table, at the side of which N---- was seated on the
+only chair left in the apartment. He was at first unconscious of my
+entrance.
+
+"My dear sir, this is kind indeed," he said as I advanced, struggling
+with his feelings, "but take a chair," and he glanced round the room
+with a bitter smile, as he observed there was none, "my friends are kind
+you see, they think chairs are useless things...."
+
+The loss of his land affected him more than I can describe. He had been
+brought up upon it, and it had become as it were part and parcel of
+himself; it was not an ordinary loss. The noise and bustle in the house
+and sundry interruptions from inquisitive eyes, warned us, as N----
+said, that "we must jog." As we were rising, I accidentally inquired
+whether he had received his letters that morning. "Good God!" he
+exclaimed, "I totally forgot, and poor Andrew I fancy is too much
+occupied in bemoaning the fate of the horses, to have thought of it;
+but we can get them when I return with you this afternoon."
+
+"Delays are dangerous," I replied, "we will not throw a chance away."
+
+We hastened to the stable, and I despatched the servant on my own horse,
+with the utmost expedition to the post-office at ----.
+
+N---- sauntered through a private path in the shrubbery towards the
+entrance of the grounds, and I made my way through the careless throng,
+who had no thought what their own fate might be perhaps to-morrow--to
+Mr. Nibble, and urged him to delay the sale for an hour, but he said it
+was impossible, he would not hurry it for half an hour or so, but that
+they were already pressed for time. The landed property was first to be
+brought to the hammer. I mechanically followed the steps of N----, and
+when I overtook him, we saw through a break in the wood, from the
+increased density of the mob and the elevation of the auctioneer, that
+the sale was commencing.
+
+We gave up all for lost. At this moment I fancied I heard the noise of
+a horse urged to full gallop. The blood rushed to our hearts; we sprung
+through the trees towards the road; in another moment Andrew was in
+sight, urging his horse to his utmost speed. The instant he saw us he
+waved his hat, "A packet from abroad, sir," he sung out as he
+approached, "from our young master, I'm sure."
+
+"God be praised, you are saved," was all I could utter; poor N---- was
+faint with sudden joy and hope. We tore open the envelope, which
+contained bills from his son in India to a large amount. I saw N---- was
+unable to think, and without more ado, I squeezed his hand, seized the
+letter, and put spurs to my horse. The bidding had commenced when I
+reached the wondering crowd, who rapidly fell back as they saw me
+approach. But why should I tire you any longer; in a couple of hours
+Fernlands remained unpolluted by one of the mob, or legal harpies who
+had invaded it. You may guess the rest....
+
+A friend related the preceding incident to me; the reader may suppose
+him to be addressing myself. The leading circumstances are strictly
+true, the names and some trifling matters alone being altered. The story
+is invested with interest from its great similarity to a portion of the
+plot of the "Antiquary;" I have the strongest reason to believe, from
+the intimate acquaintance the great novelist possessed with the country,
+that he drew Sir Arthur Wardour's similar escape from ruin, from a
+recollection of the event briefly related above.
+
+VYVYAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SELECT BIOGRAPHY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PAGANINI, THE VIOLINIST.
+
+By aid of the _Foreign Quarterly Review_, we are enabled to submit
+to our readers the following very interesting Memoirs of this eccentric
+genius.
+
+By the way, we are happy to find that the above work is enabled to
+maintain the high character with which it started. It argues well for
+the literary taste of this country, by cherishing acquaintance with
+continental literature, and thus strengthening our resources at home.
+
+
+Nicolo Paganini was born at Genoa, in February, 1784. We are not
+informed as to his father's profession, if indeed he had any: all that
+we are told is, that his chief pursuit was to improve his circumstances,
+which were not the best in the world, by speculating in the lottery, so
+that when his little son, Nicolo, began at an unusually early age to
+give strong indications of musical talent, it seemed to him as if the
+wheel of fortune had at last been propitious, and he accordingly lost
+no time in setting to work to make the most of his prize. Having some
+skill on the violin himself, he resolved to teach him that instrument;
+and as soon as he could hold it, put one into his hands, and made him
+sit beside him from, morning to night, and practise it. The incessant
+drudgery which he compelled him to undergo, and the occasional
+starvation to which he subjected him, seriously impaired his health,
+and, as Paganini himself asserts, laid the foundation of that
+valetudinarian state which has ever since been his portion, and which
+his pale, sickly countenance, and his sunk and exhausted frame so
+strongly attest. As his enthusiasm was such as to require no artificial
+stimulus, this severe system could only have been a piece of cool and
+wanton barbarity. He already began to show much promise of excellence,
+when a circumstance occurred which not only served to confirm these
+early prognostications, but to rouse him to exert all his energies.
+This was no other than a dream of his mother, Theresa. An angel appeared
+to her; she besought him to make her Nicolo a great violin player; he
+gave her a token of consent;--and the effect which this dream had upon
+all concerned, we sober-minded people can have no idea of. Young
+Paganini redoubled his perseverance. In his eighth year, under the
+superintendence of his father, he had written a sonata, which, however,
+along with many other juvenile productions, he lately destroyed; and
+as he played about three times a week in the churches and at private
+musical parties, upon a fiddle nearly as large as himself, he soon began
+to make himself known among his townsmen. At this time he received much
+benefit from one Francesco Gnecco, who died in 1811, and whom he always
+speaks highly of.
+
+In his ninth year, being applied to by a travelling singer to join him
+in a concert, he made his first public appearance in the great theatre
+at Genoa, and played the French air "La Carmagnole," with his own
+variations, with great applause.
+
+His father now resolved to place him under the tuition of the well-known
+composer, Rolla, and for that purpose took him along with him to Parma.
+The particulars of their interview afford a striking proof of the
+proficiency which he had by this time acquired. As Rolla happened to be
+ill and lying in bed, the party were shown into the ante-chamber, when,
+observing upon the table one of the composer's newest concertos, the
+father beckoned to his son to take up his violin and play it, which he
+did at sight, in such a way that the sick man immediately started up,
+demanded who it was, and could scarcely be prevailed upon to believe
+that the sounds had proceeded from a little boy, and his intended pupil;
+but as soon as he had satisfied himself that that was really the case,
+he declined to receive him. "For God's sake," said he, "go to Paer, your
+time would be lost with me, I can do nothing for you."
+
+To Paer accordingly they went, who received him kindly, and referred
+him to his own teacher, the old and experienced "Maestro di Capella"
+Giretti, from Naples, who gave him instructions for six months, three
+times a-week in counterpoint. During this period he wrote twenty-four
+Fugues for four hands, with pen, ink, and paper alone, and without any
+instrument, which his master did not allow him, and, assisted by his own
+inclination, made rapid progress. The great Paer also took much interest
+in him, giving him compositions to work out, which he himself revised:
+an interest for which Paganini ever afterwards showed himself deeply
+grateful.
+
+The time was now come when Nicolo was destined, like other youthful
+prodigies, to be hawked about the country, to fill the pockets of his
+mercenary father, who managed to speculate upon him with considerable
+success in Milan, Bologna, Florence, Pisa, Leghorn, and most of the
+upper and central towns of Italy, where his concerts were always well
+attended. Young Paganini liked these excursions well enough, but being
+now about fifteen years of age, he began to be of opinion that they
+would be still more agreeable if he could only contrive to get rid of
+the old gentleman, whose spare diet and severe discipline had now become
+more irksome to him than ever. To accomplish this desirable object, an
+opportunity soon offered. It was the custom of Lucca, at the feast of
+St. Martin, to hold a great musical festival, to which strangers were
+invited from all quarters, and numerous travellers resorted of their own
+accord; and as the occasion drew near, Nicolo begged hard to be allowed
+to go there in company with his elder brother, and after much entreaty,
+succeeded in obtaining permission. He made his appearance as a solo
+player, and succeeded so well, that he resolved now to commence
+vagabondizing on his own account--a sort of life to which he soon
+became so partial, that, notwithstanding many handsome offers which
+he occasionally received to establish himself in several places,
+as a concerto player or director of the orchestra, he never could be
+persuaded to settle any where. At a later period, however, he lived for
+some time at the court of Lucca, but soon found it more pleasant and
+profitable to resume his itinerant habits. He visited all parts of
+Italy, but usually made Genoa his head-quarters, where, however, he
+preferred to play the part of the dilletante to that of the virtuoso,
+and performed in private circles without giving public concerts.
+
+It was not long before he had amassed about 20,000 francs, part of which
+he proposed to devote to the maintenance of his parents. His father,
+however, was not to be put off with a few thousands, but insisted upon
+the whole.--Paganini then offered him the interest of the capital, but
+Signor Antonio very coolly threatened him with instant death unless he
+agreed to consign the whole of the principal in his behalf; and in order
+to avert serious consequences, and to procure peace, he gave up the
+greater part of it.
+
+It was early in 1828 when Paganini arrived at Vienna, where he gave
+a great many concerts with a success equal, if not superior, to any
+which had hitherto attended his exertions. His performance excited the
+admiration and astonishment of all the most distinguished professors and
+connoisseurs of this critical city. With any of the former all idea of
+competition was hopeless; and their greatest violinist, Mayseder, as
+soon as he had heard him, with an ingenuousness which did him honour,
+as we ourselves have reason to know, wrote to a friend in London, that
+he might now lock up his violin whenever he liked.
+
+In estimating the labour which it must have cost a performer like
+Paganini to have arrived at such transcendent excellence, people are
+often apt to err in their calculations as to the actual extent of
+time and practice which has been devoted to its acquisition. That the
+perfect knowledge of the _mechanique_ of the instrument which his
+performance exhibits, and his almost incredible skill and dexterity
+in its management must necessarily have been the result of severe
+discipline, is beyond all question; but more, much more, in every case
+of this kind, is to be ascribed to the system upon which that discipline
+has proceeded, and to the genius and enthusiasm of the artist. The
+miraculous powers of Paganini in the opinion of his auditors were not
+to be accounted for in the ordinary way. To them, it was plain that they
+must have sprung from a life of a much more settled and secluded cast
+than that of an itinerant Italian musical professor. It was equally
+clear, from his wild, haggard, and mysterious looks, that he was no
+ordinary personage, and had seen no common vicissitudes. The vaults of
+a dungeon accordingly were the local habitation which public rumour, in
+its love of the marvellous, seemed unanimously to assign to him, as the
+only place where "the mighty magic" of his bow could possibly have been
+acquired. Then, as to the delinquency which led to his incarceration,
+there were various accounts: some imputed it to his having been a
+captain of banditti; others, only a carbonaro; some to his having killed
+a man in a duel; but the more current and generally received story was,
+that he had stabbed or poisoned his wife, or, as some said, his
+mistress; although, as fame had ascribed to him no fewer than four
+mistresses, it was never very clearly made out which of his seraglio it
+was who had fallen the victim of his vengeance. The story not improbably
+might have arisen from his having been confounded with a contemporary
+violin-player of the name of Duranowski, a Pole, to whom in person he
+bore some resemblance, and who, for some offence or other having been
+imprisoned at Milan, during the leisure which his captivity afforded,
+had contrived greatly to improve himself in his art; and when once
+it was embodied into shape, the fiction naturally enough might have
+obtained the more credence, from the fact that two of his most
+distinguished predecessors, Tartini and Lolly, had attained to the great
+mastery which they possessed over their instrument during a period of
+solitude--the one within the walls of a cloister, the other in the
+privacy and retirement of a remote country village. At all events, the
+rumours were universally circulated and believed, and the innocent and
+much injured Paganini had for many years unconsciously stood forth in
+the eyes of the world as a violator of the laws, and even a convicted
+murderer--not improbably, to a certain extent, reaping the golden fruits
+of that "bad eminence;" for public performers, as we too often see, who
+have once lost their "good name," so far from finding themselves, in the
+words of Iago, "poor indeed," generally discover that they have only
+become objects of greater interest and attraction. How long he had lived
+in the enjoyment of this supposed infamy, and all the benefits accruing
+from it, we really cannot pretend to say; but he seems never to have
+been made fully aware of the formidable position in which he stood until
+he had reached Vienna, when the Theatrical Gazette, in reviewing his
+first concert, dropped some pretty broad hints as to the rumoured
+misdeeds of his early life. Whereupon he resolved at once publicly to
+proclaim his innocence, and to put down the calumny; for which purpose,
+on the 10th of April, 1828, there was inserted in the leading Vienna
+journals a manifesto, in Italian as well as German, subscribed by him,
+declaring that all these widely-circulated rumours were false; that at
+no time, and under no government whatever, had he ever offended against
+the laws, or been put under coercion; and that he had always demeaned
+himself as became a peaceable and inoffensive member of society; for the
+truth of which he referred to the magistracies of the different states
+under whose protection he had till then lived in the public exercise of
+his profession.
+
+The truth of this appeal (which it is obvious no delinquent would have
+dared to make) was never called in question, no one ever ventured to
+take up the gauntlet which Paganini had thrown down, and his character
+as a man thenceforward stood free from suspicion.
+
+His whimsicalities, his love of fun, and many other points of his
+character, are sometimes curiously exemplified in his fantasias. He
+imitates in perfection the whistling and chirrupping of birds, the
+tinkling and tolling of bells, and almost every variety of tone which
+admits of being produced; and in his performance of _Le Streghe_
+(The Witches) a favourite interlude of his, where the tremulous voices
+of the old women are given with a truly singular and laughable effect,
+his _vis comica_ finds peculiar scope.
+
+His command of the back-string of the instrument has always been an
+especial theme of wonder and admiration, and, in the opinion of some,
+could only be accounted for by resorting to the theory of the dungeon,
+and the supposition that his other strings being worn out, and not
+having it in his power to supply their places, he had been forced from
+necessity to take refuge in the string in question; a notion very like
+that of a person who would assert, that for an opera dancer to learn to
+stand on one leg, the true way would be--to have only one leg to stand
+upon. We shall give Paganini's explanation of this mystery in his own
+words:
+
+"At Lucca, I had always to direct the opera when the reigning family
+visited the theatre; I played three times a week at the court, and every
+fortnight superintended the arrangement of a grand concert for the court
+parties, which, however, the reigning princess, Elisa Bacciochi Princess
+of Lucca and Piombino, Napoleon's favourite sister, was not always
+present at, or did not hear to the close, as the harmonic tones of
+my violin were apt to grate her nerves, but there never failed to be
+present another much esteemed lady, who, while I had long admired
+her, bore (at least so I imagined) a reciprocal feeling towards me.
+Our passion gradually increased; and as it was necessary to keep it
+concealed, the footing on which we stood with each other became in
+consequence the more interesting. One day I promised to surprise her
+with a musical _jeu d'esprit_, which should have a reference to
+our mutual attachment. I accordingly announced for performance a comic
+novelty, to which I gave the name of 'Love Scene.' All were curiously
+impatient to know what this should turn out to be, when at last I
+appeared with my violin, from which I had taken off the two middle
+strings, leaving only the E and the G string. By the first of these
+I proposed to represent the lady, by the other the gentleman; and I
+proceeded to play a sort of dialogue, in which I attempted to delineate
+the capricious quarrels and reconciliations of lovers--at one time
+scolding each other, at another sighing and making tender advances,
+renewing their professions of love and esteem, and finally winding up
+the scene in the utmost good humour and delight. Having at last brought
+them into a state of the most perfect harmony, the united pair lead off
+a _pas de deux_, concluding with a brilliant finale. This musical
+scena went off with much eclat. The lady, who understood the whole
+perfectly, rewarded me with her gracious looks; the princess was all
+kindness, overwhelmed me with applause, and, after complimenting me upon
+what I had been able to effect upon the two strings, expressed a wish to
+hear what I could execute upon one string. I immediately assented--the
+idea caught my fancy; and as the emperor's birthday took place a. few
+weeks afterwards, I composed my Sonata 'Napoleon' for the G. string, and
+performed it upon that day before the court with so much approbation
+that a cantata of Cimarosa, following immediately alter it upon the same
+evening, was completely extinguished, and produced no effect whatever.
+This is the first and true cause of my partiality for the G. string; and
+as they were always desiring to hear more of it, one day taught another,
+until at last my proficiency in this department was completely
+established."
+
+We know no one who has been more cruelly misrepresented than the
+subject of this notice. In reality a person of the gentlest and most
+inoffensive habits, he is any thing rather than the desperate ruffian
+he has been described. In his demeanour he is modest and unassuming;
+in his disposition, liberal and generous to a fault. Like most artists,
+ardent and enthusiastic in his temperament, and in his actions very much
+a creature of impulse; he is full of that unaffected simplicity which we
+almost invariably find associated with true genius. He has an only son,
+by a Signora Antonia Bianchi, a singer from Palermo, with whom he lived
+for several years until the summer of 1828, when he was under the
+necessity of separating from her in consequence of the extreme violence
+of her temper; and in this little boy all his affections are
+concentrated. He is a very precocious child, and already indicates
+strong signs of musical talent. Being of a delicate frame of health,
+Paganini never can bear to trust him out of his sight. "If I were to
+lose him," says he, "I would be lost myself; it is quite impossible I
+can ever separate myself from him; when I awake in the night, he is my
+first thought."--Accordingly, ever since he parted from his mother, he
+has himself enacted the part of the child's nurse.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Why is Mr. Whitbread in his brewery like the Jerusalem coffee-house?
+Because _He-brews_ drink therein.
+
+W.G.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NATURALIST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE SUSTILLO.
+
+A caterpillar, which the Indians name sustillo, and by which a paper
+is fabricated, very similar to that made in China, is bred in the pacae,
+a tree well known in Peru. In proportion to the vigour and majestic
+growth of this tree, is the number of the insects it nourishes, and
+which are of the kind and size of the bombyx, or silk-worm. When they
+are completely satiated, they unite at the body of the tree, seeking the
+part which is best adapted to the extension they have to take. They then
+form, with the greatest symmetry and regularity, a web which is larger
+or smaller, according to the number of the operators; and more or less
+pliant, according to the quality of the leaf by which they have been
+nourished, the whole of them remaining beneath. This envelope, on which
+they bestow such a texture, consistency, and lustre, that it cannot be
+decomposed by any practicable expedient, having been finished, they
+all of them unite, and ranging themselves in vertical and even files,
+form in the centre a perfect square. Being thus disposed, each of them
+makes its cocoon, or pod, of a coarse and short silk, in which it is
+transformed from the grub into the chrysalis, and from the chrysalis
+into the papilio, or moth. In proportion as they afterwards quit their
+confinement, to take wing, they detach wherever it is most convenient
+to them, their envelope, or web, a portion of which remains suspended
+to the trunk of the tree, where it waves to and fro like a streamer,
+and which becomes more or less white, according as the air and humidity
+of the season and situation admit. This natural silk paper has been
+gathered measuring a yard and a half, of an elliptical shape, which
+is peculiar to all of it.
+
+W.G.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DESCRIPTION OF A BEAUTIFUL TREE.
+
+_By John F.M. Dovaston, Esq. A.M., of Westfelton, near Shrewsbury._
+
+
+ "_Hamlet._ Do you see nothing there?
+ _Queen._ Nothing at all; yet all that is I see."
+ _Hamlet._
+
+ "You cannot see the wood for trees."
+ _Ray's Proverbs._
+
+
+It was now the middle of May; the trees had fully put forth their
+bright, fresh leaves, and the green fields were luxuriant in a profusion
+of flowers. We had travelled through a fine country; when, descending
+the slope of a wooded valley, we were struck with delight and admiration
+at a tree of extraordinary appearance. There were several of the sort,
+dispersed singly, and in groups over the plains and grassy knolls. One
+we shall attempt to describe, though well aware how feeble is the most
+florid description to depict an idea of so magnificent an object. In
+height it exceeded 50 ft., the diameter of its shade was nearly 90 ft.,
+and the circumference of the bole 15 ft.: it was in full leaf and
+flower, and in appearance at once united the features of strength,
+majesty, and beauty; having the stateliness of the oak, in its trunk and
+arms; the density of the sycamore, in its dark, deep, massy foliage;
+and the graceful featheriness of the ash, in its waving branches, that
+dangled in rich tresses almost to the ground. Its general character as
+a tree was rich and varied, nor were its parts less attractive by their
+extreme beauty when separately considered. Each leaf was about 18 in. in
+length; but nature, always attentive to elegance, to obviate heaviness,
+had at the end of a very strong leaf-stalk divided it into five, and
+sometimes seven, leafits, of unequal length, and very long oval shape,
+finely serrated. These leafits were disposed in a circular form,
+radiating from the centre, like the leaves of the fan palm, though
+placed in a contrary plane to those of that magnificent ornament of the
+tropical forests. The central, or lower, leafits were the largest, each
+of them being 10 in. in length, and 4 in. in breadth, and the whole
+exterior of the foliage being disposed in an imbricated form, having a
+beautifully light and palmated appearance. The flowers, in which the
+tree was profuse, demand our deep admiration and attention: each group
+of them rose perpendicularly from the end of the young shoot, and was in
+length 14 in., like a gigantic hyacinth, and quite as beautiful, spiked
+to a point, exhibiting a cone or pyramid of flowers, widely separate on
+all sides, and all expanded together, principally white, finely tinted
+with various colours, as red, pink, yellow, and buff, the stamina
+forming a most elegant fringe amid the modest tints of the large and
+copious petals. These feathery blossoms, lovely in colours and stately
+in shape, stood upright on every branch all over the tree, like flowery
+minarets on innumerable verdant turrets. We had thus the opportunity of
+ascertaining that it belonged to that class of Linnaeus consisting
+entirely of rare plants the Heptándria, and the order Monogynia; the
+natural order Trihilàtae; and the _A'_cera of Jussieu.
+
+The natives informed us that the fruit ripens early in autumn, and
+consists of bunches of apples, thinly beset with sharp thorns, each when
+broken producing one or two large kernels, about 2 in. in circumference,
+of the finest bright mahogany colour without, and white within; that the
+tree is deciduous, and just before its fall changes to the finest tints
+of red, yellow, orange, and brown. When divested of its luxuriant
+foliage, the buds of the next year appear like little spears, which
+through the winter are covered with a fine glutinous gum, evidently
+designed to protect the embryo shoots within, as an hybernaculum, from
+the severe frosts of the climate, and which glisten in the cold sunshine
+like diamonds. It has the strange property of performing the whole of
+its vigorous shoot, nearly a yard long, in the short space of three
+weeks, employing all the rest of the year in converting it into wood,
+adding to its strength, and varying its beauty. The wood when sawn is
+of the finest snowy whiteness. The tree is easily raised; indifferent
+as to soil, climate, or situation; removed with safety, of quick growth,
+thrives to a vast age and size; subject to no blight or disease; in the
+earliest spring bursting its immense buds into that vigour, exuberance,
+and beauty, which we have here feebly attempted to describe. The natives
+said it was originally brought from the east of Asia, but grows freely
+in any climate, and in their tongue its name is designated by a
+combination of three words, signifying separately, a noble animal,
+an elegant game, and a luscious kernel. Had Linnaeus seen this tree,
+he would have assuredly contemplated it with delightful ecstacy, and
+named it the _Ae'_sculus Hippocástanum.--_Magazine of Natural
+History._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CIGAR-SMOKING.
+
+The Surgeon-General of the Forces has recently made public his
+belief, that never, till within the last twenty years, did he see so
+many young men with pale faces and emaciated figures, and he attributes
+the existence of the evil to the use of Cigars. The unreflecting
+servility with which men adopt new and foreign practices, is fully
+exemplified in the present case; for it is notorious that the practice
+of cigar-smoking, the modern foppery from Regent-street to Cheapside and
+Cornhill, was an importation of the Peninsular War; the imitation having
+been begun by the Spaniards, whose models are what are usually called
+the _savages_ of America. The dietetic mischief, and consequent
+paleness of complexion and emaciation of muscle, which are attributable
+to the use of cigars, belong, no doubt, to an injury inflicted, perhaps,
+in more ways than one upon the aids and organs of digestion; nor is
+that hypothesis at all inconsistent with what we hear from so many
+cigar-smokers, namely, that their cigar is their dependence for
+digestion! That, after having impaired the organ, or weakened its tone,
+or dried up the salival menstruum, they should need a stimulant, even in
+the very form of the bane which injures them, is only of a piece with
+all that has been said of drinking, and especially of dram-drinking,
+with which latter debauch, the debauch of cigar-smoking has the closest
+possible alliance. We never pass one of those stifling rendezvous in the
+metropolis--a cigar-shop, open till the latest hours--without mentally
+classing it with the gin-shops, its only compeers!
+
+Exclusive of the low habit of imitation, a dulness and feebleness of
+understanding, an absence of intellectual resources, a vacuity of
+thought is the great inducement to the use of this, as of all other
+drugs, whether from the cigar-shop, or the snuff-shop, or the gin-shop,
+or the wine-cellar; a truth by no means the less certain, because it
+happens that men of the highest powers of mind are drawn into the vice,
+and made to reduce themselves, by their adoption and dependence upon it,
+to the lowest level of the vulgar; but, at the same time, it is not to
+be denied, that a great support in defence of cigar-smoking is found in
+the medical opinions sometimes advanced as to its salutary influence.
+Now, if we admit, broadly and at once, that there may be times and
+circumstances in which the inhaling the hot smoke of a powerful narcotic
+drug is useful to the human body, must it follow that the habitual
+resort to such a practice, and this under all circumstances, is useful
+also, and even free from the most serious inconveniences?
+
+It is the admitted maxim, that if smoking is accompanied by spitting,
+injury results to the smoker; and the reason assigned is, that the
+salival fluid, which should assist digestion, is in this manner
+dissipated, and taken from its office. But may not the habitual
+application of the narcotic influence to the nervous system have its
+evils also? May it not weaken or deaden the nervous and muscular action
+which is needful to digestion? And may not even the excessive quantity
+of the matter of heat, thus artificially conveyed into the body, tend to
+a desiccation of the system, as injurious under general circumstances,
+as it may be beneficial under particular ones?
+
+Smoking invites thirst; and there is little risk in advancing, that
+whatever superinduces an unnatural indulgence in the use of liquids is
+itself, and without farther question, injurious, even if the liquids
+resorted to are of the most innocent description; but, in point of fact,
+the cigar-smoker will usually appease his thirst by means of liquors in
+themselves his enemies!
+
+It is said, however, that the use of cigars is beneficial when we find
+ourselves in marshy situations, with a high temperature, and generally,
+whenever the atmosphere inclines to the introduction of putridity and
+fever into the system. We believe this; and perhaps a useful theory of
+the alternate benefit and mischief of cigar-smoking may be offered upon
+the basis of that proposition. When and wherever the body requires to
+be _dried_, cigar-smoking may be salutary; and when and wherever
+that _drying_, or desiccation, is injurious, then and there
+cigar-smoking may be to be shunned. We know that, while surrounded by
+an atmosphere overcharged, or even only saturated with moisture, moist
+bodies remain moist, or do not part with that excess of moisture from
+which a drier atmosphere would relieve them; and that living bodies,
+so circumstanced, are threatened with typhus and typhoid fever. It is
+highly probable, therefore, that narcotics, in such cases, may allay
+a morbid irritability of the nerves, or effect a salutary diminution
+of healthful sensibility; under such circumstances, the desiccating
+and sedative effects of tobacco-smoking may prove beneficial; while,
+in all ordinary states of the system and of the atmosphere, the
+same desiccative and sedative influences may produce immediate evil
+consequences, more or less readily perceptible, and undermine, however
+gradually, the strength of the constitution.--_United Service
+Journal._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE NEW COINAGE.
+
+Why does not some man of public research enlighten the public on the
+proceedings at the Mint? The whole system is as little comprehensible
+by the uninitiated as the philosopher's stone. The cost of the Mint is
+prodigious--the machinery is all that machinery can be; yet we have one
+of the ugliest coinages of any nation of Europe. A new issue of coin is
+about to be commenced.
+
+"It appears, from the king's proclamation, that the new coinage
+will consist of double sovereigns, to be each of the value of 40s.;
+sovereigns, each of 20s.; and half-sovereigns, 10s. silver crowns,
+half-crowns, shillings, and sixpences. The double-sovereigns have for
+the obverse the king's effigy, with the inscription, 'Gulielmus IIII.
+D.G. Britanniarum Rex. F.D.;' and for the reverse, the ensigns armorial
+of the United Kingdom contained in a shield, encircled by the collar of
+the Order of the Garter, and upon the edge of the piece the words 'Decus
+et Tutamen.' The crowns and half-crowns will be similar. The shilling
+has on the reverse the words 'One Shilling,' placed in the centre of
+the piece, within a wreath, having an olive-branch on one side, and an
+oak-branch on the other; and the sixpences have the same, except the
+word 'Sixpence' instead of the words 'One Shilling.' The coppers will
+be nearly as at present."
+
+Now we must observe, what the master of the Mint and the people about
+him ought to have observed before, that there is in the first instance
+a considerable expense incurred in the coinage of the double-sovereigns,
+without any possible object, except the expense itself may be an object,
+which is not impossible. We shall have in this coin one of the most
+clumsy and useless matters of circulation that could be devised. The
+present sovereign answers every purpose that this clumsy coin can be
+required for, and even the single sovereign would be a much more
+convenient coin for circulation if it were divided, as every one knows
+who knows the trouble of getting change. The half-sovereign is in fact
+a much more convenient coin. But on this clumsy coin we must have a
+_Latin_ inscription, as if it were intended only for the society of
+antiquaries, or to be laid up in cabinets, which we acknowledge would be
+most likely its fate, except for the notorious bad taste of the British
+coinage. Of much use it is to an English public to have the classical
+phraseology of Gulielmus Britanniarum Rex, put in place of the national
+language. Then too we must have the collar of the Order of the Garter
+to encircle the national arms, of which this Order is nonsensically
+pronounced "Decus et Tutamen." The Glory and Protection. The Order of
+the Garter the _glory and protection_ of England! We are content to
+let this absurdity stay in Latin or Sanscrit; English would be shamed by
+it. The Order of the Garter which goes round the knee of any man, who
+comes with the minister's fiat on the subject, and which has no more
+relation to British glory or British defence than the Order of the Blue
+Button or the Yellow frog of his majesty the Emperor of China; and this
+is to go forth on our national gold coin! and for fear that the folly
+would not be sufficiently spread, it is to be stamped on our crowns and
+half-crowns! The shillings and sixpences luckily escape: plain English
+will do for them. And all this goes on from year to year, while we have
+in the example of France a model of what a mint ought to be. Every
+foreigner makes purchases at the French mint; and the series of national
+medals executed there is a public honour and a public profit too. But
+whoever thinks of purchasing English mintage except for bullion?--With a
+history full of the most stirring events, we have not a single medallic
+series--we have scarcely a single medal. But we have in lieu of those
+vanities a master of the mint, who is tost new into the office on every
+change of party, who has probably in the whole course of his life never
+known the difference between gold and silver but by their value in
+sovereigns and shillings; but who, in the worst of times, shows his
+patriotism by receiving a salary of no less than five thousand pounds
+a year?
+
+_Monthly Magazine._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+HYDROSTATICS AND PNEUMATICS.
+
+(_Cabinet Cyclopaedia_, vol. xvii.)
+
+
+_Easier to swim in the Sea than in a River_.
+
+Sea water has a greater buoyancy than fresh water, being relatively
+heavier; and hence it is commonly said to be much easier to swim in
+the sea than in a river: this effect, however, appears to be greatly
+exaggerated. A cubic foot of freshwater weighs about 1,000 ounces; and
+the same bulk of sea water weighs 1,028 ounces; the weight, therefore,
+of the latter exceeds the former by only 28 parts in 1,000. The force
+exerted by sea water to support the body exceeds that exerted by fresh
+water by about one thirty-sixth part of the whole force of the
+latter.--_By Dr. Lardner._
+
+
+_Ice lighter than Water_.
+
+It is known that in the process of congelation, water undergoes a
+considerable increase of bulk; thus a quantity of water, which at
+the temperature of 40 deg. measures a cubic inch, will have a greater
+magnitude when it assumes the form of ice at the temperature of 32 deg.
+Consequently ice is, bulk for bulk, lighter than water. Hence it is
+that ice is always observed to collect and float at the surface.--A
+remarkable effect produced by the buoyancy of ice in water is observable
+in some of the great rivers in America. Ice collects round stones at the
+bottom of the river, and it is sometimes formed in such a quantity that
+the upward pressure by its buoyancy exceeds the weight of the stone
+round which it is collected--consequently it raises the stone to the
+surface. Large masses of stone are thus observed floating down the river
+at considerable distances from the places of their formation.--_Ibid_.
+
+
+_Domestic Use of the Hydrometer_.
+
+The adulteration of milk by water may always be detected by the
+hydrometer, and in this respect it may be a useful appendage to
+household utensils. Pure milk has a greater specific gravity than
+water, being 103, that of water being 100. A very small proportion of
+water mixed with milk will produce a liquid specifically lighter than
+water.--Although the hydrometer is seldom applied to domestic uses,
+yet it might be used for many ordinary purposes which could scarcely
+be attained by any other means. The slightest adulteration of spirits,
+or any other liquid of known quality, may be instantly detected by it;
+and it is recommended by its cheapness, the great facility of its
+manipulation, and the simplicity of its results.--_Ibid._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER.
+
+ A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.
+ SHAKSPEARE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The late Lord Clonmel, who never thought of demanding more than a
+shilling for an affidavit, used to be well satisfied provided it was a
+good one. In his time the Birmingham shillings were current, and he used
+the following extraordinary precaution to avoid being imposed upon by
+taking a bad one:--"You shall true answer make to such questions as
+shall be demanded of you touching this affidavit, so help you God.
+Is this a good shilling?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SCRAPS.
+
+The _Court Journal_, describing a Study in Windsor Castle,
+says--"The first of a series in the plain _English_ style. The
+ceiling is white, with a cornice of simple _Grecian_ design!"
+
+According to a recent traveller, fat sheep are so plentiful in the
+Brazils that they are used as _fuel_ to feed their lime-kilns.
+
+Supposing the productive power of wheat to be only six-fold, the produce
+of a single acre would cover the whole surface of the globe in fourteen
+years.
+
+A Philadelphia Paper announces the arrival of the Siamese Twins in that
+city, in the following manner:--"_One_ of the Siamese twins arrived
+here on Monday last, accompanied by his brother."
+
+The term Husting, or Hustings, as applied to the scaffold erected at
+elections, from which candidates address the electors, is derived from
+the Court of Husting, of Saxon origin, and the most ancient in the
+kingdom. Its name is a compound of _hers_ and _ding_; the former
+implying a house, and the latter a thing, cause, suit, or plea; whereby
+it is manifest that _husding_ imports a house or hall, wherein causes
+are heard and determined; which is further evinced by the Saxon _dingere_,
+or _thingere_, an advocate, or lawyer. [_Hus_ and _thing_ (thong)
+a place enclosed, a building roped round.]--_Atlas._
+
+Segrais says, that when Louis XIV. was about seventeen years of age, he
+followed him and his brother, the Duke of Orleans, out of the playhouse,
+and that he heard the duke ask the king what he thought of the play they
+had just been seeing, and which had been well received by the audience:
+"Brother, (replied Louis,) do not you know that I never pretend to give
+my opinion on any thing that I do not perfectly understand."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ELECTIONEERING ADVICE.
+
+Among the curious _Autograph Letters_, at Sotheby's late sale,
+there was a curious one of _Sarah_, Duchess of Marlborough, dated
+August 16th, 1740, viz. A canvassing letter in favour of two Members for
+Reading; with the following electioneering advice:--"_Nothing but a
+good Parliament can save England next Session; they are both very honest
+men, and will never give a vote to a Placeman or a Pensioner._"
+
+P.T.W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE NATIONAL DEBT.
+
+George the Third came to the throne in 1760, and found the national debt
+120 millions; he reigned 59 years, and left the national debt 820
+millions, 700 millions more than at his accession, increasing on the
+whole period about 36 thousand per day, or nearly 23 pounds per minute.
+At the beginning of his reign the taxes amounted annually to 6 millions;
+at the ending 60 millions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PLURALITIES.
+
+In the year 1238, it was agreed in an assembly of divines at Paris,
+that none could without forfeiture of eternal happiness, possess two
+benefices at the same time; one being worth fifteen livres Parisis,
+each about 2s. 6d. sterling.
+
+N.B. There does not appear to be any such decision by any assembly of
+divines in England, at least not since the reformation.
+
+G.K.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+COMPUNCTIOUS VISITINGS.
+
+It is said of a certain physician that he never passed the churchyard of
+the place where he resided, without pulling forth his handkerchief from
+his pocket, and hiding his face with it. Upon this circumstance being
+noticed by an acquaintance, he apologized for it by saying, "You will
+recollect, sir, what a number of people there are who have found their
+way hither under my directions. Now, I am always apprehensive lest some
+of them recognising my features should lay hold of me, and oblige me to
+take up my lodging along with them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+IMPROMPTU ON THE BURIAL OF SHUTER, THE ACTOR.
+
+
+ Alas! poor Ned!
+ He's now in bed,
+ Who seldom was before;
+ The revel rout,
+ The midnight shout,
+ Shall never know him more.
+
+ Entomb'd in clay,
+ Here let him lay,
+ And silence ev'ry jest;
+ For life's poor play
+ Has past away,
+ And here he sleeps in rest.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_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 12676 ***
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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
+<title>The Mirror of Literature, Issue 490.</title>
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12676 ***</div>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page337" name="page337"></a>[pg 337]</span>
+ <h1>THE MIRROR<br />
+ OF<br />
+ LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.</h1>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <table width="100%" summary="Banner">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left"><b>VOL. XVII, NO. 490.]</b></td>
+ <td align="center"><b>SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1831.</b></td>
+ <td align="right"><b>[PRICE 2d.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+<div class="figure" style="width: 100%;">
+<a href="images/490-1.png"><img width="100%" src="images/490-1.png"
+alt="Old House in Southwark." /></a>
+OLD HOUSE IN SOUTHWARK.
+</div>
+<p>
+This crazy, but not unpicturesque building, was taken down in the autumn
+of last year, in forming an approach to the New London Bridge. It stood
+on the eastern side of the High-street, and is worthy of record among
+the pleasing relics of antiquity, which it has ever been the object of
+<i>The Mirror</i> to rescue from oblivion. Its style of architecture&mdash;that of
+the seventh Henry&mdash;is interesting: there is a florid picturesqueness in
+the carvings on the fronts of the first and second stories, and probably
+this ornament extended originally to the uppermost stories, which had
+subsequently been covered with plaster.
+</p>
+<p>
+We remember the house for the last twenty years, but cannot trace this
+or any other alteration in its front. The windows, it will be seen, are
+of different periods, those on the right-hand second
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page338" name="page338"></a>[pg 338]</span>
+and the left-hand
+third floor being of the oldest date.
+</p>
+<p>
+Apart from these attractions, and as a specimen of the olden domestic
+architecture of the metropolis, the annexed Cut bears an historic
+interest, in its having been the residence of the ill-starred Anne
+Boleyn, queen of Henry the Eighth. The interior was in palatial style,
+having been elaborately finished; and in one of the apartments, we learn
+that the royal arms were very conspicuous.
+</p>
+<p>
+In early times, Southwark was one of the most celebrated of the
+metropolitan suburbs; and it is much to be regretted that the liberality
+of our times has not encouraged the production of its ancient history.
+Every one at all familiar with London is aware of the antiquity of St.
+Saviour's Church, the original foundation of which was from the profits
+of a ferry over the Thames, whence its original name, St. Mary Overy, or
+"over the ferry." This was some time before the Conquest; but the church
+was principally rebuilt in the fourteenth century. We have spoken of its
+ancient fame elsewhere.<a id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a> Bankside, its name in spiritual and secular
+story, is likewise of some note. The early Bishops of Winchester had a
+palace and <i>park</i> here; remains of the former were laid open by a
+fire about seventeen years since. Then, who does not remember, in the
+love of sports and pastimes, the bull and bear-baiting theatres, and
+the uncouth glory of the Globe theatre, associated with the poet of all
+time&mdash;Shakspeare. Southwark was, therefore, a fitting site for a royal
+palace for occasional retirement, and its contiguity to the Thames must
+have enhanced its pleasantness.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Benger, in her agreeable <i>Memoirs of Anne Boleyn</i>, does not
+mention the Queen's abode in Southwark; but the date of the architecture
+of the annexed house, and its closer identification with Queen
+Elizabeth, render the first mentioned circumstance by no means
+improbable. Previous to the marriage of Anne Boleyn, we learn that Henry
+passed not a few of his leisure hours "in the delightful society of Anne
+Boleyn." "Every day they met and spent many hours in riding or walking
+together." Her family at this time resided at Durham House, on the site
+of the Adelphi, and Anne frequently made excursions with Henry in the
+vicinity of London.
+</p>
+<p>
+Of the antiquity of this district we could quote more proofs. The
+<i>galleried</i> inn-yards, and among them that at which the Pilgrims
+sojourned on their road to Canterbury, are among them. In our last
+volume too, at page 160, we engraved an ancient Vault in Tooley-street,
+the remains of the "great house, builded of stone, with arched gates,
+which pertained to the Prior of Lewis, in Sussex, and was his lodging
+when he came to London." Not far from this was "another great House of
+Stone and Timber," which, in the thirteenth century, was held of John,
+"Earl Warren, by the Abbot of St. Augustins, at Canterbury." Stowe
+says&mdash;"It was an ancient piece of worke, and seemeth to be one of the
+first builded houses on that side of the river, over against the city:
+it was called the Abbot's Inne of St. Augustine in Southwark."
+</p>
+<p>
+There was also another "Inne" near this spot, which belonged to the
+Abbey of Battle, in Sussex, and formed the town residence of its Abbots.
+This stood on the banks of the Thames, between the Bridge House and
+Battle Bridge, which was so called, "for that it standeth on the ground,
+and over a water-course (flowing out of Thames) pertayning to that
+Abbey, and was therefore both builded and repayred by the Abbots of that
+house, as being hard adjoyning to the Abbot's lodging." Its situation
+is known by the landing-place called Battle Stairs. On the opposite
+side of Tooley-street is a low neighbourhood of meanly-built streets
+and passages, still denominated the Maze, from the intricacies of a
+labyrinth in the gardens of the Abbot of Battle's Inn, and which fronted
+its entrance-gate.
+</p>
+<p>
+With these few quotations of the ancient importance of Southwark, we can
+but repeat our regret that no regular history of this district has yet
+been published. There are three or four gentlemen resident there, whose
+antiquarian attainments highly qualify them for the task. The public
+would surely find them patronage.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Engraving is from an original sketch by an ingenious Correspondent,
+M.P. of Upton, near Windsor, whom we thank for this specimen of good
+taste. We are always happy to receive antiquarian illustrations of our
+Metropolis, and in this instance the zeal of the artist, who resides
+twenty miles distant, deserves special mention.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page339" name="page339"></a>[pg 339]</span>
+</p>
+<h3>
+ PARLIAMENT.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>For the Mirror.</i>)
+</center>
+<p>
+The following particulars, which have been gleaned from several
+sources, relating to the British Parliament, may be acceptable at the
+present time, when the English people are in hopes of a renovation of
+that Constitution which has been, and will still continue to be, the
+admiration of the civilized world:&mdash;The word Parliament was first
+used in 1265; and the Commons were admitted at this time, though not
+regularly represented. The parliament called at Shrewsbury, in 1283,
+by Edward I., was the first to which cities and towns were summoned to
+send representatives. It was also the first that granted aids towards
+the national defence of the three denominations of knights, citizens,
+and burgesses, as well as by the lords spiritual and temporal. In this
+parliament the representatives sat in a separate chamber from the barons
+and knights. The Commons consisted of two knights for each county, two
+representatives for the city of London, and two for each of the
+following twenty towns only:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+Winchester, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, York, Bristol, Exeter, Lincoln,
+Canterbury, Carlisle, Norwich, Northampton, Nottingham, Scarborough,
+Grimsby, Lynn, Colchester, Yarmouth, Hereford, Chester, Shrewsbury,
+Worcester.
+</p>
+<p>
+From this it appears that there were not representatives of any towns in
+the counties of
+</p>
+<p>
+Westmoreland, Lancaster, Derby, Durham, Stafford, Warwick, Leicester,
+Rutland, Suffolk, Hertford, Bedford, Cambridge, Huntingdon, Buckingham,
+Berks, Oxford, Wilts, Somerset, Gloucester, Dorset, Sussex, Surrey.
+</p>
+<p>
+In after times, burghs that were summoned frequently prayed the Crown to
+be excused from sending representatives, on the account of their being
+compelled to pay 3s. 4d. a day to each member for his maintenance, while
+attending in his place; yet the allowance was made on a plan so strictly
+economical, that the knights of Berkshire were only allowed for six
+days, those for Bedfordshire for only five days, and those for Cornwall
+for only eleven days, when called to a parliament at York. Sheriffs,
+in their write for elections to parliament, sometimes omitted one
+or more burghs in a county, and at other times sent writs to the same
+burghs&mdash;and this, for aught known to the contrary, without instruction
+from the king or his council. Where burghs were poor, there were many
+such omissions, by favour of the sheriff, for a space of nearly three
+hundred years. Upon petition of the town of Torrington to Edward III.,
+in 1366, he directed a letter to the bailiff and good men of the town,
+excusing them "from the burden of sending two representatives to
+parliament, as they had never been obliged so to do till the 24th of his
+reign, when," says the king, "the sheriffs of Devonshire maliciously
+summoned them to send two members to parliament."
+</p>
+<p>
+Writs for the election of members to serve in the House of Commons are
+issued under different authorities upon a general election, and upon
+vacancies of particular seats during the continuance of a parliament.
+In the former case, the Lord Chancellor of Great Britain, pursuant to
+the order in council, causes the writs of elections to be issued for all
+places in England and Scotland to which such writs are usually sent. By
+the Articles and Act of Union with Ireland, the Lord Chancellor then,
+pursuant to the said orders, &amp;c., causes writs to be issued and directed
+by the Clerk of the Crown in Ireland to the several counties, and such
+counties of cities and towns as send members to the united parliament.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is generally supposed that the circumstance of bishops, or other
+ecclesiastics having seats in the legislature, is peculiar to England.
+This is a mistake;&mdash;it was characteristic of the Scottish constitution
+for centuries previous to their connexion with England: so far back,
+indeed, if not much farther, as the twelfth century. It is stated, in
+ancient documents connected with the history of the county of Elgin, the
+authenticity of which cannot be doubted, that the Abbey of Kinloss was
+founded by David I., in January, 1150, and that the abbot was mitred,
+and had a seat in parliament.
+</p>
+<p>
+To the passing of a bill, the assent of the knights, citizens, and
+burgesses must be in person; but the lords may give their votes by
+proxy; and the reason is, that the barons always sat in parliament in
+their own right, as part of the <i>pares curtis</i> of the king; and
+therefore, as they were allowed to serve by proxy in the wars, so had
+they leave to make proxies in parliament; but the commons coming only
+as representing the barones minores, and the soccage tenants in the
+country, and as representing the men of the cities, &amp;c., they could not
+constitute proxies as representatives of others.
+</p>
+<p>
+When it is the pleasure of the Crown to dissolve a parliament, it is the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page340" name="page340"></a>[pg 340]</span>
+constant practice immediately to summon another, and to make the
+dissolution of the old and the calling of the new simultaneous acts.
+By the Act of 7 and 8 of William III., c. xxv. s. I, forty days
+should intervene between the teste and return of the writs for a new
+parliament; but a longer time is necessary, and fifty days now
+intervene.
+</p>
+<p>
+Parliaments became triennial from the reigns of Edward III., but not
+until 1694 had any act passed to make such duration legal. In 1716 this
+was repealed, and the present act passed, making them septennial.
+</p>
+<h4>
+W.G.C.
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ SIMPLE AMBITION.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>To the Editor.</i>)
+</center>
+<p>
+The following anecdote was told me last summer, in the cabriolet of a
+diligence between Pau and Bayonne, and is very much at your service.
+</p>
+<p style="text-align: right;">EGOMET IPSE.</p>
+<p>
+About twenty-three years ago, the vane of Strasbourg Cathedral was
+struck by lightning, so that it hung on one side, threatening by its
+fall to endanger the lives of the people below. The alarm was so great,
+that the authorities, after a special consultation, posted bills about
+the streets, offering any reward that should be required to any one that
+would venture to ascend and strike off the vane. While the good citizens
+were reading this announcement, a peasant from the department of the
+Landes passed by, and being unable to read, he inquired the purport of
+the advertisement. When informed, he immediately offered his services
+for that purpose, and was conducted to the mayor and the bishop, who
+happened to be both in the Hôtel de Ville at the time. They questioned
+him, and fully acquainted him with the difficulties of the
+enterprise&mdash;such as the real height, and that the upper part of the
+spire could only be ascended by ladders on the outside. However, nothing
+daunted, he persisted in his resolution to perform the feat on the
+morrow. All Strasbourg was assembled in the open places of the city on
+the next day; and, although admiring his courage as they saw him ascend,
+they most prudently refrained from cheering him as he deserved. Few who
+were then shading their eyes from the sun, in order to gaze on the
+spire, but must have envied him the scene of surpassing loveliness that
+was spread below him, although it is probable that neither the green
+landscape fading into blue distance, the relics of ancient castles,
+nor the beautiful Rhine glittering in sunshine, detained his regards.
+He who at home, in his own barren and level sands, had been used to
+no greater elevations than his stilts, was now mounting like an eagle
+towards heaven, and admired by thousands. When he reached the summit,
+he deliberately seated himself on the highest stone, with one leg on
+each side of the vane; and while his clothes were visibly fluttered
+in a strong breeze at such an eminence, he, with a hammer and chisel,
+displaced the cross that had caused such alarm, It flew spinning to the
+earth, and, borne away by the wind, fell in a neighbouring field, where
+it sank twenty inches into the soil. The air was now rent with
+acclamations towards him,
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+ <p> Cui robur et aes triplex</p>
+ <p> Circa pectus erat&mdash;</p>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+(for, be it remarked, he was the only person who had even proposed
+to effect its removal). On his descent, he was carried in triumph to
+the Hôtel de Ville. Being thanked by the authorities then and there
+assembled, and assured of their intense anxiety for his life ever since
+he had quitted the earth, he was asked what was the recompense he
+demanded? He modestly replied, "that if they were pleased with what
+he had performed, he hoped they would not think him presumptuous, but
+he should so much like to walk through the Arsenal, and see all its
+wonderful stores and docks!"&mdash;and they could not prevail upon him to
+ask more.
+</p>
+<p>
+A week afterwards he left Strasbourg, with twenty-five Napoleons in
+his pocket; and declared that he had never before spent his time so
+agreeably as he did in that city, for he had seen the Imperial Arsenal,
+the fortifications, and many other fine, as well as useful, sights, and
+had been continually feasted gratis by the rich and the great folks.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ RANSOMS.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>Concluded from page</i> 149.)
+</center>
+<p>
+The queen of Edward III., after the battle of Durham, demanded of John
+Copland, David of Scotland; on his remonstrance that no one but the king
+had a right to his prisoner, Edward sent for him to Calais, and bestowed
+on him in return for his captive, £500, in land. The Scottish monarch
+paid, after an imprisonment of eleven years, 100,000 marks, and was
+dismissed. Charles de Blois, at the same period paid 700,000 crowns, and
+left his two sons as hostages. Michael de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk, paid
+£20,000. sterling, when
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page341" name="page341"></a>[pg 341]</span>
+only a simple knight. Duc d'Alençon gave for his
+freedom 200,000 crowns, and actually sold part of his estate to the Duc
+de Bretagne to pay it. Caprice often caused the detention of men in
+captivity, from their inability to comply with the absurd demands of
+their captors. Louis XI. refused to part with Wolfang Poulain, a
+Burgundian officer, unless he would purchase his redemption with some
+favourite hounds belonging to the Seigneur de Bossu. As Bossu did not
+feel sufficiently interested in his friend's welfare to comply with the
+king's wishes, and part with his dogs, some time elapsed before any
+treaty could be entered into, to restore Poulain to his country.
+</p>
+<p>
+This practice, though it undoubtedly contributed to soften the horrors
+of war, often caused hostilities to be undertaken on the most absurd and
+frivolous pretences. The English are represented by Comines as rejoicing
+in a war with France, from a recollection of the prices they obtained
+from the lords and princes they captured. Another bad effect may be
+traced to it, in the violations of safe conduct, the seizure of
+individuals during times of peace, which the middle ages so constantly
+exhibit. Oliver de Clisson, the Constable of France, on entering into a
+castle to examine its strength, at the request of the Duc de Bretagne,
+in 1387, was seized, and at first commanded to be thrown into the sea.
+The savage Breton afterwards being troubled in conscience, expressed his
+joy that his order had not been complied with, and released Clisson on
+the payment of 100,000 livres.
+</p>
+<p>
+During the wars of Edward III. and Philip, many a soldier of fortune
+amassed considerable opulence by the ransoming of his prisoners.
+Croquart, a famous leader of these companies, is related to have become
+extremely rich by the money he received from the ransoms of castles and
+towns. In the fourteenth century several Knights of Suabia having
+associated themselves together for chivalrous engagements, endeavoured
+to seize a rich Count of Wirtenburg, as a <i>means of procuring a noble
+sum of money for the ransom of himself and his family</i>. For this
+purpose they attacked him in his castle at Wildbad, but were repulsed.
+At Poictiers, the King of France was nearly torn to pieces by the
+soldiers in disputing for their prize. At the Bridge of Luissac,
+Carlonnet, the French commander, fell into the hands of the enemy, who
+were about to end the quarrel respecting his possession by putting him
+to death, when the timely arrival of an English knight rescued him from
+their power. At Agincourt, eighteen French gentlemen entered into an
+agreement to direct all their attacks against King Henry, most probably
+with a view of acquiring a fortune by his capture; hence the contest was
+the hottest about his person. After the battle of Nanci, and the death
+of the Duke of Burgundy, by the sword of Charles de Beaumont, the latter
+is said to have died of regret, when he became aware whom it was he had
+slain, and the loss he had sustained of a ducal ransom.
+</p>
+<p>
+Before quitting this subject, it may be observed that the value of a
+prisoner's liberty was a regularly transferable property. Coeur de Lion
+was sold to the emperor Henry; Philip Augustus bargained for him; and
+his ransom reduced England, from sea to sea, to the utmost distress.
+Louis XI. bought the bastard of Burgundy from Renè, Duc de Lorrain,
+for 10,000 crowns, and also William of Chalons, Prince of Orange, for
+20,000, from Sieur de Grosté. Joan of Arc was sold to the English for
+10,000 livres, and a pension of 300. In the case of the Earl of
+Pembroke, who became the property of Du Guescelin, as part of the
+purchase-money for some estates in Spain, he had sold to Henry, King of
+Castile, the constable lost his expected 120,000 livres by the death of
+his prisoner; as this nobleman was in a bad state of health, his bankers
+at Bruges wisely declined paying the money until he became <i>sound and
+in good condition</i>. (<i>Quand il serait sain, et en bon point.</i>)
+The earl dying before he left France, Du Guescelin lost both his estates
+and money. One of the family of the Blois was presented to his
+favourite, the Duke of Ireland, by Richard II., who disposed of his
+master's bounty to Oliver de Clisson for 120,000 livres. Zizim, the
+brother of Bajazet, Emperor of the Turks, after being defeated by his
+brother in an attempt to seize the throne, fled to the Knights of Rhodes
+for succour. They, fearing the vengeance of the Sultan, transferred him
+to Louis XI. who fulfilled his trust faithfully, and kept him for the
+knights, though offered all the relics that the east abounded with, and
+even the kingdom of Jerusalem, by Bajazet, for his prisoner. After being
+given into the custody of the Pope by Louis, and a six years' residence
+at Rome, he was sent back to France, as the king had found out that he
+might be of service in his engagements with Constantinople; he was,
+however, not restored
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page342" name="page342"></a>[pg 342]</span>
+to his brother in the condition which the Flemings
+had stipulated the Earl of Pembroke to be restored; for before his
+redelivery to the French, he is supposed to have been poisoned.
+</p>
+<h4>
+H.
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ THE EQUESTRIAN STATUE OF PETER THE GREAT.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>To the Editor.</i>)
+</center>
+<p>
+This stands upon a rock, which was found in a morass near Lachta, in
+Karelin, at a distance of eleven versts, or about 41,250 English feet.
+The dimensions of this stone were found to be 21 feet by 42 in length,
+and 34 in breadth; its weight is calculated at 3,200,000 lbs. or 1,600
+tons. The mechanism for its conveyance was invented by Count Carbury,
+who went by the name of Chevalier Lascuri. A solid road was first made
+from the stone to the shore; then brass slips were inserted under the
+stone to go upon cannon balls of five inches diameter, in metal grooves,
+by windlasses worked by 400 men every day, 200 fathoms towards the place
+of destination. The water transport was performed by what are called
+camels in the dockyards of Petersburgh and Amsterdam.
+</p>
+<h4>
+E.A.B.
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ SONNET TO HOPE.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>For The Mirror.</i>)
+</center>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+ <p> As some lone pilgrim through Night's dreary scene,</p>
+ <p> With cautious steps scarce venturing on his way,</p>
+ <p> Views the chaste orb of Evening's soft-eyed Queen</p>
+ <p> Gild the blue east, and scare those mists away</p>
+ <p> Which from his sight each faithful light obscur'd,</p>
+ <p> And led him wildering, sinking pale with fear!</p>
+ <p> Not he more bless'd by Cynthia's light allur'd,</p>
+ <p> Onward his course with happier thoughts doth steer,</p>
+ <p> Than I, O Hope! blest cheerer of the soul!</p>
+ <p> Who, long in Sorrow's darkening clouds involv'd,</p>
+ <p> When black despair usurp'd mild Joy's control,</p>
+ <p> Saw thee, bright angel, fram'd of heavenly mould,</p>
+ <p> Dip thy gay pallet in the rainbow's hue,</p>
+ <p> And call each scene of Peace and Mirth to view.</p>
+</div></div>
+<h4>
+<i>The Author of "A Tradesman's Lays."</i>
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<p>
+The income of a Russian metropolitan does not exceed 800l. a-year; that
+of an archbishop, 600l.; and of a bishop, 500l.; sums apparently as
+small as persons of their rank can possibly subsist on, even in Russia.
+They are, however, allowed a considerable sum annually for purposes of
+charity.
+</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>
+ THE SKETCH-BOOK.
+</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ A SCENE FROM LIFE.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>For the Mirror.</i>)
+</center>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+ <p> Truth is strange&mdash;stranger than fiction.</p>
+ <p style="text-align: right;"> LORD BYRON.</p>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+"And so the Fernlands is to be sold at last," I said, casually meeting
+Mr. Nibble, our under-sheriff&mdash;"Poor N&mdash;&mdash;, I am grieved for him, he has
+struggled hard against oppression."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is quite true, sir," replied the man of the law, "a horning came
+down last night, but it will answer no end&mdash;for Messrs. Sharke and
+Scrapepen, have advertised the whole of the property for public roup
+on Tuesday next."
+</p>
+<p>
+The Fernlands estate had been the family property of the N&mdash;&mdash;s since
+the conquest for aught I know. The present representative, after having
+sent his sons out into the world, as all Scotchmen do, to fight their
+way, (one of whom by the by was accumulating a snug fortune in India)
+got involved in some commercial speculation, for which he was wholly
+unfitted, being anything but a business man. He was a worthy
+unsuspecting fellow, but at last saw his way clearer, and as he thought
+got out, though a very heavy loser. In consequence of this scrape he
+wrote to his son in India, to say, that unless he could remit him a
+large sum, which he named, it would be impossible to keep his ground
+at Fernlands.
+</p>
+<p>
+Very soon afterwards his late partner, who was a good sort of fellow
+too, failed, and N&mdash;&mdash; was paralyzed on receiving a letter from the
+attorney to the assignees to say, that not having regularly gazetted his
+retirement from the concern, he had rendered himself legally liable to
+the creditors of the late firm of &mdash;&mdash; and Co., and unless N&mdash;&mdash; paid
+the balance which remained due after the assets of the bankrupt's estate
+had been ascertained, that immediate steps would be resorted to, to
+compel him. The matter soon got abroad, and all N&mdash;&mdash;'s other creditors
+also pressed forward to crush him&mdash;well, to make a disagreeable story
+short, the end is as I have previously related. Poor N&mdash;&mdash; is to be
+ruined to pay another man's debts, after a vast deal to do with law and
+lawyers, and much heat on both sides.
+</p>
+<p>
+I had taken great interest in the matter from the first, and it was with
+deep feelings of sorrow that I saw this excellent family likely to be
+driven from the home of their forefathers, by the merciless and often
+unjust hand of the law. N&mdash;&mdash; was, I believe, generally liked, and no
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page343" name="page343"></a>[pg 343]</span>
+person in need, in the district where he resided, looked up to the
+<i>Laird</i> for advice or assistance in vain. You may judge therefore
+of the public sensation. While these matters were pending, N&mdash;&mdash; looked
+with the deepest anxiety for the arrival of a letter from his son in
+India; and every day did he send his servant express to the little
+post-office at &mdash;&mdash;, but in vain.
+</p>
+<p>
+At last the fatal day of sale arrived. N&mdash;&mdash;, in the depth of his
+distress had early sent for me to consult whether even at the eleventh
+hour something could not be done to avert the calamity. A sinking man
+catches at a straw. It wanted less than three hours of the time of sale
+when I entered the grounds of Fernlands. The gate was half off its
+hinges, the posts plastered with advertisements of the sale; and people,
+as always happens in such cases, were already pouring towards the house
+more from a motive of curiosity than from an intention of purchasing
+anything. As I advanced towards the scene of action, I could observe
+that the shrubberies were injured, and the rare plants and flowers
+which both N&mdash;&mdash; and his wife had valued so much&mdash;for they were fond
+of the study of nature&mdash;exhibited evident tokens of the mischief of
+the careless multitude thronging to the show. The day was clear and
+beautiful, the breeze played through the leafy wilderness with a joyous
+effect; the contrast between the peace and harmony of nature, and the
+discord and tumult of man and his deeds, was affecting. But such
+thoughts were soon chased away from my mind, as I advanced over a
+portion of the lawn towards the stables, I saw N&mdash;&mdash;'s favourite mare,
+and the old pony, Jack, (whom I recollected as the companion of N&mdash;&mdash;'s
+boys, and as tractable as a dog,) in the hands of a rascally sheriff's
+officer, who was showing them to a horse-dealer from a neighbouring
+town. The lawn in the front of the house was covered with straggling
+groups of people, either discussing the event of the day, or examining
+some of the furniture which was strewed there.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Eh, sirs!" said an old man, brushing a tear from his eye, "I never
+thoucht to ha' seen the like o' this day's wark&mdash;and my forbears have
+had a bit o' farm under the laird's a hundred an' saxteen year, and
+better nor kinder folk to the puir man never lived."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Nibble, who was Messrs. Sharke's agent, was bustling about, and
+I found him engaged with a fat, pompous little fellow, the auctioneer,
+from a neighbouring town.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sad business this, Mr. &mdash;&mdash;," said he, "Fernlands is in a sad taking
+about it, I believe, but things of this kind will occur, you know; and
+I always say what can't be cured must be endured, eh."
+</p>
+<p>
+I turned with an ill-concealed expression of disgust from this man, and
+entered the house in search of my friend, for N&mdash;&mdash; would not quit the
+old place to the last. There is something melancholy in viewing a sale
+at any time&mdash;the disarrangement of the furniture&mdash;the cheerless and
+chilling aspect of the rooms&mdash;the dirt, the bustle, and the heartless
+indifference one witnesses to the misfortunes of others&mdash;all come home
+forcibly to the feelings. After stumbling and striking my shins amongst
+piles of chairs, and furniture, and carpets, disposed in lots over the
+now comfortless apartments, I at last reached the study door where I had
+spent many a happy hour with N&mdash;&mdash;. I entered; the room was stripped of
+part of its furniture, the books lying dispersed in heaps over the floor
+or on the massive table, at the side of which N&mdash;&mdash; was seated on the
+only chair left in the apartment. He was at first unconscious of my
+entrance.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My dear sir, this is kind indeed," he said as I advanced, struggling
+with his feelings, "but take a chair," and he glanced round the room
+with a bitter smile, as he observed there was none, "my friends are kind
+you see, they think chairs are useless things...."
+</p>
+<p>
+The loss of his land affected him more than I can describe. He had been
+brought up upon it, and it had become as it were part and parcel of
+himself; it was not an ordinary loss. The noise and bustle in the house
+and sundry interruptions from inquisitive eyes, warned us, as N&mdash;&mdash;
+said, that "we must jog." As we were rising, I accidentally inquired
+whether he had received his letters that morning. "Good God!" he
+exclaimed, "I totally forgot, and poor Andrew I fancy is too much
+occupied in bemoaning the fate of the horses, to have thought of it;
+but we can get them when I return with you this afternoon."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Delays are dangerous," I replied, "we will not throw a chance away."
+</p>
+<p>
+We hastened to the stable, and I despatched the servant on my own horse,
+with the utmost expedition to the post-office at &mdash;&mdash;.
+</p>
+<p>
+N&mdash;&mdash; sauntered through a private path in the shrubbery towards the
+entrance of the grounds, and I made my way through the careless throng,
+who had no thought what their own fate might be perhaps
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page344" name="page344"></a>[pg 344]</span>
+to-morrow&mdash;to
+Mr. Nibble, and urged him to delay the sale for an hour, but he said it
+was impossible, he would not hurry it for half an hour or so, but that
+they were already pressed for time. The landed property was first to be
+brought to the hammer. I mechanically followed the steps of N&mdash;&mdash;, and
+when I overtook him, we saw through a break in the wood, from the
+increased density of the mob and the elevation of the auctioneer, that
+the sale was commencing.
+</p>
+<p>
+We gave up all for lost. At this moment I fancied I heard the noise of
+a horse urged to full gallop. The blood rushed to our hearts; we sprung
+through the trees towards the road; in another moment Andrew was in
+sight, urging his horse to his utmost speed. The instant he saw us he
+waved his hat, "A packet from abroad, sir," he sung out as he
+approached, "from our young master, I'm sure."
+</p>
+<p>
+"God be praised, you are saved," was all I could utter; poor N&mdash;&mdash; was
+faint with sudden joy and hope. We tore open the envelope, which
+contained bills from his son in India to a large amount. I saw N&mdash;&mdash; was
+unable to think, and without more ado, I squeezed his hand, seized the
+letter, and put spurs to my horse. The bidding had commenced when I
+reached the wondering crowd, who rapidly fell back as they saw me
+approach. But why should I tire you any longer; in a couple of hours
+Fernlands remained unpolluted by one of the mob, or legal harpies who
+had invaded it. You may guess the rest....
+</p>
+<p>
+A friend related the preceding incident to me; the reader may suppose
+him to be addressing myself. The leading circumstances are strictly
+true, the names and some trifling matters alone being altered. The story
+is invested with interest from its great similarity to a portion of the
+plot of the "Antiquary;" I have the strongest reason to believe, from
+the intimate acquaintance the great novelist possessed with the country,
+that he drew Sir Arthur Wardour's similar escape from ruin, from a
+recollection of the event briefly related above.
+</p>
+<h4>
+VYVYAN.
+</h4>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>
+ SELECT BIOGRAPHY.
+</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ PAGANINI, THE VIOLINIST.
+</h3>
+<p>
+By aid of the <i>Foreign Quarterly Review</i>, we are enabled to submit
+to our readers the following very interesting Memoirs of this eccentric
+genius.
+</p>
+<p>
+By the way, we are happy to find that the above work is enabled to
+maintain the high character with which it started. It argues well for
+the literary taste of this country, by cherishing acquaintance with
+continental literature, and thus strengthening our resources at home.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nicolo Paganini was born at Genoa, in February, 1784. We are not
+informed as to his father's profession, if indeed he had any: all that
+we are told is, that his chief pursuit was to improve his circumstances,
+which were not the best in the world, by speculating in the lottery, so
+that when his little son, Nicolo, began at an unusually early age to
+give strong indications of musical talent, it seemed to him as if the
+wheel of fortune had at last been propitious, and he accordingly lost
+no time in setting to work to make the most of his prize. Having some
+skill on the violin himself, he resolved to teach him that instrument;
+and as soon as he could hold it, put one into his hands, and made him
+sit beside him from, morning to night, and practise it. The incessant
+drudgery which he compelled him to undergo, and the occasional
+starvation to which he subjected him, seriously impaired his health,
+and, as Paganini himself asserts, laid the foundation of that
+valetudinarian state which has ever since been his portion, and which
+his pale, sickly countenance, and his sunk and exhausted frame so
+strongly attest. As his enthusiasm was such as to require no artificial
+stimulus, this severe system could only have been a piece of cool and
+wanton barbarity. He already began to show much promise of excellence,
+when a circumstance occurred which not only served to confirm these
+early prognostications, but to rouse him to exert all his energies.
+This was no other than a dream of his mother, Theresa. An angel appeared
+to her; she besought him to make her Nicolo a great violin player; he
+gave her a token of consent;&mdash;and the effect which this dream had upon
+all concerned, we sober-minded people can have no idea of. Young
+Paganini redoubled his perseverance. In his eighth year, under the
+superintendence of his father, he had written a sonata, which, however,
+along with many other juvenile productions, he lately destroyed; and
+as he played about three times a week in the churches and at private
+musical parties, upon a fiddle nearly as large as himself, he soon began
+to make himself known among his townsmen. At this time he received much
+benefit from one Francesco Gnecco, who died in 1811, and whom he always
+speaks highly of.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page345" name="page345"></a>[pg 345]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+In his ninth year, being applied to by a travelling singer to join him
+in a concert, he made his first public appearance in the great theatre
+at Genoa, and played the French air "La Carmagnole," with his own
+variations, with great applause.
+</p>
+<p>
+His father now resolved to place him under the tuition of the well-known
+composer, Rolla, and for that purpose took him along with him to Parma.
+The particulars of their interview afford a striking proof of the
+proficiency which he had by this time acquired. As Rolla happened to be
+ill and lying in bed, the party were shown into the ante-chamber, when,
+observing upon the table one of the composer's newest concertos, the
+father beckoned to his son to take up his violin and play it, which he
+did at sight, in such a way that the sick man immediately started up,
+demanded who it was, and could scarcely be prevailed upon to believe
+that the sounds had proceeded from a little boy, and his intended pupil;
+but as soon as he had satisfied himself that that was really the case,
+he declined to receive him. "For God's sake," said he, "go to Paer, your
+time would be lost with me, I can do nothing for you."
+</p>
+<p>
+To Paer accordingly they went, who received him kindly, and referred
+him to his own teacher, the old and experienced "Maestro di Capella"
+Giretti, from Naples, who gave him instructions for six months, three
+times a-week in counterpoint. During this period he wrote twenty-four
+Fugues for four hands, with pen, ink, and paper alone, and without any
+instrument, which his master did not allow him, and, assisted by his own
+inclination, made rapid progress. The great Paer also took much interest
+in him, giving him compositions to work out, which he himself revised:
+an interest for which Paganini ever afterwards showed himself deeply
+grateful.
+</p>
+<p>
+The time was now come when Nicolo was destined, like other youthful
+prodigies, to be hawked about the country, to fill the pockets of his
+mercenary father, who managed to speculate upon him with considerable
+success in Milan, Bologna, Florence, Pisa, Leghorn, and most of the
+upper and central towns of Italy, where his concerts were always well
+attended. Young Paganini liked these excursions well enough, but being
+now about fifteen years of age, he began to be of opinion that they
+would be still more agreeable if he could only contrive to get rid of
+the old gentleman, whose spare diet and severe discipline had now become
+more irksome to him than ever. To accomplish this desirable object, an
+opportunity soon offered. It was the custom of Lucca, at the feast of
+St. Martin, to hold a great musical festival, to which strangers were
+invited from all quarters, and numerous travellers resorted of their own
+accord; and as the occasion drew near, Nicolo begged hard to be allowed
+to go there in company with his elder brother, and after much entreaty,
+succeeded in obtaining permission. He made his appearance as a solo
+player, and succeeded so well, that he resolved now to commence
+vagabondizing on his own account&mdash;a sort of life to which he soon
+became so partial, that, notwithstanding many handsome offers which
+he occasionally received to establish himself in several places,
+as a concerto player or director of the orchestra, he never could be
+persuaded to settle any where. At a later period, however, he lived for
+some time at the court of Lucca, but soon found it more pleasant and
+profitable to resume his itinerant habits. He visited all parts of
+Italy, but usually made Genoa his head-quarters, where, however, he
+preferred to play the part of the dilletante to that of the virtuoso,
+and performed in private circles without giving public concerts.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not long before he had amassed about 20,000 francs, part of which
+he proposed to devote to the maintenance of his parents. His father,
+however, was not to be put off with a few thousands, but insisted upon
+the whole.&mdash;Paganini then offered him the interest of the capital, but
+Signor Antonio very coolly threatened him with instant death unless he
+agreed to consign the whole of the principal in his behalf; and in order
+to avert serious consequences, and to procure peace, he gave up the
+greater part of it.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was early in 1828 when Paganini arrived at Vienna, where he gave
+a great many concerts with a success equal, if not superior, to any
+which had hitherto attended his exertions. His performance excited the
+admiration and astonishment of all the most distinguished professors and
+connoisseurs of this critical city. With any of the former all idea of
+competition was hopeless; and their greatest violinist, Mayseder, as
+soon as he had heard him, with an ingenuousness which did him honour,
+as we ourselves have reason to know, wrote to a friend in London, that
+he might now lock up his violin whenever he liked.
+</p>
+<p>
+In estimating the labour which it
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page346" name="page346"></a>[pg 346]</span>
+must have cost a performer like Paganini
+to have arrived at such transcendent excellence, people are often apt to
+err in their calculations as to the actual extent of time and practice
+which has been devoted to its acquisition. That the perfect knowledge of
+the <i>mechanique</i> of the instrument which his performance exhibits,
+and his almost incredible skill and dexterity in its management must
+necessarily have been the result of severe discipline, is beyond all
+question; but more, much more, in every case of this kind, is to be
+ascribed to the system upon which that discipline has proceeded, and
+to the genius and enthusiasm of the artist. The miraculous powers of
+Paganini in the opinion of his auditors were not to be accounted for
+in the ordinary way. To them, it was plain that they must have sprung
+from a life of a much more settled and secluded cast than that of an
+itinerant Italian musical professor. It was equally clear, from his
+wild, haggard, and mysterious looks, that he was no ordinary personage,
+and had seen no common vicissitudes. The vaults of a dungeon accordingly
+were the local habitation which public rumour, in its love of the
+marvellous, seemed unanimously to assign to him, as the only place where
+"the mighty magic" of his bow could possibly have been acquired. Then,
+as to the delinquency which led to his incarceration, there were various
+accounts: some imputed it to his having been a captain of banditti;
+others, only a carbonaro; some to his having killed a man in a duel; but
+the more current and generally received story was, that he had stabbed
+or poisoned his wife, or, as some said, his mistress; although, as fame
+had ascribed to him no fewer than four mistresses, it was never very
+clearly made out which of his seraglio it was who had fallen the victim
+of his vengeance. The story not improbably might have arisen from his
+having been confounded with a contemporary violin-player of the name of
+Duranowski, a Pole, to whom in person he bore some resemblance, and who,
+for some offence or other having been imprisoned at Milan, during the
+leisure which his captivity afforded, had contrived greatly to improve
+himself in his art; and when once it was embodied into shape, the
+fiction naturally enough might have obtained the more credence, from the
+fact that two of his most distinguished predecessors, Tartini and Lolly,
+had attained to the great mastery which they possessed over their
+instrument during a period of solitude&mdash;the one within the walls of a
+cloister, the other in the privacy and retirement of a remote country
+village. At all events, the rumours were universally circulated and
+believed, and the innocent and much injured Paganini had for many years
+unconsciously stood forth in the eyes of the world as a violator of the
+laws, and even a convicted murderer&mdash;not improbably, to a certain
+extent, reaping the golden fruits of that "bad eminence;" for public
+performers, as we too often see, who have once lost their "good name,"
+so far from finding themselves, in the words of Iago, "poor indeed,"
+generally discover that they have only become objects of greater
+interest and attraction. How long he had lived in the enjoyment of this
+supposed infamy, and all the benefits accruing from it, we really cannot
+pretend to say; but he seems never to have been made fully aware of the
+formidable position in which he stood until he had reached Vienna, when
+the Theatrical Gazette, in reviewing his first concert, dropped some
+pretty broad hints as to the rumoured misdeeds of his early life.
+Whereupon he resolved at once publicly to proclaim his innocence, and
+to put down the calumny; for which purpose, on the 10th of April, 1828,
+there was inserted in the leading Vienna journals a manifesto, in
+Italian as well as German, subscribed by him, declaring that all these
+widely-circulated rumours were false; that at no time, and under no
+government whatever, had he ever offended against the laws, or been put
+under coercion; and that he had always demeaned himself as became a
+peaceable and inoffensive member of society; for the truth of which he
+referred to the magistracies of the different states under whose
+protection he had till then lived in the public exercise of his
+profession.
+</p>
+<p>
+The truth of this appeal (which it is obvious no delinquent would have
+dared to make) was never called in question, no one ever ventured to
+take up the gauntlet which Paganini had thrown down, and his character
+as a man thenceforward stood free from suspicion.
+</p>
+<p>
+His whimsicalities, his love of fun, and many other points of his
+character, are sometimes curiously exemplified in his fantasias. He
+imitates in perfection the whistling and chirrupping of birds, the
+tinkling and tolling of bells, and almost every variety of tone which
+admits of being produced; and in his performance of <i>Le Streghe</i>
+(The Witches) a favourite interlude of his, where the tremulous voices
+of the old women are given with a truly singular and
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page347" name="page347"></a>[pg 347]</span>
+laughable effect,
+his <i>vis comica</i> finds peculiar scope.
+</p>
+<p>
+His command of the back-string of the instrument has always been an
+especial theme of wonder and admiration, and, in the opinion of some,
+could only be accounted for by resorting to the theory of the dungeon,
+and the supposition that his other strings being worn out, and not
+having it in his power to supply their places, he had been forced from
+necessity to take refuge in the string in question; a notion very like
+that of a person who would assert, that for an opera dancer to learn to
+stand on one leg, the true way would be&mdash;to have only one leg to stand
+upon. We shall give Paganini's explanation of this mystery in his own
+words:
+</p>
+<p>
+"At Lucca, I had always to direct the opera when the reigning family
+visited the theatre; I played three times a week at the court, and every
+fortnight superintended the arrangement of a grand concert for the court
+parties, which, however, the reigning princess, Elisa Bacciochi Princess
+of Lucca and Piombino, Napoleon's favourite sister, was not always
+present at, or did not hear to the close, as the harmonic tones of
+my violin were apt to grate her nerves, but there never failed to be
+present another much esteemed lady, who, while I had long admired
+her, bore (at least so I imagined) a reciprocal feeling towards me.
+Our passion gradually increased; and as it was necessary to keep it
+concealed, the footing on which we stood with each other became in
+consequence the more interesting. One day I promised to surprise her
+with a musical <i>jeu d'esprit</i>, which should have a reference to
+our mutual attachment. I accordingly announced for performance a comic
+novelty, to which I gave the name of 'Love Scene.' All were curiously
+impatient to know what this should turn out to be, when at last I
+appeared with my violin, from which I had taken off the two middle
+strings, leaving only the E and the G string. By the first of these
+I proposed to represent the lady, by the other the gentleman; and I
+proceeded to play a sort of dialogue, in which I attempted to delineate
+the capricious quarrels and reconciliations of lovers&mdash;at one time
+scolding each other, at another sighing and making tender advances,
+renewing their professions of love and esteem, and finally winding up
+the scene in the utmost good humour and delight. Having at last brought
+them into a state of the most perfect harmony, the united pair lead off
+a <i>pas de deux</i>, concluding with a brilliant finale. This musical
+scena went off with much eclat. The lady, who understood the whole
+perfectly, rewarded me with her gracious looks; the princess was all
+kindness, overwhelmed me with applause, and, after complimenting me upon
+what I had been able to effect upon the two strings, expressed a wish to
+hear what I could execute upon one string. I immediately assented&mdash;the
+idea caught my fancy; and as the emperor's birthday took place a. few
+weeks afterwards, I composed my Sonata 'Napoleon' for the G. string, and
+performed it upon that day before the court with so much approbation
+that a cantata of Cimarosa, following immediately alter it upon the same
+evening, was completely extinguished, and produced no effect whatever.
+This is the first and true cause of my partiality for the G. string; and
+as they were always desiring to hear more of it, one day taught another,
+until at last my proficiency in this department was completely
+established."
+</p>
+<p>
+We know no one who has been more cruelly misrepresented than the
+subject of this notice. In reality a person of the gentlest and most
+inoffensive habits, he is any thing rather than the desperate ruffian
+he has been described. In his demeanour he is modest and unassuming;
+in his disposition, liberal and generous to a fault. Like most artists,
+ardent and enthusiastic in his temperament, and in his actions very much
+a creature of impulse; he is full of that unaffected simplicity which we
+almost invariably find associated with true genius. He has an only son,
+by a Signora Antonia Bianchi, a singer from Palermo, with whom he lived
+for several years until the summer of 1828, when he was under the
+necessity of separating from her in consequence of the extreme violence
+of her temper; and in this little boy all his affections are
+concentrated. He is a very precocious child, and already indicates
+strong signs of musical talent. Being of a delicate frame of health,
+Paganini never can bear to trust him out of his sight. "If I were to
+lose him," says he, "I would be lost myself; it is quite impossible I
+can ever separate myself from him; when I awake in the night, he is my
+first thought."&mdash;Accordingly, ever since he parted from his mother, he
+has himself enacted the part of the child's nurse.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+Why is Mr. Whitbread in his brewery like the Jerusalem coffee-house?
+Because <i>He-brews</i> drink therein.
+</p>
+<h4>
+W.G.C.
+</h4>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page348" name="page348"></a>[pg 348]</span>
+</p>
+<h2>
+ THE NATURALIST.
+</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ THE SUSTILLO.
+</h3>
+<p>
+A caterpillar, which the Indians name sustillo, and by which a paper
+is fabricated, very similar to that made in China, is bred in the pacae,
+a tree well known in Peru. In proportion to the vigour and majestic
+growth of this tree, is the number of the insects it nourishes, and
+which are of the kind and size of the bombyx, or silk-worm. When they
+are completely satiated, they unite at the body of the tree, seeking the
+part which is best adapted to the extension they have to take. They then
+form, with the greatest symmetry and regularity, a web which is larger
+or smaller, according to the number of the operators; and more or less
+pliant, according to the quality of the leaf by which they have been
+nourished, the whole of them remaining beneath. This envelope, on which
+they bestow such a texture, consistency, and lustre, that it cannot be
+decomposed by any practicable expedient, having been finished, they
+all of them unite, and ranging themselves in vertical and even files,
+form in the centre a perfect square. Being thus disposed, each of them
+makes its cocoon, or pod, of a coarse and short silk, in which it is
+transformed from the grub into the chrysalis, and from the chrysalis
+into the papilio, or moth. In proportion as they afterwards quit their
+confinement, to take wing, they detach wherever it is most convenient
+to them, their envelope, or web, a portion of which remains suspended
+to the trunk of the tree, where it waves to and fro like a streamer,
+and which becomes more or less white, according as the air and humidity
+of the season and situation admit. This natural silk paper has been
+gathered measuring a yard and a half, of an elliptical shape, which
+is peculiar to all of it.
+</p>
+<h4>
+W.G.C.
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ DESCRIPTION OF A BEAUTIFUL TREE.
+</h3>
+<center>
+<i>By John F.M. Dovaston, Esq. A.M., of Westfelton, near Shrewsbury.</i>
+</center>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+ <p> "<i>Hamlet.</i> Do you see nothing there?</p>
+ <p> <i>Queen.</i> Nothing at all; yet all that is I see."</p>
+ <p style="text-align: right;"> <i>Hamlet.</i></p>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+ <p> "You cannot see the wood for trees."</p>
+ <p style="text-align: right;"> <i>Ray's Proverbs.</i></p>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+It was now the middle of May; the trees had fully put forth their
+bright, fresh leaves, and the green fields were luxuriant in a profusion
+of flowers. We had travelled through a fine country; when, descending
+the slope of a wooded valley, we were struck with delight and admiration
+at a tree of extraordinary appearance. There were several of the sort,
+dispersed singly, and in groups over the plains and grassy knolls. One
+we shall attempt to describe, though well aware how feeble is the most
+florid description to depict an idea of so magnificent an object. In
+height it exceeded 50 ft., the diameter of its shade was nearly 90 ft.,
+and the circumference of the bole 15 ft.: it was in full leaf and
+flower, and in appearance at once united the features of strength,
+majesty, and beauty; having the stateliness of the oak, in its trunk and
+arms; the density of the sycamore, in its dark, deep, massy foliage;
+and the graceful featheriness of the ash, in its waving branches, that
+dangled in rich tresses almost to the ground. Its general character as
+a tree was rich and varied, nor were its parts less attractive by their
+extreme beauty when separately considered. Each leaf was about 18 in. in
+length; but nature, always attentive to elegance, to obviate heaviness,
+had at the end of a very strong leaf-stalk divided it into five, and
+sometimes seven, leafits, of unequal length, and very long oval shape,
+finely serrated. These leafits were disposed in a circular form,
+radiating from the centre, like the leaves of the fan palm, though
+placed in a contrary plane to those of that magnificent ornament of the
+tropical forests. The central, or lower, leafits were the largest, each
+of them being 10 in. in length, and 4 in. in breadth, and the whole
+exterior of the foliage being disposed in an imbricated form, having a
+beautifully light and palmated appearance. The flowers, in which the
+tree was profuse, demand our deep admiration and attention: each group
+of them rose perpendicularly from the end of the young shoot, and was in
+length 14 in., like a gigantic hyacinth, and quite as beautiful, spiked
+to a point, exhibiting a cone or pyramid of flowers, widely separate on
+all sides, and all expanded together, principally white, finely tinted
+with various colours, as red, pink, yellow, and buff, the stamina
+forming a most elegant fringe amid the modest tints of the large and
+copious petals. These feathery blossoms, lovely in colours and stately
+in shape, stood upright on every branch all over the tree, like flowery
+minarets on innumerable verdant turrets. We had thus the opportunity of
+ascertaining that it belonged to that class of Linnaeus consisting
+entirely of rare plants the Heptándria, and the order Monogynia; the
+natural order Trihilàtae; and the <i>A'</i>cera of Jussieu.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page349" name="page349"></a>[pg 349]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The natives informed us that the fruit ripens early in autumn, and
+consists of bunches of apples, thinly beset with sharp thorns, each when
+broken producing one or two large kernels, about 2 in. in circumference,
+of the finest bright mahogany colour without, and white within; that the
+tree is deciduous, and just before its fall changes to the finest tints
+of red, yellow, orange, and brown. When divested of its luxuriant
+foliage, the buds of the next year appear like little spears, which
+through the winter are covered with a fine glutinous gum, evidently
+designed to protect the embryo shoots within, as an hybernaculum, from
+the severe frosts of the climate, and which glisten in the cold sunshine
+like diamonds. It has the strange property of performing the whole of
+its vigorous shoot, nearly a yard long, in the short space of three
+weeks, employing all the rest of the year in converting it into wood,
+adding to its strength, and varying its beauty. The wood when sawn is
+of the finest snowy whiteness. The tree is easily raised; indifferent
+as to soil, climate, or situation; removed with safety, of quick growth,
+thrives to a vast age and size; subject to no blight or disease; in the
+earliest spring bursting its immense buds into that vigour, exuberance,
+and beauty, which we have here feebly attempted to describe. The natives
+said it was originally brought from the east of Asia, but grows freely
+in any climate, and in their tongue its name is designated by a
+combination of three words, signifying separately, a noble animal,
+an elegant game, and a luscious kernel. Had Linnaeus seen this tree,
+he would have assuredly contemplated it with delightful ecstacy, and
+named it the <i>Ae'</i>sculus Hippocástanum.&mdash;<i>Magazine of Natural
+History.</i>
+</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>
+ SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ CIGAR-SMOKING.
+</h3>
+<p>
+The Surgeon-General of the Forces has recently made public his
+belief, that never, till within the last twenty years, did he see so
+many young men with pale faces and emaciated figures, and he attributes
+the existence of the evil to the use of Cigars. The unreflecting
+servility with which men adopt new and foreign practices, is fully
+exemplified in the present case; for it is notorious that the practice
+of cigar-smoking, the modern foppery from Regent-street to Cheapside and
+Cornhill, was an importation of the Peninsular War; the imitation having
+been begun by the Spaniards, whose models are what are usually called
+the <i>savages</i> of America. The dietetic mischief, and consequent
+paleness of complexion and emaciation of muscle, which are attributable
+to the use of cigars, belong, no doubt, to an injury inflicted, perhaps,
+in more ways than one upon the aids and organs of digestion; nor is
+that hypothesis at all inconsistent with what we hear from so many
+cigar-smokers, namely, that their cigar is their dependence for
+digestion! That, after having impaired the organ, or weakened its tone,
+or dried up the salival menstruum, they should need a stimulant, even in
+the very form of the bane which injures them, is only of a piece with
+all that has been said of drinking, and especially of dram-drinking,
+with which latter debauch, the debauch of cigar-smoking has the closest
+possible alliance. We never pass one of those stifling rendezvous in the
+metropolis&mdash;a cigar-shop, open till the latest hours&mdash;without mentally
+classing it with the gin-shops, its only compeers!
+</p>
+<p>
+Exclusive of the low habit of imitation, a dulness and feebleness of
+understanding, an absence of intellectual resources, a vacuity of
+thought is the great inducement to the use of this, as of all other
+drugs, whether from the cigar-shop, or the snuff-shop, or the gin-shop,
+or the wine-cellar; a truth by no means the less certain, because it
+happens that men of the highest powers of mind are drawn into the vice,
+and made to reduce themselves, by their adoption and dependence upon it,
+to the lowest level of the vulgar; but, at the same time, it is not to
+be denied, that a great support in defence of cigar-smoking is found in
+the medical opinions sometimes advanced as to its salutary influence.
+Now, if we admit, broadly and at once, that there may be times and
+circumstances in which the inhaling the hot smoke of a powerful narcotic
+drug is useful to the human body, must it follow that the habitual
+resort to such a practice, and this under all circumstances, is useful
+also, and even free from the most serious inconveniences?
+</p>
+<p>
+It is the admitted maxim, that if smoking is accompanied by spitting,
+injury results to the smoker; and the reason assigned is, that the
+salival fluid, which should assist digestion, is in this manner
+dissipated, and taken from its office. But may not the habitual
+application of the narcotic influence to the nervous system have its
+evils also? May it not weaken or deaden the nervous and
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page350" name="page350"></a>[pg 350]</span>
+muscular action
+which is needful to digestion? And may not even the excessive quantity
+of the matter of heat, thus artificially conveyed into the body, tend to
+a desiccation of the system, as injurious under general circumstances,
+as it may be beneficial under particular ones?
+</p>
+<p>
+Smoking invites thirst; and there is little risk in advancing, that
+whatever superinduces an unnatural indulgence in the use of liquids is
+itself, and without farther question, injurious, even if the liquids
+resorted to are of the most innocent description; but, in point of fact,
+the cigar-smoker will usually appease his thirst by means of liquors in
+themselves his enemies!
+</p>
+<p>
+It is said, however, that the use of cigars is beneficial when we find
+ourselves in marshy situations, with a high temperature, and generally,
+whenever the atmosphere inclines to the introduction of putridity and
+fever into the system. We believe this; and perhaps a useful theory of
+the alternate benefit and mischief of cigar-smoking may be offered upon
+the basis of that proposition. When and wherever the body requires to
+be <i>dried</i>, cigar-smoking may be salutary; and when and wherever
+that <i>drying</i>, or desiccation, is injurious, then and there
+cigar-smoking may be to be shunned. We know that, while surrounded by
+an atmosphere overcharged, or even only saturated with moisture, moist
+bodies remain moist, or do not part with that excess of moisture from
+which a drier atmosphere would relieve them; and that living bodies,
+so circumstanced, are threatened with typhus and typhoid fever. It is
+highly probable, therefore, that narcotics, in such cases, may allay
+a morbid irritability of the nerves, or effect a salutary diminution
+of healthful sensibility; under such circumstances, the desiccating
+and sedative effects of tobacco-smoking may prove beneficial; while,
+in all ordinary states of the system and of the atmosphere, the
+same desiccative and sedative influences may produce immediate evil
+consequences, more or less readily perceptible, and undermine, however
+gradually, the strength of the constitution.&mdash;<i>United Service
+Journal.</i>
+</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ THE NEW COINAGE.
+</h3>
+<p>
+Why does not some man of public research enlighten the public on the
+proceedings at the Mint? The whole system is as little comprehensible
+by the uninitiated as the philosopher's stone. The cost of the Mint is
+prodigious&mdash;the machinery is all that machinery can be; yet we have one
+of the ugliest coinages of any nation of Europe. A new issue of coin is
+about to be commenced.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It appears, from the king's proclamation, that the new coinage
+will consist of double sovereigns, to be each of the value of 40s.;
+sovereigns, each of 20s.; and half-sovereigns, 10s. silver crowns,
+half-crowns, shillings, and sixpences. The double-sovereigns have for
+the obverse the king's effigy, with the inscription, 'Gulielmus IIII.
+D.G. Britanniarum Rex. F.D.;' and for the reverse, the ensigns armorial
+of the United Kingdom contained in a shield, encircled by the collar of
+the Order of the Garter, and upon the edge of the piece the words 'Decus
+et Tutamen.' The crowns and half-crowns will be similar. The shilling
+has on the reverse the words 'One Shilling,' placed in the centre of
+the piece, within a wreath, having an olive-branch on one side, and an
+oak-branch on the other; and the sixpences have the same, except the
+word 'Sixpence' instead of the words 'One Shilling.' The coppers will
+be nearly as at present."
+</p>
+<p>
+Now we must observe, what the master of the Mint and the people about
+him ought to have observed before, that there is in the first instance
+a considerable expense incurred in the coinage of the double-sovereigns,
+without any possible object, except the expense itself may be an object,
+which is not impossible. We shall have in this coin one of the most
+clumsy and useless matters of circulation that could be devised. The
+present sovereign answers every purpose that this clumsy coin can be
+required for, and even the single sovereign would be a much more
+convenient coin for circulation if it were divided, as every one knows
+who knows the trouble of getting change. The half-sovereign is in fact
+a much more convenient coin. But on this clumsy coin we must have a
+<i>Latin</i> inscription, as if it were intended only for the society of
+antiquaries, or to be laid up in cabinets, which we acknowledge would be
+most likely its fate, except for the notorious bad taste of the British
+coinage. Of much use it is to an English public to have the classical
+phraseology of Gulielmus Britanniarum Rex, put in place of the national
+language. Then too we must have the collar of the Order of the Garter
+to encircle the national arms, of which this Order is nonsensically
+pronounced "Decus et Tutamen." The Glory and Protection. The Order of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page351" name="page351"></a>[pg 351]</span>
+the Garter the <i>glory and protection</i> of England! We are content to
+let this absurdity stay in Latin or Sanscrit; English would be shamed by
+it. The Order of the Garter which goes round the knee of any man, who
+comes with the minister's fiat on the subject, and which has no more
+relation to British glory or British defence than the Order of the Blue
+Button or the Yellow frog of his majesty the Emperor of China; and this
+is to go forth on our national gold coin! and for fear that the folly
+would not be sufficiently spread, it is to be stamped on our crowns and
+half-crowns! The shillings and sixpences luckily escape: plain English
+will do for them. And all this goes on from year to year, while we have
+in the example of France a model of what a mint ought to be. Every
+foreigner makes purchases at the French mint; and the series of national
+medals executed there is a public honour and a public profit too. But
+whoever thinks of purchasing English mintage except for bullion?&mdash;With a
+history full of the most stirring events, we have not a single medallic
+series&mdash;we have scarcely a single medal. But we have in lieu of those
+vanities a master of the mint, who is tost new into the office on every
+change of party, who has probably in the whole course of his life never
+known the difference between gold and silver but by their value in
+sovereigns and shillings; but who, in the worst of times, shows his
+patriotism by receiving a salary of no less than five thousand pounds
+a year?
+</p>
+<h4>
+<i>Monthly Magazine.</i>
+</h4>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>
+ SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY.
+</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ HYDROSTATICS AND PNEUMATICS.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>Cabinet Cyclopaedia</i>, vol. xvii.)
+<br />&nbsp;
+</center>
+<center>
+<i>Easier to swim in the Sea than in a River</i>.
+</center>
+<p>
+Sea water has a greater buoyancy than fresh water, being relatively
+heavier; and hence it is commonly said to be much easier to swim in
+the sea than in a river: this effect, however, appears to be greatly
+exaggerated. A cubic foot of freshwater weighs about 1,000 ounces; and
+the same bulk of sea water weighs 1,028 ounces; the weight, therefore,
+of the latter exceeds the former by only 28 parts in 1,000. The force
+exerted by sea water to support the body exceeds that exerted by fresh
+water by about one thirty-sixth part of the whole force of the
+latter.&mdash;<i>By Dr. Lardner.</i>
+</p>
+<center>
+<i>Ice lighter than Water</i>.
+</center>
+<p>
+It is known that in the process of congelation, water undergoes a
+considerable increase of bulk; thus a quantity of water, which at
+the temperature of 40 deg. measures a cubic inch, will have a greater
+magnitude when it assumes the form of ice at the temperature of 32 deg.
+Consequently ice is, bulk for bulk, lighter than water. Hence it is
+that ice is always observed to collect and float at the surface.&mdash;A
+remarkable effect produced by the buoyancy of ice in water is observable
+in some of the great rivers in America. Ice collects round stones at the
+bottom of the river, and it is sometimes formed in such a quantity that
+the upward pressure by its buoyancy exceeds the weight of the stone
+round which it is collected&mdash;consequently it raises the stone to the
+surface. Large masses of stone are thus observed floating down the river
+at considerable distances from the places of their formation.&mdash;<i>Ibid</i>.
+</p>
+<center>
+<i>Domestic Use of the Hydrometer</i>.
+</center>
+<p>
+The adulteration of milk by water may always be detected by the
+hydrometer, and in this respect it may be a useful appendage to
+household utensils. Pure milk has a greater specific gravity than
+water, being 103, that of water being 100. A very small proportion of
+water mixed with milk will produce a liquid specifically lighter than
+water.&mdash;Although the hydrometer is seldom applied to domestic uses,
+yet it might be used for many ordinary purposes which could scarcely
+be attained by any other means. The slightest adulteration of spirits,
+or any other liquid of known quality, may be instantly detected by it;
+and it is recommended by its cheapness, the great facility of its
+manipulation, and the simplicity of its results.&mdash;<i>Ibid.</i>
+</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>
+ THE GATHERER.
+</h2>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+ <p> A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.</p>
+ <p style="text-align: right;"> SHAKSPEARE.</p>
+</div></div>
+<hr />
+<p>
+The late Lord Clonmel, who never thought of demanding more than a
+shilling for an affidavit, used to be well satisfied provided it was a
+good one. In his time the Birmingham shillings were current, and he used
+the following extraordinary precaution to avoid being imposed upon by
+taking a bad one:&mdash;"You shall true answer make to such questions as
+shall be demanded of you touching this affidavit, so help you God.
+Is this a good shilling?"
+</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ SCRAPS.
+</h3>
+<p>
+The <i>Court Journal</i>, describing a Study in Windsor Castle,
+says&mdash;"The first of a series in the plain <i>English</i> style. The
+ceiling is white, with a cornice of simple <i>Grecian</i> design!"
+</p>
+<p>
+According to a recent traveller, fat sheep are so plentiful in the
+Brazils that they are used as <i>fuel</i> to feed their lime-kilns.
+</p>
+<p>
+Supposing the productive power of wheat to be only six-fold, the produce
+of a single acre would cover the whole surface of the globe in fourteen
+years.
+</p>
+<p>
+A Philadelphia Paper announces the arrival of the Siamese Twins in that
+city, in the following manner:&mdash;"<i>One</i> of the Siamese twins arrived
+here on Monday last, accompanied by his brother."
+</p>
+<p>
+The term Husting, or Hustings, as applied to the scaffold erected at
+elections, from which candidates address the electors, is derived from
+the Court of Husting, of Saxon origin, and the most ancient in the
+kingdom. Its name is a compound of <i>hers</i> and <i>ding</i>; the former
+implying a house, and the latter a thing, cause, suit, or plea; whereby
+it is manifest that <i>husding</i> imports a house or hall, wherein causes
+are heard and determined; which is further evinced by the Saxon <i>dingere</i>,
+or <i>thingere</i>, an advocate, or lawyer. [<i>Hus</i> and <i>thing</i> (thong)
+a place enclosed, a building roped round.]&mdash;<i>Atlas.</i>
+</p>
+<p>
+Segrais says, that when Louis XIV. was about seventeen years of age, he
+followed him and his brother, the Duke of Orleans, out of the playhouse,
+and that he heard the duke ask the king what he thought of the play they
+had just been seeing, and which had been well received by the audience:
+"Brother, (replied Louis,) do not you know that I never pretend to give
+my opinion on any thing that I do not perfectly understand."
+</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ ELECTIONEERING ADVICE.
+</h3>
+<p>
+Among the curious <i>Autograph Letters</i>, at Sotheby's late sale,
+there was a curious one of <i>Sarah</i>, Duchess of Marlborough, dated
+August 16th, 1740, viz. A canvassing letter in favour of two Members for
+Reading; with the following electioneering advice:&mdash;"<i>Nothing but a
+good Parliament can save England next Session; they are both very honest
+men, and will never give a vote to a Placeman or a Pensioner.</i>"
+</p>
+<h4>
+P.T.W.
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ THE NATIONAL DEBT.
+</h3>
+<p>
+George the Third came to the throne in 1760, and found the national debt
+120 millions; he reigned 59 years, and left the national debt 820
+millions, 700 millions more than at his accession, increasing on the
+whole period about 36 thousand per day, or nearly 23 pounds per minute.
+At the beginning of his reign the taxes amounted annually to 6 millions;
+at the ending 60 millions.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ PLURALITIES.
+</h3>
+<p>
+In the year 1238, it was agreed in an assembly of divines at Paris,
+that none could without forfeiture of eternal happiness, possess two
+benefices at the same time; one being worth fifteen livres Parisis,
+each about 2s. 6d. sterling.
+</p>
+<p>
+N.B. There does not appear to be any such decision by any assembly of
+divines in England, at least not since the reformation.
+</p>
+<h4>
+G.K.
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ COMPUNCTIOUS VISITINGS.
+</h3>
+<p>
+It is said of a certain physician that he never passed the churchyard of
+the place where he resided, without pulling forth his handkerchief from
+his pocket, and hiding his face with it. Upon this circumstance being
+noticed by an acquaintance, he apologized for it by saying, "You will
+recollect, sir, what a number of people there are who have found their
+way hither under my directions. Now, I am always apprehensive lest some
+of them recognising my features should lay hold of me, and oblige me to
+take up my lodging along with them."
+</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ IMPROMPTU ON THE BURIAL OF SHUTER, THE ACTOR.
+</h3>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> Alas! poor Ned!</p>
+<p class="i2"> He's now in bed,</p>
+ <p> Who seldom was before;</p>
+<p class="i2"> The revel rout,</p>
+<p class="i2"> The midnight shout,</p>
+ <p> Shall never know him more.</p>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> Entomb'd in clay,</p>
+<p class="i2"> Here let him lay,</p>
+ <p> And silence ev'ry jest;</p>
+<p class="i2"> For life's poor play</p>
+<p class="i2"> Has past away,</p>
+ <p> And here he sleeps in rest.</p>
+</div></div>
+<hr class="full" />
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+<a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a>
+<b>Footnote 1</b>:
+<a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+<p>
+See <i>Mirror</i>, vol. xiii. p. 227. Gower is buried here,
+Fletcher and Messenger too; and not long since the bones of
+Bishop Andrews chapels for the New London Bridge approach.&mdash;See
+also <i>Mirror</i>, vol. xvi. p. 297.
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>
+<i>Printed and Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, (near Somerset
+House,) London; sold by ERNEST FLEISCHER, 626, New Market, Leipsic;
+G.G. BENNIS, 55, Rue Neuve, St. Augustin, Paris; and by all Newsmen
+and Booksellers.</i>
+</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12676 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #12676 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/12676)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction
+ Volume 17, Number 490, Saturday, May 21, 1831
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: June 22, 2004 [EBook #12676]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIRROR OF LITERATURE, NO. 490 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, David Garcia and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. XVII, NO. 490.] SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1831. [PRICE 2d.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: OLD HOUSE IN SOUTHWARK.]
+
+
+This crazy, but not unpicturesque building, was taken down in the autumn
+of last year, in forming an approach to the New London Bridge. It stood
+on the eastern side of the High-street, and is worthy of record among
+the pleasing relics of antiquity, which it has ever been the object of
+_The Mirror_ to rescue from oblivion. Its style of architecture--that of
+the seventh Henry--is interesting: there is a florid picturesqueness in
+the carvings on the fronts of the first and second stories, and probably
+this ornament extended originally to the uppermost stories, which had
+subsequently been covered with plaster.
+
+We remember the house for the last twenty years, but cannot trace this
+or any other alteration in its front. The windows, it will be seen, are
+of different periods, those on the right-hand second and the left-hand
+third floor being of the oldest date.
+
+Apart from these attractions, and as a specimen of the olden domestic
+architecture of the metropolis, the annexed Cut bears an historic
+interest, in its having been the residence of the ill-starred Anne
+Boleyn, queen of Henry the Eighth. The interior was in palatial style,
+having been elaborately finished; and in one of the apartments, we learn
+that the royal arms were very conspicuous.
+
+In early times, Southwark was one of the most celebrated of the
+metropolitan suburbs; and it is much to be regretted that the liberality
+of our times has not encouraged the production of its ancient history.
+Every one at all familiar with London is aware of the antiquity of St.
+Saviour's Church, the original foundation of which was from the profits
+of a ferry over the Thames, whence its original name, St. Mary Overy, or
+"over the ferry." This was some time before the Conquest; but the church
+was principally rebuilt in the fourteenth century. We have spoken of its
+ancient fame elsewhere.[1] Bankside, its name in spiritual and secular
+story, is likewise of some note. The early Bishops of Winchester had a
+palace and _park_ here; remains of the former were laid open by a
+fire about seventeen years since. Then, who does not remember, in the
+love of sports and pastimes, the bull and bear-baiting theatres, and
+the uncouth glory of the Globe theatre, associated with the poet of all
+time--Shakspeare. Southwark was, therefore, a fitting site for a royal
+palace for occasional retirement, and its contiguity to the Thames must
+have enhanced its pleasantness.
+
+Miss Benger, in her agreeable _Memoirs of Anne Boleyn_, does not
+mention the Queen's abode in Southwark; but the date of the architecture
+of the annexed house, and its closer identification with Queen
+Elizabeth, render the first mentioned circumstance by no means
+improbable. Previous to the marriage of Anne Boleyn, we learn that Henry
+passed not a few of his leisure hours "in the delightful society of Anne
+Boleyn." "Every day they met and spent many hours in riding or walking
+together." Her family at this time resided at Durham House, on the site
+of the Adelphi, and Anne frequently made excursions with Henry in the
+vicinity of London.
+
+Of the antiquity of this district we could quote more proofs. The
+_galleried_ inn-yards, and among them that at which the Pilgrims
+sojourned on their road to Canterbury, are among them. In our last
+volume too, at page 160, we engraved an ancient Vault in Tooley-street,
+the remains of the "great house, builded of stone, with arched gates,
+which pertained to the Prior of Lewis, in Sussex, and was his lodging
+when he came to London." Not far from this was "another great House of
+Stone and Timber," which, in the thirteenth century, was held of John,
+"Earl Warren, by the Abbot of St. Augustins, at Canterbury." Stowe
+says--"It was an ancient piece of worke, and seemeth to be one of the
+first builded houses on that side of the river, over against the city:
+it was called the Abbot's Inne of St. Augustine in Southwark."
+
+There was also another "Inne" near this spot, which belonged to the
+Abbey of Battle, in Sussex, and formed the town residence of its Abbots.
+This stood on the banks of the Thames, between the Bridge House and
+Battle Bridge, which was so called, "for that it standeth on the ground,
+and over a water-course (flowing out of Thames) pertayning to that
+Abbey, and was therefore both builded and repayred by the Abbots of that
+house, as being hard adjoyning to the Abbot's lodging." Its situation
+is known by the landing-place called Battle Stairs. On the opposite
+side of Tooley-street is a low neighbourhood of meanly-built streets
+and passages, still denominated the Maze, from the intricacies of a
+labyrinth in the gardens of the Abbot of Battle's Inn, and which fronted
+its entrance-gate.
+
+With these few quotations of the ancient importance of Southwark, we can
+but repeat our regret that no regular history of this district has yet
+been published. There are three or four gentlemen resident there, whose
+antiquarian attainments highly qualify them for the task. The public
+would surely find them patronage.
+
+The Engraving is from an original sketch by an ingenious Correspondent,
+M.P. of Upton, near Windsor, whom we thank for this specimen of good
+taste. We are always happy to receive antiquarian illustrations of our
+Metropolis, and in this instance the zeal of the artist, who resides
+twenty miles distant, deserves special mention.
+
+
+ [1] See _Mirror_, vol. xiii. p. 227. Gower is buried here,
+ Fletcher and Messenger too; and not long since the bones of
+ Bishop Andrews chapels for the New London Bridge approach.--See
+ also _Mirror_, vol. xvi. p. 297.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PARLIAMENT.
+
+(_For the Mirror._)
+
+The following particulars, which have been gleaned from several
+sources, relating to the British Parliament, may be acceptable at the
+present time, when the English people are in hopes of a renovation of
+that Constitution which has been, and will still continue to be, the
+admiration of the civilized world:--The word Parliament was first
+used in 1265; and the Commons were admitted at this time, though not
+regularly represented. The parliament called at Shrewsbury, in 1283,
+by Edward I., was the first to which cities and towns were summoned to
+send representatives. It was also the first that granted aids towards
+the national defence of the three denominations of knights, citizens,
+and burgesses, as well as by the lords spiritual and temporal. In this
+parliament the representatives sat in a separate chamber from the barons
+and knights. The Commons consisted of two knights for each county, two
+representatives for the city of London, and two for each of the
+following twenty towns only:--
+
+Winchester, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, York, Bristol, Exeter, Lincoln,
+Canterbury, Carlisle, Norwich, Northampton, Nottingham, Scarborough,
+Grimsby, Lynn, Colchester, Yarmouth, Hereford, Chester, Shrewsbury,
+Worcester.
+
+
+From this it appears that there were not representatives of any towns in
+the counties of
+
+Westmoreland, Lancaster, Derby, Durham, Stafford, Warwick, Leicester,
+Rutland, Suffolk, Hertford, Bedford, Cambridge, Huntingdon, Buckingham,
+Berks, Oxford, Wilts, Somerset, Gloucester, Dorset, Sussex, Surrey.
+
+
+In after times, burghs that were summoned frequently prayed the Crown to
+be excused from sending representatives, on the account of their being
+compelled to pay 3s. 4d. a day to each member for his maintenance, while
+attending in his place; yet the allowance was made on a plan so strictly
+economical, that the knights of Berkshire were only allowed for six
+days, those for Bedfordshire for only five days, and those for Cornwall
+for only eleven days, when called to a parliament at York. Sheriffs,
+in their write for elections to parliament, sometimes omitted one
+or more burghs in a county, and at other times sent writs to the same
+burghs--and this, for aught known to the contrary, without instruction
+from the king or his council. Where burghs were poor, there were many
+such omissions, by favour of the sheriff, for a space of nearly three
+hundred years. Upon petition of the town of Torrington to Edward III.,
+in 1366, he directed a letter to the bailiff and good men of the town,
+excusing them "from the burden of sending two representatives to
+parliament, as they had never been obliged so to do till the 24th of his
+reign, when," says the king, "the sheriffs of Devonshire maliciously
+summoned them to send two members to parliament."
+
+Writs for the election of members to serve in the House of Commons are
+issued under different authorities upon a general election, and upon
+vacancies of particular seats during the continuance of a parliament.
+In the former case, the Lord Chancellor of Great Britain, pursuant to
+the order in council, causes the writs of elections to be issued for all
+places in England and Scotland to which such writs are usually sent. By
+the Articles and Act of Union with Ireland, the Lord Chancellor then,
+pursuant to the said orders, &c., causes writs to be issued and directed
+by the Clerk of the Crown in Ireland to the several counties, and such
+counties of cities and towns as send members to the united parliament.
+
+It is generally supposed that the circumstance of bishops, or other
+ecclesiastics having seats in the legislature, is peculiar to England.
+This is a mistake;--it was characteristic of the Scottish constitution
+for centuries previous to their connexion with England: so far back,
+indeed, if not much farther, as the twelfth century. It is stated, in
+ancient documents connected with the history of the county of Elgin, the
+authenticity of which cannot be doubted, that the Abbey of Kinloss was
+founded by David I., in January, 1150, and that the abbot was mitred,
+and had a seat in parliament.
+
+To the passing of a bill, the assent of the knights, citizens, and
+burgesses must be in person; but the lords may give their votes by
+proxy; and the reason is, that the barons always sat in parliament in
+their own right, as part of the _pares curtis_ of the king; and
+therefore, as they were allowed to serve by proxy in the wars, so had
+they leave to make proxies in parliament; but the commons coming only
+as representing the barones minores, and the soccage tenants in the
+country, and as representing the men of the cities, &c., they could not
+constitute proxies as representatives of others.
+
+When it is the pleasure of the Crown to dissolve a parliament, it is
+the constant practice immediately to summon another, and to make the
+dissolution of the old and the calling of the new simultaneous acts.
+By the Act of 7 and 8 of William III., c. xxv. s. I, forty days
+should intervene between the teste and return of the writs for a new
+parliament; but a longer time is necessary, and fifty days now
+intervene.
+
+Parliaments became triennial from the reigns of Edward III., but not
+until 1694 had any act passed to make such duration legal. In 1716 this
+was repealed, and the present act passed, making them septennial.
+
+W.G.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SIMPLE AMBITION.
+
+(_To the Editor._)
+
+
+The following anecdote was told me last summer, in the cabriolet of a
+diligence between Pau and Bayonne, and is very much at your service.
+EGOMET IPSE.
+
+
+About twenty-three years ago, the vane of Strasbourg Cathedral was
+struck by lightning, so that it hung on one side, threatening by its
+fall to endanger the lives of the people below. The alarm was so great,
+that the authorities, after a special consultation, posted bills about
+the streets, offering any reward that should be required to any one that
+would venture to ascend and strike off the vane. While the good citizens
+were reading this announcement, a peasant from the department of the
+Landes passed by, and being unable to read, he inquired the purport of
+the advertisement. When informed, he immediately offered his services
+for that purpose, and was conducted to the mayor and the bishop, who
+happened to be both in the Hôtel de Ville at the time. They questioned
+him, and fully acquainted him with the difficulties of the
+enterprise--such as the real height, and that the upper part of the
+spire could only be ascended by ladders on the outside. However, nothing
+daunted, he persisted in his resolution to perform the feat on the
+morrow. All Strasbourg was assembled in the open places of the city on
+the next day; and, although admiring his courage as they saw him ascend,
+they most prudently refrained from cheering him as he deserved. Few who
+were then shading their eyes from the sun, in order to gaze on the
+spire, but must have envied him the scene of surpassing loveliness that
+was spread below him, although it is probable that neither the green
+landscape fading into blue distance, the relics of ancient castles,
+nor the beautiful Rhine glittering in sunshine, detained his regards.
+He who at home, in his own barren and level sands, had been used to
+no greater elevations than his stilts, was now mounting like an eagle
+towards heaven, and admired by thousands. When he reached the summit,
+he deliberately seated himself on the highest stone, with one leg on
+each side of the vane; and while his clothes were visibly fluttered
+in a strong breeze at such an eminence, he, with a hammer and chisel,
+displaced the cross that had caused such alarm, It flew spinning to the
+earth, and, borne away by the wind, fell in a neighbouring field, where
+it sank twenty inches into the soil. The air was now rent with
+acclamations towards him,
+
+ Cui robur et aes triplex
+ Circa pectus erat--
+
+
+(for, be it remarked, he was the only person who had even proposed
+to effect its removal). On his descent, he was carried in triumph to
+the Hôtel de Ville. Being thanked by the authorities then and there
+assembled, and assured of their intense anxiety for his life ever since
+he had quitted the earth, he was asked what was the recompense he
+demanded? He modestly replied, "that if they were pleased with what
+he had performed, he hoped they would not think him presumptuous, but
+he should so much like to walk through the Arsenal, and see all its
+wonderful stores and docks!"--and they could not prevail upon him to
+ask more.
+
+A week afterwards he left Strasbourg, with twenty-five Napoleons in
+his pocket; and declared that he had never before spent his time so
+agreeably as he did in that city, for he had seen the Imperial Arsenal,
+the fortifications, and many other fine, as well as useful, sights, and
+had been continually feasted gratis by the rich and the great folks.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+RANSOMS.
+
+(_Concluded from page_ 149.)
+
+The queen of Edward III., after the battle of Durham, demanded of John
+Copland, David of Scotland; on his remonstrance that no one but the king
+had a right to his prisoner, Edward sent for him to Calais, and bestowed
+on him in return for his captive, £500, in land. The Scottish monarch
+paid, after an imprisonment of eleven years, 100,000 marks, and was
+dismissed. Charles de Blois, at the same period paid 700,000 crowns, and
+left his two sons as hostages. Michael de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk, paid
+£20,000. sterling, when only a simple knight. Duc d'Alençon gave for his
+freedom 200,000 crowns, and actually sold part of his estate to the Duc
+de Bretagne to pay it. Caprice often caused the detention of men in
+captivity, from their inability to comply with the absurd demands of
+their captors. Louis XI. refused to part with Wolfang Poulain, a
+Burgundian officer, unless he would purchase his redemption with some
+favourite hounds belonging to the Seigneur de Bossu. As Bossu did not
+feel sufficiently interested in his friend's welfare to comply with the
+king's wishes, and part with his dogs, some time elapsed before any
+treaty could be entered into, to restore Poulain to his country.
+
+This practice, though it undoubtedly contributed to soften the horrors
+of war, often caused hostilities to be undertaken on the most absurd and
+frivolous pretences. The English are represented by Comines as rejoicing
+in a war with France, from a recollection of the prices they obtained
+from the lords and princes they captured. Another bad effect may be
+traced to it, in the violations of safe conduct, the seizure of
+individuals during times of peace, which the middle ages so constantly
+exhibit. Oliver de Clisson, the Constable of France, on entering into a
+castle to examine its strength, at the request of the Duc de Bretagne,
+in 1387, was seized, and at first commanded to be thrown into the sea.
+The savage Breton afterwards being troubled in conscience, expressed his
+joy that his order had not been complied with, and released Clisson on
+the payment of 100,000 livres.
+
+During the wars of Edward III. and Philip, many a soldier of fortune
+amassed considerable opulence by the ransoming of his prisoners.
+Croquart, a famous leader of these companies, is related to have become
+extremely rich by the money he received from the ransoms of castles and
+towns. In the fourteenth century several Knights of Suabia having
+associated themselves together for chivalrous engagements, endeavoured
+to seize a rich Count of Wirtenburg, as a _means of procuring a noble
+sum of money for the ransom of himself and his family_. For this
+purpose they attacked him in his castle at Wildbad, but were repulsed.
+At Poictiers, the King of France was nearly torn to pieces by the
+soldiers in disputing for their prize. At the Bridge of Luissac,
+Carlonnet, the French commander, fell into the hands of the enemy, who
+were about to end the quarrel respecting his possession by putting him
+to death, when the timely arrival of an English knight rescued him from
+their power. At Agincourt, eighteen French gentlemen entered into an
+agreement to direct all their attacks against King Henry, most probably
+with a view of acquiring a fortune by his capture; hence the contest was
+the hottest about his person. After the battle of Nanci, and the death
+of the Duke of Burgundy, by the sword of Charles de Beaumont, the latter
+is said to have died of regret, when he became aware whom it was he had
+slain, and the loss he had sustained of a ducal ransom.
+
+Before quitting this subject, it may be observed that the value of a
+prisoner's liberty was a regularly transferable property. Coeur de Lion
+was sold to the emperor Henry; Philip Augustus bargained for him; and
+his ransom reduced England, from sea to sea, to the utmost distress.
+Louis XI. bought the bastard of Burgundy from Renè, Duc de Lorrain,
+for 10,000 crowns, and also William of Chalons, Prince of Orange, for
+20,000, from Sieur de Grosté. Joan of Arc was sold to the English for
+10,000 livres, and a pension of 300. In the case of the Earl of
+Pembroke, who became the property of Du Guescelin, as part of the
+purchase-money for some estates in Spain, he had sold to Henry, King of
+Castile, the constable lost his expected 120,000 livres by the death of
+his prisoner; as this nobleman was in a bad state of health, his bankers
+at Bruges wisely declined paying the money until he became _sound and
+in good condition_. (_Quand il serait sain, et en bon point._)
+The earl dying before he left France, Du Guescelin lost both his estates
+and money. One of the family of the Blois was presented to his
+favourite, the Duke of Ireland, by Richard II., who disposed of his
+master's bounty to Oliver de Clisson for 120,000 livres. Zizim, the
+brother of Bajazet, Emperor of the Turks, after being defeated by his
+brother in an attempt to seize the throne, fled to the Knights of Rhodes
+for succour. They, fearing the vengeance of the Sultan, transferred him
+to Louis XI. who fulfilled his trust faithfully, and kept him for the
+knights, though offered all the relics that the east abounded with, and
+even the kingdom of Jerusalem, by Bajazet, for his prisoner. After being
+given into the custody of the Pope by Louis, and a six years' residence
+at Rome, he was sent back to France, as the king had found out that he
+might be of service in his engagements with Constantinople; he was,
+however, not restored to his brother in the condition which the Flemings
+had stipulated the Earl of Pembroke to be restored; for before his
+redelivery to the French, he is supposed to have been poisoned.
+
+H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE EQUESTRIAN STATUE OF PETER THE GREAT.
+
+(_To the Editor._)
+
+
+This stands upon a rock, which was found in a morass near Lachta, in
+Karelin, at a distance of eleven versts, or about 41,250 English feet.
+The dimensions of this stone were found to be 21 feet by 42 in length,
+and 34 in breadth; its weight is calculated at 3,200,000 lbs. or 1,600
+tons. The mechanism for its conveyance was invented by Count Carbury,
+who went by the name of Chevalier Lascuri. A solid road was first made
+from the stone to the shore; then brass slips were inserted under the
+stone to go upon cannon balls of five inches diameter, in metal grooves,
+by windlasses worked by 400 men every day, 200 fathoms towards the place
+of destination. The water transport was performed by what are called
+camels in the dockyards of Petersburgh and Amsterdam.
+
+E.A.B
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SONNET TO HOPE.
+
+(_For The Mirror._)
+
+
+ As some lone pilgrim through Night's dreary scene,
+ With cautious steps scarce venturing on his way,
+ Views the chaste orb of Evening's soft-eyed Queen
+ Gild the blue east, and scare those mists away
+ Which from his sight each faithful light obscur'd,
+ And led him wildering, sinking pale with fear!
+ Not he more bless'd by Cynthia's light allur'd,
+ Onward his course with happier thoughts doth steer,
+ Than I, O Hope! blest cheerer of the soul!
+ Who, long in Sorrow's darkening clouds involv'd,
+ When black despair usurp'd mild Joy's control,
+ Saw thee, bright angel, fram'd of heavenly mould,
+ Dip thy gay pallet in the rainbow's hue,
+ And call each scene of Peace and Mirth to view.
+
+
+_The Author of "A Tradesman's Lays."_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The income of a Russian metropolitan does not exceed 800l. a-year; that
+of an archbishop, 600l.; and of a bishop, 500l.; sums apparently as
+small as persons of their rank can possibly subsist on, even in Russia.
+They are, however, allowed a considerable sum annually for purposes of
+charity.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE SKETCH-BOOK.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A SCENE FROM LIFE.
+
+(_For the Mirror._)
+
+ Truth is strange--stranger than fiction.
+ LORD BYRON.
+
+
+"And so the Fernlands is to be sold at last," I said, casually meeting
+Mr. Nibble, our under-sheriff--"Poor N----, I am grieved for him, he has
+struggled hard against oppression."
+
+"It is quite true, sir," replied the man of the law, "a horning came
+down last night, but it will answer no end--for Messrs. Sharke and
+Scrapepen, have advertised the whole of the property for public roup
+on Tuesday next."
+
+The Fernlands estate had been the family property of the N----s since
+the conquest for aught I know. The present representative, after having
+sent his sons out into the world, as all Scotchmen do, to fight their
+way, (one of whom by the by was accumulating a snug fortune in India)
+got involved in some commercial speculation, for which he was wholly
+unfitted, being anything but a business man. He was a worthy
+unsuspecting fellow, but at last saw his way clearer, and as he thought
+got out, though a very heavy loser. In consequence of this scrape he
+wrote to his son in India, to say, that unless he could remit him a
+large sum, which he named, it would be impossible to keep his ground
+at Fernlands.
+
+Very soon afterwards his late partner, who was a good sort of fellow
+too, failed, and N---- was paralyzed on receiving a letter from the
+attorney to the assignees to say, that not having regularly gazetted his
+retirement from the concern, he had rendered himself legally liable to
+the creditors of the late firm of ---- and Co., and unless N---- paid
+the balance which remained due after the assets of the bankrupt's estate
+had been ascertained, that immediate steps would be resorted to, to
+compel him. The matter soon got abroad, and all N----'s other creditors
+also pressed forward to crush him--well, to make a disagreeable story
+short, the end is as I have previously related. Poor N---- is to be
+ruined to pay another man's debts, after a vast deal to do with law and
+lawyers, and much heat on both sides.
+
+I had taken great interest in the matter from the first, and it was with
+deep feelings of sorrow that I saw this excellent family likely to be
+driven from the home of their forefathers, by the merciless and often
+unjust hand of the law. N---- was, I believe, generally liked, and no
+person in need, in the district where he resided, looked up to the
+_Laird_ for advice or assistance in vain. You may judge therefore
+of the public sensation. While these matters were pending, N---- looked
+with the deepest anxiety for the arrival of a letter from his son in
+India; and every day did he send his servant express to the little
+post-office at ----, but in vain.
+
+At last the fatal day of sale arrived. N----, in the depth of his
+distress had early sent for me to consult whether even at the eleventh
+hour something could not be done to avert the calamity. A sinking man
+catches at a straw. It wanted less than three hours of the time of sale
+when I entered the grounds of Fernlands. The gate was half off its
+hinges, the posts plastered with advertisements of the sale; and people,
+as always happens in such cases, were already pouring towards the house
+more from a motive of curiosity than from an intention of purchasing
+anything. As I advanced towards the scene of action, I could observe
+that the shrubberies were injured, and the rare plants and flowers
+which both N---- and his wife had valued so much--for they were fond
+of the study of nature--exhibited evident tokens of the mischief of
+the careless multitude thronging to the show. The day was clear and
+beautiful, the breeze played through the leafy wilderness with a joyous
+effect; the contrast between the peace and harmony of nature, and the
+discord and tumult of man and his deeds, was affecting. But such
+thoughts were soon chased away from my mind, as I advanced over a
+portion of the lawn towards the stables, I saw N----'s favourite mare,
+and the old pony, Jack, (whom I recollected as the companion of N----'s
+boys, and as tractable as a dog,) in the hands of a rascally sheriff's
+officer, who was showing them to a horse-dealer from a neighbouring
+town. The lawn in the front of the house was covered with straggling
+groups of people, either discussing the event of the day, or examining
+some of the furniture which was strewed there.
+
+"Eh, sirs!" said an old man, brushing a tear from his eye, "I never
+thoucht to ha' seen the like o' this day's wark--and my forbears have
+had a bit o' farm under the laird's a hundred an' saxteen year, and
+better nor kinder folk to the puir man never lived."
+
+Mr. Nibble, who was Messrs. Sharke's agent, was bustling about, and
+I found him engaged with a fat, pompous little fellow, the auctioneer,
+from a neighbouring town.
+
+"Sad business this, Mr. ----," said he, "Fernlands is in a sad taking
+about it, I believe, but things of this kind will occur, you know; and
+I always say what can't be cured must be endured, eh."
+
+I turned with an ill-concealed expression of disgust from this man, and
+entered the house in search of my friend, for N---- would not quit the
+old place to the last. There is something melancholy in viewing a sale
+at any time--the disarrangement of the furniture--the cheerless and
+chilling aspect of the rooms--the dirt, the bustle, and the heartless
+indifference one witnesses to the misfortunes of others--all come home
+forcibly to the feelings. After stumbling and striking my shins amongst
+piles of chairs, and furniture, and carpets, disposed in lots over the
+now comfortless apartments, I at last reached the study door where I had
+spent many a happy hour with N----. I entered; the room was stripped of
+part of its furniture, the books lying dispersed in heaps over the floor
+or on the massive table, at the side of which N---- was seated on the
+only chair left in the apartment. He was at first unconscious of my
+entrance.
+
+"My dear sir, this is kind indeed," he said as I advanced, struggling
+with his feelings, "but take a chair," and he glanced round the room
+with a bitter smile, as he observed there was none, "my friends are kind
+you see, they think chairs are useless things...."
+
+The loss of his land affected him more than I can describe. He had been
+brought up upon it, and it had become as it were part and parcel of
+himself; it was not an ordinary loss. The noise and bustle in the house
+and sundry interruptions from inquisitive eyes, warned us, as N----
+said, that "we must jog." As we were rising, I accidentally inquired
+whether he had received his letters that morning. "Good God!" he
+exclaimed, "I totally forgot, and poor Andrew I fancy is too much
+occupied in bemoaning the fate of the horses, to have thought of it;
+but we can get them when I return with you this afternoon."
+
+"Delays are dangerous," I replied, "we will not throw a chance away."
+
+We hastened to the stable, and I despatched the servant on my own horse,
+with the utmost expedition to the post-office at ----.
+
+N---- sauntered through a private path in the shrubbery towards the
+entrance of the grounds, and I made my way through the careless throng,
+who had no thought what their own fate might be perhaps to-morrow--to
+Mr. Nibble, and urged him to delay the sale for an hour, but he said it
+was impossible, he would not hurry it for half an hour or so, but that
+they were already pressed for time. The landed property was first to be
+brought to the hammer. I mechanically followed the steps of N----, and
+when I overtook him, we saw through a break in the wood, from the
+increased density of the mob and the elevation of the auctioneer, that
+the sale was commencing.
+
+We gave up all for lost. At this moment I fancied I heard the noise of
+a horse urged to full gallop. The blood rushed to our hearts; we sprung
+through the trees towards the road; in another moment Andrew was in
+sight, urging his horse to his utmost speed. The instant he saw us he
+waved his hat, "A packet from abroad, sir," he sung out as he
+approached, "from our young master, I'm sure."
+
+"God be praised, you are saved," was all I could utter; poor N---- was
+faint with sudden joy and hope. We tore open the envelope, which
+contained bills from his son in India to a large amount. I saw N---- was
+unable to think, and without more ado, I squeezed his hand, seized the
+letter, and put spurs to my horse. The bidding had commenced when I
+reached the wondering crowd, who rapidly fell back as they saw me
+approach. But why should I tire you any longer; in a couple of hours
+Fernlands remained unpolluted by one of the mob, or legal harpies who
+had invaded it. You may guess the rest....
+
+A friend related the preceding incident to me; the reader may suppose
+him to be addressing myself. The leading circumstances are strictly
+true, the names and some trifling matters alone being altered. The story
+is invested with interest from its great similarity to a portion of the
+plot of the "Antiquary;" I have the strongest reason to believe, from
+the intimate acquaintance the great novelist possessed with the country,
+that he drew Sir Arthur Wardour's similar escape from ruin, from a
+recollection of the event briefly related above.
+
+VYVYAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SELECT BIOGRAPHY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PAGANINI, THE VIOLINIST.
+
+By aid of the _Foreign Quarterly Review_, we are enabled to submit
+to our readers the following very interesting Memoirs of this eccentric
+genius.
+
+By the way, we are happy to find that the above work is enabled to
+maintain the high character with which it started. It argues well for
+the literary taste of this country, by cherishing acquaintance with
+continental literature, and thus strengthening our resources at home.
+
+
+Nicolo Paganini was born at Genoa, in February, 1784. We are not
+informed as to his father's profession, if indeed he had any: all that
+we are told is, that his chief pursuit was to improve his circumstances,
+which were not the best in the world, by speculating in the lottery, so
+that when his little son, Nicolo, began at an unusually early age to
+give strong indications of musical talent, it seemed to him as if the
+wheel of fortune had at last been propitious, and he accordingly lost
+no time in setting to work to make the most of his prize. Having some
+skill on the violin himself, he resolved to teach him that instrument;
+and as soon as he could hold it, put one into his hands, and made him
+sit beside him from, morning to night, and practise it. The incessant
+drudgery which he compelled him to undergo, and the occasional
+starvation to which he subjected him, seriously impaired his health,
+and, as Paganini himself asserts, laid the foundation of that
+valetudinarian state which has ever since been his portion, and which
+his pale, sickly countenance, and his sunk and exhausted frame so
+strongly attest. As his enthusiasm was such as to require no artificial
+stimulus, this severe system could only have been a piece of cool and
+wanton barbarity. He already began to show much promise of excellence,
+when a circumstance occurred which not only served to confirm these
+early prognostications, but to rouse him to exert all his energies.
+This was no other than a dream of his mother, Theresa. An angel appeared
+to her; she besought him to make her Nicolo a great violin player; he
+gave her a token of consent;--and the effect which this dream had upon
+all concerned, we sober-minded people can have no idea of. Young
+Paganini redoubled his perseverance. In his eighth year, under the
+superintendence of his father, he had written a sonata, which, however,
+along with many other juvenile productions, he lately destroyed; and
+as he played about three times a week in the churches and at private
+musical parties, upon a fiddle nearly as large as himself, he soon began
+to make himself known among his townsmen. At this time he received much
+benefit from one Francesco Gnecco, who died in 1811, and whom he always
+speaks highly of.
+
+In his ninth year, being applied to by a travelling singer to join him
+in a concert, he made his first public appearance in the great theatre
+at Genoa, and played the French air "La Carmagnole," with his own
+variations, with great applause.
+
+His father now resolved to place him under the tuition of the well-known
+composer, Rolla, and for that purpose took him along with him to Parma.
+The particulars of their interview afford a striking proof of the
+proficiency which he had by this time acquired. As Rolla happened to be
+ill and lying in bed, the party were shown into the ante-chamber, when,
+observing upon the table one of the composer's newest concertos, the
+father beckoned to his son to take up his violin and play it, which he
+did at sight, in such a way that the sick man immediately started up,
+demanded who it was, and could scarcely be prevailed upon to believe
+that the sounds had proceeded from a little boy, and his intended pupil;
+but as soon as he had satisfied himself that that was really the case,
+he declined to receive him. "For God's sake," said he, "go to Paer, your
+time would be lost with me, I can do nothing for you."
+
+To Paer accordingly they went, who received him kindly, and referred
+him to his own teacher, the old and experienced "Maestro di Capella"
+Giretti, from Naples, who gave him instructions for six months, three
+times a-week in counterpoint. During this period he wrote twenty-four
+Fugues for four hands, with pen, ink, and paper alone, and without any
+instrument, which his master did not allow him, and, assisted by his own
+inclination, made rapid progress. The great Paer also took much interest
+in him, giving him compositions to work out, which he himself revised:
+an interest for which Paganini ever afterwards showed himself deeply
+grateful.
+
+The time was now come when Nicolo was destined, like other youthful
+prodigies, to be hawked about the country, to fill the pockets of his
+mercenary father, who managed to speculate upon him with considerable
+success in Milan, Bologna, Florence, Pisa, Leghorn, and most of the
+upper and central towns of Italy, where his concerts were always well
+attended. Young Paganini liked these excursions well enough, but being
+now about fifteen years of age, he began to be of opinion that they
+would be still more agreeable if he could only contrive to get rid of
+the old gentleman, whose spare diet and severe discipline had now become
+more irksome to him than ever. To accomplish this desirable object, an
+opportunity soon offered. It was the custom of Lucca, at the feast of
+St. Martin, to hold a great musical festival, to which strangers were
+invited from all quarters, and numerous travellers resorted of their own
+accord; and as the occasion drew near, Nicolo begged hard to be allowed
+to go there in company with his elder brother, and after much entreaty,
+succeeded in obtaining permission. He made his appearance as a solo
+player, and succeeded so well, that he resolved now to commence
+vagabondizing on his own account--a sort of life to which he soon
+became so partial, that, notwithstanding many handsome offers which
+he occasionally received to establish himself in several places,
+as a concerto player or director of the orchestra, he never could be
+persuaded to settle any where. At a later period, however, he lived for
+some time at the court of Lucca, but soon found it more pleasant and
+profitable to resume his itinerant habits. He visited all parts of
+Italy, but usually made Genoa his head-quarters, where, however, he
+preferred to play the part of the dilletante to that of the virtuoso,
+and performed in private circles without giving public concerts.
+
+It was not long before he had amassed about 20,000 francs, part of which
+he proposed to devote to the maintenance of his parents. His father,
+however, was not to be put off with a few thousands, but insisted upon
+the whole.--Paganini then offered him the interest of the capital, but
+Signor Antonio very coolly threatened him with instant death unless he
+agreed to consign the whole of the principal in his behalf; and in order
+to avert serious consequences, and to procure peace, he gave up the
+greater part of it.
+
+It was early in 1828 when Paganini arrived at Vienna, where he gave
+a great many concerts with a success equal, if not superior, to any
+which had hitherto attended his exertions. His performance excited the
+admiration and astonishment of all the most distinguished professors and
+connoisseurs of this critical city. With any of the former all idea of
+competition was hopeless; and their greatest violinist, Mayseder, as
+soon as he had heard him, with an ingenuousness which did him honour,
+as we ourselves have reason to know, wrote to a friend in London, that
+he might now lock up his violin whenever he liked.
+
+In estimating the labour which it must have cost a performer like
+Paganini to have arrived at such transcendent excellence, people are
+often apt to err in their calculations as to the actual extent of
+time and practice which has been devoted to its acquisition. That the
+perfect knowledge of the _mechanique_ of the instrument which his
+performance exhibits, and his almost incredible skill and dexterity
+in its management must necessarily have been the result of severe
+discipline, is beyond all question; but more, much more, in every case
+of this kind, is to be ascribed to the system upon which that discipline
+has proceeded, and to the genius and enthusiasm of the artist. The
+miraculous powers of Paganini in the opinion of his auditors were not
+to be accounted for in the ordinary way. To them, it was plain that they
+must have sprung from a life of a much more settled and secluded cast
+than that of an itinerant Italian musical professor. It was equally
+clear, from his wild, haggard, and mysterious looks, that he was no
+ordinary personage, and had seen no common vicissitudes. The vaults of
+a dungeon accordingly were the local habitation which public rumour, in
+its love of the marvellous, seemed unanimously to assign to him, as the
+only place where "the mighty magic" of his bow could possibly have been
+acquired. Then, as to the delinquency which led to his incarceration,
+there were various accounts: some imputed it to his having been a
+captain of banditti; others, only a carbonaro; some to his having killed
+a man in a duel; but the more current and generally received story was,
+that he had stabbed or poisoned his wife, or, as some said, his
+mistress; although, as fame had ascribed to him no fewer than four
+mistresses, it was never very clearly made out which of his seraglio it
+was who had fallen the victim of his vengeance. The story not improbably
+might have arisen from his having been confounded with a contemporary
+violin-player of the name of Duranowski, a Pole, to whom in person he
+bore some resemblance, and who, for some offence or other having been
+imprisoned at Milan, during the leisure which his captivity afforded,
+had contrived greatly to improve himself in his art; and when once
+it was embodied into shape, the fiction naturally enough might have
+obtained the more credence, from the fact that two of his most
+distinguished predecessors, Tartini and Lolly, had attained to the great
+mastery which they possessed over their instrument during a period of
+solitude--the one within the walls of a cloister, the other in the
+privacy and retirement of a remote country village. At all events, the
+rumours were universally circulated and believed, and the innocent and
+much injured Paganini had for many years unconsciously stood forth in
+the eyes of the world as a violator of the laws, and even a convicted
+murderer--not improbably, to a certain extent, reaping the golden fruits
+of that "bad eminence;" for public performers, as we too often see, who
+have once lost their "good name," so far from finding themselves, in the
+words of Iago, "poor indeed," generally discover that they have only
+become objects of greater interest and attraction. How long he had lived
+in the enjoyment of this supposed infamy, and all the benefits accruing
+from it, we really cannot pretend to say; but he seems never to have
+been made fully aware of the formidable position in which he stood until
+he had reached Vienna, when the Theatrical Gazette, in reviewing his
+first concert, dropped some pretty broad hints as to the rumoured
+misdeeds of his early life. Whereupon he resolved at once publicly to
+proclaim his innocence, and to put down the calumny; for which purpose,
+on the 10th of April, 1828, there was inserted in the leading Vienna
+journals a manifesto, in Italian as well as German, subscribed by him,
+declaring that all these widely-circulated rumours were false; that at
+no time, and under no government whatever, had he ever offended against
+the laws, or been put under coercion; and that he had always demeaned
+himself as became a peaceable and inoffensive member of society; for the
+truth of which he referred to the magistracies of the different states
+under whose protection he had till then lived in the public exercise of
+his profession.
+
+The truth of this appeal (which it is obvious no delinquent would have
+dared to make) was never called in question, no one ever ventured to
+take up the gauntlet which Paganini had thrown down, and his character
+as a man thenceforward stood free from suspicion.
+
+His whimsicalities, his love of fun, and many other points of his
+character, are sometimes curiously exemplified in his fantasias. He
+imitates in perfection the whistling and chirrupping of birds, the
+tinkling and tolling of bells, and almost every variety of tone which
+admits of being produced; and in his performance of _Le Streghe_
+(The Witches) a favourite interlude of his, where the tremulous voices
+of the old women are given with a truly singular and laughable effect,
+his _vis comica_ finds peculiar scope.
+
+His command of the back-string of the instrument has always been an
+especial theme of wonder and admiration, and, in the opinion of some,
+could only be accounted for by resorting to the theory of the dungeon,
+and the supposition that his other strings being worn out, and not
+having it in his power to supply their places, he had been forced from
+necessity to take refuge in the string in question; a notion very like
+that of a person who would assert, that for an opera dancer to learn to
+stand on one leg, the true way would be--to have only one leg to stand
+upon. We shall give Paganini's explanation of this mystery in his own
+words:
+
+"At Lucca, I had always to direct the opera when the reigning family
+visited the theatre; I played three times a week at the court, and every
+fortnight superintended the arrangement of a grand concert for the court
+parties, which, however, the reigning princess, Elisa Bacciochi Princess
+of Lucca and Piombino, Napoleon's favourite sister, was not always
+present at, or did not hear to the close, as the harmonic tones of
+my violin were apt to grate her nerves, but there never failed to be
+present another much esteemed lady, who, while I had long admired
+her, bore (at least so I imagined) a reciprocal feeling towards me.
+Our passion gradually increased; and as it was necessary to keep it
+concealed, the footing on which we stood with each other became in
+consequence the more interesting. One day I promised to surprise her
+with a musical _jeu d'esprit_, which should have a reference to
+our mutual attachment. I accordingly announced for performance a comic
+novelty, to which I gave the name of 'Love Scene.' All were curiously
+impatient to know what this should turn out to be, when at last I
+appeared with my violin, from which I had taken off the two middle
+strings, leaving only the E and the G string. By the first of these
+I proposed to represent the lady, by the other the gentleman; and I
+proceeded to play a sort of dialogue, in which I attempted to delineate
+the capricious quarrels and reconciliations of lovers--at one time
+scolding each other, at another sighing and making tender advances,
+renewing their professions of love and esteem, and finally winding up
+the scene in the utmost good humour and delight. Having at last brought
+them into a state of the most perfect harmony, the united pair lead off
+a _pas de deux_, concluding with a brilliant finale. This musical
+scena went off with much eclat. The lady, who understood the whole
+perfectly, rewarded me with her gracious looks; the princess was all
+kindness, overwhelmed me with applause, and, after complimenting me upon
+what I had been able to effect upon the two strings, expressed a wish to
+hear what I could execute upon one string. I immediately assented--the
+idea caught my fancy; and as the emperor's birthday took place a. few
+weeks afterwards, I composed my Sonata 'Napoleon' for the G. string, and
+performed it upon that day before the court with so much approbation
+that a cantata of Cimarosa, following immediately alter it upon the same
+evening, was completely extinguished, and produced no effect whatever.
+This is the first and true cause of my partiality for the G. string; and
+as they were always desiring to hear more of it, one day taught another,
+until at last my proficiency in this department was completely
+established."
+
+We know no one who has been more cruelly misrepresented than the
+subject of this notice. In reality a person of the gentlest and most
+inoffensive habits, he is any thing rather than the desperate ruffian
+he has been described. In his demeanour he is modest and unassuming;
+in his disposition, liberal and generous to a fault. Like most artists,
+ardent and enthusiastic in his temperament, and in his actions very much
+a creature of impulse; he is full of that unaffected simplicity which we
+almost invariably find associated with true genius. He has an only son,
+by a Signora Antonia Bianchi, a singer from Palermo, with whom he lived
+for several years until the summer of 1828, when he was under the
+necessity of separating from her in consequence of the extreme violence
+of her temper; and in this little boy all his affections are
+concentrated. He is a very precocious child, and already indicates
+strong signs of musical talent. Being of a delicate frame of health,
+Paganini never can bear to trust him out of his sight. "If I were to
+lose him," says he, "I would be lost myself; it is quite impossible I
+can ever separate myself from him; when I awake in the night, he is my
+first thought."--Accordingly, ever since he parted from his mother, he
+has himself enacted the part of the child's nurse.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Why is Mr. Whitbread in his brewery like the Jerusalem coffee-house?
+Because _He-brews_ drink therein.
+
+W.G.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NATURALIST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE SUSTILLO.
+
+A caterpillar, which the Indians name sustillo, and by which a paper
+is fabricated, very similar to that made in China, is bred in the pacae,
+a tree well known in Peru. In proportion to the vigour and majestic
+growth of this tree, is the number of the insects it nourishes, and
+which are of the kind and size of the bombyx, or silk-worm. When they
+are completely satiated, they unite at the body of the tree, seeking the
+part which is best adapted to the extension they have to take. They then
+form, with the greatest symmetry and regularity, a web which is larger
+or smaller, according to the number of the operators; and more or less
+pliant, according to the quality of the leaf by which they have been
+nourished, the whole of them remaining beneath. This envelope, on which
+they bestow such a texture, consistency, and lustre, that it cannot be
+decomposed by any practicable expedient, having been finished, they
+all of them unite, and ranging themselves in vertical and even files,
+form in the centre a perfect square. Being thus disposed, each of them
+makes its cocoon, or pod, of a coarse and short silk, in which it is
+transformed from the grub into the chrysalis, and from the chrysalis
+into the papilio, or moth. In proportion as they afterwards quit their
+confinement, to take wing, they detach wherever it is most convenient
+to them, their envelope, or web, a portion of which remains suspended
+to the trunk of the tree, where it waves to and fro like a streamer,
+and which becomes more or less white, according as the air and humidity
+of the season and situation admit. This natural silk paper has been
+gathered measuring a yard and a half, of an elliptical shape, which
+is peculiar to all of it.
+
+W.G.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DESCRIPTION OF A BEAUTIFUL TREE.
+
+_By John F.M. Dovaston, Esq. A.M., of Westfelton, near Shrewsbury._
+
+
+ "_Hamlet._ Do you see nothing there?
+ _Queen._ Nothing at all; yet all that is I see."
+ _Hamlet._
+
+ "You cannot see the wood for trees."
+ _Ray's Proverbs._
+
+
+It was now the middle of May; the trees had fully put forth their
+bright, fresh leaves, and the green fields were luxuriant in a profusion
+of flowers. We had travelled through a fine country; when, descending
+the slope of a wooded valley, we were struck with delight and admiration
+at a tree of extraordinary appearance. There were several of the sort,
+dispersed singly, and in groups over the plains and grassy knolls. One
+we shall attempt to describe, though well aware how feeble is the most
+florid description to depict an idea of so magnificent an object. In
+height it exceeded 50 ft., the diameter of its shade was nearly 90 ft.,
+and the circumference of the bole 15 ft.: it was in full leaf and
+flower, and in appearance at once united the features of strength,
+majesty, and beauty; having the stateliness of the oak, in its trunk and
+arms; the density of the sycamore, in its dark, deep, massy foliage;
+and the graceful featheriness of the ash, in its waving branches, that
+dangled in rich tresses almost to the ground. Its general character as
+a tree was rich and varied, nor were its parts less attractive by their
+extreme beauty when separately considered. Each leaf was about 18 in. in
+length; but nature, always attentive to elegance, to obviate heaviness,
+had at the end of a very strong leaf-stalk divided it into five, and
+sometimes seven, leafits, of unequal length, and very long oval shape,
+finely serrated. These leafits were disposed in a circular form,
+radiating from the centre, like the leaves of the fan palm, though
+placed in a contrary plane to those of that magnificent ornament of the
+tropical forests. The central, or lower, leafits were the largest, each
+of them being 10 in. in length, and 4 in. in breadth, and the whole
+exterior of the foliage being disposed in an imbricated form, having a
+beautifully light and palmated appearance. The flowers, in which the
+tree was profuse, demand our deep admiration and attention: each group
+of them rose perpendicularly from the end of the young shoot, and was in
+length 14 in., like a gigantic hyacinth, and quite as beautiful, spiked
+to a point, exhibiting a cone or pyramid of flowers, widely separate on
+all sides, and all expanded together, principally white, finely tinted
+with various colours, as red, pink, yellow, and buff, the stamina
+forming a most elegant fringe amid the modest tints of the large and
+copious petals. These feathery blossoms, lovely in colours and stately
+in shape, stood upright on every branch all over the tree, like flowery
+minarets on innumerable verdant turrets. We had thus the opportunity of
+ascertaining that it belonged to that class of Linnaeus consisting
+entirely of rare plants the Heptándria, and the order Monogynia; the
+natural order Trihilàtae; and the _A'_cera of Jussieu.
+
+The natives informed us that the fruit ripens early in autumn, and
+consists of bunches of apples, thinly beset with sharp thorns, each when
+broken producing one or two large kernels, about 2 in. in circumference,
+of the finest bright mahogany colour without, and white within; that the
+tree is deciduous, and just before its fall changes to the finest tints
+of red, yellow, orange, and brown. When divested of its luxuriant
+foliage, the buds of the next year appear like little spears, which
+through the winter are covered with a fine glutinous gum, evidently
+designed to protect the embryo shoots within, as an hybernaculum, from
+the severe frosts of the climate, and which glisten in the cold sunshine
+like diamonds. It has the strange property of performing the whole of
+its vigorous shoot, nearly a yard long, in the short space of three
+weeks, employing all the rest of the year in converting it into wood,
+adding to its strength, and varying its beauty. The wood when sawn is
+of the finest snowy whiteness. The tree is easily raised; indifferent
+as to soil, climate, or situation; removed with safety, of quick growth,
+thrives to a vast age and size; subject to no blight or disease; in the
+earliest spring bursting its immense buds into that vigour, exuberance,
+and beauty, which we have here feebly attempted to describe. The natives
+said it was originally brought from the east of Asia, but grows freely
+in any climate, and in their tongue its name is designated by a
+combination of three words, signifying separately, a noble animal,
+an elegant game, and a luscious kernel. Had Linnaeus seen this tree,
+he would have assuredly contemplated it with delightful ecstacy, and
+named it the _Ae'_sculus Hippocástanum.--_Magazine of Natural
+History._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CIGAR-SMOKING.
+
+The Surgeon-General of the Forces has recently made public his
+belief, that never, till within the last twenty years, did he see so
+many young men with pale faces and emaciated figures, and he attributes
+the existence of the evil to the use of Cigars. The unreflecting
+servility with which men adopt new and foreign practices, is fully
+exemplified in the present case; for it is notorious that the practice
+of cigar-smoking, the modern foppery from Regent-street to Cheapside and
+Cornhill, was an importation of the Peninsular War; the imitation having
+been begun by the Spaniards, whose models are what are usually called
+the _savages_ of America. The dietetic mischief, and consequent
+paleness of complexion and emaciation of muscle, which are attributable
+to the use of cigars, belong, no doubt, to an injury inflicted, perhaps,
+in more ways than one upon the aids and organs of digestion; nor is
+that hypothesis at all inconsistent with what we hear from so many
+cigar-smokers, namely, that their cigar is their dependence for
+digestion! That, after having impaired the organ, or weakened its tone,
+or dried up the salival menstruum, they should need a stimulant, even in
+the very form of the bane which injures them, is only of a piece with
+all that has been said of drinking, and especially of dram-drinking,
+with which latter debauch, the debauch of cigar-smoking has the closest
+possible alliance. We never pass one of those stifling rendezvous in the
+metropolis--a cigar-shop, open till the latest hours--without mentally
+classing it with the gin-shops, its only compeers!
+
+Exclusive of the low habit of imitation, a dulness and feebleness of
+understanding, an absence of intellectual resources, a vacuity of
+thought is the great inducement to the use of this, as of all other
+drugs, whether from the cigar-shop, or the snuff-shop, or the gin-shop,
+or the wine-cellar; a truth by no means the less certain, because it
+happens that men of the highest powers of mind are drawn into the vice,
+and made to reduce themselves, by their adoption and dependence upon it,
+to the lowest level of the vulgar; but, at the same time, it is not to
+be denied, that a great support in defence of cigar-smoking is found in
+the medical opinions sometimes advanced as to its salutary influence.
+Now, if we admit, broadly and at once, that there may be times and
+circumstances in which the inhaling the hot smoke of a powerful narcotic
+drug is useful to the human body, must it follow that the habitual
+resort to such a practice, and this under all circumstances, is useful
+also, and even free from the most serious inconveniences?
+
+It is the admitted maxim, that if smoking is accompanied by spitting,
+injury results to the smoker; and the reason assigned is, that the
+salival fluid, which should assist digestion, is in this manner
+dissipated, and taken from its office. But may not the habitual
+application of the narcotic influence to the nervous system have its
+evils also? May it not weaken or deaden the nervous and muscular action
+which is needful to digestion? And may not even the excessive quantity
+of the matter of heat, thus artificially conveyed into the body, tend to
+a desiccation of the system, as injurious under general circumstances,
+as it may be beneficial under particular ones?
+
+Smoking invites thirst; and there is little risk in advancing, that
+whatever superinduces an unnatural indulgence in the use of liquids is
+itself, and without farther question, injurious, even if the liquids
+resorted to are of the most innocent description; but, in point of fact,
+the cigar-smoker will usually appease his thirst by means of liquors in
+themselves his enemies!
+
+It is said, however, that the use of cigars is beneficial when we find
+ourselves in marshy situations, with a high temperature, and generally,
+whenever the atmosphere inclines to the introduction of putridity and
+fever into the system. We believe this; and perhaps a useful theory of
+the alternate benefit and mischief of cigar-smoking may be offered upon
+the basis of that proposition. When and wherever the body requires to
+be _dried_, cigar-smoking may be salutary; and when and wherever
+that _drying_, or desiccation, is injurious, then and there
+cigar-smoking may be to be shunned. We know that, while surrounded by
+an atmosphere overcharged, or even only saturated with moisture, moist
+bodies remain moist, or do not part with that excess of moisture from
+which a drier atmosphere would relieve them; and that living bodies,
+so circumstanced, are threatened with typhus and typhoid fever. It is
+highly probable, therefore, that narcotics, in such cases, may allay
+a morbid irritability of the nerves, or effect a salutary diminution
+of healthful sensibility; under such circumstances, the desiccating
+and sedative effects of tobacco-smoking may prove beneficial; while,
+in all ordinary states of the system and of the atmosphere, the
+same desiccative and sedative influences may produce immediate evil
+consequences, more or less readily perceptible, and undermine, however
+gradually, the strength of the constitution.--_United Service
+Journal._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE NEW COINAGE.
+
+Why does not some man of public research enlighten the public on the
+proceedings at the Mint? The whole system is as little comprehensible
+by the uninitiated as the philosopher's stone. The cost of the Mint is
+prodigious--the machinery is all that machinery can be; yet we have one
+of the ugliest coinages of any nation of Europe. A new issue of coin is
+about to be commenced.
+
+"It appears, from the king's proclamation, that the new coinage
+will consist of double sovereigns, to be each of the value of 40s.;
+sovereigns, each of 20s.; and half-sovereigns, 10s. silver crowns,
+half-crowns, shillings, and sixpences. The double-sovereigns have for
+the obverse the king's effigy, with the inscription, 'Gulielmus IIII.
+D.G. Britanniarum Rex. F.D.;' and for the reverse, the ensigns armorial
+of the United Kingdom contained in a shield, encircled by the collar of
+the Order of the Garter, and upon the edge of the piece the words 'Decus
+et Tutamen.' The crowns and half-crowns will be similar. The shilling
+has on the reverse the words 'One Shilling,' placed in the centre of
+the piece, within a wreath, having an olive-branch on one side, and an
+oak-branch on the other; and the sixpences have the same, except the
+word 'Sixpence' instead of the words 'One Shilling.' The coppers will
+be nearly as at present."
+
+Now we must observe, what the master of the Mint and the people about
+him ought to have observed before, that there is in the first instance
+a considerable expense incurred in the coinage of the double-sovereigns,
+without any possible object, except the expense itself may be an object,
+which is not impossible. We shall have in this coin one of the most
+clumsy and useless matters of circulation that could be devised. The
+present sovereign answers every purpose that this clumsy coin can be
+required for, and even the single sovereign would be a much more
+convenient coin for circulation if it were divided, as every one knows
+who knows the trouble of getting change. The half-sovereign is in fact
+a much more convenient coin. But on this clumsy coin we must have a
+_Latin_ inscription, as if it were intended only for the society of
+antiquaries, or to be laid up in cabinets, which we acknowledge would be
+most likely its fate, except for the notorious bad taste of the British
+coinage. Of much use it is to an English public to have the classical
+phraseology of Gulielmus Britanniarum Rex, put in place of the national
+language. Then too we must have the collar of the Order of the Garter
+to encircle the national arms, of which this Order is nonsensically
+pronounced "Decus et Tutamen." The Glory and Protection. The Order of
+the Garter the _glory and protection_ of England! We are content to
+let this absurdity stay in Latin or Sanscrit; English would be shamed by
+it. The Order of the Garter which goes round the knee of any man, who
+comes with the minister's fiat on the subject, and which has no more
+relation to British glory or British defence than the Order of the Blue
+Button or the Yellow frog of his majesty the Emperor of China; and this
+is to go forth on our national gold coin! and for fear that the folly
+would not be sufficiently spread, it is to be stamped on our crowns and
+half-crowns! The shillings and sixpences luckily escape: plain English
+will do for them. And all this goes on from year to year, while we have
+in the example of France a model of what a mint ought to be. Every
+foreigner makes purchases at the French mint; and the series of national
+medals executed there is a public honour and a public profit too. But
+whoever thinks of purchasing English mintage except for bullion?--With a
+history full of the most stirring events, we have not a single medallic
+series--we have scarcely a single medal. But we have in lieu of those
+vanities a master of the mint, who is tost new into the office on every
+change of party, who has probably in the whole course of his life never
+known the difference between gold and silver but by their value in
+sovereigns and shillings; but who, in the worst of times, shows his
+patriotism by receiving a salary of no less than five thousand pounds
+a year?
+
+_Monthly Magazine._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+HYDROSTATICS AND PNEUMATICS.
+
+(_Cabinet Cyclopaedia_, vol. xvii.)
+
+
+_Easier to swim in the Sea than in a River_.
+
+Sea water has a greater buoyancy than fresh water, being relatively
+heavier; and hence it is commonly said to be much easier to swim in
+the sea than in a river: this effect, however, appears to be greatly
+exaggerated. A cubic foot of freshwater weighs about 1,000 ounces; and
+the same bulk of sea water weighs 1,028 ounces; the weight, therefore,
+of the latter exceeds the former by only 28 parts in 1,000. The force
+exerted by sea water to support the body exceeds that exerted by fresh
+water by about one thirty-sixth part of the whole force of the
+latter.--_By Dr. Lardner._
+
+
+_Ice lighter than Water_.
+
+It is known that in the process of congelation, water undergoes a
+considerable increase of bulk; thus a quantity of water, which at
+the temperature of 40 deg. measures a cubic inch, will have a greater
+magnitude when it assumes the form of ice at the temperature of 32 deg.
+Consequently ice is, bulk for bulk, lighter than water. Hence it is
+that ice is always observed to collect and float at the surface.--A
+remarkable effect produced by the buoyancy of ice in water is observable
+in some of the great rivers in America. Ice collects round stones at the
+bottom of the river, and it is sometimes formed in such a quantity that
+the upward pressure by its buoyancy exceeds the weight of the stone
+round which it is collected--consequently it raises the stone to the
+surface. Large masses of stone are thus observed floating down the river
+at considerable distances from the places of their formation.--_Ibid_.
+
+
+_Domestic Use of the Hydrometer_.
+
+The adulteration of milk by water may always be detected by the
+hydrometer, and in this respect it may be a useful appendage to
+household utensils. Pure milk has a greater specific gravity than
+water, being 103, that of water being 100. A very small proportion of
+water mixed with milk will produce a liquid specifically lighter than
+water.--Although the hydrometer is seldom applied to domestic uses,
+yet it might be used for many ordinary purposes which could scarcely
+be attained by any other means. The slightest adulteration of spirits,
+or any other liquid of known quality, may be instantly detected by it;
+and it is recommended by its cheapness, the great facility of its
+manipulation, and the simplicity of its results.--_Ibid._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER.
+
+ A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.
+ SHAKSPEARE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The late Lord Clonmel, who never thought of demanding more than a
+shilling for an affidavit, used to be well satisfied provided it was a
+good one. In his time the Birmingham shillings were current, and he used
+the following extraordinary precaution to avoid being imposed upon by
+taking a bad one:--"You shall true answer make to such questions as
+shall be demanded of you touching this affidavit, so help you God.
+Is this a good shilling?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SCRAPS.
+
+The _Court Journal_, describing a Study in Windsor Castle,
+says--"The first of a series in the plain _English_ style. The
+ceiling is white, with a cornice of simple _Grecian_ design!"
+
+According to a recent traveller, fat sheep are so plentiful in the
+Brazils that they are used as _fuel_ to feed their lime-kilns.
+
+Supposing the productive power of wheat to be only six-fold, the produce
+of a single acre would cover the whole surface of the globe in fourteen
+years.
+
+A Philadelphia Paper announces the arrival of the Siamese Twins in that
+city, in the following manner:--"_One_ of the Siamese twins arrived
+here on Monday last, accompanied by his brother."
+
+The term Husting, or Hustings, as applied to the scaffold erected at
+elections, from which candidates address the electors, is derived from
+the Court of Husting, of Saxon origin, and the most ancient in the
+kingdom. Its name is a compound of _hers_ and _ding_; the former
+implying a house, and the latter a thing, cause, suit, or plea; whereby
+it is manifest that _husding_ imports a house or hall, wherein causes
+are heard and determined; which is further evinced by the Saxon _dingere_,
+or _thingere_, an advocate, or lawyer. [_Hus_ and _thing_ (thong)
+a place enclosed, a building roped round.]--_Atlas._
+
+Segrais says, that when Louis XIV. was about seventeen years of age, he
+followed him and his brother, the Duke of Orleans, out of the playhouse,
+and that he heard the duke ask the king what he thought of the play they
+had just been seeing, and which had been well received by the audience:
+"Brother, (replied Louis,) do not you know that I never pretend to give
+my opinion on any thing that I do not perfectly understand."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ELECTIONEERING ADVICE.
+
+Among the curious _Autograph Letters_, at Sotheby's late sale,
+there was a curious one of _Sarah_, Duchess of Marlborough, dated
+August 16th, 1740, viz. A canvassing letter in favour of two Members for
+Reading; with the following electioneering advice:--"_Nothing but a
+good Parliament can save England next Session; they are both very honest
+men, and will never give a vote to a Placeman or a Pensioner._"
+
+P.T.W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE NATIONAL DEBT.
+
+George the Third came to the throne in 1760, and found the national debt
+120 millions; he reigned 59 years, and left the national debt 820
+millions, 700 millions more than at his accession, increasing on the
+whole period about 36 thousand per day, or nearly 23 pounds per minute.
+At the beginning of his reign the taxes amounted annually to 6 millions;
+at the ending 60 millions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PLURALITIES.
+
+In the year 1238, it was agreed in an assembly of divines at Paris,
+that none could without forfeiture of eternal happiness, possess two
+benefices at the same time; one being worth fifteen livres Parisis,
+each about 2s. 6d. sterling.
+
+N.B. There does not appear to be any such decision by any assembly of
+divines in England, at least not since the reformation.
+
+G.K.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+COMPUNCTIOUS VISITINGS.
+
+It is said of a certain physician that he never passed the churchyard of
+the place where he resided, without pulling forth his handkerchief from
+his pocket, and hiding his face with it. Upon this circumstance being
+noticed by an acquaintance, he apologized for it by saying, "You will
+recollect, sir, what a number of people there are who have found their
+way hither under my directions. Now, I am always apprehensive lest some
+of them recognising my features should lay hold of me, and oblige me to
+take up my lodging along with them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+IMPROMPTU ON THE BURIAL OF SHUTER, THE ACTOR.
+
+
+ Alas! poor Ned!
+ He's now in bed,
+ Who seldom was before;
+ The revel rout,
+ The midnight shout,
+ Shall never know him more.
+
+ Entomb'd in clay,
+ Here let him lay,
+ And silence ev'ry jest;
+ For life's poor play
+ Has past away,
+ And here he sleeps in rest.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_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 MIRROR OF LITERATURE, NO. 490 ***
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+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction
+ Volume 17, Number 490, Saturday, May 21, 1831
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: June 22, 2004 [EBook #12676]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIRROR OF LITERATURE, NO. 490 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, David Garcia and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a id="page337" name="page337"></a>[pg 337]</span>
+ <h1>THE MIRROR<br />
+ OF<br />
+ LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.</h1>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <table width="100%" summary="Banner">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left"><b>VOL. XVII, NO. 490.]</b></td>
+ <td align="center"><b>SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1831.</b></td>
+ <td align="right"><b>[PRICE 2d.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+<div class="figure" style="width: 100%;">
+<a href="images/490-1.png"><img width="100%" src="images/490-1.png"
+alt="Old House in Southwark." /></a>
+OLD HOUSE IN SOUTHWARK.
+</div>
+<p>
+This crazy, but not unpicturesque building, was taken down in the autumn
+of last year, in forming an approach to the New London Bridge. It stood
+on the eastern side of the High-street, and is worthy of record among
+the pleasing relics of antiquity, which it has ever been the object of
+<i>The Mirror</i> to rescue from oblivion. Its style of architecture&mdash;that of
+the seventh Henry&mdash;is interesting: there is a florid picturesqueness in
+the carvings on the fronts of the first and second stories, and probably
+this ornament extended originally to the uppermost stories, which had
+subsequently been covered with plaster.
+</p>
+<p>
+We remember the house for the last twenty years, but cannot trace this
+or any other alteration in its front. The windows, it will be seen, are
+of different periods, those on the right-hand second
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page338" name="page338"></a>[pg 338]</span>
+and the left-hand
+third floor being of the oldest date.
+</p>
+<p>
+Apart from these attractions, and as a specimen of the olden domestic
+architecture of the metropolis, the annexed Cut bears an historic
+interest, in its having been the residence of the ill-starred Anne
+Boleyn, queen of Henry the Eighth. The interior was in palatial style,
+having been elaborately finished; and in one of the apartments, we learn
+that the royal arms were very conspicuous.
+</p>
+<p>
+In early times, Southwark was one of the most celebrated of the
+metropolitan suburbs; and it is much to be regretted that the liberality
+of our times has not encouraged the production of its ancient history.
+Every one at all familiar with London is aware of the antiquity of St.
+Saviour's Church, the original foundation of which was from the profits
+of a ferry over the Thames, whence its original name, St. Mary Overy, or
+"over the ferry." This was some time before the Conquest; but the church
+was principally rebuilt in the fourteenth century. We have spoken of its
+ancient fame elsewhere.<a id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a> Bankside, its name in spiritual and secular
+story, is likewise of some note. The early Bishops of Winchester had a
+palace and <i>park</i> here; remains of the former were laid open by a
+fire about seventeen years since. Then, who does not remember, in the
+love of sports and pastimes, the bull and bear-baiting theatres, and
+the uncouth glory of the Globe theatre, associated with the poet of all
+time&mdash;Shakspeare. Southwark was, therefore, a fitting site for a royal
+palace for occasional retirement, and its contiguity to the Thames must
+have enhanced its pleasantness.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Benger, in her agreeable <i>Memoirs of Anne Boleyn</i>, does not
+mention the Queen's abode in Southwark; but the date of the architecture
+of the annexed house, and its closer identification with Queen
+Elizabeth, render the first mentioned circumstance by no means
+improbable. Previous to the marriage of Anne Boleyn, we learn that Henry
+passed not a few of his leisure hours "in the delightful society of Anne
+Boleyn." "Every day they met and spent many hours in riding or walking
+together." Her family at this time resided at Durham House, on the site
+of the Adelphi, and Anne frequently made excursions with Henry in the
+vicinity of London.
+</p>
+<p>
+Of the antiquity of this district we could quote more proofs. The
+<i>galleried</i> inn-yards, and among them that at which the Pilgrims
+sojourned on their road to Canterbury, are among them. In our last
+volume too, at page 160, we engraved an ancient Vault in Tooley-street,
+the remains of the "great house, builded of stone, with arched gates,
+which pertained to the Prior of Lewis, in Sussex, and was his lodging
+when he came to London." Not far from this was "another great House of
+Stone and Timber," which, in the thirteenth century, was held of John,
+"Earl Warren, by the Abbot of St. Augustins, at Canterbury." Stowe
+says&mdash;"It was an ancient piece of worke, and seemeth to be one of the
+first builded houses on that side of the river, over against the city:
+it was called the Abbot's Inne of St. Augustine in Southwark."
+</p>
+<p>
+There was also another "Inne" near this spot, which belonged to the
+Abbey of Battle, in Sussex, and formed the town residence of its Abbots.
+This stood on the banks of the Thames, between the Bridge House and
+Battle Bridge, which was so called, "for that it standeth on the ground,
+and over a water-course (flowing out of Thames) pertayning to that
+Abbey, and was therefore both builded and repayred by the Abbots of that
+house, as being hard adjoyning to the Abbot's lodging." Its situation
+is known by the landing-place called Battle Stairs. On the opposite
+side of Tooley-street is a low neighbourhood of meanly-built streets
+and passages, still denominated the Maze, from the intricacies of a
+labyrinth in the gardens of the Abbot of Battle's Inn, and which fronted
+its entrance-gate.
+</p>
+<p>
+With these few quotations of the ancient importance of Southwark, we can
+but repeat our regret that no regular history of this district has yet
+been published. There are three or four gentlemen resident there, whose
+antiquarian attainments highly qualify them for the task. The public
+would surely find them patronage.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Engraving is from an original sketch by an ingenious Correspondent,
+M.P. of Upton, near Windsor, whom we thank for this specimen of good
+taste. We are always happy to receive antiquarian illustrations of our
+Metropolis, and in this instance the zeal of the artist, who resides
+twenty miles distant, deserves special mention.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page339" name="page339"></a>[pg 339]</span>
+</p>
+<h3>
+ PARLIAMENT.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>For the Mirror.</i>)
+</center>
+<p>
+The following particulars, which have been gleaned from several
+sources, relating to the British Parliament, may be acceptable at the
+present time, when the English people are in hopes of a renovation of
+that Constitution which has been, and will still continue to be, the
+admiration of the civilized world:&mdash;The word Parliament was first
+used in 1265; and the Commons were admitted at this time, though not
+regularly represented. The parliament called at Shrewsbury, in 1283,
+by Edward I., was the first to which cities and towns were summoned to
+send representatives. It was also the first that granted aids towards
+the national defence of the three denominations of knights, citizens,
+and burgesses, as well as by the lords spiritual and temporal. In this
+parliament the representatives sat in a separate chamber from the barons
+and knights. The Commons consisted of two knights for each county, two
+representatives for the city of London, and two for each of the
+following twenty towns only:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+Winchester, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, York, Bristol, Exeter, Lincoln,
+Canterbury, Carlisle, Norwich, Northampton, Nottingham, Scarborough,
+Grimsby, Lynn, Colchester, Yarmouth, Hereford, Chester, Shrewsbury,
+Worcester.
+</p>
+<p>
+From this it appears that there were not representatives of any towns in
+the counties of
+</p>
+<p>
+Westmoreland, Lancaster, Derby, Durham, Stafford, Warwick, Leicester,
+Rutland, Suffolk, Hertford, Bedford, Cambridge, Huntingdon, Buckingham,
+Berks, Oxford, Wilts, Somerset, Gloucester, Dorset, Sussex, Surrey.
+</p>
+<p>
+In after times, burghs that were summoned frequently prayed the Crown to
+be excused from sending representatives, on the account of their being
+compelled to pay 3s. 4d. a day to each member for his maintenance, while
+attending in his place; yet the allowance was made on a plan so strictly
+economical, that the knights of Berkshire were only allowed for six
+days, those for Bedfordshire for only five days, and those for Cornwall
+for only eleven days, when called to a parliament at York. Sheriffs,
+in their write for elections to parliament, sometimes omitted one
+or more burghs in a county, and at other times sent writs to the same
+burghs&mdash;and this, for aught known to the contrary, without instruction
+from the king or his council. Where burghs were poor, there were many
+such omissions, by favour of the sheriff, for a space of nearly three
+hundred years. Upon petition of the town of Torrington to Edward III.,
+in 1366, he directed a letter to the bailiff and good men of the town,
+excusing them "from the burden of sending two representatives to
+parliament, as they had never been obliged so to do till the 24th of his
+reign, when," says the king, "the sheriffs of Devonshire maliciously
+summoned them to send two members to parliament."
+</p>
+<p>
+Writs for the election of members to serve in the House of Commons are
+issued under different authorities upon a general election, and upon
+vacancies of particular seats during the continuance of a parliament.
+In the former case, the Lord Chancellor of Great Britain, pursuant to
+the order in council, causes the writs of elections to be issued for all
+places in England and Scotland to which such writs are usually sent. By
+the Articles and Act of Union with Ireland, the Lord Chancellor then,
+pursuant to the said orders, &amp;c., causes writs to be issued and directed
+by the Clerk of the Crown in Ireland to the several counties, and such
+counties of cities and towns as send members to the united parliament.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is generally supposed that the circumstance of bishops, or other
+ecclesiastics having seats in the legislature, is peculiar to England.
+This is a mistake;&mdash;it was characteristic of the Scottish constitution
+for centuries previous to their connexion with England: so far back,
+indeed, if not much farther, as the twelfth century. It is stated, in
+ancient documents connected with the history of the county of Elgin, the
+authenticity of which cannot be doubted, that the Abbey of Kinloss was
+founded by David I., in January, 1150, and that the abbot was mitred,
+and had a seat in parliament.
+</p>
+<p>
+To the passing of a bill, the assent of the knights, citizens, and
+burgesses must be in person; but the lords may give their votes by
+proxy; and the reason is, that the barons always sat in parliament in
+their own right, as part of the <i>pares curtis</i> of the king; and
+therefore, as they were allowed to serve by proxy in the wars, so had
+they leave to make proxies in parliament; but the commons coming only
+as representing the barones minores, and the soccage tenants in the
+country, and as representing the men of the cities, &amp;c., they could not
+constitute proxies as representatives of others.
+</p>
+<p>
+When it is the pleasure of the Crown to dissolve a parliament, it is the
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page340" name="page340"></a>[pg 340]</span>
+constant practice immediately to summon another, and to make the
+dissolution of the old and the calling of the new simultaneous acts.
+By the Act of 7 and 8 of William III., c. xxv. s. I, forty days
+should intervene between the teste and return of the writs for a new
+parliament; but a longer time is necessary, and fifty days now
+intervene.
+</p>
+<p>
+Parliaments became triennial from the reigns of Edward III., but not
+until 1694 had any act passed to make such duration legal. In 1716 this
+was repealed, and the present act passed, making them septennial.
+</p>
+<h4>
+W.G.C.
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ SIMPLE AMBITION.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>To the Editor.</i>)
+</center>
+<p>
+The following anecdote was told me last summer, in the cabriolet of a
+diligence between Pau and Bayonne, and is very much at your service.
+</p>
+<p style="text-align: right;">EGOMET IPSE.</p>
+<p>
+About twenty-three years ago, the vane of Strasbourg Cathedral was
+struck by lightning, so that it hung on one side, threatening by its
+fall to endanger the lives of the people below. The alarm was so great,
+that the authorities, after a special consultation, posted bills about
+the streets, offering any reward that should be required to any one that
+would venture to ascend and strike off the vane. While the good citizens
+were reading this announcement, a peasant from the department of the
+Landes passed by, and being unable to read, he inquired the purport of
+the advertisement. When informed, he immediately offered his services
+for that purpose, and was conducted to the mayor and the bishop, who
+happened to be both in the Hôtel de Ville at the time. They questioned
+him, and fully acquainted him with the difficulties of the
+enterprise&mdash;such as the real height, and that the upper part of the
+spire could only be ascended by ladders on the outside. However, nothing
+daunted, he persisted in his resolution to perform the feat on the
+morrow. All Strasbourg was assembled in the open places of the city on
+the next day; and, although admiring his courage as they saw him ascend,
+they most prudently refrained from cheering him as he deserved. Few who
+were then shading their eyes from the sun, in order to gaze on the
+spire, but must have envied him the scene of surpassing loveliness that
+was spread below him, although it is probable that neither the green
+landscape fading into blue distance, the relics of ancient castles,
+nor the beautiful Rhine glittering in sunshine, detained his regards.
+He who at home, in his own barren and level sands, had been used to
+no greater elevations than his stilts, was now mounting like an eagle
+towards heaven, and admired by thousands. When he reached the summit,
+he deliberately seated himself on the highest stone, with one leg on
+each side of the vane; and while his clothes were visibly fluttered
+in a strong breeze at such an eminence, he, with a hammer and chisel,
+displaced the cross that had caused such alarm, It flew spinning to the
+earth, and, borne away by the wind, fell in a neighbouring field, where
+it sank twenty inches into the soil. The air was now rent with
+acclamations towards him,
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+ <p> Cui robur et aes triplex</p>
+ <p> Circa pectus erat&mdash;</p>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+(for, be it remarked, he was the only person who had even proposed
+to effect its removal). On his descent, he was carried in triumph to
+the Hôtel de Ville. Being thanked by the authorities then and there
+assembled, and assured of their intense anxiety for his life ever since
+he had quitted the earth, he was asked what was the recompense he
+demanded? He modestly replied, "that if they were pleased with what
+he had performed, he hoped they would not think him presumptuous, but
+he should so much like to walk through the Arsenal, and see all its
+wonderful stores and docks!"&mdash;and they could not prevail upon him to
+ask more.
+</p>
+<p>
+A week afterwards he left Strasbourg, with twenty-five Napoleons in
+his pocket; and declared that he had never before spent his time so
+agreeably as he did in that city, for he had seen the Imperial Arsenal,
+the fortifications, and many other fine, as well as useful, sights, and
+had been continually feasted gratis by the rich and the great folks.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ RANSOMS.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>Concluded from page</i> 149.)
+</center>
+<p>
+The queen of Edward III., after the battle of Durham, demanded of John
+Copland, David of Scotland; on his remonstrance that no one but the king
+had a right to his prisoner, Edward sent for him to Calais, and bestowed
+on him in return for his captive, £500, in land. The Scottish monarch
+paid, after an imprisonment of eleven years, 100,000 marks, and was
+dismissed. Charles de Blois, at the same period paid 700,000 crowns, and
+left his two sons as hostages. Michael de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk, paid
+£20,000. sterling, when
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page341" name="page341"></a>[pg 341]</span>
+only a simple knight. Duc d'Alençon gave for his
+freedom 200,000 crowns, and actually sold part of his estate to the Duc
+de Bretagne to pay it. Caprice often caused the detention of men in
+captivity, from their inability to comply with the absurd demands of
+their captors. Louis XI. refused to part with Wolfang Poulain, a
+Burgundian officer, unless he would purchase his redemption with some
+favourite hounds belonging to the Seigneur de Bossu. As Bossu did not
+feel sufficiently interested in his friend's welfare to comply with the
+king's wishes, and part with his dogs, some time elapsed before any
+treaty could be entered into, to restore Poulain to his country.
+</p>
+<p>
+This practice, though it undoubtedly contributed to soften the horrors
+of war, often caused hostilities to be undertaken on the most absurd and
+frivolous pretences. The English are represented by Comines as rejoicing
+in a war with France, from a recollection of the prices they obtained
+from the lords and princes they captured. Another bad effect may be
+traced to it, in the violations of safe conduct, the seizure of
+individuals during times of peace, which the middle ages so constantly
+exhibit. Oliver de Clisson, the Constable of France, on entering into a
+castle to examine its strength, at the request of the Duc de Bretagne,
+in 1387, was seized, and at first commanded to be thrown into the sea.
+The savage Breton afterwards being troubled in conscience, expressed his
+joy that his order had not been complied with, and released Clisson on
+the payment of 100,000 livres.
+</p>
+<p>
+During the wars of Edward III. and Philip, many a soldier of fortune
+amassed considerable opulence by the ransoming of his prisoners.
+Croquart, a famous leader of these companies, is related to have become
+extremely rich by the money he received from the ransoms of castles and
+towns. In the fourteenth century several Knights of Suabia having
+associated themselves together for chivalrous engagements, endeavoured
+to seize a rich Count of Wirtenburg, as a <i>means of procuring a noble
+sum of money for the ransom of himself and his family</i>. For this
+purpose they attacked him in his castle at Wildbad, but were repulsed.
+At Poictiers, the King of France was nearly torn to pieces by the
+soldiers in disputing for their prize. At the Bridge of Luissac,
+Carlonnet, the French commander, fell into the hands of the enemy, who
+were about to end the quarrel respecting his possession by putting him
+to death, when the timely arrival of an English knight rescued him from
+their power. At Agincourt, eighteen French gentlemen entered into an
+agreement to direct all their attacks against King Henry, most probably
+with a view of acquiring a fortune by his capture; hence the contest was
+the hottest about his person. After the battle of Nanci, and the death
+of the Duke of Burgundy, by the sword of Charles de Beaumont, the latter
+is said to have died of regret, when he became aware whom it was he had
+slain, and the loss he had sustained of a ducal ransom.
+</p>
+<p>
+Before quitting this subject, it may be observed that the value of a
+prisoner's liberty was a regularly transferable property. Coeur de Lion
+was sold to the emperor Henry; Philip Augustus bargained for him; and
+his ransom reduced England, from sea to sea, to the utmost distress.
+Louis XI. bought the bastard of Burgundy from Renè, Duc de Lorrain,
+for 10,000 crowns, and also William of Chalons, Prince of Orange, for
+20,000, from Sieur de Grosté. Joan of Arc was sold to the English for
+10,000 livres, and a pension of 300. In the case of the Earl of
+Pembroke, who became the property of Du Guescelin, as part of the
+purchase-money for some estates in Spain, he had sold to Henry, King of
+Castile, the constable lost his expected 120,000 livres by the death of
+his prisoner; as this nobleman was in a bad state of health, his bankers
+at Bruges wisely declined paying the money until he became <i>sound and
+in good condition</i>. (<i>Quand il serait sain, et en bon point.</i>)
+The earl dying before he left France, Du Guescelin lost both his estates
+and money. One of the family of the Blois was presented to his
+favourite, the Duke of Ireland, by Richard II., who disposed of his
+master's bounty to Oliver de Clisson for 120,000 livres. Zizim, the
+brother of Bajazet, Emperor of the Turks, after being defeated by his
+brother in an attempt to seize the throne, fled to the Knights of Rhodes
+for succour. They, fearing the vengeance of the Sultan, transferred him
+to Louis XI. who fulfilled his trust faithfully, and kept him for the
+knights, though offered all the relics that the east abounded with, and
+even the kingdom of Jerusalem, by Bajazet, for his prisoner. After being
+given into the custody of the Pope by Louis, and a six years' residence
+at Rome, he was sent back to France, as the king had found out that he
+might be of service in his engagements with Constantinople; he was,
+however, not restored
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page342" name="page342"></a>[pg 342]</span>
+to his brother in the condition which the Flemings
+had stipulated the Earl of Pembroke to be restored; for before his
+redelivery to the French, he is supposed to have been poisoned.
+</p>
+<h4>
+H.
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ THE EQUESTRIAN STATUE OF PETER THE GREAT.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>To the Editor.</i>)
+</center>
+<p>
+This stands upon a rock, which was found in a morass near Lachta, in
+Karelin, at a distance of eleven versts, or about 41,250 English feet.
+The dimensions of this stone were found to be 21 feet by 42 in length,
+and 34 in breadth; its weight is calculated at 3,200,000 lbs. or 1,600
+tons. The mechanism for its conveyance was invented by Count Carbury,
+who went by the name of Chevalier Lascuri. A solid road was first made
+from the stone to the shore; then brass slips were inserted under the
+stone to go upon cannon balls of five inches diameter, in metal grooves,
+by windlasses worked by 400 men every day, 200 fathoms towards the place
+of destination. The water transport was performed by what are called
+camels in the dockyards of Petersburgh and Amsterdam.
+</p>
+<h4>
+E.A.B.
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ SONNET TO HOPE.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>For The Mirror.</i>)
+</center>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+ <p> As some lone pilgrim through Night's dreary scene,</p>
+ <p> With cautious steps scarce venturing on his way,</p>
+ <p> Views the chaste orb of Evening's soft-eyed Queen</p>
+ <p> Gild the blue east, and scare those mists away</p>
+ <p> Which from his sight each faithful light obscur'd,</p>
+ <p> And led him wildering, sinking pale with fear!</p>
+ <p> Not he more bless'd by Cynthia's light allur'd,</p>
+ <p> Onward his course with happier thoughts doth steer,</p>
+ <p> Than I, O Hope! blest cheerer of the soul!</p>
+ <p> Who, long in Sorrow's darkening clouds involv'd,</p>
+ <p> When black despair usurp'd mild Joy's control,</p>
+ <p> Saw thee, bright angel, fram'd of heavenly mould,</p>
+ <p> Dip thy gay pallet in the rainbow's hue,</p>
+ <p> And call each scene of Peace and Mirth to view.</p>
+</div></div>
+<h4>
+<i>The Author of "A Tradesman's Lays."</i>
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<p>
+The income of a Russian metropolitan does not exceed 800l. a-year; that
+of an archbishop, 600l.; and of a bishop, 500l.; sums apparently as
+small as persons of their rank can possibly subsist on, even in Russia.
+They are, however, allowed a considerable sum annually for purposes of
+charity.
+</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>
+ THE SKETCH-BOOK.
+</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ A SCENE FROM LIFE.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>For the Mirror.</i>)
+</center>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+ <p> Truth is strange&mdash;stranger than fiction.</p>
+ <p style="text-align: right;"> LORD BYRON.</p>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+"And so the Fernlands is to be sold at last," I said, casually meeting
+Mr. Nibble, our under-sheriff&mdash;"Poor N&mdash;&mdash;, I am grieved for him, he has
+struggled hard against oppression."
+</p>
+<p>
+"It is quite true, sir," replied the man of the law, "a horning came
+down last night, but it will answer no end&mdash;for Messrs. Sharke and
+Scrapepen, have advertised the whole of the property for public roup
+on Tuesday next."
+</p>
+<p>
+The Fernlands estate had been the family property of the N&mdash;&mdash;s since
+the conquest for aught I know. The present representative, after having
+sent his sons out into the world, as all Scotchmen do, to fight their
+way, (one of whom by the by was accumulating a snug fortune in India)
+got involved in some commercial speculation, for which he was wholly
+unfitted, being anything but a business man. He was a worthy
+unsuspecting fellow, but at last saw his way clearer, and as he thought
+got out, though a very heavy loser. In consequence of this scrape he
+wrote to his son in India, to say, that unless he could remit him a
+large sum, which he named, it would be impossible to keep his ground
+at Fernlands.
+</p>
+<p>
+Very soon afterwards his late partner, who was a good sort of fellow
+too, failed, and N&mdash;&mdash; was paralyzed on receiving a letter from the
+attorney to the assignees to say, that not having regularly gazetted his
+retirement from the concern, he had rendered himself legally liable to
+the creditors of the late firm of &mdash;&mdash; and Co., and unless N&mdash;&mdash; paid
+the balance which remained due after the assets of the bankrupt's estate
+had been ascertained, that immediate steps would be resorted to, to
+compel him. The matter soon got abroad, and all N&mdash;&mdash;'s other creditors
+also pressed forward to crush him&mdash;well, to make a disagreeable story
+short, the end is as I have previously related. Poor N&mdash;&mdash; is to be
+ruined to pay another man's debts, after a vast deal to do with law and
+lawyers, and much heat on both sides.
+</p>
+<p>
+I had taken great interest in the matter from the first, and it was with
+deep feelings of sorrow that I saw this excellent family likely to be
+driven from the home of their forefathers, by the merciless and often
+unjust hand of the law. N&mdash;&mdash; was, I believe, generally liked, and no
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page343" name="page343"></a>[pg 343]</span>
+person in need, in the district where he resided, looked up to the
+<i>Laird</i> for advice or assistance in vain. You may judge therefore
+of the public sensation. While these matters were pending, N&mdash;&mdash; looked
+with the deepest anxiety for the arrival of a letter from his son in
+India; and every day did he send his servant express to the little
+post-office at &mdash;&mdash;, but in vain.
+</p>
+<p>
+At last the fatal day of sale arrived. N&mdash;&mdash;, in the depth of his
+distress had early sent for me to consult whether even at the eleventh
+hour something could not be done to avert the calamity. A sinking man
+catches at a straw. It wanted less than three hours of the time of sale
+when I entered the grounds of Fernlands. The gate was half off its
+hinges, the posts plastered with advertisements of the sale; and people,
+as always happens in such cases, were already pouring towards the house
+more from a motive of curiosity than from an intention of purchasing
+anything. As I advanced towards the scene of action, I could observe
+that the shrubberies were injured, and the rare plants and flowers
+which both N&mdash;&mdash; and his wife had valued so much&mdash;for they were fond
+of the study of nature&mdash;exhibited evident tokens of the mischief of
+the careless multitude thronging to the show. The day was clear and
+beautiful, the breeze played through the leafy wilderness with a joyous
+effect; the contrast between the peace and harmony of nature, and the
+discord and tumult of man and his deeds, was affecting. But such
+thoughts were soon chased away from my mind, as I advanced over a
+portion of the lawn towards the stables, I saw N&mdash;&mdash;'s favourite mare,
+and the old pony, Jack, (whom I recollected as the companion of N&mdash;&mdash;'s
+boys, and as tractable as a dog,) in the hands of a rascally sheriff's
+officer, who was showing them to a horse-dealer from a neighbouring
+town. The lawn in the front of the house was covered with straggling
+groups of people, either discussing the event of the day, or examining
+some of the furniture which was strewed there.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Eh, sirs!" said an old man, brushing a tear from his eye, "I never
+thoucht to ha' seen the like o' this day's wark&mdash;and my forbears have
+had a bit o' farm under the laird's a hundred an' saxteen year, and
+better nor kinder folk to the puir man never lived."
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr. Nibble, who was Messrs. Sharke's agent, was bustling about, and
+I found him engaged with a fat, pompous little fellow, the auctioneer,
+from a neighbouring town.
+</p>
+<p>
+"Sad business this, Mr. &mdash;&mdash;," said he, "Fernlands is in a sad taking
+about it, I believe, but things of this kind will occur, you know; and
+I always say what can't be cured must be endured, eh."
+</p>
+<p>
+I turned with an ill-concealed expression of disgust from this man, and
+entered the house in search of my friend, for N&mdash;&mdash; would not quit the
+old place to the last. There is something melancholy in viewing a sale
+at any time&mdash;the disarrangement of the furniture&mdash;the cheerless and
+chilling aspect of the rooms&mdash;the dirt, the bustle, and the heartless
+indifference one witnesses to the misfortunes of others&mdash;all come home
+forcibly to the feelings. After stumbling and striking my shins amongst
+piles of chairs, and furniture, and carpets, disposed in lots over the
+now comfortless apartments, I at last reached the study door where I had
+spent many a happy hour with N&mdash;&mdash;. I entered; the room was stripped of
+part of its furniture, the books lying dispersed in heaps over the floor
+or on the massive table, at the side of which N&mdash;&mdash; was seated on the
+only chair left in the apartment. He was at first unconscious of my
+entrance.
+</p>
+<p>
+"My dear sir, this is kind indeed," he said as I advanced, struggling
+with his feelings, "but take a chair," and he glanced round the room
+with a bitter smile, as he observed there was none, "my friends are kind
+you see, they think chairs are useless things...."
+</p>
+<p>
+The loss of his land affected him more than I can describe. He had been
+brought up upon it, and it had become as it were part and parcel of
+himself; it was not an ordinary loss. The noise and bustle in the house
+and sundry interruptions from inquisitive eyes, warned us, as N&mdash;&mdash;
+said, that "we must jog." As we were rising, I accidentally inquired
+whether he had received his letters that morning. "Good God!" he
+exclaimed, "I totally forgot, and poor Andrew I fancy is too much
+occupied in bemoaning the fate of the horses, to have thought of it;
+but we can get them when I return with you this afternoon."
+</p>
+<p>
+"Delays are dangerous," I replied, "we will not throw a chance away."
+</p>
+<p>
+We hastened to the stable, and I despatched the servant on my own horse,
+with the utmost expedition to the post-office at &mdash;&mdash;.
+</p>
+<p>
+N&mdash;&mdash; sauntered through a private path in the shrubbery towards the
+entrance of the grounds, and I made my way through the careless throng,
+who had no thought what their own fate might be perhaps
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page344" name="page344"></a>[pg 344]</span>
+to-morrow&mdash;to
+Mr. Nibble, and urged him to delay the sale for an hour, but he said it
+was impossible, he would not hurry it for half an hour or so, but that
+they were already pressed for time. The landed property was first to be
+brought to the hammer. I mechanically followed the steps of N&mdash;&mdash;, and
+when I overtook him, we saw through a break in the wood, from the
+increased density of the mob and the elevation of the auctioneer, that
+the sale was commencing.
+</p>
+<p>
+We gave up all for lost. At this moment I fancied I heard the noise of
+a horse urged to full gallop. The blood rushed to our hearts; we sprung
+through the trees towards the road; in another moment Andrew was in
+sight, urging his horse to his utmost speed. The instant he saw us he
+waved his hat, "A packet from abroad, sir," he sung out as he
+approached, "from our young master, I'm sure."
+</p>
+<p>
+"God be praised, you are saved," was all I could utter; poor N&mdash;&mdash; was
+faint with sudden joy and hope. We tore open the envelope, which
+contained bills from his son in India to a large amount. I saw N&mdash;&mdash; was
+unable to think, and without more ado, I squeezed his hand, seized the
+letter, and put spurs to my horse. The bidding had commenced when I
+reached the wondering crowd, who rapidly fell back as they saw me
+approach. But why should I tire you any longer; in a couple of hours
+Fernlands remained unpolluted by one of the mob, or legal harpies who
+had invaded it. You may guess the rest....
+</p>
+<p>
+A friend related the preceding incident to me; the reader may suppose
+him to be addressing myself. The leading circumstances are strictly
+true, the names and some trifling matters alone being altered. The story
+is invested with interest from its great similarity to a portion of the
+plot of the "Antiquary;" I have the strongest reason to believe, from
+the intimate acquaintance the great novelist possessed with the country,
+that he drew Sir Arthur Wardour's similar escape from ruin, from a
+recollection of the event briefly related above.
+</p>
+<h4>
+VYVYAN.
+</h4>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>
+ SELECT BIOGRAPHY.
+</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ PAGANINI, THE VIOLINIST.
+</h3>
+<p>
+By aid of the <i>Foreign Quarterly Review</i>, we are enabled to submit
+to our readers the following very interesting Memoirs of this eccentric
+genius.
+</p>
+<p>
+By the way, we are happy to find that the above work is enabled to
+maintain the high character with which it started. It argues well for
+the literary taste of this country, by cherishing acquaintance with
+continental literature, and thus strengthening our resources at home.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nicolo Paganini was born at Genoa, in February, 1784. We are not
+informed as to his father's profession, if indeed he had any: all that
+we are told is, that his chief pursuit was to improve his circumstances,
+which were not the best in the world, by speculating in the lottery, so
+that when his little son, Nicolo, began at an unusually early age to
+give strong indications of musical talent, it seemed to him as if the
+wheel of fortune had at last been propitious, and he accordingly lost
+no time in setting to work to make the most of his prize. Having some
+skill on the violin himself, he resolved to teach him that instrument;
+and as soon as he could hold it, put one into his hands, and made him
+sit beside him from, morning to night, and practise it. The incessant
+drudgery which he compelled him to undergo, and the occasional
+starvation to which he subjected him, seriously impaired his health,
+and, as Paganini himself asserts, laid the foundation of that
+valetudinarian state which has ever since been his portion, and which
+his pale, sickly countenance, and his sunk and exhausted frame so
+strongly attest. As his enthusiasm was such as to require no artificial
+stimulus, this severe system could only have been a piece of cool and
+wanton barbarity. He already began to show much promise of excellence,
+when a circumstance occurred which not only served to confirm these
+early prognostications, but to rouse him to exert all his energies.
+This was no other than a dream of his mother, Theresa. An angel appeared
+to her; she besought him to make her Nicolo a great violin player; he
+gave her a token of consent;&mdash;and the effect which this dream had upon
+all concerned, we sober-minded people can have no idea of. Young
+Paganini redoubled his perseverance. In his eighth year, under the
+superintendence of his father, he had written a sonata, which, however,
+along with many other juvenile productions, he lately destroyed; and
+as he played about three times a week in the churches and at private
+musical parties, upon a fiddle nearly as large as himself, he soon began
+to make himself known among his townsmen. At this time he received much
+benefit from one Francesco Gnecco, who died in 1811, and whom he always
+speaks highly of.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page345" name="page345"></a>[pg 345]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+In his ninth year, being applied to by a travelling singer to join him
+in a concert, he made his first public appearance in the great theatre
+at Genoa, and played the French air "La Carmagnole," with his own
+variations, with great applause.
+</p>
+<p>
+His father now resolved to place him under the tuition of the well-known
+composer, Rolla, and for that purpose took him along with him to Parma.
+The particulars of their interview afford a striking proof of the
+proficiency which he had by this time acquired. As Rolla happened to be
+ill and lying in bed, the party were shown into the ante-chamber, when,
+observing upon the table one of the composer's newest concertos, the
+father beckoned to his son to take up his violin and play it, which he
+did at sight, in such a way that the sick man immediately started up,
+demanded who it was, and could scarcely be prevailed upon to believe
+that the sounds had proceeded from a little boy, and his intended pupil;
+but as soon as he had satisfied himself that that was really the case,
+he declined to receive him. "For God's sake," said he, "go to Paer, your
+time would be lost with me, I can do nothing for you."
+</p>
+<p>
+To Paer accordingly they went, who received him kindly, and referred
+him to his own teacher, the old and experienced "Maestro di Capella"
+Giretti, from Naples, who gave him instructions for six months, three
+times a-week in counterpoint. During this period he wrote twenty-four
+Fugues for four hands, with pen, ink, and paper alone, and without any
+instrument, which his master did not allow him, and, assisted by his own
+inclination, made rapid progress. The great Paer also took much interest
+in him, giving him compositions to work out, which he himself revised:
+an interest for which Paganini ever afterwards showed himself deeply
+grateful.
+</p>
+<p>
+The time was now come when Nicolo was destined, like other youthful
+prodigies, to be hawked about the country, to fill the pockets of his
+mercenary father, who managed to speculate upon him with considerable
+success in Milan, Bologna, Florence, Pisa, Leghorn, and most of the
+upper and central towns of Italy, where his concerts were always well
+attended. Young Paganini liked these excursions well enough, but being
+now about fifteen years of age, he began to be of opinion that they
+would be still more agreeable if he could only contrive to get rid of
+the old gentleman, whose spare diet and severe discipline had now become
+more irksome to him than ever. To accomplish this desirable object, an
+opportunity soon offered. It was the custom of Lucca, at the feast of
+St. Martin, to hold a great musical festival, to which strangers were
+invited from all quarters, and numerous travellers resorted of their own
+accord; and as the occasion drew near, Nicolo begged hard to be allowed
+to go there in company with his elder brother, and after much entreaty,
+succeeded in obtaining permission. He made his appearance as a solo
+player, and succeeded so well, that he resolved now to commence
+vagabondizing on his own account&mdash;a sort of life to which he soon
+became so partial, that, notwithstanding many handsome offers which
+he occasionally received to establish himself in several places,
+as a concerto player or director of the orchestra, he never could be
+persuaded to settle any where. At a later period, however, he lived for
+some time at the court of Lucca, but soon found it more pleasant and
+profitable to resume his itinerant habits. He visited all parts of
+Italy, but usually made Genoa his head-quarters, where, however, he
+preferred to play the part of the dilletante to that of the virtuoso,
+and performed in private circles without giving public concerts.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not long before he had amassed about 20,000 francs, part of which
+he proposed to devote to the maintenance of his parents. His father,
+however, was not to be put off with a few thousands, but insisted upon
+the whole.&mdash;Paganini then offered him the interest of the capital, but
+Signor Antonio very coolly threatened him with instant death unless he
+agreed to consign the whole of the principal in his behalf; and in order
+to avert serious consequences, and to procure peace, he gave up the
+greater part of it.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was early in 1828 when Paganini arrived at Vienna, where he gave
+a great many concerts with a success equal, if not superior, to any
+which had hitherto attended his exertions. His performance excited the
+admiration and astonishment of all the most distinguished professors and
+connoisseurs of this critical city. With any of the former all idea of
+competition was hopeless; and their greatest violinist, Mayseder, as
+soon as he had heard him, with an ingenuousness which did him honour,
+as we ourselves have reason to know, wrote to a friend in London, that
+he might now lock up his violin whenever he liked.
+</p>
+<p>
+In estimating the labour which it
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page346" name="page346"></a>[pg 346]</span>
+must have cost a performer like Paganini
+to have arrived at such transcendent excellence, people are often apt to
+err in their calculations as to the actual extent of time and practice
+which has been devoted to its acquisition. That the perfect knowledge of
+the <i>mechanique</i> of the instrument which his performance exhibits,
+and his almost incredible skill and dexterity in its management must
+necessarily have been the result of severe discipline, is beyond all
+question; but more, much more, in every case of this kind, is to be
+ascribed to the system upon which that discipline has proceeded, and
+to the genius and enthusiasm of the artist. The miraculous powers of
+Paganini in the opinion of his auditors were not to be accounted for
+in the ordinary way. To them, it was plain that they must have sprung
+from a life of a much more settled and secluded cast than that of an
+itinerant Italian musical professor. It was equally clear, from his
+wild, haggard, and mysterious looks, that he was no ordinary personage,
+and had seen no common vicissitudes. The vaults of a dungeon accordingly
+were the local habitation which public rumour, in its love of the
+marvellous, seemed unanimously to assign to him, as the only place where
+"the mighty magic" of his bow could possibly have been acquired. Then,
+as to the delinquency which led to his incarceration, there were various
+accounts: some imputed it to his having been a captain of banditti;
+others, only a carbonaro; some to his having killed a man in a duel; but
+the more current and generally received story was, that he had stabbed
+or poisoned his wife, or, as some said, his mistress; although, as fame
+had ascribed to him no fewer than four mistresses, it was never very
+clearly made out which of his seraglio it was who had fallen the victim
+of his vengeance. The story not improbably might have arisen from his
+having been confounded with a contemporary violin-player of the name of
+Duranowski, a Pole, to whom in person he bore some resemblance, and who,
+for some offence or other having been imprisoned at Milan, during the
+leisure which his captivity afforded, had contrived greatly to improve
+himself in his art; and when once it was embodied into shape, the
+fiction naturally enough might have obtained the more credence, from the
+fact that two of his most distinguished predecessors, Tartini and Lolly,
+had attained to the great mastery which they possessed over their
+instrument during a period of solitude&mdash;the one within the walls of a
+cloister, the other in the privacy and retirement of a remote country
+village. At all events, the rumours were universally circulated and
+believed, and the innocent and much injured Paganini had for many years
+unconsciously stood forth in the eyes of the world as a violator of the
+laws, and even a convicted murderer&mdash;not improbably, to a certain
+extent, reaping the golden fruits of that "bad eminence;" for public
+performers, as we too often see, who have once lost their "good name,"
+so far from finding themselves, in the words of Iago, "poor indeed,"
+generally discover that they have only become objects of greater
+interest and attraction. How long he had lived in the enjoyment of this
+supposed infamy, and all the benefits accruing from it, we really cannot
+pretend to say; but he seems never to have been made fully aware of the
+formidable position in which he stood until he had reached Vienna, when
+the Theatrical Gazette, in reviewing his first concert, dropped some
+pretty broad hints as to the rumoured misdeeds of his early life.
+Whereupon he resolved at once publicly to proclaim his innocence, and
+to put down the calumny; for which purpose, on the 10th of April, 1828,
+there was inserted in the leading Vienna journals a manifesto, in
+Italian as well as German, subscribed by him, declaring that all these
+widely-circulated rumours were false; that at no time, and under no
+government whatever, had he ever offended against the laws, or been put
+under coercion; and that he had always demeaned himself as became a
+peaceable and inoffensive member of society; for the truth of which he
+referred to the magistracies of the different states under whose
+protection he had till then lived in the public exercise of his
+profession.
+</p>
+<p>
+The truth of this appeal (which it is obvious no delinquent would have
+dared to make) was never called in question, no one ever ventured to
+take up the gauntlet which Paganini had thrown down, and his character
+as a man thenceforward stood free from suspicion.
+</p>
+<p>
+His whimsicalities, his love of fun, and many other points of his
+character, are sometimes curiously exemplified in his fantasias. He
+imitates in perfection the whistling and chirrupping of birds, the
+tinkling and tolling of bells, and almost every variety of tone which
+admits of being produced; and in his performance of <i>Le Streghe</i>
+(The Witches) a favourite interlude of his, where the tremulous voices
+of the old women are given with a truly singular and
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page347" name="page347"></a>[pg 347]</span>
+laughable effect,
+his <i>vis comica</i> finds peculiar scope.
+</p>
+<p>
+His command of the back-string of the instrument has always been an
+especial theme of wonder and admiration, and, in the opinion of some,
+could only be accounted for by resorting to the theory of the dungeon,
+and the supposition that his other strings being worn out, and not
+having it in his power to supply their places, he had been forced from
+necessity to take refuge in the string in question; a notion very like
+that of a person who would assert, that for an opera dancer to learn to
+stand on one leg, the true way would be&mdash;to have only one leg to stand
+upon. We shall give Paganini's explanation of this mystery in his own
+words:
+</p>
+<p>
+"At Lucca, I had always to direct the opera when the reigning family
+visited the theatre; I played three times a week at the court, and every
+fortnight superintended the arrangement of a grand concert for the court
+parties, which, however, the reigning princess, Elisa Bacciochi Princess
+of Lucca and Piombino, Napoleon's favourite sister, was not always
+present at, or did not hear to the close, as the harmonic tones of
+my violin were apt to grate her nerves, but there never failed to be
+present another much esteemed lady, who, while I had long admired
+her, bore (at least so I imagined) a reciprocal feeling towards me.
+Our passion gradually increased; and as it was necessary to keep it
+concealed, the footing on which we stood with each other became in
+consequence the more interesting. One day I promised to surprise her
+with a musical <i>jeu d'esprit</i>, which should have a reference to
+our mutual attachment. I accordingly announced for performance a comic
+novelty, to which I gave the name of 'Love Scene.' All were curiously
+impatient to know what this should turn out to be, when at last I
+appeared with my violin, from which I had taken off the two middle
+strings, leaving only the E and the G string. By the first of these
+I proposed to represent the lady, by the other the gentleman; and I
+proceeded to play a sort of dialogue, in which I attempted to delineate
+the capricious quarrels and reconciliations of lovers&mdash;at one time
+scolding each other, at another sighing and making tender advances,
+renewing their professions of love and esteem, and finally winding up
+the scene in the utmost good humour and delight. Having at last brought
+them into a state of the most perfect harmony, the united pair lead off
+a <i>pas de deux</i>, concluding with a brilliant finale. This musical
+scena went off with much eclat. The lady, who understood the whole
+perfectly, rewarded me with her gracious looks; the princess was all
+kindness, overwhelmed me with applause, and, after complimenting me upon
+what I had been able to effect upon the two strings, expressed a wish to
+hear what I could execute upon one string. I immediately assented&mdash;the
+idea caught my fancy; and as the emperor's birthday took place a. few
+weeks afterwards, I composed my Sonata 'Napoleon' for the G. string, and
+performed it upon that day before the court with so much approbation
+that a cantata of Cimarosa, following immediately alter it upon the same
+evening, was completely extinguished, and produced no effect whatever.
+This is the first and true cause of my partiality for the G. string; and
+as they were always desiring to hear more of it, one day taught another,
+until at last my proficiency in this department was completely
+established."
+</p>
+<p>
+We know no one who has been more cruelly misrepresented than the
+subject of this notice. In reality a person of the gentlest and most
+inoffensive habits, he is any thing rather than the desperate ruffian
+he has been described. In his demeanour he is modest and unassuming;
+in his disposition, liberal and generous to a fault. Like most artists,
+ardent and enthusiastic in his temperament, and in his actions very much
+a creature of impulse; he is full of that unaffected simplicity which we
+almost invariably find associated with true genius. He has an only son,
+by a Signora Antonia Bianchi, a singer from Palermo, with whom he lived
+for several years until the summer of 1828, when he was under the
+necessity of separating from her in consequence of the extreme violence
+of her temper; and in this little boy all his affections are
+concentrated. He is a very precocious child, and already indicates
+strong signs of musical talent. Being of a delicate frame of health,
+Paganini never can bear to trust him out of his sight. "If I were to
+lose him," says he, "I would be lost myself; it is quite impossible I
+can ever separate myself from him; when I awake in the night, he is my
+first thought."&mdash;Accordingly, ever since he parted from his mother, he
+has himself enacted the part of the child's nurse.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+Why is Mr. Whitbread in his brewery like the Jerusalem coffee-house?
+Because <i>He-brews</i> drink therein.
+</p>
+<h4>
+W.G.C.
+</h4>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page348" name="page348"></a>[pg 348]</span>
+</p>
+<h2>
+ THE NATURALIST.
+</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ THE SUSTILLO.
+</h3>
+<p>
+A caterpillar, which the Indians name sustillo, and by which a paper
+is fabricated, very similar to that made in China, is bred in the pacae,
+a tree well known in Peru. In proportion to the vigour and majestic
+growth of this tree, is the number of the insects it nourishes, and
+which are of the kind and size of the bombyx, or silk-worm. When they
+are completely satiated, they unite at the body of the tree, seeking the
+part which is best adapted to the extension they have to take. They then
+form, with the greatest symmetry and regularity, a web which is larger
+or smaller, according to the number of the operators; and more or less
+pliant, according to the quality of the leaf by which they have been
+nourished, the whole of them remaining beneath. This envelope, on which
+they bestow such a texture, consistency, and lustre, that it cannot be
+decomposed by any practicable expedient, having been finished, they
+all of them unite, and ranging themselves in vertical and even files,
+form in the centre a perfect square. Being thus disposed, each of them
+makes its cocoon, or pod, of a coarse and short silk, in which it is
+transformed from the grub into the chrysalis, and from the chrysalis
+into the papilio, or moth. In proportion as they afterwards quit their
+confinement, to take wing, they detach wherever it is most convenient
+to them, their envelope, or web, a portion of which remains suspended
+to the trunk of the tree, where it waves to and fro like a streamer,
+and which becomes more or less white, according as the air and humidity
+of the season and situation admit. This natural silk paper has been
+gathered measuring a yard and a half, of an elliptical shape, which
+is peculiar to all of it.
+</p>
+<h4>
+W.G.C.
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ DESCRIPTION OF A BEAUTIFUL TREE.
+</h3>
+<center>
+<i>By John F.M. Dovaston, Esq. A.M., of Westfelton, near Shrewsbury.</i>
+</center>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+ <p> "<i>Hamlet.</i> Do you see nothing there?</p>
+ <p> <i>Queen.</i> Nothing at all; yet all that is I see."</p>
+ <p style="text-align: right;"> <i>Hamlet.</i></p>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+ <p> "You cannot see the wood for trees."</p>
+ <p style="text-align: right;"> <i>Ray's Proverbs.</i></p>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+It was now the middle of May; the trees had fully put forth their
+bright, fresh leaves, and the green fields were luxuriant in a profusion
+of flowers. We had travelled through a fine country; when, descending
+the slope of a wooded valley, we were struck with delight and admiration
+at a tree of extraordinary appearance. There were several of the sort,
+dispersed singly, and in groups over the plains and grassy knolls. One
+we shall attempt to describe, though well aware how feeble is the most
+florid description to depict an idea of so magnificent an object. In
+height it exceeded 50 ft., the diameter of its shade was nearly 90 ft.,
+and the circumference of the bole 15 ft.: it was in full leaf and
+flower, and in appearance at once united the features of strength,
+majesty, and beauty; having the stateliness of the oak, in its trunk and
+arms; the density of the sycamore, in its dark, deep, massy foliage;
+and the graceful featheriness of the ash, in its waving branches, that
+dangled in rich tresses almost to the ground. Its general character as
+a tree was rich and varied, nor were its parts less attractive by their
+extreme beauty when separately considered. Each leaf was about 18 in. in
+length; but nature, always attentive to elegance, to obviate heaviness,
+had at the end of a very strong leaf-stalk divided it into five, and
+sometimes seven, leafits, of unequal length, and very long oval shape,
+finely serrated. These leafits were disposed in a circular form,
+radiating from the centre, like the leaves of the fan palm, though
+placed in a contrary plane to those of that magnificent ornament of the
+tropical forests. The central, or lower, leafits were the largest, each
+of them being 10 in. in length, and 4 in. in breadth, and the whole
+exterior of the foliage being disposed in an imbricated form, having a
+beautifully light and palmated appearance. The flowers, in which the
+tree was profuse, demand our deep admiration and attention: each group
+of them rose perpendicularly from the end of the young shoot, and was in
+length 14 in., like a gigantic hyacinth, and quite as beautiful, spiked
+to a point, exhibiting a cone or pyramid of flowers, widely separate on
+all sides, and all expanded together, principally white, finely tinted
+with various colours, as red, pink, yellow, and buff, the stamina
+forming a most elegant fringe amid the modest tints of the large and
+copious petals. These feathery blossoms, lovely in colours and stately
+in shape, stood upright on every branch all over the tree, like flowery
+minarets on innumerable verdant turrets. We had thus the opportunity of
+ascertaining that it belonged to that class of Linnaeus consisting
+entirely of rare plants the Heptándria, and the order Monogynia; the
+natural order Trihilàtae; and the <i>A'</i>cera of Jussieu.
+</p>
+<p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page349" name="page349"></a>[pg 349]</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+The natives informed us that the fruit ripens early in autumn, and
+consists of bunches of apples, thinly beset with sharp thorns, each when
+broken producing one or two large kernels, about 2 in. in circumference,
+of the finest bright mahogany colour without, and white within; that the
+tree is deciduous, and just before its fall changes to the finest tints
+of red, yellow, orange, and brown. When divested of its luxuriant
+foliage, the buds of the next year appear like little spears, which
+through the winter are covered with a fine glutinous gum, evidently
+designed to protect the embryo shoots within, as an hybernaculum, from
+the severe frosts of the climate, and which glisten in the cold sunshine
+like diamonds. It has the strange property of performing the whole of
+its vigorous shoot, nearly a yard long, in the short space of three
+weeks, employing all the rest of the year in converting it into wood,
+adding to its strength, and varying its beauty. The wood when sawn is
+of the finest snowy whiteness. The tree is easily raised; indifferent
+as to soil, climate, or situation; removed with safety, of quick growth,
+thrives to a vast age and size; subject to no blight or disease; in the
+earliest spring bursting its immense buds into that vigour, exuberance,
+and beauty, which we have here feebly attempted to describe. The natives
+said it was originally brought from the east of Asia, but grows freely
+in any climate, and in their tongue its name is designated by a
+combination of three words, signifying separately, a noble animal,
+an elegant game, and a luscious kernel. Had Linnaeus seen this tree,
+he would have assuredly contemplated it with delightful ecstacy, and
+named it the <i>Ae'</i>sculus Hippocástanum.&mdash;<i>Magazine of Natural
+History.</i>
+</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>
+ SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ CIGAR-SMOKING.
+</h3>
+<p>
+The Surgeon-General of the Forces has recently made public his
+belief, that never, till within the last twenty years, did he see so
+many young men with pale faces and emaciated figures, and he attributes
+the existence of the evil to the use of Cigars. The unreflecting
+servility with which men adopt new and foreign practices, is fully
+exemplified in the present case; for it is notorious that the practice
+of cigar-smoking, the modern foppery from Regent-street to Cheapside and
+Cornhill, was an importation of the Peninsular War; the imitation having
+been begun by the Spaniards, whose models are what are usually called
+the <i>savages</i> of America. The dietetic mischief, and consequent
+paleness of complexion and emaciation of muscle, which are attributable
+to the use of cigars, belong, no doubt, to an injury inflicted, perhaps,
+in more ways than one upon the aids and organs of digestion; nor is
+that hypothesis at all inconsistent with what we hear from so many
+cigar-smokers, namely, that their cigar is their dependence for
+digestion! That, after having impaired the organ, or weakened its tone,
+or dried up the salival menstruum, they should need a stimulant, even in
+the very form of the bane which injures them, is only of a piece with
+all that has been said of drinking, and especially of dram-drinking,
+with which latter debauch, the debauch of cigar-smoking has the closest
+possible alliance. We never pass one of those stifling rendezvous in the
+metropolis&mdash;a cigar-shop, open till the latest hours&mdash;without mentally
+classing it with the gin-shops, its only compeers!
+</p>
+<p>
+Exclusive of the low habit of imitation, a dulness and feebleness of
+understanding, an absence of intellectual resources, a vacuity of
+thought is the great inducement to the use of this, as of all other
+drugs, whether from the cigar-shop, or the snuff-shop, or the gin-shop,
+or the wine-cellar; a truth by no means the less certain, because it
+happens that men of the highest powers of mind are drawn into the vice,
+and made to reduce themselves, by their adoption and dependence upon it,
+to the lowest level of the vulgar; but, at the same time, it is not to
+be denied, that a great support in defence of cigar-smoking is found in
+the medical opinions sometimes advanced as to its salutary influence.
+Now, if we admit, broadly and at once, that there may be times and
+circumstances in which the inhaling the hot smoke of a powerful narcotic
+drug is useful to the human body, must it follow that the habitual
+resort to such a practice, and this under all circumstances, is useful
+also, and even free from the most serious inconveniences?
+</p>
+<p>
+It is the admitted maxim, that if smoking is accompanied by spitting,
+injury results to the smoker; and the reason assigned is, that the
+salival fluid, which should assist digestion, is in this manner
+dissipated, and taken from its office. But may not the habitual
+application of the narcotic influence to the nervous system have its
+evils also? May it not weaken or deaden the nervous and
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page350" name="page350"></a>[pg 350]</span>
+muscular action
+which is needful to digestion? And may not even the excessive quantity
+of the matter of heat, thus artificially conveyed into the body, tend to
+a desiccation of the system, as injurious under general circumstances,
+as it may be beneficial under particular ones?
+</p>
+<p>
+Smoking invites thirst; and there is little risk in advancing, that
+whatever superinduces an unnatural indulgence in the use of liquids is
+itself, and without farther question, injurious, even if the liquids
+resorted to are of the most innocent description; but, in point of fact,
+the cigar-smoker will usually appease his thirst by means of liquors in
+themselves his enemies!
+</p>
+<p>
+It is said, however, that the use of cigars is beneficial when we find
+ourselves in marshy situations, with a high temperature, and generally,
+whenever the atmosphere inclines to the introduction of putridity and
+fever into the system. We believe this; and perhaps a useful theory of
+the alternate benefit and mischief of cigar-smoking may be offered upon
+the basis of that proposition. When and wherever the body requires to
+be <i>dried</i>, cigar-smoking may be salutary; and when and wherever
+that <i>drying</i>, or desiccation, is injurious, then and there
+cigar-smoking may be to be shunned. We know that, while surrounded by
+an atmosphere overcharged, or even only saturated with moisture, moist
+bodies remain moist, or do not part with that excess of moisture from
+which a drier atmosphere would relieve them; and that living bodies,
+so circumstanced, are threatened with typhus and typhoid fever. It is
+highly probable, therefore, that narcotics, in such cases, may allay
+a morbid irritability of the nerves, or effect a salutary diminution
+of healthful sensibility; under such circumstances, the desiccating
+and sedative effects of tobacco-smoking may prove beneficial; while,
+in all ordinary states of the system and of the atmosphere, the
+same desiccative and sedative influences may produce immediate evil
+consequences, more or less readily perceptible, and undermine, however
+gradually, the strength of the constitution.&mdash;<i>United Service
+Journal.</i>
+</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ THE NEW COINAGE.
+</h3>
+<p>
+Why does not some man of public research enlighten the public on the
+proceedings at the Mint? The whole system is as little comprehensible
+by the uninitiated as the philosopher's stone. The cost of the Mint is
+prodigious&mdash;the machinery is all that machinery can be; yet we have one
+of the ugliest coinages of any nation of Europe. A new issue of coin is
+about to be commenced.
+</p>
+<p>
+"It appears, from the king's proclamation, that the new coinage
+will consist of double sovereigns, to be each of the value of 40s.;
+sovereigns, each of 20s.; and half-sovereigns, 10s. silver crowns,
+half-crowns, shillings, and sixpences. The double-sovereigns have for
+the obverse the king's effigy, with the inscription, 'Gulielmus IIII.
+D.G. Britanniarum Rex. F.D.;' and for the reverse, the ensigns armorial
+of the United Kingdom contained in a shield, encircled by the collar of
+the Order of the Garter, and upon the edge of the piece the words 'Decus
+et Tutamen.' The crowns and half-crowns will be similar. The shilling
+has on the reverse the words 'One Shilling,' placed in the centre of
+the piece, within a wreath, having an olive-branch on one side, and an
+oak-branch on the other; and the sixpences have the same, except the
+word 'Sixpence' instead of the words 'One Shilling.' The coppers will
+be nearly as at present."
+</p>
+<p>
+Now we must observe, what the master of the Mint and the people about
+him ought to have observed before, that there is in the first instance
+a considerable expense incurred in the coinage of the double-sovereigns,
+without any possible object, except the expense itself may be an object,
+which is not impossible. We shall have in this coin one of the most
+clumsy and useless matters of circulation that could be devised. The
+present sovereign answers every purpose that this clumsy coin can be
+required for, and even the single sovereign would be a much more
+convenient coin for circulation if it were divided, as every one knows
+who knows the trouble of getting change. The half-sovereign is in fact
+a much more convenient coin. But on this clumsy coin we must have a
+<i>Latin</i> inscription, as if it were intended only for the society of
+antiquaries, or to be laid up in cabinets, which we acknowledge would be
+most likely its fate, except for the notorious bad taste of the British
+coinage. Of much use it is to an English public to have the classical
+phraseology of Gulielmus Britanniarum Rex, put in place of the national
+language. Then too we must have the collar of the Order of the Garter
+to encircle the national arms, of which this Order is nonsensically
+pronounced "Decus et Tutamen." The Glory and Protection. The Order of
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page351" name="page351"></a>[pg 351]</span>
+the Garter the <i>glory and protection</i> of England! We are content to
+let this absurdity stay in Latin or Sanscrit; English would be shamed by
+it. The Order of the Garter which goes round the knee of any man, who
+comes with the minister's fiat on the subject, and which has no more
+relation to British glory or British defence than the Order of the Blue
+Button or the Yellow frog of his majesty the Emperor of China; and this
+is to go forth on our national gold coin! and for fear that the folly
+would not be sufficiently spread, it is to be stamped on our crowns and
+half-crowns! The shillings and sixpences luckily escape: plain English
+will do for them. And all this goes on from year to year, while we have
+in the example of France a model of what a mint ought to be. Every
+foreigner makes purchases at the French mint; and the series of national
+medals executed there is a public honour and a public profit too. But
+whoever thinks of purchasing English mintage except for bullion?&mdash;With a
+history full of the most stirring events, we have not a single medallic
+series&mdash;we have scarcely a single medal. But we have in lieu of those
+vanities a master of the mint, who is tost new into the office on every
+change of party, who has probably in the whole course of his life never
+known the difference between gold and silver but by their value in
+sovereigns and shillings; but who, in the worst of times, shows his
+patriotism by receiving a salary of no less than five thousand pounds
+a year?
+</p>
+<h4>
+<i>Monthly Magazine.</i>
+</h4>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>
+ SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY.
+</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ HYDROSTATICS AND PNEUMATICS.
+</h3>
+<center>
+(<i>Cabinet Cyclopaedia</i>, vol. xvii.)
+<br />&nbsp;
+</center>
+<center>
+<i>Easier to swim in the Sea than in a River</i>.
+</center>
+<p>
+Sea water has a greater buoyancy than fresh water, being relatively
+heavier; and hence it is commonly said to be much easier to swim in
+the sea than in a river: this effect, however, appears to be greatly
+exaggerated. A cubic foot of freshwater weighs about 1,000 ounces; and
+the same bulk of sea water weighs 1,028 ounces; the weight, therefore,
+of the latter exceeds the former by only 28 parts in 1,000. The force
+exerted by sea water to support the body exceeds that exerted by fresh
+water by about one thirty-sixth part of the whole force of the
+latter.&mdash;<i>By Dr. Lardner.</i>
+</p>
+<center>
+<i>Ice lighter than Water</i>.
+</center>
+<p>
+It is known that in the process of congelation, water undergoes a
+considerable increase of bulk; thus a quantity of water, which at
+the temperature of 40 deg. measures a cubic inch, will have a greater
+magnitude when it assumes the form of ice at the temperature of 32 deg.
+Consequently ice is, bulk for bulk, lighter than water. Hence it is
+that ice is always observed to collect and float at the surface.&mdash;A
+remarkable effect produced by the buoyancy of ice in water is observable
+in some of the great rivers in America. Ice collects round stones at the
+bottom of the river, and it is sometimes formed in such a quantity that
+the upward pressure by its buoyancy exceeds the weight of the stone
+round which it is collected&mdash;consequently it raises the stone to the
+surface. Large masses of stone are thus observed floating down the river
+at considerable distances from the places of their formation.&mdash;<i>Ibid</i>.
+</p>
+<center>
+<i>Domestic Use of the Hydrometer</i>.
+</center>
+<p>
+The adulteration of milk by water may always be detected by the
+hydrometer, and in this respect it may be a useful appendage to
+household utensils. Pure milk has a greater specific gravity than
+water, being 103, that of water being 100. A very small proportion of
+water mixed with milk will produce a liquid specifically lighter than
+water.&mdash;Although the hydrometer is seldom applied to domestic uses,
+yet it might be used for many ordinary purposes which could scarcely
+be attained by any other means. The slightest adulteration of spirits,
+or any other liquid of known quality, may be instantly detected by it;
+and it is recommended by its cheapness, the great facility of its
+manipulation, and the simplicity of its results.&mdash;<i>Ibid.</i>
+</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>
+ THE GATHERER.
+</h2>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+ <p> A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.</p>
+ <p style="text-align: right;"> SHAKSPEARE.</p>
+</div></div>
+<hr />
+<p>
+The late Lord Clonmel, who never thought of demanding more than a
+shilling for an affidavit, used to be well satisfied provided it was a
+good one. In his time the Birmingham shillings were current, and he used
+the following extraordinary precaution to avoid being imposed upon by
+taking a bad one:&mdash;"You shall true answer make to such questions as
+shall be demanded of you touching this affidavit, so help you God.
+Is this a good shilling?"
+</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ SCRAPS.
+</h3>
+<p>
+The <i>Court Journal</i>, describing a Study in Windsor Castle,
+says&mdash;"The first of a series in the plain <i>English</i> style. The
+ceiling is white, with a cornice of simple <i>Grecian</i> design!"
+</p>
+<p>
+According to a recent traveller, fat sheep are so plentiful in the
+Brazils that they are used as <i>fuel</i> to feed their lime-kilns.
+</p>
+<p>
+Supposing the productive power of wheat to be only six-fold, the produce
+of a single acre would cover the whole surface of the globe in fourteen
+years.
+</p>
+<p>
+A Philadelphia Paper announces the arrival of the Siamese Twins in that
+city, in the following manner:&mdash;"<i>One</i> of the Siamese twins arrived
+here on Monday last, accompanied by his brother."
+</p>
+<p>
+The term Husting, or Hustings, as applied to the scaffold erected at
+elections, from which candidates address the electors, is derived from
+the Court of Husting, of Saxon origin, and the most ancient in the
+kingdom. Its name is a compound of <i>hers</i> and <i>ding</i>; the former
+implying a house, and the latter a thing, cause, suit, or plea; whereby
+it is manifest that <i>husding</i> imports a house or hall, wherein causes
+are heard and determined; which is further evinced by the Saxon <i>dingere</i>,
+or <i>thingere</i>, an advocate, or lawyer. [<i>Hus</i> and <i>thing</i> (thong)
+a place enclosed, a building roped round.]&mdash;<i>Atlas.</i>
+</p>
+<p>
+Segrais says, that when Louis XIV. was about seventeen years of age, he
+followed him and his brother, the Duke of Orleans, out of the playhouse,
+and that he heard the duke ask the king what he thought of the play they
+had just been seeing, and which had been well received by the audience:
+"Brother, (replied Louis,) do not you know that I never pretend to give
+my opinion on any thing that I do not perfectly understand."
+</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ ELECTIONEERING ADVICE.
+</h3>
+<p>
+Among the curious <i>Autograph Letters</i>, at Sotheby's late sale,
+there was a curious one of <i>Sarah</i>, Duchess of Marlborough, dated
+August 16th, 1740, viz. A canvassing letter in favour of two Members for
+Reading; with the following electioneering advice:&mdash;"<i>Nothing but a
+good Parliament can save England next Session; they are both very honest
+men, and will never give a vote to a Placeman or a Pensioner.</i>"
+</p>
+<h4>
+P.T.W.
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ THE NATIONAL DEBT.
+</h3>
+<p>
+George the Third came to the throne in 1760, and found the national debt
+120 millions; he reigned 59 years, and left the national debt 820
+millions, 700 millions more than at his accession, increasing on the
+whole period about 36 thousand per day, or nearly 23 pounds per minute.
+At the beginning of his reign the taxes amounted annually to 6 millions;
+at the ending 60 millions.
+</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ PLURALITIES.
+</h3>
+<p>
+In the year 1238, it was agreed in an assembly of divines at Paris,
+that none could without forfeiture of eternal happiness, possess two
+benefices at the same time; one being worth fifteen livres Parisis,
+each about 2s. 6d. sterling.
+</p>
+<p>
+N.B. There does not appear to be any such decision by any assembly of
+divines in England, at least not since the reformation.
+</p>
+<h4>
+G.K.
+</h4>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ COMPUNCTIOUS VISITINGS.
+</h3>
+<p>
+It is said of a certain physician that he never passed the churchyard of
+the place where he resided, without pulling forth his handkerchief from
+his pocket, and hiding his face with it. Upon this circumstance being
+noticed by an acquaintance, he apologized for it by saying, "You will
+recollect, sir, what a number of people there are who have found their
+way hither under my directions. Now, I am always apprehensive lest some
+of them recognising my features should lay hold of me, and oblige me to
+take up my lodging along with them."
+</p>
+<hr />
+<h3>
+ IMPROMPTU ON THE BURIAL OF SHUTER, THE ACTOR.
+</h3>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> Alas! poor Ned!</p>
+<p class="i2"> He's now in bed,</p>
+ <p> Who seldom was before;</p>
+<p class="i2"> The revel rout,</p>
+<p class="i2"> The midnight shout,</p>
+ <p> Shall never know him more.</p>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<p class="i2"> Entomb'd in clay,</p>
+<p class="i2"> Here let him lay,</p>
+ <p> And silence ev'ry jest;</p>
+<p class="i2"> For life's poor play</p>
+<p class="i2"> Has past away,</p>
+ <p> And here he sleeps in rest.</p>
+</div></div>
+<hr class="full" />
+<blockquote class="footnote">
+<a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a>
+<b>Footnote 1</b>:
+<a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+<p>
+See <i>Mirror</i>, vol. xiii. p. 227. Gower is buried here,
+Fletcher and Messenger too; and not long since the bones of
+Bishop Andrews chapels for the New London Bridge approach.&mdash;See
+also <i>Mirror</i>, vol. xvi. p. 297.
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>
+<i>Printed and Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, (near Somerset
+House,) London; sold by ERNEST FLEISCHER, 626, New Market, Leipsic;
+G.G. BENNIS, 55, Rue Neuve, St. Augustin, Paris; and by all Newsmen
+and Booksellers.</i>
+</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement,
+and Instruction, by Various
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction
+ Volume 17, Number 490, Saturday, May 21, 1831
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: June 22, 2004 [EBook #12676]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIRROR OF LITERATURE, NO. 490 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, David Garcia and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+VOL. XVII, NO. 490.] SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1831. [PRICE 2d.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: OLD HOUSE IN SOUTHWARK.]
+
+
+This crazy, but not unpicturesque building, was taken down in the autumn
+of last year, in forming an approach to the New London Bridge. It stood
+on the eastern side of the High-street, and is worthy of record among
+the pleasing relics of antiquity, which it has ever been the object of
+_The Mirror_ to rescue from oblivion. Its style of architecture--that of
+the seventh Henry--is interesting: there is a florid picturesqueness in
+the carvings on the fronts of the first and second stories, and probably
+this ornament extended originally to the uppermost stories, which had
+subsequently been covered with plaster.
+
+We remember the house for the last twenty years, but cannot trace this
+or any other alteration in its front. The windows, it will be seen, are
+of different periods, those on the right-hand second and the left-hand
+third floor being of the oldest date.
+
+Apart from these attractions, and as a specimen of the olden domestic
+architecture of the metropolis, the annexed Cut bears an historic
+interest, in its having been the residence of the ill-starred Anne
+Boleyn, queen of Henry the Eighth. The interior was in palatial style,
+having been elaborately finished; and in one of the apartments, we learn
+that the royal arms were very conspicuous.
+
+In early times, Southwark was one of the most celebrated of the
+metropolitan suburbs; and it is much to be regretted that the liberality
+of our times has not encouraged the production of its ancient history.
+Every one at all familiar with London is aware of the antiquity of St.
+Saviour's Church, the original foundation of which was from the profits
+of a ferry over the Thames, whence its original name, St. Mary Overy, or
+"over the ferry." This was some time before the Conquest; but the church
+was principally rebuilt in the fourteenth century. We have spoken of its
+ancient fame elsewhere.[1] Bankside, its name in spiritual and secular
+story, is likewise of some note. The early Bishops of Winchester had a
+palace and _park_ here; remains of the former were laid open by a
+fire about seventeen years since. Then, who does not remember, in the
+love of sports and pastimes, the bull and bear-baiting theatres, and
+the uncouth glory of the Globe theatre, associated with the poet of all
+time--Shakspeare. Southwark was, therefore, a fitting site for a royal
+palace for occasional retirement, and its contiguity to the Thames must
+have enhanced its pleasantness.
+
+Miss Benger, in her agreeable _Memoirs of Anne Boleyn_, does not
+mention the Queen's abode in Southwark; but the date of the architecture
+of the annexed house, and its closer identification with Queen
+Elizabeth, render the first mentioned circumstance by no means
+improbable. Previous to the marriage of Anne Boleyn, we learn that Henry
+passed not a few of his leisure hours "in the delightful society of Anne
+Boleyn." "Every day they met and spent many hours in riding or walking
+together." Her family at this time resided at Durham House, on the site
+of the Adelphi, and Anne frequently made excursions with Henry in the
+vicinity of London.
+
+Of the antiquity of this district we could quote more proofs. The
+_galleried_ inn-yards, and among them that at which the Pilgrims
+sojourned on their road to Canterbury, are among them. In our last
+volume too, at page 160, we engraved an ancient Vault in Tooley-street,
+the remains of the "great house, builded of stone, with arched gates,
+which pertained to the Prior of Lewis, in Sussex, and was his lodging
+when he came to London." Not far from this was "another great House of
+Stone and Timber," which, in the thirteenth century, was held of John,
+"Earl Warren, by the Abbot of St. Augustins, at Canterbury." Stowe
+says--"It was an ancient piece of worke, and seemeth to be one of the
+first builded houses on that side of the river, over against the city:
+it was called the Abbot's Inne of St. Augustine in Southwark."
+
+There was also another "Inne" near this spot, which belonged to the
+Abbey of Battle, in Sussex, and formed the town residence of its Abbots.
+This stood on the banks of the Thames, between the Bridge House and
+Battle Bridge, which was so called, "for that it standeth on the ground,
+and over a water-course (flowing out of Thames) pertayning to that
+Abbey, and was therefore both builded and repayred by the Abbots of that
+house, as being hard adjoyning to the Abbot's lodging." Its situation
+is known by the landing-place called Battle Stairs. On the opposite
+side of Tooley-street is a low neighbourhood of meanly-built streets
+and passages, still denominated the Maze, from the intricacies of a
+labyrinth in the gardens of the Abbot of Battle's Inn, and which fronted
+its entrance-gate.
+
+With these few quotations of the ancient importance of Southwark, we can
+but repeat our regret that no regular history of this district has yet
+been published. There are three or four gentlemen resident there, whose
+antiquarian attainments highly qualify them for the task. The public
+would surely find them patronage.
+
+The Engraving is from an original sketch by an ingenious Correspondent,
+M.P. of Upton, near Windsor, whom we thank for this specimen of good
+taste. We are always happy to receive antiquarian illustrations of our
+Metropolis, and in this instance the zeal of the artist, who resides
+twenty miles distant, deserves special mention.
+
+
+ [1] See _Mirror_, vol. xiii. p. 227. Gower is buried here,
+ Fletcher and Messenger too; and not long since the bones of
+ Bishop Andrews chapels for the New London Bridge approach.--See
+ also _Mirror_, vol. xvi. p. 297.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PARLIAMENT.
+
+(_For the Mirror._)
+
+The following particulars, which have been gleaned from several
+sources, relating to the British Parliament, may be acceptable at the
+present time, when the English people are in hopes of a renovation of
+that Constitution which has been, and will still continue to be, the
+admiration of the civilized world:--The word Parliament was first
+used in 1265; and the Commons were admitted at this time, though not
+regularly represented. The parliament called at Shrewsbury, in 1283,
+by Edward I., was the first to which cities and towns were summoned to
+send representatives. It was also the first that granted aids towards
+the national defence of the three denominations of knights, citizens,
+and burgesses, as well as by the lords spiritual and temporal. In this
+parliament the representatives sat in a separate chamber from the barons
+and knights. The Commons consisted of two knights for each county, two
+representatives for the city of London, and two for each of the
+following twenty towns only:--
+
+Winchester, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, York, Bristol, Exeter, Lincoln,
+Canterbury, Carlisle, Norwich, Northampton, Nottingham, Scarborough,
+Grimsby, Lynn, Colchester, Yarmouth, Hereford, Chester, Shrewsbury,
+Worcester.
+
+
+From this it appears that there were not representatives of any towns in
+the counties of
+
+Westmoreland, Lancaster, Derby, Durham, Stafford, Warwick, Leicester,
+Rutland, Suffolk, Hertford, Bedford, Cambridge, Huntingdon, Buckingham,
+Berks, Oxford, Wilts, Somerset, Gloucester, Dorset, Sussex, Surrey.
+
+
+In after times, burghs that were summoned frequently prayed the Crown to
+be excused from sending representatives, on the account of their being
+compelled to pay 3s. 4d. a day to each member for his maintenance, while
+attending in his place; yet the allowance was made on a plan so strictly
+economical, that the knights of Berkshire were only allowed for six
+days, those for Bedfordshire for only five days, and those for Cornwall
+for only eleven days, when called to a parliament at York. Sheriffs,
+in their write for elections to parliament, sometimes omitted one
+or more burghs in a county, and at other times sent writs to the same
+burghs--and this, for aught known to the contrary, without instruction
+from the king or his council. Where burghs were poor, there were many
+such omissions, by favour of the sheriff, for a space of nearly three
+hundred years. Upon petition of the town of Torrington to Edward III.,
+in 1366, he directed a letter to the bailiff and good men of the town,
+excusing them "from the burden of sending two representatives to
+parliament, as they had never been obliged so to do till the 24th of his
+reign, when," says the king, "the sheriffs of Devonshire maliciously
+summoned them to send two members to parliament."
+
+Writs for the election of members to serve in the House of Commons are
+issued under different authorities upon a general election, and upon
+vacancies of particular seats during the continuance of a parliament.
+In the former case, the Lord Chancellor of Great Britain, pursuant to
+the order in council, causes the writs of elections to be issued for all
+places in England and Scotland to which such writs are usually sent. By
+the Articles and Act of Union with Ireland, the Lord Chancellor then,
+pursuant to the said orders, &c., causes writs to be issued and directed
+by the Clerk of the Crown in Ireland to the several counties, and such
+counties of cities and towns as send members to the united parliament.
+
+It is generally supposed that the circumstance of bishops, or other
+ecclesiastics having seats in the legislature, is peculiar to England.
+This is a mistake;--it was characteristic of the Scottish constitution
+for centuries previous to their connexion with England: so far back,
+indeed, if not much farther, as the twelfth century. It is stated, in
+ancient documents connected with the history of the county of Elgin, the
+authenticity of which cannot be doubted, that the Abbey of Kinloss was
+founded by David I., in January, 1150, and that the abbot was mitred,
+and had a seat in parliament.
+
+To the passing of a bill, the assent of the knights, citizens, and
+burgesses must be in person; but the lords may give their votes by
+proxy; and the reason is, that the barons always sat in parliament in
+their own right, as part of the _pares curtis_ of the king; and
+therefore, as they were allowed to serve by proxy in the wars, so had
+they leave to make proxies in parliament; but the commons coming only
+as representing the barones minores, and the soccage tenants in the
+country, and as representing the men of the cities, &c., they could not
+constitute proxies as representatives of others.
+
+When it is the pleasure of the Crown to dissolve a parliament, it is
+the constant practice immediately to summon another, and to make the
+dissolution of the old and the calling of the new simultaneous acts.
+By the Act of 7 and 8 of William III., c. xxv. s. I, forty days
+should intervene between the teste and return of the writs for a new
+parliament; but a longer time is necessary, and fifty days now
+intervene.
+
+Parliaments became triennial from the reigns of Edward III., but not
+until 1694 had any act passed to make such duration legal. In 1716 this
+was repealed, and the present act passed, making them septennial.
+
+W.G.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SIMPLE AMBITION.
+
+(_To the Editor._)
+
+
+The following anecdote was told me last summer, in the cabriolet of a
+diligence between Pau and Bayonne, and is very much at your service.
+EGOMET IPSE.
+
+
+About twenty-three years ago, the vane of Strasbourg Cathedral was
+struck by lightning, so that it hung on one side, threatening by its
+fall to endanger the lives of the people below. The alarm was so great,
+that the authorities, after a special consultation, posted bills about
+the streets, offering any reward that should be required to any one that
+would venture to ascend and strike off the vane. While the good citizens
+were reading this announcement, a peasant from the department of the
+Landes passed by, and being unable to read, he inquired the purport of
+the advertisement. When informed, he immediately offered his services
+for that purpose, and was conducted to the mayor and the bishop, who
+happened to be both in the Hotel de Ville at the time. They questioned
+him, and fully acquainted him with the difficulties of the
+enterprise--such as the real height, and that the upper part of the
+spire could only be ascended by ladders on the outside. However, nothing
+daunted, he persisted in his resolution to perform the feat on the
+morrow. All Strasbourg was assembled in the open places of the city on
+the next day; and, although admiring his courage as they saw him ascend,
+they most prudently refrained from cheering him as he deserved. Few who
+were then shading their eyes from the sun, in order to gaze on the
+spire, but must have envied him the scene of surpassing loveliness that
+was spread below him, although it is probable that neither the green
+landscape fading into blue distance, the relics of ancient castles,
+nor the beautiful Rhine glittering in sunshine, detained his regards.
+He who at home, in his own barren and level sands, had been used to
+no greater elevations than his stilts, was now mounting like an eagle
+towards heaven, and admired by thousands. When he reached the summit,
+he deliberately seated himself on the highest stone, with one leg on
+each side of the vane; and while his clothes were visibly fluttered
+in a strong breeze at such an eminence, he, with a hammer and chisel,
+displaced the cross that had caused such alarm, It flew spinning to the
+earth, and, borne away by the wind, fell in a neighbouring field, where
+it sank twenty inches into the soil. The air was now rent with
+acclamations towards him,
+
+ Cui robur et aes triplex
+ Circa pectus erat--
+
+
+(for, be it remarked, he was the only person who had even proposed
+to effect its removal). On his descent, he was carried in triumph to
+the Hotel de Ville. Being thanked by the authorities then and there
+assembled, and assured of their intense anxiety for his life ever since
+he had quitted the earth, he was asked what was the recompense he
+demanded? He modestly replied, "that if they were pleased with what
+he had performed, he hoped they would not think him presumptuous, but
+he should so much like to walk through the Arsenal, and see all its
+wonderful stores and docks!"--and they could not prevail upon him to
+ask more.
+
+A week afterwards he left Strasbourg, with twenty-five Napoleons in
+his pocket; and declared that he had never before spent his time so
+agreeably as he did in that city, for he had seen the Imperial Arsenal,
+the fortifications, and many other fine, as well as useful, sights, and
+had been continually feasted gratis by the rich and the great folks.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+RANSOMS.
+
+(_Concluded from page_ 149.)
+
+The queen of Edward III., after the battle of Durham, demanded of John
+Copland, David of Scotland; on his remonstrance that no one but the king
+had a right to his prisoner, Edward sent for him to Calais, and bestowed
+on him in return for his captive, L500, in land. The Scottish monarch
+paid, after an imprisonment of eleven years, 100,000 marks, and was
+dismissed. Charles de Blois, at the same period paid 700,000 crowns, and
+left his two sons as hostages. Michael de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk, paid
+L20,000. sterling, when only a simple knight. Duc d'Alencon gave for his
+freedom 200,000 crowns, and actually sold part of his estate to the Duc
+de Bretagne to pay it. Caprice often caused the detention of men in
+captivity, from their inability to comply with the absurd demands of
+their captors. Louis XI. refused to part with Wolfang Poulain, a
+Burgundian officer, unless he would purchase his redemption with some
+favourite hounds belonging to the Seigneur de Bossu. As Bossu did not
+feel sufficiently interested in his friend's welfare to comply with the
+king's wishes, and part with his dogs, some time elapsed before any
+treaty could be entered into, to restore Poulain to his country.
+
+This practice, though it undoubtedly contributed to soften the horrors
+of war, often caused hostilities to be undertaken on the most absurd and
+frivolous pretences. The English are represented by Comines as rejoicing
+in a war with France, from a recollection of the prices they obtained
+from the lords and princes they captured. Another bad effect may be
+traced to it, in the violations of safe conduct, the seizure of
+individuals during times of peace, which the middle ages so constantly
+exhibit. Oliver de Clisson, the Constable of France, on entering into a
+castle to examine its strength, at the request of the Duc de Bretagne,
+in 1387, was seized, and at first commanded to be thrown into the sea.
+The savage Breton afterwards being troubled in conscience, expressed his
+joy that his order had not been complied with, and released Clisson on
+the payment of 100,000 livres.
+
+During the wars of Edward III. and Philip, many a soldier of fortune
+amassed considerable opulence by the ransoming of his prisoners.
+Croquart, a famous leader of these companies, is related to have become
+extremely rich by the money he received from the ransoms of castles and
+towns. In the fourteenth century several Knights of Suabia having
+associated themselves together for chivalrous engagements, endeavoured
+to seize a rich Count of Wirtenburg, as a _means of procuring a noble
+sum of money for the ransom of himself and his family_. For this
+purpose they attacked him in his castle at Wildbad, but were repulsed.
+At Poictiers, the King of France was nearly torn to pieces by the
+soldiers in disputing for their prize. At the Bridge of Luissac,
+Carlonnet, the French commander, fell into the hands of the enemy, who
+were about to end the quarrel respecting his possession by putting him
+to death, when the timely arrival of an English knight rescued him from
+their power. At Agincourt, eighteen French gentlemen entered into an
+agreement to direct all their attacks against King Henry, most probably
+with a view of acquiring a fortune by his capture; hence the contest was
+the hottest about his person. After the battle of Nanci, and the death
+of the Duke of Burgundy, by the sword of Charles de Beaumont, the latter
+is said to have died of regret, when he became aware whom it was he had
+slain, and the loss he had sustained of a ducal ransom.
+
+Before quitting this subject, it may be observed that the value of a
+prisoner's liberty was a regularly transferable property. Coeur de Lion
+was sold to the emperor Henry; Philip Augustus bargained for him; and
+his ransom reduced England, from sea to sea, to the utmost distress.
+Louis XI. bought the bastard of Burgundy from Rene, Duc de Lorrain,
+for 10,000 crowns, and also William of Chalons, Prince of Orange, for
+20,000, from Sieur de Groste. Joan of Arc was sold to the English for
+10,000 livres, and a pension of 300. In the case of the Earl of
+Pembroke, who became the property of Du Guescelin, as part of the
+purchase-money for some estates in Spain, he had sold to Henry, King of
+Castile, the constable lost his expected 120,000 livres by the death of
+his prisoner; as this nobleman was in a bad state of health, his bankers
+at Bruges wisely declined paying the money until he became _sound and
+in good condition_. (_Quand il serait sain, et en bon point._)
+The earl dying before he left France, Du Guescelin lost both his estates
+and money. One of the family of the Blois was presented to his
+favourite, the Duke of Ireland, by Richard II., who disposed of his
+master's bounty to Oliver de Clisson for 120,000 livres. Zizim, the
+brother of Bajazet, Emperor of the Turks, after being defeated by his
+brother in an attempt to seize the throne, fled to the Knights of Rhodes
+for succour. They, fearing the vengeance of the Sultan, transferred him
+to Louis XI. who fulfilled his trust faithfully, and kept him for the
+knights, though offered all the relics that the east abounded with, and
+even the kingdom of Jerusalem, by Bajazet, for his prisoner. After being
+given into the custody of the Pope by Louis, and a six years' residence
+at Rome, he was sent back to France, as the king had found out that he
+might be of service in his engagements with Constantinople; he was,
+however, not restored to his brother in the condition which the Flemings
+had stipulated the Earl of Pembroke to be restored; for before his
+redelivery to the French, he is supposed to have been poisoned.
+
+H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE EQUESTRIAN STATUE OF PETER THE GREAT.
+
+(_To the Editor._)
+
+
+This stands upon a rock, which was found in a morass near Lachta, in
+Karelin, at a distance of eleven versts, or about 41,250 English feet.
+The dimensions of this stone were found to be 21 feet by 42 in length,
+and 34 in breadth; its weight is calculated at 3,200,000 lbs. or 1,600
+tons. The mechanism for its conveyance was invented by Count Carbury,
+who went by the name of Chevalier Lascuri. A solid road was first made
+from the stone to the shore; then brass slips were inserted under the
+stone to go upon cannon balls of five inches diameter, in metal grooves,
+by windlasses worked by 400 men every day, 200 fathoms towards the place
+of destination. The water transport was performed by what are called
+camels in the dockyards of Petersburgh and Amsterdam.
+
+E.A.B
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SONNET TO HOPE.
+
+(_For The Mirror._)
+
+
+ As some lone pilgrim through Night's dreary scene,
+ With cautious steps scarce venturing on his way,
+ Views the chaste orb of Evening's soft-eyed Queen
+ Gild the blue east, and scare those mists away
+ Which from his sight each faithful light obscur'd,
+ And led him wildering, sinking pale with fear!
+ Not he more bless'd by Cynthia's light allur'd,
+ Onward his course with happier thoughts doth steer,
+ Than I, O Hope! blest cheerer of the soul!
+ Who, long in Sorrow's darkening clouds involv'd,
+ When black despair usurp'd mild Joy's control,
+ Saw thee, bright angel, fram'd of heavenly mould,
+ Dip thy gay pallet in the rainbow's hue,
+ And call each scene of Peace and Mirth to view.
+
+
+_The Author of "A Tradesman's Lays."_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The income of a Russian metropolitan does not exceed 800l. a-year; that
+of an archbishop, 600l.; and of a bishop, 500l.; sums apparently as
+small as persons of their rank can possibly subsist on, even in Russia.
+They are, however, allowed a considerable sum annually for purposes of
+charity.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE SKETCH-BOOK.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A SCENE FROM LIFE.
+
+(_For the Mirror._)
+
+ Truth is strange--stranger than fiction.
+ LORD BYRON.
+
+
+"And so the Fernlands is to be sold at last," I said, casually meeting
+Mr. Nibble, our under-sheriff--"Poor N----, I am grieved for him, he has
+struggled hard against oppression."
+
+"It is quite true, sir," replied the man of the law, "a horning came
+down last night, but it will answer no end--for Messrs. Sharke and
+Scrapepen, have advertised the whole of the property for public roup
+on Tuesday next."
+
+The Fernlands estate had been the family property of the N----s since
+the conquest for aught I know. The present representative, after having
+sent his sons out into the world, as all Scotchmen do, to fight their
+way, (one of whom by the by was accumulating a snug fortune in India)
+got involved in some commercial speculation, for which he was wholly
+unfitted, being anything but a business man. He was a worthy
+unsuspecting fellow, but at last saw his way clearer, and as he thought
+got out, though a very heavy loser. In consequence of this scrape he
+wrote to his son in India, to say, that unless he could remit him a
+large sum, which he named, it would be impossible to keep his ground
+at Fernlands.
+
+Very soon afterwards his late partner, who was a good sort of fellow
+too, failed, and N---- was paralyzed on receiving a letter from the
+attorney to the assignees to say, that not having regularly gazetted his
+retirement from the concern, he had rendered himself legally liable to
+the creditors of the late firm of ---- and Co., and unless N---- paid
+the balance which remained due after the assets of the bankrupt's estate
+had been ascertained, that immediate steps would be resorted to, to
+compel him. The matter soon got abroad, and all N----'s other creditors
+also pressed forward to crush him--well, to make a disagreeable story
+short, the end is as I have previously related. Poor N---- is to be
+ruined to pay another man's debts, after a vast deal to do with law and
+lawyers, and much heat on both sides.
+
+I had taken great interest in the matter from the first, and it was with
+deep feelings of sorrow that I saw this excellent family likely to be
+driven from the home of their forefathers, by the merciless and often
+unjust hand of the law. N---- was, I believe, generally liked, and no
+person in need, in the district where he resided, looked up to the
+_Laird_ for advice or assistance in vain. You may judge therefore
+of the public sensation. While these matters were pending, N---- looked
+with the deepest anxiety for the arrival of a letter from his son in
+India; and every day did he send his servant express to the little
+post-office at ----, but in vain.
+
+At last the fatal day of sale arrived. N----, in the depth of his
+distress had early sent for me to consult whether even at the eleventh
+hour something could not be done to avert the calamity. A sinking man
+catches at a straw. It wanted less than three hours of the time of sale
+when I entered the grounds of Fernlands. The gate was half off its
+hinges, the posts plastered with advertisements of the sale; and people,
+as always happens in such cases, were already pouring towards the house
+more from a motive of curiosity than from an intention of purchasing
+anything. As I advanced towards the scene of action, I could observe
+that the shrubberies were injured, and the rare plants and flowers
+which both N---- and his wife had valued so much--for they were fond
+of the study of nature--exhibited evident tokens of the mischief of
+the careless multitude thronging to the show. The day was clear and
+beautiful, the breeze played through the leafy wilderness with a joyous
+effect; the contrast between the peace and harmony of nature, and the
+discord and tumult of man and his deeds, was affecting. But such
+thoughts were soon chased away from my mind, as I advanced over a
+portion of the lawn towards the stables, I saw N----'s favourite mare,
+and the old pony, Jack, (whom I recollected as the companion of N----'s
+boys, and as tractable as a dog,) in the hands of a rascally sheriff's
+officer, who was showing them to a horse-dealer from a neighbouring
+town. The lawn in the front of the house was covered with straggling
+groups of people, either discussing the event of the day, or examining
+some of the furniture which was strewed there.
+
+"Eh, sirs!" said an old man, brushing a tear from his eye, "I never
+thoucht to ha' seen the like o' this day's wark--and my forbears have
+had a bit o' farm under the laird's a hundred an' saxteen year, and
+better nor kinder folk to the puir man never lived."
+
+Mr. Nibble, who was Messrs. Sharke's agent, was bustling about, and
+I found him engaged with a fat, pompous little fellow, the auctioneer,
+from a neighbouring town.
+
+"Sad business this, Mr. ----," said he, "Fernlands is in a sad taking
+about it, I believe, but things of this kind will occur, you know; and
+I always say what can't be cured must be endured, eh."
+
+I turned with an ill-concealed expression of disgust from this man, and
+entered the house in search of my friend, for N---- would not quit the
+old place to the last. There is something melancholy in viewing a sale
+at any time--the disarrangement of the furniture--the cheerless and
+chilling aspect of the rooms--the dirt, the bustle, and the heartless
+indifference one witnesses to the misfortunes of others--all come home
+forcibly to the feelings. After stumbling and striking my shins amongst
+piles of chairs, and furniture, and carpets, disposed in lots over the
+now comfortless apartments, I at last reached the study door where I had
+spent many a happy hour with N----. I entered; the room was stripped of
+part of its furniture, the books lying dispersed in heaps over the floor
+or on the massive table, at the side of which N---- was seated on the
+only chair left in the apartment. He was at first unconscious of my
+entrance.
+
+"My dear sir, this is kind indeed," he said as I advanced, struggling
+with his feelings, "but take a chair," and he glanced round the room
+with a bitter smile, as he observed there was none, "my friends are kind
+you see, they think chairs are useless things...."
+
+The loss of his land affected him more than I can describe. He had been
+brought up upon it, and it had become as it were part and parcel of
+himself; it was not an ordinary loss. The noise and bustle in the house
+and sundry interruptions from inquisitive eyes, warned us, as N----
+said, that "we must jog." As we were rising, I accidentally inquired
+whether he had received his letters that morning. "Good God!" he
+exclaimed, "I totally forgot, and poor Andrew I fancy is too much
+occupied in bemoaning the fate of the horses, to have thought of it;
+but we can get them when I return with you this afternoon."
+
+"Delays are dangerous," I replied, "we will not throw a chance away."
+
+We hastened to the stable, and I despatched the servant on my own horse,
+with the utmost expedition to the post-office at ----.
+
+N---- sauntered through a private path in the shrubbery towards the
+entrance of the grounds, and I made my way through the careless throng,
+who had no thought what their own fate might be perhaps to-morrow--to
+Mr. Nibble, and urged him to delay the sale for an hour, but he said it
+was impossible, he would not hurry it for half an hour or so, but that
+they were already pressed for time. The landed property was first to be
+brought to the hammer. I mechanically followed the steps of N----, and
+when I overtook him, we saw through a break in the wood, from the
+increased density of the mob and the elevation of the auctioneer, that
+the sale was commencing.
+
+We gave up all for lost. At this moment I fancied I heard the noise of
+a horse urged to full gallop. The blood rushed to our hearts; we sprung
+through the trees towards the road; in another moment Andrew was in
+sight, urging his horse to his utmost speed. The instant he saw us he
+waved his hat, "A packet from abroad, sir," he sung out as he
+approached, "from our young master, I'm sure."
+
+"God be praised, you are saved," was all I could utter; poor N---- was
+faint with sudden joy and hope. We tore open the envelope, which
+contained bills from his son in India to a large amount. I saw N---- was
+unable to think, and without more ado, I squeezed his hand, seized the
+letter, and put spurs to my horse. The bidding had commenced when I
+reached the wondering crowd, who rapidly fell back as they saw me
+approach. But why should I tire you any longer; in a couple of hours
+Fernlands remained unpolluted by one of the mob, or legal harpies who
+had invaded it. You may guess the rest....
+
+A friend related the preceding incident to me; the reader may suppose
+him to be addressing myself. The leading circumstances are strictly
+true, the names and some trifling matters alone being altered. The story
+is invested with interest from its great similarity to a portion of the
+plot of the "Antiquary;" I have the strongest reason to believe, from
+the intimate acquaintance the great novelist possessed with the country,
+that he drew Sir Arthur Wardour's similar escape from ruin, from a
+recollection of the event briefly related above.
+
+VYVYAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SELECT BIOGRAPHY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PAGANINI, THE VIOLINIST.
+
+By aid of the _Foreign Quarterly Review_, we are enabled to submit
+to our readers the following very interesting Memoirs of this eccentric
+genius.
+
+By the way, we are happy to find that the above work is enabled to
+maintain the high character with which it started. It argues well for
+the literary taste of this country, by cherishing acquaintance with
+continental literature, and thus strengthening our resources at home.
+
+
+Nicolo Paganini was born at Genoa, in February, 1784. We are not
+informed as to his father's profession, if indeed he had any: all that
+we are told is, that his chief pursuit was to improve his circumstances,
+which were not the best in the world, by speculating in the lottery, so
+that when his little son, Nicolo, began at an unusually early age to
+give strong indications of musical talent, it seemed to him as if the
+wheel of fortune had at last been propitious, and he accordingly lost
+no time in setting to work to make the most of his prize. Having some
+skill on the violin himself, he resolved to teach him that instrument;
+and as soon as he could hold it, put one into his hands, and made him
+sit beside him from, morning to night, and practise it. The incessant
+drudgery which he compelled him to undergo, and the occasional
+starvation to which he subjected him, seriously impaired his health,
+and, as Paganini himself asserts, laid the foundation of that
+valetudinarian state which has ever since been his portion, and which
+his pale, sickly countenance, and his sunk and exhausted frame so
+strongly attest. As his enthusiasm was such as to require no artificial
+stimulus, this severe system could only have been a piece of cool and
+wanton barbarity. He already began to show much promise of excellence,
+when a circumstance occurred which not only served to confirm these
+early prognostications, but to rouse him to exert all his energies.
+This was no other than a dream of his mother, Theresa. An angel appeared
+to her; she besought him to make her Nicolo a great violin player; he
+gave her a token of consent;--and the effect which this dream had upon
+all concerned, we sober-minded people can have no idea of. Young
+Paganini redoubled his perseverance. In his eighth year, under the
+superintendence of his father, he had written a sonata, which, however,
+along with many other juvenile productions, he lately destroyed; and
+as he played about three times a week in the churches and at private
+musical parties, upon a fiddle nearly as large as himself, he soon began
+to make himself known among his townsmen. At this time he received much
+benefit from one Francesco Gnecco, who died in 1811, and whom he always
+speaks highly of.
+
+In his ninth year, being applied to by a travelling singer to join him
+in a concert, he made his first public appearance in the great theatre
+at Genoa, and played the French air "La Carmagnole," with his own
+variations, with great applause.
+
+His father now resolved to place him under the tuition of the well-known
+composer, Rolla, and for that purpose took him along with him to Parma.
+The particulars of their interview afford a striking proof of the
+proficiency which he had by this time acquired. As Rolla happened to be
+ill and lying in bed, the party were shown into the ante-chamber, when,
+observing upon the table one of the composer's newest concertos, the
+father beckoned to his son to take up his violin and play it, which he
+did at sight, in such a way that the sick man immediately started up,
+demanded who it was, and could scarcely be prevailed upon to believe
+that the sounds had proceeded from a little boy, and his intended pupil;
+but as soon as he had satisfied himself that that was really the case,
+he declined to receive him. "For God's sake," said he, "go to Paer, your
+time would be lost with me, I can do nothing for you."
+
+To Paer accordingly they went, who received him kindly, and referred
+him to his own teacher, the old and experienced "Maestro di Capella"
+Giretti, from Naples, who gave him instructions for six months, three
+times a-week in counterpoint. During this period he wrote twenty-four
+Fugues for four hands, with pen, ink, and paper alone, and without any
+instrument, which his master did not allow him, and, assisted by his own
+inclination, made rapid progress. The great Paer also took much interest
+in him, giving him compositions to work out, which he himself revised:
+an interest for which Paganini ever afterwards showed himself deeply
+grateful.
+
+The time was now come when Nicolo was destined, like other youthful
+prodigies, to be hawked about the country, to fill the pockets of his
+mercenary father, who managed to speculate upon him with considerable
+success in Milan, Bologna, Florence, Pisa, Leghorn, and most of the
+upper and central towns of Italy, where his concerts were always well
+attended. Young Paganini liked these excursions well enough, but being
+now about fifteen years of age, he began to be of opinion that they
+would be still more agreeable if he could only contrive to get rid of
+the old gentleman, whose spare diet and severe discipline had now become
+more irksome to him than ever. To accomplish this desirable object, an
+opportunity soon offered. It was the custom of Lucca, at the feast of
+St. Martin, to hold a great musical festival, to which strangers were
+invited from all quarters, and numerous travellers resorted of their own
+accord; and as the occasion drew near, Nicolo begged hard to be allowed
+to go there in company with his elder brother, and after much entreaty,
+succeeded in obtaining permission. He made his appearance as a solo
+player, and succeeded so well, that he resolved now to commence
+vagabondizing on his own account--a sort of life to which he soon
+became so partial, that, notwithstanding many handsome offers which
+he occasionally received to establish himself in several places,
+as a concerto player or director of the orchestra, he never could be
+persuaded to settle any where. At a later period, however, he lived for
+some time at the court of Lucca, but soon found it more pleasant and
+profitable to resume his itinerant habits. He visited all parts of
+Italy, but usually made Genoa his head-quarters, where, however, he
+preferred to play the part of the dilletante to that of the virtuoso,
+and performed in private circles without giving public concerts.
+
+It was not long before he had amassed about 20,000 francs, part of which
+he proposed to devote to the maintenance of his parents. His father,
+however, was not to be put off with a few thousands, but insisted upon
+the whole.--Paganini then offered him the interest of the capital, but
+Signor Antonio very coolly threatened him with instant death unless he
+agreed to consign the whole of the principal in his behalf; and in order
+to avert serious consequences, and to procure peace, he gave up the
+greater part of it.
+
+It was early in 1828 when Paganini arrived at Vienna, where he gave
+a great many concerts with a success equal, if not superior, to any
+which had hitherto attended his exertions. His performance excited the
+admiration and astonishment of all the most distinguished professors and
+connoisseurs of this critical city. With any of the former all idea of
+competition was hopeless; and their greatest violinist, Mayseder, as
+soon as he had heard him, with an ingenuousness which did him honour,
+as we ourselves have reason to know, wrote to a friend in London, that
+he might now lock up his violin whenever he liked.
+
+In estimating the labour which it must have cost a performer like
+Paganini to have arrived at such transcendent excellence, people are
+often apt to err in their calculations as to the actual extent of
+time and practice which has been devoted to its acquisition. That the
+perfect knowledge of the _mechanique_ of the instrument which his
+performance exhibits, and his almost incredible skill and dexterity
+in its management must necessarily have been the result of severe
+discipline, is beyond all question; but more, much more, in every case
+of this kind, is to be ascribed to the system upon which that discipline
+has proceeded, and to the genius and enthusiasm of the artist. The
+miraculous powers of Paganini in the opinion of his auditors were not
+to be accounted for in the ordinary way. To them, it was plain that they
+must have sprung from a life of a much more settled and secluded cast
+than that of an itinerant Italian musical professor. It was equally
+clear, from his wild, haggard, and mysterious looks, that he was no
+ordinary personage, and had seen no common vicissitudes. The vaults of
+a dungeon accordingly were the local habitation which public rumour, in
+its love of the marvellous, seemed unanimously to assign to him, as the
+only place where "the mighty magic" of his bow could possibly have been
+acquired. Then, as to the delinquency which led to his incarceration,
+there were various accounts: some imputed it to his having been a
+captain of banditti; others, only a carbonaro; some to his having killed
+a man in a duel; but the more current and generally received story was,
+that he had stabbed or poisoned his wife, or, as some said, his
+mistress; although, as fame had ascribed to him no fewer than four
+mistresses, it was never very clearly made out which of his seraglio it
+was who had fallen the victim of his vengeance. The story not improbably
+might have arisen from his having been confounded with a contemporary
+violin-player of the name of Duranowski, a Pole, to whom in person he
+bore some resemblance, and who, for some offence or other having been
+imprisoned at Milan, during the leisure which his captivity afforded,
+had contrived greatly to improve himself in his art; and when once
+it was embodied into shape, the fiction naturally enough might have
+obtained the more credence, from the fact that two of his most
+distinguished predecessors, Tartini and Lolly, had attained to the great
+mastery which they possessed over their instrument during a period of
+solitude--the one within the walls of a cloister, the other in the
+privacy and retirement of a remote country village. At all events, the
+rumours were universally circulated and believed, and the innocent and
+much injured Paganini had for many years unconsciously stood forth in
+the eyes of the world as a violator of the laws, and even a convicted
+murderer--not improbably, to a certain extent, reaping the golden fruits
+of that "bad eminence;" for public performers, as we too often see, who
+have once lost their "good name," so far from finding themselves, in the
+words of Iago, "poor indeed," generally discover that they have only
+become objects of greater interest and attraction. How long he had lived
+in the enjoyment of this supposed infamy, and all the benefits accruing
+from it, we really cannot pretend to say; but he seems never to have
+been made fully aware of the formidable position in which he stood until
+he had reached Vienna, when the Theatrical Gazette, in reviewing his
+first concert, dropped some pretty broad hints as to the rumoured
+misdeeds of his early life. Whereupon he resolved at once publicly to
+proclaim his innocence, and to put down the calumny; for which purpose,
+on the 10th of April, 1828, there was inserted in the leading Vienna
+journals a manifesto, in Italian as well as German, subscribed by him,
+declaring that all these widely-circulated rumours were false; that at
+no time, and under no government whatever, had he ever offended against
+the laws, or been put under coercion; and that he had always demeaned
+himself as became a peaceable and inoffensive member of society; for the
+truth of which he referred to the magistracies of the different states
+under whose protection he had till then lived in the public exercise of
+his profession.
+
+The truth of this appeal (which it is obvious no delinquent would have
+dared to make) was never called in question, no one ever ventured to
+take up the gauntlet which Paganini had thrown down, and his character
+as a man thenceforward stood free from suspicion.
+
+His whimsicalities, his love of fun, and many other points of his
+character, are sometimes curiously exemplified in his fantasias. He
+imitates in perfection the whistling and chirrupping of birds, the
+tinkling and tolling of bells, and almost every variety of tone which
+admits of being produced; and in his performance of _Le Streghe_
+(The Witches) a favourite interlude of his, where the tremulous voices
+of the old women are given with a truly singular and laughable effect,
+his _vis comica_ finds peculiar scope.
+
+His command of the back-string of the instrument has always been an
+especial theme of wonder and admiration, and, in the opinion of some,
+could only be accounted for by resorting to the theory of the dungeon,
+and the supposition that his other strings being worn out, and not
+having it in his power to supply their places, he had been forced from
+necessity to take refuge in the string in question; a notion very like
+that of a person who would assert, that for an opera dancer to learn to
+stand on one leg, the true way would be--to have only one leg to stand
+upon. We shall give Paganini's explanation of this mystery in his own
+words:
+
+"At Lucca, I had always to direct the opera when the reigning family
+visited the theatre; I played three times a week at the court, and every
+fortnight superintended the arrangement of a grand concert for the court
+parties, which, however, the reigning princess, Elisa Bacciochi Princess
+of Lucca and Piombino, Napoleon's favourite sister, was not always
+present at, or did not hear to the close, as the harmonic tones of
+my violin were apt to grate her nerves, but there never failed to be
+present another much esteemed lady, who, while I had long admired
+her, bore (at least so I imagined) a reciprocal feeling towards me.
+Our passion gradually increased; and as it was necessary to keep it
+concealed, the footing on which we stood with each other became in
+consequence the more interesting. One day I promised to surprise her
+with a musical _jeu d'esprit_, which should have a reference to
+our mutual attachment. I accordingly announced for performance a comic
+novelty, to which I gave the name of 'Love Scene.' All were curiously
+impatient to know what this should turn out to be, when at last I
+appeared with my violin, from which I had taken off the two middle
+strings, leaving only the E and the G string. By the first of these
+I proposed to represent the lady, by the other the gentleman; and I
+proceeded to play a sort of dialogue, in which I attempted to delineate
+the capricious quarrels and reconciliations of lovers--at one time
+scolding each other, at another sighing and making tender advances,
+renewing their professions of love and esteem, and finally winding up
+the scene in the utmost good humour and delight. Having at last brought
+them into a state of the most perfect harmony, the united pair lead off
+a _pas de deux_, concluding with a brilliant finale. This musical
+scena went off with much eclat. The lady, who understood the whole
+perfectly, rewarded me with her gracious looks; the princess was all
+kindness, overwhelmed me with applause, and, after complimenting me upon
+what I had been able to effect upon the two strings, expressed a wish to
+hear what I could execute upon one string. I immediately assented--the
+idea caught my fancy; and as the emperor's birthday took place a. few
+weeks afterwards, I composed my Sonata 'Napoleon' for the G. string, and
+performed it upon that day before the court with so much approbation
+that a cantata of Cimarosa, following immediately alter it upon the same
+evening, was completely extinguished, and produced no effect whatever.
+This is the first and true cause of my partiality for the G. string; and
+as they were always desiring to hear more of it, one day taught another,
+until at last my proficiency in this department was completely
+established."
+
+We know no one who has been more cruelly misrepresented than the
+subject of this notice. In reality a person of the gentlest and most
+inoffensive habits, he is any thing rather than the desperate ruffian
+he has been described. In his demeanour he is modest and unassuming;
+in his disposition, liberal and generous to a fault. Like most artists,
+ardent and enthusiastic in his temperament, and in his actions very much
+a creature of impulse; he is full of that unaffected simplicity which we
+almost invariably find associated with true genius. He has an only son,
+by a Signora Antonia Bianchi, a singer from Palermo, with whom he lived
+for several years until the summer of 1828, when he was under the
+necessity of separating from her in consequence of the extreme violence
+of her temper; and in this little boy all his affections are
+concentrated. He is a very precocious child, and already indicates
+strong signs of musical talent. Being of a delicate frame of health,
+Paganini never can bear to trust him out of his sight. "If I were to
+lose him," says he, "I would be lost myself; it is quite impossible I
+can ever separate myself from him; when I awake in the night, he is my
+first thought."--Accordingly, ever since he parted from his mother, he
+has himself enacted the part of the child's nurse.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Why is Mr. Whitbread in his brewery like the Jerusalem coffee-house?
+Because _He-brews_ drink therein.
+
+W.G.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NATURALIST.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE SUSTILLO.
+
+A caterpillar, which the Indians name sustillo, and by which a paper
+is fabricated, very similar to that made in China, is bred in the pacae,
+a tree well known in Peru. In proportion to the vigour and majestic
+growth of this tree, is the number of the insects it nourishes, and
+which are of the kind and size of the bombyx, or silk-worm. When they
+are completely satiated, they unite at the body of the tree, seeking the
+part which is best adapted to the extension they have to take. They then
+form, with the greatest symmetry and regularity, a web which is larger
+or smaller, according to the number of the operators; and more or less
+pliant, according to the quality of the leaf by which they have been
+nourished, the whole of them remaining beneath. This envelope, on which
+they bestow such a texture, consistency, and lustre, that it cannot be
+decomposed by any practicable expedient, having been finished, they
+all of them unite, and ranging themselves in vertical and even files,
+form in the centre a perfect square. Being thus disposed, each of them
+makes its cocoon, or pod, of a coarse and short silk, in which it is
+transformed from the grub into the chrysalis, and from the chrysalis
+into the papilio, or moth. In proportion as they afterwards quit their
+confinement, to take wing, they detach wherever it is most convenient
+to them, their envelope, or web, a portion of which remains suspended
+to the trunk of the tree, where it waves to and fro like a streamer,
+and which becomes more or less white, according as the air and humidity
+of the season and situation admit. This natural silk paper has been
+gathered measuring a yard and a half, of an elliptical shape, which
+is peculiar to all of it.
+
+W.G.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+DESCRIPTION OF A BEAUTIFUL TREE.
+
+_By John F.M. Dovaston, Esq. A.M., of Westfelton, near Shrewsbury._
+
+
+ "_Hamlet._ Do you see nothing there?
+ _Queen._ Nothing at all; yet all that is I see."
+ _Hamlet._
+
+ "You cannot see the wood for trees."
+ _Ray's Proverbs._
+
+
+It was now the middle of May; the trees had fully put forth their
+bright, fresh leaves, and the green fields were luxuriant in a profusion
+of flowers. We had travelled through a fine country; when, descending
+the slope of a wooded valley, we were struck with delight and admiration
+at a tree of extraordinary appearance. There were several of the sort,
+dispersed singly, and in groups over the plains and grassy knolls. One
+we shall attempt to describe, though well aware how feeble is the most
+florid description to depict an idea of so magnificent an object. In
+height it exceeded 50 ft., the diameter of its shade was nearly 90 ft.,
+and the circumference of the bole 15 ft.: it was in full leaf and
+flower, and in appearance at once united the features of strength,
+majesty, and beauty; having the stateliness of the oak, in its trunk and
+arms; the density of the sycamore, in its dark, deep, massy foliage;
+and the graceful featheriness of the ash, in its waving branches, that
+dangled in rich tresses almost to the ground. Its general character as
+a tree was rich and varied, nor were its parts less attractive by their
+extreme beauty when separately considered. Each leaf was about 18 in. in
+length; but nature, always attentive to elegance, to obviate heaviness,
+had at the end of a very strong leaf-stalk divided it into five, and
+sometimes seven, leafits, of unequal length, and very long oval shape,
+finely serrated. These leafits were disposed in a circular form,
+radiating from the centre, like the leaves of the fan palm, though
+placed in a contrary plane to those of that magnificent ornament of the
+tropical forests. The central, or lower, leafits were the largest, each
+of them being 10 in. in length, and 4 in. in breadth, and the whole
+exterior of the foliage being disposed in an imbricated form, having a
+beautifully light and palmated appearance. The flowers, in which the
+tree was profuse, demand our deep admiration and attention: each group
+of them rose perpendicularly from the end of the young shoot, and was in
+length 14 in., like a gigantic hyacinth, and quite as beautiful, spiked
+to a point, exhibiting a cone or pyramid of flowers, widely separate on
+all sides, and all expanded together, principally white, finely tinted
+with various colours, as red, pink, yellow, and buff, the stamina
+forming a most elegant fringe amid the modest tints of the large and
+copious petals. These feathery blossoms, lovely in colours and stately
+in shape, stood upright on every branch all over the tree, like flowery
+minarets on innumerable verdant turrets. We had thus the opportunity of
+ascertaining that it belonged to that class of Linnaeus consisting
+entirely of rare plants the Heptandria, and the order Monogynia; the
+natural order Trihilatae; and the _A'_cera of Jussieu.
+
+The natives informed us that the fruit ripens early in autumn, and
+consists of bunches of apples, thinly beset with sharp thorns, each when
+broken producing one or two large kernels, about 2 in. in circumference,
+of the finest bright mahogany colour without, and white within; that the
+tree is deciduous, and just before its fall changes to the finest tints
+of red, yellow, orange, and brown. When divested of its luxuriant
+foliage, the buds of the next year appear like little spears, which
+through the winter are covered with a fine glutinous gum, evidently
+designed to protect the embryo shoots within, as an hybernaculum, from
+the severe frosts of the climate, and which glisten in the cold sunshine
+like diamonds. It has the strange property of performing the whole of
+its vigorous shoot, nearly a yard long, in the short space of three
+weeks, employing all the rest of the year in converting it into wood,
+adding to its strength, and varying its beauty. The wood when sawn is
+of the finest snowy whiteness. The tree is easily raised; indifferent
+as to soil, climate, or situation; removed with safety, of quick growth,
+thrives to a vast age and size; subject to no blight or disease; in the
+earliest spring bursting its immense buds into that vigour, exuberance,
+and beauty, which we have here feebly attempted to describe. The natives
+said it was originally brought from the east of Asia, but grows freely
+in any climate, and in their tongue its name is designated by a
+combination of three words, signifying separately, a noble animal,
+an elegant game, and a luscious kernel. Had Linnaeus seen this tree,
+he would have assuredly contemplated it with delightful ecstacy, and
+named it the _Ae'_sculus Hippocastanum.--_Magazine of Natural
+History._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CIGAR-SMOKING.
+
+The Surgeon-General of the Forces has recently made public his
+belief, that never, till within the last twenty years, did he see so
+many young men with pale faces and emaciated figures, and he attributes
+the existence of the evil to the use of Cigars. The unreflecting
+servility with which men adopt new and foreign practices, is fully
+exemplified in the present case; for it is notorious that the practice
+of cigar-smoking, the modern foppery from Regent-street to Cheapside and
+Cornhill, was an importation of the Peninsular War; the imitation having
+been begun by the Spaniards, whose models are what are usually called
+the _savages_ of America. The dietetic mischief, and consequent
+paleness of complexion and emaciation of muscle, which are attributable
+to the use of cigars, belong, no doubt, to an injury inflicted, perhaps,
+in more ways than one upon the aids and organs of digestion; nor is
+that hypothesis at all inconsistent with what we hear from so many
+cigar-smokers, namely, that their cigar is their dependence for
+digestion! That, after having impaired the organ, or weakened its tone,
+or dried up the salival menstruum, they should need a stimulant, even in
+the very form of the bane which injures them, is only of a piece with
+all that has been said of drinking, and especially of dram-drinking,
+with which latter debauch, the debauch of cigar-smoking has the closest
+possible alliance. We never pass one of those stifling rendezvous in the
+metropolis--a cigar-shop, open till the latest hours--without mentally
+classing it with the gin-shops, its only compeers!
+
+Exclusive of the low habit of imitation, a dulness and feebleness of
+understanding, an absence of intellectual resources, a vacuity of
+thought is the great inducement to the use of this, as of all other
+drugs, whether from the cigar-shop, or the snuff-shop, or the gin-shop,
+or the wine-cellar; a truth by no means the less certain, because it
+happens that men of the highest powers of mind are drawn into the vice,
+and made to reduce themselves, by their adoption and dependence upon it,
+to the lowest level of the vulgar; but, at the same time, it is not to
+be denied, that a great support in defence of cigar-smoking is found in
+the medical opinions sometimes advanced as to its salutary influence.
+Now, if we admit, broadly and at once, that there may be times and
+circumstances in which the inhaling the hot smoke of a powerful narcotic
+drug is useful to the human body, must it follow that the habitual
+resort to such a practice, and this under all circumstances, is useful
+also, and even free from the most serious inconveniences?
+
+It is the admitted maxim, that if smoking is accompanied by spitting,
+injury results to the smoker; and the reason assigned is, that the
+salival fluid, which should assist digestion, is in this manner
+dissipated, and taken from its office. But may not the habitual
+application of the narcotic influence to the nervous system have its
+evils also? May it not weaken or deaden the nervous and muscular action
+which is needful to digestion? And may not even the excessive quantity
+of the matter of heat, thus artificially conveyed into the body, tend to
+a desiccation of the system, as injurious under general circumstances,
+as it may be beneficial under particular ones?
+
+Smoking invites thirst; and there is little risk in advancing, that
+whatever superinduces an unnatural indulgence in the use of liquids is
+itself, and without farther question, injurious, even if the liquids
+resorted to are of the most innocent description; but, in point of fact,
+the cigar-smoker will usually appease his thirst by means of liquors in
+themselves his enemies!
+
+It is said, however, that the use of cigars is beneficial when we find
+ourselves in marshy situations, with a high temperature, and generally,
+whenever the atmosphere inclines to the introduction of putridity and
+fever into the system. We believe this; and perhaps a useful theory of
+the alternate benefit and mischief of cigar-smoking may be offered upon
+the basis of that proposition. When and wherever the body requires to
+be _dried_, cigar-smoking may be salutary; and when and wherever
+that _drying_, or desiccation, is injurious, then and there
+cigar-smoking may be to be shunned. We know that, while surrounded by
+an atmosphere overcharged, or even only saturated with moisture, moist
+bodies remain moist, or do not part with that excess of moisture from
+which a drier atmosphere would relieve them; and that living bodies,
+so circumstanced, are threatened with typhus and typhoid fever. It is
+highly probable, therefore, that narcotics, in such cases, may allay
+a morbid irritability of the nerves, or effect a salutary diminution
+of healthful sensibility; under such circumstances, the desiccating
+and sedative effects of tobacco-smoking may prove beneficial; while,
+in all ordinary states of the system and of the atmosphere, the
+same desiccative and sedative influences may produce immediate evil
+consequences, more or less readily perceptible, and undermine, however
+gradually, the strength of the constitution.--_United Service
+Journal._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE NEW COINAGE.
+
+Why does not some man of public research enlighten the public on the
+proceedings at the Mint? The whole system is as little comprehensible
+by the uninitiated as the philosopher's stone. The cost of the Mint is
+prodigious--the machinery is all that machinery can be; yet we have one
+of the ugliest coinages of any nation of Europe. A new issue of coin is
+about to be commenced.
+
+"It appears, from the king's proclamation, that the new coinage
+will consist of double sovereigns, to be each of the value of 40s.;
+sovereigns, each of 20s.; and half-sovereigns, 10s. silver crowns,
+half-crowns, shillings, and sixpences. The double-sovereigns have for
+the obverse the king's effigy, with the inscription, 'Gulielmus IIII.
+D.G. Britanniarum Rex. F.D.;' and for the reverse, the ensigns armorial
+of the United Kingdom contained in a shield, encircled by the collar of
+the Order of the Garter, and upon the edge of the piece the words 'Decus
+et Tutamen.' The crowns and half-crowns will be similar. The shilling
+has on the reverse the words 'One Shilling,' placed in the centre of
+the piece, within a wreath, having an olive-branch on one side, and an
+oak-branch on the other; and the sixpences have the same, except the
+word 'Sixpence' instead of the words 'One Shilling.' The coppers will
+be nearly as at present."
+
+Now we must observe, what the master of the Mint and the people about
+him ought to have observed before, that there is in the first instance
+a considerable expense incurred in the coinage of the double-sovereigns,
+without any possible object, except the expense itself may be an object,
+which is not impossible. We shall have in this coin one of the most
+clumsy and useless matters of circulation that could be devised. The
+present sovereign answers every purpose that this clumsy coin can be
+required for, and even the single sovereign would be a much more
+convenient coin for circulation if it were divided, as every one knows
+who knows the trouble of getting change. The half-sovereign is in fact
+a much more convenient coin. But on this clumsy coin we must have a
+_Latin_ inscription, as if it were intended only for the society of
+antiquaries, or to be laid up in cabinets, which we acknowledge would be
+most likely its fate, except for the notorious bad taste of the British
+coinage. Of much use it is to an English public to have the classical
+phraseology of Gulielmus Britanniarum Rex, put in place of the national
+language. Then too we must have the collar of the Order of the Garter
+to encircle the national arms, of which this Order is nonsensically
+pronounced "Decus et Tutamen." The Glory and Protection. The Order of
+the Garter the _glory and protection_ of England! We are content to
+let this absurdity stay in Latin or Sanscrit; English would be shamed by
+it. The Order of the Garter which goes round the knee of any man, who
+comes with the minister's fiat on the subject, and which has no more
+relation to British glory or British defence than the Order of the Blue
+Button or the Yellow frog of his majesty the Emperor of China; and this
+is to go forth on our national gold coin! and for fear that the folly
+would not be sufficiently spread, it is to be stamped on our crowns and
+half-crowns! The shillings and sixpences luckily escape: plain English
+will do for them. And all this goes on from year to year, while we have
+in the example of France a model of what a mint ought to be. Every
+foreigner makes purchases at the French mint; and the series of national
+medals executed there is a public honour and a public profit too. But
+whoever thinks of purchasing English mintage except for bullion?--With a
+history full of the most stirring events, we have not a single medallic
+series--we have scarcely a single medal. But we have in lieu of those
+vanities a master of the mint, who is tost new into the office on every
+change of party, who has probably in the whole course of his life never
+known the difference between gold and silver but by their value in
+sovereigns and shillings; but who, in the worst of times, shows his
+patriotism by receiving a salary of no less than five thousand pounds
+a year?
+
+_Monthly Magazine._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+HYDROSTATICS AND PNEUMATICS.
+
+(_Cabinet Cyclopaedia_, vol. xvii.)
+
+
+_Easier to swim in the Sea than in a River_.
+
+Sea water has a greater buoyancy than fresh water, being relatively
+heavier; and hence it is commonly said to be much easier to swim in
+the sea than in a river: this effect, however, appears to be greatly
+exaggerated. A cubic foot of freshwater weighs about 1,000 ounces; and
+the same bulk of sea water weighs 1,028 ounces; the weight, therefore,
+of the latter exceeds the former by only 28 parts in 1,000. The force
+exerted by sea water to support the body exceeds that exerted by fresh
+water by about one thirty-sixth part of the whole force of the
+latter.--_By Dr. Lardner._
+
+
+_Ice lighter than Water_.
+
+It is known that in the process of congelation, water undergoes a
+considerable increase of bulk; thus a quantity of water, which at
+the temperature of 40 deg. measures a cubic inch, will have a greater
+magnitude when it assumes the form of ice at the temperature of 32 deg.
+Consequently ice is, bulk for bulk, lighter than water. Hence it is
+that ice is always observed to collect and float at the surface.--A
+remarkable effect produced by the buoyancy of ice in water is observable
+in some of the great rivers in America. Ice collects round stones at the
+bottom of the river, and it is sometimes formed in such a quantity that
+the upward pressure by its buoyancy exceeds the weight of the stone
+round which it is collected--consequently it raises the stone to the
+surface. Large masses of stone are thus observed floating down the river
+at considerable distances from the places of their formation.--_Ibid_.
+
+
+_Domestic Use of the Hydrometer_.
+
+The adulteration of milk by water may always be detected by the
+hydrometer, and in this respect it may be a useful appendage to
+household utensils. Pure milk has a greater specific gravity than
+water, being 103, that of water being 100. A very small proportion of
+water mixed with milk will produce a liquid specifically lighter than
+water.--Although the hydrometer is seldom applied to domestic uses,
+yet it might be used for many ordinary purposes which could scarcely
+be attained by any other means. The slightest adulteration of spirits,
+or any other liquid of known quality, may be instantly detected by it;
+and it is recommended by its cheapness, the great facility of its
+manipulation, and the simplicity of its results.--_Ibid._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER.
+
+ A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.
+ SHAKSPEARE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The late Lord Clonmel, who never thought of demanding more than a
+shilling for an affidavit, used to be well satisfied provided it was a
+good one. In his time the Birmingham shillings were current, and he used
+the following extraordinary precaution to avoid being imposed upon by
+taking a bad one:--"You shall true answer make to such questions as
+shall be demanded of you touching this affidavit, so help you God.
+Is this a good shilling?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SCRAPS.
+
+The _Court Journal_, describing a Study in Windsor Castle,
+says--"The first of a series in the plain _English_ style. The
+ceiling is white, with a cornice of simple _Grecian_ design!"
+
+According to a recent traveller, fat sheep are so plentiful in the
+Brazils that they are used as _fuel_ to feed their lime-kilns.
+
+Supposing the productive power of wheat to be only six-fold, the produce
+of a single acre would cover the whole surface of the globe in fourteen
+years.
+
+A Philadelphia Paper announces the arrival of the Siamese Twins in that
+city, in the following manner:--"_One_ of the Siamese twins arrived
+here on Monday last, accompanied by his brother."
+
+The term Husting, or Hustings, as applied to the scaffold erected at
+elections, from which candidates address the electors, is derived from
+the Court of Husting, of Saxon origin, and the most ancient in the
+kingdom. Its name is a compound of _hers_ and _ding_; the former
+implying a house, and the latter a thing, cause, suit, or plea; whereby
+it is manifest that _husding_ imports a house or hall, wherein causes
+are heard and determined; which is further evinced by the Saxon _dingere_,
+or _thingere_, an advocate, or lawyer. [_Hus_ and _thing_ (thong)
+a place enclosed, a building roped round.]--_Atlas._
+
+Segrais says, that when Louis XIV. was about seventeen years of age, he
+followed him and his brother, the Duke of Orleans, out of the playhouse,
+and that he heard the duke ask the king what he thought of the play they
+had just been seeing, and which had been well received by the audience:
+"Brother, (replied Louis,) do not you know that I never pretend to give
+my opinion on any thing that I do not perfectly understand."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ELECTIONEERING ADVICE.
+
+Among the curious _Autograph Letters_, at Sotheby's late sale,
+there was a curious one of _Sarah_, Duchess of Marlborough, dated
+August 16th, 1740, viz. A canvassing letter in favour of two Members for
+Reading; with the following electioneering advice:--"_Nothing but a
+good Parliament can save England next Session; they are both very honest
+men, and will never give a vote to a Placeman or a Pensioner._"
+
+P.T.W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE NATIONAL DEBT.
+
+George the Third came to the throne in 1760, and found the national debt
+120 millions; he reigned 59 years, and left the national debt 820
+millions, 700 millions more than at his accession, increasing on the
+whole period about 36 thousand per day, or nearly 23 pounds per minute.
+At the beginning of his reign the taxes amounted annually to 6 millions;
+at the ending 60 millions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PLURALITIES.
+
+In the year 1238, it was agreed in an assembly of divines at Paris,
+that none could without forfeiture of eternal happiness, possess two
+benefices at the same time; one being worth fifteen livres Parisis,
+each about 2s. 6d. sterling.
+
+N.B. There does not appear to be any such decision by any assembly of
+divines in England, at least not since the reformation.
+
+G.K.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+COMPUNCTIOUS VISITINGS.
+
+It is said of a certain physician that he never passed the churchyard of
+the place where he resided, without pulling forth his handkerchief from
+his pocket, and hiding his face with it. Upon this circumstance being
+noticed by an acquaintance, he apologized for it by saying, "You will
+recollect, sir, what a number of people there are who have found their
+way hither under my directions. Now, I am always apprehensive lest some
+of them recognising my features should lay hold of me, and oblige me to
+take up my lodging along with them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+IMPROMPTU ON THE BURIAL OF SHUTER, THE ACTOR.
+
+
+ Alas! poor Ned!
+ He's now in bed,
+ Who seldom was before;
+ The revel rout,
+ The midnight shout,
+ Shall never know him more.
+
+ Entomb'd in clay,
+ Here let him lay,
+ And silence ev'ry jest;
+ For life's poor play
+ Has past away,
+ And here he sleeps in rest.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_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 MIRROR OF LITERATURE, NO. 490 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 12676.txt or 12676.zip *****
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