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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12785 ***
+
+THE
+
+ATLANTIC MONTHLY.
+
+A MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, ART, AND POLITICS.
+
+VOL. XI--FEBRUARY, 1863.--NO. LXIV.
+
+
+
+
+SOVEREIGNS AND SONS.
+
+
+The sudden death of Prince Albert caused profound regret, and the
+Royal Family of Britain had the sincere sympathies of the civilized
+world on that sad occasion. The Prince Consort was a man of brilliant
+talents, and those talents he had cultivated with true German
+thoroughness. His knowledge was extensive, various, and accurate.
+There was no affectation in his regard for literature, art, and
+science; for he felt toward them all as it was natural that an
+educated gentleman of decided abilities, and who had strongly
+pronounced intellectual tastes, should feel. Though he could not be
+said to hold any official position, his place in the British Empire
+was one of the highest that could be held by a person not born to the
+sceptre. His knowledge of affairs, and the confidence that was placed
+in him by the sovereign, made it impossible that he should not be
+a man of much influence, no matter whether he was recognized by the
+Constitution or not. As the director of the education of the princes
+and princesses, his children, his character and ideas are likely to be
+felt hereafter, when those personages shall have become the occupants
+of high and responsible stations. The next English sovereign will be
+pretty much what he was made by his father; and it is no light thing
+to have had the formation of a mind that may be made to act, with
+more or less directness, on the condition of two hundred millions of
+people.
+
+We know it is the custom to speak of the Government of England as if
+there were no other powerful institution in that Empire than the House
+of Commons; and that very arrogant gentleman, Mr. John Arthur Roebuck,
+has told us, in his usual style, that the crown is a word, and nothing
+more. "The crown!" exclaimed the member for Sheffield, in 1858,--"the
+crown! it is the House of Commons!" Theoretically Mr. Roebuek is
+right, and the British practice conforms to the theory, whenever the
+reigning prince is content to receive the theory, and to act upon it:
+but all must depend upon that prince's character; and should a British
+sovereign resolve to rule as well as to reign, he might give the House
+of Commons much trouble, in which the whole Empire would share. The
+House of Commons was never stronger than it was in the latter part of
+1760. For more than seventy years it had been the first institution in
+the State, and for forty-six years the interest of the sovereign had
+been to maintain its supremacy. The king was a cipher. Yet a new
+king had but to appear to change everything. George III. ascended the
+throne with the determination not to be the slave of any minister,
+himself the slave of Parliament; and from the day that he became king
+to the day that the decline of his faculties enforced his retirement,
+his personal power was everywhere felt, and his personal character
+everywhere impressed itself on the British world, and to no ordinary
+extent on other countries. George III. was not a great man, and it has
+been argued that his mind was never really sound; and yet of all men
+who then lived, and far more than either Washington or Napoleon, he
+gave direction and color and tone to all public events, and to not
+a little of private life, and much of his work will have everlasting
+endurance. He did not supersede the House of Commons, but he would not
+be the simple vizier of that many-headed sultan, which for the most
+part became his humble tool. Yet he was not a popular sovereign until
+he had long occupied the throne, and had perpetrated deeds that should
+have destroyed the greatest popularity that sovereign ever possessed.
+It was not until after the overthrow of the Fox-and-North Coalition
+that he found himself popular, and so he remained unto the end. The
+change that he wrought, and the power that he wielded in the State,--a
+power as arbitrary as that of Louis XV.,--were the fruits of his
+personal character, and that character was the consequence of the
+peculiar education which he had received.
+
+Lord Brougham tells us that George III. "was impressed with a lofty
+feeling of his prerogative, and a firm determination to maintain,
+perhaps extend it. At all events, he was resolved not to be a mere
+name or a cipher in public affairs; and whether from a sense of the
+obligations imposed upon him by his station, or from a desire to enjoy
+all its powers and privileges, he certainly, while his reason remained
+entire, but especially during the earlier period of his reign,
+interfered in the affairs of government more than any prince who ever
+sat upon the throne of this country since our monarchy was distinctly
+admitted to be a limited one, and its executive functions were
+distributed among responsible ministers. The correspondence which he
+carried on with his confidential servants during the ten most critical
+years of his life lies before us, and it proves that his attention was
+ever awake to all the occurrences of the government. Not a step was
+taken in foreign, colonial, or domestic affairs, that he did not
+form his opinion upon it, and exercise his influence over it. The
+instructions to ambassadors, the orders to governors, the movements of
+forces, down to the marching of a single battalion, in the districts
+of this country, the appointment to all offices in Church and State,
+not only the giving away of judgeships, bishoprics, regiments, but the
+subordinate promotions, lay and clerical,--all these form the topics
+of his letters; on all his opinion is pronounced decisively; in
+all his will is declared peremptorily. In one letter he decides the
+appointment of a Scotch puisne judge; in another the march of a troop
+from Buckinghamshire into Yorkshire; in a third the nomination to
+the Deanery of Westminster; in a fourth he says, that, 'if Adam, the
+architect, succeeds Worsley at the Board of Works, he shall think
+Chambers ill used.' For the greater affairs of State it is well known
+how substantially he insisted upon being the king _de facto_ as well
+as _de jure_. The American War, the long exclusion of the Liberal
+party, the French Revolution, the Catholic question, are all sad
+monuments of his real power."
+
+This is a true picture of George III., and why it should be supposed
+that no descendant of that monarch will ever be able to make himself
+potently felt in the government of his Empire we are at a loss to
+understand. The exact part of that monarch would not be repeated, the
+world having changed so much as to render such repetition impossible;
+but the end at which George III. aimed, and which he largely
+accomplished for himself, that end being the vindication of the
+monarchical element in the British polity, might be undertaken by one
+of his great-grandsons with every reason to expect success. The means
+employed would have to be different from those which George III. made
+use of, but that would prove nothing against the project itself.
+The men who followed Cromwell to the Long Parliament and the men who
+followed Bonaparte into the Council of Five Hundred were differently
+clothed and armed, but the pikemen of the future Protector were
+engaged in the same kind of work that was afterward done by the
+grenadiers of the future Emperor. The one set of men had never
+heard of the bayonet, and the other set had faith in nothing but the
+bayonet, believing it to be as "holy" as M. Michelet asserts it to
+be. The pikemen were the most pious of men, and could have eaten an
+Atheist with relish, after having roasted him. The grenadiers were
+Atheists, and cared no more for Christianity than for Mahometanism,
+their chief having testified his regard for the latter, and
+consequently his contempt for both, only the year before, in Egypt.
+Yet both detachments were successfully employed in doing the same
+thing, and that was the clearing away of what was regarded as
+legislative rubbish, in order that military monarchies might be
+erected on the cleared ground. In each instance there was the element
+of violence actively at work, and it makes no possible difference that
+the English Commons went out because they did not care to come to push
+of pike, and that the French Representatives departed rather than risk
+the consequence of a bayonet-charge. So if the Prince of Wales should
+see fit to tread in the footsteps of his great-grandfather, he would
+have very different instruments from those "king's friends" whose
+existence and actions were so fatal to ministers in the early part of
+those days when George III. was king.
+
+It is a common remark, that the institutions of England have been so
+far reformed in a democratic direction, that no monarch could ever
+expect to become powerful in that country. We think the observation
+unphilosophical; and it is because the old aristocratical system of
+England received a heavy blow in 1832 that we believe a king of that
+country could make himself a ruler in fact as well as in theory.
+Between a king and an aristocracy there never can be anything like a
+sincere attachment, unless the king be content to be recognized as
+the first member of the patrician order, to be _primus inter pares_ in
+strict good faith, an agent of his class, but not the sovereign of his
+kingdom. Kings generally prefer new men to men of established position
+and old descent. They have a fondness for low-born favorites, who are
+not only cleverer than most aristocrats will condescend to be, but who
+recognize a chief in a monarch, and enable him to feel and to enjoy
+his superiority when in their company. The hostility that prevails
+between the peer and the _parvenu_ is the most natural thing in the
+world, and is no more to be wondered at than that between the hare and
+the hound. In earlier times the peerage had the best of it, and could
+hang up the _parvenus_ with wonderful despatch,--as witness the
+fate of Cochrane and his associates, favorites of the third James of
+Scotland, who swung in the wind over Lauder Bridge. In later times
+brains and intelligence tell in and on the world, and the peers,
+having no longer pit and gallows for the punishment of presumptuous
+plebeians who dare to get between them and the regal sunshine, must be
+content to see those plebeians basking in the royal rays, if they are
+not capable of outdoing them in those arts that ever have been found
+most useful in the advancement of the interest of courtiers. Hanging
+and heading have gone mostly out of date, or the peer would be in more
+danger than the upstart.
+
+The Reform Bill has made it much easier for a king of Great Britain to
+become a ruler than it was for George III. to carry his point over
+the old aristocracy, for it has created a class of voters who could be
+easily won over to the aid of a king engaged in a project that should
+not injure them, while its success should reduce the power of the
+aristocracy. The father of the Reform Bill made a strange mistake
+as to the character of that measure. "I hope," said the old Tory and
+Pittite, Lord Sidmouth, to him, "God will forgive you on account of
+this bill: I don't think I can." "Mark my words," was Earl Grey's
+answer,--"within two years you will find that we have become unpopular
+for having brought forward the most aristocratic measure that ever was
+proposed in Parliament." The great Whig statesman was but half right.
+The Whigs became unpopular within the time named, but it was for very
+different reasons from that assigned by Earl Grey in advance for their
+fall in the people's favor. The Reform Bill, instead of proving an
+aristocratic measure, has wellnigh rendered aristocratical government
+impossible in England; and as a democracy in that country is as much
+out of the question as a well-ordered monarchy is in America, a return
+to a true regal government would seem to be the only course left for
+England, if she desires to have a strong government. When the Duke of
+Wellington, seeing the breaking up of the old system because of the
+triumph of the Whig measure, asked the question, "How is the King's
+government to be carried on?" he meant, "How will it be possible to
+maintain the old aristocratical system of party-government?"
+
+Since the grand organic change that was effected thirty years ago,
+there has been no strong and stable government in England. Lord Grey
+went out of office because he could not keep his party together. The
+King, under the spurring of his wife, made an effort to play the part
+of his father in 1783, with Peel for Pitt, and was beaten. Peel was
+floored, and Lord Melbourne became Premier again; and though he held
+office six years, he never had a working majority in the Commons, nor
+a majority of any kind in the Peers. The largest majorities that he
+could command in the lower House would have been considered something
+like very weak support in the ante-Reform times, and would have caused
+the ministers of those times to resign themselves to resignation.
+When the Tories came back to power, in 1841, with about one hundred
+majority in the Commons, they thought they were secure for a decade
+at least; but in a few months they found they were not secure of even
+their own chief; and in five years they were compelled to abandon
+protection, and to consent to the death and burial of their own party,
+which was denied even the honor of embalmment, young Conservatism
+being nothing but old Toryism, and therefore it was beyond even the
+power of spices to prolong its decay. It had rotted of the potato-rot,
+and the League's powerful breath blew it over. The Whigs returned
+to office, but not to power, the Russell Government proving a most
+ridiculous concern, and living through only five years of rickety
+rule. A spasmodic Tory Government, that discarded Tory principles,
+endured for less than a year, not even the vigorous intellect of the
+Earl of Derby, seconded though it was by the genius of Disraeli, being
+sufficient to insure it a longer term of existence. Then came the
+Aberdeen Ministry, a regular coalition concern, a no-party government,
+and necessarily so, because all parties but the extreme Tories were
+represented in it, and were engaged in neutralizing each other. How
+could there be a party government, or, indeed, for long a government
+of any kind, by a ministry in which were such men as Aberdeen and
+Russell, Palmerston and Grahame, Gladstone and Clarendon, all pigging
+together in the same truckle-bed, to use Mr. Burke's figure concerning
+the mixture that was called the Chatham Ministry? The coalition went
+to pieces on the Russian rock, having managed the war much worse
+than any American Administration ever mismanaged one. The Palmerston
+Government followed, and has existed ever since, deducting the
+fifteen months that the second Derby-Disraeli Ministry lasted; but the
+Palmerston Ministry has seldom had a majority in Parliament, and has
+lived, partly through the forbearance of its foes, partly through the
+support of men who are neither its friends nor its enemies, and partly
+through the personal popularity of its vigorous old chief, who is
+as lively at seventy-eight as he was at forty-five, when he was a
+Canningite. Ministries now maintain themselves because men do not know
+what might happen, if they were to be dismissed; and this has been the
+political state of England for more than a quarter of a century, with
+no indications of a change so long as the government shall remain
+purely Parliamentary in its character, Parliament meaning the House of
+Commons. There is no party in the United Kingdom capable of electing a
+strong majority to the House of Commons, and hence a strong government
+is impossible so long as that body shall control the country. With the
+removal of Lord Palmerston something like anarchy might be expected,
+there being no man but him who is competent to keep the Commons in
+order without the aid of a predominating party. The tendency has been
+for some time to lean upon individuals, at the same time that
+the number of individuals possessed of influence of the requisite
+character has greatly diminished. Sir Robert Peel, had he lived, would
+have been all that Lord Palmerston is, and more, and would have been
+more acceptable to the middle class than is the Irish peer.
+
+The state of things that is thus presented, and which must become
+every year of a more pronounced character, is one that would be highly
+favorable to the exertions of a prince who should seek to make himself
+felt as the wielder of the sceptre, and who should exert himself to
+rise from the presidency of an aristocratical corporation, which is
+all that a British monarch now is, to the place of king of a great and
+free people. A prince with talent, and with a hold on the affection of
+his nominal subjects, might confer the blessing of strong government
+on Britain, and rule over the first of empires, instead of being a
+mere doge, or, as Napoleon coarsely had it, a pig to fatten at the
+public expense. The time would appear to be near at hand when England
+shall be the scene of a new struggle for power, with the aristocracy
+on the one side, and the sovereign and most of the people on the
+other. A nation like England cannot exist long with weakness
+organized for its government, and there is nothing in the condition
+of Parliament or of parties that allows us to suppose that from them
+strength could proceed, any more than that grapes could be gathered
+from thorns or figs from thistles. A monarch who should effect the
+change indicated might be called a usurper, and certainly would be a
+revolutionist; but, as Mommsen says, "Any revolution or any usurpation
+is justified before the bar of history by exclusive ability to
+govern,"--and government is what most nations now stand most in need
+of. The reason why George III.'s conduct is generally condemned is,
+that he was a clumsy creature, and that he made a bad use of the power
+which he monopolized, or sought to monopolize, his whole course being
+unrelieved by a single trait of genius, or even of that tact which is
+the genius of small minds.
+
+
+It has been charged upon the princes of the House of Hanover that they
+are given to quarrelling, and that between sovereign and heir-apparent
+there has never been good-will, while they have on several occasions
+disgusted the world by the vehemence of their hatred for each other.
+That George I. hated his heir is well known; and George II. hated his
+son Frederick with far more intensity than he himself had been hated
+by his own father. The Memoirs of Lord Hervey show the state of
+feeling that existed in the English royal family during the first
+third of the reign of George II., and the spectacle is hideous beyond
+parallel; and for many years longer, until Frederick's death,
+there was no abatement of paternal and filial hate. George III.
+was disgusted with his eldest son's personal conduct and political
+principles, as well he might be; for while the father was a model of
+decorum, and a bitter Tory, the son was a profligate, and a Whig,--and
+the King probably found it harder to forgive the Whig than the
+profligate. The Prince cared no more for Whig principles than he did
+for his marriage-vows, but affected them as a means of annoying his
+father, whose Toryism was of proof. He, as a man, toasted the buff and
+blue, when that meant support of Washington and his associates,
+for the same reason that, as a boy, he had cheered for Wilkes and
+Liberty,--because it was the readiest way of annoying his father; but
+he ever deserted the Whigs when his aid and countenance could have
+been useful to them. George IV. had no child with whom to quarrel, but
+while Prince Regent he did his worst to make his daughter unhappy,
+as we find established in Miss Knight's Memoirs. The good-natured
+and kind-hearted William IV. had no legitimate children, but he was
+strongly attached to the Fitzclarences, who were borne to him by Mrs.
+Jordan. Indeed, monarchs have often been as full of love for their
+offspring born out of wedlock as of hate for their children born in
+that holy state. Being men, they must love something, and what
+so natural as that they should love their natural children, whose
+helpless condition appeals so strongly to all their better feelings,
+and who never can become their rivals?
+
+Queen Victoria is the first sovereign of the House of Hanover who,
+having children, has not pained the world by quarrelling with them.
+A model sovereign, she has not allowed an infirmity supposed to be
+peculiar to her illustrious House to control her clear and just mind,
+so that her career as a mother is as pleasing as her career as a
+sovereign is splendid. About the time of the death of Prince Albert,
+a leading British journal published some articles in which it was
+insinuated, not asserted, that there had been trouble in the Royal
+Family, and that that quarrelling between parent and child which
+had been so common in that family in former times was about to
+be exhibited again. It was even said that domestic peace was an
+impossibility in the House of Hanover, which was but an indorsement
+of Earl Granville's remark, in George II.'s reign. "This family," said
+that eccentric peer, "always has quarrelled, and always will quarrel,
+from generation to generation"; and he did not live to see the ill
+feeling that existed between George III. and his eldest son.
+
+There is no reason for saying that the Hanover family is more
+quarrelsome than most other royal lines; and the domestic dissensions
+of great houses are more noted than those of lesser houses only
+because kings and nobles are so placed as to live in sight of the
+world. When a king falls out with his eldest son, the entertainment is
+one to which all men go as spectators, and historians consider it
+to be the first of their duties to give full details of that
+entertainment. Since the Hanoverians have reigned over the English,
+the world has been a writing and a reading world, and nothing has more
+interested writers and readers than the dissensions of sovereigns and
+their sons. If we extend our observation to those days when German
+sovereigns were unthought of in England, we shall find that kings
+and princes did not always agree; and if we go farther, and scan the
+histories of other royal houses, we shall learn that it is not in
+Britain alone that the wearers of crowns have looked with aversion
+upon their heirs, and have had sons who have loved them so well and
+truly as to wish to witness their promotion to heavenly crowns. The
+Hanoverian monarchs of England, and their sons, have shared only the
+common lot of those who reign and those who wish to reign.
+
+The Norman kings of England did not always live on good terms with
+their sons. William the Conqueror had a very quarrelsome family. His
+children quarrelled with one another, and the King quarrelled with his
+wife. The oldest son of William and Matilda was Robert, afterward Duke
+of Normandy,--and a very trying time this young man caused his father
+to have; while the mother favored the son, probably out of revenge for
+the beatings she had received, with fists and bridles, from her royal
+husband, who used to swear "By the Splendor of God!"--his favorite
+oath, and one that has as much merit as can belong to any piece of
+blasphemy,--that he never would be governed by a woman. The father and
+son went to war, and they actually met in battle, when the son ran the
+old gentleman through the arm with his lance, and dropped him out of
+the saddle with the utmost dexterity. This was the first time that
+the Conqueror was ever conquered, and perhaps it was not altogether
+without complacency that "the governor" saw what a clever fellow his
+eldest son was with his tools. At the time of William's death Robert
+was on bad terms with him, and is believed to have been bearing arms
+against him. Henry I. lost his sons before he could well quarrel
+with them, the wreck of the White Ship causing the death of his
+heir-apparent, and also of his natural son Richard. He compensated for
+this omission by quarrelling with his daughter Matilda, and with her
+husband, Geoffrey of Anjou. He made war on his brother Robert, took
+from him the Duchy of Normandy, and shut him up for life; but the
+story, long believed, that he put out Robert's eyes, has been called
+in question by modern writers. King Stephen, who bought his breeches
+at so low a figure, had a falling-out with his son Eustace, when he
+and Henry Plantagenet sought to restore peace to England, and nothing
+but Eustace's death made a settlement possible. William Rufus, the Red
+King, who was the second of the Norman sovereigns of England, had
+no legitimate children, for he was never married. He was a jolly
+bachelor, and as such he has had the honor of having his history
+written by one of the ablest literary ladies of our time, Miss Agnes
+Strickland. He was the only king of England, who arrived at years of
+indiscretion, who did not marry. The other bachelor kings were Edward
+V. and Edward VI., whose united ages were short of thirty years. His
+character does not tend to make the single state of man respected.
+"Never did a ruler die less regretted than William Rufus," says Dr.
+Lappenberg, "although still young, being little above forty, not a
+usurper, and successful in his undertakings. He was never married,
+and, besides the crafty and officious tools of his power, was
+surrounded only by a few Normans of quality, and harlots. In his last
+struggle with the clergy, the most shameless rapacity is especially
+prominent, and so glaring, that, notwithstanding some exaggerations
+and errors that may be pointed out in the Chronicles, he still appears
+in the same light. Effeminacy, drunkenness, gluttony, dissoluteness,
+and unnatural crimes were the distinguishing characteristics of his
+court. He was himself an example of incontinence." This is a nice
+character to travel with down the page of history. He quarrelled with
+his brothers, and with his uncle, and kept up the family character in
+an exceedingly satisfactory manner, considering that he was unmarried.
+The statement that he was slain by Walter Tirel, accidentally, in the
+New Forest, is now disregarded. Our theory of his death is, that he
+fell a victim to the ambition of his brother, Henry I., who succeeded
+him, and who certainly had good information as to his fall, and made
+good use of it, like a sensible fellow.
+
+Of all the royal races of the Middle Ages, no one stands out more
+boldly on the historic page than the Plantagenets, who ruled over
+England from 1154 to 1485, the line of descent being frequently
+broken, and family quarrels constantly occurring. They were a bold and
+an able race, and if they had possessed a closer resemblance to the
+Hapsburgs, they would have become masters of Western Europe; but their
+quarrelsome disposition more than undid all that they could effect
+through the exercise of their talents. On the female side they were
+descended from the Conqueror; and, as we have seen, the Conqueror's
+family was one in which sons rebelled against the fathers, and brother
+fought with brother. Matilda, daughter of Henry I., became the wife of
+Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, and from their union came Henry II., first
+of the royal Plantagenets. Now the Angevine Plantagenets were "a hard
+set," as we should say in these days. Dissensions were common enough
+in the family, and they descended to the offspring of Geoffrey and
+Matilda, being in fact intensified by the elevation of the House to a
+throne. Henry II. married Eleanora of Aquitaine, one of the greatest
+matches of those days, a marriage which has had great effect on modern
+history. The Aquitanian House was as little distinguished for the
+practice of the moral virtues as were the lines of Anjou and Normandy.
+One of the Countesses of Anjou was reported to be a demon, which
+probably meant only that her husband had caught a Tartar in marrying
+her; but the story was enough to satisfy the credulous people of those
+times, who, very naturally, considering their conduct, believed that
+the Devil was constant in his attention to their affairs. It was to
+this lady that Richard Cocur de Lion referred, when he said, speaking
+of the family contentions, "Is it to be wondered at, that, coming from
+such a source, we live ill with one another? What comes from the Devil
+must to the Devil return." With such an origin on his father's side,
+crossing the fierce character of his mother, Henry II. thought he
+could not do better than marry Eleanora, whose origin was almost as
+bad as his own. Her grandfather had been a "fast man" in his youth and
+middle life, and it was not until he had got nigh to seventy that he
+began to think that it was time to repent. He had taken Eleanora's
+grandmother from her husband, and a pious priest had said to them,
+"Nothing good will be born to you," which prediction the event
+justified. The old gentleman resigned his rich dominions, supposed to
+be the best in Europe, to his grand-daughter, and she married Louis
+VII., King of France, and accompanied him in the crusade that he was
+so foolish as to take part in. She had women-warriors, who did their
+cause immense mischief; and unless she has been greatly scandalized,
+she made her husband fit for heaven in a manner approved neither by
+the law nor the gospel. The Provençal ladies had no prejudices against
+Saracens. After her return to Europe, she got herself divorced from
+Louis, and married Henry Plantagenet, who was much her junior, she
+having previously been the mistress of his father. It was a _mariage
+de convenance_, and, as is sometimes the case with such marriages,
+it turned out very inconveniently for both parties to it. It was not
+unfruitful, but all the fruit it produced was bad, and to the husband
+and father that fruit became the bitterest of bitter ashes. No
+romancer would have dared to bring about such a scries of unions as
+led to the creation of Plantagenet royalty, and to so much misery
+as well as greatness. There is no exaggeration in Michelet's lively
+picture of the Plantagenets. "In this family," he says, "it was a
+succession of bloody wars and treacherous treaties. Once, when King
+Henry had met his sons in a conference, their soldiers drew upon him.
+This conduct was traditionary in the two Houses of Anjou and Normandy.
+More than once had the children of William the Conqueror and Henry II.
+pointed their swords against their father's breast. Fulk had placed
+his foot on the neck of his vanquished son. The jealous Eleanora, with
+the passion and vindictiveness of her Southern blood, encouraged her
+sons' disobedience, and trained them to parricide. These youths, in
+whose veins mingled the blood of so many different races,--Norman,
+Saxon, and Aquitanian,--seemed to entertain, over and above the
+violence of the Fulks of Anjou and the Williams of England, all the
+opposing hatreds and discords of those races. They never knew whether
+they were from the South or the North: they only knew that they hated
+one another, and their father worse than all. They could not trace
+back their ancestry, without finding, at each descent, or rape, or
+incest, or parricide." Henry II. quarrelled with all his sons, and
+they all did him all the mischief they could, under the advice and
+direction of their excellent mother, whom Henry imprisoned. A priest
+once sought to effect a reconciliation between Henry and his son
+Geoffrey. He went to the Prince with a crucifix in his hand, and
+entreated him not to imitate Absalom.
+
+"What!" exclaimed the Prince, "would you have me renounce my
+birthright?"
+
+"God forbid!" answered the holy man; "I wish you to do nothing to your
+own injury."
+
+"You do not understand my words," said Geoffrey; "it is our family
+fate not to love one another. 'T is our inheritance; and not one of us
+will ever forego it."
+
+That must have been a pleasant family to marry into! When the King's
+eldest son, Henry, died, regretting his sins against his father,
+that father durst not visit him, fearing treachery; and the immediate
+occasion of the King's death was the discovery of the hostility of his
+son John, who, being the worst of his children, was, of course, the
+best-beloved of them all. The story was, that, when Richard entered
+the Abbey of Fontevraud, in which his father's body lay, the corpse
+bled profusely, which was held to indicate that the new king was his
+father's murderer. Richard was very penitent, as his elder brother
+Henry had been, on his death-bed. They were very sorrowful, were those
+Plantagenet princes, when they had been guilty of atrocious acts,
+and when it was too late for their repentance to have any practical
+effect.
+
+Richard I. had no children, and so he could not get up a perfect
+family-quarrel, though he and his brother John were enemies. He died
+at forty-two, and but a few years after his marriage with Berengaria
+of Navarre, an English queen who never was in England. When on his
+death-bed, Richard was advised by the Bishop of Rouen to repent, and
+to separate himself from his children. "I have no children," the King
+answered. But the good priest told him that he had children, and that
+they were avarice, luxury, and pride. "True," said Richard, who was
+a humorist,--"and I leave my avarice to the Cistercians, my luxury
+to the Gray Friars, and my pride to the Templars." History has fewer
+sharper sayings than this, every word of which told like a cloth-yard
+shaft sent against a naked bosom. Richard certainly never quarrelled
+with the children whom he thus left to his _friends_.
+
+King John did not live long enough to illustrate the family character
+by fighting with his children. When he died, in 1216, his eldest son,
+Henry III., was but nine years old, and even a Plantagenet could not
+well fall out with a son of that immature age. However, John did his
+best to make his mark on his time. If he could not quarrel with his
+children, because of their tender years, he, with a sense of duty that
+cannot be too highly praised, devoted his venom to his wife. He was
+pleased to suspect her of being as regardless of marriage-vows as he
+had been himself, and so he hanged her supposed lover over her bed,
+with two others, who were suspected of being their accomplices.
+The Queen was imprisoned. On their being reconciled, he stinted her
+wardrobe, a refinement of cruelty that was aggravated by his monstrous
+expenditure on his own ugly person. Queen Isabella was very handsome,
+and perhaps John was of the opinion of some modern husbands, who think
+that dress extinguishes beauty as much as it inflames bills. Having
+no children to torment, John turned his disagreeable attentions to his
+nephew, Arthur, Duke of Brittany, who, according to modern ideas, was
+the lawful King of England. The end was the end of Arthur. How he was
+disposed of is not exactly known, but, judging from John's character
+and known actions, we incline to agree with those writers who say that
+the uncle slew the nephew with his own royal hand. He never could
+deny himself an attainable luxury, and to him the murder of a youthful
+relative must have been a rich treat, and have created for him a new
+sensation, something like the new pleasure for which the Persian king
+offered a great reward. Besides, all uncles are notoriously bad, and
+seem, indeed, to have been made only for the misery of their nephews
+and nieces, of whose commands they are most reprehensibly negligent.
+We mean to write a book, one of these days, for the express purpose of
+showing what a mistake it was to allow any such relationship to exist,
+and tracing all the evil that ever has afflicted humanity to the
+innate wickedness of uncles, and requiring their extirpation. We
+err, then, on the safe side, in supposing that John despatched Arthur
+himself,--not to say, that, when you require that a delicate piece of
+work should be done, you must do it with your own hand, or you may
+be disappointed. John did the utmost that he could do to keep up the
+discredit of the family; for, when a man has no son to whip and to
+curse, he should not be severely censured for having done no more than
+to kill his nephew. Men of large and charitable minds will take all
+the circumstances of John's case into the account, and not allow their
+judgment of his conduct to be harsh. What better can a man do than his
+worst?
+
+Henry III. appears to have managed to live without quarrelling
+with his children; but then he was a poor creature, and even was so
+unkingly, and so little like what a Plantagenet should have been, that
+he actually disliked war! He might with absolute propriety have worn
+the lowly broom-corn from which his family-name was taken, while it
+was a sweeping satire on almost all others who bore it. His heir,
+Edward I., was a king of "high stomach," and as a prince he stood
+stoutly by his father in the baronial wars. He, too, though the father
+of sixteen children, dispensed with family dissensions, thus showing
+that "The more, the merrier," is a true saying. Edward II. came to
+grief from having a bad wife, Isabella of France, who made use of
+his son against him. That son was Edward III., who became king in his
+father's lifetime, and whose marriage with Philippa of Hainault is
+one of the best-known facts of history, not only because it was an
+uncommonly happy marriage, but that it had remarkable consequences.
+This royal couple got along very happily with their children; but the
+ambition of their fourth son, the Duke of Lancaster, troubled the
+last days of the King, and prepared the way for great woes in the next
+century. The King was governed by Lancaster, and the Black Prince, who
+was then in a dying state, was at the head of what would now be called
+the Opposition, as if he foresaw what evils his brother's ambition
+would be the means of bringing upon his son.
+
+Richard II., son of the Black Prince, had no children, though he
+was twice married. He was dethroned, the rebels being headed by his
+cousin, Henry of Lancaster, who became Henry IV. Thus was brought
+about that change in the course of descent which John of Gaunt seems
+to have aimed at, but which he died just too soon to see effected.
+It was a violent change, and one which had its origin in a family
+quarrel, added to political dissatisfaction. Had the revolutionist
+wished merely to set aside a bad king, they would have called the
+House of Mortimer to the throne, the chief member of that House being
+the next heir, as descended from the Duke of Clarence, elder brother
+of the Duke of Lancaster; but more was meant than a political
+revolution, and so the line of Clarence was passed over, and its right
+to the crown treated with neglect, to be brought forward in bloody
+fashion in after-days. In fact, the Englishmen who made Henry of
+Lancaster king prepared the way for that long and terrible struggle
+which took place in the fifteenth century, and which was, its
+consequences as well as its course considered, the greatest civil
+war that has ever afflicted Christendom. The movement that led to the
+elevation of Henry of Holingbroke to the throne, though not precisely
+a palace-revolution, resembles a revolution of that kind more than
+anything else with which it can be compared; and it was as emphatic
+a departure from the principle of hereditary right as can be found in
+history. So much was this the case, that liberals in polities mostly
+place their historical sympathies with the party of the Red Rose, for
+no other reason, that we have ever been able to see, than that the
+House of Lancaster's possession of the throne testified to the triumph
+of revolutionary principles; for that House was jealous of its power
+and cruel in the exercise of it, and was so far from being friendly to
+the people, that it derived its main support from the aristocracy,
+and was the ally of the Church in the harsh work of exterminating the
+Lollards. The House of York, on the other hand, while it had, to use
+modern words, the legitimate right to the throne, was a popular House,
+and represented and embodied whatever there was then existing in
+politics that could be identified with the idea of progress.
+
+The character of the troubles that existed between Henry IV. and his
+eldest son and successor, Shakspeare's Prince Hal, is involved in much
+obscurity. It used to be taken for granted that the poet's Prince was
+an historical character, but that is no longer the case,--Falstaff's
+royal associate being now regarded in the same light in which Falstaff
+himself is regarded. The one is a poetic creation, and so is the
+other. Prince Henry was neither a robber nor a rowdy, but from his
+early youth a much graver character than most men are in advanced
+life. He had great faults, but they were not such as are made to
+appear in the pages of the player. The hero of Agincourt was a mean
+fellow,--a tyrant, a persecutor, a false friend and a cruel enemy, and
+the wager of most unjust wars; but he was not the "fast" youth that
+he has been generally drawn. He had neither the good nor the bad
+qualities that belong to young gentlemen who do not live on terms with
+their papas. He was of a grave and sad temperament, and much more of
+a Puritan than a Cavalier. It is a little singular that Shakspeare
+should have given portraits so utterly false of the most unpopular of
+the kings of the York family, and of the most popular of the kings of
+the rival house,--of Richard III., that is, and of the fifth Henry
+of Lancaster. Neither portrait has any resemblance to the original,
+a point concerning which the poet probably never troubled himself, as
+his sole purpose was to make good acting plays. Had it been necessary
+to that end to make Richard walk on three legs, or Henry on one leg,
+no doubt he would have done so,--just as Monk Lewis said he would have
+made Lady Angela blue, in his "Castle Spectre," if by such painting
+he could have made the play more effective. Prince Henry was a very
+precocious youth, and had the management of great affairs when he was
+but a child, and when it would have been better for his soul's and
+his body's health, had he been engaged in acting as an esquire of some
+good knight, and subjected to rigid discipline. The jealousy that
+his father felt was the natural consequence of the popularity of the
+Prince, who was young, and had highly distinguished himself in both
+field and council, was not a usurper, and was not held responsible for
+any of the unpopular acts done by the Government of his father. They
+were at variance not long before Henry IV.'s death, but little is
+known as to the nature of their quarrels. The crown scene, in which
+the Prince helps himself to the crown while his father is yet alive,
+is taken by Shakspeare from Monstrelet, who is supposed to have
+invented all that he narrates in order to weaken the claim of the
+English monarch to the French throne. If Henry IV., when dying, could
+declare that he had no right to the crown of England, on what could
+Henry V. base his claim to that of France?
+
+Henry V. died before his only son, Henry VI., had completed his first
+year; and Henry VI. was early separated from his only son, Edward
+of Lancaster, the same who was slain while flying from the field
+of Tewkesbury, at the age of eighteen. There was, therefore, no
+opportunity for quarrels between English kings and their sons for the
+sixty years that followed the death of Henry IV.; but there was
+much quarrelling, and some murdering, in the royal family, in those
+years,--brothers and other relatives being fierce rivals, even unto
+death, and zealous even unto slaying of one another. It would be hard
+to say of what crime those Plantagenets were not guilty.[A] Edward
+IV., with whom began the brief ascendency of the House of York, died
+at forty-one, after killing his brother of Clarence, his eldest son
+being but twelve years old. He had no opportunity to have troubles
+with his boys, and he loved women too well to fall out with his
+daughters, the eldest of whom was but just turned of seventeen. The
+history of Edward IV. is admirably calculated to furnish matter for a
+sermon on the visitation of the sins of parents on their children. He
+had talent enough to have made himself master of Western Europe,
+but he followed a life of debauchery, by which he was cut off in his
+prime, leaving a large number of young children to encounter the worst
+of fortunes. Both of his sons disappeared, whether murdered by Richard
+III. or Henry VII. no one can say; and his daughters had in part to
+depend upon that bastard slip of the Red-Rose line, Henry VII., for
+the means to enable them to live as gentlewomen,--all but the eldest,
+whom Henry took to wife as a point of policy, which her father would
+have considered the greatest misfortune of all those that befell his
+offspring. Richard III's only legitimate son died a mere boy.
+
+[Footnote A: It has been said of the Plantagenets that they "never
+shed the blood of a woman." This is nonsense, as we could, time and
+space permitting, show by the citation of numerous facts, but we shall
+here mention only one. King John had a noble woman shut up with her
+son, and starved to death. Perhaps that was not shedding her blood,
+but it was something worse. Before English statesmen and orators and
+writers take all the harlotry of Secessia under their kind care and
+championship, it would be well for them to read up their own country's
+history, and see how abominably women have been used in England for a
+thousand years, from queens to queans.]
+
+The Tudors fame to the English throne in 1485. There was no want of
+domestic quarrelling with them. Arthur, Henry VII.'s eldest son, died
+young, but left a widow, Catharine of Aragon, whom the King treated
+badly; and he appears to have been jealous of the Prince of Wales,
+afterward Henry VIII., but died too soon to allow of that jealousy's
+blooming into quarrels. According to some authorities, the Prince
+thought of seizing the crown, on the ground that it belonged to him in
+right of his mother, Elizabeth Plantagenet, who was unquestionably the
+legitimate heir. Henry VIII. himself, who would have made a splendid
+tyrant over a son who should have readied to man's estate,--an
+absolute model in that way to all after-sovereigns,--was denied
+by fortune an opportunity to round and perfect his character as
+a domestic despot. Only one of his legitimate sons lived even to
+boyhood, Edward VI., and Henry died when the heir-apparent was in his
+tenth year. Of his illegitimate son, the Duke of Richmond, Henry
+was extravagantly fond, and at one time thought of making him
+heir-apparent, which might have been done, for the English dread of
+a succession war was then at its height. Richmond died in his
+seventeenth year. Having no sons of a tormentable age, Henry made his
+daughters as unhappy as he could make them by the harsh exercise of
+paternal authority, and bastardized them both, in order to clear the
+way to the throne for his son. Edward VI. died a bachelor, in his
+sixteenth year, so that we can say nothing of him as a parent; but he
+treated his sister Mary with much harshness, and exhibited on various
+occasions a disposition to have things his own way that would have
+delighted his father, provided it had been directed against anybody
+but that severe old gentleman himself. Mary I. was the best sovereign
+of her line, domestically considered; but then she had neither son nor
+daughter with whom to quarrel, and the difficulties she had with her
+half-sister, Elizabeth, like the differences between the Archangel
+Michael and the Fallen Angel, were purely political in their
+character. We do not think that she would have done much injustice,
+if she had made Elizabeth's Tower-dungeon the half-way house to the
+scaffold. But though political, the half-sisterly dissensions between
+these ladies serve to keep Mary I. within the rules of the royal
+houses to which she belonged. Mary, dying of the loss of Calais and
+the want of children, was succeeded by Elizabeth, who, being a
+maiden queen, had no issue with whom to make issue concerning
+things political or personal. But observe how basely she treated her
+relatives, those poor girls, the Greys, Catharine and Mary, sisters of
+poor Lady Jane, whose fair and clever head Mary I. had taken off. The
+barren Queen, too jealous to share her power with a husband, hated
+marriage with all "the sour malevolence of antiquated virginity," and
+was down upon the Lady Catharine and the Lady Mary because they chose
+to become wives. Then she imprisoned her cousin, Mary Stuart, for
+nineteen years, and finally had her butchered under an approach to
+the forms of law, and in total violation of its spirit. She, too, kept
+within the royal rules, and made herself as great a pest as possible
+to her relatives.
+
+The English throne passed to the House of Stuart in 1603, and, after
+a lapse of six-and-fifty years, England had a sovereign with sons and
+daughters, the first since the death of Henry VIII. at the beginning
+of 1547. There was little opportunity for family dissensions in the
+days of most of the Stuarts, as either political troubles of the most
+serious nature absorbed the attention of kings and princes, or the
+reigning monarchs had no legitimate children. The open quarrel
+between Charles I. and the Parliament began before his eldest son had
+completed his eleventh year; and after that quarrel had increased to
+war, and it was evident that the sword alone could decide the issue,
+the King parted with his son forever. They had no opportunity to
+become rivals, and to fall out. There is so much that can be said
+against Charles I. with truth, that it is pleasing--as are most
+novelties--to be able to mention something to his credit. Instead
+of being jealous of his son, or desiring to keep him in ignorance of
+affairs, he early determined to train him to business. According
+to Clarendon, he said that he wished to "unboy him." Therefore he
+conferred high military offices upon him before he had completed his
+fifteenth year; and sent him to the West of England, to be the
+nominal head of the Western Association. Charles II. had no legitimate
+children, and so he could not have any quarrels with a Prince of
+Wales. He was fond of his numerous bastards, and, like an affectionate
+royal father, provided handsomely for them at the public-expense. What
+more could a father do, situated as that father was, and always in
+want of his people's money? Some of them were not his sons,--Monmouth,
+the best beloved of them all, being the son of Robert Sidney, a
+brother of the renowned Algernon, a fact that partially excuses the
+harsh conduct of James II. toward his nominal nephew. James II. had
+no legitimate son until the last year of his reign; but his two eldest
+daughters treated him far worse than any sovereign of the Hanoverian
+line was ever used by a son. They were most respectable women, and
+their deficiency in piety has worked well for the world; but it must
+ever be repugnant to humanity to regard the conduct of Mary and Anne
+with respect. No wonder that people called Mary the modern Tullia.
+Mary II. died young, and childless; and Queen Anne, though a most
+prolific wife, and but fifty-one at her death, survived all her
+children. Anne believed that her children's deaths were sent in
+punishment of her unfilial conduct; and she would have restored her
+nephew, the Pretender, to the British throne, but that the Jacobites
+were the silliest political creatures that ever triumphed in the
+how-not-to-do-it business, and could not even hold their mouths open
+for the rich and ripened fruit to drop into them.
+
+The first of the English Stuarts, James I., is suspected of having
+allowed his jealousy of his eldest son, the renowned Prince Henry, to
+carry him to the extent of child-murder. The Stuarts are called the
+Fated Line, and it is certain that none of their number, from Robert
+II.--who got the Scottish throne in virtue of his veins containing a
+portion of the blood of the Bruce, and so regalized the family, which,
+like the Bruces, was of Norman origin, and originally Fitzalan
+by name--to Charles Edward, and the Cardinal York, who died but
+yesterday, as it were, but had a wonderful run of bad luck. They had
+capital cards, but they knew not how to play them. With them, to play
+was to lose, and the most fortunate of their number were those kings
+who played as little as they could, such as James I. and Charles II.
+Those who lost the most were those who played the hardest, as Charles
+I. and his second son, James II. Yet the family was a clever one, with
+strong traits, both of character and talent, that ought to have made
+it the most successful of ruling races, and would have made it so,
+if its chiefs could have learned to march with the times. They had to
+contend, in Scotland, with one of the fiercest and most unprincipled
+aristocracies that ever tried the patience and traversed the purposes
+of monarchs who really aimed at the good government of their people;
+and the idiosyncrasy contracted during more than two centuries of
+Scottish rule clung to the family after it went to England, and found
+itself living under altogether a different state of things. What was
+virtue in Scotland became vice in England; and the ultra-monarchists,
+who came into existence not long after James I. succeeded to
+Elizabeth, helped to spoil the Stuarts. Both James and his successor
+were dominated by Scotch traditions, and supposed that they were
+contending with men who had the same end in view that had been
+regarded by the Douglases, the Hamiltons, the Ruthvens, the Lindsays,
+and others of the old Scotch baronage. What helped to deceive them was
+this,--that their opponents in England, like the opponents of their
+ancestors in Scotland, were aristocrats; and they supposed, that, as
+aristocratical movements in their Northern kingdom had always been
+subversive of order and peace, the same kind of movements would
+produce similar results in their Southern kingdom. They could not
+understand that one aristocracy may differ much from another, and
+that, while in Scotland the interest of the people, or rather of the
+whole nation, required the exaltation of the kingly power, in England
+it was that exaltation which was most to be feared. Sufficient
+allowance has not been made for the Stuarts in this respect, little
+regard being paid to the effect of the family's long training at home,
+which had rendered hostility to the nobility second nature to it. Had
+the Stuarts been the supporters of liberal ideas in England, their
+conduct would have given the lie to every known principle of human
+action. As their distrust of aristocracy rendered them despotically
+disposed, because the Scotch aristocracy had been the most lawless of
+mankind, so did they become attached to the Church of England because
+of the tyranny they had seen displayed by the Church of Scotland, the
+most illiberal ecclesiastical body, in those times, that men had ever
+seen, borne with, or suffered from. James I. and his grandson Charles
+II. had their whole conduct colored, and dyed in the wool, too, by
+their recollections of the odious treatment to which they had
+been subjected by a harsh and intolerant clergy. They had not the
+magnanimity to overlook, in the day of their power, what they had
+suffered in the day of their weakness.
+
+James I. undoubtedly disliked his eldest son, and was jealous of him;
+but it is by no means clear that he killed him, or caused him to
+be killed. He used to say of him, "What! will he bury me alive?"
+He ordered that the court should not go into mourning for Henry, a
+circumstance that makes in his favor, as murderers are apt to affect
+all kinds of hypocrisy in regard to their victims, and to weep in
+weeds very copiously. Yet his conduct may have been a refinement of
+hypocrisy, and, though a coward in the common acceptation of the word,
+James had much of that peculiar kind of hardihood which enables its
+possessor to treat commonly received ideas with contempt. His conduct
+in "The Great Oyer of Poisoning" was most extraordinary, it must
+be allowed, and is not reconcilable with innocence; but it does not
+follow that the guilt which the great criminals in that business could
+have established as against James related only to the death of Henry.
+It bore harder upon the King than even that crime could have borne,
+and must have concerned his conduct in matters that are peculiarly
+shocking to the ears of Northern peoples, though Southern races have
+ears that are less delicate. It was in Somerset's power to
+explain James's conduct respecting some things that puzzled his
+contemporaries, and which have continued to puzzle their descendants;
+but the explanation would have ruined the monarch in the estimation of
+even the most vicious portion of his subjects, and probably would have
+given an impetus to the growing power of the Puritans that might have
+led to their ascendency thirty years earlier than it came to pass
+in the reign of his son. James was capable of almost any crime or
+baseness; but in the matter of poisoning his eldest son he is entitled
+to the Scotch verdict of _Not Proven_.
+
+Whether James killed his son or not, it is certain that the Prince's
+death was a matter of extreme importance. Henry was one of those
+characters who are capable of giving history a twist that shall
+last forever. He had a fondness for active life, was very partial
+to military pursuits, and was friendly to those opinions which
+the bigoted chiefs of Austria and Bavaria were soon to combine to
+suppress. Henry would have come to the throne in 1625, had he lived,
+and there seems no reason to doubt that he would have anticipated the
+part which Gustavus Adolphus played a few years later. He would have
+made himself the champion of Protestantism, and not the less readily
+because his sister, the Electress-Palatine and Winter-Queen of
+Bohemia, would have been benefited by his successes in war. Bohemia
+might have become the permanent possession of the Palatine, and
+Protestantism have maintained its hold on Southern Germany, had Henry
+lived and reigned, and had his conduct as a king justified the hopes
+and expectations that were created by his conduct as a prince. The
+House of Austria would in that case have had a very different
+career from that which it has had since 1625, when Ferdinand II. was
+preparing so much evil for the future of Europe. Had Henry returned
+from Continental triumphs at the head of a great and an attached army,
+what could have prevented him from establishing arbitrary power in
+his insular dominions? His brother failed to make himself absolute,
+because he had no army, and was personally unpopular; but Henry would
+have had an army, and one, too, that would have stood high in English
+estimation, because of what it had done for the English name and the
+Protestant religion in Germany,--and Henry himself would have been
+popular, as a successful military man is sure to be in any country.
+Pym and Hampden would have found him a very different man to deal with
+from his foolish brother, who had all the love of despotism that man
+can have, but little of that kind of ability which enables a sovereign
+to reign despotically. Charles I. had no military capacity or taste,
+or he would have taken part in the Thirty Years' War, and in that way,
+and through the assistance of his army, have accomplished his domestic
+purpose. His tyranny was of a hard, iron character, unrelieved by
+a single ray of glory, but aggravated by much disgrace from the ill
+working of his foreign policy; so that it was well calculated to
+create the resistance which it encountered, and by which it was
+shivered to pieces. Henry would have gone to work in a different way,
+and, like Cromwell, would have given England glory, while taking from
+her freedom. There is nothing that the wearer of a crown cannot do,
+provided that crown is encircled with laurel. But the Stuarts seldom
+produced a man of military talent, which was a fortunate thing for
+their subjects, who would have lost their right to boast of their
+Constitutional polity, had Charles I. or James II. been a good
+soldier. We Americans, too, would have had a very different sort
+of annals to write, if the Stuarts, who have given so many names to
+American places, had known how to use that sword which they were so
+fond of handling.
+
+
+The royal families of England did by no means monopolize the share of
+domestic dissensions set apart for kings. The House of Stuart, even
+before it ascended the English throne, and when it reigned over only
+poor, but stout Scotland, was anything but famous for the love of its
+fathers for their sons, or for its sons' love for their fathers; and
+dissensions were common in the royal family. Robert III., second king
+of the line, had great grief with his eldest son, the Duke of Rothsay;
+and the King's brother, the Duke of Albany, did much to increase the
+evil that had been caused by the loose life of the heir-apparent. The
+end was, that Rothsay was imprisoned, and then murdered by his uncle.
+Scott has used the details of this court-tragedy in his "Fair Maid of
+Perth," one of the best of his later novels, most of the incidents in
+which are strictly historical. James I. was murdered while he was yet
+young, and James II. lost his life at twenty-nine; but James III. lost
+both throne and life in a war that was waged against him in the name
+of his son, who became king in consequence of his father's defeat and
+death. When James IV. fell at Flodden, because he fought like a brave
+fool, and not like a skilful general, he left a son who was not three
+years old; and that son, James V., when he died, left a daughter, the
+hapless Mary Stuart, who was but a week old. There was not much room
+for quarrelling in either of these cases. Mary Stuart's son, then an
+infant, was made the head of the party that dethroned his mother,
+and forced her into that long exile that terminated in her murder by
+Elizabeth of England. Mary's quarrels with her husband, Darnley, were
+of so bitter a character as to create the belief that she caused
+him to be murdered,--a belief that is as common now as it was in the
+sixteenth century, though the Marian Controversy has been going on for
+wellnigh three hundred years, and it has been distinctly proved by a
+host of clever writers and skilful logicians that it was impossible
+for her to have had any thing to do with that summary act of divorce.
+
+Several of the sovereigns of Continental Europe have had great
+troubles with their children, and these children have often had very
+disobedient fathers. In France, the Dauphin, afterward Louis XI.,
+could not always keep on good terms with his father, Charles VII., who
+has the reputation of having restored the French monarchy, after the
+English had all but subverted it, Charles at one time being derisively
+called King of Bourges. Nothing annoyed Louis so much as being
+compelled to run away before the army which his father was leading
+against him. He would, he declared, have stayed and fought, but that
+he had not even half so many men as composed the royal force. He
+would have killed his father as readily as he killed his brother in
+after-days,--if he did kill his brother, of which there is some
+doubt, of which he should have the benefit. As was but natural, he
+was jealous of his son, though he died when that prince was thirteen.
+Owing to various causes, however, there have been fewer quarrels
+between French kings and their eldest sons than between English kings
+and their eldest sons. Few French monarchs have been succeeded by
+their sons during the last three hundred years,--but two, in fact,
+namely, Louis XIII., who followed his father, Henry IV., and Louis
+XIV., who succeeded to Louis XIII., his father. It is two hundred
+and twenty years since a father was succeeded by a son in France,--a
+circumstance that Napoleon III. should lay to heart, and not be too
+sure that the Prince Imperial is to become Napoleon IV. There seems
+to be something fatal about the French purple, which has a strange
+tendency to spread itself, and to settle upon shoulders that could not
+have counted upon experiencing its weight and its warmth. Sometimes it
+is hung up for the time, and becomes dusty, while republicans take a
+turn at governing, though seldom with success. There were troubles
+in the families of Louis XIV., who was too heartless, selfish, and
+unfeeling not to be that worst kind of king, the domestic tyrant. He
+tyrannized over even his mistresses.
+
+Philip II., the greatest monarch of modern times,--perhaps the
+greatest of all time, the extent and diversity of his dominions
+considered, and the ability of the races over which he ruled taken
+into the account,--was under the painful necessity of putting his
+eldest son, Don Carlos, in close confinement, from which he never came
+forth until he was brought out feet foremost, the presumption being
+that he had been put to death by his father's orders. Carlos has been
+made a hero of romance, but a more worthless character never lived.
+On his death-bed Philip II. was compelled to see how little his son
+Philip, who succeeded him, cared for his feelings and wishes. Peter
+the Great put to death his son Alexis; and Frederick William I.
+of Prussia came very near taking the life of that son of his who
+afterward became Frederick the Great.
+
+Jealousy is so common a feeling in Oriental royal houses, that it is
+hardly allowable to quote anything from their history; but we may be
+permitted to allude to the effect of one instance of paternal hate in
+the Ottoman family at the time of its utmost greatness. Solyman
+the Magnificent was jealous of his eldest son, Mustapha, who is
+represented by all writers on the Turkish history of those times as
+a remarkably superior man, and who, had he lived, would have been a
+mighty foe to Christendom. This son the Sultan caused to be put to
+death, and there are few incidents of a more tragical cast than those
+which accompanied Mustapha's murder. They might be turned to great
+use by an historical romancer, who would find matters all made to his
+hand. The effect of this murder was to substitute for the succession
+that miserable drunkard, Selim II., who was utterly unable to lead the
+Turks in those wars that were absolutely essential to their existence
+as a dominant people. "With him," says Ranke, "begins the series of
+those inactive Sultans, in whose dubious character we may trace one
+main cause of the decay of the Ottoman fortunes." Solyman's hatred of
+his able son was a good thing for Christendom; for, if Mustapha had
+lived, and become Sultan, the War of Cyprus--that contest in
+which occurred the Battle of Lepanto--might have Lad a different
+termination, and the Osmanlis have been successful invaders of both
+Spain and Italy. It was a most fortunate circumstance for Europe,
+that, while it was engaged in carrying on civil wars and wars of
+religion, the Turks should have had for their chiefs men incapable of
+carrying on that work of war and conquest through which alone it was
+possible for those Mussulmans to maintain their position in Europe;
+and that they were thus favored was owing to the causeless jealousy
+felt by Sultan Solyman for the son who most resembled himself: and
+Solyman was the greatest of his line, which some say ended with him.
+
+
+
+
+UNDER THE PEAR-TREE.
+
+IN TWO PARTS.
+
+PART I.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+One Sunday morning, long ago, a girl stood in her bed-room,
+lingeringly occupied with the last touches of her toilet.
+
+A string of beads, made of pure gold and as large as peas, lay before
+her. They had been her mother's,--given to her when the distracted
+state of American currency made a wedding-present of the precious
+metal as welcome as it was valuable. Three several times, under
+circumstances of great pecuniary urgency, had the beads sufficed, one
+by one, to restore the family to comfort,--to pay the expenses of a
+journey, to buy seed-grain, and to make out the payment of a yoke of
+oxen. Afterwards, when peace and plenty came to be housemates in the
+land, the gold beads were redeemed, and the necklace, dearer than
+ever, encircled the neck of the only daughter.
+
+The only daughter took them up, and clasped them round her throat with
+a decisive snap. But the crowning graces remained in the shape of two
+other ornaments that lay in a small China box. It had a head on the
+cover, beautifully painted, of some queen,--perhaps of the Empress
+Josephine, the girl thought. The hat had great ostrich-feathers, that
+seemed proper to royalty, and it was a pretty face.
+
+In the box lay a pin and ring. On the back of the pin was braided
+hair, and letters curiously intertwined. The young girl slipped the
+ring on her own finger once more, and smiled. Then she took it off,
+with a sigh that had no pain in it, and looked at the name engraved
+inside,--DORCAS FOX.
+
+Whoever saw this name in the town records would naturally image to
+himself the town tailoress or nurse, or somebody's single sister
+who had been wise too long,--somebody tall, a little bent, and
+bony,--somebody weather-beaten and determined--looking, with a sharp,
+shrewd glance of a gray eye that said you could not possibly get the
+better of her and so need not try,--somebody who goes out unattended
+and fearless at night; for, as she very properly observes, "Who'd want
+to speak to _me_?"
+
+This might have described the original owner of the pin and ring, who
+had died years before, and left the ornaments for her namesake and
+niece, when she was too young to remember or care for her, but not the
+niece herself. She was young, blooming, twenty-two, and the belle of
+the country-village where she dwelt.
+
+The bed-room where the girl stood and meditated, after her fashion,
+was six feet by ten in dimensions, and the oval mirror before which
+she stood was six inches by ten. It was a genuine relic of the
+Mayflower, and had been brought over, together with the great chest in
+the entry, by the grand-grand-grandmother of all the Foxes. If anybody
+were disposed to be skeptical on this point, Colonel Fox had only to
+point to the iron clamp at the end, by which it had been confined to
+the deck; that would have produced conviction, if he had declared it
+came out of the Ark. This was a queer-looking little mirror, in which
+the young Dorcas saw her round face reflected: framed in black oak,
+delicately carved, and cut on the edge with a slant that gave the
+plate an appearance of being an inch thick.
+
+Sixty years ago there were not many mirrors in country-towns in New
+England; and in Colonel Fox's house this and one more sufficed for the
+family-reflections. In the "square room," a modern long looking-glass,
+framed in mahogany, and surmounted by the American emblem of triumph,
+was the astonishment of the neighbors,--and in Walton those were many,
+though the population was small.
+
+Dorcas looked wistfully and wishingly at the oval pin; but with no
+more notion of what she was looking at than the child who gazes into
+the heavens on a winter night. When she looked into the oval mirror,
+no dream of the centuries through which it had received on its surface
+fair and suffering faces, grave, noble, self-sacrificing men, and
+scenes of trial deep and agonizing,--no dream of the past disturbed
+the serene unconsciousness of her gaze. She looked at the large
+pearls that formed the long oval pin, and at the exquisite allegorical
+painting, which, in the quaint fashion of the time of its execution,
+was colored with the "ground hair" of the beloved; so materializing
+sentiment, and, as it were, getting as near as possible to the very
+heart's blood. Yet the old gold, the elaborate execution of the quaint
+classical device, and the fanciful arrangement of the braided hair
+interwoven with twisted gold letters, all told no tales to the
+observer, whose unwakened nature, indeed, asked no questions.
+
+The little room, so small that in these days a College of Physicians
+would at once condemn it, as a cradle of disease and death, had
+nevertheless for twenty years been the nightly abode of as perfect a
+piece of health as the country produced. Whatever might be wanting
+in height and space was amply made up in inevitable and involuntary
+ventilation. Health walked in at the wide cracks around the little
+window-frame, peeped about in all directions with the snow-flakes in
+winter and the ready breezes in summer, and settled itself permanently
+on the fresh cheeks and lips of the light sleeper and early riser.
+
+Beside the white-covered cot there stood a straight-backed,
+list-seated oaken chair, a mahogany chest of drawers that reached from
+floor to ceiling, and a little three-legged light-stand. Everything
+was covered with white, and the room was fragrant with the lavender
+and dried rose-leaves with which every drawer was scrupulously
+perfumed. There was no toilet-table, for Dorcas had use neither for
+perfumes nor ointment. No Kalydors and no Glycerines came within the
+category of her healthful experience. Alert and graceful, she neither
+burnt her fingers nor cut her hands, and had need therefore of no
+soothing salves or sirups; and as she did not totter in scrimped shoes
+or tight laces, and so did not fall and break her bones, she had no
+need even of that modern necessity in all well-regulated families,
+"Prepared Glue." There was no medicine-chest in Colonel Fox's house.
+Healthy, occupied, active, and wise--but not too wise--was Dorcas Fox.
+
+It is no proof that Dorcas was a beauty, that she looked often in the
+little mirror. Ugliness is quite as anxious as beauty on that point,
+and is even oftener found gazing with sad solicitude at itself, if
+haply there may be found some mollifying or mitigating circumstance,
+either in outline or expression. But Dorcas's face pleased herself and
+everybody else.
+
+A certain freedom and ease, the result partly of a symmetrical form,
+and partly of conscious good-looks, gave the grace of movement to
+Dorcas which attracted all eyes. Almost every one has a sense of
+harmony, and old and young loved to watch the musical motion of Dorcas
+Fox, whatever she might be doing,--whether she queened it at the
+"Thanksgiving Ball," and from heel-and-toe, pigeon-wing, or mazy
+double-shuffle, evolved the finest and subtlest intricacies of muscle,
+or whether, on the Sabbath, walking behind her parents to meeting,
+she married the movement to the solemnity of the day, and, as it were,
+walked in long metre.
+
+She always was in Hallelujah metre to the Blacks, Whites, Grays,
+Greens, and Browns that color so largely every New-England community;
+and the youths who were wont to form the crowd that invariably settled
+at the corner of the meeting-house waited only till Dorcas Fox went up
+the "broad-oil" to express open-mouthed admiration. After her fashion,
+she was as much wondered at as the Duchess of Hamilton in her time,
+and with much more reason, since Dorcas was composed of real roses and
+lilies.
+
+On Sunday, though the Puritanic doctrine prevailed, as far as doctrine
+can, of not speaking week-day thoughts, or having them, if they would
+keep away, yet inevitably, among the younger portion of the flock, the
+day of "meeting" was one of more than religious importance; and many
+lads and lasses who were never attracted by Father Boardman's eloquent
+sedatives still made it a point to be regular in their attendance at
+meeting twice on every Sunday. From far and near came open one-horse
+wagons, piled high with weekly shaven and dressed humanity,--young
+and old with solemn and demure faces, with brown-ribboned queues, and
+garments of domestic making. Fresh, strong, tall girls of five feet
+ten, dressed in straw bonnets of their own handiwork, and sometimes
+with scarlet cardinals lightly flung over their shoulders, sprang over
+the wagon-thills to the ground. Now and then the more remote dwellers
+came on horseback, each Jack with his Gill on a pillion behind, and
+holding him with a proper and dignified embrace.
+
+Hard-handed youths, with bright, determined faces,--men nursed in
+blockhouses, born in forts,--men who had raised their corn when the
+loaded gun went every step with the hoe and the plough,--such men,
+of whom the Revolution had been made, who could say nothing, and do
+everything, stood in a crowd around the meeting-house door. There was
+some excitement in meeting each other, though there was very little,
+if anything, to say. There was time enough in those days. Progress
+wasn't in such a hurry as now. Inventions came calmly along, once in
+a man's life, and not, as now, each heel-trodden by that of his
+neighbor, tripping up and passing it, in the speed of the breathless
+race.
+
+The sun itself seemed to shine with a calmer and silenter radiance
+over the broad, leisurely land.
+
+Time enough, bless you! and the Sunday, any way, is _so_ long!
+
+This Sunday morning, at ten o'clock, Dorcas has already been up and
+dressed six hours. Everything having the remotest connection with
+domestic duties has been finished and laid aside long ago, and she has
+devoted the last two hours to solitary meditations, mostly of the kind
+already mentioned.
+
+In the great oven, since last night, has lain the Sunday supper of
+baked pork-and-beans, Indian-pudding, and brown bread, all the
+better the longer they bake, and all unfailing in their character
+of excellence. In the square room, in the green arm-chair, sits the
+Colonel, fast asleep.
+
+Four hours ago, he fumed and fretted about barn and cow-house,
+breakfasted, and had family-prayers. Since then, he has donned his
+Sabbath array, both mental and bodily. Mentally, having dismissed the
+cares of the week, he has strictly united himself with his body, and
+gone to sleep. Bodily, he appears in a suit of hemlock-dyed, with
+Matherman buttons, knee- and shoe-buckles of silver. His gray hair is
+neatly composed in a queue, his full cheeks rest on his portly chest,
+and the outward visibly harmonizes with the inward man. He
+sleeps soundly now, purposing faithfully to keep awake during the
+three-and-twenty heads of the minister's discourse. If he finds it
+too much for him, he means to stand, as he often does. Sometimes he
+partakes freely of the aromatic stimulants carried by his wife and
+daughter as bouquets. The southernwood wakes him, and the green seeds
+of the caraway get him well along through the sermon.
+
+Mrs. Fox steps softly in, rustling in the same black taffeta she
+always wears, and the same black silk bonnet,--worn just fifty-two
+days in a year, and carefully pinned and boxed away for all the other
+three hundred and thirteen.
+
+As fashions did not come to Walton oftener than once in ten years,
+it followed that apparel among the young people wore very much the
+expression of individual taste, while among the elders it was wont to
+assume the cast now irreverently designated by "fossil remains." And,
+really, it did not much matter. Whatever our country-grandmothers were
+admired and esteemed for, be sure it was not dress.
+
+As the clock pointed to half-past ten, the door opened quickly, and
+Dorcas stood on the threshold, like a summer breeze that has stopped
+one moment its fluttering, and hovers fresh, sweet, and sunny in
+the morning air. The breath of her presence, if indeed it were not
+association, roused old Colonel Fox from his sleep. He glanced at her,
+took the ready arm of his wife, looked again at the clock, and passed
+out over the flat door-stone with his cocked hat and cane, as became
+an invalid soldier and a gentleman. Behind them, hymn-book in hand
+and with downcast eyes, walked Dorcas. Not a word passed between the
+parents and their only daughter. On Sunday, people were not to think
+their own thoughts. And familiarity between parents and children,
+never allowed even on week-days, would have been unpardonable
+unfitness on the Sabbath.
+
+They reached the church-door just as the minister, with his white wig
+shedding powder on his venerable back, passed up the broad-aisle.
+A perfectly decorous throng of the loiterers followed, and the
+pews rapidly filled. The Colonel and his wife, being persons of
+consequence, took their way with suitable dignity and deliberation. In
+the three who turned, about half-way up the broad-aisle, into a square
+pew, a physiognomist would have seen at one glance the characteristic
+features of each mind. In the Colonel, choleric, fresh, and
+warm-hearted, a good lover, and not very good hater. In his wife, "a
+chronicler of small-beer," with a perfectly negative expression. One
+might guess she did no harm, and fear she did no good,--that she saved
+the hire of an upper servant,--that she was an inveterate sewer and
+cleaner, and would leave the world in time with an epitaph.
+
+On the third figure and face the physiognomist might dwell
+longer,--but that rather because youth, hope, and inexperience had
+refused to make any of the life-marks that tell stories in faces.
+There was abundant room for imagination and prophecy.
+
+A figure not too tall, but full of wavy lines,--two dark-blue eyes,
+whose full under-lids gave an expression of arch sweetness to the
+glance,--a delicate complexion of roses and lilies, as suggestive of
+fading as of blossoming,--features small, and not at all of the Greek
+pattern,--and the rather large head and slightly developed bust,
+typical of American rural beauty.
+
+To this summary of youthful charms would be at once added the grace of
+motion before spoken of, which made Dorcas Fox a favorite with all the
+young men in Walton, and which gave her a reputation of beauty which
+in strictness she did not deserve. A little habitual ill-health,
+and the glamour is gone, with the roses and lilies and the music
+of motion. In our climate of fierce extremes, both field- and
+garden-flowers speedily wilt and chill. Dorcas herself had been a
+thousand times told she was the very picture of her mother at her age.
+And just to look now at Mrs. Colonel Fox!
+
+A tall young man stood on the doorsteps of the meeting-house, as
+Dorcas went demurely behind her parents in at the open door. He looked
+at her with a quick, inquiring glance from his keen Yankee eyes, which
+she answered with an almost imperceptible nod of her graceful head.
+She dropped her eyes, and passed on. This young man was Henry Mowers,
+and he owned the Mowers farm. He was a very good, sensible fellow, and
+had "kept company," as the country-phrase is, with Dorcas Fox for
+the last few weeks, having, indeed, had his eye on her ever since the
+New-Year's sleigh-ride and ball.
+
+After Dorcas had reached her seat in the pew, and adjusted her
+spotless Sunday chintz and the ribbon that confined her jaunty
+gypsy-hat over her sunny hair, she raised her eyes carelessly to a pew
+in a side-aisle. The Dorrs generally occupied it alone; but sometimes
+Swan Day, when he wasn't in the choir, sat there too.
+
+Swan Day, or, as he might better have been called, Night Raven, kept
+the country-store in Walton. One naturally thought of afternoon
+rather than morning at seeing his olive complexion, dark eyes, and
+thick-clustering black curls. Such romance as was to be had in Walton,
+without the aid of a circulating library, certainly gathered about
+Swan Day. An orphan, born of a Creole mother and a British sergeant,
+he had been left early to his own resources. He had found them
+sufficient thus far, in a cordial neighborhood like Walton, when
+industry and temperance were cardinal virtues not carried to excess;
+and he was rather a favorite among the young women.
+
+The peculiar languor and richness of his complexion,--the dark eyes,
+soft as an Indian girl's,--the mouth, melting and red as the grapes
+where under a tropical sun his foreign mother had lain, and, gathering
+them ripe, had dropped them lazily into his baby mouth: these were new
+and strange features in the Saxon community where he had accidentally
+been left on the death of his father, who was shot at Saratoga. The
+mother lingered awhile, and then dropped away, leaving Swan to thrive
+in the bracing air in which she had shivered to death.
+
+Many Sundays before this, Swan had looked at Colonel Fox's pew, and,
+looking, loved.
+
+Dorcas looked occasionally.
+
+All the time, while the minister preached, she twiddled her
+caraway-stems, sometimes biting a seed in two very softly between her
+little teeth, and keeping, on the whole, an appearance of exemplary
+devoutness. When Father Boardman reached "sixthly," she raised her
+eyes, and saw Henry Mowers looking straight at her. Then she
+dropped her eyelids at once, sniffed delicately at her bouquet of
+southernwood, and, gaining strength from its pungency, applied herself
+to staring once more at the great pine pulpit, where, like a very old
+sparrow on the house-top, Father Boardman denounced and anathematized
+at leisure all who did not think as he did. By degrees, all the eyes
+in Dorcas's neighborhood that had been any length of time in the world
+were dozing and closing with the full leave of the spirit. Finally,
+when Father Boardman entered on the "improvement," Dorcas, who had
+not heard a word, looked again in the direction of the Dorr pew. Henry
+Mowers had succumbed to Morpheus half an hour before. Still there
+flamed on the deep, bewitching eyes of Day; and as all the rest in her
+neighborhood had gone to sleep, and the young girl had really nothing
+specially to keep herself awake with, she looked up, too, and then
+down, and then rosily, and timidly, and consciously, and then at
+him once more. By that time she blushed again, and a smile was just
+beginning to wake from its sleep in the corner of her mouth, when
+a rush, a rising, and a general clatter and banging of pew-seats
+announced the blessed news of suspended instruction.
+
+In the fashion of sixty years ago, the congregation waited reverently,
+until the pastor walked down the broad-aisle and out at the door,
+before a soul stirred. Then the men followed, and last of all the
+women. In the crowd, there were frequent opportunities for whispered
+words, all the sweeter for the stealing; and in the crowd, after he
+had seen Henry Mowers jump into the wagon and drive off his three
+sisters half a mile to their home, and after seeing Jenny Post ride
+off on a pillion behind her old brother, as in the gone-by days when
+wide roads and wagons were not, Swan sauntered carelessly towards
+Dorcas, and said, in a tone too low for her parents to hear, but very
+distinctly,--
+
+"I must see you to-morrow night."
+
+"I can't," was the murmured reply.
+
+"For the last time, Dorcas! come down to the old pear-tree to-morrow,
+before sunset," he whispered, imploringly.
+
+He was wise to turn suddenly away before her parents could hear him,
+touching on secular subjects, and before she could herself get up any
+new objection. Her objections, truly, were very faint and few, and,
+being tossed about awhile, finally settled out of sight. Henry
+would, she knew, come to his weekly wooing as soon as the setting sun
+proclaimed the Sabbath-day over. After that time she was safe. She
+could slip down the orchard to the pear-tree, and hear what was the
+important word, and what Swan meant by "the last."
+
+Eight or ten persons, who lived at a distance from "meeting," were in
+the habit of partaking the hospitality of Colonel Fox, of a Sunday,
+as the hour's intermission gave them no opportunity to return to
+their distant homes. After the Puritan fashion, unlike enough to the
+present, families were restricted on Sunday to two meals, and those
+were provided with a Jewish regard to the fourth commandment. All
+labor was scrupulously anticipated or postponed, but such hospitality
+as consisted with the strict observance of the Sabbath was at the
+service of their friends.
+
+On coming in at the door of the square room, with its sanded floor,
+its old desk, its spare bed in the corner, and its cherry table with
+wavy outlines, which had belonged to Colonel Fox's mother, Dorcas
+found the cloth already laid, and the bonnets and cardinals of half a
+dozen old friends on the bed.
+
+In five minutes, early apples, old cider, and a plate of raised
+doughnuts, flanked by plates of mince- and apple-pie, rewarded the
+patience and piety of the company. Colonel Fox, solemnly, and as if
+he were quite accustomed to it, poured from a jug into large tumblers
+that held at least a pint, dropped three large lumps of loaf-sugar,
+filled the glass with water, grated some nutmeg on the top, and bade
+his guests refresh themselves with toddy, unless they preferred flip:
+if they did, they had only to say so: the poker was hot.
+
+They all ate and drank, and by that time the bell rang again; and then
+they all went again. And if they heard Father Boardman at all, it was
+with utterly composed minds, when he told them it was their duty to be
+contented, even should their condemnation be eternally decreed, since
+it must, of course, be for the good of the whole, and for the glory of
+God. Hopkinsianism was in fashion then, and the minds of men in many
+parts of the country had accepted the logic of its founder, negatived
+as it was, in its practical application, by the sweetness of his
+Christian benevolence and his large humanity. Then the toddy helped
+them to swallow many doctrines that in our cold-water days are sharply
+and defiantly contested. The head is much clearer; whether hearts are
+better is doubtful.
+
+After supper, and while yet the sun lingered smilingly over the
+Great Meadows and on the hills, behind which he sank, Dorcas, who had
+meanwhile adorned herself with Aunt Dorcas's bequest, broke the long
+silence, by whispering so low that her father's sleep should not be
+disturbed,--
+
+"Mother, do you set much by this pin?"
+
+"Of course I do, child! 'T was your Aunt Dorcas's," said Mrs. Fox,
+"your father's own sister."
+
+"Yes, I know it, mother; but how did she come by it?"
+
+All these years, and this was the first time Dorcas had asked the
+question! She colored a little, too, as if some secret thought or
+story were busy about her heart, as she looked at the ring.
+
+"Well,--it was a man she 'xpected to 'a' bed. They was to 'a' ben
+merried, an' he was to 'a' gi'n up v'yagin'. But he was cast away, an'
+she never heerd nothin' about neither him nor the ship. He was waitin'
+to git means, an' he did, privateerin' an' so; but I 'xpect he was
+drownded," concluded Mrs. Fox, in a suitably plaintive tone.
+
+And that was Aunt Dorcas's story.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+If anybody is curious to know why there should be mystery or secrecy
+connected with Swan Day's meeting with Dorcas, or why they should meet
+under a pear-tree, instead of her father's roof-tree, in a rational
+way, it might be a sufficient answer, that there never was and never
+will be anything direct and straightforward about Cupid or his doings.
+But the real and more important reason was, that Colonel Fox did not
+like Swan, and had said, in so many words, that "he wouldn't have
+Swan Day a-hangin' round, no _how_!--that he was a poor kind of a
+shote,--that he wished both him and his clutter well out o' town,--and
+that he needn't think to make swans out of his geese, no _time_!"
+
+In the first and last sentence, Colonel Fox indicated the ground of
+his dislike to the handsome young store-keeper, and his dread that
+Swan's eyes would somehow interfere with his own cherished plans of a
+union between the Fox and Mower farms. Whatever Colonel Fox determined
+on was done or to be done. He had anticipated the French proverb;
+and the "impossibility" made not the slightest difference. Therefore
+Dorcas had no notion of disobedience in her head, permanently. She
+solaced herself by the occasional luxury of departure from set rules,
+and she intended to depart in that way to-morrow,--for just five
+minutes,--just to hear what that foolish fellow wanted of her; and
+what could it be? and why was it the last time?--would he give her up?
+
+Dorcas pondered the matter while the sun still crowned the heights,
+and glanced at her sleeping father in silence. Why should Colonel Fox
+dislike Swan so very much because he was a Britisher? All that was
+done with, long ago, and why not be peaceable? Just then her father
+drew the breath sharply between his teeth, as if in pain. It was the
+old wound, that had never been healed since the Battle of Bennington.
+He had lain on the ground,--Dorcas had often heard him tell the
+tale,--and had striven to slake his deathly thirst with the blood that
+he scooped up in the hollow of his hand from the ground about him. So
+terrible was the carnage where he lay. "A d----d Britisher had shot
+him,--another had driven his horse over him, and afterwards, while
+he lay half-dead, had tried to rob him!" Would he ever forget it?
+He would have continued, on the contrary, to fire and hack till the
+present day, but for the wound in his knee, which had disabled him for
+life, long before a peace was patched up with the mother-country. So
+he had retired to Walton, and before Continental money had depreciated
+more than half had bought acres by the thousand, and become
+generalissimo of flocks and herds. Through the admiration of his
+townsmen for his wounds, he rapidly and easily attained the rank
+of Colonel, without the discomfort of fighting for it; and from his
+excellent sense and the executive ability induced by military
+habits, became, in turn, justice of the peace, deacon of the church,
+town-clerk, and manager-general of Walton.
+
+Nobody--that is to say, nobody in the family--spoke, when Colonel Fox
+was in the house, unless first spoken to,--not even Dorcas. Such were
+the domestic tactics of the last century, and Colonel Fox held fast to
+old notions.
+
+The social ones were far more liberal,--so very liberal, indeed, so
+very free and easy, in the rural districts especially, that only a
+knowledge of the primitive conditions under which such manners grew
+up could possibly reconcile with them any impressions of purity and
+discretion. In hearing of manners, therefore, it is always necessary
+to remember that the children of country Puritans are and were wholly
+different _in the grain_ from Paris or London society of the same
+period,--as different, for example, as the Goddess of Reason from
+our first mother, though at first glance one might think those two
+similar. New-England parents had the utmost confidence in their
+daughters, and almost no restraint was laid on social intercourse.
+Their personal dignity and propriety wore presupposed, as matters of
+course. Religion and virtue needed only to point, not to restrain.
+
+The Colonel, on his part, took little heed of Dorcas's movements in
+the way of balls and sleigh-rides. Content that her face showed health
+and enjoyment, he never thought or cared what passed in her mind. If
+only the hay-crop proved abundant, and the Davis lot yielded well,--if
+neither wheat got the blight, nor sheep the rot,--if it were better to
+buy Buckhorn for milk, or sell the Calico-Trotter,--these thoughts so
+filled his soul that there was very little room to let in any nonsense
+about Dorcas, only "to have Swan Day shet up before he begins," for,
+as he often said, "he wouldn't give the snap of his thumb for as many
+Swan Days as could stand between this and Jerusalem!"
+
+She had met him twice before, and both times rather accidentally, as
+she supposed, under the pear-tree,--both times, when she went to the
+well for water. He had drawn the water, and had talked some with
+his tongue, but more, far more, with his eyes of Oriental depth and
+fascination. Dorcas thought and meant no harm in meeting Swan. Even if
+her nature had been more wakened and conscious,--even if she had had
+either the habit or the power of analyzing her own sensations,--even
+if she had seen her soul from without, as she certainly did not
+within,--she would have recoiled from the thought of deliberate
+coquetry.
+
+In the nature even of a coquette there is not necessarily either
+cruelty or hardness. It cannot be a fine nature, and must be deficient
+in the tact which appreciates the feelings of another, and
+the sympathy that shrinks from injuring them. It may be called
+selfishness, which is another term for thoughtlessness or want of
+consideration or perception, but it is not deliberate selfishness.
+This last is often found with fine perceptions and intuitive tact. It
+is rather a natural obtuseness, a want of thought on the subject. Such
+persons remember and connect their own sensations with the object,
+thinking little or nothing of the feelings they may themselves excite
+by the heedlessness of their manner.
+
+If Dorcas had once thought of the value of the hearts she played with,
+and as it were tossed from hand to hand,--if she had even weighed one
+against another, she might have had some sorrow in grieving either.
+But having no standard of delicacy and tenderness in her own nature
+by which to judge theirs, Dorcas cannot be accused of intentional
+injustice, which is generally understood by coquetry. On the contrary,
+if she had been able to express her emotions,--
+
+ "How happy could I be with either!"
+
+would have done so. Dorcas was very young in experience.
+
+In those days of freedom there was no such word as "engaged"; least
+of all, did the parties concerned violate all their own notions of
+decorum by "announcing an engagement." The lists were free to all
+to enter, and the bravest won the day. After weeks and months of
+shy "company-keeping," it was "expected it would be a match" by the
+keen-sighted or deeply interested. Sometimes the dissolution of an
+engagement was mentioned as "a shame! after keeping company so many
+years, and she had got all her quilts made and everything!" But best
+of all was for the parties to be married outright, by a justice of
+the peace, without a word of public warning, and then to enjoy
+the pleasure of outwitting the neighbors, and coming down like a
+thunderclap on a social sunshine unsuspicious of banns, which had been
+published on some three literally public days, but when nobody
+was hearing. That was something worth doing, and very much worth
+remembering!
+
+The sun set. The Sabbath was done. The Colonel heaved a sigh of
+relief. The Colonel's wife took her knitting-work; and the Colonel's
+daughter looked up with a shy smile at Henry Mowers fastening his
+horse by the corn-barn. It was time Sunday was over, indeed! Such a
+long supper! but it must end sometime!--and then prayers, and then
+Dorcas had amused herself with Bel and the Dragon and Tobit awhile.
+All would not do, and the family had been obliged to resort to the
+sweet restorer for the last ten minutes. Now they could think their
+own thoughts in peace, and talk of what interested them,--cattle,
+people, and the like. Poor Dorcas! what with Father Boardman's
+preaching, and the Westminster Catechism, she associated religion with
+all that was dull and inexplicable, though she did not doubt it was
+good in case of dying. In the Nature and life that surrounded her
+she had not seen God, but a refuge from Him. In the crimson floods
+of sunshine, in the brilliant moonrise, or the pulsating stars of a
+winter night, she found a sort of guilty relief from the dulness of
+what she supposed was Revelation. But she never thought of questioning
+or doubting any teachings, in the pulpit or out. A woman cannot, like
+a man, fight a subject down. Her intellect shrinks from being tossed
+and pierced on the pricks of doctrine. She is gentle and cowardly. She
+sets the matter aside, and is contented to wait till she dies to
+find out. But the men in Walton were all theologians, and sharp at
+polemics. In the bar-room the spirit of liberty throve, which was
+crushed in the pulpit. In that small New-England town, where, like
+a great white sheep, Father Boardman now led his docile flock to the
+fold, whoever looked long enough would see many new folds and many new
+shepherds. Every shape of religious thinking will have its exponent,
+and the widest liberty be claimed and enjoyed. Though he slept through
+Father Boardman's sermons, it is doubtful if Henry Mowers did not in
+his dreams lay the corner-stone of the new meeting-house on the hill.
+
+Monday, and the hurly-burly of washing over. Dorcas had nearly
+finished her "stent" on the little wheel. As she sat by the open door,
+diligently trotting her foot, and softly pulling the last flax from
+her distaff, her glance went hastily and often towards the setting
+sun. She could see beyond the sloping orchard, no longer loaded
+with fruit, the Great Meadows, extending along the banks of the
+Connecticut. She could see on the eastern side great white mountains,
+that went modestly by the name of hills, and that came in after-years
+to draw pilgrims from the ends of the earth. They were white-capped
+and solemn-looking, and girdled by majestic forests; while the Green
+Mountains, that lay along the horizon, not so high as "the Hills,"
+were crowned with verdure to the very top, and flaming with autumn
+dyes. As far as the eye reached, beyond the immediate view rose an
+immense solitude of forest that had lasted through centuries.
+
+Dorcas's eyes rested and roamed alternately over these massive natural
+features. She felt dimly in her heart the effect of the solemn aspect
+of these great wastes,--these sublime possibilities, concealed and
+waiting for the energy of man to discover them. A melancholy, sweet
+and soft, composed partly of the effect of the view, and partly of the
+languor of the Indian-summer weather, diffused itself over her. She
+accused herself of various sins,--of levity, vanity, and not knowing
+her own mind. Soon, however, feeling her unskilfulness to steer, she
+abandoned the bark, and left it to drift. She must see Swan Day.
+
+"And as to Henry!"--here Dorcas set back the little wheel,--"and as
+to Henry!"--and here Dorcas threw her apron over her face,--"why, what
+harm is there? I'm only going to see what he wants."
+
+Under the apron rippled and rushed a thousand warm blushes, that
+contradicted every word Dorcas said to herself. They made her remember
+how, only the evening before, Henry had said words to her, which,
+although she pretended not to understand him, had made her heart beat
+proudly and tenderly; and how she had thought whoever was chosen to
+be Henry's wife would be a happy woman! How many times had he said, as
+they stood parting on the stoop, how sorry he was to go, and she,
+like Juliet, had whispered, 't was "not yet day"! Yes, of course
+Henry Mowers would be her husband, and she would tell Swan Day so,
+if--if----But then, perhaps, there was no such nonsense in Swan's
+head, after all.
+
+Why could not the gypsy be satisfied with her almost angelic
+happiness? But no. She shivered a little as the sun went down, and
+exchanged her working-dress of petticoat and short-gown for something
+warmer.
+
+Because Cely Temple was cutting apples and pumpkins, and stringing
+them across the kitchen and pantry to dry, and because black Dinah
+was making the "bean-porridge" for supper, it came to pass that the
+daughter of the house was called on to lay the table. Dorcas bit her
+lip, as she hastily did the duty, and postponed the pleasure.
+
+The laboring-season is nearly over, the eight hired men reduced to
+two, and the family-table is spread in the kitchen. How is the table
+spread for supper in the house of Colonel Fox, one of the richest
+farmers in Walton?
+
+This is the way.
+
+Dorcas brushes a scrap from the long table, scoured as white as snow,
+but puts no linen on it. On the buttery-shelves, a set of pewter
+rivals silver in brightness, but Dorcas does not touch them. She
+places a brown rye-and-Indian loaf, of the size of a half-peck, in the
+centre of the table,--a pan of milk, with the cream stirred in,--brown
+earthen bowls, with bright pewter spoons by the dozen,--a delicious
+cheese, whole, and the table is ready. When Dinah appears, with
+her bright Madras turban, and says she is ready to dish the
+"bean-porridge, nine days old," Dorcas tells her she is going
+down beyond the cider-mill, to bring up the yarn, and, throwing a
+handkerchief over her head, is out of sight before Dinah has finished
+blowing the tin horn that summons to supper.
+
+In five minutes, she was beyond the cider-mill, beyond the well, and
+standing under the old pear-tree. Behind her, hiding her from the
+house, is the corn-barn, stuffed and laden with the heavy harvest of
+maize and wheat, and the cider-mill, where twenty bushels of apples
+lie uncrushed on the ground, ready for the morrow's fate. A long row
+of barrels already filled from the foaming vat stand ready to be taken
+to the Colonel's own cellar, for the Colonel's own drinking, and as
+far as one can see in one direction is the Colonel's own land. The
+heiress of all would still be sought for herself.
+
+Dorcas stood in the departing light, and leaned against the pear-tree.
+Not yet come? A flush went up to her forehead, as, dropping her
+handkerchief, she raised her hand to her eyes and glanced hastily
+about her. Her chestnut curls were fastened with a blue ribbon on the
+side of her head, and the floating ends fell on her shoulder.
+
+This was the one departure from the severe simplicity of her dress,
+for neither bright-hued calicoes nor muslins found their way to
+Walton. Once in a long while, a print, at five times the present
+prices, was introduced into the social circles of Walton by an
+occasional peddler, or possibly by the adventurous spirit of Swan Day.
+But these were rare instances.
+
+Flannel of domestic manufacture, pressed till you could almost see
+your face in it, stood instead of the French woollen fabric of modern
+days. It left the jimp little waist as round and definite as the eye
+could ask, while the full flow of the skirt exposed the neat foot,
+deftly incased in stout Jefferson shoes. A plaited lawn, technically
+termed a "modesty-piece," was folded over the bosom, and concealed
+all but the upper part of the throat. Above that rose a face full of
+delicacy and healthy sweetness. Eyes full of sparkles, and dimples
+all about the cheeks, chin, and rather large mouth. Youth, and the
+radiance of a happy, unconscious nature, of the capabilities or
+possibilities of which she was as ignorant as the robin on the branch
+above her, whose evening song had just closed, and who has just shut
+his coquettish eyes.
+
+A minute more, and Swan sprang over the stone wall, and with three
+steps was standing by her. He stood still and looked at her, drawing
+deep breaths of haste and agitation.
+
+Dorcas spoke first.
+
+"You wanted to see me. What is the matter?"
+
+"Nothing,--but--you know I've got home."
+
+"Why, yes, that is clear," answered Dorcas, mischievously, and
+entirely easy herself, now that she saw Swan's cheeks aflame, and his
+voice choking so he could not speak.
+
+"We might as well go towards the house, if that is all," added she,
+gathering in her hand some skeins of yarn that had been spread out to
+whiten.
+
+Swan caught the yarn and threw it away with an impatient jerk. Then he
+took both of Dorcas's hands in his, holding them with a fierce grasp
+that made her almost scream.
+
+"You know I can't go near the house."
+
+"Yes, I know," said Dorcas, half frightened at his manner. "When did
+you get back from Boston?"
+
+"Saturday night. And I am going again to-morrow. And then--Dorcas--I
+shall stay."
+
+"Stay?"
+
+"Stay,--till you tell me to come back, maybe!"
+
+"Why, where are you going, Swan?"
+
+"To China, Dorcas."
+
+"I want to know!" exclaimed she.
+
+"Just it,--and no two ways about it. Sold out to Sawtell. Now you have
+it, Dorcas!"
+
+This curt and abrupt dialogue needed no more words. The rest was made
+out fully by the bright color on each face, the sparkling interest
+on the bent brow of Dorcas, and the deep, mellow voice, full of
+tenderness and hope, mixed with stern decision, on the part of Swan
+Day.
+
+No wonder Dorcas's eyes had a glamour over them as she listened and
+looked. What did she see? A slight, erect figure, with Napoleonic
+features, animated with admiration and sensibility; emotion glorifying
+the rich, deep eyes, and making them look in the twilight like stars;
+and over all, the indefinable ease that comes from knowledge of the
+world, however small that world may be.
+
+Swan had little gift of language. The foregoing short dialogue is a
+specimen of his ability in that way. But looks are a refinement on
+speech, and say what words never can say.
+
+"You see, Dorcas, I'm going out for the Perkinses with Orrin Tileston.
+We each put in five hundred, and have our share of the profits."
+
+"But to China! that's right under our feet! You'll never come back!"
+murmured the girl.
+
+"Do you ever want I should? Dorcas, if I come back rich, shall you be
+glad? It will be all for you,--dear!" the last word low and timidly.
+
+The mist went over her eyes again. A vision of Solomon in all his
+glory swept across her. Even to Walton had spread rumors of the
+immense fortunes acquired in the China and India trade, and the gold
+of Cathay seemed to shimmer over the form before her, so strong, so
+able to contend with, and compel, if need were, Fortune.
+
+As to Swan, he looked over the river of Time that separated him from
+love and happiness, and saw his idol and ideal standing on the
+farther bank, dressed in purple and fine linen, with jewels of his own
+adorning. Like Bunyan's "shining ones," she seemed to him far lifted
+out of the range of ordinary thought and expression, into the regions
+of inspired song. Now that he was really going to the East, the image
+of Dorcas in his heart took on itself, with a graceful readiness, the
+gold of Ophir, the pomps of Palmyra, and the shining glories of Zion.
+He longed to "crown her with rose-buds, to fill her with costly wine
+and ointments,"--to pour over her the measureless bounty of his love,
+from the cornucopia of Fortune.
+
+"Dorcas," said he,--and his words showed how inadequately thoughts can
+be represented,--"Dorcas, I know your father thinks nothing at all
+of me now; _but_, supposing I come back in two years, with--with--say
+five thousand dollars!--then, Dorcas!"
+
+The bright, soft eyes looked pleadingly at her.
+
+Truly, in those days of simplicity and scant earnings, five thousand
+dollars did seem likely to be an overwhelming temptation to the owner
+of the Fox farm.
+
+"But,--Swan!" said the blushing girl, releasing herself from his
+grasp, and stepping back.
+
+"Yes, Dorcas!--yes!--once!--only once!"
+
+He came between her and the image of Henry Mowers; he was going
+away; she might never see him again. A vague sentiment, composed of
+pleasure, pity, admiration, and ambition, but having the semblance
+only of timidity in her rosy face and downcast eyes, made her yield
+her shrinking form, for one moment, to his trembling and passionate
+caress, and the next, she ran as swiftly as a deer to the house.
+
+Swan's eyes followed her. With his feet, he dared not. His bounding
+heart half-choked him with pleasant pain. All be had not said,--all he
+had meant to say to Dorcas, of his well-laid plans, his good-luck,
+his hopes,--all he had meant to entreat of her constancy, for in the
+infrequent communications between the two countries there was no hope
+of a correspondence,--all he had meant to say to her of his fervent
+love, of his anguish at separation, of the joy of reunion, and that
+his love would leave him only with his life,--if he could only have
+told her! But then he never would or could have put it all into
+words, if Dorcas had stayed with him under the pear-tree till the next
+morning.
+
+He thought of the Colonel's pride, and how it would come down, at the
+sight of Swan Day returning to Walton with five thousand dollars in
+his coat-pocket, and mounted, perhaps, on an elephant! If he had held
+a foremost social position in Walton, even while selling tape and
+mop-sticks, molasses and rum, at the country-store, what might not be
+the impression on the public mind at seeing the glittering plumage of
+this "bird let loose from Eastern skies, when hastening fondly home"?
+There was much balm for wounded pride to be gathered in this Oriental
+project.
+
+Swan collected his energies and his clothes, finished his remaining
+last words and duties, and took his seat with the mail-carrier, who
+had the only public conveyance at that period from the town of Walton
+to the town of Boston. His parents were dead; his immediate relatives
+were scattered already in different States; and he left Walton with
+his heart full of one image, that of Dorcas Fox.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+"They du say Swan Day's gun off for good!" said Cely Temple, as she
+returned from the store, with a Dutch-oven in her hand, which she had
+purchased,--"an' to th' East Injees!"
+
+"I want to know!" rejoined Mrs. Fox.
+
+"I know some'll be sorry!" continued Cely, while Dorcas diligently
+stirred a five-pail kettle of apple-sauce, that hung stewing over the
+low fire.
+
+Mrs. Fox looked up quickly at her daughter, but Dorcas continued
+quietly stirring, and without turning round.
+
+"Mahala Dorr, I guess," said she.
+
+"Wall, M'hala'll be, an' so'll others," answered Cely, prudently.
+"But I expect likely Swan'll do well, ef he don't die. They say the
+atemuspere is pison there!--especially for dark-complected folks."
+
+To this hopeful remark Mrs. Fox rejoined, that "old Miss Day come
+herself from a warm country, and 't was likely her son would settle
+there for good, and enjoy his health there better than what he would
+here."
+
+"He'll look out well for Number One, anyhow!" said Cely, lifting the
+lid of the Dutch-oven from the fire.
+
+Dorcas shot an angry glance at the apple-sauce.
+
+Nothing further passed on the subject, and Dorcas somehow felt, as she
+stirred, as if Swan were already a long, long way off,--as if the ship
+had sailed, and would stay sailed, like an enchanted ship, hovering
+on the horizon, and never come near enough for the passengers to be
+distinguished,--or else, maybe, go up into the clouds, and rest there
+with all its masts and spars distinct against the rose-mist, as she
+had read of once in a book of travels,--or, perhaps, even be inverted,
+and stand there on its head, as it were, always: but everything must
+be upside down, of course, in China. Already the thought of Swan Day
+had mingled with the mists of the past. The outline became indefinite,
+and softened into a golden splendor, that belonged no more to her, but
+was essentially of another hemisphere. He had by this time cut loose
+from home and country. Whether a hundred, or a hundred thousand miles,
+it mattered not. Since she could not grasp the idea, the distance was
+as good as infinite to her.
+
+This, you see, is not exactly coquetry. But events drifted her.
+
+When supper was over, and Dinah had gone to sleep, and Cely to visit
+the neighbors, as usual, Dorcas shyly approached the subject which
+occupied her thoughts, by getting the little box of jewelry, and
+looking at it. Her mother called her from the kitchen, out of which
+the bed-room opened.
+
+"Does mother want me?" asked Dorcas, turning round, with the box in
+her hand.
+
+"No, no matter," answered the mother; and, possibly with an intuitive
+feeling of what was in her daughter's thought, she went into the
+bed-room, and looked with her at the pin and ring of Aunt Dorcas.
+
+"Was it--was it a long time, mother,--I mean, before he came back?"
+said Dorcas.
+
+"Who? Captain Waterhouse? Bless you! they was as good as merried for
+ten year, an' he was goin' all the time, an' then, jest at the last
+minute, to be 'racked! It's 'most always so, when people goes to sea,"
+added she, in a plaintive tone.
+
+Dorcas meditated; she looked wistfully at her mother.
+
+"It's a pretty pin,--dreadful pretty round the edge."
+
+"Yes, 't is! I expect likely them's di'mon's. 'T was made over in
+foreign parts. He was goin' to bring his picter, too, from there. But
+he's lost and gone! Your Aunt Dorcas never had no more suitors after
+that, and she kind o' gin in, and never had no sperits."
+
+Dorcas's eyes filled, and she closed the box.
+
+
+Henry Mowers would not come to the Fox farm till the next Sunday
+night. That was as much settled as the new moon. So Dorcas had the
+whole week to herself, to be thoroughly unhappy in,--all the more so,
+a thousand times more so, for being utterly incapable of saying or
+seeing why. An instinctive delicacy kept her from showing to any
+of the family that she was even depressed; and her voice was heard
+steadily warbling one of Wesley's hymns, or "Wolfe's Address to his
+Army," in clear, brilliant tones, that rang up-stairs and down. The
+general impression of distance and water associated her absent lover
+with all that was heroic and romantic in song; for of novels she knew
+nothing,--the Colonel's library being limited, in the imaginative
+line, to a torn copy of the "Iliad," which had been left at the house
+by a travelling cobbler.
+
+However, romance is before all rules, and shapes its own adventures.
+The beauty of Swan Day, which, dark and slight as it was, gleamed with
+a power for Dorcas's eye and heart before which Buonarotti's
+would have been only pale stone forever,--that beauty dwelt in her
+imagination and memory, as only first romantic impressions can.
+Distance canonized him, enthroned him, glorified him. And when she
+thought of his setting forth so boldly, so bravely, to tread the
+wide water, to tempt the hot sun, the foreign exposure, the perpetual
+dangers of heathen countries, for her unworthy sake, all that was
+tenderest, most grateful, in her now first wakened nature, rose up in
+distressful tumult, and agitated the depths that are in all women's
+souls.
+
+If there had been anybody to whom she could confide the sad wrenching
+of her spirit, any one who would have cleared her vision, and taught
+her to look on "this picture and on this," she might not have been so
+puzzled between her two Hyperions. But as it was, it was a sorrowful
+struggle. One had the advantage of distance and imagination,--one of
+presence, and of the magnetism of eye and lip.
+
+"I am a wicked, wicked girl!" said she, as she stood before the glass,
+and loosened the locks that fell like sunshine over her shoulders. But
+this confession, with true New-England reticence, was uttered only to
+one listener,--herself.
+
+Then, she recalled, for it was Monday night once more, the frank and
+noble nature of Henry: how he had not asked her to promise him, but
+seemed to take for granted her truth and faith; how he had looked so
+fondly, so clearly into her eyes, not for what he might find there,
+but to show the transparent goodness and sincerity of his own; and
+how he had told her of all his plans and hopes, of his wish and her
+father's intention that they should be married that very fall; how
+little he had said of his own overflowing affection, only that "he had
+never thought of anybody else." Dorcas only felt, without putting the
+sense into language, that in this life-boat there was safety. But
+then had she not sent her heart on a venture in the other,--that other
+which even now was tossing on the waves of a future, full-freighted
+with hope, and faith in her truth?
+
+She opened the little box again, and looked at the ring and painted
+pin. How sorrowfully she looked at them now, seen through tears of
+conscious experience! How mournful seemed the ground hair, and
+the tints woven of so many broken hopes, sad thoughts, and wrecked
+expectations! the hair, kissed so many times in the weary years of
+waiting, and then wept over in the drearier desolation, when the sight
+could only bring thoughts of the salt waves dashing amongst it in the
+deep sea! What a life that had been of poor Aunt Dorcas! Then came
+across her busy thought the words of her mother,--"It's 'most always
+so!"
+
+Swan sailed very far away, in these tearful reveries, and took hope
+and life with him.
+
+When the next Sunday evening came, and the next, and the next,--and
+when Dorcas had ceased to say, blushing and smiling,--"Don't, Henry!
+you know I should make such a poor kind of a wife for you! and your
+mother wouldn't think anything of me!"--and when, Henry had had an
+offer to go to Western New York, where there were nobody knew how many
+beautiful girls, all waiting to pounce on the tall, fine-looking
+young farmer,--when Colonel Fox forgot he was a deacon, and swore
+that Dorcas was undeserving of such a happy lot as was offered to
+her,--when the tears, and the reveries, and the pictures of far-away
+lands, and the hopes that might wither with long years of waiting,
+were all merged and effaced in the healthy happiness of the
+present,--Dorcas dried her tears, and applied herself diligently to
+building up her flaxen _trousseau_, and smothered in her heart the
+image of dark and brilliant beauty that had for a time occupied it.
+
+"She waited--a long time!--years--and years!" murmured Dorcas,
+sorrowfully, as she looked at the pin and ring, which in her mind were
+associated strongly with only one person,--and that one hereafter to
+be dead to her. As soon as events clearly defined her duties, Dorcas
+had no further questions with herself. If the box had been Pandora's,
+not the less resolutely would she have shut it forever, and so crushed
+the hope that it could never have leaped out.
+
+So, with choking tears, and throbbing pulses, she followed many
+brilliant fancies and hopes to their last resting-place. Henceforth
+her path was open and clear, her duties defined, and with daily
+occupation of hand and thought she strove to displace all that had
+ever made her other than the cheerful and busy Dorcas. For the last
+time, she closed and put away the box.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THRENODY.
+
+[Among the imprinted papers of the author of "Charles Auchester" and
+"Counterparts" was found this poem, addressed to a father on the death
+of a favorite son, whose noble disposition and intellectual gifts were
+all enlisted on the side of suffering humanity.]
+
+ O mourner by the ever-mourning deep,
+ Full as the sea of tears! imperial heart,
+ King in thy sorrow over all who weep!
+ O wrestler with the darkness set apart
+
+ In clouds of woe whose lightnings are the throb
+ Of thy fast-flashing pulses! pause to hear
+ The lullabies of many an alien sob,
+ A storm of alien sighs,--so far! so near!
+
+ Oh that our vigils with thy gentle dead
+ Could charm thee from thy night-long agonies,
+ Could steep thy brain in slumber mild, and shed
+ Elysian dreams upon thy closing eyes!
+
+ In vain! all vain!--'tis yet the feast of tears;
+ Sorrow for sorrow is the only spell;
+ Nor wanders yet to melt in unspent years
+ The wringing murmur of our fresh farewell!
+
+ Thousands bereft strew wide the ashes dim;
+ Rich hearts, poor hands, the lovely, the unlearned,
+ Bemoan the angel of the age in him,
+ A star unto its starlight strength returned,
+
+ The City of Delights hath lost its gem,
+ The Sea the changeful glance so like its own,
+ Genius the darling of her diadem,
+ Whose smile made moonlight round her awful throne.
+
+ Those elfin steps their music moves no more
+ Beneath light domes to tune the festal train,
+ Nor at the moony eves along the shore
+ To brim with fairy forms that wizard brain.
+
+ Cold rocks, wild winds, and ever-changing waves,
+ Sad rains that fret the sea and drown the day,
+ We hail,--well pleased that stricken Autumn raves,
+ Though not with Winter shall our griefs decay.
+
+ On lurid mornings, when the lustrous sea
+ Is violet-shadowed from the warm blue air,
+ When the dark grasses brighten over thee,
+ And the winged sunbeams flutter golden there,--
+
+ Then to the wild green slope, thy chosen rest,
+ The blossoms of our spirits we will bring,
+ (Again a babe upon thy mother's breast,
+ An infant seed of the eternal Spring,)--
+
+ Thoughts bright and dark as violets in their dew,
+ Unfading memories of a smile more sweet
+ Than perfume of pale roses, hopes that strew
+ Ethereal lilies on those silent feet
+
+ The ghost of Pain haunts not that garden-land
+ Where Passion's phantom is so softly laid;
+ But Charity beside that earth doth stand,
+ Most lovely left of all, thy sister-shade.
+
+ Her baby-loves like trembling snowdrops lean
+ Above thy calm hands and thy quiet head,
+ When morn is fair, or noonday's glory keen
+ Or the white star-fire glistens on thy bed.
+
+ Her eyes of heaven upon thy slumbers brood,
+ Her watch is o'er thy pillow, and her breath
+ Tells every breeze that stirs thy solitude
+ How thou didst earn that rest on earth called Death,--
+
+ Earned in such quickening youth and brilliant years!
+ For us too early, not too soon for thee!--
+ So may we rest, when Death shall dry our tears,
+ Till everlasting Morning makes us free!
+
+
+
+
+THE UTILITY AND THE FUTILITY OF APHORISMS.
+
+
+The best aphorisms are pointed expressions of the results of
+observation, experience, and reflection. They are portable wisdom,
+the quintessential extracts of thought and feeling. They furnish the
+largest amount of intellectual stimulus and nutriment in the smallest
+compass. About every weak point in human nature, or vicious spot
+in human life, there is deposited a crystallization of warning and
+protective proverbs. For instance, with what relishing force such
+sayings as the following touch the evil resident in indolence and
+delay!--"An unemployed mind is the Devil's workshop"; "The industrious
+tortoise wins the race from the lagging eagle"; "When God says,
+To-day, the Devil says, To-morrow." In like manner, another cluster
+of adages depict the certainty of the detection and punishment of
+crime:--"Murder will out"; "Justice has feet of wool, but hands of
+iron"; "God's mills grind slow, but they grind sure." So in relation
+to every marked exposure of our life, there will be found in the
+records of the common thought of mankind a set of deprecating
+aphorisms.
+
+The laconic compactness of these utterances, their constant
+applicability, the pungent patness with which they hit some fact of
+experience, principle of human nature, or phenomenon of life, the ease
+with which their racy sense may be apprehended and remembered, give
+them a powerful charm for the popular fancy. Accordingly, a multitude
+of proverbs are afloat in the writings and in the mouths of every
+civilized people. Groups of national proverbs exist in most of the
+languages of the world, each family of apothegms revealing the
+chief traits of the people who gave them birth. In these collective
+expressions of national mind, we can recognize--if so incomplete a
+characterization may be ventured--the indrawn meditativeness of the
+Hindu, the fiery imagination of the Arab, the devout and prudential
+understanding of the Hebrew, the æsthetic subtilty of the Greek,
+the legal breadth and sensual recklessness of the Roman, the martial
+frenzy of the Goth, the chivalric and dark pride of the Spaniard,
+the treacherous blood of the Italian, the mercurial vanity of the
+Frenchman, the blunt realism of the Englishman.
+
+It is obvious enough that the masses of moral statements or standing
+exhortations composing the aphorisms of a language cannot mix in the
+daily minds of men without deep cause and effect. It will be worth our
+while to inquire into the bearings of this matter; for, though many a
+gatherer has carried his basket through these diamond districts of the
+mind, we do not remember that any one has sharply examined the value
+of the treasures so often displayed, set forth the methods of their
+influence and its qualifications, and determined the respective limits
+of their use and their worthlessness. Undertaking this task, we must,
+in the outset, divide aphorisms into the two classes of proverbs
+and maxims, plebeian perceptions and aristocratic conclusions, moral
+axioms and philosophic rules. This distinction may easily be made
+clear, and will prove useful.
+
+Popular proverbs are national, or cosmopolitan, and they are
+anonymous,--rising from among the multitude, and floating on their
+breath. They are generalizations of the average observation of a
+people. Undoubtedly, as a general thing, each one was first struck
+out by some superior mind. But usually this happened so early that
+the name of the author is lost. Proverbs--as the etymology hints--are
+words held before the common mind, words in front of the public. Wise
+maxims, on the contrary, are individual, may more commonly be traced
+to their origin in the writings of some renowned author, and are
+more limited in their audience. They are the results of comprehensive
+insight, the ripened products of searching meditation, the weighty
+utterances of weighty minds. The proverb, "A burnt child dreads the
+fire," flies over all climes and alights on every tongue. The maxim,
+"All true life begins with renunciation," appeals to comparatively
+few, and tarries only in prepared and thoughtful minds. Proverbs
+are often mere statements of facts, barren truisms, too obvious to
+instruct our thought, affect our feeling, or in any way change our
+conduct, though the accuracy with which the arrow is shot fixes our
+attention. Notice a few examples of this sort:--"A friend in need is
+a friend indeed"; "Many a little makes a mickle"; "Anger is a brief
+madness"; "It is an ill wind that blows nobody any good." Such
+affirmations are too general and obvious to be provocative awakeners
+of original reflection, sentiment, or will. Maxims, on the other hand,
+instead of being general descriptions or condensed common-places, are
+usually definite directions, discriminative exhortations. Notice such
+specimens as these:--"Take care of the pence, and the pounds will take
+care of themselves"; "When angry, count ten before you speak"; "Do the
+duty nearest your hand, and the next will already have grown clearer";
+"Remember that a thing begun is half done." Proverbs, then, are
+results of observation, often affirmations of quite evident facts,
+as, "Necessity is the mother of invention," or, "Who follows the
+river will arrive at the sea." Maxims, in distinction, are results
+of reflection. They are experience generalized into rules for the
+guidance of action, as, "Think twice before you speak once," or,
+"Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will
+not depart from it." Proverbs are statical; maxims are dynamic. Those
+are wisdom embalmed; these wisdom vitalized. The former are literary
+fodder; the latter are literary pemmican.
+
+The commonest application of proverbs is as mental economics,
+_substitutes for thought_. They are constantly employed by the
+ordinary sort of persons as provisions to avoid spiritual exertion,
+artifices to dispose of a matter with the smallest amount of
+intellectual trouble, as when one ends a controversy with the adage,
+"Least said, soonest mended." The majority of people desire to get
+along with the least possible expenditure of thinking. To many a
+hard-headed laborer, five minutes of girded and continuous thinking
+are more exhaustive than a whole day of muscular toil. No fact is more
+familiar than that illiterate minds are furnished with an abundance of
+trite sayings which they readily cite on all occasions. They thus
+hit, or at least fancy they hit, the principle which applies to the
+exigency, without the trouble of extemporaneously thinking it out
+for themselves on the spot. Such saws as, "The pot must not call the
+kettle black," "One swallow does not make a Spring," "Nought is never
+in danger," "Out of sight, out of mind," often give employment to an
+otherwise freightless tongue, and serve as excusing makeshifts for a
+mind incompetent, from ignorance, indolence, or fatigue, to discharge
+the duty of furnishing its own thought and expression for the
+occasion.
+
+Proverbs are more frequently used as _explanations_ than as _guides_
+of conduct, as the reason why we _have_ acted in a certain manner than
+as a reason why we _should_ act so. "Look before you leap," is usually
+said _after_ we have leaped. When a miserly man refuses to give
+anything in behalf of some distant object, his refusal is not prompted
+by the remembrance of the proverb, "Charity begins at home"; but the
+stingy propensity first stirs in the man and actuates him, and then he
+expresses his motive, or evades the true issue, by quoting the selfish
+old saw ever ready at his hand. In such cases the axiom is not the
+forerunning cause of the action, but its justifying explanation.
+Sometimes, undeniably, an applicable proverb coming to mind does
+influence a man and decide his conduct. Coming at the right moment, in
+the wavering of his will, it suggests the principle which determines
+him, lends the needful balance of impulse for which he waited. An old
+proverb, indorsed by the usage of generations, strikes on the ear like
+a voice falling from the heights of antiquity; it is clothed with
+a kind of authority. Doubtless many a poor boy has received a sound
+flogging which he would have escaped, had not his father happened
+to recall the somewhat cruel and questionable aphorism of Solomon,
+currently abbreviated into "Spare the rod and spoil the child."
+When Charles IX. was hesitating as to the enactment of the Saint
+Bartholomew Massacre, his bigoted mother, infuriated with sectarian
+hate, whispered in his ear, "Clemency is sometimes cruelty, and
+cruelty clemency,"--and the fatal decree was sealed. But such
+instances are exceptional, and partly deceptive, too. Man is usually
+governed by his own passions, his own circumstances, or his own
+reason, not by any verbal propositions. And when an apt and timely
+adage seems to determine him, it is, for the most part, because
+it acts upon responsive feelings preëxistent in him and already
+struggling to express themselves. And thus, upon the whole, it is
+to be concluded that proverbs are the children of Epimetheus, or
+afterthought, rather than of Prometheus, or forethought. They are
+rather products than producers,--intellectual forms rather than
+intellectual forces. The prevalent notion of their influence is a
+huge and singular error. One of our wisest authors, himself a great
+aphorist, says,--"Proverbs are the sanctuaries of the intuitions." But
+the intuitions, for the very reason that they are intuitive, need no
+advisory guidance, and admit of no verbal help.
+
+But when we turn from the aphoristic proverbs of the people to
+the aphoristic maxims of the wise, a deep distinction and contrast
+confront us. These, so far from being evasions of effort or
+substitutes for thought, are direct stimulants to thought, provocative
+summonses to more earnest mental application. Seneca says, "Wouldst
+thou subject all things to thyself? Subject thyself to reason." A
+modern writer says, "They are not kings who have thrones, but they who
+know how to govern." Now any one meeting these maxims, if they have
+any effect on him, will be set a-thinking to discover the principle
+contained in them. He will feel that there is a profound significance
+in them; and his curiosity will be awakened, his intellect fired, to
+find out the grounds and bearings of the law they denote. In this way
+the words of the wise are goads to prick and urge the faculties of
+inferior minds. Pointed expressions of the experience of the sovereign
+masters of life and the world impel feebler and less agile natures to
+follow the tracks of light and emulate the choice examples set before
+them, with swifter movements and with richer results than they could
+ever have attained, if not thus encouraged. Proverbial axioms flourish
+copiously in the idiomatic ground and vernacular climate of unlearned,
+undisciplined, unreflective minds, as thistles on the highway where
+every ass may gather them. But precious maxims, those "short sentences
+drawn from a long experience," as Cervantes calls them, are found
+mostly in the writings of the greatest geniuses, Solomon, Aristotle,
+Shakspeare, Bacon, Goethe, Richter, Emerson: and they appeal
+comparatively but to a select class of minds, kindred in some degree
+to those that originated them.
+
+To appreciate and use correctly a valuable maxim requires a genius,
+a vital appropriating exercise of mind, closely allied to that which
+first created it. In order to secure genuine profit here, the disciple
+must for himself repeat the processes of the teacher, reach the same
+conclusion, see the same truth. Wisdom cannot be mechanically taken,
+but must be spiritually assimilated,--cannot be put on as a coat or
+hat, used as a hammer or a sling, but must be intelligently grasped,
+digested, and organized into the mental structure and habits. The
+truth of this is at once so palpable and so important that it has
+found embodiment in numerous proverbs known to almost every one: "An
+ounce of mother-wit is worth a pound of school-wit"; "A pennyweight of
+your own wit is worth a ton of other people's"; "Who cannot work out
+his salvation by heart will never do it by book."
+
+For the reason just indicated, we think the common estimate of
+the actual influence of even the costliest preceptive sayings is
+monstrously exaggerated. That an aphorism should really be of use, it
+must virtually be reproduced by the faculties of your own soul. But
+the mental energy and acquirement which thus recreate it in a great
+degree supersede the necessity of it, render it an expression not of
+a guidance you need from without, but of an insight and force already
+working within. Your character determines what maxims you will select
+or create far more than the maxims you choose or make determine what
+your character will be. Herbart says, "Characters with ruling plans
+are energetic; characters with ruling maxims are virtuous." This is
+true, since a continuous plan subsidizes the forces that would without
+it run to waste, and a deliberately chosen authority girds and guides
+the soul from perilous dallying and dissipation. Nevertheless, it is
+not so much that characters are energetic or virtuous because they
+have ruling plans or maxims as it is that they have ruling plans or
+maxims because they are energetic or virtuous. Say to a penurious,
+hard, grumpy man, "It is more blessed to give than to receive." Will
+you thus make him liberal, sympathetic, affable? No, his character
+will neutralize your precept, as vinegar receiving the sunshine into
+its bosom becomes more sour. Some persons seem to imagine that a wise
+maxim is a sort of fairy's wand, one touch of which will transform the
+loaded panniers of a donkey into the fiery wings of a Pegasus. Surely,
+it is a great error. Trench says, with an amusing _naïveté_, "There is
+scarcely a mistake which in the course of our lives we have committed,
+but some proverb, _had we known and attended to its lesson_, might
+have saved us from it." The two comprehensive conditions, "had we
+known and attended to its lesson," are discharging conductors, that
+empty the sentence of all proper meaning, and leave only a rank of
+hollow words behind. He might as well say, "Had we never been tempted,
+we had never fallen,--had we possessed all wisdom, we had never
+committed an error," The best maxim that ever was made cannot directly
+impart or create knowledge or virtue or spiritual force. It can only
+give a voice to those qualities where they already exist, and so set
+in motion a strengthening interchange of action and reaction. Though a
+fool's mouth be stuffed with proverbs, he still remains as much a fool
+as before. He is past preaching to who does not care to mend. As the
+brave Schiller affirms, "Heaven and earth fight in vain against a
+dunce." Eternal contact with nutritious wisdom can teach no lesson,
+nor profit at all one who has not a coöperative and assimilative
+mind. The anchor is always in the sea, but it never learns to swim.
+Philosophic precepts address the reason; but the springs of motive and
+regeneration are in the sentiments. To attempt the reformation of
+a bad man by means of fine aphorisms is as hopeless as to bombard
+a fortress with diamonds, or to strive to exhilarate the brain by
+pelting the forehead with grapes.
+
+And yet, notwithstanding these large limitations and abatements, it
+is not to be denied that both proverbs and maxims, when habitually
+recalled, generally have some effect, often are strongly influential,
+and may, by a faithful observance of the conditions, be made extremely
+efficacious. What, then, are the conditions of deriving profit from
+the contemplation of aphorisms? How can we make their futility end,
+their utility begin? The first, ever indispensable condition is fresh
+discrimination. There are false, cynical, mean, devilish aphorisms, as
+well as sound and worthy ones. Each style of character, kind and grade
+of experience breathes itself out in corresponding expressions. "Self
+is the man"; "Look out for Number One"; "Devil take the hindmost";
+"One for me is as good as two for you"; "Every man has his price";
+"Draw the snake from its hole by another man's hand"; "Vengeance is
+a feast fit for the gods." The fact that such infernal sentiments are
+proverbs must be no excuse for not trampling them out of sight with
+disgust and scorn. Discrimination is needed not only to reject bad
+sayings, but also to correct incomplete or extravagant ones. The
+maxim, "Never judge by appearances," must be modified, because in
+reality appearances are all that we have to judge from. Its true
+rendering is, "Judge cautiously, for appearances are often deceptive."
+A proverb is almost always partial, presenting one aspect of the
+matter,--or excessive, making no allowance for exceptions. Here
+independent insight is requisite, that we may not err. As a general
+thing, aphorisms are particular truths put into forms of universality,
+and they must be severely scrutinized, lest a mere characteristic
+of the individual be mistaken for a normal faculty of the race. For
+instance, it is said, "A reconciled friend is an enemy in disguise."
+Not always, by any means; it depends greatly on the character of
+the man, "Forewarned is forearmed." Generally this is true, but not
+invariably; as sometimes a man, by being forewarned of danger, is
+unnerved with terror, and undone. So the two maxims, "Never abandon
+a certainty for an uncertainty," "Nothing venture, nothing have,"
+destroy each other. Whether you shall give up the one bird in the hand
+and try for the two in the bush depends on the relative worth of the
+one and the two, and the probabilities of success in the trial.
+No abstract maxim can help solve that problem: it requires living
+intelligence. To follow a foreign rule empirically will often be to
+fare as the monkey fared, who, undertaking to shave, as he had seen
+his master do, gashed his face and paws. Fearful incisions of the soul
+will he get who accepts unqualifyingly the class of impulsive proverbs
+with their enormously overdrawn inferences: such as that of David,
+when he said in his haste, "All men are liars"; or that of Moore,
+when he said in his song, "The world is all a fleeting show, for man's
+illusion given"; or that maxim of Schopenhauer, so full of deadly
+misanthropy and melancholy that one would gladly turn his back on a
+world in which he believed such a rule necessary, "Love no one, hate
+no one, is the first half of all worldly wisdom; say nothing, believe
+nothing, is the other half."
+
+The first condition of a profitable use of maxims being a thorough
+mastery of the rule proposed, with its limits, the next condition
+is an accurate self-knowledge. Know yourself, your weaknesses, your
+aptitudes, your exposures, your gifts and strength, in order that you
+may know what to seek or avoid, what to cherish or spurn, what to spur
+or curb, what to fortify or assail. For example, if your head is made
+of butter, it is clear that it will not do for you to be a baker. If
+you are a coward, you must not volunteer to lead a forlorn hope. The
+advantage of self-knowledge is that it enables us to prescribe for
+ourselves the contemplation of such principles and motives as we
+need. If our thought is narrow and our fancy cold, we should study the
+maxims that instruct,--as, "Joys are wings, sorrows are spurs." If
+our heart is faint and our will weak, we should study the maxims that
+inspire,--as, "The reward of a thing well done is to have done it."
+The instructive maxim opens a vista of truth to the intellect, as when
+Goethe said, "A man need not be an architect in order to live in a
+house." The inspiring maxim strikes a martial chord in the soul,
+as when Alexander said to his Greeks, shrinking at the sight of
+the multitudinous host of Persians, "One butcher does not fear many
+sheep." The evil of self-ignorance is, that it permits men to choose
+as their favorite and guiding maxims those adages which express and
+foster their already rampant propensities, leaving their drooping
+deficiencies to pine and cramp in neglect. The miser pampers his
+avarice by repeating a hundred times a day, "A penny saved is a penny
+gained": as if that were the maxim _he_ needed! The spend-thrift
+comforts and confirms himself in his prodigality by saying, "God
+loveth a cheerful giver": as if that were not precisely the saying
+he ought never to recall! Audacity and arrogance constantly say to
+themselves, "Be bold, be bold, and evermore be bold." Timidity and
+distrust are ever whispering, "Be not too bold." Thus what would be
+one man's meat proves another man's poison; whereas, were it rightly
+distributed, both would be nourished into healthy development. The
+over-reckless should restrain himself by remembering that "Fools
+rush in where angels fear to tread." The over-cautious should animate
+himself with the reflection that "The coward dies a thousand deaths,
+the brave man only one." A man who, with deep self-knowledge,
+carefully chooses and perseveringly applies maxims adapted to check
+his excess and arouse his defect may derive unspeakable profit from
+them.
+
+To do this with full success, however, he must have a discriminating
+knowledge of the circumstances as well as of the rule, and of himself.
+"Circumstances alter cases." What applies happily in one exigency may
+be perfectly absurd or ruinous in a different situation. The mule,
+loaded with salt, waded through a brook, and, as the salt melted,
+the burden grew light. The ass, loaded with wool, tried the same
+experiment; but the wool, saturated with water, was twice as heavy as
+before. So the Satyr, in Æsop's fable, asked the man coming in from
+the cold, "Why he blew on his fingers?" and was told, "To warm them."
+Soon after he asked, "Why he blew in his soup?" and was told, "To
+cool it." Whereupon he rushed on the man with a club and slew him as a
+liar. The ramifications of truth in varying emergencies are infinitely
+subtile and complicated, and often demand the very nicest care
+in distinguishing. Good advice, when empirically taken and rashly
+followed, is as an eye in the hand, sure to be put out the first thing
+on trying to use it. "Advice costs nothing and is good for nothing,"
+it is often said. But that depends on the quality of the advice, on
+the circumstances, and on what kind of persons impart and receive the
+counsel. Advice given with earnestness and wisdom, and applied with
+docility and discrimination, may cost a great deal and be invaluable.
+Competence and aptness, or folly and heedlessness, make a world of
+difference. The great difficulty in regard to the fruitfulness of
+advice is the universal readiness to impart, the usual unwillingness
+to accept it. We give advice by the bucket, take it by the grain. For
+these reasons the world is yet surfeited with precept and starving for
+example: and the applicability is by no means exhausted of the
+fable of Brabrius, who tells how when an old crab said to her child,
+"Awkward one, walk not so crookedly!" he replied, "Mother, walk you
+straight, I will watch and follow." Verbal wisdom would direct us;
+exemplified wisdom draws us.
+
+The first danger, then, from aphorisms is, that they may enable us
+to evade, instead of helping us to fulfil, the duty of meeting and
+solving for ourselves each mental exigency as it arises. In such a
+case, educative discipline and growth are forfeited. The other danger
+from them is, that they may be applied mechanically, without a just
+understanding of them, and thus that grievous mistakes may be made.
+Their genuine use is to excite our own minds to master the principles
+which their authors have set forth in them. Fresh honesty of personal
+thought, aspiration, and patience, is the spiritual talisman wherewith
+alone we can vivify truisms into truths, and transmute noble maxims
+into flesh and blood, nay, into immortal mind. The master-thinkers aid
+us to do this by the quickening power of their suggestions,--the great
+critic not only giving his readers direction, but also helping them to
+eyesight.
+
+To traverse the works of some authors is like going through a
+carefully arranged herbarium, where every specimen is lifeless,
+shrivelled, dusty, crumbling to the touch. The writings of genuine men
+of genius are like a conservatory, where every plant of thought and
+sentiment, whether indigenous or exotic, is alive, full of bloom and
+fragrance, the sap at work in its veins. Verbal statements which are
+petrifactions of wisdom can neither stimulate nor nourish; but verbal
+statements which are vital concentrations of wisdom do both. He
+has learned one of the most important lessons in human life who
+understands adequately the difference between formal perception and
+organic experience, contrasting the futility of detached and deathly
+proverbs with the utility of nutritious and electrical maxims.
+A mechanical teacher crowds the ear with mummified precepts and
+exhortations; an inspired teacher brings surcharged examples and
+rules into contact with the mind. The distinction is world-wide and
+inexhaustible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SHELLEY.
+
+BY ONE WHO KNEW HIM.
+
+
+If photography had existed during the lifetime of Shelley, it alone
+would have sufficed to correct many a misconception of his character
+founded upon imperfect portraiture; and even the most boyish
+recollections of him, matter-of-fact as they are, may help to solve
+the problem upon which many minds have been engaged without yet
+having finished the work. For Shelley still remains before the
+world misconceived because misdescribed; and if society is
+gradually clearing its ideas of the man, it is not only because
+the preconceptions of that multitudinous authority are themselves
+gradually drifting away, but also because substantial facts are slowly
+coming into view. Their development has been hindered by obstacles
+which will be understood when I have proceeded a little farther, and
+even within the compass of this brief sketch I hope that I shall be
+able to make readers on both sides of the Atlantic work their own way
+a little closer to the truth.
+
+Shelley is still regarded by the majority, either as a victim of
+persecution, or a rebel against authority, or both,--his friends
+probably inclining to hold him up as a philosopher-patriot, whose
+resistance to intellectual oppression placed him in the condition of
+a martyr and robbed him of his fair share of life. My own earliest
+memory presents him very much in that aspect. I first recall him
+pale and slender, worn with anxiety, openly alluding to the marks of
+premature age in his own aspect, bursting with aspirations against
+tyranny of all kinds, and yielding to fits of dreadful despondency
+under sufferings inflicted by the dignitaries of the land at the
+instance of his own family. The circumstances by which he was
+surrounded contributed to this guise of martyrdom.
+
+My own earliest recollections began in prison, where my father[A]
+was incarcerated for critical remarks which at the present day would
+scarcely attract attention, and which were put forth in no impulse of
+personal hostility, but under the strongest sense of duty, with the
+desire to vindicate the constitutional freedom of England against the
+perverted control of faction and the influences of a corrupt court. At
+that time my father was accounted a man prone to mutiny against "the
+powers that be," although his political opinions belonged to a class
+which would now be regarded as too moderate for popular liberalism.
+He has been censured for literary affectation and for personal
+improvidence, but only by those who do not understand the real
+elements of his character. The leading ideas of his mind were,
+first, earnest duty to his country at any cost to himself; next, the
+sacrifice of any ordinary consideration to personal affection and
+friendship; and lastly, the cultivation of "the ideal," especially as
+it is developed in imaginative literature. His life was passed in an
+absolute devotion to these three principles. A one-sided frankness has
+blazoned to the world the sacrifices which he accepted from friends,
+but has whispered nothing of the more than commensurate sacrifices
+made on his side; and the simplicity that rendered him the creature of
+the library in which he lived entered into the expression of all his
+thoughts and feelings.
+
+[Footnote A: Leigh Hunt.]
+
+Although I can remember some of the most eminent men who visited us
+in prison, Shelley I cannot; but I can well recall my father's
+description of the young stranger who came to him breathing the
+classic thoughts of college, ardent with aspirations for the
+emancipation of man from intellectual slavery, and endowed by Nature
+with an aspect truly "angelic."
+
+In the interval before his next visit to us, Shelley had passed
+through the first serious passion of his youth, had married Harriet
+Westbrooke, had become the father of two children, and had thus to all
+appearance secured the transmission of the estates strictly entailed
+with the baronetcy,--but had also been exiled from his family-home,
+as well as from college, for his revolutionary and infidel principles,
+had gone through a course of domestic disappointment, had separated
+from his wife, and was threatened with the removal of his children,
+on the ground of the impious and "immoral" training to which they were
+destined under his guardianship. He came to our house for support and
+consolation; he found in it a home for his intellect as well as for
+his feelings, and he was as strictly a part of the family as any of
+our blood-relations, for he came and went at pleasure. I can remember
+that I performed his bidding equally with that of my father; and as to
+personal deference or regard, the only distinction which my memory
+can discover is, that I found in Shelley a companion whom I better
+understood, and whose country rambles I was more pleased to share. For
+this there were many reasons, and amongst them that Shelley entered
+more unreservedly into the sports and even the thoughts of children.
+I had probably awakened interest in him, not only because I was my
+father's eldest child, but still more because I had already begun to
+read with great avidity, and with an especial sense of imaginative
+wonders and horrors; and, familiarized with the conversation amongst
+literary men, I had really been able to understand something of his
+position, insomuch that no doubt he saw the intense interest I took in
+himself and his sufferings.
+
+The emotions that he underwent were but too manifest in the
+unconcealed anxiety and the eager recital of newly awakened hopes,
+with intervals of the deepest depression. He suffered also from
+physical causes, which I then only in part understood. This suffering
+was traced to the attack made upon him at Tanyralt, in Wales, when, on
+the night of February the 26th, 1813, some man who had been prowling
+about the house in which he lived first fired at him through the
+window, and then entered the room, escaping when the man-servant was
+called in by the tumult and the screams of Mrs. Shelley. The whole
+incident has been doubted,--why, I can hardly understand, unless the
+reason is that some of the conjectures in which Mrs. Shelley indulged
+were over-imaginative. She mentions by name a political opponent who
+had said that "he would drive them out of the country." My own weak
+recollections point to reasons more personal. But what I do know is,
+that Shelley himself ascribed the injury from which he suffered to
+a pressure of the assassin's knee upon him in the struggle. The
+complaint was of long standing; the attacks were alarmingly severe,
+and the seizure very sudden. I can remember one day at Hampstead: it
+was soon after breakfast, and Shelley sat reading, when he suddenly
+threw up his book and hands, and fell back, the chair sliding sharply
+from under him, and he poured forth shrieks, loud and continuous,
+stamping his feet madly on the ground. My father rushed to him, and,
+while the women looked out for the usual remedies of cold water and
+hand-rubbing, applied a strong pressure to his side, kneading it with
+his hands; and the patient seemed gradually to be relieved by that
+process. This happened about the time when he was most anxious for the
+result of the trial which was to deprive him of his children. In
+the intervals he sought relief in reading, in conversation,--which
+especially turned upon classic literature,--in freedom of thought and
+action, and in play with the children of the house. I can remember
+well one day when we were both for some long time engaged in gambols,
+broken off by my terror at his screwing up his long and curling
+hair into a horn, and approaching me with rampant paws and frightful
+gestures as some imaginative monster.
+
+It was at this time that the incident happened which has been
+mentioned by my father. A poor woman had been attending her son before
+a criminal court in London. As they were returning home at night,
+fatigue and anxiety so overcame her that she fell on the ground in
+convulsions, where she was found by Shelley. He appealed to a very
+opulent person, who lived on the top of the hill, asking admission for
+the woman into the house, or the use of the carriage, which had just
+set the family down at the door. The stranger was repulsed with
+the cold remark that impostors swarmed everywhere, and that his own
+conduct was "extraordinary." The good Samaritan, whom the Christian
+would not help, warned the uncharitable man that such treatment of the
+poor is sometimes chastised by hard treatment of the rich in days
+of trouble; and I heard Shelley describe the manner in which the
+gentleman retreated into his mansion, exclaiming, "God bless me, Sir!
+dear me, Sir!" In the account of the occurrence given by my father,
+he has omitted to mention that Shelley and the woman's son, who had
+already carried her a considerable way up the main hill of Hampstead,
+brought her on from the inhospitable mansion to our house in their
+arms; and I believe, that, the son's strength failing, for some way
+down the hill into the Vale of Health Shelley carried her on his back.
+I cannot help contrasting this action of the wanderer with the careful
+self-regard of another friend who often came to see us, though I do
+not remember that any of us were ever inside his doors. He was, I
+believe, for some time actually a pensioner on Shelley's generosity,
+though he ultimately rose to be comparatively wealthy. One night, when
+he had been visiting us, he was in trouble because no person had been
+sent from a tavern at the top of the hill to light him up the pathway
+across the heath. That same self-caring gentleman afterwards became
+one of the apologists who most powerfully contributed to mislead
+public opinion in regard to his benefactor.
+
+Shelley often called me for a long ramble on the heath, or into
+regions which I then thought far distant; and I went with him rather
+than with my father, because he walked faster, and talked with
+me while he walked, instead of being lost in his own thoughts and
+conversing only at intervals. A love of wandering seemed to possess
+him in the most literal sense; his rambles appeared to be without
+design, or any limit but my fatigue; and when I was "done up,"
+he carried me home in his arms, on his shoulder, or pickback. Our
+communion was not always concord; as I have intimated, he took a
+pleasure in frightening me, though I never really lost my confidence
+in his protection, if he would only drop the fantastic aspects that
+he delighted to assume. Sometimes, but much more rarely, he teased me
+with exasperating banter; and, inheriting from some of my progenitors
+a vindictive temper, I once retaliated severely. We were in the
+sitting-room with my father and some others, while I was tortured. The
+chancery-suit was just then approaching its most critical point, and,
+to inflict the cruellest stroke I could think of, I looked him in the
+face, and expressed a hope that he would be beaten in the trial and
+have his children taken from him. I was sitting on his knee, and as
+I spoke, he let himself fall listlessly back in his chair, without
+attempting to conceal the shock I had given him. But presently he
+folded his arms round me and kissed me; and I perfectly understood
+that he saw how sorry I was, and was as anxious as I was to be friends
+again. It was not very long after that we were playing with paper
+boats on the pond in the Vale of Health, watching the way in which the
+wind carried some of them over, or swamped most of them before they
+had surmounted many billows; and Shelley then playfully said how
+much he should like it, if we could get into one of the boats and be
+shipwrecked,--it was a death he should like better than any other.
+
+After the death of Harriet, Shelley's life entirely changed; and I
+think I shall be able to show in the sequel that the change was far
+greater than any of his biographers, except perhaps one who was most
+likely to know, have acknowledged. Conventional form and Shelley are
+almost incompatible ideas; as his admirable wife has said of him, "He
+lived to idealize reality,--to ally the love of abstract truth, and
+adoration of abstract good, with the living sympathies. And long as he
+did this without injury to others, he had the reverse of any respect
+for the dictates of orthodoxy or convention." As soon, therefore,
+as the obstacle to a second marriage was removed, he and Mary
+Wollstonecraft Godwin were regularly joined in matrimony, and retired
+to Great Marlow, in Buckinghamshire. A brief year Shelley passed in
+the position of a country-gentleman on a small scale. His abode was
+a rough house in the village, with a garden at the back and nothing
+beyond but the country. Close to the house there was a small
+pleasure-ground, with a mound at the farther end of the lawn slightly
+inclosing the view. Behind the mound there was a kitchen-garden, not
+unintermixed with flowers and ornamental vegetation; and farther still
+was a piece of ground traversed by a lane deeply excavated in the
+chalk soil. At that time Shelley had a thousand a year allowed to
+him by his father; but although he was in no respect the unreckoning,
+wasteful person that many have represented him to be, such a sum must
+have been insufficient for the mode in which he lived. His family
+comprised himself, Mary, William their eldest son, and Claire
+Claremont,--the daughter of Godwin's second wife, and therefore
+the half-sister of Mary Shelley,--a girl of great ability, strong
+feelings, lively temper, and, though not regularly handsome, of
+brilliant appearance. They kept three servants, if not a fourth
+assistant: a cook; Élise, a Swiss _gouvernante_ for the child; and
+Harry, a man who did the work of gardener and man-servant in general.
+He kept something like open house; for while I was there with my
+father and mother, there also came, for a short time, several other
+friends, some of whom stopped for more than a passing visit. He played
+the Lord Bountiful among his humbler neighbors, not only helping them
+with money or money's-worth, but also advising them in sickness; for
+he had made some study of medicine, in part, I suspect, to be the more
+useful.
+
+I have already intimated that he had assisted certain of his
+companions; and I am convinced that these circumstances contributed to
+the resolution which Shelley formed to leave England for Italy in
+the year 1818, although he then ascribed his doing so to the score of
+health,--or rather, as he said, of life. He then believed himself
+to be laboring under a tendency to consumption, not without medical
+warnings to that effect, although there were strong reasons for
+doubting the validity of the belief, which was based upon less precise
+grounds before the introduction of auscultation and the careful
+examinations of our day. It was, however, characteristic of Shelley
+to rest his actions upon the dominant motive; so that, if several
+inducements operated to the same end, he absolutely discarded the
+minor considerations, and acted solely upon the grand one. I can well
+remember, that, when other persons urged upon him cumulative reasons
+for any course of action, whether in politics, or morality, or
+trifling personal matters of the day, he indignantly cast aside all
+such makeweights, and insisted upon the one sufficient motive. I
+mention this the more explicitly because the opposite course is the
+most common, and some who did not sympathize with his concentration
+of purpose afterwards imputed the suppression of all but one, out of
+several apparent motives, to reserve, or even to a want of candor.
+The accusation was first made by some of Shelley's false
+friends,--creatures who gathered round him to get what they could, and
+afterwards made a market of their connection, to his disadvantage. But
+I was shocked to find a sanction for the notion under the hand of one
+of Shelley's first and most faithful friends, and I discovered it,
+too, when death had barred me from the opportunity of controverting
+the mistake. It was easily accounted for. The writer to whom I allude
+was himself a person whose scrupulous conscience and strong mistrust
+of his own judgment, unless supported on every side, induced him to
+accumulate and to avow as many motives as possible for each single
+act. He could scarcely understand or believe the existence of a
+mind which, although powerful and comprehensive in its grasp, should
+nevertheless deliberately set aside all motives but one, and actually
+proceed upon that exclusive ground without regard to the others.
+
+Both Shelley and his friends seem to have underrated his strength, and
+one little incident will illustrate my meaning. He kept no horse or
+carriage; but in accordance with his ruling passion he had a boat on
+the river of sufficient size to carry a numerous party. It was made
+both for sailing and rowing; and I can remember being one of an
+expedition which went some distance up the Thames, when Shelley
+himself towed the boat on the return home, while I walked, by his
+side. His health had very much improved with the change that had
+taken place in his mode of life, his more settled condition, and the
+abatement of anxiety, with the absolute removal of some of its causes.
+I am well aware that he _had_ suffered severely, and that he continued
+to be haunted by certain recollections, partly real and partly
+imaginative, which pursued him like an Orestes. He frequently talked
+on such subjects; but it has always appeared to me that those who
+have reported what he said have been guilty of a singular confusion in
+their interpretations. As I proceed, you will find that certain facts
+in his life have never yet been distinctly related, and I have a
+strong reason for believing that some circumstances of which I became
+accidentally aware were never disclosed at all, except to Mary; while
+in her writings I can trace allusions to them, that remind me of
+passages in ancient authors,--in Ovid, for instance,--which would have
+been absolutely unintelligible, except for accidental references. In
+spite, however, of the rude trials to which his constitution had
+been subjected, and of new symptoms supposed to indicate pulmonary
+weakness, there was a marked improvement in his aspect since he had
+visited London. He still had that ultra-youthful figure that partook
+the traits of the hobbledehoy, arrived at man's stature, but not yet
+possessing the full manly proportions. His extremities were large, his
+limbs long, his face small, and his thorax very partially developed,
+especially in girth. An habitual eagerness of mood, thrusting forward
+his face, made him stoop, with sunken chest and rounded shoulders; and
+this was even more apparent in the easy costume of the country than
+in London dress. But in his countenance there was life instead of
+weariness; melancholy more often yielded to alternations of bright
+thoughts; and paleness had given way to a certain freshness of color,
+with something like roses in the cheeks. Notwithstanding the sense of
+weakness in the chest, which attacked him on any sudden effort,
+his power of exertion was considerable. Once, returning from a long
+excursion, and entering the house by the back way, up a precipitous,
+though not perpendicular bank, the women of the party had to be
+helped; and Shelley was the most active in rendering that assistance.
+While others were content to accomplish the feat for one, he, I think,
+helped three up the bank, sliding in a half-sitting posture when he
+returned to fetch a new charge. I well remember his shooting past me
+in a cloud of chalk-dust, as I was slowly climbing up. He had a fit
+of panting after it, but he made light of the exertion. I can also
+recollect, that, although he frequently preferred to steer rather than
+to put forth his strength, yet, if it were necessary, he would take
+an oar, and could stick to his seat for any time against any force of
+current or of wind, not only without complaining, but without being
+compelled to give in until the set task was accomplished, though it
+should involve some miles of hard pulling. These facts indicate the
+amount of "grit" that lay under the outward appearance of weakness and
+excitable nerves.
+
+Shelley's fulness of vitality did not at that time seem to be shared
+by the partner of his life. Mary's intellectual powers had already
+been manifested. He must to some extent have known the force of her
+affection, and the tenderness of her nature; but it is remarkable that
+her youth was not the period of her greatest beauty, and certainly at
+that date she did not do justice to herself either in her aspect or in
+the tone of her conversation. She was singularly pale. With a figure
+that needed to be set off, she was careless in her dress; and the
+decision of purpose which ultimately gained her the playful title of
+"Wilful Woman" then appeared, at least in society, principally in the
+negative form,--her temper being easily crossed, and her resentments
+taking a somewhat querulous and peevish tone. Both of the pair were
+still young, and their ideas of education were adverse to the
+received doctrines of the day, rather than substantive; and their
+own principles in this matter were exemplified somewhat perversely by
+little William. Even at that early age the child called forth frequent
+and poignant remonstrances from his _gouvernante_, and occasionally
+drew perplexed exclamations or desponding looks from his father, who
+took the child's little perversities seriously to heart, and sometimes
+vented his embarrassment in generalized remarks on human nature.
+
+Some years elapsed between the night when I saw Shelley pack up his
+pistols--which he allowed me to examine--for his departure for
+the South, and the moment when, after our own arrival in Italy, my
+attention was again called to his presence by the shrill sound of
+his voice, as he rushed into my father's arms, which he did with an
+impetuousness and a fervor scarcely to be imagined by any who did
+not know the intensity of his feelings and the deep nature of his
+affection for that friend. I remember his crying out that he was "so
+_inexpressibly_ delighted!--you cannot think how _inexpressibly_ happy
+it makes me!"
+
+The history of Shelley's brief visit to Pisa has been related by many,
+and is, I believe, told in his published letters; but it appears to me
+that those who have recounted it have in some respects fallen short.
+Excepting Mary Shelley, the best-informed spoke too soon after the
+event. Shelley's own letters are slightly misleading, from a very
+intelligible cause. After he had encouraged, if he did not suggest,
+the enterprise of "The Liberal,"--and I believe it would be nearly
+impossible for any one of the three men interested in that venture to
+ascertain exactly who was its author,--his mind misgave him. He knew
+my father's necessities and his childish capacities for business. With
+a keen sense of the power displayed in "Don Juan," and even in more
+melodramatic works, Shelley had acquired a full knowledge of the
+singularly licentious training from which Byron had then scarcely
+emerged, and of the vacillating caprice which enfeebled all his
+actions. His own ability to grapple with practical affairs was very
+great; but he himself had scarcely formed a sufficient estimate of it.
+Determined to maintain a thorough equality and freedom with the noble
+bard in their social relations, he shrank from any position which
+might raise in Byron's jealous and unstable mind the idea that he was
+under pressure; yet he was anxious to prevent disappointment for Leigh
+Hunt. He dreaded failure, and resolved that he would do his best to
+prevent it; and yet again he scarcely anticipated success.
+
+As early as the end of 1818, he described the way in which Byron spent
+his life, after he had been partly exiled, partly emancipated from the
+ordinary restraints of society. At that time, "the Italian women were
+the most contemptible of all who existed under the moon,--an ordinary
+Englishman could not approach them"; "but," writes Shelley, "Lord
+Byron is familiar with the lowest sort of these women,--the people
+his _gondolieri_ pick up in the streets." Byron's curiosity, indeed,
+tempted him to learn something of vice in its most revolting aspects.
+"He has," writes Shelley, "a certain degree of candor, while you talk
+to him, but unfortunately it does not outlast your departure." I am
+sure that before 1821 Byron had risen in his friend's estimation, or
+the "Liberal" scheme would never have been contemplated; and there
+were excellent reasons for the change. It is only by degrees that men
+have learned to appreciate at once the extraordinary nature and force
+of Byron's genius and the equally monstrous and marvellous nature
+of the evil training by which he was "dragged up." In the midst
+of extravagant license he gained experiences which might have
+extinguished his mind, but which, as they did not have that effect,
+added to his resources. In the process some of his personal qualities
+as a companion suffered severely. Very few grown men have been so
+extravagantly sensitive to personal approbation; and he was anxious
+to conciliate the liking of all who approached him, however foreign
+to his own set, however humble, or however insignificant. He was as
+mistrustful as a greedy child. He could be extravagant, but he was not
+open-handed; and yet he would give up what he coveted for himself,
+if he were urged by those whose esteem he desired to win. Now, of
+all persons who came near him, Shelley was the one that combined the
+greatest number of qualities calculated to influence a creature like
+Byron. He was of gentle blood; he was as resolute as he was able to
+maintain what is popularly called an independent position; he was
+truly sincere; and his way of life displayed a purity which Byron
+admired, though he fell from it so lamentably. On the other hand,
+Shelley was at odds with society on the very same questions of morals;
+he possessed all the philosophy for understanding the complicated
+perplexities of aberrant genius; did actually make allowances for
+Byron; estimated his powers more accurately, and therefore more
+highly, than any other person who came near him; and thus commanded at
+once his sympathies, his ambition, and his confidence. Everybody
+knows that in the interval between 1818 and the date of his death at
+Missolonghi, Byron's discipline of life had undergone a marked
+and beneficial change, and many agencies have been mentioned as
+contributing to that result, but I am sure that no one was so
+all-sufficient as the personal association with Shelley. Nothing of
+this is gainsaid by the fact that the greater part of this improvement
+was displayed after Shelley's death. Change of scene, intercourse with
+others, opportunities for acting upon his new principles, all helped,
+together, probably, with the graver sense of counsel bequeathed by
+the friend whom he had lost. Certain it is that Byron never mentioned
+Shelley in my hearing without a peculiarly emphatic manner. I know
+that to more than one person he performed acts of kindness and
+friendly aid as tributes to the memory of Shelley; and if any action
+were urged upon him as worthy of his own genius and dignity, nothing
+clenched the appeal like the name of Shelley. But if you will for a
+moment compare the characters of the two men,--if you will contrast
+the large self-sacrifice of the one with the self-indulgence of the
+other, the independence of the one with the craving of the other for
+approval, the absolute trust in human hope and goodness of Shelley
+with the _blasé_ cynicism of Byron, I think two conclusions must
+instantly strike you,--first, that Shelley must have possessed almost
+unequalled power of influence over those who surrounded him, and,
+secondly, that Byron himself must have been a much better man, or
+possessing much more in common with Shelley than society or some of
+his most intellectual companions at all imagined. Part of the facts
+bearing upon the subject have come out since the death of both. My own
+attention was drawn to the point by the striking discord between the
+way in which other people speak of their relations and the manner of
+Shelley and Byron towards each other, and especially Byron's way in
+speaking of Shelley. It is not probable that Shelley formed to himself
+any such idea of his own power; yet you will find hints at it in his
+letters, you will see, curious traces of it in the letters of others,
+and nothing else will fully explain the change in Byron's life.
+Moreover, it reconciles the apparent inconsistencies of Shelley's
+reservations in talking about Byron with his manifest and practical
+confidence in the result of their joint working.
+
+When I met Shelley again in Italy, it was easy to see that a grand
+change had come over his appearance and condition. The Southern
+climate had suited him, and the boat which caused his death had in the
+mean while been instrumental in developing his life. His retirement
+from painful personal conflict had given him greater ease; intercourse
+with Mary had made his life better; and, not to overlook one important
+fact, he had _grown_ since he left England. For physiologists attest
+the truth, that growth continues throughout human existence, even
+until after decay begins; and Shelley's constitution was of that
+kind--strong in some of its developments, slow in others--which needed
+longer time than many to arrive at its full proportions. For instance,
+in the interval since I had seen him his chest had manifestly become
+of a larger girth. I am speaking only upon distant recollection; but
+I should judge it to have been three or four inches larger round, or
+perhaps more. His voice was stronger, his manner more confident
+and downright, and, although not less emphatic, yet decidedly less
+impulsively changeful. I can recall his reading from an ancient
+author, translating as he went, a passage about the making of the
+first man; and I remember it from the subject and from the easy
+flow of his translation, but chiefly from the air of strength and
+cheerfulness which I noticed in his voice and manner. In nothing,
+however, does Shelley appear to me to have been so misdescribed as
+in the outward man,--partly, as usual, from overstatement of
+peculiarities, and partly because each artist has painted the portrait
+from his own favorite view. Many, through exaggeration, or imperfect
+knowledge, have equally misconstrued his moral character, and have
+omitted to report the real conduct of his understanding as he advanced
+towards "the middle of the way of life."
+
+From the story of his life after I first saw him, as well as from
+many things that I have heard him say of his family, and the strange
+recollections that he had of home, it is easy to understand the
+general tenor of his early life. Through some caprice in genealogical
+chemistry, in Percy the Shelley race struck out an entirely new idea:
+an apparent caprice in the sequence of houses that has often been
+noticed. For how often may we observe that the union of the most
+remarkable intellects produces a _tertium quid_ which is the reverse
+of an equivalent to the combined totals, representing only a fraction
+of their qualities, and that fraction in its negative aspect; while,
+on the other hand, rivulets of blood which have gained for themselves
+no name upon earth may combine to form a river illustrious to the
+whole world. In the latter case, not an unusual effect is that those
+who are charged with the infancy of the new type in the family are
+incompetent to their duty; and accordingly Shelley was regarded merely
+as "a strange boy," wayward, mutinous, and to be severely chastised
+into obedience. It has been said that he attracted no particular
+notice at school; but this is not true. At Eton his resentment of
+tyrannical authority displayed itself not only against the masters,
+but against the privileges of young patricians. He refused to be
+"fag"; and on one occasion he so braved the youthful public-opinion,
+that, on being dared to the act by the surrounding boys, he pinned
+a companion's hand to the table with a fork. According to my
+recollection, the immediate provocative was that he was dared to
+do it; but the incident arose out of his resistance to the seniors
+amongst the scholars and to the customs of the school. It was evident
+that the masters had their eye upon him. Such a youth, with a command
+of language that was a born faculty and not simply acquired, _must_
+have attracted very positive attention on the part of the teachers;
+but it was certain, that, with the tendencies of those days, they
+would have thought it discreet to say as little as possible about the
+slender mutineer. It is equally well known, that, notwithstanding his
+youth, religious opinions caused his expulsion from college; and when
+we turn to the earliest of his writings which assumed anything like a
+complete shape, we discover at once the nature of those powers
+which could not have been overlooked,--we detect the genius, the
+revolutionary ideas, and the extraordinary command which he had
+acquired over the subject-matter of much that is taught in schools
+and colleges. Amid the orthodox reaction that followed upon the French
+Revolution, he was struck with the excesses to which despotic power
+could be carried. He read history with sympathies for the natural
+impulses and aspirations of the race, as opposed to the small circles
+which comprise established authorities. He looked upon knowledge as
+the means of serving, not enslaving the race. And therefore, while he
+excused the crimes of the Revolution, on the score of the ignorance
+in which the people had been kept, their sufferings, and the natural
+revulsion against such painful down-treading, he regarded the counter
+acts of authority as a treachery to wisdom itself. He says,--
+
+ "Hath Nature's soul,
+ That formed this world so beautiful....
+ And filled the meanest worm that crawls in dust
+ With spirit, thought, and love, on Man alone,
+ Partial in causeless malice, wantonly
+ Heaped ruin, vice, and slavery?
+ Nature?--no!
+ Kings, priests, and statesmen blast the human flower
+ Even in its tender bud; their influence darts
+ Like subtle poison through the bloodless veins
+ Of desolate society."
+
+The pretension of authority to speak with a supernatural warrant
+provoked him to deny the warrant itself, or the sources from which it
+was said to emanate.
+
+ "Is there a God?--ay, an almighty God,
+ And vengeful as almighty? Once his voice
+ Was heard on earth; earth shuddered at the sound,
+ The fiery-visaged firmament expressed
+ Abhorrence, and the grave of Nature yawned
+ To swallow all the dauntless and the good
+ That dared to hurl defiance at his throne,
+ Girt as it was with power. None but slaves
+ Survived,--cold-blooded slaves, who did the work
+ Of tyrranous omnipotence."
+
+To these superstitious and ambitious pretensions he traced the
+corruption which disorganized society, leading it down even to the
+very worst immoralities.
+
+ "All things are sold: the very light of heaven
+ Is venal....
+ Those duties which heart of human love
+ Should urge him to perform instinctively
+ Are bought and sold as in a public mart.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Even love is sold; the solace of all woe
+ Is turned to deadliest agony, old age
+ Shivers in selfish beauty's loathing arms,
+ And youth's corrupted impulses prepare
+ A life of horror from the blighting bane
+ Of commerce; whilst the pestilence that springs
+ From unenjoying sensualism has filled
+ All human life with hydra-headed woes."
+
+"Shelley," says Mary, in her note on the poem, "was eighteen when he
+wrote 'Queen Mab.' He never published it. When it was written, he
+had come to the decision that he was too young to be a judge of
+controversies." The wife-editor refers to a series of
+articles published in the "New Monthly Magazine" for 1832 by a
+fellow-collegian, a warm friend of Shelley's, touching upon his
+school-life, and describing the state of his mind at college. The
+worst of all these biographical sketches of remarkable men is, that
+delicacy, discretion, or some other euphemistically named form of
+hesitancy, induces writers to suppress the incidents which supply the
+very angles of the form they want to delineate; and it is especially
+so in Shelley's case. I am sure, that, if Mary, or my father, or any
+of those with whom Shelley conversed most thoroughly, had related some
+of the more extravagant incidents of his early life exactly as they
+occurred, we should better understand the tenor of his thought,--and
+we should also have the most valuable complement to that part of
+his intellectual progress which stands in contrast with the earlier
+portion. Now, as I have said, at school Shelley was a more practical
+and impracticable mutineer than his friends have generally allowed.
+They have been anxious to soften his "faults"; and the consequence
+is, that we miss the force of the boy's logic and the vigor of his
+Catonian experiments.
+
+Again, accident has made me aware of facts which give me to
+understand, that, in passing through the usual curriculum of a college
+life in all its paths, Shelley did not go scathless,--but that, in
+the tampering with venal pleasures, his health was seriously, and not
+transiently, injured. The effect was far greater on his mind than on
+his body; and the intellectual being greater than the physical
+power, the healthy reaction was greater. But that reaction was
+also, especially in early youth, principally marked by horror and
+antagonism. Conscientious, far beyond even the ordinary maximum
+amongst ordinary men, he felt bound to denounce the mischief from
+which he saw others suffer more severely than himself, since in them
+there was no such reaction. I have no doubt that he himself would have
+spoken even plainer language, though to me his language is perfectly
+transparent, if he had not been restrained by a superstitious notion
+of his own, that the true escape from the pestilent and abhorrent
+brutalities which he detected around him in "real" life is found in
+"the ideal" form of thought and language. Ardent and romantic, he was
+eager to discover beauty "beneath" every natural aspect. Of all men
+living, I am the one most bound to be aware of the inconsistency; but
+you will see it reconciled a little later.
+
+Shelley left college prone "to fall in love,"--having already, indeed,
+gone through some very slight experiences of that process. In his
+wanderings, in a humble position which conciliated rather than
+repelled him, he met with Harriet Westbrooke, a very comely, pleasing,
+and simple type of girlhood. She was at some disadvantage, under some
+kind of domestic oppression; so she served at once as an object for
+his disengaged affection, and a subject for his liberating theories,
+and as a substratum for the idealizing process upon which he
+constructed a fictitious creation of Harriet Westbrooke. His dreams
+bearing but a faint and controversial resemblance to the Harriet
+Westbrooke of daily life, the fictitious image prevented him from
+knowing her, until the reality broke through the poetical vision only
+to shock him by its inferiority or repulsiveness. As to the poor girl
+herself, she never had the capacity for learning to know him. In the
+sequel she proved to be the not unwilling slave of a petty domestic
+intrigue,--oppression from which he would have rescued her. Married
+life enabled him to discover that she was the reverse of the being
+that he had fancied. They were first married in Scotland in 1811.
+Shelley made acquaintance with the Godwins in 1812, before his eldest
+child was born. I am not sure whether he was acquainted with Mary at
+that time; but some circumstances which I cannot verify make me doubt
+it. Harriet's daughter was born early in the summer of 1813, and it
+was before the close of that year that the couple began to disagree.
+The wife was evidently under the dominion of a relative whose
+influence was injurious to her. I do not find a hint of any imputation
+upon what is usually called her "fidelity"; but the relative
+manifestly desired to show her power over both. It is probable that at
+an early day Shelley's disposition to see "sermons in stones and good
+in everything" made him think better of that interloping lady than she
+deserved,--and that consequently he not only gave her encouragement,
+but committed himself to something which, to Harriet's mind, justified
+her deference for ill-considered advice. It is very likely that she
+was counselled to extend her power over Shelley in a manner which her
+own simple nature would not have suggested; but, being as foolish as
+it was cunning and vulgar, such conduct could no result but that of
+repelling a man like Shelley. That he acquired a detestation of the
+relative is a certain fact. He must have been expecting a second child
+when he formally remarried Harriet in England on the twenty-fourth of
+March, 1814; and that ceremony has been mentioned by several writers
+to prove the most opposite conclusions,--that Shelley was devoted to
+his first wife, and that he behaved to her with the basest hypocrisy.
+It proves nothing but his desire to place the hereditary rights of the
+second child, who might be a boy, beyond doubt; and the precaution
+was justified by the event. Before the close of the same year Harriet
+returned to her father's house, and there she gave birth to a son,
+Charles, who would have inherited the baronetcy, if he had not died
+in 1826, after his father's death. The parting took place about the
+twenty-fourth of June, 1814; and at the same time Shelley wrote a
+poem, of which fragments are given in the recently published "Relics."
+The verse shows, first, that Shelley was suffering severely from the
+chronic conflict which he had undergone, and, secondly, that he had
+found some novel comfort in the intercourse with Mary.
+
+ "To sit and curb the soul's mute rage,
+ Which preys upon itself alone;
+ To curse the life which is the cage
+ Of fettered grief that dares not groan,
+ Hiding from many a careless eye
+ The scorned load of agony.
+
+ "Upon my heart thy accents sweet
+ Of peace and pity fell like dew
+ On flowers half dead....
+
+ "We are not happy, sweet! our state
+ Is strange and full of doubt and fear;
+ More need of words that ills abate;--
+ Reserve or censure come not near
+ Our sacred friendship, lest there be
+ No solace left for thee and me."
+
+It is obvious that considerably after the date of this poem, Harriet
+remained in amicable correspondence with Shelley; and not only so,
+but, while she altogether abstained from opposing his new connection,
+she was actually on friendly terms with Mary. It is easy to understand
+how a limited nature like Harriet's should be worn out by the
+exaction and impracticability of one like Shelley; for to her most
+impracticable would seem his lofty and ideal requirements. On the
+other hand, it is evident that Shelley regarded the unfortunate girl
+with feelings of deep commiseration; and I know that he not only
+pitied her, but felt strong compunctions for the share which his own
+mistaken conduct at the beginning, even more than at the end, had had
+in drawing her aside from what would have been her natural course in
+ordinary life. Mary, I believe, clearly understood the whole case,
+and felt nothing but compassion for one who was a "victim to
+circumstances."
+
+The sequel has been alluded to in several publications, but so
+obscurely as to be more than unintelligible; for the reader is led to
+conclusions the reverse of the fact. In the "Memorials," at page 63,
+the subject is barely touched upon. I take the whole passage.
+
+"Towards the close of 1813, estrangements, which for some time had
+been slowly growing between Mr. and Mrs. Shelley, came to a crisis.
+Separation ensued; and Mrs. Shelley returned to her father's house.
+Here she gave birth to her second child,--a son, who died in 1826.
+
+"The occurrences of this painful epoch in Shelley's life, and the
+causes which led to them, I am spared from relating. In Mary Shelley's
+own words:--'This is not the time to relate the truth; and I should
+reject any coloring of the truth.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Of those remaining who were intimate with Shelley at this time, each
+has given us a different version of this sad event, colored by his own
+views and personal feelings. Evidently, Shelley confided to none of
+these friends. We, who bear his name and are of his family, have in
+our possession papers written by his own hand, which, in after-years,
+may make the story of his life complete, and which few now living,
+except Shelley's own children, have ever perused.
+
+"One mistake which has gone forth to the world we feel ourselves
+called upon positively to contradict. Harriet's death has sometimes
+been ascribed to Shelley. This is entirely false. There was no
+immediate connection whatever between her tragic end and any conduct
+on the part of her husband."
+
+At the end of the "Relics" is a memorandum entitled, "Harriet
+Shelley and Mr. Thomas Love Peacock." Mr. Peacock had been writing in
+"Fraser's Magazine" a series of articles on Shelley; in "Macmillan's
+Magazine" for June, 1866, was an article by Mr. Richard Garnet,
+entitled, "Shelley in Pall-Mall"; to this Mr. Peacock replied in
+"Percy Bysshe Shelley: Supplementary Notice"; and Mr. Garnet rejoined
+in the new little volume which he ha; edited. The main purpose of
+this last notice is, to show that Mr. Peacock was not accurate in his
+chronology or in his interpretation of the severance between Shelley
+and Harriet. Alluding either to the discretion which prevented Shelley
+from making a confidant of Mr. Peacock, or to his grief occasioned by
+the fate of Harriet, the writer refers to "the proof which exists in a
+series of letters written by Shelley at this very time to one in whom
+he had confidence, and at present in possession of his family," and
+then proceeds thus:--"Nothing more beautiful or characteristic ever
+proceeded from his pen; and they afford the most unequivocal testimony
+of the grief and horror occasioned by the tragical incident to which
+they bear reference. Yet self-reproach formed no element of his
+sorrow, in the midst of which he could proudly say, '------, ------,'
+(mentioning two dry, unbiased men of business,) 'every one, does me
+full justice, bears testimony to the uprightness and liberality of my
+conduct to her.'"
+
+In the "Memorials" and the "Relics" there is no further allusion to
+the circumstances which preceded Harriet's suicide; but it appears to
+me very desirable that the whole story should be brought out much more
+distinctly, and I can at least show why I say so. The correspondence
+in question took place in the middle of December, 1816. Shelley was
+married to Mary about a fortnight later; and in the most emphatic
+terms he alluded not only to the solace which he derived from the
+conversation of his host, but to the manner in which my father spoke
+of Mary. My own recollection goes back to the period, and I have
+already testified to the state of Shelley's mind. He was just then
+instituting the process to recover the children, and he caught at
+an opinion that had been expressed, that, in the event of his again
+becoming contracted in marriage, there would be no longer any pretence
+to deprive him of the children.
+
+Let me for a moment pause on this incident, as it establishes two
+facts of some interest. In the first place, it shows some of the
+grounds of the very strong and unalterable friendship which subsisted
+between my father and Mary,--a friendship which stood the test of many
+vicissitudes, and even of some differences of opinion; both persons
+being very sensitive in feeling, quick in temper, thoroughly
+outspoken, and obstinately tenacious of their own convictions.
+Secondly, it corroborates what I have said with regard to the
+community of spirit that Shelley found in his real wife,--the woman
+who became the companion of his fortunes, of his thoughts, of his
+sufferings, and of his hopes. It will be seen, that, even before
+marriage with his second wife, he was counting upon Mary's help in
+preventing his separation from the two children already born to him.
+She was a woman uniting intellectual faculties with strong ambitions
+of affection as well as intellect; and esteem thus substantially
+shown, at that early age, by two such men as Percy Shelley and Leigh
+Hunt, must have conveyed the deepest gratification.
+
+Throughout these communications Shelley evinced the strong pity that
+he felt for the unhappy being whom he had known. Circumstances had
+come to his knowledge which had thrown considerable light upon his
+relations with Harriet. There can be no doubt that one member of the
+family had hoped to derive gain from the connection with himself, as a
+person of rank and property. There seems also reason to suppose, that,
+about the same time, Harriet's father, an aged man, became so ill that
+his death might be regarded as approaching, and he had something to
+leave. Poor, foolish Harriet had undoubtedly formed an attachment to
+Shelley, whom she had been allowed to marry; but she had then
+suffered herself to become a tool in the hands of others, and the fact
+accounted for the idle way in which she importuned him to do things
+repugnant to his feelings and convictions. She thus exasperated his
+temper, and lost her own; they quarrelled, in the ordinary conjugal
+sense, and, from all I have learned, I am induced to guess, that, when
+she left him, it was not only in the indulgence of self-will, but also
+in the vain hope that her retreating would induce him to follow her,
+perhaps in a more obedient spirit. She sought refuge in her father's
+house, where she might have expected kindness; but, as the old man
+bent towards the grave, with rapid loss of faculties, he became more
+severe in his treatment of the poor woman; and she was driven from the
+paternal roof. This Shelley did not know at the time; nor did he until
+afterwards learn the process by which she arrived at her fate.
+Too late she became aware how fatal to her interests had been the
+intrigues of which she had been the passive instrument; and I suspect
+that she was debarred from seeking forgiveness and help partly by
+false shame, and partly by the terrible adaptability of weak natures
+to the condition of the society in which they find themselves. I have
+said that there is not a trace of evidence or a whisper of scandal
+against her before her voluntary departure from Shelley, and I have
+indicated the most probable motives of that step; but subsequently she
+forfeited her claim to a return, even in the eye of the law. Shelley
+had information which made him believe that she fell even to the depth
+of actual prostitution. If she left him, it would appear that she
+herself was deserted in turn by a man in a very humble grade of life;
+and it was in consequence of this desertion that she killed herself.
+
+The change in his personal aspect that showed itself at Marlow
+appeared also in his writings,--the most typical of his works for this
+period being naturally the most complete that issued from his pen, the
+"Revolt of Islam." We find there identically the same doctrine that
+there is in "Queen Mab,"--a systematic abhorrence of the servility
+which renders man captive to power, denunciation of the love of gain
+which blinds his insight and destroys his energy, of the prostitution
+of religious faith, and, above all, of the slavery of womanhood. But
+by this time the doctrine has more distinct in its expression, and far
+more powerful in its utterance.
+
+ "Man seeks for gold in mines, that he may weave
+ A lasting chain for his own slavery;
+ In fear and restless care that he may live,
+ He toils for others, who must ever be
+ The joyless thralls of like captivity;
+ He murders, for his chiefs delight in ruin;
+ He builds the altar, that its idol's fee
+ May be his very blood; he is pursuing,
+ O blind and willing wretch! his own obscure undoing.
+
+ "Woman!--she is his slave, she has become
+ A thing I weep to speak,--the child of scorn,
+ The outcast of a desolated home.
+ Falsehood and fear and toil, like waves, have worn
+ Channels upon her cheek, which smiles adorn,
+ As calm decks the false ocean. Well ye know
+ What woman is; for none of woman born
+ Can choose but drain the bitter dregs of woe,
+ Which ever from the oppressed to the oppressors flow."
+
+The indignation against the revolting subjugation of womanhood comes
+out still more distinctly in the preceding canto, where Cythna relates
+the horrors to which she was subjected.
+
+ "One was she among the many there, the thralls
+ Of the cold tyrant's cruel lust; and they
+ Laughed mournfully in those polluted halls;
+ But she was calm and sad, musing alway
+ On loftiest enterprise, till on a day
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ She told me what a loathsome agony
+ Is that when selfishness mocks love's delight,
+ Foul as in dreams' most fearful imagery
+ To dally with the mowing dead;--that night
+ All torture, fear, or horror made seem light
+ Which the soul dreams or knows."
+
+The poet bears testimony to the spiritual power which rules throughout
+Nature; the monster recovering his dignity while he is under the
+higher influence.
+
+ "Even when he saw her wondrous loveliness,
+ One moment to great Nature's sacred power
+ He bent and was no longer passionless;
+ But when he bade her to his secret bower
+ Be borne a loveless victim, and she tore
+ Her locks in agony, and her words of flame
+ And mightier looks availed not, then he bore
+ Again his load of slavery, and became
+ A king, a heartless beast, a pageant and a name.
+
+ ...."When the day
+ Shone on her awful frenzy, from the sight,
+ Where like a spirit in fleshly chains she lay
+ Struggling, aghast and pale the tyrant fled away.
+
+ "Her madness was a beam of light, a power
+ Which dawned through the rent soul; and words it gave,
+ Gestures and looks, such as in whirlwinds bore
+ Which might not be withstood."
+
+The doctrine involved in this passage is very clear, and it marks a
+decided progress since the days of "Queen Mab." It will be observed
+that Shelley's mind had become familiarized with the idea of a spirit
+ruling throughout Nature, obedience to which constitutes human power.
+Most remarkable is the passage in which the tyrant recovers his
+faculties through his subjection to this spirit; because it indicates
+Shelley's faithful adhesion to the universal, though oft obscurely
+formed belief, that the ability to _receive_ influence is the most
+exalted faculty to which human nature can attain, while the exercise
+of an arbitrary power centring in self is not only debasing, but is an
+actual destroyer of human faculty.
+
+There can be no doubt that he had profited greatly in his moral
+condition, as well as in his bodily health, by the greater
+tranquillity which he enjoyed in the society of Mary, and also by the
+sympathy which gave full play to his ideas, instead of diverting and
+disappointing them. She was, indeed, herself a woman of extraordinary
+power, of heart as well as head. Many circumstances conspired to
+conceal some of her natural faculties. She lost her mother very young;
+her father--speaking with great diffidence, from a very slight and
+imperfect knowledge--appeared to me a harsh and ungenial man. She
+inherited from him her thin voice, but not the steel-edged sharpness
+of his own; and she inherited, not from him, but from her mother, a
+largeness of heart that entered proportionately into the working
+of her mind. She had a masculine capacity for study; for, though I
+suspect her early schooling was irregular, she remained a student all
+her life, and by painstaking industry made herself acquainted with
+any subject that she had to handle. Her command of history and
+her imaginative power are shown in such books as "Valperga" and
+"Castruccio"; but the daring originality of her mind comes out most
+distinctly in her earliest published work, "Frankenstein." Its leading
+idea has been ascribed to her husband, but, I am sure, unduly; and the
+vividness with which she has brought out the monstrous tale in all its
+horror, but without coarse or revolting incidents, is a proof of the
+genius which she inherited alike from both her parents. It is clear,
+also, that the society of Shelley was to her a great school, which she
+did not appreciate to the full until most calamitously it was taken
+away; and yet, of course, she could not fail to learn the greater part
+of what it had become to her. This again showed itself even in her
+appearance, after she had spent some years in Italy; for, while she
+had grown far more comely than she was in her mere youth, she had
+acquired a deeper insight into many subjects that interested Shelley,
+and some others; and she had learned to express the force of natural
+affection, which she was born to feel, but which had somehow been
+stunted and suppressed in her youth. In the preface to the collected
+edition of his works, she says: "I have the liveliest recollection of
+all that was done and said during the period of my knowing him.
+Every impression is as clear as if stamped yesterday, and I have no
+apprehension of any mistake in my statements, as far as they go. In
+other respects I am, indeed, incompetent; but I feel the importance of
+the task, and regard it as my most sacred duty. I endeavor to fulfil
+it in a manner he would himself approve; and hope in this publication
+to lay the first stone of a monument due to Shelley's genius, his
+sufferings, and his virtues." And in the postscript, written in
+November, 1839, she says: "At my request, the publisher has restored
+the omitted passages of 'Queen Mab.' I now present this edition as
+a complete collection of my husband's poetical works, and I do not
+foresee that I can hereafter add to or take away a word or line." So
+writes the wife-editor; and then "The Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe
+Shelley" begin with a dedication to Harriet, restored to its place
+by Mary. While the biographers of Shelley are chargeable with
+suppression, the most straightforward and frank of all of them is
+Mary, who, although not insensible to the passion of jealousy, and
+carrying with her the painful sense of a life-opportunity not fully
+used, thus writes the name of Harriet the first on her husband's
+monument, while she has nobly abstained from telling those things that
+other persons should have supplied to the narrative. I have heard her
+accused of an over-anxiety to be admired; and something of the sort
+was discernible in society: it was a weakness as venial as it was
+purely superficial. Away from society, she was as truthful and simple
+a woman as I have ever met,--was as faithful a friend as the world
+has produced,--using that unreserved directness towards those whom she
+regarded with affection which is the very crowning glory of friendly
+intercourse. I suspect that these qualities came out in their greatest
+force after her calamity; for many things which she said in her
+regret, and passages in Shelley's own poetry, make me doubt whether
+little habits of temper, and possibly of a refined and exacting
+coquettishness, had not prevented him from acquiring so full a
+knowledge of her as she had of him. This was natural for many reasons,
+and especially two. Shelley had not the opportunity of retrospectively
+studying her character, and his mind was by nature more constructed
+than hers was to be preoccupied. If the reader desires a portrait
+of Mary, he has one in the well-known antique bust sometimes called
+"Isis" and sometimes "Clytie": a woman's head and shoulders rising
+from a lotus-flower. It is most probably the portrait of a Roman lady,
+is in some degree more elongated and "classic" than Mary; but, on the
+other hand, it falls short of her, for it gives no idea of her
+tall and intellectual forehead, nor has it any trace of the bright,
+animated, and sweet expression that so often lighted up her face.
+
+Attention has often been concentrated on the passage in
+"Epipsychidion" which appears to relate Shelley's experiences from
+earliest youth until he met with the noble and unfortunate "Lady
+Emilia V., now imprisoned in the convent of--," whose own words form
+the motto to the poem, and a key to the sympathy which the writer felt
+for her:--"The loving soul launches itself out of the created, and
+creates in the infinite a world all its own, far different from this
+dark and fearful abysm." The passage begins,--
+
+ "There was a being whom my spirit oft
+ Met on its visioned wanderings, far aloft,
+ In the clear golden prime of my youth's
+ dawn."
+
+And this being was the worshipped object of Shelley's adoring
+aspirations in extreme youth; but it passed by him as a vision,
+though--
+
+ "And as a man with mighty loss dismayed,
+ I would have followed, though the grave between
+ Yawned like a gulf whose spectres are unseen:
+ When a voice said,--'O thou of hearts the weakest,
+ The phantom is beside thee whom thou seekest.'
+ Then I,--'Where?' The world's echo answered, 'Where'!"
+
+She ever remained the veiled divinity of thoughts that worshipped her,
+while he went forth into the world with hope and fear,--
+
+ "Into the wintry forest of our life;
+ And struggling through its error with vain strife,
+ And stumbling in my weakness and my haste,
+ And half bewildered by new forms, I passed
+ Seeking among those untaught foresters
+ If I could find one form resembling hers
+ In which she might have masked herself from me."
+
+The passage grows more and more intelligible. Hitherto he has been
+simply a dreamy seeker; but now, at last, he thinks that Fate has
+answered his questioning exclamation, "Where?"
+
+ "There, one whose voice was venomed melody
+ Sat by a well, under the nightshade bowers;
+ The breath of her false mouth was like faint flowers;
+ Her touch was as electric poison; flame
+ Out of her looks into my vitals came;
+ And from her living cheeks and bosom flew
+ A killing air which pierced like honey-dew
+ Into the core of my green heart, and lay
+ Upon its leaves,--until, as hair grown gray
+ O'er a young brow, they hid its unblown prime
+ With ruins of unseasonable time."
+
+This is a plain and only too intelligible reference to the college
+experiences to which I have alluded. The youth for the moment thought
+that he had encountered her whom he was seeking, but, instead of the
+Florimel, he found her venal, hideous, and fatal _simulacrum_; and
+he indicates even the material consequences to himself in his injured
+aspect and hair touched with gray. He continues his search.
+
+ "In many mortal forms I rashly sought
+ The shadow of that idol of my thought:
+ And some were fair,--but beauty dies away;
+ Others were wise,--but honeyed words betray;
+ And one was true,--oh! why not true to me?
+ Then, as a hunted deer that could not flee,
+ I turned upon my thoughts and stood at bay."
+
+"Oh! why not true to me?" has been taken by some very few who were
+cognizant of the facts as constituting an imputation on the one whom
+he first married; but I am convinced that the interpretation is wrong,
+although the surmise on which that interpretation is based was partly
+correct. Nothing is more evident than the fact that Harriet possessed
+rather an unusual degree of ability, but enormously less than Shelley
+desired in the being whom he sought, and equally less than his
+idealizing estimate originally ascribed to her. It is also plain, from
+her own letters, that she courted his approval in a way far too common
+with the wives of the artist-tribe, and perhaps with most wives: not
+being exactly what he wished her to be, and lacking the faculties to
+become so, she tried to seem it. The desire was partly sincere, partly
+an affectation, as we discern in such little trifles as her suddenly
+using the word "thou" in a letter to Hookham where she had previously
+been using the ordinary colloquial "you." That she was not quite
+ingenuous we also detect in the fast-and-loose conduct which enabled
+her, while affecting to become what Shelley deemed her to be, also to
+play into the hands of very inferior people, who must sometimes have
+counselled her against him behind his back; and this, I am sure, is
+what he means by "Oh! why not true to me?" though he may include
+in the question a fervent regret for the fate which attended her
+wandering from him. "Then like a hunted deer he turned upon his
+thoughts and stood at bay," until
+
+ "The cold day
+ Trembled, for pity of my strife and pain,
+ When, like a noonday dawn, there shone again
+ Deliverance. One stood on my path who seemed
+ As like the glorious shape that I had dreamed
+ As is the Moon, whose changes ever run
+ Into themselves, to the eternal Sun."
+
+"The cold chaste moon" fails to satisfy the longing of his soul.
+"At her silver voice came death and life"; hope and despondency,
+expectation from her noble qualities, disappointment at the failure
+of response, were feelings that sprang from the exaggerations of his
+ideal longings.
+
+ "What storms then shook the ocean of my sleep,
+ Blotting that Moon whose pale and waning lips
+ Then shrank as in the sickness of eclipse!"
+
+The whole passage is worth perusing; and again wrong interpretation
+has been given to this portion of his writing. I am still more firmly
+convinced that in the other case, when he says, "The planet of that
+hour was quenched," he alludes to nothing more than the partial
+failure of his own ideal requirements. At length into the obscure
+forest came
+
+ "The vision I had sought through grief and shame.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I stood and felt the dawn of my long night
+ Was penetrating me with living light:
+ I knew it was the vision veiled from me
+ So many years,--that it was Emily."
+
+To grasp the entire meaning of this autobiographical episode, we must
+remember the extent to which Shelley idealizes. "More popular poets
+clothe the ideal with familiar and sensible imagery; Shelley loved
+to idealize the real,--to gift the mechanism of the material universe
+with a soul and a voice, and to bestow such also on the most delicate
+and abstract emotions and thoughts of the mind. Sophocles was
+his great master in this species of imagery." The heroine of the
+"Epipsychidion" is an imagination; a creature, like Raphael's Galatea,
+copied from no living model, but from "_una certa idea_"; a thing
+originally created by himself, and suggested only by the living
+portrait, as each one of the admired had previously suggested its
+ideal counterpart. Emilia, then, was the bride of a dream, and, in the
+indulgence of disappointed longing for a fuller satisfaction of his
+soul, Shelley mournfully contrasts this vision, who had so eloquently
+responded to his idealizing through her convent-bars, with Mary, whose
+stubborn, independent realism had checked and daunted him.
+
+But the last year of Shelley's life had involved a very considerable
+progress in the formation of his intellectual character. The
+"Prometheus Unbound," perhaps at once the most characteristic and the
+most perfect of all his works, is identical in spirit and tendency
+even with the earliest, "Queen Mab"; but a re-perusal of it in
+comparison with the other writings, even the "Revolt of Islam," will
+show a more distinct presentment of the original ideas, coupled with
+a much more measured suggestion for acting on them, and a far less
+bitter allusion to the obstacles; while the charity and love are more
+all-embracing and apparent than ever. Imperfect as it is for dramatic
+representation, shortcoming even in the power to trace the working
+of emotions and ideas in utterly diverse characters, the "Cenci" does
+indicate a stronger aptitude for sympathy with other creatures
+on their own terms than any other of the poet's writings. He had,
+therefore, sobered in judgment, without declining in his inborn
+genius; but, on the contrary, with a clearer sense of the limits
+placed upon individual action, he had gained strength; and I feel
+certain that a corresponding change had taken place in his perception
+of the true import and value of characters unlike his own. The last
+few months of his life at Lerici had very materially contributed to
+this change. Although I cannot recall any distinct statement to that
+effect by Mary Shelley, her conversation had left that impression on
+me; it is also suggested by the way in which he himself spoke of it,
+and is fully confirmed by the tone of the letters addressed to her
+from Pisa.
+
+
+All who have attempted to portray Shelley, either intellectually or
+physically, have done so from some appreciable, almost personal point
+of view. When many eyes see one object, it presents itself in as many
+different aspects, and the description given by each bears often a
+slight resemblance to that of others. So it has been with Shelley. The
+artistic portraits of him have happened to be particularly imperfect.
+I remember seeing a miniature by an amateur friend which actually
+suggested a form broad and square. The ordinarily received miniature
+is like almost all of its tribe, and resembles Shelley about as
+much as a lady in a book of fashions resembles real women; and it
+constitutes evidence all the more detrimental and misleading, since it
+appears to give as well as to receive a color of verisimilitude from
+the usual written description, which represents Shelley as "feminine,"
+"almost girlish," "ideal," "angelic," and so forth. The accounts of
+him by firmer hands are still cramped by the individuality of the
+authorship.
+
+His school-friend, Hogg, is a gentleman of independent property;
+Shelley detected the sensitiveness of his nature; and I know that the
+man has been capable of truly generous conduct. How is it, then, that
+he has written such utterly unintelligible stuff, and has descended to
+such evasions as to insert initials, lest people should detect amongst
+Shelley's correspondents a most admirable friend, who happened, it
+is supposed, to be of plebeian origin? Mr. Thomas Jefferson Hogg,
+I surmise, was conscious, somewhat early in life, that his better
+qualities were not fully appreciated; and his love of ease, his wit,
+his perception of the ludicrous, made him take refuge in cynicism
+until he learned almost to forget the origin of the real meaning of
+the things he talked about. His account of Shelley is like a figure
+seen through fantastically distorting panes of glass.
+
+Thomas Love Peacock, again, is a man to whose extraordinary powers
+Shelley did full justice. He has worked through a long official career
+without losing his very peculiar dry wit; but a dry wit was not the
+man exactly to discern the form of Shelley's mind, or to portray it
+with accuracy and distinctness.
+
+Few men knew the poet better than my father; but a mind checked by
+"over-refinement," excessive conscientiousness, and an irresistible
+tendency to find out niceties of difference,--a mind, in short, like
+that of Hamlet, cultivated rather than corrected by the trials
+of life, was scarcely suited to comprehend the strong instincts,
+indomitable will, and complete unity of idea which distinguished
+Shelley. Accordingly we have from my father a very doubtful portrait,
+seldom advancing beyond details, which are at once exaggerated and
+explained away by qualifications.
+
+Byron, I suspect, through the natural strength of his perceptive
+power, was likely to have formed a better design; but the two were
+separated soon after he had begun to learn that such a man as Shelley
+might be found on the same earth with himself.
+
+One or two others that have written have been mere tourists or
+acquaintances. Unquestionably the companion who knew him best of all
+was Mary; and although she lacked the power of distinct, positive, and
+absolute portraiture, her writings will be found to contain, together
+with his own, the best materials for forming an estimate of his
+natural character.
+
+The real man was reconcilable with all these descriptions. His traits
+suggested everything that has been said of him; but his aspect,
+conformation, and personal qualities contained more than any one has
+ascribed to him, and more indeed than all put together. A few plain
+matters-of-fact will make this intelligible. Shelley was a tall
+man,--nearly, if not quite, five feet ten in height. He was peculiarly
+slender, and, as I have said already, his chest had palpably
+enlarged after the usual growing period. He retained the same kind
+of straitness in the perpendicular outline on each side of him; his
+shoulders were the reverse of broad, but yet they were not sloping,
+and a certain squareness in them was naturally incompatible with
+anything feminine in his appearance. To his last days he still
+suffered his chest to collapse; but it was less a stoop than a
+peculiar mode of holding the head and shoulders,--the face thrown a
+little forward, and the shoulders slightly elevated; though the whole
+attitude below the shoulders, when standing, was unusually upright,
+and had the appearance of litheness and activity. I have mentioned
+that bodily vigor which he could display; and from his action when I
+last saw him, as well as from Mary's account, it is evident that he
+had not abandoned his exercises, but the reverse. He had an oval face
+and delicate features, not unlike those given to him in the well-known
+miniature. His forehead was high. His fine, dark brown hair, when not
+cut close, disposed itself in playful and very beautiful curls over
+his brows and round the back of his neck. He had brown eyes, with
+a color in his cheek "like a girl's"; but as he grew older, his
+complexion bronzed. So far the reality agrees with the current
+descriptions; nevertheless they omit material facts. The outline of
+the features and face possessed a firmness and _hardness_ entirely
+inconsistent with a feminine character. The outline was sharp and
+firm; the markings distinct, and indicating an energetic _physique_.
+The outline of the bone was distinctly perceptible at the temples, on
+the bridge of the nose, at the back portion of the cheeks, and in the
+jaw, and the artist could trace the principal muscles of the face.
+The beard also, although the reverse of strong, was clearly marked,
+especially about the chin. Thus, although the general aspect was
+peculiarly slight, youthful, and delicate, yet, when you looked to
+"the points" of the animal, you saw well enough the indications of a
+masculine vigor, in many respects far above the average. And what I
+say of the physical aspect of course bears upon the countenance. That
+changed with every feeling. It usually looked earnest,--when
+joyful, was singularly bright and animated, like that of a gay young
+girl,--when saddened, had an aspect of sorrow peculiarly touching, and
+sometimes it fell into a listless weariness still more mournful; but
+for the most part there was a look of active movement, promptitude,
+vigor, and decision, which bespoke a manly, and even a commanding
+character.
+
+The general tendency that all who approached Shelley displayed to
+yield to his dictate is a practical testimony to these qualities;
+for his earnestness was apt to take a tone of command so generous,
+so free, so simple, as to be utterly devoid of offence, and yet to
+constitute him a sort of tyrant over all who came within his reach.
+
+The weakness ascribed to Shelley's voice was equally taken from
+exceptional instances, and the account of it usually suggests the idea
+that he spoke in a falsetto which might almost be mistaken for the
+"shriek" of a harsh-toned woman. Nothing could be more unlike the
+reality. The voice was indeed quite peculiar, and I do not know where
+any parallel to it is likely to be found unless in Lancashire. Shelley
+had no ear for music,--the words that he wrote for existing airs
+being, strangely enough, inappropriate in rhythm and even in cadence;
+and though he had a manifest relish for music and often talked of it,
+I do not remember that I ever heard him sing even the briefest snatch.
+I cannot tell, therefore, what was the "register" of his singing
+voice; but his speaking voice unquestionably was then of a high
+natural counter-tenor. I should say that he usually spoke at a pitch
+somewhere about the D natural above the base line; but it was in no
+respect a falsetto. It was a natural chest-voice, not powerful, but
+telling, musical, and expressive. In reading aloud, the strain was
+peculiarly clear, and had a sustained, song-like quality, which came
+out more strongly when, as he often did, he recited verse. When he
+called out in pain,--a very rare occurrence,--or sometimes in comic
+playfulness, you might hear the "shrillness" of which people talk; but
+it was only because the organ was forced beyond the ordinary effort.
+His usual speech was clear, and yet with a breath in it, with an
+especially distinct articulation, a soft, vibrating tone, emphatic,
+pleasant, and persuasive.
+
+It seems to me that these physical characteristics forcibly illustrate
+the moral and intellectual genius of the man. The impulsiveness which
+has been ascribed to him is a wrong expression, for it is usually
+interpreted to mean the action of sudden motives waywardly,
+capriciously, or at least intermittingly working; whereas the
+character which Shelley so constantly displayed was an overbearing
+strength of conviction and feeling, a species of audacious, but
+chivalrous readiness to act upon conviction as promptly as possible,
+and, above all, a zealous disposition to say out all that was in his
+mind. It is better expressed by the word which some satirist put
+into the mouth of Coleridge, speaking of himself, and, instead of
+impulsiveness, it should have been called an "utterancy," coupled with
+decision and promptitude of action. The physical development of the
+man with the progress of time may be traced in the advancement of his
+writings. The physical qualities which are equally to be found in his
+poetry and prose were quite as manifest in his aspect, and not less
+so in his conduct of affairs. It must be remembered that his life
+terminated long before he had arrived half-way, "_nel mezzo del cammin
+di nostra vita_," when more than one other great intellect has been
+but commencing its true work. I believe, that, if Shelley had lived,
+he would himself have been the most potent and useful commentator on
+his own writings, in the production of other and more complete works.
+But meanwhile the true measure of his genius is to be found in the
+influence which he has had, not only over those who have proclaimed
+their debt to him, but over numbers who have mistrusted and even
+denounced him.
+
+
+
+
+THE TEST.
+
+ "Farewell awhile, my bonnie darling!
+ One long, close kiss, and I depart:
+ I hear the angry trumpet snarling,
+ The drum-beat tingles at my heart."
+
+ Behind him, softest flutes were breathing
+ Across the vale their sweet recall;
+ Before him burst the battle, seething
+ In flame beneath its thunder-pall.
+
+ All sights and sounds to stay invited;
+ The meadows tossed their foam of flowers;
+ The lingering Day beheld, delighted,
+ The dances of his amorous Hours.
+
+ He paused: again the fond temptation
+ Assailed his heart, so firm before,
+ And tender dreams, of Love's creation,
+ Persuaded from the peaceful shore.
+
+ "But no!" he sternly cried; "I follow
+ The trumpet, not the shepherd's reed:
+ Let idlers pipe in pastoral hollow,--
+ Be mine the sword, and mine the deed!
+
+ "Farewell to Love!" he murmured, sighing:
+ "Perchance I lose what most is dear;
+ But better there, struck down and dying,
+ Than be a man and wanton here!"
+
+ He went where battle's voice was loudest;
+ He pressed where danger nearest came;
+ His hand advanced, among the proudest,
+ Their banner through the lines of flame.
+
+ And there, when wearied Carnage faltered,
+ He, foremost of the fallen, lay,
+ While Night looked down with brow unaltered,
+ And breathed the battle's dust away.
+
+ There lying, sore from wounds untended,
+ A vision crossed the starry gleam:
+ The girl he loved beside him bended,
+ And kissed him in his fever-dream.
+
+ "Oh, love!" she cried, "you fled, to find me;
+ I left with you the daisied vale;
+ I turned from flutes that wailed behind me,
+ To hear your trumpet's distant hail.
+
+ "Your tender vows, your peaceful kisses,
+ They scarce outlived the moment's breath;
+ But now we clasp immortal blisses
+ Of passion proved on brinks of Death!
+
+ "No fate henceforward shall estrange her
+ Who finds a heart more brave than fond;
+ For Love, forsook this side of danger,
+ Waits for the man who goes beyond!"
+
+
+
+
+THE PREACHER'S TRIAL.
+
+Sitting in my New-England study, as do so many of my tribe, to peruse
+the "Atlantic," I wonder whether, like its namesake, hospitable to
+many persons and things, it will for once let me write as well as
+read, and launch from my own calling a theme on its bosom. Our cloth
+has been worn so long in the world, I doubt how far it may suit with
+new fashions in fine company-parlors; but, seeing room is so cordially
+made for some of my brethren, as the Reverend Mr. Wilbur and "The
+Country Parson," to keep up the dignity of the profession, I am
+emboldened to come for a day with what the editorial piety may accept,
+"rejected article" as it might be elsewhere.
+
+The pulpit has lost something of its old sacredness in the general
+mind. There is little popular superstition to endure its former
+dictation. No exclusive incarnate theocracy in any particular persons
+is left, Leviticus and the Hebrew priesthood are gone. Church,
+ministry, and Sabbath are the regular targets taken out by our moral
+riflemen and archers, though so seldom to hit fair in the centre, that
+we may find ourselves, like spectators at the match, respecting the
+old targets more than we do the shots. Yet homilies and exporters are
+thought fair game. I have even heard splendid lecturers whose wit
+ran so low or who were so pushed for matter as to talk of what
+divinity-students wear round their necks, which seems a superficial
+consideration. The anciently venerated desk has two sharp enemies,
+the radical and the conservative, aiming their artillery from opposite
+sides, putting it somewhat in the position of the poor fish who is in
+danger from diverse classes of its fellow-creatures, one in the air
+and one in the water, and knows not whether to dive or rise to the
+surface, till it can conclude which is the more pleasant exit from
+life, to be hawked at or swallowed outright.
+
+While, however, critics and reformers fail to furnish a fit substitute
+for the sermon, and the finest essays show not only Bacon's "dry
+light," but a very cold one too, and the wit and humor of the lyceum
+fall short of any mark in the conscience of mankind, and philanthropy
+uses stabbing often instead of surgery, a clerical institution, on
+whose basis direct admonition can be administered by individuals
+without egotism or impertinence, maintains an indefeasible claim.
+Indeed, as was fancied of the innocent in the ordeal by fire, or like
+the children from the furnace, it comes out the other side of all
+censure, with some odor of sanctity yet on its unsinged robes and new
+power in higher quarters in its hands. Defective, indeed, it is. If
+some of its organs could speak a little more in their natural voice,
+and could, moreover, wash off the deformity of this Indian war-paint
+of high-wrought rhetoric,--if they could use a little more of the
+colloquial earnestness of the street and table in their style, instead
+of those freaks of eloquence which, among all our associations,
+there ought to be a society to put down,--they would more honor their
+vocation, and effect its purpose of saving human souls. Let us not be
+so loudmouthed, or bluster as we do. Our declamation will have to hush
+its barbarian noise some time. Nothing but conversation will be
+left in heaven; and it were well, could we have on earth sober and
+thoughtful assemblies, at blood-warmth instead of fever-heat, rather
+than those over-crowded halls from which _hundreds go away unable to
+obtain admission_.
+
+But the present design is a plea for justice, not a fresh charge.
+The pulpit is to teach religion in application to life. But when we
+reflect what life is, how deep in the soul, how wide in the world,
+how complicated and delicate in its affairs and ties,--and when, we
+consider what religion is, the whole truth of heaven respecting
+all the operations of earth,--a kindly judgment is required for
+unavoidable short-comings and ministerial mistakes. With different
+ages, sexes, experiences, states of mind, degrees of intelligence and
+impressibleness in a congregation, it is a rare felicity for a sermon
+to reach all its members with equal impressiveness or acceptance. Who
+ever heard a uniform estimate of any discourse? There seems almost a
+curse upon the preacher's office from its very greatness, so that it
+is never finished, and no portion of it can be done perfectly well and
+secure against all objection. If he try to unfold the deep things
+of the Spirit, and bring his best thoughts, which he would not throw
+away, before his audience, though in language clearer than many a
+chapter of Paul's Epistles, _some_ will call the topic obscure, and
+complain that their children cannot understand it, quoting, perhaps,
+the old sentence, that all truth necessary to salvation is so plain
+that he who runs may read, and the wayfaring man, though a fool,
+cannot err therein, and commending superficial homilies on other
+tongues to censure whatever is profound from his. But should the
+poor occupant of the desk venture to emulate this eulogized sonorous
+exhortation, exerting himself to come down to the ignorant and the
+young, there will be _some_ to stigmatize that, too, as a sort of
+trifling and disrespect to mature minds. He has by a senior now and
+then been blamed for excessive attention to the lambs of his flock,
+and annoyed with the menace to stay away, if they were especially
+to be noticed. If a visitation of special grace or an exaltation of
+physical strength make the mortal incumbent happy in his exposition,
+so that he is listened to with edification and delight, it is, by
+some, not passed over to his credit at the ebb-tide of his power. Half
+the time the house is not half full, as though the institution which
+all order to be conducted nobody but he is bound to shoulder. If the
+preacher labor to express the mysterious relationship between God and
+Christ, the divine and human nature, he will be considered by _some_
+a sectarian, controversialist, or heretic. If he unfold what is
+above all denominational disputes, he will be fortunate to escape
+accusations of transcendentalism, pantheism, spiritualism. If, lucky
+man, he go scot-free of such indictment, a last stunning stroke, in
+the gantlet he runs, will be sure to fetch him up, in the vague and
+unanswerable imputation of being _very peculiar in his views_. If
+he insist on the miracles as literal facts, he will be laughed at as
+old-fashioned in one pew; if he slight them, he will be mourned over
+as unsound in the next. Men grumble at taxes and tolls; alas! nobody
+is stopped at so many gates and questioned in so many ways as he. If
+he take in hand the tender matter of consoling stricken hearts, the
+ecstasy of his visions will not save his topic from being regarded by
+some as painful, and by others as a mere shining of the moon. He will
+receive special requests not to harrow up the feelings he only meant
+to bind up in balm. He may be informed of an aversion, more or less
+extensive, to naming the _grave_ or _coffin_ and what it contains,
+though he only puts one foot by pall or bier to plant the other in
+paradise. If he turn the everlasting verities he is intrusted with to
+events transpiring on the public stage, though he never sided with any
+party in his life, and has no more committed himself to men than did
+his Master, _some_ will be grieved at his _preaching politics_. His
+head has throbbed, his heart ached, his eyes were hot and wet
+once before he uttered himself; but he must suffer and weep worse
+afterwards, because he went too far for one man and not far enough for
+another. He is told, one day, that he is too severe on seceders, and
+the next, ironically, that, with such merciful sentiments towards
+them, he ought always to wear a cravat completely white. One man is
+amused at his sermon, and another thinks the same is sad. He will be
+asked if he cannot give a little less of one thing or more of another,
+as though he were a dealer in wares or an exhibiter of curious
+documents for a price, and could take an article from this or that
+shelf, or a paper from any one of a hundred pigeon-holes, when, if he
+be a servant of the Lord and organ of the Holy Ghost, he has no choice
+and is shut up to his errand,--necessity is laid upon him, woe is unto
+him if he deliver it not, but, like another Jonah, flee to Tarshish
+when the Lord tells him to go to Nineveh and cry against its
+wickedness; and he feels through every nerve that truth is not a
+thing to be carried round as merchandise or peddled out at all to suit
+particular tastes, to retain old friends or win new ones, hard as it
+may go, to the anguish of his soul, to lose the good-will of those he
+loves, and whose distrust is a chronic pang, though they come to love
+him again all the more for what he has suffered and said. But if,
+passing by discussions of general interest, and exposing himself
+to the hint of being behind the times, he grapple with the sins
+immediately about him, board the false customs of society and trade,
+and strike with the sword of the Lord at private vices and family
+faults, he will be blamed as very _personal_, and be apprised of his
+insults to those of whom in his delivery he never thought, as he may
+never preach _at_ anybody, or even _to_ anybody, in his most direct
+thrusting, more than to himself, reaching others only through his own
+wounded heart. Meantime, some of his ecclesiastical constituents
+will suspect him, in his local ethics, of leniency to wide-spread
+corruption; and professed philanthropists will brand him as a trimmer
+and coward, recreant, fawning, and dumb,--the term _spaniel_ having
+been flung at one of the best men and most conscientious ministers
+that ever lived, simply because he could not vituperate as harshly
+as some of his neighbors. Some would have him remember only those in
+bonds; others say they cannot endure from him even the word _slavery_.
+Blessed, if, from all these troubles, he can, for solace, and with a
+sense of its significance, bethink himself of Christ's saying to
+his disciples, "Woe unto you, when all men shall speak well of you!"
+Thrice blessed, if he have an assurance and in that inward certificate
+possess the peace which passeth understanding!
+
+I intend not, by my simple story, which has in it no fiction, to add
+to the lamentations of the old prophet, nor will allow Jeremiah to
+represent all my mood. It is perfectly fit the laity should criticize
+the clergy. The minister,--who is he but one of the people, set apart
+to particular functions, open to a judgment on the manner of their
+discharge, from which no sacred mission or supposed apostolic
+succession can exempt, the Apostles having been subject to it
+themselves? Under their robes and ordinances, in high-raised desks,
+priest and bishop are but men, after all. Ministers should be grateful
+for all the folk's frankness. Only let the criticism be considerate
+and fair; and in order to its becoming so, let us ascertain the
+perfect model of their calling. Did not their Master give it, when he
+said, "The field is the world"? If so, then to everything in the world
+must the pulpit apply the moral law. What department of it shall be
+excused? _Politics_,--because it embraces rival schools in the same
+worshipping body, and no disinterested justice in alluding to its
+principles can be expected from a preacher, or because whoever
+disagrees with his opinions must be silent, there being on Sunday and
+in the sanctuary no decency allowed of debate or reply, and therefore
+whatever concerns the civil welfare and salvation of the community is
+out of the watchman's beat now, though God so expressly bade him warn
+the city of old? _Commerce_,--because a minister understands nothing
+of the elements and necessities of business, and must blunder in
+pointing to banks and shops or any transactions of the street, though
+an old preacher, called Solomon, in his Proverbs refers so sharply to
+the buyer and the seller? _Pleasure_,--because the servant of the Lord
+cannot be supposed to sympathize with, but only to denounce, amusement
+which poor tired humanity employs for its recreation, though Miriam's
+smiting of her timbrel, which still rings from the borders of the
+raging Red Sea, and David's dancing in a linen ephod with all his
+might before the Lord, when the ark on a new cart came into the
+city, were a sort of refreshment of triumphant sport? _The social
+circle_,--because of course he cannot go to parties or comprehend the
+play of feeling in which the natural affections run to and fro,
+and should rather be at home reading his Bible, turning over his
+Concordance, and writing his sermon, letting senate and dance, market
+and exchange, opera and theatre, fights and negotiations go to the
+winds, so he only comes duly with his _exegesis_ Sunday morning to his
+place? In short, is the minister's concern and call of God only, with
+certain imposing formalities and prearranged dogmas, to greet in their
+Sunday-clothes his friends who have laid aside their pursuits and
+delights with the gay garments or working-dress of the week, never
+reminding them of what, during the six days, they have heard or where
+they have been? "No!" let him say; "if this is to be a minister, no
+minister can I be!" For what is left of the field the Lord sends the
+minister into? It is cut up and fenced off into countless divisions,
+to every one of which some earthly-agent or interest brings a
+title-deed. The minister finds the land of the world, like some vast
+tract of uncivilized territory, seized by wild squatters, owned and
+settled by other parties, and, as a famous political-economist said
+in another connection, there is no cover at Nature's table for him.
+As with the soldier in the play, whose wars were over, _his_
+"occupation's gone."
+
+What is the minister, then? A ghost, or a figure like some in the
+shop-window, all made up of dead cloth and color into an appearance of
+life? Verily, he comes almost to that. But no such shape, no spectre
+from extinct animation of thousands of years ago, like the geologist's
+skeletons reconstructed from lifeless strata of the earth, can answer
+the vital purposes of the revelation from God. Of no pompous or
+abstract ritual administration did the Son of God set an example. He
+had a parable for the steward living when _He_ did; He called
+King Herod, then reigning, _a fox_, and the Scribes and Pharisees
+hypocrites; He declared the prerogatives of His Father beyond Cæsar's;
+He maintained a responsibility of human beings coextensive with the
+stage and inseparable from the smallest trifle of their existence. He
+did not limit His marvellous tongue to antiquities and traditions. He
+used the mustard-seed in the field and the leaven in the lump for His
+everlasting designs. His finger was stretched out to the cruel stones
+of self-righteousness flying through the air, and phylacteries of
+dissimulation worn on the walk. He was so _political_, He would have
+saved Jerusalem and Judea from Roman ruin, and wept because He could
+not, with almost the only tears mentioned of His. Those who teach in
+His name should copy after His pattern.
+
+"_Confine yourselves to the old first Gospel, preach Christianity,
+early Christianity_," we ministers are often told. But what is
+Christianity, early or late, and what does the Gospel mean, but a rule
+of holy living in every circumstance now? Grief and offence may come,
+as Jesus says they must; misapplications and complaints, which are
+almost always misapprehensions, may be made; but are not these better
+than indifference and death? No doubt there is a prudence, and still
+more an impartial candor and equity, in treating every matter, but
+no beauty in timid flight from any matter there is to treat. The
+clergyman, like every man, speaks at his peril, and is as accountable
+as any one for what he says. He ought justly and tenderly to remember
+the diverse tenets represented among his auditors, to side with
+no sect as such, to give no individual by his indorsement a mean
+advantage over any other, nor any one a handle of private persecution
+by his open anathema. Moreover, he should abstain from that
+particularity in secular themes which so easily wanders from all
+sight of spiritual law amid regions of uncertainty and speculative
+conjecture. He should shun explorations less fit for prophets than for
+experts. He should lay his finger on no details in which questions of
+right and wrong are not plainly involved. He must be public-spirited;
+he cannot be more concerned for his country and his race, that
+righteousness and liberty and love may prevail, than divine seers have
+ever been, as their books of record show; but, if he becomes a mere
+diplomatist, financier, secretary-of-state, or military general, in
+his counsels or his tone, he evacuates his own position, flees as
+a craven from his post, and assumes that of other men. Yet it is an
+extreme still worse for him to resort to lifeless generalities of
+doctrine and duty, producing as little effect as comes from electric
+batteries or telegraphic wires when no magnetic current is established
+and no object reached. What section, of the world should evade or defy
+the law of God?
+
+O preachers, beware of your sentimental descant on the worth of
+goodness, the goodness of being good, and the sinfulness of sin,
+without specifying either! It is a blank cartridge, or one of
+treacherous sand instead of powder, or a spiked gun, only whose
+priming explodes without noise or execution. Let nobody dodge the sure
+direction of that better than lead or iron shot with which from you
+the conscience is pierced and iniquity slain. Suffer not the statesman
+to withdraw his policy, nor the broker his funds, nor the captain the
+cause he fights for, from the sentence of divine truth on the good or
+evil in all the acts of men.
+
+The preacher, however, as he pronounces or reports that sentence, must
+never forget the bond he is under in his own temper to the spirit of
+impartial love. Whatever is vindictive vitiates his announcement all
+the more that he cannot be rebuked for it, as he ought to be, on the
+spot. Only let not the hearers mistake earnestness for vindictiveness.
+If kindly and with intense serenity he communicates what he has
+struggled long and hard to attain, then for their own sake, if not for
+his, they should beware of visiting him either with silent distrust or
+open reproach. He, just like them, must stand or fall according to his
+fidelity to the oracles of God. Only, once more, let him and let
+the Church comprehend that those oracles are not summed up in any
+laborious expounding of verbal texts. "The letter killeth," unless
+itself enlivened through the immediate Providence.
+
+To be true to God, the preacher must be true to his time, as the
+Prophets, Jesus, and the Apostles were to theirs. The pulpit dies of
+its dignity, when it creeps into the exhausted receiver of foregone
+conclusions, and has nothing to say but of Adam and Pharaoh, Jew
+and Gentile, Palestine and Tyre so far away. Its decorum of being
+inoffensive to others is suicidal for itself. It is the sleep of
+death for all. As the inductive philosopher took all knowledge for
+his province, it must take all life. We have, indeed, a glorious and
+venerable charter of inestimable worth in our map of the religious
+history of mankind through centuries that are gone. We must study
+the true meaning of the Bible, _the book_ and chief collection of
+the records of faith, precious above all for the immortal image and
+photograph, in so many a shifting light and various expression, of
+the transcendent form of divinity through manhood in Him to be ever
+reverently and lovingly named, Jesus Christ. But there is a spirit in
+man. "The word of God," says an Apostle, "is not bound"; nor can it
+be wholly bound up. The Holy Spirit of God that first descended never
+died, and never ceased to act on the human soul. The day of miracles
+is not past,--or, if none precisely like those of Jesus are
+still wrought, miracles of grace, the principal workings of the
+supernatural, of which external prodigies are the lowest species, are
+performed abundantly in the living breast. Jesus Himself, after all
+the sufficient and summary grandeur of His instructions, assures
+His followers of the Spirit that would come to lead them, beyond
+whatsoever He had said, into all truth. In that dispensation of the
+Spirit we live. Its sphere endures through all change, impregnable.
+It is "builded far from accident." No progress of earthly science can
+threat or hurt its eternal proportions. It is the supreme knowledge,
+and to whoever enters it a whisper comes whose only response is the
+confession of our noble hymn,--
+
+ "True science is to read Thy name."
+
+Much is said of a contradictory relation of science to faith. But the
+statement is a misnomer. True faith is the lushest science, even the
+knowledge of God. Putting fishes or birds, shells or flowers, stones
+or stars, in a circle or a row is a lower science than the sublime
+intercommunication of the soul by prayer and love with its Father.
+Mere physical, without spiritual science, has no bottom to hold
+anything, and no foundation of peace. The king of science is not the
+naturalist as such, but the saint conversing with Divinity,--not so
+much Humboldt or La Place as Fénelon or Luther. So far as the progress
+of outward science saps accredited writings, they must give way, or
+rather any false conceptions of Nature they imply must yield, leaving
+whatever spirituality there is in them untouched. But this is from
+no essential contradiction between science and religious faith. What
+faith or religion is there in believing the world was made in six
+days? Less than in calculating, with Agassiz, by the coral reefs of
+Florida, that to make one bit of it took more than sixty thousand
+years. Religious faith, what is it? It is the trembling transport with
+which the soul hearkens and gives itself up to God, in sympathy with
+all likewise entranced souls. But from such consecrated listening to
+the voice of Deity, fresh in our bosom or echoed from without by those
+He has inspired, we verify the rule already affirmed, and fetch
+advice and command for all the affairs of life. It is emphatically
+the minister's duty thus to join the vision to the fact, that they
+may strike through and through one another. Certainly, so the true
+minister's speech should run. Let him stand up and boldly say, or
+always imply, "I so construe it; and if the _Church_ interpret it
+otherwise, the Church is no place for me. If the _world_ will accept
+no such method, the world is no place for me. I see not why I was
+born, or what with Church or world I have to do. From Church and world
+I should beg leave to retire, trusting that God's Universe, somewhere
+beyond this dingy spot, is true to the persuasion of His mind. I must
+apply religion universally to life, or not at all. If, when my country
+is in peril, I cannot bring her to the altar and ask that she may be
+lifted up in the arms of a common supplication,--if, in the terrible
+game of honesty with political corruption, when '_Check_' is said
+to the adverse power, I cannot wish and pray that '_Checkmate_' may
+follow,--when some huge evil, sorely wounded, in its fierce throes
+spreads destruction about, as the dying monster in Northern seas casts
+up boat-loads of dying men who fall bruised and bleeding among the
+fragments into the waves with the threshing of its angry tail, if
+then I cannot hope that the struggle may be short, and the ship of the
+Republic gather back her crew from prevailing in the conflict to sail
+prosperous with all her rich cargo of truth and freedom on the voyage
+over the sea of Time,--if no sound of the news-boy's cry must mix with
+the echoes of solemn courts, and no reflection of wasting fires in
+which life and treasure melt can flash through their windows, and
+no deeds of manly heroism or womanly patriotism are to have applause
+before God and Christ in the temple,--if nothing but some preexisting
+scheme of salvation, distinct from all living activity, must absorb
+the mind,--then I totally misunderstand and am quite out of my place.
+Then let me go. It is high time I were away. I have stayed too long
+already." Such should be the speech of the minister, knowing he is
+not tempted to be a partisan, and is possessed with but an over-kind
+sensibility to dread any ruffling of others' feelings or discord with
+those that are dear.
+
+In the first year of a young minister's service, Dr. Channing besought
+him to let no possible independence of parochial support relax his
+industry: a needless caution to one not constituted to feel seductions
+of sloth, in whom active energy is no merit, and who can have no
+motive but the people's good. What else is there for him to seek?
+There is no by-end open, and no virtue in a devotedness there is no
+lure to forego. There is no position he can covet, as politicians are
+said to bid for the Presidency. But one thing is indispensable: he
+must tell what he thinks; he is strong only in his convictions; the
+sacrifice of them he cannot make; it were but his debility, if he did;
+and the treasury of all the fortunes of the richest parish were no
+more than a cipher to purchase it from any one who, quick as he may
+be to human kindness, may have a more tremulous rapture for the
+approbation of God.
+
+After all, to his profession and parish the preacher is in debt.
+Exquisite rewards his work yields. If controversy arise on some point
+with his friends, there may, after a while, be no remnant of hard
+feeling,--as there are heavy cannonades, and no bit of wadding picked
+up. Those who have striven with or defamed may come to cherish him all
+the more for their alienation. Those who could not hear him, or, when
+they heard, thought him too long, or what they heard did not like, may
+own with him, out of their discontent, closer and sweeter bonds. His
+business is expansive in its nature. The seasons of human life in
+broad representation are always before him. How many moral springs and
+summers, autumns and winters he sees, till he can hardly tell whether
+his musing on this curious existence be memory or hope, retrospect
+of earth or prospect of heaven! and he begins to think the spiritual
+world abolishes distinctions of spheres and times, as parents, that
+were his lambs, bring their babes to his arms, and, even in the
+flesh, his mortal passing into eternal vision, he beholds, as in
+vivid dreaming, other parents leading their children on other shores,
+unseen, though hard by. Where, after a score or two of years, is his
+church? He has several congregations,--one within the dedicated walls,
+one of emigrants whom his fancy instead of the bell assembles, and
+a third of elders and little ones gone back through the shadow of
+mystery whence they came. In what abides of the flock nothing remains
+as it was. Wondrous transformations snow maturity or decline in the
+very forms that, to his also changing eye and hand, once wore soft
+cheeks and silken locks. In his experience, miracle is less than
+creation and lower than truth. He cannot credit Memory's ever losing
+her seat, he has such things to remember. The best thereof can never
+be written down, published, uttered by orators, or blown from the
+trumpet of Fame, whose "brave instrument" must put up with a meaner
+message and inferior breath. Out of his affections are born his
+beliefs; earth is the cradle of his expectancy and persuasion of
+heaven; and not otherwise than through the glass of his experience
+could he have sight of a sphere of ineffable glory for better growth
+than Nature here affords in all her gardens and fields.
+
+So let the preacher stand by his order. But let him be just, also, to
+the constituency from which it springs. Hearty and cheerful, though
+obscure worker, let him be. Let him fling his weaver's shuttle still,
+daily while he lives, through the crossing party-colored threads of
+human life, till, in his factory too, beauty flows from confusion,
+contradiction ends in harmony, and the blows with which each one has
+been stricken form the perfect pattern from all. There is a unity
+which all faithful labor, through whatever jars, consults and creates.
+Of all criticisms the resultant is truth; be the conflicts what they
+may, the issue shall be peace; and one music of affection is yet
+angelically to flow from the many divided notes of human life. Who is
+the _minister_, then? No ordained functionary alone, but every man or
+woman that has lived and served, loved and lamented, and now, for such
+ends, suffers and hopes.
+
+
+
+
+THE GHOST OF LITTLE JACQUES.
+
+
+How quiet the saloon was, that morning, as I groped my way through the
+little white tables, the light chairs, and the dimness of early dawn
+to the windows. It was my business to open the windows every morning,
+finding my way down as best I could; for it was not permitted to light
+the gas at that hour, and no candles were allowed, lest they should
+soil the furniture. This morning the glass dome which brightened the
+ceiling, and helped to lighten the saloon, was of very little effect,
+so cloudy and dusk was the sky. The high houses which shut in the
+strip of garden on all sides reflected not a ray of light. A
+chill struck through me, as I passed along the marble pavement; a
+saloon-dampness, empty, vault-like, hung about the fireless, sunless
+place; and the plashing of the fountain which dripped into the marble
+basin beyond--dropping, dropping, incessantly--struck upon my ear like
+water trickling down the side of a cave.
+
+It had never occurred to me to think the place lonely or dreary
+before, or to demur at this morning operation of opening it for the
+day; a tawdry, gilded, showy hall, it had seemed to me quite a grand
+affair, compared with those in which I had hitherto found employment.
+Now I shuddered and shivered, and felt the task, always regarded as a
+compliment to my honesty, to be indeed hard and heavy enough.
+
+It might have been--yet I was not a coward--that the little coffin
+in that little room at the end of the saloon had something to do with
+this uneasiness. On each side of that narrow room (which opened upon a
+long hall leading to the front of the building) were the small windows
+looking out upon the garden, which I always unbolted first. I say I
+do not know that this presence of death had anything to do with my
+trepidation. The death of a child was no very solemn or very uncommon
+thing in my master's family. He had many children, and, when death
+thinned their ranks, took the loss like a philosopher,--as he was,--a
+French philosopher. He philosophized that his utmost exertions could
+not do much more for the child than bequeath to him just such a
+life as he led, and a share in just such a saloon as he owned; and
+therefore, if a priest and a coffin insured the little innocent
+admission into heaven without any extra charge, he would not betray
+such lack of wisdom as to demur at the proposition. Therefore, very
+quietly, since I had been in his employ, (about a twelvemonth,) three
+of his children, one by one, had been brought down to that little room
+at the end of the saloon, and thence through the long hall, through
+the crowded street out to some unheard-of burying-ground, where a pot
+of flowers and a painted cross supplied the place of a head-stone.
+The shop was not shut up on these occasions: that would have been an
+unnecessary interference with the comfort of customers, and loss
+of time and money. The necessity of providing for his little living
+family had quite disenthralled Monsieur C---- from any weakly
+sentimentality in regard to his little dead family.
+
+So I do not know why I shuddered, being also myself somewhat of a
+philosopher,--of such cool philosophy as grows out inevitably from the
+hard and stony strata of an overworked life. The sleeper within
+was certainly better cared for now than he ever had been in life.
+Monsieur's purse afforded no holiday-dress but a shroud; three of
+these in requisition within so short a time quite scanted the wardrobe
+of the other children. Little Jacques had always been a somewhat
+restless and unhappy baby, longing for fresh air, and a change which
+he never got; it seemed likely, so far as the child's promise was
+concerned, that the "great change" was his only chance of variety, and
+the very best thing that could have happened to him.
+
+And yet, after all, there was something about his death which
+individualized it, and hung a certain sadness over its occurrence that
+does not often belong to the death of children, or at least had not
+marked the departure of his two stout little brothers. Scarlet-fever
+and croup and measles are such every-day, red-winged, mottled angels,
+that no one is appalled at their presence; they take off the little
+sufferer in such vigorous fashion, clutch him with so hearty a
+grip, that one is compelled to open the door, let them out, and
+feel relieved when the exit is made. It is only when some dim-eyed,
+white-robed shape, scarcely seen, scarcely felt, steps softly in and
+steals away the little troublesome bundle of life with solemn eye and
+hushed lip, that we have time to pause, to look, to grieve.
+
+This little Jacques, when I came to his father's house, was a rampant,
+noisy, cunning child, with the vivacity of French and American blood
+mingling in his veins, and filling him with strongest tendencies to
+mischief, and prompting elfish feats of activity. He was not by any
+means a fascinating child,--in fact, no children ever fascinated
+me,--but this little fellow was rather disagreeable, a wonder to his
+father, a horror to his mother, and a great annoyance generally;
+we were all rather cross with him, and he was universally put down,
+thrust aside, and ordered out of the way.
+
+This was the state of affairs when I came. It was little Jacques, with
+a high forehead, white, tightly curling hair, and mischief-full blue
+eye, who made himself translator of all imaginable inquisitorial
+French phrases for my benefit,--who questioned, and tormented,
+and made faces at me,--who pulled my apron, disappeared with my
+carpet-bag, and placed a generous slice of molasses-candy upon the
+seat of my chair, when I sat down to rest myself.
+
+Little Jacques ardently loved a sly fishing-expedition on the edge
+of the marble fountain-basin, and had lured one or two unthinking
+gold-fish to destruction with fly and a crooked pin. He would sit
+perched up there at an odd chance, when his father was away, and he
+dared venture into the saloon,--his little bare feet twinkling against
+the water, his plump figure curled up into the minutest size, but
+ready for a spring and a dart up-stairs at the shortest notice of
+danger. This piscatory propensity had been severely punished by both
+Monsieur and Madame C----, who could not afford to encourage such an
+expensive Izaak Walton; but there was no managing the child. He
+seemed to possess an impish capability of eluding detection and angry
+denunciations. To be sure, circumstances were against any very strict
+guard being kept over the youngster. Madame C---- was a very weak
+woman, a very weak woman indeed,--she declared that such was the
+case,--a nervous, dispirited woman, whom everything troubled, who
+could not bear the noise and tramp of life, and altogether sank under
+it. Destiny had had no mercy on her weakness, however, and had left
+her to get along with an innumerable family of children, a philosophic
+husband, who took all her troubles coolly, and a constant demand
+for her services either in the shop or at the cradle. She could not,
+therefore, have patience with the incessant anxiety which little
+Jacques excited by his pranks.
+
+One day Madame C---- had gone out for a walk, leaving the children
+locked in a room above, five of them, two younger and two older
+than Jacques; and these together had been in a state of riotous
+insurrection the whole morning. Little Jacques was not of a
+disposition to submit to ignominious imprisonment, when human
+ingenuity could devise means of escape; while his brothers were
+running wild together, he soberly hunted up another key, screwed and
+scraped and got it into the key-hole; it turned, and he was out.
+
+Half an hour afterwards, his mother, returning, caught the unfortunate
+fugitive contemplatively perched on the edge of the fountain-basin. In
+such a frenzy of anger as only unreasonable people are subject to,
+she caught the child, shivering with terror, and thrust him into the
+water. The gold-fish splashed and swirled, and the water streamed over
+the sides of the basin. It was only an instant's work; snatching up
+the forlorn fisher, she shook him unmercifully, and set him upon the
+floor, dripping and breathless. I saw nothing of them until night.
+His mother had then recovered her usual peevishness, weakness, and
+inefficiency; the ebullition of energy had entirely subsided. I was
+curious to know whether the summary punishment had had any effect upon
+Jacques; but he was asleep, as soundly as usual after a day's hard
+frolic.
+
+My curiosity was likely to be gratified to satiety. A strange change
+came over the little fellow after this. To one accustomed to his apish
+activity, and to being annoyed by it, there was something plaintive
+in the fact of having got rid of that trouble. The child was silent,
+mopish, "good," as his mother said, congratulating herself on the
+effect of her summary visitation upon the offender.
+
+When, however, a month passed without any return of the evil
+propensities, this continued quiescence grew to be something ghostly,
+and, to people who had only their own hands to depend on for a living,
+a subject of anxiety and alarm: it was expensive to clothe and feed a
+child who promised but little service in future.
+
+"The _enfant_ will never come to anything," said Monsieur; "we could
+better have spared him than Jean."
+
+To which his wife shook her head, and solemnly assented.
+
+The '_enfant_,' however, gave no signs of taking the hint. Day after
+day his little ministerial head and flaxen curls were visible over
+the top of his old-fashioned arm-chair, and day after day his food was
+demanded, and his appetite was as good as ever.
+
+Watching the child, whose blue eyes, now the mischief was out of them,
+grew utterly vacant of expression, I unaccountably to myself came to
+feel an uncomfortable interest in, a morbid sympathy with him,--an
+uneasy, unhappy sympathy, more physical than mental.
+
+No fault could have been found with the motherly carefulness and
+attention of Madame C----. It was charmingly polite and French. But
+the sight of her preparing the child's food, or coaxing him
+with unaccustomed delicacies and _bonbons_, grew to be utterly
+distasteful,--an infliction so nervously annoying that I could not
+overcome it. A secret antipathy which I had nourished against Madame
+seemed to be germinating; every action of hers irritated me, every
+sound of her sharp, yet well-modulated voice gave me a tremor. The
+truth was, that plunge into the water, taking place so unexpectedly in
+my presence, had startled and upset me almost as completely as if it
+had befallen myself. A hard-working woman had no business with such
+nerves. I knew that, and tried to annihilate them; but the more I
+cut them down, the more they bled. The thing was a mere trifle,--the
+fountain-basin was shallow, the water healthy,--nothing could be more
+healthy than bathing,--and, at any rate, it was no affair of mine.
+Yet my mind in some unhealthy mood aggravated the circumstances, and
+colored everything with its own dark hue.
+
+I could not give up my place, of course not; I was not likely to get
+so good a situation anywhere else; I could not risk it; and yet the
+servitude of horror under which I was held for a few weeks was almost
+enough to reconcile one to starvation. Only that I was kept busy
+in the shop most of the time, and had little leisure to observe the
+course of affairs, or to be in Madame's society, I should have given
+warning,--foolishly enough,--for there was not a tangible thing of
+which I had to complain. But a shapeless suspicion which for some days
+had been brooding in my mind was taking form, too dim for me to
+dare to recognize it, but real enough to make me feel a miserable
+fascination to the house while little Jacques still lived, a magnetic,
+uncomfortable necessity for my presence, as though it were in some
+sort a protection against an impending evil.
+
+Such suspicion I did not, of course, presume to name, scarcely
+presumed to think, it seemed so like an unnatural monstrosity of my
+own mind. But when, one morning, the child died, holding in his
+hands the _bonbons_ his mother had given him, and Madame C----, all
+agitation and frenzy and weeping, still contrived to extract them from
+the tightly closed, tiny fists, and threw them into the grate, I felt
+a horrid thrill like the effect of the last scene in a tragedy. _I
+knew that the bonbons were poisoned_.
+
+So that is the reason I shuddered as I passed through the saloon.
+
+Throwing open the window, a dim light flickered through, and a sickly
+ray fell upon the fountain. It shivered upon the dripping marble
+column in its centre, and struck with an icy hue the water in the
+basin below. The fountain was not in my range of vision from the
+window; but I often turned to look at it as I opened the shutters,
+thinking it a pretty sight when the drops sparkled in the misty light
+against the background of the otherwise darkened room. It pleased my
+imagination to watch the effect produced by a little more or a little
+less opening of the shutters,--a nonsensical morning play-spell, which
+quite enlivened me for the sedate occupations of the day. It was,
+however, not imagination now which whispered to me that there was
+something else to look at beside the jet of water and the shadowy
+play of light. Stooping down upon the fountain-brink, absorbed in
+contemplating the gold-fish swimming below, and with its naked little
+feet touching the water's edge, a tiny figure sat. My first thought
+(the first thoughts of fear are never reasonable) was, that some child
+from up-stairs had stolen down unawares, (as children are quite as
+fond as grown folks of forbidden pleasures,) to amuse itself with the
+water. But the children were not risen yet, and the saloon was too
+utterly dark and dismal at that hour to tempt the bravest of them.
+Second thoughts reminded me of that certainty, and I looked again. The
+figure raised its head from its drooping posture, and gazed vacantly,
+out of a pair of dim blue eyes, at me. The eyes were the eyes of
+little Jacques.
+
+I do not know how I should have been so utterly overcome, but I
+started up in terror as I felt the dreamy phantom-gaze fixed upon me,
+raising my hands wildly above my head. The hammer which I held in my
+hand to drive back the bolts of the shutters flew from my grasp and
+struck the great mirror,--the new mirror which had just been bought,
+and was not yet hung up. All the savings of a year were shivered to
+fragments in an instant. My horror at this catastrophe recalled my
+presence of mind; for I was a poor woman, dependent for my bread on
+the family. Poor women cannot afford to have fancies; some prompt
+reality always startles them out of dream or superstition. My
+superstition fled in dismay as I stooped over the fragments of
+the looking-glass. What should I do? Where should I hide myself? I
+involuntarily took hold of the mirror with the instinctive intention
+of turning it to the wall. It was very heavy; I could scarcely lift
+it. Pausing a moment, and looking forward at its shattered face in
+utter anguish of despair, I saw again, repeated in a hundred jagged
+splinters, up and down in zigzag confusion, in demoniac omnipresence,
+the uncanny eye, the spectral shape, which had so appalled me. The
+little phantom had arisen, its slim finger was outstretched,--it
+beckoned, slowly beckoned, growing indistinct, it receded farther and
+farther out from the saloon towards the shop.
+
+The fascination of a spell was upon me; I turned and followed the
+retreating figure. The shutters of the show-window were not yet taken
+down, but thin lines of light filtered through them,--light enough to
+see that the apparition made its way to a forbidden spot slyly haunted
+by the little boy in his days of mischief,--a certain shelf where a
+box of some peculiar sort of expensive confections was kept. I had
+seen his mother, with unwonted generosity, give the child a handful of
+these a day or two before his death. I could go no farther. A mighty
+fear fell upon me, a dimness of vision and a terrible faintness; for
+that child-phantom, gliding on before, stopped like a retribution at
+that very spot, and, raising its little hand, pointed to that very
+box, glancing upward with its solemn eye, as, rising slowly in the
+air, it grew indistinct, its outlines fading into darkness, and
+disappeared.
+
+I did not fall or faint, however; I hastened out to the saloon again.
+The door of the little room where the coffin stood was open, and
+Madame stepping out, looked vaguely about her.
+
+"Madame! Madame!" I cried, "oh, I have seen--I have seen a terrible
+sight!"
+
+Madame's face grew white, very white. She grasped me harshly by the
+arm.
+
+"What _are_ you talking about, you crazy woman? You are getting quite
+wild, I think. Do you imagine you can hide your guilt in that way?"
+and she shook me with a savage fierceness that made my very bones
+ache. "This is carrying it with a high hand, to be sure, to flatter
+yourself that such wilful carelessness will not be discovered. Do you
+suppose," she cried, pointing to the fragments of glass, "that _my_
+nerves could feel a crash like that, and I not come down to see what
+had happened?"
+
+She spoke so volubly, and kept so firm a grip of my arm, that I could
+not get breath to utter a word of self-defence,--indeed, what defence
+could I make? Yet I should say, from my mistress's singular manner,
+that _she_ had seen that vision too, so wild were her eyes, so haggard
+her face.
+
+Little Jacques was buried. His attentive parents enjoyed a
+carriage-ride, with his miniature coffin between them, quite as
+well as if the little fellow had accompanied them alive and full of
+mischief.
+
+Outside matters, as Monsieur said, being now off his mind, he could
+attend to business again.
+
+The mirror belonged to "business." I had been writhing under that
+knowledge all the morning of their absence.
+
+Monsieur took the sight of his despoiled glass as calmly as Diogenes
+might have viewed a similar disaster from his tub. Monsieur's
+philosophy was grounded upon common sense. He knew that the frame
+was valuable. He knew also that I had saved enough to pay for the
+accident. I knew it, too, and was well aware that he would exact
+payment to the uttermost farthing. Monsieur, therefore, was quite
+cool. He laughed loudly at Madame's excitement, and the feverish
+account she gave of my fright, my deceitfulness, and pretending to see
+what nobody else saw.
+
+"Little Jacques!" I heard him exclaim, as I entered the room,
+shrugging his shoulders with such a contemptuously good-natured
+sneer as only a Frenchman can manufacture; and raising both his hands
+derisively, he went off with vivacity to his business.
+
+In the morning I left. Monsieur endeavored to persuade me to stay. But
+my business there was finished. I was quite as cool as Monsieur,--in
+fact, a little chilly. I was determined to go. Madame was determined
+also; we could no longer get along together; each hated and feared
+the other; and Madame C---- having used overnight what influence she
+possessed to bring her husband to see the necessity of my departure,
+his objections were not very difficult to remove.
+
+I could not afford to be out of work, that was true, and it might take
+me a long time to get it; but I was tired to death, and glad of any
+excuse for a little rest. What, after all, if I did lie by for a
+little while? there was not much pleasure or profit either way.
+
+I should not grow rich by my work; I could not grow much poorer
+by being idle. The past year, which I had spent in the service of
+Monsieur and Madame C----, had been one of constant annoyance and
+irritating variety of employment. I had grown fretful in the constant
+hurry and drive, and the baneful atmosphere of Madame's peevishness.
+Body and soul cried out for a season of release, which never in all my
+life of service had I thought of before.
+
+I had my desire now. I had put away my bondage. I had ceased my
+unprofitable labor. The rest I had so long craved was at hand. I might
+take a jubilee, a siesta, if I pleased, of half a year, and nobody be
+the wiser. I was responsible to nobody. Nobody had any demands upon
+my time or exertion. Free! I stood in a vacuum; no rush of air, no
+tempest or whirlpool stirred its infinite profundity. At length I
+was at peace,--a peace which seemed likely to last as long as my slim
+purse held out; for employment was not easy to obtain. Did I enjoy it?
+Did I lap myself in the long-desired repose in thankful quiescence
+of spirit? Perhaps,--I cannot tell; restlessness had become a chronic
+disease with me. I felt like a ship drifted from its moorings: the
+winds and the tides were pleasant; the ocean was at lull; but the ship
+rocked aimless and unsteady upon the waters. The heavy weights of
+life and activity so suddenly withdrawn left painful lightness akin to
+emptiness. The broken chains trailed noisily after me. The time hung
+heavily which I had so long prayed for. Long years of monotonous
+servitude had made a very machine of me. I could only rust in
+inaction. Some other power, to rack and grind and urge me on, was
+necessary to my very existence.
+
+So it happened, that, at last, my holiday having spun out to the end
+of my means, I left the city, and engaged work at very low wages in
+a country-village. The situation and the remuneration were not in
+the least calculated to stimulate ambition or avarice; and I remained
+obscurely housed, incessantly busy, and coarsely clothed and fed, in
+this place, for two years. They were not long years either. I had
+no hard taskmaster, however hard my task, no uneasy, unexplainable
+apprehensions, no moody forebodings of evil, no troublesome children
+to distress me. At the end of that time I heard of a better situation,
+and returned to the city.
+
+I had been engaged about a twelvemonth in my new place, a very
+pleasant little shop, though the pay was less and the work harder
+than I had had with Monsieur C----, when, one morning, standing at the
+shop-window, I saw that gentleman pass: very brisk, very spruce, very
+plump he looked. Glancing in, (I flatter myself that a show-window
+arranged as I could arrange it would attract any one's eye,) he espied
+me. A speedy recognition and a long conversation were the result. It
+was early morning, and we had the store to ourselves. Monsieur was
+very friendly. His business was very good. Poor Madame! he wished
+she could have lived to see it; but she was gone, poor soul! out of a
+world of trouble. And Monsieur plaintively fixed his eyes on the black
+crape upon his hat. The unhappy exit took place a few months after my
+departure. The children had gone to one or another relative. Monsieur
+was all alone; he had been away since then himself, had been doing as
+well as a bereaved man could do, and, having saved a snug little sum,
+had returned to buy out the old stand, and reëstablish himself in the
+old place. No one was with him; he wished he could get a good hand to
+superintend the concern, now his own hands were so full. It would be a
+good situation for somebody. In short, Monsieur came again and again,
+until, as I was poor and lonely, and had almost overworked myself
+just to keep soul and body together, whose union, after all, was of
+no importance to any one save myself, and as I was quite glad to
+find some one else who was interested in the preservation of the
+partnership, I consented to be his wife. It was a very sensible and
+philosophic arrangement for both of us. We could make more money
+together than apart, and were stout and well able to help each other,
+if only well taken care of. So we settled the business, and settled
+ourselves as partners in the saloon.
+
+
+Three years had passed, and we were in the old place still. We had
+been very busy that day. Many orders to fill, many customers to wait
+upon. Monsieur, completely worn out, was sound asleep on the sofa
+up-stairs. It was late; I was very much fatigued, as I descended,
+according to my usual custom, to see that everything was safe about
+the house and shop. The place was all shut and empty; the lights were
+all out. A cushioned lounge in one corner of the saloon--_my_ saloon
+now--attracted my weary limbs, and I threw myself upon it, setting the
+lamp upon a marble table by its side. With a complacent sense of rest
+settling upon me, I drowsily looked about at the dim magnificence of
+loneliness which surrounded me. The night-lamp made more shadow than
+shine; but even by its obscured rays one who had known the old place
+would have been struck with the wonderful improvement we had made. So
+I thought. It was almost like a palace, gilded, and mirrored, and hung
+with silken curtains. Monsieur and I had thriven together, had worked
+hard and saved much these many years to produce the change. But the
+change had been, as everything we effected was, well considered, and
+had proved very profitable in the end. Better reception-rooms brought
+better customers; higher prices a higher class of patronage. It
+was very pleasant, lying there, to reflect that we were actually
+succeeding in the world; and a pleasant and quiet mood fell upon me,
+as, hopeful of the future, I looked back at the past. I thought of my
+old days in that saloon; I thought of little Jacques. Little Jacques
+was still a thought of some horror to me, and I generally avoided any
+allusion to him. But to-night, in this subdued and contemplative mood,
+I even let the little phantom glide into my reverie without being
+startled. I even speculated on the old theme which had so haunted
+me. I wondered whether my suspicions had been correct, and
+whether--whether Madame C---- was guilty of sending her little son
+before her into the other world. So thinking,--I might have been
+almost dreaming,--a slight rustle in the shop aroused me. I was not
+alarmed; my nerves are now much healthier, and I wisely make a point
+of not getting them unstrung by violent movements, or unaccustomed
+feats of activity, when anything astonishing happens. I therefore
+lifted my head calmly and looked about,--it might be a mouse. The
+noise ceased that instant, as if the intruder were aware of being
+observed. Mice sometimes have this instinct. We had some valuable
+new confections, which I had no desire should be disposed of by such
+customers. So, taking up my lamp, and peering cautiously about me, I
+proceeded to the shop. The light flickered,--flickered on something
+tall and white,--something white and shadowy, standing erect,
+and shrinking aside, behind the counter. My heart stood still;
+a sepulchral chill came over me. My old self, trembling,
+angry, foreboding, stepped suddenly within the niche whence the
+self-confident, full-grown, sensible woman had vanished utterly. For
+an instant, I felt like a ghost myself. It seemed natural that ghosts,
+if such there were, should spy me out, and appall my heart with their
+presence. For there, in that old, haunted spot, where long years ago
+the spectre of little Jacques had lifted its menacing finger, stood
+the form of Marie, Madame C----. I knew it well; shuddering and
+shivering myself, more like an intruder than one intruded upon, I laid
+my hand upon the chill marble counter for support. It was no creation
+of imagination; the figure laid its hand also upon the marble, and,
+stretching over its gaunt neck, stood and peered into my eyes.
+
+"Madame C----! Madame C----!" I cried; "what in the name of God would
+you have of me?"
+
+"Nothing," she answered,--"nothing of you,--and nothing in the name
+of God. Oh, you need not shudder at me,--Christine C----! I know _you_
+well enough. You haven't got over your old tricks yet. I'm no ghost,
+though. Mayhap you'd rather I'd be, for all your nerves, eh?"--and she
+shook her head in the old vengeful, threatening way.
+
+It was true enough. "What evil atmosphere surrounded me? What fell
+snare environed me? I looked about like a hunted animal brought to
+bay,--like a robber suddenly entrapped in the midst of his ill-gotten
+gains. For this was no dead woman, but a living vengeance, more
+terrible than death, brought to my very door. Some unseen power, it
+seemed, full of evil influence, full of malignant justice, stretched
+its long arms through my life, and would not let me by any means
+escape to peace, to rest. A direful vision of horrible struggles yet
+to come--of want, despair, disgrace in reservation--sickened my soul.
+
+"I will call--I will call," said I, gasping,--"I will call Monsieur
+C----; he"----
+
+"Don't, don't, I beg of you!" she cried, catching me by the sleeve,
+with a sardonic laugh; low, whispering, full of direful meaning, it
+stealthily echoed through the saloon. "Don't disturb the good man. He
+sleeps so soundly after his well-spent days! _He_ doesn't have any bad
+dreams, I fancy,--rid of such a troublesome, vicious wife,--a wife who
+harassed her husband to death, and murdered her little boy,--he sleeps
+sound, doesn't he? And yet--I declare, in the name of God, Christine
+C----,"--and she lifted up her bony finger like an avenging
+fate,--"_he did it_!"
+
+I had been endeavoring to calm myself while this woman of spectral
+face and form stared at me with her maniac eye across the counter. I
+had succeeded. At any rate, this was a tangible horror, and could be
+grappled with; it was not beyond human reach, a shadowy retribution
+from the invisible world. To face the circumstances, however
+repulsive, is less depressing than to await in suspense the coming
+of their footsteps, and the descent of that blow we know they will
+inflict. I had always found that policy best which was bravest. I
+remembered this now. Dropping my high tone, and soothing my excited
+features, I beckoned the woman and gave her a chair; I took a chair
+myself, wrapping a shawl close about me to repress the shivering I
+could not yet overcome, and I and that woman, returned from the grave,
+as it seemed to me, sat calmly down in business-fashion, and held a
+long conversation.
+
+
+Madame C---- had loved her husband with that sort of respectful,
+awe-filled affection which lower natures experience towards those
+which are a grade above them. She had loved her children, too,
+although they were her torment. Her inability to manage or keep
+them in order fretted and irritated her excessively. Monsieur, as a
+philosopher, could not understand the anomaly, that a woman who was
+perpetually unhappy and ill-tempered, while her children, young,
+buoyant, and mischievous, were about her, should sympathize with
+and care for them when sick. He could not understand her
+conscience-stricken misery when little Jacques drooped after her
+severity towards him. Monsieur was a kind husband, however, and a wise
+man in many things. He had studied much in his youth, chiefly medical
+works, of which he had quite a collection. He could not understand
+the whimsical nervousness of women, but, when so slight a thing as a
+child's illness appeared to be the cause of it, could unhesitatingly
+undertake to remove the difficulty. He had prescribed attentively
+for the two children who died before Jacques, thereby rendering them
+comfortable and quiet, and saving quite an item in the doctor's bill.
+
+When little Jacques fell ill, and Madame fretted incessantly about
+his loss of vigor and vivacity, Monsieur, with fatherly kindness,
+undertook, in the midst of his pressing business, to give the child
+his medicine, which had to be most carefully prepared. Sometimes the
+powders were disguised in _bonbons_, the more agreeably to dose
+the patient little fellow; these were prepared with Monsieur's own
+fatherly hands, and during his absence were once in a while left
+for Madame to administer. Madame had great faith in these
+medicines,--great faith in her husband's skill; but the child's
+disease was obstinate, very; no progress could be discovered. It was
+a comforting thought, at least, that, if his recovery was beyond
+possibility, something had been done to soothe his pain and quiet
+the vexed spirit in its bitter struggle with dissolution. Yes, the
+medicines were certainly very quieting,--so quieting, so death-like
+in their influence,--she could not tell how a suspicion (perhaps the
+strange expression of the child's eye, when they were administered)
+glided into her imagination (having so great a reverence for her
+husband, it took no place in her mind for an instant,--it was merely a
+spectral, haunting shadow) that these things were getting the child
+no better,--that they were not medicine for keeping him here, but for
+helping him away. This suspicion, breathing its baleful breath across
+her mind, weak, vacillating, incapable of energetic action, had
+rendered her miserable, morose, irritable, more so than ever before.
+Yet little Jacques in his last hour hankered for the medicine, and
+craved feverishly the delicate powder, the sweet confection, his
+father prepared for him.
+
+While inwardly brooding over this unnamed terror, and cowering before
+this shapeless thought which loomed in the darkness of her mental
+gloom, an idea entered her mind that I, too, was suspicious that
+something was going wrong,--that I was watching,--waiting the evil to
+come. The child died. Her fear for him was utterly superseded by fear
+for her husband. What if I should find him out and betray him? The
+anxiety occasioned by this possibility made her hate me. The agony
+of her little one's departure, the fear of some dire discovery, the
+consciousness of guilt near enough of vicinage almost to seem her
+own, combined to nearly distract her mind, and it seemed like a joyful
+relief when I departed. The sudden release from that constant pressure
+of fear (she knew I could do nothing against them without money,
+credit, or friends) made her ill for a time, quite ill, she said. She
+knew not what was done for her during this sickness,--who nursed her,
+or who gave her medicine. But one morning, on waking from what seemed
+a long sleep, in which she had dreamed strangely and talked wildly,
+she beheld Monsieur, smiling kindly, standing beside her bed with a
+vial and a spoon in his hand.
+
+"It is a cordial, my dear, which will strengthen and bring you round
+again very soon. You need a sedative,--something to allay fever and
+excitement."
+
+"Is it little Jacques's medicine?"
+
+"Quite similar, my dear,--not the powders,--the liquid. Equally
+soothing to the nerves, and promotive of sleep."
+
+She turned her face away. She had slept long enough. She thanked
+Monsieur, not daring to look up, but capriciously refused to touch
+little Jacques's medicine.
+
+"And Monsieur," she said, "Monsieur was very angry. He said I was a
+disobedient wife, who did not wish to get well, but desired to be a
+constant expense and trouble to her husband.
+
+"And so, Christine C----, I trembled and shook, and let fall words I
+never meant to have uttered to Monsieur, and I said he had killed
+the child, and wished to kill me, that he might marry Mademoiselle
+Christine. I did not say any more that day. In the morning, Monsieur
+and I discoursed together again. I declared I would get well and go
+away. Oh! Monsieur knew well I would not betray him. He was willing,
+very willing to consent to my departure. He cared for me well, and
+gave me much money; and I went away to my old aunt, who lived in
+Paris. I have been dead,--I have died to Monsieur. I should never have
+returned, but that my good aunt is gone. When I buried her,--shut her
+kind eyes, and wrapped her so snugly in her shroud,--I thought it a
+horrible thing to be living without a soul to care for me, or comfort
+me, or even to wrap me up as I did her when the time was come. I felt
+then a thirsty spirit rising within me to see my old place where I had
+comfort and shelter long ago, and to see my children. I have been to
+see them: they are in B----; they did not know me there. I did not
+tell them who I was. I have been faithful to my promise. I tell no one
+but you, Christine C----, who have stepped into my place, and stolen
+away my home. A prettier home you have made of it for a prettier wife;
+but it's the old place yet, with the old stain upon it."
+
+
+Wishing to consider a moment what I should do, half paralyzed, like
+one who is stricken with death, I left that other ME, (for was she not
+also my husband's wife?) apparently exhausted, lying upon the sofa,
+and went wearily up-stairs, with heavy steps, like one whose life
+has suddenly become a weight to him. What, indeed, _should_ I do?
+Starvation and misery stared me in the face. If I left the house,
+casting its guilt and its comfort behind me, where could I go? I could
+do nothing, earn nothing now. My reputation, now that we were so lone
+established, would be entirely gone. And if I left all for which I had
+labored so hard, for another to enjoy, would that better the matter?
+Great God! would _anything_ help me? Before me in terrific vision
+rose a dim vista of future ruin, of ineffectual years writhing in the
+inescapable power of the law, of long trial, of horrible suspense, of
+garish publicity, of my name handed from mouth to mouth, a forlorn,
+duped, degraded thing, whose blighted life was a theme of newspaper
+comment and cavil. These thoughts swept over me as a tempest sweeps
+over the young tree whose roots are not firm in the soil, whose
+writhing and wrestling are impotent to defend it from certain
+destruction. There was no one I loved especially, no one I cared for
+anxiously, to relieve the bitter thoughts which centred in myself
+alone. Monsieur awoke as I was sitting thus, in ineffectual effort to
+compose myself. Seeing me sitting near him, still dressed, the door
+open, and the light burning, he inquired what was the matter. I had
+something below requiring his attention, I said, and, taking up the
+lamp, ushered him down-stairs. My chaotic thoughts were beginning to
+settle themselves,--to form a nucleus about the first circumstance
+that thrust itself definitely before them. That poor wretch waiting
+below,--that forsaken, abject, dishonored wife,--I would confront him
+with her, and charge him with his guilt. Opening the saloon-door, I
+stepped in before him. The lamp which I had left upon the stand was
+out, and the slender thread of light which fell from the one in my
+hand, sweeping across the gloom, rested upon the deserted sofa. The
+saloon was empty; no trace, no sign could be discovered of any human
+being. The hush, the solemnity of night brooded over the place.
+Monsieur mockingly, but unsteadily, inquired what child's game I
+was playing,--he was too tired to be fooled with. He spoke hotly and
+quickly, as he never had spoken to me before,--like one who has long
+been ill at ease, and deems a slight circumstance portentous.
+
+So I turned upon him, with all the bitterness in my heart rising to
+my tongue. I told him the story. I charged him with the guilt. He
+listened in silence; marble-like he stood with folded arms, and heard
+the conclusion of the whole matter. When I was silent, he strode up
+to me, and, stooping, peered into my face steadily. His teeth were
+clenched, his eyes shot fire; otherwise he was calm, quite composed.
+He said, quietly,--
+
+"Would you blame me for making an angel out of an idiot?"
+
+Monsieur's philosophy was too subtile for me. GUILTY seemed a coarse
+word to apply to so fine a nature.
+
+He denied having attempted to injure his wife in any way.
+
+"Women are all fools," he said; "they are all alike,--go just as
+they are led, and do just as they are taught. They cannot think
+for themselves. They have no ideas of justice but just what the law
+furnishes them with. It was silly to complain; it argued a narrow mind
+to condemn merely because the laws condemn. In that case all should
+be acquitted whom the laws acquit,--did we ever do this? Would his
+darling Jacques, happy, angelic, condemn his parent for releasing him
+from the drudgery of life? Was it not better to play on a golden harp
+than to be a confectioner? Were not all men, in fact, more or less
+slayers of their brothers? Was I not myself guilty in attributing
+to Madame a deed in my eyes worthy of death, and of which she was
+innocent? It was only those whose courage induced them to venture a
+little farther who received condemnation. In some way or other,
+every soul is wearing out and overtasking somebody else's soul, and
+shortening somebody's days. A man who should throw his child into the
+water, in order to save him from being burned to death, would not
+be arraigned for the fierce choice. Little Jacques, if he had lived,
+would have lingered in misery and imbecility. Was a lingering death of
+torture to be preferred by a tenderhearted woman to one more rapid and
+less painful, where the certainty of death left only such preference?
+Ah, well! it was consolation that his little son was safe from all
+vicissitude, whatever might befall his devoted father!" and Monsieur
+wiped his eyes, and drew out a little miniature he always carried in
+his bosom. It was the portrait of little Jacques.
+
+Well, as I have said, Monsieur was a philosopher, and I was a
+philosopher; and yet I must have been a woman incapable of reason,
+incapable of comprehending an argument; for the thought of this thing,
+and of being in the presence of a man capable of such a deed, made me
+uneasy, restless, unhappy, as though I were in some sort a partaker of
+the crime. I could not sleep; I was haunted with horrific dreams; and
+when, in few days, among the "accidents" the death of an unknown woman
+was recorded, whose body had drifted ashore at night, and I recognized
+by the description poor, unknown, uncared-for Madame C----, a wild
+fever burned in my veins, a frenzy of anguish akin to remorse, as if
+_I_ had wronged the dead, and sent her drifting, helpless, out to the
+unknown world. A pitiable soul, who preferred misery for her portion,
+rather than betray the man she loved, or become partaker of his crime,
+had crept back, after years of self-imposed absence, with death in her
+heart, to see the old place and the new wife,--and how had I received
+her? With horror and shuddering, as though she were some guilty thing,
+to be held at arm's-length. Not as one woman, generous, forgiving,
+hoping for mercy hereafter, should receive another, however erring. It
+was a sad boon, perhaps, she had endowed me with; yet it was all she
+prized and cherished.
+
+With a nobleness of magnanimity, a passionate self-sacrifice, which
+none but a woman could be capable of, Madame C---- had divested
+herself of all peculiarities of clothing by which she could be
+identified. It was only by recognizing the features, and a singular
+scar upon the forehead, that I knew it was herself. She was buried by
+stranger hands, however; we dared not come forward to claim her.
+
+The excitement attendant on this miserable death, and the
+circumstances which preceded it, laid me, for the first time in my
+life, upon a sick-bed. I was unconscious for many weeks of anything
+save intolerable pain and intolerable heat. A fiery agony of fever
+leaped in my veins, and scorched up my life-blood. I believe Monsieur
+cared for me, and nursed me attentively during this illness.
+
+The fever left me; exhausted, spent, my life shrunken up within me, my
+energy burned out, a puny, spiritless remnant of the strong woman who
+lay down upon that couch, I lay despondent, vacant of all interest in
+the world hitherto so exciting to me. I had not seen Monsieur since
+this apparent commencement of recovery. A great, good-natured nurse
+kept watch over me, and fed me with spiritless dainties, tasteless,
+unsatisfying.
+
+One day, when my senses began to settle a little, and things began
+to take shape again, I asked for Monsieur. He came and stood at my
+bedside.
+
+"Christine," said he, "you have no faith in my power of making angels.
+I have not made one of you. Being divided in our theories, we will
+divide our earthly goods. We will part. Should you as a woman deem it
+your duty to inform against me, I shall not think it wrong. I shall
+bear it as a philosopher. You have no proof, you can substantiate
+nothing; but it may be a satisfaction. I do not understand women;
+therefore I cannot tell."
+
+"Monsieur," I answered, "leave it to God to fill His heaven as He
+thinks best. He has not invited your assistance; neither has He
+invited me to avenge Him. Since He does not punish, dare I invade His
+prerogative?"
+
+And we did not part.
+
+We will live together in peace, we said, and the past shall be utterly
+forgotten; shall not a whole lifetime of unwavering rectitude atone
+for this one crime?
+
+I accepted my fate,--weakly, in the dread of poverty, in the horror
+of disgrace, shrinking within myself with the secret thrust upon me.
+I said we are all the makers of our own destiny, and there is
+nothing supernatural in life. If this course is best and wisest in my
+judgment, nothing evil will come of it. I said this, ignorant of the
+mystery of existence, and inexperienced in that subtile power which
+penetrates all the windings and turnings of humanity, searching out
+hidden things,--the Purifier, and the Avenger, allotting to each one
+his portion of bitterness, his inexorable punishment. "We will live
+together in peace": it was the thought of a sudden moment of fervor,
+which overleaped the dreary length of life, and assumed to compass the
+repentance of a whole existence in a single day.
+
+But destiny holds always in store its retribution. God suffers no
+dropped stitches in the web of His universe, and the smallest truth
+evaded, the least wretch neglected, will surely be picked up again
+in the unending circle that is winding its certain thread around all
+beings, connecting by invisible links the most insignificant chances
+with the most significant events.
+
+When I said we will be one, we will endure together, I thought that
+so, in my enduring strength, I could bear up whatever burden came. I
+know not how, by what invisible process, the load which I had lifted
+to my shoulders grew into leaden heaviness,--heavy, heavy, like the
+weight of some dead soul resting its lifeless shape upon my living
+spirit, till I staggered under the unbearable presence. I had doomed
+myself to stand side by side, to work hand in hand with guilt, to feel
+hourly the dread lest in some moment of frenzy engendered by the dumb
+anguish within me I might betray the secret whose rust was eating into
+my soul, and shriek out my misery in the ears of all men.
+
+Monsieur, seeing me grow thin and pale, declared that I must have a
+change, I must go somewhere, to the sea-shore. To the sea-shore! No,
+I would not go to the sea-shore, or to any other shore; a stranded
+vessel, I could not struggle from the place of shipwreck.
+
+Monsieur grew vexed and anxious, when I stubbornly shook my head. And
+when week after week I still refused, he grew strangely uneasy. I had
+better go; if I would not go alone, he would go with me, shut up the
+shop, and take a holiday.
+
+I considered the matter that day. The project was a wild one; at this
+busiest season of the year, it would be an injury to our business.
+And what might the neighbors say? It might lead them to unpleasant
+suspicions. We were not popular among them. No, it would not do.
+
+I explained this to Monsieur very calmly at the supper-table. His
+face was pale and quiet as usual. He did not interrupt me. When I
+concluded, he rose as if he would go out, but turning back suddenly
+and striking the table with his clenched fist,--
+
+"God!" he exclaimed. "Woman would you see me die like a dog? The
+neighbors! for all I know, they have got me at their finger-ends
+now,--the vile rabble! That old hag, Madame Justine, at the
+ribbon-shop below,--some demon possessed her to look out that night
+when SHE came crawling home. She noted her well with her greedy eyes;
+some one _so_ like my dear first wife, she told me. There is mischief
+and death in her eyes. She knows or guesses too much."
+
+"What can she guess?" I asked; "she has only lately come into the
+neighborhood."
+
+In answer to this, Monsieur informed me that she professed to
+have been an old friend of his wife's, who, in times gone by, half
+bewildered with her troubles, had probably dropped many unguarded
+words in this woman's presence. Madame C---- had died (to her old
+home) while this woman was away on a visit. "Ah!" she said, "she had
+her misgivings many a time. Did the same doctor attend Madame C----
+who prescribed for little Jacques? _He_ ought to be hung, then. Ah,
+well, if all men had their deserts, she knew many things that would
+hang some folks who looted all fair and square, and held their guilty
+heads higher than their neighbors."
+
+"Well?" I said.
+
+"Well!--you women are so virtuous, you have no mercy, Madame. Go,
+hang--go, drown the wretch who comes under the malediction of the
+ladies! Oh, there is nothing too hard for him! And this one owed me a
+grudge lately about a mistake,--a little mistake I made in an account
+with her, and would not alter because I thought it all right."
+
+
+The preparations were going on silently and steadily that night. I
+would go anywhere now, anything would I do, to escape the fate whose
+stealthy footsteps were tracking us out. Well I knew, that, once in
+the power of the law, its firm grasp would wrest every secret from
+the deepest depths where it was hidden. Once out of the city, we could
+readily take flight, if immediate danger threatened.
+
+The doors were all closed; the trunks stood corded in the hall. I was
+down-stairs, getting the silver together. Monsieur was in his room,
+packing up his medicine-chest. There was no weakness in my nerves
+now, no trembling in my limbs. I was determined. While thus engaged,
+pausing a moment amid the light tinkle of the silver spoons, I thought
+I heard footsteps in the saloon above. Softly ascending the stairs, I
+met Monsieur at the door. He had come down under the same impression,
+that some one was walking in the saloon, still holding in his hand the
+tiny cup in which he measured his medicines. It was full, and Monsieur
+carried it very carefully, as, opening the door, he looked cautiously
+about. Nothing stirred; all was silent as death; and walking forward
+toward the fountain, he straightened himself up, and his white face
+flushed as he said in a whisper,--
+
+"Christine, everything is ready. We are safe yet; we shall escape.
+Once away, we will never return to this doomed place, let what will
+come of it. Yes, I am certain that we shall escape!"
+
+Monsieur took a step forward as he said this, and stood transfixed.
+The light shook which he held in his hand, as if a strong wind
+had passed over it; his eye quailed; his cheek blanched to ghastly
+whiteness. I thought that undue excitement had brought on a
+fainting-fit of some kind, and was stooping to dip my hands in the
+water and bathe his forehead, when I saw, distinctly, like a white
+mist in the darkness, a visible shape sitting solemn upon the
+basin-edge; the room was very dim, and the falling spray fell over the
+shape like a weeping-willow, yet my eyes discerned it clearly. Oh, it
+was no dream that I had dreamed in my young days long ago! That little
+figure was no stranger to my vision, no stranger to the changeless
+waterfall. Did Monsieur see it also? He stood close beside the
+fountain now, with his face towards the spectre. The tiny cup in his
+hand fell from the loosened fingers down into the water; a lonely
+gold-fish, swimming there, turned over on its golden side and floated
+motionless upon the surface.
+
+I scarcely noticed this, for, at the time, I heard the knob of the
+shop-door turn quickly, and the door was shaken violently. It was
+probably the night-watchman going his rounds; but, in my alarm and
+excitement, I thought we were betrayed. I stepped swiftly to the door,
+and pushed an extra bolt inside.
+
+"Monsieur!" I cried, under my breath, "hide! hide yourself! Quick! in
+the name of Heaven!"
+
+But he did not answer, and, hastening to his side, I saw the faint
+outlines of that shadowy visitant growing indistinct and disappearing.
+As it vanished, Monsieur turned deliberately toward me; his eyes were
+clear, the faintness was over; his voice was grave and steady, as he
+said,--
+
+"Christine! I have seen it. It is the warning of death. There is
+no future and no escape for me. The retribution is at hand,"--and
+stooping swiftly down, he lifted the tiny cup brimming to his lips.
+"Go you," he said, huskily, "to the sea-shore. I have an errand
+elsewhere."
+
+In the morning came the officers of justice; my dim eyes saw them, my
+ears heard unshrinking their stern voices demanding Monsieur C----. I
+did not answer; I pointed vaguely forward; and forward they marched,
+with a heavy tramp, to where the one whom they were seeking lay prone
+upon the marble floor, his head hanging nervelessly down over the
+water. He had been arrested by a Higher Power. Monsieur C---- was
+dead.
+
+
+
+
+BOSTON HYMN.
+
+
+ The word of the Lord by night
+ To the watching Pilgrims came,
+ As they sat by the sea-side,
+ And filled their hearts with flame.
+
+ God said,--I am tired of kings,
+ I suffer them no more;
+ Up to my ear the morning brings
+ The outrage of the poor.
+
+ Think ye I made this ball
+ A field of havoc and war,
+ Where tyrants great and tyrants small
+ Might harry the weak and poor?
+
+ My angel,--his name is Freedom,
+ Choose him to be your king;
+ He shall cut pathways east and west,
+ And fend you with his wing.
+
+ Lo! I uncover the land
+ Which I hid of old time in the West,
+ As the sculptor uncovers his statue,
+ When he has wrought his best.
+
+ I show Columbia, of the rocks
+ Which dip their foot in the seas
+ And soar to the air-borne flocks
+ Of clouds, and the boreal fleece.
+
+ I will divide my goods,
+ Call in the wretch and slave:
+ None shall rule but the humble,
+ And none but Toil shall have.
+
+ I will have never a noble,
+ No lineage counted great:
+ Fishers and choppers and ploughmen
+ Shall constitute a State.
+
+ Go, cut down trees in the forest,
+ And trim the straightest boughs;
+ Cut down trees in the forest,
+ And build me a wooden house.
+
+ Call the people together,
+ The young men and the sires,
+ The digger in the harvest-field,
+ Hireling, and him that hires.
+
+ And here in a pine state-house
+ They shall choose men to rule
+ In every needful faculty,
+ In church, and state, and school.
+
+ Lo, now! if these poor men
+ Can govern the land and sea,
+ And make just laws below the sun,
+ As planets faithful be.
+
+ And ye shall succor men;
+ 'T is nobleness to serve;
+ Help them who cannot help again;
+ Beware from right to swerve.
+
+ I break your bonds and masterships,
+ And I unchain the slave:
+ Free be his heart and hand henceforth,
+ As wind and wandering wave.
+
+ I cause from every creature
+ His proper good to flow:
+ So much as he is and doeth,
+ So much he shall bestow.
+
+ But, laying his hands on another
+ To coin his labor and sweat,
+ He goes in pawn to his victim
+ For eternal years in debt.
+
+ Pay ransom to the owner,
+ And fill the bag to the brim.
+ Who is the owner? The slave is owner,
+ And ever was. Pay him.
+
+ O North! give him beauty for rags,
+ And honor, O South! for his shame;
+ Nevada! coin thy golden crags
+ With Freedom's image and name.
+
+ Up! and the dusky race
+ That sat in darkness long,--
+ Be swift their feet as antelopes,
+ And as behemoth strong.
+
+ Come, East, and West, and North,
+ By races, as snow-flakes,
+ And carry my purpose forth,
+ Which neither halts nor shakes.
+
+ My will fulfilled shall be,
+ For, in daylight or in dark,
+ My thunderbolt has eyes to see
+ His way home to the mark.
+
+
+
+
+THE SIEGE OF CINCINNATI.
+
+
+The live man of the old Revolution, the daring Hotspur of those
+troublous days, was Anthony Wayne. The live man to-day of the great
+Northwest is Lewis Wallace. With all the chivalric clash of the
+stormer of Stony Point, he has a cooler head, with a capacity for
+larger plans, and the steady nerve to execute whatever he conceives.
+When a difficulty rises in his path, the difficulty, no matter what
+its proportions, moves aside; he does not. When a river like the Ohio
+at Cincinnati intervenes between him and his field of operations,
+there is a sudden sound of saws and hammers at sunset, and the
+next morning beholds the magic spectacle of a great pontoon-bridge
+stretching between the shores of Freedom and Slavery, its planks
+resounding to the heavy tread of almost endless regiments and
+army-wagons. Is a city like Cincinnati menaced by a hungry foe,
+striding on by forced marches, that foe sees his path suddenly blocked
+by ten miles of fortifications thoroughly manned and armed, and he
+finds it prudent, even with his twenty thousand veterans, to retreat
+faster than he came, strewing the road with whatever articles impede
+his haste. Some few incidents in the career of such a man, since he
+has taken the field, ought not to be uninteresting to those for whom
+he has fought so bravely; and we believe his services, when known,
+will be appreciated, otherwise we will come under the old ban against
+Republics, that they are ungrateful.
+
+While returning from New York at the expiration of a short leave of
+absence, the first asked for since the beginning of the war, General
+Wallace was persuaded by Governor Morton to stump the State of Indiana
+in favor of voluntary enlistments, which at that time were progressing
+slowly. Wallace went to work in all earnestness. His idea was to
+obtain command of the new levies, drill them, and take them to the
+field; and this idea was circulated throughout the State. The result
+was, enlisting increased rapidly; the ardor for it rose shortly into
+a fever, and has not yet abated. Regiments are still forming, shedding
+additional lustre upon the name of patriotic Indiana.
+
+General Wallace was thus engaged when the news was received from
+Morgan of the invasion of Kentucky by Kirby Smith. All eyes turned
+at once to Governor Morton, many of whose regiments were now ready to
+take the field, if they only had officers to lead them. Wallace came
+promptly to the Governor's assistance, and offered to take command of
+a regiment for the crisis. His offer was accepted, and he was sent to
+New Albany, where the Sixty-Sixth Indiana was in camp. In twelve
+hours he mustered it, paid its bounty money, clothed and armed it, and
+marched it to Louisville. Brigadier-General Boyle was in command of
+Kentucky. Wallace, who is a Major-General, reported to him at the
+above-named city, and a peculiar scene occurred.
+
+"General Boyle," said Wallace, "I report to you the Sixty-Sixth
+Indiana Regiment."
+
+"Who commands it?" asked the General.
+
+"I have that honor, Sir," was the reply.
+
+"You want orders, I suppose?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"It is a difficult matter for me," said Boyle. "I have no right to
+order you."
+
+"That difficulty is easily solved," Wallace replied, with
+characteristic promptness. "I come to report to you as a Colonel. I
+come to take orders as such."
+
+General Boyle consulted with his Adjutant-General, and the result was
+_a request_ that General Wallace would proceed to Lexington with his
+command. Here was exhibited the ready, self-sacrificing spirit of
+a true patriot: he did not stand and wait until he could find the
+position to which his high rank entitled him, but stepped into the
+place where he could best and quickest serve his country in her hour
+of peril.
+
+While Wallace was still at the railway-station, he received an order
+from General Boyle, putting him in command of all the forces in
+Lexington. Here was a golden opportunity for our young commander. What
+higher honor could be coveted than to relieve the brave Morgan,
+pent up as he was with his little army in the mountain-gorges of the
+Cumberland? The idea fired the soul of Wallace, and he pushed on to
+Lexington. But here he was sadly disappointed. He found the forces
+waiting there inadequate to the task: instead of an army, there were
+only three regiments. He telegraphed for more troops. Indiana and Ohio
+responded promptly and nobly. In three days he received and brigaded
+nine regiments and started them toward the Gap.
+
+No one but an experienced soldier, one who has indeed tried it, can
+conceive of the labor involved in such an undertaking. The material in
+his hands was, to say the best of it, magnificently _raw_. Officers,
+from colonels to corporals, brave though they might be as lions, knew
+literally nothing of military affairs. The men had not learned even to
+load their guns. Companies had to be led, like little children, by
+the hand as it were, into their places in line of battle. There was
+no cavalry, no artillery. It happened, however, that guns, horses, and
+supplies intended for Morgan at the Gap were in depot at Lexington.
+Then Wallace began to catch a glimpse of dawn through the dark tangle
+of the wilderness. Some kind of order, prompt and immediate, must be
+forced out of this chaos; and it came, for the master-spirit was there
+to arrange and compel. He mounted several hundred men, giving them
+rifles instead of sabres. He manned new guns, procuring harness and
+ammunition for them from Louisville. Where there were no caissons, he
+supplied wagons. But his regiments were not his sole reliance; he is
+a believer in riflemen, a fighting class of which Kentucky was full.
+These he summoned to his assistance, and was met by a ready and hearty
+response: they came trooping to him by hundreds. Among others,
+Garrett Davis, United States Senator, led a company of Home-Guards to
+Lexington. In this way General Wallace composed, or rather improvised
+a little army, and all without help, his regular staff being absent,
+mostly in Memphis.
+
+"Kentucky has not been herself in this war," exclaimed General
+Wallace; "she must be aroused; and I propose to do it thoroughly."
+
+"How will you do it?" asked a skeptic.
+
+"Easily enough, Sir. Kentucky has a host of great names. Kentuckians
+believe in great names. It is to this tune that the traitors have
+carried them to the field against us. I will take with me to the field
+all the men living, old and young, who have made those names great.
+Buckner took the young Crittendens and Clays; by Heaven, I'll take
+their fathers!"
+
+"But they can't march."
+
+"I'll haul them, then."
+
+"They can be of no service in that way."
+
+"But the magic of their names!" exclaimed Wallace. "What will the
+young Kentuckians say, when they hear John J. Crittenden, Leslie
+Combs, Robert Breckenridge, Tom Clay, Garrett Davis, Judge Goodloe,
+and fathers of that kind, are going down to battle with me?"
+
+The skeptics held their peace.
+
+General Wallace now constituted a volunteer staff. Wadsworth, M.C.
+from Maysville district, was his adjutant-general. Brand, Gratz,
+Goodloe, and young Tom Clay were his aids. Old Tom Clay, John J.
+Crittenden, Leslie Combs, Judge Goodloe, Garrett Davis, were all
+prepared and going, when General Wallace was suddenly relieved of his
+command by General Nelson.
+
+Without instituting any comparison between these two generals, it
+is enough to say that the supersession of Wallace by Nelson at that
+moment was most unfortunate and untimely, as the sequel proved,
+fraught as it was with disastrous consequences. The circumstances were
+these.
+
+Scott's Rebel cavalry had whipped Metcalf's regiment of Loyalists at
+Big Hill, some twelve or fifteen miles beyond Richmond, Kentucky,
+and followed them to within four miles of that town, where they were
+stopped by Lenck's brigade of infantry. The affair was reported to
+Wallace, with the number and situation of the enemy. He at once took
+prompt measures to meet the exigence of the situation. He could throw
+Lenck's and Clay's brigades upon the Rebel front; the brigade at
+Nicholasville could take them in flank by crossing the Kentucky River
+at Tatt's Ford; while, by uniting Clay Smith's command with that of
+Jacob, then _en route_ for Nicholasville, he could plant seventeen
+hundred cavalry in their rear between Big Hill and Mount Vernon.
+
+The enemy at this time were at least twenty miles in advance of their
+supports, and a night's march would have readily placed the several
+forces mentioned in position to attack them by daylight. This was
+Wallace's plan,--simple, feasible, and soldier-like. All his orders
+were given. A supply-train with extra ammunition and abundant rations
+was in line on the road to Richmond. Clay's brigade was drawn up ready
+to move, and General Wallace's horse was saddled. He was writing a
+last order in reference to the city of Lexington in his absence, and
+directing the officer left in charge to forward regiments to him at
+Richmond as fast as they should arrive, when General Nelson came and
+instantly took the command. Fifteen minutes more and General Wallace
+would have been on the road to Richmond to superintend the execution
+of his plan of attack. The supersession was, of course, a bitter
+disappointment; yet he never grumbled or demurred in the least, but,
+like a true soldier who knows his duty, offered that evening to serve
+his successor in any capacity, a generosity which General Nelson
+declined. The well-conceived plan which Wallace had matured failed for
+the simple reason, that, instead of marching to execute it that night,
+as common sense would seem to have dictated, Nelson did not leave
+Lexington until the next day at one o'clock; and at daylight, when the
+attack was to have been made, the Rebel leader, Scott, discovered his
+danger, and wisely retreated, finding nobody in his rear. The result
+was, Nelson went to Richmond and was defeated. It is possible that
+the same result might have followed Wallace; but by those competent to
+judge it is thought otherwise.
+
+He had a plan adapted to the troops he was leading, who, although very
+raw, would have been invincible behind breastworks, as American troops
+have always shown themselves to be. Wallace never intended arraying
+these inexperienced men in the open field against the veteran troops
+of the Rebels. Neither did he intend they should dig. He had collected
+large quantities of intrenching tools, and was rapidly assembling
+a corps of negroes, nearly five hundred of whom he had already in
+waiting in Morgan's factory, all prepared to follow his column, armed
+with spades and picks. In Madison County he intended getting at least
+five hundred more. "I will march," he said, "like Cæsar in Gaul, and
+intrench my camp every night. If I am attacked at any time in too
+great numbers, I can drop back to my nearest works, and wait for
+reinforcements." Such was his plan, and those who know him believe
+firmly that he could have been at the Cumberland Gap in time not only
+to succor our little army there, but to have prevented the destruction
+and evacuation of that very important post.
+
+Wallace, finding himself thus suddenly superseded, his plans ignored,
+and his voluntary service bluffly refused, left Lexington for
+Cincinnati. While there the Battle of Richmond was fought, the
+disastrous results of which are still too fresh in the public mind to
+require repeating. Nelson, who did not arrive upon the field until the
+day was about lost, and only in time to use his sword against his own
+men in a fruitless endeavor to rally them, received a flesh-wound,
+and hastened back the same night to Cincinnati, leaving many dead and
+wounded on the field, and thousands of our brave boys prisoners to be
+paroled by the Rebels. These are simple matters of record, and are not
+here set down in any spirit of prejudice, or to throw a shadow upon
+the memory of the misguided, unfortunate, but courageous Nelson.
+
+At this juncture General Wallace was again ordered to Lexington, this
+time by General Wright, a general whose gentlemanly bearing in all
+capacities makes him an ornament to the American army. Wallace was
+ordered thither to resume command of the forces; but on arriving
+at Paris, the order was countermanded, and he was sent back to take
+charge of the city of Cincinnati. Shrewdly suspecting that our forces
+would evacuate Lexington, he hastened to his new post. General Wright
+was at that time in Louisville. On his way back, Wallace was asked by
+one of his aids,--
+
+"Do you believe the enemy will come to Cincinnati?"
+
+"Yes," was the reply. "Kirby Smith will first go to Frankfort. He must
+have that place, if possible, for the political effect it will have.
+If he gets it, he will surely come to Cincinnati. He is an idiot, if
+he does not. Here is the material of war,--goods, groceries, salt,
+supplies, machinery, etc.,--enough to restock the whole bogus
+Confederacy."
+
+"What are you going to do? You have nothing to defend the city with."
+
+"I will show you," was the reply.
+
+Within the first half-hour after his arrival in Cincinnati, General
+Wallace wrote and sent to the daily papers the following proclamation,
+which fully and clearly develops his whole plan.
+
+
+"PROCLAMATION.
+
+"The undersigned, by order of Major-General Wright, assumes command of
+Cincinnati, Covington, and Newport.
+
+"It is but fair to inform the citizens, that an active, daring, and
+powerful enemy threatens them with every consequence of war; yet the
+cities must be defended, and their inhabitants must assist in the
+preparation.
+
+"Patriotism, duty, honor, self-preservation, call them to the labor,
+and it must be performed equally by all classes.
+
+"First. All business must be suspended at nine o'clock to-day. Every
+business-house must be closed.
+
+"Second. Under the direction of the Mayor, the citizens must, within
+an hour after the suspension of business, (ten o'clock, A.M.,)
+assemble in convenient public places ready for orders. As soon as
+possible they will then be assigned to their work.
+
+"This labor ought to be that of love, and the undersigned trusts and
+believes it will be so. Anyhow, it must be done.
+
+"The willing shall be properly credited; the unwilling promptly
+visited. The principle adopted is, Citizens for the labor, soldiers
+for the battle.
+
+"Third. The ferry-boats will cease plying the river after four
+o'clock, A.M., until further orders.
+
+"Martial law is hereby proclaimed in the three cities; but until they
+can be relieved by the military, the injunctions of this proclamation
+will be executed by the police.
+
+ "LEWIS WALLACE,
+ "Maj.-Gen'r'l Commanding."
+
+Could anything be bolder and more to the purpose? It placed Cincinnati
+under martial law. It totally suspended business, and sent every
+citizen, without distinction, to the ranks or into the trenches.
+"Citizens for labor, soldiers for battle," was the principle
+underlying the whole plan,--a motto by which he reached every
+able-bodied man in the metropolis, and united the energies of forty
+thousand people,--a motto original with himself, and for which he
+should have the credit.
+
+Imagine the astonishment that seized the city, when, in the morning,
+this bold proclamation was read,--a city unused to the din of war and
+its impediments. As yet there was no word of an advance of the enemy
+in the direction of Cincinnati. It was a question whether they would
+come or not. Thousands did not believe in the impending danger; yet
+the proclamation was obeyed to the letter, and this, too, when there
+was not a regiment to enforce it. The secret is easy of comprehension:
+it was the universal confidence reposed in the man who issued the
+order; and he was equally confident, not only in his own judgment, but
+in the people with whom he had to deal.
+
+"If the enemy should not come after all this fuss," said one of the
+General's friends, "you will be ruined."
+
+"Very well," he replied; "but they will come. And if they do not, it
+will be because this same fuss has caused them to think better of it."
+
+The ten days ensuing will be forever memorable in the annals of the
+city of Cincinnati. The cheerful alacrity with which the people rose
+_en masse_ to swell the ranks and crowd into the trenches was a sight
+worth seeing, and being seen could not readily be forgotten.
+
+Here were the representatives of all nations and classes. The sturdy
+German, the lithe and gay-hearted Irishman, went shoulder to shoulder
+in defence of their adopted country. The man of money, the man of law,
+the merchant, the artist, and the artisan swelled the lines hastening
+to the scene of action, armed either with musket, pick, or spade.
+Added to these was seen Dickson's long and dusky brigade of colored
+men, cheerfully wending their way to labor on the fortifications,
+evidently holding it their especial right to put whatever impediments
+they could in the northward path of those whom they considered their
+own peculiar foe. But the pleasantest and most picturesque sight of
+those remarkable days was the almost endless stream of sturdy men who
+rushed to the rescue from the rural districts of the State. These
+were known as the "Squirrel-Hunters." They came in files numbering
+thousands upon thousands, in all kinds of costumes, and armed with all
+kinds of fire-arms, but chiefly the deadly rifle, which they knew so
+well bow to use. Old men, middle-aged men, young men, and often mere
+boys, like the "minute-men" of the old Revolution, they left the
+plough in the furrow, the flail on the half-threshed sheaves, the
+unfinished iron upon the anvil,--in short, dropped all their peculiar
+avocations, and with their leathern pouches full of bullets and their
+ox-horns full of powder, poured into the city by every highway and
+by-way in such numbers that it seemed as if the whole State of Ohio
+were peopled only with hunters, and that the spirit of Daniel Boone
+stood upon the hills opposite the town beckoning them into Kentucky.
+The pontoon-bridge, which had been begun and completed between sundown
+and sundown, groaned day and night with the perpetual stream of
+life all setting southward. In three days there were ten miles of
+intrenchments lining the hills, making a semicircle from the river
+above the city to the banks of the river below; and these were thickly
+manned from end to end, and made terrible to the astonished enemy by
+black and frowning cannon. General Heath, with his twenty thousand
+Rebel veterans, flushed with their late success at Richmond, drew up
+before these formidable preparations, and deemed it prudent to take
+the matter into serious consideration before making the attack.
+
+Our men were eagerly awaiting their approach, thousands in rifle-pits
+and tens of thousands along the whole line of the fortifications,
+while our scouts and pickets were skirmishing with their outposts in
+the plains in front. Should the foe make a sudden dash and carry any
+point of our lines, it was thought by some that nothing would prevent
+them from entering Cincinnati.
+
+But for this also provision was made. The river about the city, above
+and below, was well protected by a flotilla of gun-boats improvised
+from the swarm of steamers which lay at the wharves. A storm of shot
+and shell, such as they had not dreamed of, would have played upon
+their advancing columns, while our regiments, pouring down from the
+fortifications, would have fallen upon their rear. The shrewd leaders
+of the Rebel army were probably kept well posted by traitors within
+our own lines in regard to the reception prepared for them, and,
+taking advantage of the darkness of night and the violence of a
+thunder-storm, made a hasty and ruinous retreat. Wallace was anxious
+to follow them, and was confident of success, but was overruled by
+those higher in authority.
+
+The address which he now published to the citizens of Cincinnati,
+Covington, and Newport was manly and well-deserved. He said,--
+
+
+"For the present, at least, the enemy has fallen back, and your cities
+are safe. It is the time for acknowledgments. I beg leave to make you
+mine. When I assumed command, there was nothing to defend you with,
+except a few half-finished works and some dismounted guns; yet I was
+confident. The energies of a great city are boundless; they have only
+to be aroused, united, and directed. You were appealed to. The answer
+will never be forgotten. Paris may have seen something like it in her
+revolutionary days, but the cities of America never did. Be proud that
+you have given them an example so splendid. The most commercial of
+people, you submitted to a total suspension of business, and without
+a murmur adopted my principle, 'Citizens for labor, soldiers for
+battle.' In coming times, strangers viewing the works on the hills of
+Newport and Covington will ask, 'Who built these intrenchments? You
+can answer, 'We built them.' If they ask, 'Who guarded them?' you
+can reply, 'We helped in thousands.' If they inquire the result, your
+answer will be, 'The enemy came and looked at them, and stole away in
+the night.' You have won much honor. Keep your organizations ready to
+win more. Hereafter be always prepared to defend yourselves.
+
+ "LEWIS WALLACE,
+ "Maj.-Gen'r'l."
+
+
+It can safely be claimed for our young General, that he was the moving
+spirit which inspired and directed the people, and thereby saved
+Cincinnati and the surrounding cities, and, in the very face of Heath
+and his victorious horde from Richmond, organized a new and formidable
+army. That the citizens fully indorsed this was well exemplified on
+the occasion of his leading back into the metropolis a number of her
+volunteer regiments when the danger was over. They lined the streets,
+crowded the doors and windows, and filled the air with shouts of
+applause, in honor of the great work he had done.
+
+
+In writing this notice of Wallace and the siege, we have had no
+intention to overlook the services of his co-laborers, especially
+those rendered to the West by the gallant Wright, who holds command
+of the department. The writer has attempted to give what came directly
+under his own observation, and what he believes to be the core of the
+matter, and consequently most interesting to the public.
+
+
+
+
+JANE AUSTEN.
+
+
+In the old Cathedral of Winchester stand the tombs of kings, with
+dates stretching back to William Rufus and Canute; here, too, are the
+marble effigies of queens and noble ladies, of crusaders and warriors,
+of priests and bishops. But our pilgrimage led us to a slab of black
+marble set into the pavement of the north aisle, and there, under the
+grand old arches, we read the name of Jane Austen. Many-colored as the
+light which streams through painted windows, came the memories which
+floated in our soul as we read the simple inscription: happy hours,
+gladdened by her genius, weary hours, soothed by her touch; the
+honored and the wise who first placed her volumes in our hand; the
+beloved ones who had lingered over her pages, the voices of our
+distant home, associated with every familiar story.
+
+The personal history of Jane Austen belongs to the close of the last
+and the beginning of the present century. Her father through forty
+years was rector of a parish in the South of England. Mr. Austen was
+a man of great taste in all literary matters; from him his daughter
+inherited many of her gifts. He probably guided her early education
+and influenced the direction of her genius. Her life was passed
+chiefly in the country. Bath, then a fashionable watering-place, with
+occasional glimpses of London, must have afforded all the intercourse
+which she held with what is called "the world." Her travels were
+limited to excursions in the vicinity of her father's residence.
+Those were days of post-chaises and sedan-chairs, when the rush of
+the locomotive was unknown. Steam, that genie of the vapor, was yet a
+little household elf, singing pleasant times by the evening fire, at
+quiet hearthstones; it has since expanded into a mighty giant, whose
+influences are no longer domestic. The circles of fashion are changed
+also. Those were the days of country-dances and India muslins; the
+beaux and belles of "the upper rooms" at Bath knew not the whirl of
+the waltz, nor the ceaseless involvements of "the German." Yet the
+measures of love and jealousy, of hope and fear, to which their hearts
+beat time, would be recognized to-night in every ballroom. Infinite
+sameness, infinite variety, are not more apparent in the outward than
+in the inward world, and the work of that writer will alone be lasting
+who recognizes and embodies this eternal law of the great Author.
+
+Jane Austen possessed in a remarkable degree this rare intuition. The
+following passage is found in Sir Walter Scott's journal, under date
+of the fourteenth of March, 1826:--"Read again, and for the third time
+at least, Miss Austen's finely written novel of 'Pride and Prejudice.'
+That young lady had a talent for describing the involvements and
+feelings and characters of ordinary life, which is to me the most
+wonderful I ever met with. The Big Bow-wow strain I can do myself
+like any now going; but the exquisite touch which renders ordinary
+commonplace things and characters interesting from truth of the
+description and the sentiment is denied to me." This is high praise,
+but it is something more when we recur to the time at which Sir Walter
+writes this paragraph. It is amid the dreary entries in his journal
+of 1826, many of which make our hearts ache and our eyes overflow. He
+read the pages of Jane Austen on the fourteenth of March, and on the
+fifteenth he writes, "This morning I leave 39 Castle Street for the
+last time." It was something to have written a book sought for by him
+at such a moment. Even at Malta, in December, 1831, when the pressure
+of disease, as well as of misfortune, was upon him, Sir Walter was
+often found with a volume of Miss Austen in his hand, and said to a
+friend, "There is a finishing-off in some of her scenes that is really
+quite above everybody else."
+
+Jane Austen's life-world presented such a limited experience that it
+is marvellous where she could have found the models from which she
+studied such a variety of forms. It is only another proof that the
+secret lies in the genius which seizes, not in the material which is
+seized. We have been told by one who knew her well, that Miss Austen
+never intentionally drew portraits from individuals, and avoided,
+if possible, all sketches that could be recognized. But she was so
+faithful to Nature, that many of her acquaintance, whose characters
+had never entered her mind, were much offended, and could not be
+persuaded that they or their friends had not been depicted in some
+of her less attractive personages: a feeling which we have frequently
+shared; for, as the touches of her pencil brought out the light
+and shades very quietly, we have been startled to recognize our own
+portrait come gradually out on the canvas, especially since we are not
+equal to the courage of Cromwell, who said, "Paint me as I am."
+
+In the "Autobiography of Sir Egerton Brydges" we find the following
+passage: it is characteristic of the man:--
+
+"I remember Jane Austen, the novelist, a little child. Her mother was
+a Miss Leigh, whose paternal grandmother was a sister of the first
+Duke of Chandos. Mr. Austen was of a Kentish family, of which several
+branches have been settled in the Weald, and some are still remaining
+there. When I knew Jane Austen, I never suspected she was an
+authoress; but my eyes told me that she was fair and handsome, slight
+and elegant, with cheeks a little too full. The last time, I think,
+I saw her was at Ramsgate, in 1803; perhaps she was then about
+twenty-seven years old. Even then I did not know that she was addicted
+to literary composition."
+
+We can readily suppose that the spheres of Jane Austen and Sir Egerton
+could not be very congenial; and it does not appear that he was ever
+tempted from the contemplation of his own performances, to read her
+"literary compositions." A letter from Robert Southey to Sir Egerton
+shows that the latter had not quite forgotten her. Southey writes,
+under the dale of Keswick, April, 1830:--
+
+"You mention Miss Austen; her novels are more true to Nature, and have
+(for my sympathies) passages of finer feeling than any others of
+this age. She was a person of whom I have heard so much, and think so
+highly, that I regret not having seen her, or ever had an opportunity
+of testifying to her the respect which I felt for her."
+
+A pleasant anecdote, told to us on good authority in England, is
+illustrative of Miss Austen's power over various minds. A party of
+distinguished literary men met at a country-seat; among them was
+Macaulay, and, we believe, Hallam; at all events, they were men of
+high reputation. While discussing the merits of various authors, it
+was proposed that each should write down the name of that work of
+fiction which had given him the greatest pleasure. Much surprise and
+amusement followed; for, on opening the slips of paper, _seven_ bore
+the name of "Mansfield Park,"--a coincidence of opinion most rare, and
+a tribute to an author unsurpassed.
+
+Had we been of that party at the English country-house, we should have
+written, "The _last_ novel by Miss Austen which we have read"; yet,
+forced to a selection, we should have named "Persuasion." But we
+withdraw our private preference, and, yielding to the decision of
+seven wise men, place "Mansfield Park" at the head of the list, and
+leave it there without further comment.
+
+"Persuasion" was her latest work, and bears the impress of a matured
+mind and perfected style. The language of Miss Austen is, in all her
+pages, drawn from the "wells of English undefiled." Concise and clear,
+simple and vigorous, no word can be omitted that she puts down,
+and none can be added to heighten the effect of her sentences. In
+"Persuasion" there are passages whose depth and tenderness, welling
+up from deep fountains of feeling, impress us with the conviction that
+the angel of sorrow or suffering had troubled the waters, yet had left
+in them a healing influence, which is felt rather than revealed. Of
+all the heroines we have known through a long and somewhat varied
+experience, there is not one whose life-companionship we should so
+desire to secure as that of Anne Elliot. Ah! could she also forgive
+our faults and bear with our weaknesses, while we were animated by
+her sweet and noble example, existence would be, under any aspect, a
+blessing. This felicity was reserved for Captain Wentworth. Happy man!
+In "Persuasion" we also find the subtle Mr. Elliot. Here, as with Mr.
+Crawford in "Mansfield Park," Miss Austen deals dexterously with the
+character of a man of the world, and uses a nicer discernment than is
+often found in the writings of women, even those who assume masculine
+names.
+
+"Emma" we know to have been a favorite with the author. "I have drawn
+a character full of faults," said she, "nevertheless I like her."
+In Emma's company we meet Mr. Knightley, Harriet Smith, and Frank
+Churchill. We sit beside good old Mr. Woodhouse, and please him by
+tasting his gruel. We walk through Highbury, we are patronized by Mrs.
+Elton, listen forbearingly to the indefatigable Miss Bates, and take
+an early walk to the post-office with Jane Fairfax. Once we found
+ourselves actually on "Box Hill," but it did not seem half so real as
+when we "explored" there with the party from Highbury.
+
+"Pride and Prejudice" is piquant In style and masterly in portraiture.
+We make perhaps too many disagreeable acquaintances to enjoy ourselves
+entirely; yet who would forego Mr. Collins, or forget Lady Catherine
+de Bourgh, though each in their way is more stupid and odious than any
+one but Miss Austen could induce us to endure. Mr. Darcy's character
+is ably given; a very difficult one to sustain under all the
+circumstances in which he is placed. It is no small tribute to the
+power of the author to concede that she has so managed the workings
+of his real nature as to make it possible, and even probable, that a
+high-born, high-bred Englishman of Mr. Darcy's stamp could become the
+son-in-law of Mrs. Bennet. The scene of Darcy's declaration of love
+to Elizabeth, at the Hunsford Parsonage, is one of the most remarkable
+passages in Miss Austen's writings, and, indeed, we remember nothing
+equal to it among the many writers of fiction who have endeavored to
+describe that culminating point of human destiny.
+
+"Northanger Abbey" is written in a fine vein of irony, called forth,
+in some degree, by the romantic school of Mrs. Radcliffe and her
+imitators. We doubt whether Miss Austen was not over-wise with regard
+to these romances. Though born after the Radcliffe era, we well
+remember shivering through the "Mysteries of Udolpho" with as quaking
+a heart as beat in the bosom of Catherine Morland. If Miss Austen was
+not equally impressed by the power of these romances, we rejoice
+that they were written, as with them we should have lost "Northanger
+Abbey." For ourselves, we spent one very rainy day in the streets of
+Bath, looking up every nook and corner familiar in the adventures
+of Catherine, and time, not faith, failed, for a visit to Northanger
+itself. Bath was also sanctified by the presence of Anne Elliot. Our
+inn, the "White Hart," (made classic by the adventures of various
+well-remembered characters,) was hallowed by exquisite memories
+which connected one of the rooms (we faithfully believed it was our
+apartment) with the conversation of Anne Elliot and Captain Harville,
+as they stood by the window, while Captain Wentworth listened and
+wrote. In vain did we gaze at the windows of Camden Place. No Anne
+Elliot appeared.
+
+"Sense and Sensibility" was the first novel published by Miss Austen.
+It is marked by her peculiar genius, though it may be wanting in the
+nicer finish which experience gave to her later writings.
+
+The Earl of Carlisle, when Lord Morpheth, wrote a poem for some now
+forgotten annual, entitled "The Lady and the Novel." The following
+lines occur among the verses:--
+
+ "Or is it thou, all-perfect Austen? here
+ Let one poor wreath adorn thy early bier,
+ That scarce allowed thy modest worth to claim
+ The living portion of thy honest fame:
+ Oh, Mrs. Bennet, Mrs. Morris, too,
+ While Memory survives, she'll dream of you;
+ And Mr. Woodhouse, with abstemious lip,
+ Must thin, but not too thin, the gruel sip;
+ Miss Bates, _our_ idol, though the village bore,
+ And Mrs. Elton, ardent to explore;
+ While the clear style flows on without pretence,
+ With unstained purity, and unmatched sense."
+
+If the Earl of Carlisle, in whose veins flows "the blood of all the
+Howards," is willing to acknowledge so many of our friends, who are
+anything but aristocratic, our republican soul shrinks not from the
+confession that we should like to accompany good-natured Mrs. Jennings
+in her hospitable carriage, (so useful to our young ladies of sense
+and sensibility,) witness the happiness of Elinor at the parsonage,
+and the reward of Colonel Brandon at the manor-house of Delaford, and
+share with Mrs. Jennings all the charms of the mulberry-tree and the
+yew arbor.
+
+An article on "Recent Novels," in "Fraser's Magazine" for
+December, 1847, written by Mr. G.H. Lewes, contains the following
+paragraphs:--"What we most heartily enjoy and applaud is truth in the
+delineations of life and character.... To make our meaning precise, we
+would say that Fielding and Miss Austen are the greatest novelists in
+our language.... We would rather have written 'Pride and Prejudice,'
+or 'Tom Jones,' than any of the 'Waverley Novels'.... Miss Austen has
+been called a prose Shakspeare,--and among others, by Macaulay. In
+spite of the sense of incongruity which besets us in the words _prose_
+Shakspeare, we confess the greatness of Miss Austen, her marvellous
+dramatic power, seems, more than anything in Scott, akin to
+Shakspeare."
+
+The conclusion of this article is devoted to a review of 'Jane Eyre,'
+and led to the correspondence between Miss Brontè and Mr. Lewes
+which will be found in the memoir of her life. In these letters it is
+apparent that Mr. Lewes wishes Miss Brontè to read and to enjoy Miss
+Austen's works, as he does himself. Mr. Lewes is disappointed, and
+felt, doubtless, what all true lovers of Jane Austen have experienced,
+a surprise to find how obtuse otherwise clever people sometimes
+are. In this instance, however, we think Mr. Lewes expected what was
+impossible. Charlotte Brontè could not harmonize with Jane Austen. The
+luminous and familiar star which comes forth into the quiet evening
+sky when the sun sets amid the amber light of an autumn evening, and
+the comet which started into sight, unheralded and unnamed, and flamed
+across the midnight sky, have no affinity, except in the Divine Mind,
+whence both originate.
+
+The notice of Miss Austen, by Macaulay, to which Mr. Lewes alludes,
+must be, we presume, the passage which occurs in Macaulay's article on
+Madame D'Arblay, in the "Edinburgh Review," for January, 1843. We do
+not find the phrase, "prose Shakspeare," but the meaning is the same;
+we give the passage as it stands before us:--
+
+"Shakspeare has neither equal nor second; but among writers who, in
+the point we have noticed, have approached nearest the manner of the
+great master, we have no hesitation in placing Jane Austen, as a
+woman of whom England is justly proud. She has given us a multitude of
+characters, all, in a certain sense, commonplace, all such as we meet
+every day. Yet they are all as perfectly discriminated from each other
+as if they were the most eccentric of human beings. There are, for
+example, four clergymen, none of whom we should be surprised to
+find in any parsonage in the kingdom,--Mr. Edward Ferrars, Mr. Henry
+Tilney, Mr. Edward Bertram, and Mr. Elton. They are all specimens
+of the upper part of the middle class. They have been all liberally
+educated. They all lie under the restraints of the same sacred
+profession. They are all young. They are all in love. Not any one of
+them has any hobby-horse, to use the phrase of Sterne. Not one has any
+ruling passion, such as we read in Pope. Who would not have expected
+them to be insipid likenesses of each other? No such thing. Harpagon
+is not more unlike Jourdain, Joseph Surface is not more unlike Sir
+Lucius O'Trigger, than every one of Miss Austen's young divines to
+all his reverend brethren. And almost all this is done by touches
+so delicate that they elude analysis, that they defy the powers of
+description, and that we know them to exist only by the general effect
+to which they have contributed."
+
+Dr. Whately, the Archbishop of Dublin, in the "Quarterly Review,"
+1821, sums up his estimate of Miss Austen with these words: "The
+Eastern monarch who proclaimed a reward to him who should discover a
+new pleasure would have deserved well of mankind, had he stipulated
+it should be blameless. Those again who delight in the study of human
+nature may improve in the knowledge of it, and in the profitable
+application of that knowledge, by the perusal of such fictions. Miss
+Austen introduces very little of what is technically called religion
+into her books, yet that must be a blinded soul which does not
+recognize the vital essence, everywhere present in her pages, of a
+deep and enlightened piety.
+
+There are but few descriptions of scenery in her novels. The figures
+of the piece are her care; and if she draws in a tree, a hill, or a
+manor-house, it is always in the background. This fact did not arise
+from any want of appreciation for the glories or the beauties of the
+outward creation, for we know that the pencil was as often in her hand
+as the pen. It was that unity of purpose, ever present to her mind,
+which never allowed her to swerve from the actual into the ideal, nor
+even to yield to tempting descriptions of Nature which might be near,
+and yet aside from the main object of her narrative. Her creations
+are living people, not masks behind which the author soliloquizes
+or lectures. These novels are impersonal; Miss Austen never herself
+appears; and if she ever had a lover, we cannot decide whom he
+resembled among the many masculine portraits she has drawn.
+
+Very much has been said in her praise, and we, in this brief article,
+have summoned together witnesses to the extent of her powers, which
+are fit and not few. Yet we are aware that to a class of readers Miss
+Austen's novels must ever remain sealed books. So be it. While the
+English language is read, the world will always be provided with souls
+who can enjoy the rare excellence of that rich legacy left to them by
+her genius.
+
+Once in our lifetime we spent three delicious days in the Isle of
+Wight, and then crossed the water to Portsmouth. After taking a turn
+on the ramparts in memory of Fanny Price, and looking upon the harbor
+whence the Thrush went out, we drove over Portsdown Hill to visit the
+surviving member of that household which called Jane Austen their own.
+
+We had been preceded by a letter, introducing us to Admiral Austen as
+fervent admirers of his sister's genius, and were received by him with
+a gentle courtesy most winning to our heart.
+
+In the finely-cut features of the brother, who retained at eighty
+years of age much of the early beauty of his youth, we fancied we must
+see a resemblance to his sister, of whom there exists no portrait.
+
+It was delightful to us to hear him speak of "Jane," and to be brought
+so near the actual in her daily life. Of his sister's fame as a writer
+the Admiral spoke understandingly, but reservedly.
+
+We found the old Admiral safely moored in that most delightful of
+havens, a quiet English country-home, with the beauty of Nature around
+the mansion, and the beauty of domestic love and happiness beneath its
+hospitable roof.
+
+There we spent a summer day, and the passing hours seemed like the
+pages over which we had often lingered, written by her hand whose
+influence had guided us to those she loved. That day, with all its
+associations, has become a sacred memory, and links us to the sphere
+where dwells that soul whose gift of genius has rendered immortal the
+name of Jane Austen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PROCLAMATION.
+
+
+ "I order and declare that all persons held as slaves in the
+ said designated States and parts of States are and hereafter
+ shall be free,... and I hereby enjoin upon the people so
+ declared to be free to abstain from all violence, unless in
+ necessary self-defence."
+
+ ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
+
+ Saint Patrick, slave to Milcho of the herds
+ Of Ballymena, sleeping, heard these words:
+ "Arise, and flee
+ Out from the land of bondage, and be free!"
+
+ Glad as a soul in pain, who hears from heaven
+ The angels singing of his sins forgiven,
+ And, wondering, sees
+ His prison opening to their golden keys,
+
+ He rose a man who laid him down a slave,
+ Shook from his locks the ashes of the grave,
+ And outward trod
+ Into the glorious liberty of God.
+
+ He cast the symbols of his shame away;
+ And passing where the sleeping Milcho lay,
+ Though back and limb
+ Smarted with wrong, he prayed, "God pardon him!"
+
+ So went he forth: but in God's time he came
+ To light on Uilline's hills a holy flame;
+ And, dying, gave
+ The land a saint that lost him as a slave.
+
+ O dark, sad millions, patiently and dumb
+ Waiting for God, your hour, at last, has come,
+ And freedom's song
+ Breaks the long silence of your night of wrong!
+
+ Arise and flee! shake off the vile restraint
+ Of ages! but, like Ballymena's saint,
+ The oppressor spare,
+ Heap only on his head the coals of prayer!
+
+ Go forth, like him! like him, return again,
+ To bless the land whereon in bitter pain
+ Ye toiled at first,
+ And heal with freedom what your slavery cursed!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LAW OF COSTS.
+
+
+Our nation is now paying the price, not only of its vice, but also
+of its virtue,--not alone of its evil doing, but of its noble and
+admirable doing as well. It has of late been a customary cry with
+a certain class, that those who cherish freedom and advocate social
+justice are the proper authors of the present war. No doubt there
+is in this allegation an ungracious kind of truth; that is, had the
+nation been destitute of a political faith and of moral feeling, there
+would have been no contest. But were one lying ill of yellow-fever
+or small-pox, there would be the same sort of lying truth in the
+statement, that the _life_ in him, which alone resists the disease, is
+really its cause; since to yellow-fever, or to any malady, dead bodies
+are not subject. There is no preventive of disease so effectual as
+death itself,--no place so impregnable to pestilence as the grave. So,
+had the vitality gone out of the nation's heart, had that lamp of love
+for freedom and justice and of homage to the being of man, which once
+burned in its bosom so brightly, already sunk into death-flicker and
+extinction, then in the sordid and icy dark that would remain there
+could be no war of like nature with this that to-day gives the land
+its woful baptism of blood and tears. Oh, no! there would have been
+peace--_and_ putrefaction: peace, but without its sweetness, and
+death, but without its hopes.
+
+In one important sense, however, this war--hateful and horrible though
+it be--is the price which the nation must pay for its ideas and its
+magnanimity. If you take a clear initial step toward any great end,
+you thereby assume as a debt to destiny the pursuit and completion of
+your action; and should you fail to meet this debt, it will not fail
+to meet you, though now in the shape of retribution and with a biting
+edge. The seaman who has signed shipping-papers owes a voyage, and
+must either sail or suffer. The nation which has recognized absolute
+rights of man, and in their name assumed to shed blood, has taken
+upon itself the burden of a high destination, and must bear it, if
+not willingly, reluctantly, if not in joy and honor, then in shame and
+weeping.
+
+Our nation, by the early nobility of its faith and action, assumed
+such a debt to destiny, and now must pay it. It needed not to come in
+this shape: there need have been no horror of carnage,--no feast of
+vultures, and carnival of fiends,--no weeping of Rachel, mourning
+for her children, and refusing to be comforted, because they are not.
+There was required only a magnanimity in proceeding to sustain that of
+our beginning,--only a sympathy broad enough to take our little planet
+and all her human tribes in its arms, deep enough to go beneath
+the skin in which men differ, to the heart's blood in which they
+agree,--only pains and patience, faith and forbearance,--only a
+national obedience to that profound precept of Christianity which
+prescribes service to him that would be greatest, making the knowledge
+of the wise due to the ignorant, and the strength of the strong due
+to the weak. The costs of freedom would have been paid in the patient
+lifting up of a degraded race from the slough of servitude; and the
+nation would at the same time have avoided that slough of lava and
+fire wherein it is now ingulfed.
+
+It was not to be so. History is coarse; it gets on by gross feeding
+and fevers, not by delicacy of temperance and wisdom of regimen. Our
+debt was to be paid, not in a pure form, but mixed with the costs of
+unbelief, cowardice, avarice. Yet primarily it is the cost, not of
+meanness, but of magnanimity, that we are now paying,--not of a base
+skepticism, but of a noble faith. For, in truth, normal qualities and
+actions involve costs no less than vicious and abnormal. Such is the
+law of the world; and it is this law of the costs of worthiness, of
+knowledge and nobility, of all memorable being and doing, that I now
+desire to set forth. Having obtained the scope and power of the law,
+having considered it also as applying to individuals, we may proceed
+to exhibit its bearing upon the present struggle of our Republic.
+
+The general statement is this,--that whatever has a worth has also
+a cost. "The law of the universe," says a wise thinker, "is, Pay and
+take." If you desire silks of the mercer or supplies at the grocery,
+you, of course, pay money. Is it a harvest from the field that
+you seek? Tillage must be paid. Would you have the river toil in
+production of cloths for your raiment? Only pay the due modicum of
+knowledge, labor, and skill, and you shall bind its hand to your
+water-wheels, and turn all its prone strength into pliant service. Or
+perhaps you wish the comforts of a household. By payment of the
+due bearing of its burdens, you may hope to obtain it,--surely not
+otherwise. Do you ask that this house may be a true home, a treasury
+for wealth of the heart, a little heaven? Once more the word
+is _pay_,--pay your own heart's unselfish love, pay a generous
+trustfulness, a pure sympathy, a tender consideration, and a sweet
+firm-heartedness withal. And so, wherever there is a gaining, there
+is a warning,--wherever a well-being, a well-doing,--wherever a
+preciousness, a price of possession; and he who scants the payment
+stints the purchase; and he that will proffer nothing shall profit
+nothing; but he that freely and wisely gives shall receive as freely.
+
+But these _desiderata_ which I have named are all prices either of
+ordinary use, of comfort, or felicity; and it is generally understood
+that happiness is costly: but virtue? Virtue, so far from costing
+anything, is often supposed to be itself a price that you pay for
+happiness. It is told us that we shall be rewarded for our virtue;
+what moralistic commonplace is more common than this? But rewarded
+for your virtue you are not to be; you are to pay for it; at least,
+payment made, rather than received, is the principal fact. He who
+is honest for reward is a knave without reward. He who asks pay for
+telling truth has truth only on his tongue and a double lie in his
+heart. Do you think that the true artist strives to paint well that he
+may get money for his work? Or rather, is not his desire to pay money,
+to pay anything in reason, for the sake of excellence in his art? And,
+indeed, what is worthier than Worth? What fitter, therefore, to be
+paid for? And that payment is made, even under penal forms, every one
+may see. For what did Raleigh give his lofty head? For the privilege
+of being Raleigh, of being a man of great heart and a statesman of
+great mind, with a King James, a burlesque of all sovereignty, on the
+throne. For what did Socrates quaff the poison? For the privilege of
+that divine sincerity and penetration which characterized his life.
+For what did Kepler endure the last straits of poverty, his children
+crying for bread, while his own heart was pierced with their wailing?
+For the privilege--in his own noble words--"of reading God's thoughts
+after Him,"--God's thoughts written in stellar signs on the scroll of
+the skies. And Cicero and Thomas Cromwell, John Huss and John Knox,
+John Rogers and John Brown, and many another, high and low, famed and
+forgotten, must they not all make, as it were, penal payment for the
+privilege of being true men, truest among true? And again I say, that,
+if one knows something worthier than Worth, something more excellent
+than Excellence, then only does he know something fitter than they to
+be paid for.
+
+Payment _may_ assume a penal form: do not think this its only form.
+And to take the law at once out of the limitations which these
+examples suggest, let me show you that it is a law of healthy and
+unlamenting Nature. Look at the scale of existence, and you will see
+that for every step of advance in that scale payment is required.
+The animal is higher than the vegetable; the animal, accordingly, is
+subject to the sense of pain, the vegetable not; and among animals the
+pain may be keener as the organization is nobler. The susceptibility
+not only to pain, but to vital injury, observes the same gradation.
+A little girdling kills an oak; but some low fungus may be cut and
+troubled and trampled _ad libitum_, and it will not perish; and along
+the shores, farmers year after year pluck sea-weed from the rocks,
+and year after year it springs again lively as ever. Among the lowest
+orders of animals you shall find a creature that, if you cut it in
+two, straightway duplicates its existence and floats away twice as
+happy as before; but of the prick of a bodkin or the sting of a bee
+the noblest of men may die.
+
+In the animal body the organs make a draft from the general vigors
+of the system just in proportion to their dignity. The eye,--what
+an expensive boarder at the gastric tables is that! Considerable
+provinces of the brain have to be made over to its exclusive use;
+and it will be remembered that a single ounce of delicate, sensitive
+brain, full of mysterious and marvellous powers, requires more vital
+support than many pounds of common muscle. The powers of the eye are
+great; it has a right to cost much, and it does cost. Also we observe
+that in this organ there is the exceeding susceptibility to injury,
+which, as we have observed, invariably accompanies powers of a lofty
+grade.
+
+Noble senses cost much; noble susceptibilities cost vastly more.
+Compare oxen with men in respect to the amount of feeling and nervous
+wear and tear which they severally experience. The ox enjoys grass and
+sleep; he feels hunger and weariness, and he is wounded by that which
+goes through his hide. But upon the nerve of the man what an incessant
+thousandfold play! Out of the eyes of the passers-by pleasures and
+pains are rained upon him; a word, a look, a tone thrills his every
+fibre; the touch of a hand warms or chills the very marrow in his
+bones. Anticipation and memory, hope and regret, love and hate,
+ideal joy and sorrow and shame, ah, what troops of visitants are
+ever present with his soul, each and all, whether welcome guests or
+unwelcome, to be nourished from the resources of his bosom! And out of
+this high sensibility of man must come what innumerable stabs of quick
+agony, what slow, gasping hours of grief and pain, that to the cattle
+upon the hills are utterly unknown! But do you envy the ox his bovine
+peace? It is precisely that which makes him an ox, It is due to
+nothing but his insensibility,--by no means, as I take occasion to
+assure those poets who laud outward Nature and inferior creatures
+to the disparagement of man,--by no means due to composure and
+philosophy. The ox is no great hero, after all, for he will bellow at
+a thousandth part the sense of pain which from a Spartan child wrings
+no tear nor cry.
+
+Yes, it is precisely this sensibility which makes man human. Were he
+incapable of ideal joy and sorrow, he, too, were brute. It is through
+this delicacy of conscious relationship, it is through this openness
+to the finest impressions, that he can become an organ of supernal
+intelligence, that he is capable of social and celestial inspirations.
+High spiritual sensibility is the central condition of a noble and
+admirable life; it is the hinge on which turn and open to man the
+gates of his highest glory and purest peace. Yet for this he must pay
+away all that induration of brutes and boors which sheds off so many
+a wasting excitement and stinging chagrin, as the feathers of the
+water-fowl shed rain.
+
+In entering, therefore, upon any noble course of life, any generous
+and brave pursuit of excellence, understand, that, so far as ordinary
+coin is concerned, you are rather to pay, than to be paid, for your
+superiorities. Understand that the pursuit of excellence must indeed
+be brave to be prosperous,--that is, it is always in some way opposed
+and imperilled. Understand, that, with every step of spiritual
+elevation which you attain, some part of your audience and
+companionship will be left behind. Understand, that, if you carry
+lofty principles and philosophic intelligence into camps, these
+possessions will in general not be passed to your credit, but will be
+charged against you; and you must surpass your inferiors in their
+own kinds of virtue to regain what of popular regard these cost you.
+Understand, that, if you have a reverence for theoretical and absolute
+truth, less of common fortune will come to you in answer to equal
+business and professional ability than to those who do care for money,
+and do not care for truth. Are you a physician? Let me tell you that
+there is a possible excellence in your profession which will rather
+limit than increase your practice; yet that very excellence you must
+strive to attain, for your soul's life is concerned in your doing so.
+Are you a lawyer? Know that there is a depth and delicacy in the sense
+of justice, which will sometimes send clients from your office, and
+sometimes tie your tongue at the bar; yet, as you would preserve the
+majesty of your manhood, strive just for that unprofitable sense of
+justice,--unprofitable only because infinitely, rather than finitely,
+profitable. In a stormy and critical time, when much is ending
+and much beginning, and a great land is heaving and quivering with
+commingled agonies of dissolution and throes of new birth, are you a
+statesman of earnestness and insight, with your eye on the cardinal
+question of your epoch, its answer clearly in your heart, and your
+will irrevocably set to give it due enunciation and emphasis? Expect
+calumny and affected contempt from the base; expect alienation
+and misconstruction and undervaluing on the part of some who are
+honorable. Are you a woman rich in high aims, in noble sympathies and
+thrilling sensibilities, and, as must ever be the case with such, not
+too rich in a meet companionship? Expect loneliness, and wear it as
+a grace upon your brow; it is your laurel. Are you a true artist or
+thinker? Expect to go beyond popular appreciation; _go_ beyond it,
+or the highest appreciation you will not deserve. In fine, for all
+excellence expect and _seek_ to pay.
+
+No one ever held this law more steadily in view than Jesus; and when
+ardent young people came to him proposing pupilage, he was wont at
+once to bring it before their eyes. It was on such an occasion that he
+uttered the words, so simple and intense that they thrill to the touch
+like the string of a harp, "The foxes have holes, and the birds of the
+air have nests; but the Son of Man hath not where to lay his head."
+Of like suggestion his question of the king going to war, who first
+sitteth down and consulteth whether he be able, and of the man about
+to build a house, who begins by counting the cost.
+
+The cost,--question of this must arise; question of this must on all
+sides either be honestly met or dishonestly eluded. For observe, that
+attempt to escape payment for the purest values, no less than for
+the grossest, _is_ dishonest. If one seek to compass possession of
+ordinary goods without compensation, we at once apply the opprobrious
+term of _theft_ or _fraud_. Why does the same sort of attempt cease to
+be fraudulent when it is carried up to a higher degree and applied to
+possessions more precious? If he that evades the revenue law of the
+State be guilty of fraud, what of him who would import Nature's
+goods and pay no duties? For Nature has her own system of impost, and
+permits no smuggling. There was a tax on truth ere there was one on
+tea or on silver plate. Character, genius, high parts in history are
+all assessed upon. Nature lets out her houses and lands on liberal
+terms; but resorts to distraint, if her dues be not forthcoming. Be
+sure, therefore, that little success and little honor will wait upon
+any would-be thieving from God. He who attempts to purloin on this
+high scale has set all the wit of the universe at work to thwart him,
+and will certainly be worsted sorely in the end.
+
+The moment, therefore, that any man is found engaged in this business,
+how to estimate him is clear. Daniel O'Connell tried the experiment of
+being an heroic patriot and making money by it. It is conceded by
+his friends that he applied to his private uses, to sustaining the
+magnificence of his household, the rent-moneys sweated from the
+foreheads of Irish peasants. But, they say, he had sacrificed many
+ambitions in taking up the _rôle_ of a patriot; and he felt entitled
+to revenues as liberal as any indulgence of them could have procured
+him! The apology puts his case beyond all apology. He who--to employ
+the old phraseology--seeks to exact the same bribe of God that he
+might have obtained from the Devil is always the Devil's servant, no
+matter whose livery he wears. Had one often to apply the good word
+_patriot_ to such men, it would soon blister his mouth. I find, in
+fact, no vice so bad as this spurious virtue, no sinners so unsavory
+as these mock saints.
+
+To nations, also, this comprehensive law applies. Would you have
+a noble and orderly freedom? Buy it, and it is yours. "Liberty or
+death," cried eloquent Henry; and the speech is recited as bold and
+peculiar; but, by an enduring ordinance of Nature, the people that
+does not in its heart of hearts say, "Liberty or death," cannot have
+liberty. Many of us had learned to fancy that the stern tenure by
+which ancient communities held their civilization was now become an
+obsolete fact, and that without peril or sacrifice we might forever
+appropriate all that blesses nations; but by the iron throat of this
+war Providence is thundering down upon us the unalterable law, that
+man shall hold no ideal possession longer than he places all his lower
+treasures at its command.
+
+But there was a special form of cost, invited by the virtue of our
+national existence; and it is this in particular that we are now
+paying,--paying it, I am sorry to say, in the form of retribution
+because the nation declined to meet it otherwise. But the peculiarity
+of the case is, as has been affirmed, that it was chiefly the virtue
+and nobility of the nation which created this debt at the outset.
+
+And now what is the peculiar virtue and glory of this nation? Why,
+that its national existence is based upon a recognition of the
+absolute rights and duties of humanity. Theoretically this is our
+basis; practically there is a commixture; much of this cosmopolitan
+faith is mingled with much of confined self-regard. But the
+theoretical fact is the one here in point: since the question now
+is not of the national _un_faith or infidelity, but of the national
+faith. And beyond a question, the real faith of the nation, so far as
+it has one, is represented by its formal declaration, made sacred by
+the shedding of blood. Our belief really is not in the special
+right or privilege of Americans, but in the prerogative of man.
+This prerogative we may have succeeded well or ill in stating and
+interpreting; the fact, that our appeal is to this, alone concerns us
+here.
+
+Now this national attitude, so far as history informs me, is
+unprecedented. The true-born son of Albion, save as an exceptional
+culture enlarges his soul, believes religiously that God is an
+Englishman, and that the interests of England precede those of the
+universe. When, therefore, he sees anything done which depletes the
+pocket of England, it affects him with a sense of infidelity in those
+to whom this loss is due. England professes to have a _national_
+religion; she has, and in a deeper sense than is commonly meant.
+
+We will not disparage England overmuch; she has done good service in
+history. We will not boast of ourselves; the actual politics of this
+country have been, in no small part, base and infidel to a degree
+that is simply sickening. Nevertheless, it remains true that the
+fundamental idea of the State here represents a new phase of human
+history. Every European nationality had taken shape and character
+while yet our globe was not known to be a globe, while before the eyes
+of all lookers land and sea faded away into darkness and mystery; and
+it was not possible that common human sympathy should take into its
+arms a world of which it could not conceive. But a national spirit
+was here generated when the ocean had been crossed, when the earth had
+been rounded, when, too, Newton had, as it were, circumnavigated the
+solar system,--when, therefore, there could be, and must be, a new
+recognition of humanity. Our country, again, was peopled from the
+minorities of Europe, from those whom the spirit of the new time
+had touched, and taken away their content with old institutions,--a
+population restless, uncertain, yeasty, chaotic, it might be, full of
+the rawness of new conditions, mean and magnanimous by turns, as such
+people are wont, but all leavened more or less with a sentiment new in
+history,--all leavened with a kind of whole-world feeling, a sense
+of the oneness of humanity, and, as derived from this, a sense of
+absolute rights of man, of prerogatives belonging to human nature as
+such.
+
+The truth of all this has been brought under suspicion by the
+flatulent oratory of our Fourth-of-Julys; but truth it remains. Our
+nation did enunciate a grand idea never equally felt by any other. Our
+nation has said, and said with the sword in its right hand, "Every man
+born into this world has the right from God to make the most and best
+of his existence, and society is established only to further and guard
+this sacred right." We thus established a new scale of justice; we
+raised a demand for the individual which had not been so made before.
+Freedom and order were made one; both were identified with justice,
+simple, broad, equal, universal justice. The American idea, then, what
+is it? _The identification of politics with justice_, this it is. With
+justice, and this, too, not on a scale of conventional usage, but
+on the scale of natural right. That, as I read, is the American
+idea,--making politics moral by their unity with natural justice,
+justice world-old and world-wide.
+
+This conception--obscurely seen and felt, and mixed with the
+inevitable amount of folly and self-seeking, yet, after, all,
+this conception--our nation dared to stand up and announce, and to
+consecrate it by the shedding of blood, calling God and all good men
+to witness. The deed was grand; the hearts of men everywhere were more
+or less its accomplices; all the tides of history ran in its favor;
+kings, forgetting themselves into virtue and generosity, lent it
+good wishes or even good arms; it was successful; and on its primary
+success waited such prosperities as the world has seldom seen.
+
+But, because the deed was noble, great costs must needs attend it,
+attend it long. And first of all the cost of _applying our principle
+within our own borders_. For, when a place had been obtained for us
+among nations, we looked down, and, lo! at our feet the African--in
+chains. A benighted and submissive race, down-trodden and despised
+from of old, a race of outcasts, of Pariahs, covered with the shame of
+servitude, and held by the claim of that terrible talisman, the
+word _property_,--here it crouched at our feet, lifting its hands,
+imploring. Yes, America, here is your task now; never flinch nor
+hesitate, never begin to question now; thrust your right hand deep
+into your heart's treasury, bring forth its costliest, purest justice,
+and lay its immeasurable bounty into this sable palm, bind its
+blessing on this degraded brow. Ah, but America did falter and
+question. "How can I?" it said. "This is a Negro, a _Negro_! Besides,
+he is PROPERTY!" And so America looked up, determined to ignore
+the kneeling form. With pious blasphemy it said, "He is here
+providentially; God in His own good time will dispose of him"; as
+if God's hour for a good effect were not the earliest hour at
+which courage and labor can bring it about, not the latest to which
+indolence and infidelity can postpone it. Then it looked away across
+oceans to other continents, and began again the chant, "Man is man;
+natural right is sacred forever; and of politics the sole basis is
+universal justice." Joyfully it sang for a while, but soon there began
+to come up the clank of chains mingling with its chant, and the groans
+of oppressed men and violated women, and prayers to Heaven for another
+justice than this; and then the words of its chant grew bitter in the
+mouth of our nation, and a sickness came in its heart, and an evil
+blush mounted and stood on its brow; and at length a devil spoke in
+its bosom and said, "The negro has no rights that a white man is bound
+to respect"; and ere the words were fairly uttered, their meaning, as
+was indeed inevitable, changed to this,--"A Northern 'mudsill' has no
+rights that a Southern gentleman is bound to respect"; and soon guns
+were heard booming about Sumter, and a new chapter in our history and
+in the world's history began.
+
+Our nation refused allegiance to its own principles, refused to pay
+the lawful costs of its virtue and nobility; therefore it is sued in
+the courts of destiny, and the case is this day on trial.
+
+The case is plain, the logic clear. Natural right is sacred, or it is
+not. If it is, the negro is lawfully free; if it is not, you may be
+lawfully a slave. Just how all this stands in the Constitution of the
+United States I do not presume to say. Other heads, whose business it
+is, must attend to that. Every man to his vocation. I speak from the
+stand-point of philosophy, not of politics; I attend to the logic of
+history, the logic of destiny, according to which, of course, final
+judgment will be rendered. It is not exactly to be supposed that
+the statute of any nation makes grass green, or establishes the
+relationship between cause and effect. The laws of the world are
+considerably older than our calendar, and therefore date yet more
+considerably beyond the year 1789. And by the laws of the world, by
+the eternal relationship between cause and effect, it stands enacted
+beyond repeal, and graven upon somewhat more durable than marble or
+brass, that the destiny of this nation for more than one century to
+come hinges upon its justice to that outcast race,--outcast, but not
+henceforth to be cast out by us, save to the utter casting down of
+ourselves. Once it might have been otherwise; now we have made it
+so. Justice to the African is salvation to the white man upon this
+continent. Oh, my America, you must not, cannot, shall not be blind
+to this fact! America, deeper in my love and higher in my esteem than
+ever before, newly illustrated in worth, newly proven to be capable
+still, in some directions, of exceeding magnanimity, open your eyes
+that your feet may have guidance, now when there is such need! Open
+your eyes to see, that, if you deliberately deny justice and human
+recognition to one innocent soul in all your borders, you stab at your
+own existence; for, in violating the unity of humanity, you break the
+principle that makes you a nation and alive. Give justice to black
+and white, recognize man as man; or the constituting idea, the vital
+faith, the crystallizing principle of the nation perishes, and the
+whole disintegrates, falls into dust.
+
+I invite the attention of conservative men to the fact that in this
+due paying of costs lies the true conservation. I invite them to
+observe, that, as every living body has a principle which makes it
+alive, makes it a unit, harmonizing the action of its members,--as
+every crystal has a unitary law, which commands the arrangement of its
+particles, the number and arrangement of its faces and angles,--so
+it is with every orderly or living state. To this also there is a
+central, clarifying, unifying faith. Without this you may collect
+hordes into the brief, brutal empire of a Chingis Khan or Tamerlane;
+but you can have no firm, free, orderly, inspiring national life.
+
+Whenever and wherever in history this central condition of national
+existence has been destroyed, there a nation has fallen into chaos,
+into imbecility, losing all power to produce genius, to generate able
+souls, to sustain the trust of men in each other, or to support any of
+the conditions of social health and order. Even advances in the right
+line of progress have to be made slowly, gradually, lest the shock of
+newness be too great, and break off a people from the traditions in
+which its faith is embodied; but a mere recoil, a mere denial and
+destruction of its centralizing principle, is the last and utmost
+calamity which can befall any nation.
+
+This is no fine-spun doctrine, fit for parlors and lecture-rooms, but
+not for counting-rooms and congressional halls. It is solid, durable
+fact. History is full of it; and he is a mere mole, and blinder than
+midnight, who cannot perceive it. The spectacle of nations falling
+into sudden, chronic, careless imbecility is frequent and glaring
+enough for even wilfulness to see; and the central secret of this
+sad phenomenon, so I am _sure_, has been suggested here. When the
+socializing faith of a nation has perished, the alternative for
+it becomes this, that it can be stable only as it is stagnant, and
+vigorous only as it is lawless.
+
+Of this I am sure; but whether Bullion Street can be willing to
+understand it I am not so sure. Yet if it cannot, or some one in its
+behalf, grass will grow there. And why should it refuse heed? Who is
+more concerned? Does Bullion Street desire chaos? Does it wish that
+the pith should be taken out of every statute, and the chief value
+from every piece of property? If not, its course is clear. This nation
+has a vital faith,--or had one,--well grounded in its traditions.
+Conserve this; or, if it has been impaired, renew its vigor. This
+faith is our one sole pledge of order, of peace, of growth, of all
+that we prize in the present, or hope for the future. That it is
+a noble faith, new in its breadth, its comprehension and
+magnanimity,--this would seem in my eyes rather to enhance than
+diminish the importance of its conservation. Yet the only argument
+against it is, that it is generous, broad, inspiring; and the only
+appeal in opposition to it must be made to the coldness of skepticism,
+the suicidal miserliness of egotism, or the folly and fatuity of
+ignorance.
+
+Our nation has a political faith. Will you, conservative men, conserve
+this, and so regain and multiply the blessing it has already brought?
+or will you destroy it, and wait till, through at least a century
+of tossing and tumult, another, and that of less value, is grown? A
+faith, a crystallizing principle for many millions of people is not
+grown in a day; if it can be grown in a century is problematical. The
+fact, and the choice, are before you.
+
+Our nation _had_ a faith which it cherished with sincerity and
+sureness. If half the nation has fallen away from this,--if half the
+remaining moiety is doubtful, skeptical about it,--if, therefore,
+we are already a house divided against itself and tottering to its
+fall,--to what is all due? Simply to the fact that no nation can long
+unsay its central principle, and yet preserve it in faithfulness and
+power,--that no nation can long preach the sanctity of natural right,
+the venerableness of man's nature, and the identity of pure justice
+with political interest, from an auction-block on which men and
+maidens are sold,--that, in fine, a nation cannot continue long with
+impunity to play within its own borders the part both of Gessler and
+Tell, both of Washington and Benedict Arnold, both of Christ and of
+him that betrayed him.
+
+We must choose. For our national faith we must make honest payment,
+so conserving it, and with it all for which nations may hope; or else,
+refusing to meet these costs, we must suffer the nation's soul to
+perish, and in the imbecility, the chaos, and shame that will follow,
+suffer therewith all that nations may lawfully fear.
+
+What good omens, then, attend our time, now when the first officer of
+the land has put the trumpet to his mouth and blown round the world an
+intimation that, to the extent of the nation's power, these costs will
+begin to be paid, this true conservation to be practised! The work
+is not yet done; and the late elections betoken too much of moral
+debility in the people. But my trust continues firm. The work will be
+done,--at least, so far as we are responsible for its doing. And then!
+Then our shame, our misery, our deadly sickness will be taken away;
+no more that poison in our politics; no more that degradation in our
+commercial relations; no more that careful toning down of sentiment
+to low levels, that it may harmonize with low conditions; no more that
+need to shun the company of all healthful and heroic thoughts, such
+as are fit, indeed, to brace the sinews of a sincere social order, but
+sure to crack the sinews of a feeble and faithless conventionalism.
+Base men there will yet be, and therefore base politics; but when once
+our nation has paid the debt it owes to itself and the human race,
+when once it has got out of its blood the venom of this great
+injustice, it will, it must, arise beautiful in its young strength,
+noble in its new-consecrated faith, and stride away with a generous
+and achieving pace upon the great highways of historical progress.
+Other costs will come, if we are worthy; other lessons there will be
+to learn. I anticipate a place for brave and wise restrictions,--for
+I am no Red Republican,--as well as for brave and generous expansions.
+Lessons to learn, errors to unlearn, there will surely be; tasks to
+attempt, and disciplines to practise; but once place the nation in the
+condition of _health_, once get it at one with its own heart, once get
+it out of these aimless eddies into clear sea, out of these accursed
+"doldrums," (as the sailors phrase it,) this commixture of broiling
+calm and sky-bursting thunder-gust, into the great trade-winds of
+natural tendency that are so near at hand,--and I can trust it to meet
+all future emergency. All the freshest blood of the world is flowing
+hither: we have but to wed this with the life-blood of the universe,
+with eternal truth and justice, and God has in store no blessing for
+noblest nations that will not be secured for ours.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE CHASSEURS À PIED.
+
+
+Among the most celebrated corps of the French army, one of the most
+conspicuous and remarkable is that peculiar body of troops to which
+has been given the name of _Chasseurs à Pied_, or _Foot-Chasseurs_,
+to distinguish it from an organization of mounted men in the same
+service, uniformed and trained on similar principles. The Chasseurs
+à Pied have not attained the same romantic renown as that acquired
+by their brethren and rivals in arms, the Zouaves, but, nevertheless,
+they have had an exceedingly brilliant career in the late wars
+and conquests of France. They possess their own characteristics of
+originality, too, and are, in many respects, one of the most efficient
+and formidable forces in existence.
+
+In order to convey a clear and correct idea of the new principles
+adopted in the organization and equipment of the Chasseurs, and to
+furnish our readers with some facts that may be interesting to them
+as historical students, and most useful to such among them as are
+connected with or may have any aspiration for military life, we must
+beg them to go back with us, for a moment, to the very period of the
+invention of gunpowder. It would be out of the question, of course, to
+attempt, in these pages, a description of all the curious weapons
+that were at first employed under the name of fire-arms. We will only
+remark that such weapons were, despite the anathemas of Bayard and
+the sarcasms of Ariosto, very much used as early as the middle of the
+sixteenth century, and played an important part on the battle-fields
+of that epoch.
+
+To the Spaniards belongs the credit of having rendered the use of
+fire-arms more easy, more regular, and more general among the nations.
+For more than a hundred years the Spaniards were the very masters
+of the art of war. Their power had begun to decline, but they still
+retained their military superiority; and from the Battle of Ceresole,
+won by the Count of Enghien in 1544, down to the memorable victory of
+Rocroy, gained in 1643 by a hero of the same race and the same name,
+they had the upper-hand in all pitched engagements. Their generals
+were the very best and most thoroughly instructed, and formed a real
+school; they, too, were the only officers who practised strategy.
+Their organization was better than any other, and their celebrated
+_tercios_ were the very model of all regiments. Their armament was
+likewise superior, as they had adopted the musket, which was the
+first fire-arm that a man could handle with any facility, load with
+rapidity, and aim with any precision. Each of their _tercios_ or
+battalions contained a regulated proportion of these musketeers, and
+the number was large, compared to the whole mass of troops.
+
+The excellent results attained by the Spaniards, in the more perfect
+organization and equipment of their infantry, did not escape the
+attention of the French officers; and one of them especially, the Duke
+Francis de Guise, endeavored to turn his observations to good account.
+It is to him that we are indebted for the first rough sketch of
+regimental organization modelled upon that of the _tercios_, and, in
+more than one encounter with the Huguenots, the numbers of thoroughly
+skilled arquebuse-men embodied in the old French bands in Picardy and
+Piedmont secured advantages to the Catholic armies. In the opposite
+party, a young general who was destined to become a great king,
+endowed with that creative instinct, that genius which is as readily
+applicable to the science of government as to that of war, and which,
+when tempered with good sense, may bestow glory and happiness upon
+whole nations, Henry IV., had taken particular pains to increase the
+number and the efficiency of his arquebuse-men, and frequently managed
+to employ them in ways as novel as they were successful. At the Battle
+of Coutras, he distributed them in groups of twenty-five, in the midst
+of his squadrons of cavalry, so that, when the royal _gendarmerie_
+advanced to charge the latter, they were suddenly received with
+murderous volleys by these arquebuse-men _of the spur_, as they were
+called, owing to their combination with the cavalry, and the shock
+they thus encountered gave victory to the Protestants. Henry IV. went
+even too far with his passion for fire-arms. He increased their number
+and their use among cavalry so extravagantly, that the latter arm was
+perverted from its proper object. The cavalry, for a long time, forgot
+that their strength lay in the points of their sabres, in the dash of
+the men, and the speed of their horses.
+
+Most of the great captains of an early day thus signalized their
+progress by some improvement in the equipment of their infantry. One
+of the most formidable enemies of Spanish power, Maurice of Nassau,
+a skilful engineer and tactician, was the first to array infantry in
+such a manner as to combine the simultaneous use of the musket and the
+pike. Before his time, fire-arms had been used only for skirmishing
+service; he commenced to use them in line. This reform was, however,
+only foreshadowed, as it were, by the Dutch General; it was reserved
+for Gustavus Adolphus to complete it. While he was executing a series
+of military operations such as the world had not beheld since the days
+of Cæsar, he was also creating a movable artillery, and giving to the
+fire of his infantry an efficacy which had not been attained before.
+For the heavy machines of war which were drawn by oxen to the field
+of battle, and which remained there motionless and paralyzed by the
+slightest movements of the contending armies, he substituted light
+cannon drawn by horses and following up all the manoeuvres of either
+cavalry or foot. He had found the infantry formed in dense battalions.
+His system arranged it in long continuous lines in which each rank
+of musketeers was sustained by several ranks of pikemen, so that his
+array, thus distributed, should present to the enemy a front bristling
+with steel, while, at the same time, it could cover a large space of
+ground with its discharge of lead. Attentive to all kinds of detail,
+he also gave his soldiers the cartouch-box and knapsack instead of
+the cumbersome apparatus to which they had been accustomed. In fact,
+Gustavus Adolphus was the founder of the modern science of battle. In
+strategy and the grand combinations of warfare, he was the disciple
+and rival of the ancient masters; for, even if this "divine portion"
+of the military art be inaccessible to the vast number of its
+votaries, and if history can easily enumerate those who were capable
+of comprehending it, and, more especially, of applying it, its rules
+and principles have, nevertheless, been by no means the same in all
+ages. On the contrary, the invention of fire-arms demanded an entirely
+new system of tactics, and this the Swedish hero introduced.
+
+The example set by Gustavus was not, however, very rapidly followed,
+and, although some slight improvements were introduced by French
+officers during the seventeenth century, it was not until the time
+of Louis XIV. that the reforms started by Maurice of Nassau, and so
+successfully continued by the Swedish army, began to attain their
+consummation. The progress made in that direction was due to Vauban,
+whose eminent genius had mastered every question and every branch of
+study so completely, that, when applied to on any subject connected
+with politics or war, his opinion was always clear and correct.
+The very numerous essays and sketches from his hand which are found
+deposited in the fortresses and in the archives of France all reveal
+some flash of genius, and even his wildest speculations bear the stamp
+of his high intellect and excellent heart. Engineering science was
+carried by him to such a degree of perfection that it has made but few
+advances since his time; and it was Vauban who induced Louis XIV. to
+replace the pike and the musket with a weapon which should be, at
+one and the same time, an instrument for both firing and thrusting,
+namely, the bayonet-gun. The Royal Fusileer Regiment, since called the
+Royal Artillery, was the first one armed with this weapon, (in
+1670,) and in 1703 the whole French army finally gave up the pike.
+Notwithstanding some reverses sustained by the infantry thus armed,
+and notwithstanding the disapproval of Puységur and others, this gun
+was soon adopted by all Europe, and the success of the great Frederick
+put a conclusive indorsement on this new style of weapon. Frederick
+had taken up and perfected the ideas of Gustavus Adolphus; and he now
+laid down certain rules for the formation and manoeuvring of infantry,
+which are still followed at this day; and since that time, no one has
+disputed the fact that the strength of foot-troops lies in their guns
+and their legs.
+
+Our present firelock differs from the article used during the
+Seven Years' War only in its more careful construction and some
+modifications of detail. The most important of these relates to the
+more rapid explosion of the charge. In 1840 the old flint-locks were
+generally replaced by the percussion-lock, which is simpler, is
+less exposed to the effects of dampness, and more quickly and surely
+ignites the powder. Even the ordinary regulation-musket with its
+bayonet was spoken of by Napoleon in his time as "the best engine of
+warfare ever invented by man." Since the day of the Great Emperor, and
+even during the reign of the present Napoleon, continued improvements
+have been made in the character of the weapon used by the French
+infantry. The weight, length, correctness of aim, durability, and
+handiness of the gun have all been carefully examined and modified, to
+the advantage of the soldier, until, finally, we have a weapon which
+combines wonderful qualities of lightness, strength, correctness of
+equipoise, ease and rapidity of loading, with perfect adaptability as
+a combination of the lance, pike, and sword, when it has ceased to be
+a fire-arm.
+
+We have not here the space to enter upon a disquisition concerning
+these progressive changes; but suffice it to say that nearly all the
+peculiar styles of fire-arms were well known at an early period,
+and that the rifling, etc., of guns and cannon, with the other
+modifications now adopted, are merely the development and consummation
+of old ideas. For instance, the rifled arquebuse was known and used
+at the close of the fifteenth century, and, although the rifled musket
+was not put in general use by the French infantry, from the fact that
+its reduced length and the greater complication of movements required
+in loading and discharging it deprived it of other advantages when
+in the hands of troops of the line, still it was adopted in a certain
+proportion in some branches of the French service.
+
+As early as the middle of the seventeenth century, some corps of light
+cavalry called _Carabins_ were armed with the short rifle-musket, and
+hence the derivation of the term _carabines_ applied to the weapon.
+These "carabines" were also very promptly adopted by hunters and
+sportsmen everywhere. The Swiss and the Tyrolese employed them in
+chasing the chamois among their mountains, and practised their skill
+in the use of them at general shooting-matches, which to this very day
+are celebrated as national festivals. The Austrian Government was the
+first to profit by this preference on the part of certain populations
+for accurate fire-arms, and at once proceeded to organize battalions
+of Tyrolese _Chasseurs_, or _Huntsmen_,--to give the meaning of the
+French word. These Chasseurs were applied in the Austrian service as
+light troops, and so great was their efficiency against the Prussians
+that Frederick the Great was compelled, in his turn, to organize a
+battalion of Chasseur sharp-shooters. France followed suit, in the
+course of the eighteenth century, and called into existence various
+corps of the same description, under different names. These, however,
+were but short-lived, although some of them, for instance, the Grassin
+Legion, acquired quite a reputation.
+
+Finally came the French Revolution. The troops of the Republic were
+more remarkable for courage and enthusiasm than for tactics and drill.
+They usually attacked as skirmishers,--a system which may be employed
+successfully by even the most regularly disciplined armies, but which
+is sometimes more especially useful to raw troops, because it
+gives the private soldier an opportunity to compensate by personal
+intelligence for the lack of thorough instruction. Struck by the
+aptitude of the French recruits for that kind of fighting, the
+Convention, in reorganizing the army, decreed the formation of some
+half-brigades of light infantry. The picked men were to be armed with
+the new weapon, and received the name of _Carabiniers_. The carabine
+of 1793 is the first specimen of that kind of arm which was regularly
+employed in France.
+
+Subsequently, owing to many practical defects, when Napoleon
+reorganized the equipment of the French armies, the carabine was
+dropped from the service, although the regiments of light infantry
+were retained, and their picked companies preserved the title of
+Carabiniers. In the Imperial Guard, too, there were companies of
+Skirmishers, Flankers, and Chasseurs, but neither one of these corps
+was distinguished by any particular style of arms or drill. The
+Emperor's wish was to have the armament and training of all his
+infantry uniform, so that all the regiments should be equally adapted
+to the service of troops of the line or light troops. Finally, to
+carry out his design with greater ease, he formed all the men who were
+more active and agile than the rest, or whose low stature prevented
+them from becoming Grenadiers, into companies of Voltigeurs,--and this
+was one of his finest military creations.
+
+However, notwithstanding the correctness of Napoleon's views, as a
+general principle, the thousand and one uses of a corps of picked
+marksmen as light troops were so universally admitted that the
+different nations of Europe continued and even augmented that branch
+of their military service. Under different names they were found not
+only in the armies of England, Austria, Prussia, and Russia, but also
+under the banners of the secondary powers, such as Sweden, Piedmont,
+and Switzerland.
+
+After the disasters of 1815, the reorganization of the French army
+was confided to Marshal Gouvion de St. Cyr, who united to sincere
+patriotism every qualification of an able general. He gave to the
+French service the basis of its present success, his suggestions
+having, of course, been perfected and expanded in the mean time. Among
+other things, he prescribed the formation of battalions of Chasseurs,
+to be organized in legions, side by side with the infantry of
+the line, but with their own special equipment. This plan was not
+efficiently executed, and the Chasseur battalions shared the fate
+of the Department Legions of France, and were merged in the existing
+regiments.
+
+The project, in a different form, was revived by Marshal Soult, who,
+as Minister of War, in 1833, succeeded in securing the passage of
+a royal ordinance prescribing the formation of companies of
+sharp-shooters "armed with carabines and uniformed in a manner
+befitting their special service." These companies were to be united
+subsequently into battalions, and were to undergo a particular course
+of training. Although the ordinance was not immediately carried
+into execution, the impulse had been given, and erelong successful
+improvements in the rifle having been effected by an old officer of
+the Royal Guard, named Delvigne, and a certain Colonel Poncharra,
+inspector of the manufacture of arms, the Duke of Orléans brought
+about the formation of a company of marksmen peculiarly trained and
+equipped, and provided with the so-called Delvigne-Poncharra carabine.
+This company was placed in garrison at Vincennes, where, under skilful
+and popular commanders, it gave such satisfaction that it was finally
+decided to try the experiment on a larger scale, and a decree of
+November 14, 1838, created a battalion of the same character.
+
+This corps, then, and even now, known to the people as the
+_Tirailleurs de Vincennes_, wore a uniform very similar to that of the
+present Chasseurs, but quite different from that of the infantry of
+the period. Instead of the stiff accoutrements and heavy headgear of
+the latter, they assumed a frock, wide and roomy pantaloons, and a
+light military shako. The double folds of white buckskin, which were
+very fine to look at, to be sure, but which oppressed the lungs and
+offered a conspicuous mark to the enemy, were discarded; the sabre was
+no longer allowed to dangle between the legs of the soldier and impede
+his movements; while the necessary munitions were carried in a manner
+more convenient and better adapted to their preservation. The arms
+consisted of a carabine, and a long, solid, sharpened appendage to
+it, termed the _sword-bayonet_. This latter weapon was provided with
+a hilt, and could be used for both cut and thrust, with considerable
+effect, while, affixed to the end of the carabine, it furnished a most
+formidable pike.
+
+Although the Delvigne-Poncharra carabine had great advantages, it
+still did not command the range of the coarser and heavier muskets of
+the line, and, in order to make up for this in some degree, the most
+robust and skilful men of the corps were armed with a heavier gun,
+constructed on the same principles, but capable of throwing a heavier
+charge with precision, to greater distances. The proportion of men so
+armed was one-eighth of the battalion. The use of these two
+different calibres of fire-arms had some drawbacks, but they were
+counterbalanced by some curious advantages. For instance, the
+battalion could keep up a steady fire at ordinary distances, while,
+at the same moment, the men armed with the heavy carabines, or
+_Carabiniers_, as they were distinctively called, even within their
+own battalion, could reach the enemy at points where he deemed himself
+beyond the range of the force he saw in front of him. United in
+groups, the Carabiniers could thus produce severe effect, and actually
+formed a sort of _hand artillery_,--to use an expression often
+employed concerning them.
+
+The Tirailleurs thus composed were, owing to the shortness of their
+carabines, drawn up in two ranks, instead of in the regimental style
+of three ranks. They manoeuvred in line, like all other infantry
+battalions, but, in addition to the ordinary drill, were trained in
+gymnastics and double-quick evolutions, as well as in fencing with the
+bayonet, a special course of sharp-shooting, and what was termed _the
+new Tirailleur drill_.
+
+Gymnastics have always been encouraged in the French army, and, when
+not carried to excess, they are of the greatest use, particularly in
+developing the strength of young men, giving suppleness and confidence
+to raw recruits, and facilitating their manoeuvres. Running was
+naturally a portion of these exercises, although it was rarely
+permitted in the evolutions of French troops, since it was found to
+produce much disorder. The Tirailleurs were so trained, however, that
+they could move, with all their accoutrements, in ranks, without noise
+and without confusion, at a cadenced and measured running step termed
+the _pas gymnastique_, or gymnastic step,--and they could use it
+even during complicated field-manoeuvres. This was a most excellent
+innovation, for it enabled infantry to pass rapidly to any important
+point, and to execute many evolutions with the promptitude in some
+degree which cavalry obtains from the combination of the two gaits.
+
+The bayonet-exercise was very acceptable to the men, for it augmented
+their confidence in their weapons and their skill in handling them.
+
+The target or sharp-shooting drill was much the most complicated and
+difficult, as the troops were taught to fire when kneeling and lying
+on the ground, and to avail themselves of the slightest favoring
+circumstances of the soil. The rules and methods adopted in this
+branch of the drill have been the subject of profound and careful
+study, and are exceedingly ingenious.
+
+The approval of these measures by the French Government was such,
+that, by a decree of August 28th, 1839, the merely temporary
+organization of the Tirailleurs was made permanent and separate, and
+the corps was sent to camp at Fontainebleau. There, the agility of
+the men, their neat and convenient uniforms and equipments, and their
+rapid and orderly evolutions struck every one who saw them. When, at
+the close of their period of encampment, the King was passing them in
+review as a special compliment, he warmly asked Marshal Soult what
+he thought of the new corps. The Marshal, in replying, emphatically
+expressed the wish that His Majesty had thirty such battalions instead
+of only one.
+
+However, the new organization found some opponents, and many urgent
+arguments were adduced to prevent its extension. In order to put all
+these to the test, it was finally determined to submit the Tirailleurs
+to the ordeal of actual warfare; and they were speedily shipped to
+Africa, where it was quickly discovered that their gymnastic training
+had so prepared them that they easily became inured to the fatigues
+and privations of campaigning life. Their heavy carabines succeeded
+admirably, and the skill of their marksmen--among others, of a certain
+Sergeant Pistouley--was the theme of universal praise.
+
+The Tirailleurs were now brigaded with the Zouaves, and erelong had
+shared glorious laurels with those celebrated troops.
+
+Finally, in 1840, the dangers that seemed to be accumulating over
+France on all sides assumed so dark a form that the patriotism of the
+whole nation was aroused, and, in the midst of the general outpouring
+of men and means, the Duke of Orléans was authorized to form no less
+than ten battalions of Chasseurs.
+
+The Duke set himself about this important task with all the zeal that
+had characterized his first effort to create the organization, and
+all the erudition he had gleaned from years of military study and
+research. In the first place, he abandoned the title of Tirailleurs,
+as being not sufficiently distinctive, and adopted that of Chasseurs à
+Pied, or Foot-Chasseurs. The organization by battalions was retained,
+and the one formed two years before at Vincennes was designated as the
+First Battalion, and recalled from Africa to St. Omer as a model for
+the other nine that were to be organized. St. Omer offered extensive
+barracks, a vast field suitable to military exercise, and, in fine,
+all the establishments requisite for a large concourse of troops. The
+ranks were soon filled with picked men from all sides, and ardent,
+ambitious officers from every corps of the army sought commands. Among
+the latter we may mention a certain Captain, since Marshal de M'Mahon,
+who was put at the head of the Tenth Battalion.
+
+Under the eyes of the Prince Royal, and in accordance with a series
+of regulations drawn up by him with the greatest care, and constantly
+modified to suit circumstances, the battalions were drilled and
+trained assiduously in all the walks of their profession connected
+with their own destined service. Every branch of their military life
+was illustrated by their exercises, and even the officers went through
+a thorough course of special instruction under accomplished tutors,
+who were also officers of peculiar ability and experience. While
+the Duke of Orléans, with the distinguished General Rostolan and two
+picked lieutenant-colonels, remained at St. Omer in charge of the
+growing force, another lieutenant-colonel was intrusted with the task
+of training subordinates to serve as teachers in sharp-shooting, and
+for this purpose a detachment was assembled at Vincennes, consisting
+of ten officers and a number of subalterns who had attracted attention
+by their particular aptitude. These, after having been thoroughly
+instructed in the manufacture of small arms, the preparation of
+munitions, and the rules and practice of sharp-shooting, were sent to
+St. Omer to furnish the new battalions with the officers who were to
+form part of the permanent organization. The weapon selected was an
+improvement upon the former carabines of the Tirailleurs; and while
+the old proportion, to wit, the eighth part of each battalion, were
+armed with guns of longer range, and styled distinctively Carabiniers,
+these were set apart as the picked company of each battalion. The
+Duke, taking up his residence at St. Omer, attended in person to all
+that was going forward; and so constant were his exertions, and so
+warm the zeal of those who assisted the enterprise, that in a few
+months all the battalions were equipped, armed, and well drilled.
+
+One fine spring morning,--it was in May, 1841,--a long column of
+troops entered Paris with a celerity hitherto unknown. There was no
+false glitter, no tinsel; everything was neat and martial, with bugles
+for their only music, and a uniform that was sombre, indeed, but of
+such harmonious simplicity as to be by no means devoid of elegance.
+This column consisted of the Chasseurs, coming to receive their
+standard from the hands of Louis Philippe, and speeding through the
+streets with their _gymnastic step_. On the very next day, as though
+to signalize the serious and entirely military character of the
+organization, four of these battalions were sent off to Africa,
+and the remaining six posted at the different leading fortresses of
+France, where the collections of artillery, etc., enabled them to
+proceed with the perfect development of their training.
+
+It was only a year later, when the Duke of Orléans was snatched away,
+on the very eve of some crowning experiments he was about to make in
+illustration of the full uses and capacities of this force, that it
+received the title of Chasseurs d'Orléans, which the modesty of
+its founder would not tolerate during his lifetime. This name they
+gallantly bore through the combats that marked their novitiate in
+Africa, where it was at once found that the complete preparation of
+both officers and men made victory comparatively easy for them. The
+deadly precision of their aim struck terror into the Arabs, and, as
+early as 1842, the splendid behavior of the Sixth Battalion in the
+bloody fights of the Oued Foddah at once ranged the Chasseurs among
+the finest troops in Africa. To attempt to follow them step by step
+in their career would be idle in the space we have here allotted to
+ourselves. We shall therefore cite merely a few instances where their
+courage and efficiency shone with peculiar lustre.
+
+In the course of the year 1845, an impostor, playing upon the
+credulity of the Arabs, and artfully availing himself of the
+organization ready furnished by the religious sect to which he
+belonged, succeeded in bringing about a revolt of a great portion of
+the tribes in Algiers and Oran. He went by the title of "Master of the
+Hour," a sort of Messiah who had been long expected in that region.
+But he was more generally known as Bou-Maza, or _The Father with the
+She-Goat_, from the fact that a she-goat was his customary companion,
+and was supposed by the populace to serve him as a medium of
+communication with the supernatural Powers. This man exhibited a great
+deal of skill and audacity. His activity was so extraordinary, and
+he had been seen at so many different points at almost the same time,
+that his very existence was at first doubted, and many supposed him to
+be a myth. At one time it was thought that the insurrection had been
+quelled, as a chief calling himself Bou-Maza had been captured and
+shot, when, suddenly, the real leader reappeared among the Flittas,
+one of the most warlike tribes of Algeria, and living in a region very
+difficult of access. Against these and the Prophet, General Bourjolly,
+the French commander, marched at once, but unfortunately with very
+inadequate force. A terrible combat ensued, the Fourth Regiment of the
+Chasseurs d'Afrique and the Ninth Battalion of the Chasseurs d'Orléans
+having to sustain the brunt of it. Both these corps performed
+prodigies of valor, and it was worth while to hear the men of
+each reciprocally narrating the glory and the peril of their
+comrades,--these telling by what noble exploits the mounted Chasseurs
+(d'Afrique) had saved the remains of Lieutenant-Colonel Berthier, and
+the others describing the Chasseurs à Pied, how they stood immovable,
+although without cartridges, around the body of their commander,
+Clère, with their terrible sword-bayonets bloody to the hilt!
+
+On almost the same day, the Eighth Battalion succumbed to a frightful
+catastrophe. At a period of supposed tranquillity, the Souhalia
+tribe, who had been steadfast allies of the French, were unexpectedly
+attacked by Abd-el-Kader at the head of an overwhelming force.
+Lieutenant-Colonel Montagnac, with only sixty-two horsemen of the
+Second Hussars and three hundred and fifty men of the Eighth Chasseurs
+d'Orléans, hurried to the rescue. He was repeatedly warned of the
+danger, but, despite all that could be said, he dashed at the whole
+force of Abd-el-Kader. At the very first discharge, Montagnac fell
+mortally wounded, and in a few moments all the horses and nearly all
+the men were disabled. Captain Cognord, of the Second Hussars, rallied
+the survivors, and this little handful of heroes, huddled together
+upon a hillock, fought like tigers, until their ammunition was
+exhausted. The Arabs then closed in upon the group, which had become
+motionless and silent, and, to use the expressive language of an
+eye-witness, "felled them to the earth as they would overturn a wall."
+The enemy found none remaining but the dead, or those who were
+so badly wounded that they gave no sign of life. Before expiring,
+Montagnac had summoned to his aid a small detachment he had left in
+reserve. The latter, on its approach, was immediately surrounded, and
+perished to the very last man. There was now surviving of the whole
+French force only the Carabinier company of the Eighth Chasseurs, upon
+whom the Arabs rushed with fury, from every side. After a resistance
+of almost fabulous heroism, during which the flag of the company was
+shot away in shreds, and the Carabiniers cut their bullets into
+six and eight pieces so as to prolong their defence, every volley
+decimating the foe, this little band of seventy men, encumbered with
+ten wounded, succeeded in wearying and disheartening the Emir to such
+an extent that he determined to abandon the direct assault which was
+costing him so dearly, and to surround the French detachment in the
+ruined building which served them for a refuge, and so starve them
+out. Captain Dutertre, Adjutant of the Eighth, who had been captured
+by the Arabs in the early part of the action, was sent forward by the
+enemy toward his old comrades. For a moment the firing ceased, and
+the Captain shouted so that all could hear him,--"Chasseurs, they have
+sworn to behead me, if you do not lay down your arms; and I say to
+you, Die, rather than surrender one single man!"
+
+The Captain was instantly sabred, and the conflict recommenced. The
+same summons was repeated twice afterwards, and twice failed, when,
+finally, the firing ceased, and the Arabs bivouacked around their
+prey. Every possible approach was closed and guarded, and, thus caged
+in, the Chasseurs remained for three nights and days without food or
+drink. At length, by a sudden and desperate dash, on the morning
+of September 20th, the seventy heroes, bearing their ten wounded
+comrades, succeeded in breaking through the line of Arab sentinels,
+and escaped to a neighboring chain of hills. Thither they were pursued
+by their wild foemen, who, although infuriated at the daring and
+success of this sally, had a sufficient respect for the heavy
+carabines of the French, and merely hovered closely on their rear,
+awaiting some favorable opportunity to dash in upon them. This moment
+soon came. The French soldiers, no longer able to withstand the
+torments of thirst, descending from the hills, in spite of the
+entreaties of their officers, dashed into a neighboring stream to cool
+their burning lips. The instant of doom had come, and, in less time
+than it takes to recite the narrative, all but twelve of the little
+band were massacred by the exulting Arabs. The twelve escaped to
+Djemaa only after terrible privations and sufferings.
+
+We might readily fill a volume with episodes equally glorious and
+equally gloomy in the career of the Chasseurs. They were in nearly
+all the brilliant actions of the ensuing Algerian campaigns, and, at
+Zaatcha, Isly, and other famed engagements, they contended side by
+side with the renowned Zouaves for the palm of military excellence.
+Their agility, their promptitude in action, their ardor in attack, and
+their solidity in retreat, their endurance on the march, their skill
+and intelligence in availing themselves of every inequality of ground
+and in turning everything to account, made them so conspicuously
+preferable, as an infantry corps, for certain operations, that Marshal
+Bugeaud caused the number of battalions employed in Africa to be
+increased to six. From that time to the present, continual progress
+has been, made in the organization, discipline, and instruction of
+the Chasseurs, and all the objections which at different periods were,
+raised against the special composition and details of the force having
+been one by one met and obviated, France now counts no less than
+twenty-one battalions of them in her army.
+
+It was for a long time thought by some, that, although the Chasseurs,
+like the Zouaves, had been successful in the skirmishing engagements
+of Algeria, they would not be found so useful in European warfare.
+This opinion was proved to be erroneous at the siege of Rome, in 1849,
+where the Chasseurs, armed with their new and terrible weapon, the
+_carabine à tige_, in the management of which they had been thoroughly
+drilled, rendered the most important service; and from what was seen
+of them there it became evident that the existence of such a force,
+so perfected in every particular, would hereafter greatly modify the
+relations and conditions of the defence and attack of fortified works.
+The importance of this fact will impress the reader, when he remembers
+how large a part fortresses have played in warfare since 1815, and
+especially when he glances at the tendency everywhere perceptible now
+toward transforming military strongholds into great intrenched camps,
+as revealed at Antwerp in Belgium, Fredericia in Denmark, Buda and
+Comorn in Hungary, Peschiera, Mantua, Venice, Verona, and Rome in
+Italy, Silistria and Sebastopol in the East, and Washington, Manassas,
+and Richmond in America.
+
+Other nations have not been slow to follow French example. Russia
+is rapidly manufacturing rifled pieces for her service; England
+is providing her whole army with the Minié musket, and Austria and
+Prussia are applying inventions of their own to the armament of corps
+organized and trained on the principle of the French Chasseurs.
+
+The Duke of Wellington is said to have remarked, not long before his
+death, while speaking of the English troops, that they had, indeed,
+adopted the new musket, but that it would be physically difficult for
+them to transform themselves into light infantry. The same observation
+will undoubtedly apply to all the Continental nations excepting the
+French; but in the United States, while we could muster the finest
+heavy troops in the world, we have also the most abundant material for
+just such light infantry as those described in the foregoing sketch.
+
+The Chasseurs are not merely distinguished as perfect light infantry,
+but they also form excellent troops of the line. By the weight of
+their fire, they are capable of producing in battles and sieges
+effects unknown before their appearance on the scene, and that is the
+great point, the entirely new feature about them.
+
+The creation of these battalions, well planned and happily executed
+as it has been, remains a most important event in military history.
+Consecrated by the valor and the intelligence of the officers and
+soldiers of France, it has been the signal and the source of new
+and rapid reforms. One of these battalions attached to each infantry
+division adds fresh force to that fine classification which first
+arose under the Republic, and, although somewhat perverted under the
+Empire, still remains the basis of the French grand organization,
+recalling, as it does, the immortal idea of the Roman Legion.
+
+With the aid of its example, and the emulation inspired by the success
+of the Chasseurs, the splendid system of the French infantry-service
+has been completed under the present Napoleon; and we now behold the
+race he rules so disciplined for war, the respective qualities of the
+North and the South of France, the firmness and solidity of the former
+and the enthusiasm and ardor of the latter, so beautifully blended,
+that we may well exclaim, "Here, indeed, is a whole nation armed! _in
+pedite robur_!"
+
+In conclusion, the writer and compiler of this sketch would not be
+venturing too far, perhaps, were he to remark that so excellent an
+example can be nowhere better followed than in this country, if, as
+would to-day appear a certainty, we are to turn aside from the ways of
+peace to study the art of war. We have here precisely the material
+for whole armies of light infantry, the most favorable conditions
+for their equipment and instruction, and, owing to the nature of the
+region we inhabit, its dense woodlands, its wide savannas, its broad
+rivers, and its numerous ranges of rough mountains, the very land
+in which the tactics and marksmanship of the Chasseurs would be most
+available.
+
+
+
+
+LATEST VIEWS OF MR. BIGLOW.
+
+PRELIMINARY NOTE.
+
+
+[It is with feelings of the liveliest pain that we inform our readers
+of the death of the Reverend Homer Wilbur, A.M., which took place
+suddenly, by an apoplectic stroke, on the afternoon of Christmas day,
+1862. Our venerable friend (for so we may venture to call him, though
+we never enjoyed the high privilege of his personal acquaintance)
+was in his eighty-fourth year, having been born June 12, 1779, at
+Pigsgusset Precinct (now West Jerusha) in the then District of Maine.
+Graduated with distinction at Hubville College in 1805, he pursued his
+theological studies with the late Reverend Preserved Thacker, D.D.,
+and was called to the charge of the First Society in Jaalam in 1809,
+where he remained till his death.
+
+"As an antiquary he has probably left no superior, if, indeed,
+an equal," writes his friend and colleague, the Reverend Jeduthun
+Hitchcock, to whom we are indebted for the above facts; "in proof
+of which I need only allude to his 'History of Jaalam, Genealogical,
+Topographical, and Ecclesiastical,' 1849, which has won him an eminent
+and enduring place in our more solid and useful literature. It is only
+to be regretted that his intense application to historical studies
+should have so entirely withdrawn him from the pursuit of poetical
+composition, for which he was endowed by Nature with a remarkable
+aptitude. His well-known hymn, beginning, 'With clouds of care
+encompassed round,' has been attributed in some collections to the
+late President Dwight, and it is hardly presumptuous to affirm that
+the simile of the rainbow in the eighth stanza would do no discredit
+to that polished pen."
+
+We regret that we have not room at present for the whole of Mr.
+Hitchcock's exceedingly valuable communication. We hope to lay more
+liberal extracts from it before our readers at an early day. A summary
+of its contents will give some notion of its importance and interest.
+It contains: 1st, A biographical sketch of Mr. Wilbur, with notices
+of his predecessors in the pastoral office, and of eminent clerical
+contemporaries; 2d, An obituary of deceased, from the Punkin-Falls
+"Weekly Parallel"; 3d, A list of his printed and manuscript
+productions and of projected works; 4th, Personal anecdotes and
+recollections, with specimens of table-talk; 5th, A tribute to his
+relict, Mrs. Dorcas (Pilcox) Wilbur; 6th, A list of graduates fitted
+for different colleges by Mr. Wilbur, with biographical memoranda
+touching the more distinguished; 7th, Concerning learned, charitable,
+and other societies, of which Mr. Wilbur was a member, and of those
+with which, had his life been prolonged, he would doubtless have been
+associated, with a complete catalogue of such Americans as have been
+Fellows of the Royal Society; 8th, A brief summary of Mr. Wilbur's
+latest conclusions concerning the Tenth Horn of the Beast in its
+special application to recent events, for which the public, as Mr.
+Hitchcock assures us, have been waiting with feelings of lively
+anticipation; 10th, Mr. Hitchcock's own views on the same topic; and,
+11th, A brief essay on the importance of local histories. It will be
+apparent that the duty of preparing Mr. Wilbur's biography could not
+have fallen into more sympathetic hands.
+
+In a private letter with which the reverend gentleman has since
+favored us, he expresses the opinion that Mr. Wilbur's life was
+shortened by our unhappy civil war. It disturbed his studies,
+dislocated all his habitual associations and trains of thought, and
+unsettled the foundations of a faith, rather the result of habit than
+conviction, in the capacity of man for self-government. "Such has
+been the felicity of my life," he said to Mr. Hitchcock, on the very
+morning of the day he died, "that, through the divine mercy, I could
+always say, _Summum nec metuo diem, nec opto_. It has been my habit,
+as you know, on every recurrence of this blessed anniversary, to read
+Milton's 'Hymn of the Nativity' till its sublime harmonies so dilated
+my soul and quickened its spiritual sense that I seemed to hear that
+other song which gave assurance to the shepherds that there was
+One who would lead them also in green pastures and beside the still
+waters. But to-day I have been unable to think of anything but that
+mournful text, 'I came not to send peace, but a sword,' and, did it
+not smack of pagan presumptuousness, could almost wish I had never
+lived to see this day."
+
+Mr. Hitchcock also informs us that his friend "lies buried in the
+Jaalam graveyard, under a large red-cedar which he specially admired.
+A neat and substantial monument is to be erected over his remains,
+with a Latin epitaph written by himself; for he was accustomed to say
+pleasantly that there was at least one occasion in a scholar's life
+when he might show the advantages of a classical training."
+
+The following fragment of a letter addressed to us, and apparently
+intended to accompany Mr. Biglow's contribution to the present
+number, was found upon his table after his decease.--EDITORS ATLANTIC
+MONTHLY.]
+
+_To the Editors of the_ ATLANTIC MONTHLY.
+
+Jaalam, 24th Dec'r, 1862
+
+RESPECTED SIRS,--The infirm state of my bodily health would be a
+sufficient apology for not taking up the pen at this time, wholesome
+as I deem it for the mind to apricate in the shelter of epistolary
+confidence, were it not that a considerable, I might even say a large,
+number of individuals in this parish expect from their pastor some
+publick expression of sentiment at this crisis. Moreover, _Qui tacitus
+ardet magis uritur_. In trying times like these, the besetting sin of
+undisciplined minds is to seek refuge from inexplicable realities
+in the dangerous stimulant of angry partisanship or the indolent
+narcotick of vague and hopeful vaticination; _fortunamque suo temperat
+arbitrio_. Both by reason of my age and my natural temperament, I am
+unfitted for either. Unable to penetrate the inscrutable judgments of
+God, I am more than ever thankful that my life has been prolonged till
+I could in some small measure comprehend His mercy. As there is no man
+who does not at some time render himself amenable to the one,--_quum
+vix Justus sit securus_,--so there is none that does not feel himself
+in daily need of the other.
+
+I confess, I cannot feel, as some do, a personal consolation for the
+manifest evils of this war in any remote or contingent advantages
+that may spring from it. I am old and weak, I can bear little, and can
+scarce hope to see better days; nor is it any adequate compensation
+to know that Nature is old and strong and can bear much. Old men
+philosophize over the past, but the present is only a burthen and a
+weariness. The one lies before them like a placid evening landscape;
+the other is full of the vexations and anxieties of housekeeping.
+It may be true enough that _miscet haec illis, prohibetque Clotho
+fortunam stare_, but he who said it was fain at last to call in
+Atropos with her shears before her time; and I cannot help selfishly
+mourning that the fortune of our Republick could not at least stand
+till my days were numbered.
+
+Tibullus would find the origin of wars in the great exaggeration of
+riches, and does not stick to say that in the days of the beechen
+trencher there was peace. But averse as I am by nature from all wars,
+the more as they have been especially fatal to libraries, I would have
+this one go on till we are reduced to wooden platters again, rather
+than surrender the principle to defend which it was undertaken. Though
+I believe Slavery to have been the cause of it, by so thoroughly
+demoralizing Northern politicks for its own purposes as to give
+opportunity and hope to treason, yet I would not have our thought and
+purpose diverted from their true object,--the maintenance of the idea
+of Government. We are not merely suppressing an enormous riot, but
+contending for the possibility of permanent order coexisting with
+democratical fickleness; and while I would not superstitiously
+venerate form to the sacrifice of substance, neither would I forget
+that an adherence to precedent and prescription can alone give that
+continuity and coherence under a democratical constitution which are
+inherent in the person of a despotick monarch and the selfishness of
+an aristocratical class. _Stet pro ratione voluntas_ is as dangerous
+in a majority as in a tyrant.
+
+I cannot allow the present production of my young friend to go out
+without a protest from me against a certain extremeness in his views,
+more pardonable in the poet than the philosopher. While I agree with
+him that the only cure for rebellion is suppression by force, yet I
+must animadvert upon certain phrases where I seem to see a coincidence
+with a popular fallacy on the subject of compromise. On the one hand
+there are those who do not see that the vital principle of Government
+and the seminal principle of Law cannot properly be made a subject of
+compromise at all, and on the other those who are equally blind to the
+truth that without a compromise of individual opinions, interests, and
+even rights, no society would be possible. _In medio tutissimus_. For
+my own part, I would gladly----
+
+ Ef I a song or two could make,
+ Like rockets druv by their own burnin',
+ All leap an' light, to leave a wake
+ Men's hearts an' faces skyward turnin'!--
+ But, it strikes me, 't ain't jest the time
+ Fer stringin' words with settisfaction:
+ Wut's wanted now's the silent rhyme
+ 'Twixt upright Will an' downright Action.
+
+ Words, ef you keep 'em, pay their keep,
+ But gabble's the short cut to ruin;
+ It's gratis, (gals half-price,) but cheap
+ At no rate, ef it henders doin';
+ Ther' 's nothin' wuss, 'less 't is to set
+ A martyr-prem'um upon jawrin':
+ Teapots git dangerous, ef you shet
+ Their lids down on 'em with Fort Warren.
+
+ 'Bout long enough it's ben discussed
+ Who sot the magazine afire,
+ An' whether, ef Bob Wickliffe bust,
+ 'T would scare us more or blow us higher,
+ D' ye s'pose the Gret Foreseer's plan
+ Wuz settled fer him in town-meetin'?
+ Or thet ther' 'd ben no Fall o' Man,
+ Ef Adam'd on'y bit a sweetin'?
+
+ Oh, Jon'than, ef you want to be
+ A rugged chap agin an' hearty,
+ Go fer wutever'll hurt Jeff D.,
+ Nut wut'll boost up ary party.
+ Here's hell broke loose, an' we lay flat
+ With half the univarse a-singein',
+ Till Sen'tor This an' Gov'nor Thet
+ Stop squabblin' fer the garding-ingin'.
+
+ It's war we're in, not politics;
+ It's systems wrastlin' now, not parties;
+ An' victory in the eend'll fix
+ Where longest will an' truest heart is.
+ An' wut's the Guv'ment folks about?
+ Tryin' to hope ther' 's nothin' doin',
+ An' look ez though they didn't doubt
+ Sunthin' pertickler wuz a-brewin'.
+
+ Ther' 's critters yit thet talk an' act
+ Fer wut they call Conciliation;
+ They'd hand a buff'lo-drove a tract
+ When they wuz madder than all Bashan.
+ Conciliate? it jest means _be kicked_,
+ No metter how they phrase an' tone it;
+ It means thet we're to set down licked,
+ Thet we're poor shotes an' glad to own it!
+
+ A war on tick's ez dear'z the deuce,
+ But it wun't leave no lastin' traces,
+ Ez't would to make a sneakin' truce
+ Without no moral specie-basis:
+ Ef green-backs ain't nut jest the cheese,
+ I guess ther' 's evils thet's extremer,--
+ Fer instance,--shinplaster idees
+ Like them put out by Gov'nor Seymour.
+
+ Last year, the Nation, at a word,
+ When tremblin' Freedom cried to shield her,
+ Flamed weldin' into one keen sword
+ Waitin' an' longin' fer a wielder:
+ A splendid flash!--an' how'd the grasp
+ With sech a chance ez thet wuz tally?
+ Ther' warn't no meanin' in our clasp,--
+ Half this, half thet, all shilly-shally.
+
+ More men? More Man! It's there we fail;
+ Weak plans grow weaker yit by lengthenin':
+ Wut use in addin' to the tail,
+ When it's the head's in need o' strengthenin'?
+ We wanted one thet felt all Chief
+ From roots o' hair to sole o' stockin',
+ Square-sot with thousan'-ton belief
+ In him an' us, ef earth went rockin'!
+
+ Ole Hick'ry wouldn't ha' stood see-saw
+ 'Bout doin' things till they wuz done with,--
+ He'd smashed the tables o' the Law
+ In time o' need to load his gun with;
+ He couldn't see but jest one side,--
+ Ef his, 'twuz God's, an' thet wuz plenty;
+ An' so his "_Forrards_!" multiplied
+ An army's fightin' weight by twenty.
+
+ But this 'ere histin', creak, creak, creak,
+ Your cappen's heart up with a derrick,
+ This tryin' to coax a lightnin'-streak
+ Out of a half-discouraged hay-rick,
+ This hangin' on mont' arter mont'
+ Fer one sharp purpose 'mongst the twitter,--
+ I tell ye, it doos kind o' stunt
+ The peth an' sperit of a critter.
+
+ In six months where'll the People be,
+ Ef leaders look on revolution
+ Ez though it wuz a cup o' tea,--
+ Jest social el'ments in solution?
+ This weighin' things doos wal enough
+ When war cools down, an' comes to writin';
+ But while it's makin', the true stuff
+ Is pison-mad, pig-headed fightin'.
+
+ Democ'acy gives every man
+ A right to be his own oppressor;
+ But a loose Gov'ment ain't the plan,
+ Helpless ez spilled beans on a dresser:
+ I tell ye one thing we might larn
+ From them smart critters, the Seceders,--
+ Ef bein' right's the fust consarn,
+ The 'fore-the-fust 's cast-iron leaders.
+
+ But 'pears to me I see some signs
+ Thet we're a-goin' to use our senses:
+ Jeff druv us into these hard lines,
+ An' ough' to bear his half th' expenses;
+ Slavery's Secession's heart an' will,
+ South, North, East, West, where'er you find it,
+ An' ef it drors into War's mill,
+ D' ye say them thunder-stones sha'n't grind it?
+
+ D' ye s'pose, ef Jeff giv _him_ a lick,
+ Ole Hick'ry'd tried his head to sof'n
+ So 's 't wouldn't hurt thet ebony stick
+ Thet's made our side see stars so of'n?
+ "No!" he'd ha' thundered, "on your knees,
+ An' own one flag, one road to glory!
+ Soft-heartedness, in times like these,
+ Shows sof'ness in the upper story!"
+
+ An' why should we kick up a muss
+ About the Pres'dunt's proclamation?
+ It ain't a-goin' to lib'rate us,
+ Ef we don't like emancipation:
+ The right to be a cussed fool
+ Is safe from all devices human,
+ It's common (ez a gin'l rule)
+ To every critter born o' woman.
+
+ So _we_'re all right, an' I, fer one,
+ Don't think our cause'll lose in vally
+ By rammin' Scriptur' in our gun,
+ An' gittin' Natur' fer an ally:
+ Thank God, say I, fer even a plan
+ To lift one human bein's level,
+ Give one more chance to make a man,
+ Or, anyhow, to spile a devil!
+
+ Not thet I'm one thet much expec'
+ Millennium by express to-morrer;
+ They _will_ miscarry,--I rec'lec'
+ Tu many on 'em, to my sorrer:
+ Men ain't made angels in a day,
+ No matter how you mould an' labor 'em,--
+ Nor 'riginal ones, I guess, don't stay
+ With Abe so of'n ez with Abraham,
+
+ The'ry thinks Fact a pooty thing,
+ An' wants the banns read right ensuin';
+ But Fact wun't noways wear the ring
+ 'Thout years o' settin' up an' wooin':
+ But, arter all, Time's dial-plate
+ Marks cent'ries with the minute-finger,
+ An' Good can't never come tu late,
+ Though it doos seem to try an' linger.
+
+ An' come wut will, I think it's grand
+ Abe's gut his will et last bloom-furnaced
+ In trial-flames till it'11 stand
+ The strain o' bein' in deadly earnest:
+ Thet's wut we want,--we want to know
+ The folks on our side hez the bravery
+ To b'lieve ez hard, come weal, come woe,
+ In Freedom ez Jeff doos in Slavery.
+
+ Set the two forces foot to foot,
+ An' every man knows who'll be winner,
+ Whose faith in God hez ary root
+ Thet goes down deeper than his dinner:
+ _Then_ 'twill be felt from pole to pole,
+ Without no need o' proclamation,
+ Earth's Biggest Country's gut her soul
+ An' risen up Earth's Greatest Nation!
+
+
+
+
+REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES.
+
+
+_Slavery and Secession in America, Historical and Economical; together
+with a Practical Scheme of Emancipation_. By THOMAS ELLISON, F.S.S.,
+etc. Second Edition: Enlarged. With a Reply to the Fundamental
+Arguments of Mr. James Spence, contained in his Work on the American
+Union, and Remarks on the Productions of Other Writers. With Map and
+Appendices. London: Sampson Low, Son, & Co.
+
+We have too long delayed to speak of Mr. Ellison's book. More than a
+year ago, before Mr. Stuart Mill or Professor Cairnes had written
+in our behalf, before we had received a word of sympathy from any
+representative Englishman, save Mr. John Bright, the first edition of
+this work was placed before the British public. And we could not
+have asked for a better informed or more judicious defender than Mr.
+Ellison. "Slavery and Secession in America" is a temperate and concise
+statement of the essential features of our national struggle. The
+supposed interest of half a million of slaveholders in the extension
+of the Southern institution is truly represented as the cause of their
+guilty insurrection against the liberties of their countrymen.
+Mr. Ellison does not desire immediate emancipation, and wastes no
+sentiment upon the sufferings of the negro. But the economical and
+social position of Slavery is given with the unanswerable emphasis of
+careful figures. He traces the rise and increase of the institution
+in the States, until its disgrace culminates in a bloody rebellion.
+He clearly shows, that, by acknowledging the doctrine involved in
+Secession, by allowing it to govern the intercourse between
+nations, the morality of society would be shaken from its base. The
+anti-slavery character of the strife in which we are involved is
+made to appear,--slavery-diffusion being the object of the South,
+slavery-restriction the aim of the North. It is shown that the
+Secession ordinances utterly failed to point out a single instance
+in which the rights of the Southern people were infringed upon by
+the National Executive; also, that the alleged right of Secession is
+neither Constitutional, nor, when backed by no tangible grievance,
+can it he called revolutionary. In short, Mr. Ellison takes the only
+ground which seems possible to loyalists in America: namely, that
+Secession--in other words, the treason of slaveholders against the
+Constitution of their country--is of necessity punishable by law; and
+that good men of all nationalities should unite in the moral support
+of a benignant government thus wantonly assailed.
+
+The "practical scheme of emancipation" promised us in the title can
+hardly be said to amount to a scheme at all; but there are suggestions
+worth attending to, if that delicate matter might be managed as we
+would, not as we must.
+
+We have marked but two passages for a questioning comment. General
+Taylor, by an inadvertency strange to pass to a second edition, is
+represented as putting down the South-Carolina Nullifiers in 1838.
+Also, Dr. Charles Mackay, the New-York Correspondent of the London
+"Times," is quoted as having once borne anti-slavery testimony. This
+is certainly hard. Whatever emoluments slave-masters or their allies
+may hereafter have it in their power to bestow this gentleman has
+fairly earned. If he ever did say anything that was disagreeable to
+them, it should not be remembered against him.
+
+The merit of Mr. Ellison's book is neither in rhetoric, philanthropic
+sentiment, nor any exalted theory of political philosophy; it is in an
+unanswerable appeal to statistics, and a condensed statement of facts.
+The work may be commended to all desirous of arriving at the truth.
+
+But no conventional phrases of a book-notice can express our
+obligations to Mr. Ellison and those few of his countrymen who have
+publicly rebuked the noisy bitterness of writers striving, with too
+much success, to debauch the sentiment of England. Most dear to us is
+an occasional lull in that storm of insolence and mendacity designed
+to embarrass the Government of the United States in the august and
+solemn championship of human liberty committed to its charge. And let
+it be remarked that our expectations of English approval were never
+Utopian. The great principle involved in the American contest was so
+far above the level of the ordinary pursuits of men, that, even
+among ourselves, few have been able to transfuse it into their daily
+consciousness. We never looked to England for the encouragement of a
+popular enthusiasm,--hardly, perhaps, for a cold acquiescence. John
+Bull, we said, is proverbially a grumbler, proverbially indifferent to
+all affairs but his own; he will be annoyed by tariffs, and plagued
+by scarcity of cotton;--what wonder, if we are a little misunderstood?
+The minor contributors to his daily press will not be able to think
+long or wisely of what they write; we must be ready to pardon a
+certain amount of irritation and misstatement. That such was the
+feeling of intelligent Americans towards England, at the beginning of
+our troubles, we have no doubt. But for the scurrility heaped upon
+us by what claims to be the higher British press we were totally
+unprepared,--and for this good reason, that such malignity of
+criticism as is possible in America could never have suggested it. Let
+us not be misunderstood. We acknowledge the "Rowdy Journal" and Mr.
+Jefferson Brick. Undoubtedly, newspapers exist among us of which the
+description of Mr. Dickens is no very extravagant caricature. But
+their editors, if not of notoriously infamous life, are those whose
+minds are unenlarged by any generous education,--men whose lack of
+grammar suggests a certain palliation of their want of veracity and
+good-breeding. Such journals are seldom or never seen by the
+large class of cultivated American readers, and are in no sense
+representative of them. The "Saturday Review" and "Blackwood's
+Magazine" are said to be conducted by men of University training.
+Their articles are written in clear and precise English, and often
+contain vigorous thought. They publish few papers which do not give
+evidence of at least tolerable scholarship in their writers. Of
+kindred periodicals on this side of the ocean it may be safely said,
+that the intelligence of the reader forces their criticism up to
+some decent standard of honest painstaking. We may thus explain the
+bewilderment which came over us at that burst of vulgar ribaldry
+from the leading British press, in which the organs above named have
+achieved a scandalous preeminence. Vibrating from the extreme of
+shallowness to the extreme of sufficiency, scorning to be limited in
+abuse by adhering to any single hypothesis, the current literature
+of England has gloated over the rebellion of Slavery with the cynical
+chuckles of a sour spinster. Would that language less strong could
+express our meaning! President Lincoln--whatever may be judged his
+deficiency in resources of statesmanship--will be embalmed by history
+as one possessing many qualities peculiarly adapted to our perilous
+crisis, together with an integrity of life and purpose honorably
+representing the yeomanry of the Republic. This man, the ruler of a
+friendly people, British journalists have proclaimed guilty of crimes
+to which the records of the darkest despotisms can scarcely furnish a
+parallel. The precious blood of Ellsworth was taken by the "Saturday
+Review" as the text of such disgraceful banter as we trust few
+bar-keepers in America would bestow upon a bully killed in a
+pot-house fray. General Butler, for a verbal infelicity in an order
+of imperative necessity and wholesome effect, has been befouled by
+language which no careful historian would apply to Tiberius or Louis
+XV. But enough of this. We should be glad to believe that these
+utterers of false witness were boorish men, in dark and desperate
+ignorance of the true bearing of our current affairs. We are unable so
+to believe.
+
+It is a relief to turn to that small company of Englishmen who
+have extended brother-hands to us in the day of our necessity. No
+world-homage of literary admiration is worth the personal emotion with
+which they are recognized in America as representatives of that
+_Old_ England which has place in the affection and gratitude of every
+cultivated man among us. They have done us justice, when contempt for
+justice alone was popular, and a cynical skepticism seemed the only
+retreat from blatant abuse. Cairnes, Mill, Ellison, and others whom we
+need not name,--for the sake of such men let us still think of England
+in generous temper. Their sympathies have been with us through this
+terrible arbitrament of arms; they were with us in that solemn close
+of the old year, when the destiny of our dumb four millions weighed
+upon the night. These men have told us that the principle for which we
+contend is sound and worthy: they may also tell us that we have made
+occasional mistakes in reducing the principle to practice; and of this
+we are painfully conscious. It is well for us to forego that reckless
+bravado of unexampled prosperity once so offensive to foreign ears.
+Yet the best thing we ever had to boast of has been with us in the
+storm. According to the admirable observation of Niebuhr,--"Liberty
+exists where public opinion can constrain Government to fulfil its
+duties, and where, on the other side, in times of popular infatuation,
+the Government can maintain a wise course in spite of public opinion."
+This liberty has been preserved to us through all the turbulence of
+war. Like some divine element, it has mingled in the convulsion of
+human passion, and already prophesies the day when the service of man
+to man, as of man to God, shall be rendered in perfect freedom.
+
+
+_A Treatise on Military Law and the Practice of Courts-Martial_. By
+CAPTAIN S.V. BENÉT, Ordnance Department, U.S. Army, late Assistant
+Professor of Ethics, Law, etc., Military Academy, West Point. Mew
+York: D. Van Nostrand.
+
+In these days of large armies and intense military enthusiasm, the
+very title of a military book commends it, _primâ facie_, to public
+interest; and when it promises to elucidate and systematize the
+intricate subject of military law, it has great specific importance
+in the eyes of the tens of thousands of officers who are constantly
+called upon to administer that law, and to whom the duties of
+courts-martial are new and difficult. But, to understand still more
+clearly the great value of such a work, supposing it to be well
+written, we must go back in the history of military courts, and see
+how little had been done to render them systematic and uniform,--what
+a comparatively unoccupied field the author had to reap in,--what
+needs there were to supply; and then we shall be better able to
+criticize his work, and to judge of its practical value.
+
+For a very long period we followed, in our army, the practice of the
+English courts-martial, as we adopted the English Common Law in our
+civic courts.
+
+The military code to be applied and administered by courts-martial is
+contained in the Act of Congress of the 10th of April, 1806, commonly
+called "The Rules and Articles of War," and in a few other acts and
+parts of acts, supplementary to these, which have been enacted from
+time to time, as circumstances seemed to require.
+
+In the year 1839, Major-General Macomb, commander-in-chief of the
+army, prepared a little treatise on "The Practice of Courts-Martial,"
+which, in lieu of something better, was generally used; and the modes
+of proceeding and forms of orders and records there given established
+uniformity in the actions and duties of such courts throughout the
+army.
+
+Five or six years later, Captain John P. O'Brien, of the Fourth
+Artillery, issued "A Treatise on American Military Law and Practice of
+Courts-Martial." This work evinced a great deal of legal research, and
+a thorough knowledge of the practical applications of military law;
+but it is voluminous, wanting in arrangement, and, while valuable as
+a storehouse from which to draw materials, not suited for ready
+reference, or for the study of beginners. It is now, we believe, out
+of print; and, as its accomplished author is not living, it can hardly
+be adapted to the wants of the army at the present day.
+
+In the year 1846, Captain William C. De Hart, of the Second Artillery,
+published his excellent work, entitled, "Observations on Military Law,
+and the Constitution and Practice of Courts-Martial." In his Preface
+he says,--"Since the legal establishment of the army and navy of
+the United States, there has been no work produced, written for the
+express purpose,... and intended as a guide for the administration
+of military justice." And, in a note, he adds, "The small treatise on
+courts-martial by the late Major-General Macomb is no exception to
+the remark." He makes, if we remember rightly, no reference to Captain
+O'Brien's work, which appeared but a short time before his own.
+
+The work of Captain De Hart, so far in advance of what had yet
+appeared on this subject, written, too, by an expert, who had been
+long employed under the orders of the War Department as the acting
+judge-advocate of the army, (the office of judge-advocate not being
+created till a later day,) was regarded as the chief authority in the
+army. But it was never designed, nor can it be easily adapted,
+for instruction. It is a philosophical discussion of the subject,
+containing many historical citations and illustrations, which show
+the reader his authorities without fortifying his positions. For a
+text-book, therefore, it lacks arrangement, and is too discursive.
+
+Up to this time, the subject of military law was not studied at the
+Military Academy; but in the year 1856, when the course of studies in
+that institution was lengthened, so as to consume five years instead
+of four, this branch was added to the curriculum, and has since been
+retained,--its importance being made every day more manifest. Then a
+treatise was wanted, which, while it could be used as authority in our
+vast army, should be also suited as a text-book for the cadets, from
+which they could recite in the section-room, and which should be their
+_vade-mecum_ for future reference,--originally learned, and always
+consulted.
+
+This was Captain Benét's self-appointed task, and he has performed it
+admirably. He has examined all the authorities, French and English,
+and his book bears the evidences of this original investigation. For
+purposes of study, his system is clear, his arrangement logical, and
+his divisions numerous and just. All the directions as to _trials_ are
+very practically set forth, so that any sensible volunteer officer,
+appointed upon a court unexpectedly, could very soon, by the aid of
+these pages, make himself "master of the position." And as there is
+much concurrent, and sometimes apparently conflicting, jurisdiction of
+military and civic courts, this volume ought to be on every lawyer's
+table as the special expounder of military law, wherever it may
+approach the action of the civil code.
+
+Having said thus much of the general plan, scope, and merits of the
+work, let us cast a brief glance at the nature of its contents. It is
+called a treatise on _Military Law_. What is military law? It is that
+law which governs the army, and all individuals connected with it. In
+other words, it has respect to military organization and discipline.
+It must not be confounded with _Martial Law_, which is the suspension
+of civic law, and the substitution of military law over citizens, not
+soldiers, in extraordinary circumstances.
+
+Military law, which cannot wait for the slow processes of civic
+courts, is immediate and condign in its action, and is administered
+by courts-martial, to which are confided the powers of judge and jury.
+These courts examine into the cases, find verdicts, and pronounce
+sentences,--all, however, subject to the revision and sanction of the
+supreme authority which convened them.
+
+Courts--martial are divided into two classes: _General Courts_, for
+the trial of officers, and of the higher grades of offences; and
+_Regimental_ or _Garrison Courts_, for the consideration of less
+important cases in a regiment or garrison. General courts vary in the
+number of members: they must be composed of not less than _five_, and
+of never more than _thirteen_. Regimental or garrison courts are
+never composed of more than three members. For general courts, only, a
+judge-advocate is appointed to conduct the prosecution for the United
+States.
+
+The offences against military law are determined by the "Rules and
+Articles of War," in which the principal offences are distinctly set
+forth and forbidden; and, that unanticipated misconduct may not be
+without cognizance and punishment, the _ninety-ninth_ article includes
+all such cases under the charge of "conduct to the prejudice of good
+order and military discipline," which is of universal scope.
+
+The punishments are also set forth in the Articles of War. Those
+prescribed for officers include death,--cashiering,[A]--cashiering,
+with a clause disabling the officer from ever holding any office
+under the United States,--dismissal,--suspension from rank and
+pay,--reprimand. For soldiers the principal punishments are
+death,--confinement,--confinement on bread-and-water diet,--solitary
+confinement,--forfeiture of pay and allowances,--discharges.
+
+[Footnote A: Cashiering implies something infamous in the British
+service; and although it has been attempted to make no distinction
+between cashiering and dismissing in our service, something of the
+opprobrium still attaches to the former punishment.]
+
+The conduct of the trial, the duties of all persons concerned,
+members, judge-advocate, prisoner, witnesses, counsel, etc., are
+given in detail, and will be very easily learned. Forms of orders for
+convening courts-martial, modes of recording the proceedings, the form
+of a general order confirming or disapproving the proceedings, the
+form of the judge-advocate's certificate, and the forms of charges
+and specifications under different articles of war, are given in
+the Appendix, and are used _verbatim_ by all judge-advocates and
+recorders. There are also explanations of the duties of courts of
+inquiry, and of boards for retiring disabled officers; and extracts
+from the Acts of Congress bearing upon military law. The Articles of
+War are also given for reference. The book is thus rendered complete
+as a manual for the conduct of courts-martial, from the original order
+to the execution of the sentence.
+
+From what has been said, it will be gathered that the work was needed,
+that it admirably supplies the need, and that it may be recommended,
+without qualification, as providing all the information which it
+purports to provide, and which could be demanded of it, in a lucid,
+systematic, and simple manner. It is an octavo volume, containing
+377 pages, clearly printed in large type, and on excellent paper;
+the binding is serviceable, being in strong buff leather, like other
+law-books.
+
+
+_Lectures on Moral Science_. Delivered before the Lowell Institute,
+Boston. By MARK HOPKINS, D.D., LL.D. Boston: Gould and Lincoln. 12mo.
+
+It is a little curious that there is not a single science in which
+man is constitutionally, and therefore directly interested, to which
+Emanuel Kant has not, in one way or another, written a _Prolegomena_.
+Professionally he did so in the case of Metaphysic: and out of the
+great original claim which he here established there emanates a
+separate claim, in each particular science of the order already
+indicated, to a sublime dictatorship. And chiefly is this claim valid
+in Moral Philosophy; for it was his province, the first of all men,
+clearly to reveal, as a scientific fact certified by demonstration,
+the divine eminence of the practical above the merely speculative
+powers of man,--the fulfilment of which mission justly entitled him
+to all the privileges incident to the vantage-ground thus
+gained,--privileges widely significant in a survey of that field where
+chiefly these practical powers hold their Olympian supremacy, the
+field of Moral Philosophy.
+
+Nothing could have afforded us a better excuse for a _résumé_ of Kant,
+in this connection, than the new work of Dr. Hopkins. Of the many
+treatises on Moral Science with which the reading world has been
+flooded and bewildered since the time of Coleridge, there is this one
+alone found worthy of being ranged along-side of the works of the
+old Königsberg seer,--the one alone which, like his, deals with
+the grander features of the science. It is the best realization
+objectively of Kant's subjective principles that has yet been given.
+But how, the plain English reader will ask, are we to understand from
+this the place which the new work takes in literature? Not readily,
+indeed, unless one has already taken the trouble to examine such of
+Kant's treatises as have found their way out of German into hardly
+tolerable English, and has, moreover, reflected upon the importance of
+the principles therein established. But, of those who will read
+this notice, not one out of fifty has had even the opportunity
+for examination, not one out of five thousand has really taken the
+opportunity, and, of those that have, one half, at least, have done so
+independently of any philosophic aim, and have therefore reflected to
+very little purpose on the principles involved. Therefore, what the
+reader could not or has not chosen to do for himself we will do for
+him, at the same time congratulating him that there is now placed in
+his hands as complete and perfect a structure outwardly, in the work
+under notice, as the groundwork furnished by the old master was, in
+its subjective analysis, simple and profound.
+
+Those who approach human nature, or the nature outside of us, with
+a reverence for reality, will give precedence, after the manner of
+Nature, to those powers which are predominant and determinative; and
+in man these are Reason and Will. These two exist as identical in
+Personality, which we may denominate as we choose, whether Rational
+Will, or, as Kant does more frequently, Practical Reason. Here, in the
+identity of these two powers in Personality, and still more in
+their relation to each other as they are differentiated in personal
+existence, does Morality originate and develop according to
+principles.
+
+Now let it be remembered that Kant's mission was, as above indicated,
+to exclude the speculative side of our nature from any direct relation
+to human destiny, inasmuch as it could not answer either of the
+three great questions which every man everywhere and of necessity
+puts,--Whence am I? What am I? and Whither do I tend?--and therefore
+stood confused in the presence of any grand reality, whether human or
+divine, and to make the Practical Reason the sole and immediate link
+of connection between ourselves and the realities from the presence of
+which the Speculative Reason had been driven. Then will it be
+clearly seen how he would answer the fundamental question of Moral
+Philosophy,--Wherein does the quality of Goodness originally reside?
+
+The answer, from Kant's own lips, is this: "There is nothing in
+the world, nor, generally speaking, even out of it, possible to be
+conceived, which can without limitation be held good, but a _Good
+Will_." The good is not in the end attained, not even in the volition,
+but is a principle resident in the will itself. "The volition is
+between its principle _a priori_, which is formal, and its spring _a
+posteriori_, which is material; and since it must be determined by
+something, and being deprived of every material principle, it must be
+determined by the formal."
+
+Now, although President Hopkins considers Moral Philosophy as a
+philosophy of _ends_, he evidently does not mean ends _a posteriori_
+and _material_, but ends _a priori_, using the term as the best
+objective translation of _principles_. Almost as if with the conscious
+design of making his work harmonize with the groundwork furnished by
+Kant, he has developed a graduated series of conditions, according
+to which we ascend "the great world's altar-stairs," from lower and
+conditioned good up to that good which is the condition of all, itself
+unlimited, namely, in the will fulfilling its original design. The
+"law of limitation," according to which not only the subordinate
+powers of man, but even the forces of Nature, from those concerned in
+the highest animal organization down to that of gravitation, are made
+to take their places in the chain of dependence which hangs from the
+human will, is the most important part, scientifically, of the whole
+work. It is in accordance with this law that the science of Morals
+becomes a structure,--universal in its base and regularly ascending
+after the order of Nature, harmonious in all its parts, and proceeding
+upward within hearing of universal harmonies. Hitherto there has been
+no such structure; but only tabernacles have been built, because there
+was no Solomon to build a temple.
+
+Once having determined the connection which there is between the Will
+and the principle of Good, there still remains to be determined the
+place which Reason has in this connection.
+
+Merely to act according to some teleological or determining principle
+gives man no preëminence above Nature, except in degree. That which is
+peculiar to man is that he has the faculty of acting according to laws
+_as represented and reflected upon in the light of thought_,--to which
+reason is absolutely indispensable. Reason is therefore necessary to
+choice,--to freedom. There can, therefore, no more be goodness without
+reason than there can be without will. Yet there might be, as Kant
+justly argues, if good were to be in any case identified with mere
+happiness. "For," says he, "all the actions which man has to perform
+with a view to happiness, and the whole rule of his conduct, would be
+much more exactly presented to him by instinct, and that end had been
+much more certainly attained than it ever can be by reason; and should
+the latter also be bestowed on the favored creature, it must be of use
+only in contemplating the happy predisposition lodged in instinct,
+to admire this, to rejoice in it, and be grateful for it to the
+beneficent Cause; in short, Nature would have prevented reason from
+any practical use in subduing appetite, etc., and from excogitating
+for itself a project of happiness; she would have taken upon herself
+not only the choice of ends, but the means, and had with wise care
+intrusted both to instinct merely." The fact, then, that reason has
+been given, and has been endowed with a practical use, is sufficient
+to prove that some more worthy end than felicity is designed,--namely,
+a will good in itself,--rationally good,--that is, _from choice_.
+
+Out of the _rationality_ of will is developed its _morality_. Here,
+only, is found the possibility of failure in respect of the end
+constitutionally indicated,--here only the avenues of temptation, by
+which alien elements come in to array the man against himself in
+a terrible conflict, so sublime that it is a spectacle to heavenly
+powers. It is only as this rationality is clearly developed, and is
+allotted its just place in Moral Science, that the universal structure
+to which we have already alluded, and which, as we saw, culminated
+in the will, assumes its peculiar sublimity. For the _voluntariness_
+which is consciously realized in reason gives man the mastery over
+constitutional processes, not merely to direct, but even to thwart
+them; nor this merely for himself, but it is in his power, through
+the nullification of his own constitution, to nullify also that of the
+world, to dally with the institutions of Nature, and on the grandest
+scale to play the meddler.
+
+Merely of itself, apart from reason, the will could only work out its
+teleological type in darkness and by blind necessity; there could be
+no goodness, for this involves conscious elements. But through reason,
+that which of itself the will would yield as unconscious impulse
+obtains _representation_, and thus becomes a recognized principle,
+which in connection with the feelings involves an element of
+obligation.
+
+Conscience, thus, instead of being a separate and independent faculty,
+is, as Dr. Hopkins also places it, a function of the moral reason.
+Into the courts of this reason come not only the higher indications of
+will, but also the impulses of appetite, instinct, and affection,--not
+moral in themselves, indeed, but yet assuming the garments of morality
+as seen in this high presence.
+
+That which was made fundamental by Kant, in all that he has left on
+the subject of Moral Philosophy, is the position that it is wholly
+to be developed out of practical reason, or will as represented in
+reason. The same position is fundamental in President Hopkins's work,
+and it is here that its philosophic value chiefly rests. This position
+is developed in plain English, with strict scientific truth, and yet
+with a warm and sympathetic glow, as regards outward embodiment,
+that very much heightens the elevating power of the principles
+and conclusions evolved. Nor is man, because of his independent
+personality, made to stand alone, but always is he seen in the
+higher and All-Comprehending Presence. Ideal truth is reached without
+necessitating Idealism, and harmony is attained without Pantheism.
+
+We have purposely confined ourselves to the most general feature of
+the work, because it is this which gives it its great and distinctive
+importance; yet the whole structure is as elaborately and beautifully
+wrought as it is fitly grounded in the truth of Nature.
+
+
+_The National Almanac and Annual Record for 1863_. Philadelphia:
+George W. Childs. 12mo. pp. 600.
+
+
+Volumes like this are the very staff of history. What a stride in
+literature from the "Prognostications" of Nostradamus and Partridge,
+and the imposture of such prophetic chap-books as the almanacs of
+Moore and Poor Robin, to the bulky volumes teeming with all manner of
+information, such as the "Almanach Impérial," the "New Edinburgh," or
+"Thorn's Irish Almanac"! In the list of superior works ranking with
+those just named is to be included the new "National Almanac." We have
+here assuredly a vast improvement over anything in this way which
+has heretofore been attempted among us. A more comprehensive range of
+topics is presented, and such standard subjects as we should naturally
+expect to find introduced are worked up with much more copiousness and
+accuracy of treatment. It is evident on every page that a thoroughly
+active and painstaking industry has presided over the preparation of
+the volume. Statistics have not been taken at second-hand, where the
+primary sources of knowledge could be rendered available. The details
+of the great Departments of the Federal Government have been revised
+by the Departments themselves. In like manner, the particulars
+concerning the several States have in most cases been corrected by a
+State officer. Thus, as respects the leading subjects in the book, we
+have here not only the most accurate information before the public,
+but we have it in the latest authorized or official form. Facts are
+as a general rule brought down to date, instead of being six or
+twelve months behind-hand, as has been the case heretofore in similar
+publications, the compilers of which were content to await the tardy
+printing by Congress of documents and reports. Hence the work is
+pervaded by an air of freshness and vitality. It is not merely
+a receptacle of outgrown facts and accomplished events, but the
+companion and interpreter of the scenes and activities of the stirring
+present. It strives to seize and embody the whole being and doing of
+the passing time.
+
+It is quite impossible to exhibit in these few lines any adequate
+conception of the diversity and fulness of the subjects. All the
+valuable results of the last census are classified and incorporated.
+Then we have the entire organization of the military, naval, and
+civil service,--the tariff and tax laws conveniently arranged,--the
+financial, industrial, commercial, agricultural, literary,
+educational, and ecclesiastical elements of our condition,--the
+legislation of the last three sessions of Congress, and full and
+detailed statistics of the individual States,--to which is added a
+minute sketch of the foreign Governments. Nor can we overlook the
+fact, that, in the abundant matter relating to our present war,
+the narrative of events, obituary notices, etc., reach back to
+the commencement of the Rebellion, so as to furnish a complete and
+unbroken record of the contest from its outbreak. So much for the
+diversified nature of the matter; and an idea may be formed of its
+aggregate bulk from the fact that it exceeds, by nearly one-third, the
+size of the "American Almanac."
+
+The publication is, we trust, the dawning of a new era in this
+department of our literature. We have done well heretofore, but we
+have been behind many of the leading foreign works. There are in this
+initial volume indications that the new series which it inaugurates
+will be conducted with a thoroughness, enterprise, and skill which
+cannot fail to supply a great want. The politician, statesman,
+and scholar, the merchant, mechanic, and tradesman, every
+newspaper-reader, and, in truth, every observant and thoughtful man,
+of whatsoever profession or business, always wants at hand a minute
+and trustworthy exhibition of the manifold elements which constitute
+the changeful present as it ebbs and flows around him. Such hand-books
+are indispensable for present reference, and they constitute an
+invaluable storehouse for the future.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Atlantic Monthly, Vol. XI., February,
+1863, No. LXIV., by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12785 ***
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #12785 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/12785)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Atlantic Monthly, Vol. XI., February, 1863,
+No. LXIV., 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: Atlantic Monthly, Vol. XI., February, 1863, No. LXIV.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: June 30, 2004 [EBook #12785]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATLANTIC MONTHLY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Leonard Johnson
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+ATLANTIC MONTHLY.
+
+A MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, ART, AND POLITICS.
+
+VOL. XI--FEBRUARY, 1863.--NO. LXIV.
+
+
+
+
+SOVEREIGNS AND SONS.
+
+
+The sudden death of Prince Albert caused profound regret, and the
+Royal Family of Britain had the sincere sympathies of the civilized
+world on that sad occasion. The Prince Consort was a man of brilliant
+talents, and those talents he had cultivated with true German
+thoroughness. His knowledge was extensive, various, and accurate.
+There was no affectation in his regard for literature, art, and
+science; for he felt toward them all as it was natural that an
+educated gentleman of decided abilities, and who had strongly
+pronounced intellectual tastes, should feel. Though he could not be
+said to hold any official position, his place in the British Empire
+was one of the highest that could be held by a person not born to the
+sceptre. His knowledge of affairs, and the confidence that was placed
+in him by the sovereign, made it impossible that he should not be
+a man of much influence, no matter whether he was recognized by the
+Constitution or not. As the director of the education of the princes
+and princesses, his children, his character and ideas are likely to be
+felt hereafter, when those personages shall have become the occupants
+of high and responsible stations. The next English sovereign will be
+pretty much what he was made by his father; and it is no light thing
+to have had the formation of a mind that may be made to act, with
+more or less directness, on the condition of two hundred millions of
+people.
+
+We know it is the custom to speak of the Government of England as if
+there were no other powerful institution in that Empire than the House
+of Commons; and that very arrogant gentleman, Mr. John Arthur Roebuck,
+has told us, in his usual style, that the crown is a word, and nothing
+more. "The crown!" exclaimed the member for Sheffield, in 1858,--"the
+crown! it is the House of Commons!" Theoretically Mr. Roebuek is
+right, and the British practice conforms to the theory, whenever the
+reigning prince is content to receive the theory, and to act upon it:
+but all must depend upon that prince's character; and should a British
+sovereign resolve to rule as well as to reign, he might give the House
+of Commons much trouble, in which the whole Empire would share. The
+House of Commons was never stronger than it was in the latter part of
+1760. For more than seventy years it had been the first institution in
+the State, and for forty-six years the interest of the sovereign had
+been to maintain its supremacy. The king was a cipher. Yet a new
+king had but to appear to change everything. George III. ascended the
+throne with the determination not to be the slave of any minister,
+himself the slave of Parliament; and from the day that he became king
+to the day that the decline of his faculties enforced his retirement,
+his personal power was everywhere felt, and his personal character
+everywhere impressed itself on the British world, and to no ordinary
+extent on other countries. George III. was not a great man, and it has
+been argued that his mind was never really sound; and yet of all men
+who then lived, and far more than either Washington or Napoleon, he
+gave direction and color and tone to all public events, and to not
+a little of private life, and much of his work will have everlasting
+endurance. He did not supersede the House of Commons, but he would not
+be the simple vizier of that many-headed sultan, which for the most
+part became his humble tool. Yet he was not a popular sovereign until
+he had long occupied the throne, and had perpetrated deeds that should
+have destroyed the greatest popularity that sovereign ever possessed.
+It was not until after the overthrow of the Fox-and-North Coalition
+that he found himself popular, and so he remained unto the end. The
+change that he wrought, and the power that he wielded in the State,--a
+power as arbitrary as that of Louis XV.,--were the fruits of his
+personal character, and that character was the consequence of the
+peculiar education which he had received.
+
+Lord Brougham tells us that George III. "was impressed with a lofty
+feeling of his prerogative, and a firm determination to maintain,
+perhaps extend it. At all events, he was resolved not to be a mere
+name or a cipher in public affairs; and whether from a sense of the
+obligations imposed upon him by his station, or from a desire to enjoy
+all its powers and privileges, he certainly, while his reason remained
+entire, but especially during the earlier period of his reign,
+interfered in the affairs of government more than any prince who ever
+sat upon the throne of this country since our monarchy was distinctly
+admitted to be a limited one, and its executive functions were
+distributed among responsible ministers. The correspondence which he
+carried on with his confidential servants during the ten most critical
+years of his life lies before us, and it proves that his attention was
+ever awake to all the occurrences of the government. Not a step was
+taken in foreign, colonial, or domestic affairs, that he did not
+form his opinion upon it, and exercise his influence over it. The
+instructions to ambassadors, the orders to governors, the movements of
+forces, down to the marching of a single battalion, in the districts
+of this country, the appointment to all offices in Church and State,
+not only the giving away of judgeships, bishoprics, regiments, but the
+subordinate promotions, lay and clerical,--all these form the topics
+of his letters; on all his opinion is pronounced decisively; in
+all his will is declared peremptorily. In one letter he decides the
+appointment of a Scotch puisne judge; in another the march of a troop
+from Buckinghamshire into Yorkshire; in a third the nomination to
+the Deanery of Westminster; in a fourth he says, that, 'if Adam, the
+architect, succeeds Worsley at the Board of Works, he shall think
+Chambers ill used.' For the greater affairs of State it is well known
+how substantially he insisted upon being the king _de facto_ as well
+as _de jure_. The American War, the long exclusion of the Liberal
+party, the French Revolution, the Catholic question, are all sad
+monuments of his real power."
+
+This is a true picture of George III., and why it should be supposed
+that no descendant of that monarch will ever be able to make himself
+potently felt in the government of his Empire we are at a loss to
+understand. The exact part of that monarch would not be repeated, the
+world having changed so much as to render such repetition impossible;
+but the end at which George III. aimed, and which he largely
+accomplished for himself, that end being the vindication of the
+monarchical element in the British polity, might be undertaken by one
+of his great-grandsons with every reason to expect success. The means
+employed would have to be different from those which George III. made
+use of, but that would prove nothing against the project itself.
+The men who followed Cromwell to the Long Parliament and the men who
+followed Bonaparte into the Council of Five Hundred were differently
+clothed and armed, but the pikemen of the future Protector were
+engaged in the same kind of work that was afterward done by the
+grenadiers of the future Emperor. The one set of men had never
+heard of the bayonet, and the other set had faith in nothing but the
+bayonet, believing it to be as "holy" as M. Michelet asserts it to
+be. The pikemen were the most pious of men, and could have eaten an
+Atheist with relish, after having roasted him. The grenadiers were
+Atheists, and cared no more for Christianity than for Mahometanism,
+their chief having testified his regard for the latter, and
+consequently his contempt for both, only the year before, in Egypt.
+Yet both detachments were successfully employed in doing the same
+thing, and that was the clearing away of what was regarded as
+legislative rubbish, in order that military monarchies might be
+erected on the cleared ground. In each instance there was the element
+of violence actively at work, and it makes no possible difference that
+the English Commons went out because they did not care to come to push
+of pike, and that the French Representatives departed rather than risk
+the consequence of a bayonet-charge. So if the Prince of Wales should
+see fit to tread in the footsteps of his great-grandfather, he would
+have very different instruments from those "king's friends" whose
+existence and actions were so fatal to ministers in the early part of
+those days when George III. was king.
+
+It is a common remark, that the institutions of England have been so
+far reformed in a democratic direction, that no monarch could ever
+expect to become powerful in that country. We think the observation
+unphilosophical; and it is because the old aristocratical system of
+England received a heavy blow in 1832 that we believe a king of that
+country could make himself a ruler in fact as well as in theory.
+Between a king and an aristocracy there never can be anything like a
+sincere attachment, unless the king be content to be recognized as
+the first member of the patrician order, to be _primus inter pares_ in
+strict good faith, an agent of his class, but not the sovereign of his
+kingdom. Kings generally prefer new men to men of established position
+and old descent. They have a fondness for low-born favorites, who are
+not only cleverer than most aristocrats will condescend to be, but who
+recognize a chief in a monarch, and enable him to feel and to enjoy
+his superiority when in their company. The hostility that prevails
+between the peer and the _parvenu_ is the most natural thing in the
+world, and is no more to be wondered at than that between the hare and
+the hound. In earlier times the peerage had the best of it, and could
+hang up the _parvenus_ with wonderful despatch,--as witness the
+fate of Cochrane and his associates, favorites of the third James of
+Scotland, who swung in the wind over Lauder Bridge. In later times
+brains and intelligence tell in and on the world, and the peers,
+having no longer pit and gallows for the punishment of presumptuous
+plebeians who dare to get between them and the regal sunshine, must be
+content to see those plebeians basking in the royal rays, if they are
+not capable of outdoing them in those arts that ever have been found
+most useful in the advancement of the interest of courtiers. Hanging
+and heading have gone mostly out of date, or the peer would be in more
+danger than the upstart.
+
+The Reform Bill has made it much easier for a king of Great Britain to
+become a ruler than it was for George III. to carry his point over
+the old aristocracy, for it has created a class of voters who could be
+easily won over to the aid of a king engaged in a project that should
+not injure them, while its success should reduce the power of the
+aristocracy. The father of the Reform Bill made a strange mistake
+as to the character of that measure. "I hope," said the old Tory and
+Pittite, Lord Sidmouth, to him, "God will forgive you on account of
+this bill: I don't think I can." "Mark my words," was Earl Grey's
+answer,--"within two years you will find that we have become unpopular
+for having brought forward the most aristocratic measure that ever was
+proposed in Parliament." The great Whig statesman was but half right.
+The Whigs became unpopular within the time named, but it was for very
+different reasons from that assigned by Earl Grey in advance for their
+fall in the people's favor. The Reform Bill, instead of proving an
+aristocratic measure, has wellnigh rendered aristocratical government
+impossible in England; and as a democracy in that country is as much
+out of the question as a well-ordered monarchy is in America, a return
+to a true regal government would seem to be the only course left for
+England, if she desires to have a strong government. When the Duke of
+Wellington, seeing the breaking up of the old system because of the
+triumph of the Whig measure, asked the question, "How is the King's
+government to be carried on?" he meant, "How will it be possible to
+maintain the old aristocratical system of party-government?"
+
+Since the grand organic change that was effected thirty years ago,
+there has been no strong and stable government in England. Lord Grey
+went out of office because he could not keep his party together. The
+King, under the spurring of his wife, made an effort to play the part
+of his father in 1783, with Peel for Pitt, and was beaten. Peel was
+floored, and Lord Melbourne became Premier again; and though he held
+office six years, he never had a working majority in the Commons, nor
+a majority of any kind in the Peers. The largest majorities that he
+could command in the lower House would have been considered something
+like very weak support in the ante-Reform times, and would have caused
+the ministers of those times to resign themselves to resignation.
+When the Tories came back to power, in 1841, with about one hundred
+majority in the Commons, they thought they were secure for a decade
+at least; but in a few months they found they were not secure of even
+their own chief; and in five years they were compelled to abandon
+protection, and to consent to the death and burial of their own party,
+which was denied even the honor of embalmment, young Conservatism
+being nothing but old Toryism, and therefore it was beyond even the
+power of spices to prolong its decay. It had rotted of the potato-rot,
+and the League's powerful breath blew it over. The Whigs returned
+to office, but not to power, the Russell Government proving a most
+ridiculous concern, and living through only five years of rickety
+rule. A spasmodic Tory Government, that discarded Tory principles,
+endured for less than a year, not even the vigorous intellect of the
+Earl of Derby, seconded though it was by the genius of Disraeli, being
+sufficient to insure it a longer term of existence. Then came the
+Aberdeen Ministry, a regular coalition concern, a no-party government,
+and necessarily so, because all parties but the extreme Tories were
+represented in it, and were engaged in neutralizing each other. How
+could there be a party government, or, indeed, for long a government
+of any kind, by a ministry in which were such men as Aberdeen and
+Russell, Palmerston and Grahame, Gladstone and Clarendon, all pigging
+together in the same truckle-bed, to use Mr. Burke's figure concerning
+the mixture that was called the Chatham Ministry? The coalition went
+to pieces on the Russian rock, having managed the war much worse
+than any American Administration ever mismanaged one. The Palmerston
+Government followed, and has existed ever since, deducting the
+fifteen months that the second Derby-Disraeli Ministry lasted; but the
+Palmerston Ministry has seldom had a majority in Parliament, and has
+lived, partly through the forbearance of its foes, partly through the
+support of men who are neither its friends nor its enemies, and partly
+through the personal popularity of its vigorous old chief, who is
+as lively at seventy-eight as he was at forty-five, when he was a
+Canningite. Ministries now maintain themselves because men do not know
+what might happen, if they were to be dismissed; and this has been the
+political state of England for more than a quarter of a century, with
+no indications of a change so long as the government shall remain
+purely Parliamentary in its character, Parliament meaning the House of
+Commons. There is no party in the United Kingdom capable of electing a
+strong majority to the House of Commons, and hence a strong government
+is impossible so long as that body shall control the country. With the
+removal of Lord Palmerston something like anarchy might be expected,
+there being no man but him who is competent to keep the Commons in
+order without the aid of a predominating party. The tendency has been
+for some time to lean upon individuals, at the same time that
+the number of individuals possessed of influence of the requisite
+character has greatly diminished. Sir Robert Peel, had he lived, would
+have been all that Lord Palmerston is, and more, and would have been
+more acceptable to the middle class than is the Irish peer.
+
+The state of things that is thus presented, and which must become
+every year of a more pronounced character, is one that would be highly
+favorable to the exertions of a prince who should seek to make himself
+felt as the wielder of the sceptre, and who should exert himself to
+rise from the presidency of an aristocratical corporation, which is
+all that a British monarch now is, to the place of king of a great and
+free people. A prince with talent, and with a hold on the affection of
+his nominal subjects, might confer the blessing of strong government
+on Britain, and rule over the first of empires, instead of being a
+mere doge, or, as Napoleon coarsely had it, a pig to fatten at the
+public expense. The time would appear to be near at hand when England
+shall be the scene of a new struggle for power, with the aristocracy
+on the one side, and the sovereign and most of the people on the
+other. A nation like England cannot exist long with weakness
+organized for its government, and there is nothing in the condition
+of Parliament or of parties that allows us to suppose that from them
+strength could proceed, any more than that grapes could be gathered
+from thorns or figs from thistles. A monarch who should effect the
+change indicated might be called a usurper, and certainly would be a
+revolutionist; but, as Mommsen says, "Any revolution or any usurpation
+is justified before the bar of history by exclusive ability to
+govern,"--and government is what most nations now stand most in need
+of. The reason why George III.'s conduct is generally condemned is,
+that he was a clumsy creature, and that he made a bad use of the power
+which he monopolized, or sought to monopolize, his whole course being
+unrelieved by a single trait of genius, or even of that tact which is
+the genius of small minds.
+
+
+It has been charged upon the princes of the House of Hanover that they
+are given to quarrelling, and that between sovereign and heir-apparent
+there has never been good-will, while they have on several occasions
+disgusted the world by the vehemence of their hatred for each other.
+That George I. hated his heir is well known; and George II. hated his
+son Frederick with far more intensity than he himself had been hated
+by his own father. The Memoirs of Lord Hervey show the state of
+feeling that existed in the English royal family during the first
+third of the reign of George II., and the spectacle is hideous beyond
+parallel; and for many years longer, until Frederick's death,
+there was no abatement of paternal and filial hate. George III.
+was disgusted with his eldest son's personal conduct and political
+principles, as well he might be; for while the father was a model of
+decorum, and a bitter Tory, the son was a profligate, and a Whig,--and
+the King probably found it harder to forgive the Whig than the
+profligate. The Prince cared no more for Whig principles than he did
+for his marriage-vows, but affected them as a means of annoying his
+father, whose Toryism was of proof. He, as a man, toasted the buff and
+blue, when that meant support of Washington and his associates,
+for the same reason that, as a boy, he had cheered for Wilkes and
+Liberty,--because it was the readiest way of annoying his father; but
+he ever deserted the Whigs when his aid and countenance could have
+been useful to them. George IV. had no child with whom to quarrel, but
+while Prince Regent he did his worst to make his daughter unhappy,
+as we find established in Miss Knight's Memoirs. The good-natured
+and kind-hearted William IV. had no legitimate children, but he was
+strongly attached to the Fitzclarences, who were borne to him by Mrs.
+Jordan. Indeed, monarchs have often been as full of love for their
+offspring born out of wedlock as of hate for their children born in
+that holy state. Being men, they must love something, and what
+so natural as that they should love their natural children, whose
+helpless condition appeals so strongly to all their better feelings,
+and who never can become their rivals?
+
+Queen Victoria is the first sovereign of the House of Hanover who,
+having children, has not pained the world by quarrelling with them.
+A model sovereign, she has not allowed an infirmity supposed to be
+peculiar to her illustrious House to control her clear and just mind,
+so that her career as a mother is as pleasing as her career as a
+sovereign is splendid. About the time of the death of Prince Albert,
+a leading British journal published some articles in which it was
+insinuated, not asserted, that there had been trouble in the Royal
+Family, and that that quarrelling between parent and child which
+had been so common in that family in former times was about to
+be exhibited again. It was even said that domestic peace was an
+impossibility in the House of Hanover, which was but an indorsement
+of Earl Granville's remark, in George II.'s reign. "This family," said
+that eccentric peer, "always has quarrelled, and always will quarrel,
+from generation to generation"; and he did not live to see the ill
+feeling that existed between George III. and his eldest son.
+
+There is no reason for saying that the Hanover family is more
+quarrelsome than most other royal lines; and the domestic dissensions
+of great houses are more noted than those of lesser houses only
+because kings and nobles are so placed as to live in sight of the
+world. When a king falls out with his eldest son, the entertainment is
+one to which all men go as spectators, and historians consider it
+to be the first of their duties to give full details of that
+entertainment. Since the Hanoverians have reigned over the English,
+the world has been a writing and a reading world, and nothing has more
+interested writers and readers than the dissensions of sovereigns and
+their sons. If we extend our observation to those days when German
+sovereigns were unthought of in England, we shall find that kings
+and princes did not always agree; and if we go farther, and scan the
+histories of other royal houses, we shall learn that it is not in
+Britain alone that the wearers of crowns have looked with aversion
+upon their heirs, and have had sons who have loved them so well and
+truly as to wish to witness their promotion to heavenly crowns. The
+Hanoverian monarchs of England, and their sons, have shared only the
+common lot of those who reign and those who wish to reign.
+
+The Norman kings of England did not always live on good terms with
+their sons. William the Conqueror had a very quarrelsome family. His
+children quarrelled with one another, and the King quarrelled with his
+wife. The oldest son of William and Matilda was Robert, afterward Duke
+of Normandy,--and a very trying time this young man caused his father
+to have; while the mother favored the son, probably out of revenge for
+the beatings she had received, with fists and bridles, from her royal
+husband, who used to swear "By the Splendor of God!"--his favorite
+oath, and one that has as much merit as can belong to any piece of
+blasphemy,--that he never would be governed by a woman. The father and
+son went to war, and they actually met in battle, when the son ran the
+old gentleman through the arm with his lance, and dropped him out of
+the saddle with the utmost dexterity. This was the first time that
+the Conqueror was ever conquered, and perhaps it was not altogether
+without complacency that "the governor" saw what a clever fellow his
+eldest son was with his tools. At the time of William's death Robert
+was on bad terms with him, and is believed to have been bearing arms
+against him. Henry I. lost his sons before he could well quarrel
+with them, the wreck of the White Ship causing the death of his
+heir-apparent, and also of his natural son Richard. He compensated for
+this omission by quarrelling with his daughter Matilda, and with her
+husband, Geoffrey of Anjou. He made war on his brother Robert, took
+from him the Duchy of Normandy, and shut him up for life; but the
+story, long believed, that he put out Robert's eyes, has been called
+in question by modern writers. King Stephen, who bought his breeches
+at so low a figure, had a falling-out with his son Eustace, when he
+and Henry Plantagenet sought to restore peace to England, and nothing
+but Eustace's death made a settlement possible. William Rufus, the Red
+King, who was the second of the Norman sovereigns of England, had
+no legitimate children, for he was never married. He was a jolly
+bachelor, and as such he has had the honor of having his history
+written by one of the ablest literary ladies of our time, Miss Agnes
+Strickland. He was the only king of England, who arrived at years of
+indiscretion, who did not marry. The other bachelor kings were Edward
+V. and Edward VI., whose united ages were short of thirty years. His
+character does not tend to make the single state of man respected.
+"Never did a ruler die less regretted than William Rufus," says Dr.
+Lappenberg, "although still young, being little above forty, not a
+usurper, and successful in his undertakings. He was never married,
+and, besides the crafty and officious tools of his power, was
+surrounded only by a few Normans of quality, and harlots. In his last
+struggle with the clergy, the most shameless rapacity is especially
+prominent, and so glaring, that, notwithstanding some exaggerations
+and errors that may be pointed out in the Chronicles, he still appears
+in the same light. Effeminacy, drunkenness, gluttony, dissoluteness,
+and unnatural crimes were the distinguishing characteristics of his
+court. He was himself an example of incontinence." This is a nice
+character to travel with down the page of history. He quarrelled with
+his brothers, and with his uncle, and kept up the family character in
+an exceedingly satisfactory manner, considering that he was unmarried.
+The statement that he was slain by Walter Tirel, accidentally, in the
+New Forest, is now disregarded. Our theory of his death is, that he
+fell a victim to the ambition of his brother, Henry I., who succeeded
+him, and who certainly had good information as to his fall, and made
+good use of it, like a sensible fellow.
+
+Of all the royal races of the Middle Ages, no one stands out more
+boldly on the historic page than the Plantagenets, who ruled over
+England from 1154 to 1485, the line of descent being frequently
+broken, and family quarrels constantly occurring. They were a bold and
+an able race, and if they had possessed a closer resemblance to the
+Hapsburgs, they would have become masters of Western Europe; but their
+quarrelsome disposition more than undid all that they could effect
+through the exercise of their talents. On the female side they were
+descended from the Conqueror; and, as we have seen, the Conqueror's
+family was one in which sons rebelled against the fathers, and brother
+fought with brother. Matilda, daughter of Henry I., became the wife of
+Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, and from their union came Henry II., first
+of the royal Plantagenets. Now the Angevine Plantagenets were "a hard
+set," as we should say in these days. Dissensions were common enough
+in the family, and they descended to the offspring of Geoffrey and
+Matilda, being in fact intensified by the elevation of the House to a
+throne. Henry II. married Eleanora of Aquitaine, one of the greatest
+matches of those days, a marriage which has had great effect on modern
+history. The Aquitanian House was as little distinguished for the
+practice of the moral virtues as were the lines of Anjou and Normandy.
+One of the Countesses of Anjou was reported to be a demon, which
+probably meant only that her husband had caught a Tartar in marrying
+her; but the story was enough to satisfy the credulous people of those
+times, who, very naturally, considering their conduct, believed that
+the Devil was constant in his attention to their affairs. It was to
+this lady that Richard Cocur de Lion referred, when he said, speaking
+of the family contentions, "Is it to be wondered at, that, coming from
+such a source, we live ill with one another? What comes from the Devil
+must to the Devil return." With such an origin on his father's side,
+crossing the fierce character of his mother, Henry II. thought he
+could not do better than marry Eleanora, whose origin was almost as
+bad as his own. Her grandfather had been a "fast man" in his youth and
+middle life, and it was not until he had got nigh to seventy that he
+began to think that it was time to repent. He had taken Eleanora's
+grandmother from her husband, and a pious priest had said to them,
+"Nothing good will be born to you," which prediction the event
+justified. The old gentleman resigned his rich dominions, supposed to
+be the best in Europe, to his grand-daughter, and she married Louis
+VII., King of France, and accompanied him in the crusade that he was
+so foolish as to take part in. She had women-warriors, who did their
+cause immense mischief; and unless she has been greatly scandalized,
+she made her husband fit for heaven in a manner approved neither by
+the law nor the gospel. The Provençal ladies had no prejudices against
+Saracens. After her return to Europe, she got herself divorced from
+Louis, and married Henry Plantagenet, who was much her junior, she
+having previously been the mistress of his father. It was a _mariage
+de convenance_, and, as is sometimes the case with such marriages,
+it turned out very inconveniently for both parties to it. It was not
+unfruitful, but all the fruit it produced was bad, and to the husband
+and father that fruit became the bitterest of bitter ashes. No
+romancer would have dared to bring about such a scries of unions as
+led to the creation of Plantagenet royalty, and to so much misery
+as well as greatness. There is no exaggeration in Michelet's lively
+picture of the Plantagenets. "In this family," he says, "it was a
+succession of bloody wars and treacherous treaties. Once, when King
+Henry had met his sons in a conference, their soldiers drew upon him.
+This conduct was traditionary in the two Houses of Anjou and Normandy.
+More than once had the children of William the Conqueror and Henry II.
+pointed their swords against their father's breast. Fulk had placed
+his foot on the neck of his vanquished son. The jealous Eleanora, with
+the passion and vindictiveness of her Southern blood, encouraged her
+sons' disobedience, and trained them to parricide. These youths, in
+whose veins mingled the blood of so many different races,--Norman,
+Saxon, and Aquitanian,--seemed to entertain, over and above the
+violence of the Fulks of Anjou and the Williams of England, all the
+opposing hatreds and discords of those races. They never knew whether
+they were from the South or the North: they only knew that they hated
+one another, and their father worse than all. They could not trace
+back their ancestry, without finding, at each descent, or rape, or
+incest, or parricide." Henry II. quarrelled with all his sons, and
+they all did him all the mischief they could, under the advice and
+direction of their excellent mother, whom Henry imprisoned. A priest
+once sought to effect a reconciliation between Henry and his son
+Geoffrey. He went to the Prince with a crucifix in his hand, and
+entreated him not to imitate Absalom.
+
+"What!" exclaimed the Prince, "would you have me renounce my
+birthright?"
+
+"God forbid!" answered the holy man; "I wish you to do nothing to your
+own injury."
+
+"You do not understand my words," said Geoffrey; "it is our family
+fate not to love one another. 'T is our inheritance; and not one of us
+will ever forego it."
+
+That must have been a pleasant family to marry into! When the King's
+eldest son, Henry, died, regretting his sins against his father,
+that father durst not visit him, fearing treachery; and the immediate
+occasion of the King's death was the discovery of the hostility of his
+son John, who, being the worst of his children, was, of course, the
+best-beloved of them all. The story was, that, when Richard entered
+the Abbey of Fontevraud, in which his father's body lay, the corpse
+bled profusely, which was held to indicate that the new king was his
+father's murderer. Richard was very penitent, as his elder brother
+Henry had been, on his death-bed. They were very sorrowful, were those
+Plantagenet princes, when they had been guilty of atrocious acts,
+and when it was too late for their repentance to have any practical
+effect.
+
+Richard I. had no children, and so he could not get up a perfect
+family-quarrel, though he and his brother John were enemies. He died
+at forty-two, and but a few years after his marriage with Berengaria
+of Navarre, an English queen who never was in England. When on his
+death-bed, Richard was advised by the Bishop of Rouen to repent, and
+to separate himself from his children. "I have no children," the King
+answered. But the good priest told him that he had children, and that
+they were avarice, luxury, and pride. "True," said Richard, who was
+a humorist,--"and I leave my avarice to the Cistercians, my luxury
+to the Gray Friars, and my pride to the Templars." History has fewer
+sharper sayings than this, every word of which told like a cloth-yard
+shaft sent against a naked bosom. Richard certainly never quarrelled
+with the children whom he thus left to his _friends_.
+
+King John did not live long enough to illustrate the family character
+by fighting with his children. When he died, in 1216, his eldest son,
+Henry III., was but nine years old, and even a Plantagenet could not
+well fall out with a son of that immature age. However, John did his
+best to make his mark on his time. If he could not quarrel with his
+children, because of their tender years, he, with a sense of duty that
+cannot be too highly praised, devoted his venom to his wife. He was
+pleased to suspect her of being as regardless of marriage-vows as he
+had been himself, and so he hanged her supposed lover over her bed,
+with two others, who were suspected of being their accomplices.
+The Queen was imprisoned. On their being reconciled, he stinted her
+wardrobe, a refinement of cruelty that was aggravated by his monstrous
+expenditure on his own ugly person. Queen Isabella was very handsome,
+and perhaps John was of the opinion of some modern husbands, who think
+that dress extinguishes beauty as much as it inflames bills. Having
+no children to torment, John turned his disagreeable attentions to his
+nephew, Arthur, Duke of Brittany, who, according to modern ideas, was
+the lawful King of England. The end was the end of Arthur. How he was
+disposed of is not exactly known, but, judging from John's character
+and known actions, we incline to agree with those writers who say that
+the uncle slew the nephew with his own royal hand. He never could
+deny himself an attainable luxury, and to him the murder of a youthful
+relative must have been a rich treat, and have created for him a new
+sensation, something like the new pleasure for which the Persian king
+offered a great reward. Besides, all uncles are notoriously bad, and
+seem, indeed, to have been made only for the misery of their nephews
+and nieces, of whose commands they are most reprehensibly negligent.
+We mean to write a book, one of these days, for the express purpose of
+showing what a mistake it was to allow any such relationship to exist,
+and tracing all the evil that ever has afflicted humanity to the
+innate wickedness of uncles, and requiring their extirpation. We
+err, then, on the safe side, in supposing that John despatched Arthur
+himself,--not to say, that, when you require that a delicate piece of
+work should be done, you must do it with your own hand, or you may
+be disappointed. John did the utmost that he could do to keep up the
+discredit of the family; for, when a man has no son to whip and to
+curse, he should not be severely censured for having done no more than
+to kill his nephew. Men of large and charitable minds will take all
+the circumstances of John's case into the account, and not allow their
+judgment of his conduct to be harsh. What better can a man do than his
+worst?
+
+Henry III. appears to have managed to live without quarrelling
+with his children; but then he was a poor creature, and even was so
+unkingly, and so little like what a Plantagenet should have been, that
+he actually disliked war! He might with absolute propriety have worn
+the lowly broom-corn from which his family-name was taken, while it
+was a sweeping satire on almost all others who bore it. His heir,
+Edward I., was a king of "high stomach," and as a prince he stood
+stoutly by his father in the baronial wars. He, too, though the father
+of sixteen children, dispensed with family dissensions, thus showing
+that "The more, the merrier," is a true saying. Edward II. came to
+grief from having a bad wife, Isabella of France, who made use of
+his son against him. That son was Edward III., who became king in his
+father's lifetime, and whose marriage with Philippa of Hainault is
+one of the best-known facts of history, not only because it was an
+uncommonly happy marriage, but that it had remarkable consequences.
+This royal couple got along very happily with their children; but the
+ambition of their fourth son, the Duke of Lancaster, troubled the
+last days of the King, and prepared the way for great woes in the next
+century. The King was governed by Lancaster, and the Black Prince, who
+was then in a dying state, was at the head of what would now be called
+the Opposition, as if he foresaw what evils his brother's ambition
+would be the means of bringing upon his son.
+
+Richard II., son of the Black Prince, had no children, though he
+was twice married. He was dethroned, the rebels being headed by his
+cousin, Henry of Lancaster, who became Henry IV. Thus was brought
+about that change in the course of descent which John of Gaunt seems
+to have aimed at, but which he died just too soon to see effected.
+It was a violent change, and one which had its origin in a family
+quarrel, added to political dissatisfaction. Had the revolutionist
+wished merely to set aside a bad king, they would have called the
+House of Mortimer to the throne, the chief member of that House being
+the next heir, as descended from the Duke of Clarence, elder brother
+of the Duke of Lancaster; but more was meant than a political
+revolution, and so the line of Clarence was passed over, and its right
+to the crown treated with neglect, to be brought forward in bloody
+fashion in after-days. In fact, the Englishmen who made Henry of
+Lancaster king prepared the way for that long and terrible struggle
+which took place in the fifteenth century, and which was, its
+consequences as well as its course considered, the greatest civil
+war that has ever afflicted Christendom. The movement that led to the
+elevation of Henry of Holingbroke to the throne, though not precisely
+a palace-revolution, resembles a revolution of that kind more than
+anything else with which it can be compared; and it was as emphatic
+a departure from the principle of hereditary right as can be found in
+history. So much was this the case, that liberals in polities mostly
+place their historical sympathies with the party of the Red Rose, for
+no other reason, that we have ever been able to see, than that the
+House of Lancaster's possession of the throne testified to the triumph
+of revolutionary principles; for that House was jealous of its power
+and cruel in the exercise of it, and was so far from being friendly to
+the people, that it derived its main support from the aristocracy,
+and was the ally of the Church in the harsh work of exterminating the
+Lollards. The House of York, on the other hand, while it had, to use
+modern words, the legitimate right to the throne, was a popular House,
+and represented and embodied whatever there was then existing in
+politics that could be identified with the idea of progress.
+
+The character of the troubles that existed between Henry IV. and his
+eldest son and successor, Shakspeare's Prince Hal, is involved in much
+obscurity. It used to be taken for granted that the poet's Prince was
+an historical character, but that is no longer the case,--Falstaff's
+royal associate being now regarded in the same light in which Falstaff
+himself is regarded. The one is a poetic creation, and so is the
+other. Prince Henry was neither a robber nor a rowdy, but from his
+early youth a much graver character than most men are in advanced
+life. He had great faults, but they were not such as are made to
+appear in the pages of the player. The hero of Agincourt was a mean
+fellow,--a tyrant, a persecutor, a false friend and a cruel enemy, and
+the wager of most unjust wars; but he was not the "fast" youth that
+he has been generally drawn. He had neither the good nor the bad
+qualities that belong to young gentlemen who do not live on terms with
+their papas. He was of a grave and sad temperament, and much more of
+a Puritan than a Cavalier. It is a little singular that Shakspeare
+should have given portraits so utterly false of the most unpopular of
+the kings of the York family, and of the most popular of the kings of
+the rival house,--of Richard III., that is, and of the fifth Henry
+of Lancaster. Neither portrait has any resemblance to the original,
+a point concerning which the poet probably never troubled himself, as
+his sole purpose was to make good acting plays. Had it been necessary
+to that end to make Richard walk on three legs, or Henry on one leg,
+no doubt he would have done so,--just as Monk Lewis said he would have
+made Lady Angela blue, in his "Castle Spectre," if by such painting
+he could have made the play more effective. Prince Henry was a very
+precocious youth, and had the management of great affairs when he was
+but a child, and when it would have been better for his soul's and
+his body's health, had he been engaged in acting as an esquire of some
+good knight, and subjected to rigid discipline. The jealousy that
+his father felt was the natural consequence of the popularity of the
+Prince, who was young, and had highly distinguished himself in both
+field and council, was not a usurper, and was not held responsible for
+any of the unpopular acts done by the Government of his father. They
+were at variance not long before Henry IV.'s death, but little is
+known as to the nature of their quarrels. The crown scene, in which
+the Prince helps himself to the crown while his father is yet alive,
+is taken by Shakspeare from Monstrelet, who is supposed to have
+invented all that he narrates in order to weaken the claim of the
+English monarch to the French throne. If Henry IV., when dying, could
+declare that he had no right to the crown of England, on what could
+Henry V. base his claim to that of France?
+
+Henry V. died before his only son, Henry VI., had completed his first
+year; and Henry VI. was early separated from his only son, Edward
+of Lancaster, the same who was slain while flying from the field
+of Tewkesbury, at the age of eighteen. There was, therefore, no
+opportunity for quarrels between English kings and their sons for the
+sixty years that followed the death of Henry IV.; but there was
+much quarrelling, and some murdering, in the royal family, in those
+years,--brothers and other relatives being fierce rivals, even unto
+death, and zealous even unto slaying of one another. It would be hard
+to say of what crime those Plantagenets were not guilty.[A] Edward
+IV., with whom began the brief ascendency of the House of York, died
+at forty-one, after killing his brother of Clarence, his eldest son
+being but twelve years old. He had no opportunity to have troubles
+with his boys, and he loved women too well to fall out with his
+daughters, the eldest of whom was but just turned of seventeen. The
+history of Edward IV. is admirably calculated to furnish matter for a
+sermon on the visitation of the sins of parents on their children. He
+had talent enough to have made himself master of Western Europe,
+but he followed a life of debauchery, by which he was cut off in his
+prime, leaving a large number of young children to encounter the worst
+of fortunes. Both of his sons disappeared, whether murdered by Richard
+III. or Henry VII. no one can say; and his daughters had in part to
+depend upon that bastard slip of the Red-Rose line, Henry VII., for
+the means to enable them to live as gentlewomen,--all but the eldest,
+whom Henry took to wife as a point of policy, which her father would
+have considered the greatest misfortune of all those that befell his
+offspring. Richard III's only legitimate son died a mere boy.
+
+[Footnote A: It has been said of the Plantagenets that they "never
+shed the blood of a woman." This is nonsense, as we could, time and
+space permitting, show by the citation of numerous facts, but we shall
+here mention only one. King John had a noble woman shut up with her
+son, and starved to death. Perhaps that was not shedding her blood,
+but it was something worse. Before English statesmen and orators and
+writers take all the harlotry of Secessia under their kind care and
+championship, it would be well for them to read up their own country's
+history, and see how abominably women have been used in England for a
+thousand years, from queens to queans.]
+
+The Tudors fame to the English throne in 1485. There was no want of
+domestic quarrelling with them. Arthur, Henry VII.'s eldest son, died
+young, but left a widow, Catharine of Aragon, whom the King treated
+badly; and he appears to have been jealous of the Prince of Wales,
+afterward Henry VIII., but died too soon to allow of that jealousy's
+blooming into quarrels. According to some authorities, the Prince
+thought of seizing the crown, on the ground that it belonged to him in
+right of his mother, Elizabeth Plantagenet, who was unquestionably the
+legitimate heir. Henry VIII. himself, who would have made a splendid
+tyrant over a son who should have readied to man's estate,--an
+absolute model in that way to all after-sovereigns,--was denied
+by fortune an opportunity to round and perfect his character as
+a domestic despot. Only one of his legitimate sons lived even to
+boyhood, Edward VI., and Henry died when the heir-apparent was in his
+tenth year. Of his illegitimate son, the Duke of Richmond, Henry
+was extravagantly fond, and at one time thought of making him
+heir-apparent, which might have been done, for the English dread of
+a succession war was then at its height. Richmond died in his
+seventeenth year. Having no sons of a tormentable age, Henry made his
+daughters as unhappy as he could make them by the harsh exercise of
+paternal authority, and bastardized them both, in order to clear the
+way to the throne for his son. Edward VI. died a bachelor, in his
+sixteenth year, so that we can say nothing of him as a parent; but he
+treated his sister Mary with much harshness, and exhibited on various
+occasions a disposition to have things his own way that would have
+delighted his father, provided it had been directed against anybody
+but that severe old gentleman himself. Mary I. was the best sovereign
+of her line, domestically considered; but then she had neither son nor
+daughter with whom to quarrel, and the difficulties she had with her
+half-sister, Elizabeth, like the differences between the Archangel
+Michael and the Fallen Angel, were purely political in their
+character. We do not think that she would have done much injustice,
+if she had made Elizabeth's Tower-dungeon the half-way house to the
+scaffold. But though political, the half-sisterly dissensions between
+these ladies serve to keep Mary I. within the rules of the royal
+houses to which she belonged. Mary, dying of the loss of Calais and
+the want of children, was succeeded by Elizabeth, who, being a
+maiden queen, had no issue with whom to make issue concerning
+things political or personal. But observe how basely she treated her
+relatives, those poor girls, the Greys, Catharine and Mary, sisters of
+poor Lady Jane, whose fair and clever head Mary I. had taken off. The
+barren Queen, too jealous to share her power with a husband, hated
+marriage with all "the sour malevolence of antiquated virginity," and
+was down upon the Lady Catharine and the Lady Mary because they chose
+to become wives. Then she imprisoned her cousin, Mary Stuart, for
+nineteen years, and finally had her butchered under an approach to
+the forms of law, and in total violation of its spirit. She, too, kept
+within the royal rules, and made herself as great a pest as possible
+to her relatives.
+
+The English throne passed to the House of Stuart in 1603, and, after
+a lapse of six-and-fifty years, England had a sovereign with sons and
+daughters, the first since the death of Henry VIII. at the beginning
+of 1547. There was little opportunity for family dissensions in the
+days of most of the Stuarts, as either political troubles of the most
+serious nature absorbed the attention of kings and princes, or the
+reigning monarchs had no legitimate children. The open quarrel
+between Charles I. and the Parliament began before his eldest son had
+completed his eleventh year; and after that quarrel had increased to
+war, and it was evident that the sword alone could decide the issue,
+the King parted with his son forever. They had no opportunity to
+become rivals, and to fall out. There is so much that can be said
+against Charles I. with truth, that it is pleasing--as are most
+novelties--to be able to mention something to his credit. Instead
+of being jealous of his son, or desiring to keep him in ignorance of
+affairs, he early determined to train him to business. According
+to Clarendon, he said that he wished to "unboy him." Therefore he
+conferred high military offices upon him before he had completed his
+fifteenth year; and sent him to the West of England, to be the
+nominal head of the Western Association. Charles II. had no legitimate
+children, and so he could not have any quarrels with a Prince of
+Wales. He was fond of his numerous bastards, and, like an affectionate
+royal father, provided handsomely for them at the public-expense. What
+more could a father do, situated as that father was, and always in
+want of his people's money? Some of them were not his sons,--Monmouth,
+the best beloved of them all, being the son of Robert Sidney, a
+brother of the renowned Algernon, a fact that partially excuses the
+harsh conduct of James II. toward his nominal nephew. James II. had
+no legitimate son until the last year of his reign; but his two eldest
+daughters treated him far worse than any sovereign of the Hanoverian
+line was ever used by a son. They were most respectable women, and
+their deficiency in piety has worked well for the world; but it must
+ever be repugnant to humanity to regard the conduct of Mary and Anne
+with respect. No wonder that people called Mary the modern Tullia.
+Mary II. died young, and childless; and Queen Anne, though a most
+prolific wife, and but fifty-one at her death, survived all her
+children. Anne believed that her children's deaths were sent in
+punishment of her unfilial conduct; and she would have restored her
+nephew, the Pretender, to the British throne, but that the Jacobites
+were the silliest political creatures that ever triumphed in the
+how-not-to-do-it business, and could not even hold their mouths open
+for the rich and ripened fruit to drop into them.
+
+The first of the English Stuarts, James I., is suspected of having
+allowed his jealousy of his eldest son, the renowned Prince Henry, to
+carry him to the extent of child-murder. The Stuarts are called the
+Fated Line, and it is certain that none of their number, from Robert
+II.--who got the Scottish throne in virtue of his veins containing a
+portion of the blood of the Bruce, and so regalized the family, which,
+like the Bruces, was of Norman origin, and originally Fitzalan
+by name--to Charles Edward, and the Cardinal York, who died but
+yesterday, as it were, but had a wonderful run of bad luck. They had
+capital cards, but they knew not how to play them. With them, to play
+was to lose, and the most fortunate of their number were those kings
+who played as little as they could, such as James I. and Charles II.
+Those who lost the most were those who played the hardest, as Charles
+I. and his second son, James II. Yet the family was a clever one, with
+strong traits, both of character and talent, that ought to have made
+it the most successful of ruling races, and would have made it so,
+if its chiefs could have learned to march with the times. They had to
+contend, in Scotland, with one of the fiercest and most unprincipled
+aristocracies that ever tried the patience and traversed the purposes
+of monarchs who really aimed at the good government of their people;
+and the idiosyncrasy contracted during more than two centuries of
+Scottish rule clung to the family after it went to England, and found
+itself living under altogether a different state of things. What was
+virtue in Scotland became vice in England; and the ultra-monarchists,
+who came into existence not long after James I. succeeded to
+Elizabeth, helped to spoil the Stuarts. Both James and his successor
+were dominated by Scotch traditions, and supposed that they were
+contending with men who had the same end in view that had been
+regarded by the Douglases, the Hamiltons, the Ruthvens, the Lindsays,
+and others of the old Scotch baronage. What helped to deceive them was
+this,--that their opponents in England, like the opponents of their
+ancestors in Scotland, were aristocrats; and they supposed, that, as
+aristocratical movements in their Northern kingdom had always been
+subversive of order and peace, the same kind of movements would
+produce similar results in their Southern kingdom. They could not
+understand that one aristocracy may differ much from another, and
+that, while in Scotland the interest of the people, or rather of the
+whole nation, required the exaltation of the kingly power, in England
+it was that exaltation which was most to be feared. Sufficient
+allowance has not been made for the Stuarts in this respect, little
+regard being paid to the effect of the family's long training at home,
+which had rendered hostility to the nobility second nature to it. Had
+the Stuarts been the supporters of liberal ideas in England, their
+conduct would have given the lie to every known principle of human
+action. As their distrust of aristocracy rendered them despotically
+disposed, because the Scotch aristocracy had been the most lawless of
+mankind, so did they become attached to the Church of England because
+of the tyranny they had seen displayed by the Church of Scotland, the
+most illiberal ecclesiastical body, in those times, that men had ever
+seen, borne with, or suffered from. James I. and his grandson Charles
+II. had their whole conduct colored, and dyed in the wool, too, by
+their recollections of the odious treatment to which they had
+been subjected by a harsh and intolerant clergy. They had not the
+magnanimity to overlook, in the day of their power, what they had
+suffered in the day of their weakness.
+
+James I. undoubtedly disliked his eldest son, and was jealous of him;
+but it is by no means clear that he killed him, or caused him to
+be killed. He used to say of him, "What! will he bury me alive?"
+He ordered that the court should not go into mourning for Henry, a
+circumstance that makes in his favor, as murderers are apt to affect
+all kinds of hypocrisy in regard to their victims, and to weep in
+weeds very copiously. Yet his conduct may have been a refinement of
+hypocrisy, and, though a coward in the common acceptation of the word,
+James had much of that peculiar kind of hardihood which enables its
+possessor to treat commonly received ideas with contempt. His conduct
+in "The Great Oyer of Poisoning" was most extraordinary, it must
+be allowed, and is not reconcilable with innocence; but it does not
+follow that the guilt which the great criminals in that business could
+have established as against James related only to the death of Henry.
+It bore harder upon the King than even that crime could have borne,
+and must have concerned his conduct in matters that are peculiarly
+shocking to the ears of Northern peoples, though Southern races have
+ears that are less delicate. It was in Somerset's power to
+explain James's conduct respecting some things that puzzled his
+contemporaries, and which have continued to puzzle their descendants;
+but the explanation would have ruined the monarch in the estimation of
+even the most vicious portion of his subjects, and probably would have
+given an impetus to the growing power of the Puritans that might have
+led to their ascendency thirty years earlier than it came to pass
+in the reign of his son. James was capable of almost any crime or
+baseness; but in the matter of poisoning his eldest son he is entitled
+to the Scotch verdict of _Not Proven_.
+
+Whether James killed his son or not, it is certain that the Prince's
+death was a matter of extreme importance. Henry was one of those
+characters who are capable of giving history a twist that shall
+last forever. He had a fondness for active life, was very partial
+to military pursuits, and was friendly to those opinions which
+the bigoted chiefs of Austria and Bavaria were soon to combine to
+suppress. Henry would have come to the throne in 1625, had he lived,
+and there seems no reason to doubt that he would have anticipated the
+part which Gustavus Adolphus played a few years later. He would have
+made himself the champion of Protestantism, and not the less readily
+because his sister, the Electress-Palatine and Winter-Queen of
+Bohemia, would have been benefited by his successes in war. Bohemia
+might have become the permanent possession of the Palatine, and
+Protestantism have maintained its hold on Southern Germany, had Henry
+lived and reigned, and had his conduct as a king justified the hopes
+and expectations that were created by his conduct as a prince. The
+House of Austria would in that case have had a very different
+career from that which it has had since 1625, when Ferdinand II. was
+preparing so much evil for the future of Europe. Had Henry returned
+from Continental triumphs at the head of a great and an attached army,
+what could have prevented him from establishing arbitrary power in
+his insular dominions? His brother failed to make himself absolute,
+because he had no army, and was personally unpopular; but Henry would
+have had an army, and one, too, that would have stood high in English
+estimation, because of what it had done for the English name and the
+Protestant religion in Germany,--and Henry himself would have been
+popular, as a successful military man is sure to be in any country.
+Pym and Hampden would have found him a very different man to deal with
+from his foolish brother, who had all the love of despotism that man
+can have, but little of that kind of ability which enables a sovereign
+to reign despotically. Charles I. had no military capacity or taste,
+or he would have taken part in the Thirty Years' War, and in that way,
+and through the assistance of his army, have accomplished his domestic
+purpose. His tyranny was of a hard, iron character, unrelieved by
+a single ray of glory, but aggravated by much disgrace from the ill
+working of his foreign policy; so that it was well calculated to
+create the resistance which it encountered, and by which it was
+shivered to pieces. Henry would have gone to work in a different way,
+and, like Cromwell, would have given England glory, while taking from
+her freedom. There is nothing that the wearer of a crown cannot do,
+provided that crown is encircled with laurel. But the Stuarts seldom
+produced a man of military talent, which was a fortunate thing for
+their subjects, who would have lost their right to boast of their
+Constitutional polity, had Charles I. or James II. been a good
+soldier. We Americans, too, would have had a very different sort
+of annals to write, if the Stuarts, who have given so many names to
+American places, had known how to use that sword which they were so
+fond of handling.
+
+
+The royal families of England did by no means monopolize the share of
+domestic dissensions set apart for kings. The House of Stuart, even
+before it ascended the English throne, and when it reigned over only
+poor, but stout Scotland, was anything but famous for the love of its
+fathers for their sons, or for its sons' love for their fathers; and
+dissensions were common in the royal family. Robert III., second king
+of the line, had great grief with his eldest son, the Duke of Rothsay;
+and the King's brother, the Duke of Albany, did much to increase the
+evil that had been caused by the loose life of the heir-apparent. The
+end was, that Rothsay was imprisoned, and then murdered by his uncle.
+Scott has used the details of this court-tragedy in his "Fair Maid of
+Perth," one of the best of his later novels, most of the incidents in
+which are strictly historical. James I. was murdered while he was yet
+young, and James II. lost his life at twenty-nine; but James III. lost
+both throne and life in a war that was waged against him in the name
+of his son, who became king in consequence of his father's defeat and
+death. When James IV. fell at Flodden, because he fought like a brave
+fool, and not like a skilful general, he left a son who was not three
+years old; and that son, James V., when he died, left a daughter, the
+hapless Mary Stuart, who was but a week old. There was not much room
+for quarrelling in either of these cases. Mary Stuart's son, then an
+infant, was made the head of the party that dethroned his mother,
+and forced her into that long exile that terminated in her murder by
+Elizabeth of England. Mary's quarrels with her husband, Darnley, were
+of so bitter a character as to create the belief that she caused
+him to be murdered,--a belief that is as common now as it was in the
+sixteenth century, though the Marian Controversy has been going on for
+wellnigh three hundred years, and it has been distinctly proved by a
+host of clever writers and skilful logicians that it was impossible
+for her to have had any thing to do with that summary act of divorce.
+
+Several of the sovereigns of Continental Europe have had great
+troubles with their children, and these children have often had very
+disobedient fathers. In France, the Dauphin, afterward Louis XI.,
+could not always keep on good terms with his father, Charles VII., who
+has the reputation of having restored the French monarchy, after the
+English had all but subverted it, Charles at one time being derisively
+called King of Bourges. Nothing annoyed Louis so much as being
+compelled to run away before the army which his father was leading
+against him. He would, he declared, have stayed and fought, but that
+he had not even half so many men as composed the royal force. He
+would have killed his father as readily as he killed his brother in
+after-days,--if he did kill his brother, of which there is some
+doubt, of which he should have the benefit. As was but natural, he
+was jealous of his son, though he died when that prince was thirteen.
+Owing to various causes, however, there have been fewer quarrels
+between French kings and their eldest sons than between English kings
+and their eldest sons. Few French monarchs have been succeeded by
+their sons during the last three hundred years,--but two, in fact,
+namely, Louis XIII., who followed his father, Henry IV., and Louis
+XIV., who succeeded to Louis XIII., his father. It is two hundred
+and twenty years since a father was succeeded by a son in France,--a
+circumstance that Napoleon III. should lay to heart, and not be too
+sure that the Prince Imperial is to become Napoleon IV. There seems
+to be something fatal about the French purple, which has a strange
+tendency to spread itself, and to settle upon shoulders that could not
+have counted upon experiencing its weight and its warmth. Sometimes it
+is hung up for the time, and becomes dusty, while republicans take a
+turn at governing, though seldom with success. There were troubles
+in the families of Louis XIV., who was too heartless, selfish, and
+unfeeling not to be that worst kind of king, the domestic tyrant. He
+tyrannized over even his mistresses.
+
+Philip II., the greatest monarch of modern times,--perhaps the
+greatest of all time, the extent and diversity of his dominions
+considered, and the ability of the races over which he ruled taken
+into the account,--was under the painful necessity of putting his
+eldest son, Don Carlos, in close confinement, from which he never came
+forth until he was brought out feet foremost, the presumption being
+that he had been put to death by his father's orders. Carlos has been
+made a hero of romance, but a more worthless character never lived.
+On his death-bed Philip II. was compelled to see how little his son
+Philip, who succeeded him, cared for his feelings and wishes. Peter
+the Great put to death his son Alexis; and Frederick William I.
+of Prussia came very near taking the life of that son of his who
+afterward became Frederick the Great.
+
+Jealousy is so common a feeling in Oriental royal houses, that it is
+hardly allowable to quote anything from their history; but we may be
+permitted to allude to the effect of one instance of paternal hate in
+the Ottoman family at the time of its utmost greatness. Solyman
+the Magnificent was jealous of his eldest son, Mustapha, who is
+represented by all writers on the Turkish history of those times as
+a remarkably superior man, and who, had he lived, would have been a
+mighty foe to Christendom. This son the Sultan caused to be put to
+death, and there are few incidents of a more tragical cast than those
+which accompanied Mustapha's murder. They might be turned to great
+use by an historical romancer, who would find matters all made to his
+hand. The effect of this murder was to substitute for the succession
+that miserable drunkard, Selim II., who was utterly unable to lead the
+Turks in those wars that were absolutely essential to their existence
+as a dominant people. "With him," says Ranke, "begins the series of
+those inactive Sultans, in whose dubious character we may trace one
+main cause of the decay of the Ottoman fortunes." Solyman's hatred of
+his able son was a good thing for Christendom; for, if Mustapha had
+lived, and become Sultan, the War of Cyprus--that contest in
+which occurred the Battle of Lepanto--might have Lad a different
+termination, and the Osmanlis have been successful invaders of both
+Spain and Italy. It was a most fortunate circumstance for Europe,
+that, while it was engaged in carrying on civil wars and wars of
+religion, the Turks should have had for their chiefs men incapable of
+carrying on that work of war and conquest through which alone it was
+possible for those Mussulmans to maintain their position in Europe;
+and that they were thus favored was owing to the causeless jealousy
+felt by Sultan Solyman for the son who most resembled himself: and
+Solyman was the greatest of his line, which some say ended with him.
+
+
+
+
+UNDER THE PEAR-TREE.
+
+IN TWO PARTS.
+
+PART I.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+One Sunday morning, long ago, a girl stood in her bed-room,
+lingeringly occupied with the last touches of her toilet.
+
+A string of beads, made of pure gold and as large as peas, lay before
+her. They had been her mother's,--given to her when the distracted
+state of American currency made a wedding-present of the precious
+metal as welcome as it was valuable. Three several times, under
+circumstances of great pecuniary urgency, had the beads sufficed, one
+by one, to restore the family to comfort,--to pay the expenses of a
+journey, to buy seed-grain, and to make out the payment of a yoke of
+oxen. Afterwards, when peace and plenty came to be housemates in the
+land, the gold beads were redeemed, and the necklace, dearer than
+ever, encircled the neck of the only daughter.
+
+The only daughter took them up, and clasped them round her throat with
+a decisive snap. But the crowning graces remained in the shape of two
+other ornaments that lay in a small China box. It had a head on the
+cover, beautifully painted, of some queen,--perhaps of the Empress
+Josephine, the girl thought. The hat had great ostrich-feathers, that
+seemed proper to royalty, and it was a pretty face.
+
+In the box lay a pin and ring. On the back of the pin was braided
+hair, and letters curiously intertwined. The young girl slipped the
+ring on her own finger once more, and smiled. Then she took it off,
+with a sigh that had no pain in it, and looked at the name engraved
+inside,--DORCAS FOX.
+
+Whoever saw this name in the town records would naturally image to
+himself the town tailoress or nurse, or somebody's single sister
+who had been wise too long,--somebody tall, a little bent, and
+bony,--somebody weather-beaten and determined--looking, with a sharp,
+shrewd glance of a gray eye that said you could not possibly get the
+better of her and so need not try,--somebody who goes out unattended
+and fearless at night; for, as she very properly observes, "Who'd want
+to speak to _me_?"
+
+This might have described the original owner of the pin and ring, who
+had died years before, and left the ornaments for her namesake and
+niece, when she was too young to remember or care for her, but not the
+niece herself. She was young, blooming, twenty-two, and the belle of
+the country-village where she dwelt.
+
+The bed-room where the girl stood and meditated, after her fashion,
+was six feet by ten in dimensions, and the oval mirror before which
+she stood was six inches by ten. It was a genuine relic of the
+Mayflower, and had been brought over, together with the great chest in
+the entry, by the grand-grand-grandmother of all the Foxes. If anybody
+were disposed to be skeptical on this point, Colonel Fox had only to
+point to the iron clamp at the end, by which it had been confined to
+the deck; that would have produced conviction, if he had declared it
+came out of the Ark. This was a queer-looking little mirror, in which
+the young Dorcas saw her round face reflected: framed in black oak,
+delicately carved, and cut on the edge with a slant that gave the
+plate an appearance of being an inch thick.
+
+Sixty years ago there were not many mirrors in country-towns in New
+England; and in Colonel Fox's house this and one more sufficed for the
+family-reflections. In the "square room," a modern long looking-glass,
+framed in mahogany, and surmounted by the American emblem of triumph,
+was the astonishment of the neighbors,--and in Walton those were many,
+though the population was small.
+
+Dorcas looked wistfully and wishingly at the oval pin; but with no
+more notion of what she was looking at than the child who gazes into
+the heavens on a winter night. When she looked into the oval mirror,
+no dream of the centuries through which it had received on its surface
+fair and suffering faces, grave, noble, self-sacrificing men, and
+scenes of trial deep and agonizing,--no dream of the past disturbed
+the serene unconsciousness of her gaze. She looked at the large
+pearls that formed the long oval pin, and at the exquisite allegorical
+painting, which, in the quaint fashion of the time of its execution,
+was colored with the "ground hair" of the beloved; so materializing
+sentiment, and, as it were, getting as near as possible to the very
+heart's blood. Yet the old gold, the elaborate execution of the quaint
+classical device, and the fanciful arrangement of the braided hair
+interwoven with twisted gold letters, all told no tales to the
+observer, whose unwakened nature, indeed, asked no questions.
+
+The little room, so small that in these days a College of Physicians
+would at once condemn it, as a cradle of disease and death, had
+nevertheless for twenty years been the nightly abode of as perfect a
+piece of health as the country produced. Whatever might be wanting
+in height and space was amply made up in inevitable and involuntary
+ventilation. Health walked in at the wide cracks around the little
+window-frame, peeped about in all directions with the snow-flakes in
+winter and the ready breezes in summer, and settled itself permanently
+on the fresh cheeks and lips of the light sleeper and early riser.
+
+Beside the white-covered cot there stood a straight-backed,
+list-seated oaken chair, a mahogany chest of drawers that reached from
+floor to ceiling, and a little three-legged light-stand. Everything
+was covered with white, and the room was fragrant with the lavender
+and dried rose-leaves with which every drawer was scrupulously
+perfumed. There was no toilet-table, for Dorcas had use neither for
+perfumes nor ointment. No Kalydors and no Glycerines came within the
+category of her healthful experience. Alert and graceful, she neither
+burnt her fingers nor cut her hands, and had need therefore of no
+soothing salves or sirups; and as she did not totter in scrimped shoes
+or tight laces, and so did not fall and break her bones, she had no
+need even of that modern necessity in all well-regulated families,
+"Prepared Glue." There was no medicine-chest in Colonel Fox's house.
+Healthy, occupied, active, and wise--but not too wise--was Dorcas Fox.
+
+It is no proof that Dorcas was a beauty, that she looked often in the
+little mirror. Ugliness is quite as anxious as beauty on that point,
+and is even oftener found gazing with sad solicitude at itself, if
+haply there may be found some mollifying or mitigating circumstance,
+either in outline or expression. But Dorcas's face pleased herself and
+everybody else.
+
+A certain freedom and ease, the result partly of a symmetrical form,
+and partly of conscious good-looks, gave the grace of movement to
+Dorcas which attracted all eyes. Almost every one has a sense of
+harmony, and old and young loved to watch the musical motion of Dorcas
+Fox, whatever she might be doing,--whether she queened it at the
+"Thanksgiving Ball," and from heel-and-toe, pigeon-wing, or mazy
+double-shuffle, evolved the finest and subtlest intricacies of muscle,
+or whether, on the Sabbath, walking behind her parents to meeting,
+she married the movement to the solemnity of the day, and, as it were,
+walked in long metre.
+
+She always was in Hallelujah metre to the Blacks, Whites, Grays,
+Greens, and Browns that color so largely every New-England community;
+and the youths who were wont to form the crowd that invariably settled
+at the corner of the meeting-house waited only till Dorcas Fox went up
+the "broad-oil" to express open-mouthed admiration. After her fashion,
+she was as much wondered at as the Duchess of Hamilton in her time,
+and with much more reason, since Dorcas was composed of real roses and
+lilies.
+
+On Sunday, though the Puritanic doctrine prevailed, as far as doctrine
+can, of not speaking week-day thoughts, or having them, if they would
+keep away, yet inevitably, among the younger portion of the flock, the
+day of "meeting" was one of more than religious importance; and many
+lads and lasses who were never attracted by Father Boardman's eloquent
+sedatives still made it a point to be regular in their attendance at
+meeting twice on every Sunday. From far and near came open one-horse
+wagons, piled high with weekly shaven and dressed humanity,--young
+and old with solemn and demure faces, with brown-ribboned queues, and
+garments of domestic making. Fresh, strong, tall girls of five feet
+ten, dressed in straw bonnets of their own handiwork, and sometimes
+with scarlet cardinals lightly flung over their shoulders, sprang over
+the wagon-thills to the ground. Now and then the more remote dwellers
+came on horseback, each Jack with his Gill on a pillion behind, and
+holding him with a proper and dignified embrace.
+
+Hard-handed youths, with bright, determined faces,--men nursed in
+blockhouses, born in forts,--men who had raised their corn when the
+loaded gun went every step with the hoe and the plough,--such men,
+of whom the Revolution had been made, who could say nothing, and do
+everything, stood in a crowd around the meeting-house door. There was
+some excitement in meeting each other, though there was very little,
+if anything, to say. There was time enough in those days. Progress
+wasn't in such a hurry as now. Inventions came calmly along, once in
+a man's life, and not, as now, each heel-trodden by that of his
+neighbor, tripping up and passing it, in the speed of the breathless
+race.
+
+The sun itself seemed to shine with a calmer and silenter radiance
+over the broad, leisurely land.
+
+Time enough, bless you! and the Sunday, any way, is _so_ long!
+
+This Sunday morning, at ten o'clock, Dorcas has already been up and
+dressed six hours. Everything having the remotest connection with
+domestic duties has been finished and laid aside long ago, and she has
+devoted the last two hours to solitary meditations, mostly of the kind
+already mentioned.
+
+In the great oven, since last night, has lain the Sunday supper of
+baked pork-and-beans, Indian-pudding, and brown bread, all the
+better the longer they bake, and all unfailing in their character
+of excellence. In the square room, in the green arm-chair, sits the
+Colonel, fast asleep.
+
+Four hours ago, he fumed and fretted about barn and cow-house,
+breakfasted, and had family-prayers. Since then, he has donned his
+Sabbath array, both mental and bodily. Mentally, having dismissed the
+cares of the week, he has strictly united himself with his body, and
+gone to sleep. Bodily, he appears in a suit of hemlock-dyed, with
+Matherman buttons, knee- and shoe-buckles of silver. His gray hair is
+neatly composed in a queue, his full cheeks rest on his portly chest,
+and the outward visibly harmonizes with the inward man. He
+sleeps soundly now, purposing faithfully to keep awake during the
+three-and-twenty heads of the minister's discourse. If he finds it
+too much for him, he means to stand, as he often does. Sometimes he
+partakes freely of the aromatic stimulants carried by his wife and
+daughter as bouquets. The southernwood wakes him, and the green seeds
+of the caraway get him well along through the sermon.
+
+Mrs. Fox steps softly in, rustling in the same black taffeta she
+always wears, and the same black silk bonnet,--worn just fifty-two
+days in a year, and carefully pinned and boxed away for all the other
+three hundred and thirteen.
+
+As fashions did not come to Walton oftener than once in ten years,
+it followed that apparel among the young people wore very much the
+expression of individual taste, while among the elders it was wont to
+assume the cast now irreverently designated by "fossil remains." And,
+really, it did not much matter. Whatever our country-grandmothers were
+admired and esteemed for, be sure it was not dress.
+
+As the clock pointed to half-past ten, the door opened quickly, and
+Dorcas stood on the threshold, like a summer breeze that has stopped
+one moment its fluttering, and hovers fresh, sweet, and sunny in
+the morning air. The breath of her presence, if indeed it were not
+association, roused old Colonel Fox from his sleep. He glanced at her,
+took the ready arm of his wife, looked again at the clock, and passed
+out over the flat door-stone with his cocked hat and cane, as became
+an invalid soldier and a gentleman. Behind them, hymn-book in hand
+and with downcast eyes, walked Dorcas. Not a word passed between the
+parents and their only daughter. On Sunday, people were not to think
+their own thoughts. And familiarity between parents and children,
+never allowed even on week-days, would have been unpardonable
+unfitness on the Sabbath.
+
+They reached the church-door just as the minister, with his white wig
+shedding powder on his venerable back, passed up the broad-aisle.
+A perfectly decorous throng of the loiterers followed, and the
+pews rapidly filled. The Colonel and his wife, being persons of
+consequence, took their way with suitable dignity and deliberation. In
+the three who turned, about half-way up the broad-aisle, into a square
+pew, a physiognomist would have seen at one glance the characteristic
+features of each mind. In the Colonel, choleric, fresh, and
+warm-hearted, a good lover, and not very good hater. In his wife, "a
+chronicler of small-beer," with a perfectly negative expression. One
+might guess she did no harm, and fear she did no good,--that she saved
+the hire of an upper servant,--that she was an inveterate sewer and
+cleaner, and would leave the world in time with an epitaph.
+
+On the third figure and face the physiognomist might dwell
+longer,--but that rather because youth, hope, and inexperience had
+refused to make any of the life-marks that tell stories in faces.
+There was abundant room for imagination and prophecy.
+
+A figure not too tall, but full of wavy lines,--two dark-blue eyes,
+whose full under-lids gave an expression of arch sweetness to the
+glance,--a delicate complexion of roses and lilies, as suggestive of
+fading as of blossoming,--features small, and not at all of the Greek
+pattern,--and the rather large head and slightly developed bust,
+typical of American rural beauty.
+
+To this summary of youthful charms would be at once added the grace of
+motion before spoken of, which made Dorcas Fox a favorite with all the
+young men in Walton, and which gave her a reputation of beauty which
+in strictness she did not deserve. A little habitual ill-health,
+and the glamour is gone, with the roses and lilies and the music
+of motion. In our climate of fierce extremes, both field- and
+garden-flowers speedily wilt and chill. Dorcas herself had been a
+thousand times told she was the very picture of her mother at her age.
+And just to look now at Mrs. Colonel Fox!
+
+A tall young man stood on the doorsteps of the meeting-house, as
+Dorcas went demurely behind her parents in at the open door. He looked
+at her with a quick, inquiring glance from his keen Yankee eyes, which
+she answered with an almost imperceptible nod of her graceful head.
+She dropped her eyes, and passed on. This young man was Henry Mowers,
+and he owned the Mowers farm. He was a very good, sensible fellow, and
+had "kept company," as the country-phrase is, with Dorcas Fox for
+the last few weeks, having, indeed, had his eye on her ever since the
+New-Year's sleigh-ride and ball.
+
+After Dorcas had reached her seat in the pew, and adjusted her
+spotless Sunday chintz and the ribbon that confined her jaunty
+gypsy-hat over her sunny hair, she raised her eyes carelessly to a pew
+in a side-aisle. The Dorrs generally occupied it alone; but sometimes
+Swan Day, when he wasn't in the choir, sat there too.
+
+Swan Day, or, as he might better have been called, Night Raven, kept
+the country-store in Walton. One naturally thought of afternoon
+rather than morning at seeing his olive complexion, dark eyes, and
+thick-clustering black curls. Such romance as was to be had in Walton,
+without the aid of a circulating library, certainly gathered about
+Swan Day. An orphan, born of a Creole mother and a British sergeant,
+he had been left early to his own resources. He had found them
+sufficient thus far, in a cordial neighborhood like Walton, when
+industry and temperance were cardinal virtues not carried to excess;
+and he was rather a favorite among the young women.
+
+The peculiar languor and richness of his complexion,--the dark eyes,
+soft as an Indian girl's,--the mouth, melting and red as the grapes
+where under a tropical sun his foreign mother had lain, and, gathering
+them ripe, had dropped them lazily into his baby mouth: these were new
+and strange features in the Saxon community where he had accidentally
+been left on the death of his father, who was shot at Saratoga. The
+mother lingered awhile, and then dropped away, leaving Swan to thrive
+in the bracing air in which she had shivered to death.
+
+Many Sundays before this, Swan had looked at Colonel Fox's pew, and,
+looking, loved.
+
+Dorcas looked occasionally.
+
+All the time, while the minister preached, she twiddled her
+caraway-stems, sometimes biting a seed in two very softly between her
+little teeth, and keeping, on the whole, an appearance of exemplary
+devoutness. When Father Boardman reached "sixthly," she raised her
+eyes, and saw Henry Mowers looking straight at her. Then she
+dropped her eyelids at once, sniffed delicately at her bouquet of
+southernwood, and, gaining strength from its pungency, applied herself
+to staring once more at the great pine pulpit, where, like a very old
+sparrow on the house-top, Father Boardman denounced and anathematized
+at leisure all who did not think as he did. By degrees, all the eyes
+in Dorcas's neighborhood that had been any length of time in the world
+were dozing and closing with the full leave of the spirit. Finally,
+when Father Boardman entered on the "improvement," Dorcas, who had
+not heard a word, looked again in the direction of the Dorr pew. Henry
+Mowers had succumbed to Morpheus half an hour before. Still there
+flamed on the deep, bewitching eyes of Day; and as all the rest in her
+neighborhood had gone to sleep, and the young girl had really nothing
+specially to keep herself awake with, she looked up, too, and then
+down, and then rosily, and timidly, and consciously, and then at
+him once more. By that time she blushed again, and a smile was just
+beginning to wake from its sleep in the corner of her mouth, when
+a rush, a rising, and a general clatter and banging of pew-seats
+announced the blessed news of suspended instruction.
+
+In the fashion of sixty years ago, the congregation waited reverently,
+until the pastor walked down the broad-aisle and out at the door,
+before a soul stirred. Then the men followed, and last of all the
+women. In the crowd, there were frequent opportunities for whispered
+words, all the sweeter for the stealing; and in the crowd, after he
+had seen Henry Mowers jump into the wagon and drive off his three
+sisters half a mile to their home, and after seeing Jenny Post ride
+off on a pillion behind her old brother, as in the gone-by days when
+wide roads and wagons were not, Swan sauntered carelessly towards
+Dorcas, and said, in a tone too low for her parents to hear, but very
+distinctly,--
+
+"I must see you to-morrow night."
+
+"I can't," was the murmured reply.
+
+"For the last time, Dorcas! come down to the old pear-tree to-morrow,
+before sunset," he whispered, imploringly.
+
+He was wise to turn suddenly away before her parents could hear him,
+touching on secular subjects, and before she could herself get up any
+new objection. Her objections, truly, were very faint and few, and,
+being tossed about awhile, finally settled out of sight. Henry
+would, she knew, come to his weekly wooing as soon as the setting sun
+proclaimed the Sabbath-day over. After that time she was safe. She
+could slip down the orchard to the pear-tree, and hear what was the
+important word, and what Swan meant by "the last."
+
+Eight or ten persons, who lived at a distance from "meeting," were in
+the habit of partaking the hospitality of Colonel Fox, of a Sunday,
+as the hour's intermission gave them no opportunity to return to
+their distant homes. After the Puritan fashion, unlike enough to the
+present, families were restricted on Sunday to two meals, and those
+were provided with a Jewish regard to the fourth commandment. All
+labor was scrupulously anticipated or postponed, but such hospitality
+as consisted with the strict observance of the Sabbath was at the
+service of their friends.
+
+On coming in at the door of the square room, with its sanded floor,
+its old desk, its spare bed in the corner, and its cherry table with
+wavy outlines, which had belonged to Colonel Fox's mother, Dorcas
+found the cloth already laid, and the bonnets and cardinals of half a
+dozen old friends on the bed.
+
+In five minutes, early apples, old cider, and a plate of raised
+doughnuts, flanked by plates of mince- and apple-pie, rewarded the
+patience and piety of the company. Colonel Fox, solemnly, and as if
+he were quite accustomed to it, poured from a jug into large tumblers
+that held at least a pint, dropped three large lumps of loaf-sugar,
+filled the glass with water, grated some nutmeg on the top, and bade
+his guests refresh themselves with toddy, unless they preferred flip:
+if they did, they had only to say so: the poker was hot.
+
+They all ate and drank, and by that time the bell rang again; and then
+they all went again. And if they heard Father Boardman at all, it was
+with utterly composed minds, when he told them it was their duty to be
+contented, even should their condemnation be eternally decreed, since
+it must, of course, be for the good of the whole, and for the glory of
+God. Hopkinsianism was in fashion then, and the minds of men in many
+parts of the country had accepted the logic of its founder, negatived
+as it was, in its practical application, by the sweetness of his
+Christian benevolence and his large humanity. Then the toddy helped
+them to swallow many doctrines that in our cold-water days are sharply
+and defiantly contested. The head is much clearer; whether hearts are
+better is doubtful.
+
+After supper, and while yet the sun lingered smilingly over the
+Great Meadows and on the hills, behind which he sank, Dorcas, who had
+meanwhile adorned herself with Aunt Dorcas's bequest, broke the long
+silence, by whispering so low that her father's sleep should not be
+disturbed,--
+
+"Mother, do you set much by this pin?"
+
+"Of course I do, child! 'T was your Aunt Dorcas's," said Mrs. Fox,
+"your father's own sister."
+
+"Yes, I know it, mother; but how did she come by it?"
+
+All these years, and this was the first time Dorcas had asked the
+question! She colored a little, too, as if some secret thought or
+story were busy about her heart, as she looked at the ring.
+
+"Well,--it was a man she 'xpected to 'a' bed. They was to 'a' ben
+merried, an' he was to 'a' gi'n up v'yagin'. But he was cast away, an'
+she never heerd nothin' about neither him nor the ship. He was waitin'
+to git means, an' he did, privateerin' an' so; but I 'xpect he was
+drownded," concluded Mrs. Fox, in a suitably plaintive tone.
+
+And that was Aunt Dorcas's story.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+If anybody is curious to know why there should be mystery or secrecy
+connected with Swan Day's meeting with Dorcas, or why they should meet
+under a pear-tree, instead of her father's roof-tree, in a rational
+way, it might be a sufficient answer, that there never was and never
+will be anything direct and straightforward about Cupid or his doings.
+But the real and more important reason was, that Colonel Fox did not
+like Swan, and had said, in so many words, that "he wouldn't have
+Swan Day a-hangin' round, no _how_!--that he was a poor kind of a
+shote,--that he wished both him and his clutter well out o' town,--and
+that he needn't think to make swans out of his geese, no _time_!"
+
+In the first and last sentence, Colonel Fox indicated the ground of
+his dislike to the handsome young store-keeper, and his dread that
+Swan's eyes would somehow interfere with his own cherished plans of a
+union between the Fox and Mower farms. Whatever Colonel Fox determined
+on was done or to be done. He had anticipated the French proverb;
+and the "impossibility" made not the slightest difference. Therefore
+Dorcas had no notion of disobedience in her head, permanently. She
+solaced herself by the occasional luxury of departure from set rules,
+and she intended to depart in that way to-morrow,--for just five
+minutes,--just to hear what that foolish fellow wanted of her; and
+what could it be? and why was it the last time?--would he give her up?
+
+Dorcas pondered the matter while the sun still crowned the heights,
+and glanced at her sleeping father in silence. Why should Colonel Fox
+dislike Swan so very much because he was a Britisher? All that was
+done with, long ago, and why not be peaceable? Just then her father
+drew the breath sharply between his teeth, as if in pain. It was the
+old wound, that had never been healed since the Battle of Bennington.
+He had lain on the ground,--Dorcas had often heard him tell the
+tale,--and had striven to slake his deathly thirst with the blood that
+he scooped up in the hollow of his hand from the ground about him. So
+terrible was the carnage where he lay. "A d----d Britisher had shot
+him,--another had driven his horse over him, and afterwards, while
+he lay half-dead, had tried to rob him!" Would he ever forget it?
+He would have continued, on the contrary, to fire and hack till the
+present day, but for the wound in his knee, which had disabled him for
+life, long before a peace was patched up with the mother-country. So
+he had retired to Walton, and before Continental money had depreciated
+more than half had bought acres by the thousand, and become
+generalissimo of flocks and herds. Through the admiration of his
+townsmen for his wounds, he rapidly and easily attained the rank
+of Colonel, without the discomfort of fighting for it; and from his
+excellent sense and the executive ability induced by military
+habits, became, in turn, justice of the peace, deacon of the church,
+town-clerk, and manager-general of Walton.
+
+Nobody--that is to say, nobody in the family--spoke, when Colonel Fox
+was in the house, unless first spoken to,--not even Dorcas. Such were
+the domestic tactics of the last century, and Colonel Fox held fast to
+old notions.
+
+The social ones were far more liberal,--so very liberal, indeed, so
+very free and easy, in the rural districts especially, that only a
+knowledge of the primitive conditions under which such manners grew
+up could possibly reconcile with them any impressions of purity and
+discretion. In hearing of manners, therefore, it is always necessary
+to remember that the children of country Puritans are and were wholly
+different _in the grain_ from Paris or London society of the same
+period,--as different, for example, as the Goddess of Reason from
+our first mother, though at first glance one might think those two
+similar. New-England parents had the utmost confidence in their
+daughters, and almost no restraint was laid on social intercourse.
+Their personal dignity and propriety wore presupposed, as matters of
+course. Religion and virtue needed only to point, not to restrain.
+
+The Colonel, on his part, took little heed of Dorcas's movements in
+the way of balls and sleigh-rides. Content that her face showed health
+and enjoyment, he never thought or cared what passed in her mind. If
+only the hay-crop proved abundant, and the Davis lot yielded well,--if
+neither wheat got the blight, nor sheep the rot,--if it were better to
+buy Buckhorn for milk, or sell the Calico-Trotter,--these thoughts so
+filled his soul that there was very little room to let in any nonsense
+about Dorcas, only "to have Swan Day shet up before he begins," for,
+as he often said, "he wouldn't give the snap of his thumb for as many
+Swan Days as could stand between this and Jerusalem!"
+
+She had met him twice before, and both times rather accidentally, as
+she supposed, under the pear-tree,--both times, when she went to the
+well for water. He had drawn the water, and had talked some with
+his tongue, but more, far more, with his eyes of Oriental depth and
+fascination. Dorcas thought and meant no harm in meeting Swan. Even if
+her nature had been more wakened and conscious,--even if she had had
+either the habit or the power of analyzing her own sensations,--even
+if she had seen her soul from without, as she certainly did not
+within,--she would have recoiled from the thought of deliberate
+coquetry.
+
+In the nature even of a coquette there is not necessarily either
+cruelty or hardness. It cannot be a fine nature, and must be deficient
+in the tact which appreciates the feelings of another, and
+the sympathy that shrinks from injuring them. It may be called
+selfishness, which is another term for thoughtlessness or want of
+consideration or perception, but it is not deliberate selfishness.
+This last is often found with fine perceptions and intuitive tact. It
+is rather a natural obtuseness, a want of thought on the subject. Such
+persons remember and connect their own sensations with the object,
+thinking little or nothing of the feelings they may themselves excite
+by the heedlessness of their manner.
+
+If Dorcas had once thought of the value of the hearts she played with,
+and as it were tossed from hand to hand,--if she had even weighed one
+against another, she might have had some sorrow in grieving either.
+But having no standard of delicacy and tenderness in her own nature
+by which to judge theirs, Dorcas cannot be accused of intentional
+injustice, which is generally understood by coquetry. On the contrary,
+if she had been able to express her emotions,--
+
+ "How happy could I be with either!"
+
+would have done so. Dorcas was very young in experience.
+
+In those days of freedom there was no such word as "engaged"; least
+of all, did the parties concerned violate all their own notions of
+decorum by "announcing an engagement." The lists were free to all
+to enter, and the bravest won the day. After weeks and months of
+shy "company-keeping," it was "expected it would be a match" by the
+keen-sighted or deeply interested. Sometimes the dissolution of an
+engagement was mentioned as "a shame! after keeping company so many
+years, and she had got all her quilts made and everything!" But best
+of all was for the parties to be married outright, by a justice of
+the peace, without a word of public warning, and then to enjoy
+the pleasure of outwitting the neighbors, and coming down like a
+thunderclap on a social sunshine unsuspicious of banns, which had been
+published on some three literally public days, but when nobody
+was hearing. That was something worth doing, and very much worth
+remembering!
+
+The sun set. The Sabbath was done. The Colonel heaved a sigh of
+relief. The Colonel's wife took her knitting-work; and the Colonel's
+daughter looked up with a shy smile at Henry Mowers fastening his
+horse by the corn-barn. It was time Sunday was over, indeed! Such a
+long supper! but it must end sometime!--and then prayers, and then
+Dorcas had amused herself with Bel and the Dragon and Tobit awhile.
+All would not do, and the family had been obliged to resort to the
+sweet restorer for the last ten minutes. Now they could think their
+own thoughts in peace, and talk of what interested them,--cattle,
+people, and the like. Poor Dorcas! what with Father Boardman's
+preaching, and the Westminster Catechism, she associated religion with
+all that was dull and inexplicable, though she did not doubt it was
+good in case of dying. In the Nature and life that surrounded her
+she had not seen God, but a refuge from Him. In the crimson floods
+of sunshine, in the brilliant moonrise, or the pulsating stars of a
+winter night, she found a sort of guilty relief from the dulness of
+what she supposed was Revelation. But she never thought of questioning
+or doubting any teachings, in the pulpit or out. A woman cannot, like
+a man, fight a subject down. Her intellect shrinks from being tossed
+and pierced on the pricks of doctrine. She is gentle and cowardly. She
+sets the matter aside, and is contented to wait till she dies to
+find out. But the men in Walton were all theologians, and sharp at
+polemics. In the bar-room the spirit of liberty throve, which was
+crushed in the pulpit. In that small New-England town, where, like
+a great white sheep, Father Boardman now led his docile flock to the
+fold, whoever looked long enough would see many new folds and many new
+shepherds. Every shape of religious thinking will have its exponent,
+and the widest liberty be claimed and enjoyed. Though he slept through
+Father Boardman's sermons, it is doubtful if Henry Mowers did not in
+his dreams lay the corner-stone of the new meeting-house on the hill.
+
+Monday, and the hurly-burly of washing over. Dorcas had nearly
+finished her "stent" on the little wheel. As she sat by the open door,
+diligently trotting her foot, and softly pulling the last flax from
+her distaff, her glance went hastily and often towards the setting
+sun. She could see beyond the sloping orchard, no longer loaded
+with fruit, the Great Meadows, extending along the banks of the
+Connecticut. She could see on the eastern side great white mountains,
+that went modestly by the name of hills, and that came in after-years
+to draw pilgrims from the ends of the earth. They were white-capped
+and solemn-looking, and girdled by majestic forests; while the Green
+Mountains, that lay along the horizon, not so high as "the Hills,"
+were crowned with verdure to the very top, and flaming with autumn
+dyes. As far as the eye reached, beyond the immediate view rose an
+immense solitude of forest that had lasted through centuries.
+
+Dorcas's eyes rested and roamed alternately over these massive natural
+features. She felt dimly in her heart the effect of the solemn aspect
+of these great wastes,--these sublime possibilities, concealed and
+waiting for the energy of man to discover them. A melancholy, sweet
+and soft, composed partly of the effect of the view, and partly of the
+languor of the Indian-summer weather, diffused itself over her. She
+accused herself of various sins,--of levity, vanity, and not knowing
+her own mind. Soon, however, feeling her unskilfulness to steer, she
+abandoned the bark, and left it to drift. She must see Swan Day.
+
+"And as to Henry!"--here Dorcas set back the little wheel,--"and as
+to Henry!"--and here Dorcas threw her apron over her face,--"why, what
+harm is there? I'm only going to see what he wants."
+
+Under the apron rippled and rushed a thousand warm blushes, that
+contradicted every word Dorcas said to herself. They made her remember
+how, only the evening before, Henry had said words to her, which,
+although she pretended not to understand him, had made her heart beat
+proudly and tenderly; and how she had thought whoever was chosen to
+be Henry's wife would be a happy woman! How many times had he said, as
+they stood parting on the stoop, how sorry he was to go, and she,
+like Juliet, had whispered, 't was "not yet day"! Yes, of course
+Henry Mowers would be her husband, and she would tell Swan Day so,
+if--if----But then, perhaps, there was no such nonsense in Swan's
+head, after all.
+
+Why could not the gypsy be satisfied with her almost angelic
+happiness? But no. She shivered a little as the sun went down, and
+exchanged her working-dress of petticoat and short-gown for something
+warmer.
+
+Because Cely Temple was cutting apples and pumpkins, and stringing
+them across the kitchen and pantry to dry, and because black Dinah
+was making the "bean-porridge" for supper, it came to pass that the
+daughter of the house was called on to lay the table. Dorcas bit her
+lip, as she hastily did the duty, and postponed the pleasure.
+
+The laboring-season is nearly over, the eight hired men reduced to
+two, and the family-table is spread in the kitchen. How is the table
+spread for supper in the house of Colonel Fox, one of the richest
+farmers in Walton?
+
+This is the way.
+
+Dorcas brushes a scrap from the long table, scoured as white as snow,
+but puts no linen on it. On the buttery-shelves, a set of pewter
+rivals silver in brightness, but Dorcas does not touch them. She
+places a brown rye-and-Indian loaf, of the size of a half-peck, in the
+centre of the table,--a pan of milk, with the cream stirred in,--brown
+earthen bowls, with bright pewter spoons by the dozen,--a delicious
+cheese, whole, and the table is ready. When Dinah appears, with
+her bright Madras turban, and says she is ready to dish the
+"bean-porridge, nine days old," Dorcas tells her she is going
+down beyond the cider-mill, to bring up the yarn, and, throwing a
+handkerchief over her head, is out of sight before Dinah has finished
+blowing the tin horn that summons to supper.
+
+In five minutes, she was beyond the cider-mill, beyond the well, and
+standing under the old pear-tree. Behind her, hiding her from the
+house, is the corn-barn, stuffed and laden with the heavy harvest of
+maize and wheat, and the cider-mill, where twenty bushels of apples
+lie uncrushed on the ground, ready for the morrow's fate. A long row
+of barrels already filled from the foaming vat stand ready to be taken
+to the Colonel's own cellar, for the Colonel's own drinking, and as
+far as one can see in one direction is the Colonel's own land. The
+heiress of all would still be sought for herself.
+
+Dorcas stood in the departing light, and leaned against the pear-tree.
+Not yet come? A flush went up to her forehead, as, dropping her
+handkerchief, she raised her hand to her eyes and glanced hastily
+about her. Her chestnut curls were fastened with a blue ribbon on the
+side of her head, and the floating ends fell on her shoulder.
+
+This was the one departure from the severe simplicity of her dress,
+for neither bright-hued calicoes nor muslins found their way to
+Walton. Once in a long while, a print, at five times the present
+prices, was introduced into the social circles of Walton by an
+occasional peddler, or possibly by the adventurous spirit of Swan Day.
+But these were rare instances.
+
+Flannel of domestic manufacture, pressed till you could almost see
+your face in it, stood instead of the French woollen fabric of modern
+days. It left the jimp little waist as round and definite as the eye
+could ask, while the full flow of the skirt exposed the neat foot,
+deftly incased in stout Jefferson shoes. A plaited lawn, technically
+termed a "modesty-piece," was folded over the bosom, and concealed
+all but the upper part of the throat. Above that rose a face full of
+delicacy and healthy sweetness. Eyes full of sparkles, and dimples
+all about the cheeks, chin, and rather large mouth. Youth, and the
+radiance of a happy, unconscious nature, of the capabilities or
+possibilities of which she was as ignorant as the robin on the branch
+above her, whose evening song had just closed, and who has just shut
+his coquettish eyes.
+
+A minute more, and Swan sprang over the stone wall, and with three
+steps was standing by her. He stood still and looked at her, drawing
+deep breaths of haste and agitation.
+
+Dorcas spoke first.
+
+"You wanted to see me. What is the matter?"
+
+"Nothing,--but--you know I've got home."
+
+"Why, yes, that is clear," answered Dorcas, mischievously, and
+entirely easy herself, now that she saw Swan's cheeks aflame, and his
+voice choking so he could not speak.
+
+"We might as well go towards the house, if that is all," added she,
+gathering in her hand some skeins of yarn that had been spread out to
+whiten.
+
+Swan caught the yarn and threw it away with an impatient jerk. Then he
+took both of Dorcas's hands in his, holding them with a fierce grasp
+that made her almost scream.
+
+"You know I can't go near the house."
+
+"Yes, I know," said Dorcas, half frightened at his manner. "When did
+you get back from Boston?"
+
+"Saturday night. And I am going again to-morrow. And then--Dorcas--I
+shall stay."
+
+"Stay?"
+
+"Stay,--till you tell me to come back, maybe!"
+
+"Why, where are you going, Swan?"
+
+"To China, Dorcas."
+
+"I want to know!" exclaimed she.
+
+"Just it,--and no two ways about it. Sold out to Sawtell. Now you have
+it, Dorcas!"
+
+This curt and abrupt dialogue needed no more words. The rest was made
+out fully by the bright color on each face, the sparkling interest
+on the bent brow of Dorcas, and the deep, mellow voice, full of
+tenderness and hope, mixed with stern decision, on the part of Swan
+Day.
+
+No wonder Dorcas's eyes had a glamour over them as she listened and
+looked. What did she see? A slight, erect figure, with Napoleonic
+features, animated with admiration and sensibility; emotion glorifying
+the rich, deep eyes, and making them look in the twilight like stars;
+and over all, the indefinable ease that comes from knowledge of the
+world, however small that world may be.
+
+Swan had little gift of language. The foregoing short dialogue is a
+specimen of his ability in that way. But looks are a refinement on
+speech, and say what words never can say.
+
+"You see, Dorcas, I'm going out for the Perkinses with Orrin Tileston.
+We each put in five hundred, and have our share of the profits."
+
+"But to China! that's right under our feet! You'll never come back!"
+murmured the girl.
+
+"Do you ever want I should? Dorcas, if I come back rich, shall you be
+glad? It will be all for you,--dear!" the last word low and timidly.
+
+The mist went over her eyes again. A vision of Solomon in all his
+glory swept across her. Even to Walton had spread rumors of the
+immense fortunes acquired in the China and India trade, and the gold
+of Cathay seemed to shimmer over the form before her, so strong, so
+able to contend with, and compel, if need were, Fortune.
+
+As to Swan, he looked over the river of Time that separated him from
+love and happiness, and saw his idol and ideal standing on the
+farther bank, dressed in purple and fine linen, with jewels of his own
+adorning. Like Bunyan's "shining ones," she seemed to him far lifted
+out of the range of ordinary thought and expression, into the regions
+of inspired song. Now that he was really going to the East, the image
+of Dorcas in his heart took on itself, with a graceful readiness, the
+gold of Ophir, the pomps of Palmyra, and the shining glories of Zion.
+He longed to "crown her with rose-buds, to fill her with costly wine
+and ointments,"--to pour over her the measureless bounty of his love,
+from the cornucopia of Fortune.
+
+"Dorcas," said he,--and his words showed how inadequately thoughts can
+be represented,--"Dorcas, I know your father thinks nothing at all
+of me now; _but_, supposing I come back in two years, with--with--say
+five thousand dollars!--then, Dorcas!"
+
+The bright, soft eyes looked pleadingly at her.
+
+Truly, in those days of simplicity and scant earnings, five thousand
+dollars did seem likely to be an overwhelming temptation to the owner
+of the Fox farm.
+
+"But,--Swan!" said the blushing girl, releasing herself from his
+grasp, and stepping back.
+
+"Yes, Dorcas!--yes!--once!--only once!"
+
+He came between her and the image of Henry Mowers; he was going
+away; she might never see him again. A vague sentiment, composed of
+pleasure, pity, admiration, and ambition, but having the semblance
+only of timidity in her rosy face and downcast eyes, made her yield
+her shrinking form, for one moment, to his trembling and passionate
+caress, and the next, she ran as swiftly as a deer to the house.
+
+Swan's eyes followed her. With his feet, he dared not. His bounding
+heart half-choked him with pleasant pain. All be had not said,--all he
+had meant to say to Dorcas, of his well-laid plans, his good-luck,
+his hopes,--all he had meant to entreat of her constancy, for in the
+infrequent communications between the two countries there was no hope
+of a correspondence,--all he had meant to say to her of his fervent
+love, of his anguish at separation, of the joy of reunion, and that
+his love would leave him only with his life,--if he could only have
+told her! But then he never would or could have put it all into
+words, if Dorcas had stayed with him under the pear-tree till the next
+morning.
+
+He thought of the Colonel's pride, and how it would come down, at the
+sight of Swan Day returning to Walton with five thousand dollars in
+his coat-pocket, and mounted, perhaps, on an elephant! If he had held
+a foremost social position in Walton, even while selling tape and
+mop-sticks, molasses and rum, at the country-store, what might not be
+the impression on the public mind at seeing the glittering plumage of
+this "bird let loose from Eastern skies, when hastening fondly home"?
+There was much balm for wounded pride to be gathered in this Oriental
+project.
+
+Swan collected his energies and his clothes, finished his remaining
+last words and duties, and took his seat with the mail-carrier, who
+had the only public conveyance at that period from the town of Walton
+to the town of Boston. His parents were dead; his immediate relatives
+were scattered already in different States; and he left Walton with
+his heart full of one image, that of Dorcas Fox.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+"They du say Swan Day's gun off for good!" said Cely Temple, as she
+returned from the store, with a Dutch-oven in her hand, which she had
+purchased,--"an' to th' East Injees!"
+
+"I want to know!" rejoined Mrs. Fox.
+
+"I know some'll be sorry!" continued Cely, while Dorcas diligently
+stirred a five-pail kettle of apple-sauce, that hung stewing over the
+low fire.
+
+Mrs. Fox looked up quickly at her daughter, but Dorcas continued
+quietly stirring, and without turning round.
+
+"Mahala Dorr, I guess," said she.
+
+"Wall, M'hala'll be, an' so'll others," answered Cely, prudently.
+"But I expect likely Swan'll do well, ef he don't die. They say the
+atemuspere is pison there!--especially for dark-complected folks."
+
+To this hopeful remark Mrs. Fox rejoined, that "old Miss Day come
+herself from a warm country, and 't was likely her son would settle
+there for good, and enjoy his health there better than what he would
+here."
+
+"He'll look out well for Number One, anyhow!" said Cely, lifting the
+lid of the Dutch-oven from the fire.
+
+Dorcas shot an angry glance at the apple-sauce.
+
+Nothing further passed on the subject, and Dorcas somehow felt, as she
+stirred, as if Swan were already a long, long way off,--as if the ship
+had sailed, and would stay sailed, like an enchanted ship, hovering
+on the horizon, and never come near enough for the passengers to be
+distinguished,--or else, maybe, go up into the clouds, and rest there
+with all its masts and spars distinct against the rose-mist, as she
+had read of once in a book of travels,--or, perhaps, even be inverted,
+and stand there on its head, as it were, always: but everything must
+be upside down, of course, in China. Already the thought of Swan Day
+had mingled with the mists of the past. The outline became indefinite,
+and softened into a golden splendor, that belonged no more to her, but
+was essentially of another hemisphere. He had by this time cut loose
+from home and country. Whether a hundred, or a hundred thousand miles,
+it mattered not. Since she could not grasp the idea, the distance was
+as good as infinite to her.
+
+This, you see, is not exactly coquetry. But events drifted her.
+
+When supper was over, and Dinah had gone to sleep, and Cely to visit
+the neighbors, as usual, Dorcas shyly approached the subject which
+occupied her thoughts, by getting the little box of jewelry, and
+looking at it. Her mother called her from the kitchen, out of which
+the bed-room opened.
+
+"Does mother want me?" asked Dorcas, turning round, with the box in
+her hand.
+
+"No, no matter," answered the mother; and, possibly with an intuitive
+feeling of what was in her daughter's thought, she went into the
+bed-room, and looked with her at the pin and ring of Aunt Dorcas.
+
+"Was it--was it a long time, mother,--I mean, before he came back?"
+said Dorcas.
+
+"Who? Captain Waterhouse? Bless you! they was as good as merried for
+ten year, an' he was goin' all the time, an' then, jest at the last
+minute, to be 'racked! It's 'most always so, when people goes to sea,"
+added she, in a plaintive tone.
+
+Dorcas meditated; she looked wistfully at her mother.
+
+"It's a pretty pin,--dreadful pretty round the edge."
+
+"Yes, 't is! I expect likely them's di'mon's. 'T was made over in
+foreign parts. He was goin' to bring his picter, too, from there. But
+he's lost and gone! Your Aunt Dorcas never had no more suitors after
+that, and she kind o' gin in, and never had no sperits."
+
+Dorcas's eyes filled, and she closed the box.
+
+
+Henry Mowers would not come to the Fox farm till the next Sunday
+night. That was as much settled as the new moon. So Dorcas had the
+whole week to herself, to be thoroughly unhappy in,--all the more so,
+a thousand times more so, for being utterly incapable of saying or
+seeing why. An instinctive delicacy kept her from showing to any
+of the family that she was even depressed; and her voice was heard
+steadily warbling one of Wesley's hymns, or "Wolfe's Address to his
+Army," in clear, brilliant tones, that rang up-stairs and down. The
+general impression of distance and water associated her absent lover
+with all that was heroic and romantic in song; for of novels she knew
+nothing,--the Colonel's library being limited, in the imaginative
+line, to a torn copy of the "Iliad," which had been left at the house
+by a travelling cobbler.
+
+However, romance is before all rules, and shapes its own adventures.
+The beauty of Swan Day, which, dark and slight as it was, gleamed with
+a power for Dorcas's eye and heart before which Buonarotti's
+would have been only pale stone forever,--that beauty dwelt in her
+imagination and memory, as only first romantic impressions can.
+Distance canonized him, enthroned him, glorified him. And when she
+thought of his setting forth so boldly, so bravely, to tread the
+wide water, to tempt the hot sun, the foreign exposure, the perpetual
+dangers of heathen countries, for her unworthy sake, all that was
+tenderest, most grateful, in her now first wakened nature, rose up in
+distressful tumult, and agitated the depths that are in all women's
+souls.
+
+If there had been anybody to whom she could confide the sad wrenching
+of her spirit, any one who would have cleared her vision, and taught
+her to look on "this picture and on this," she might not have been so
+puzzled between her two Hyperions. But as it was, it was a sorrowful
+struggle. One had the advantage of distance and imagination,--one of
+presence, and of the magnetism of eye and lip.
+
+"I am a wicked, wicked girl!" said she, as she stood before the glass,
+and loosened the locks that fell like sunshine over her shoulders. But
+this confession, with true New-England reticence, was uttered only to
+one listener,--herself.
+
+Then, she recalled, for it was Monday night once more, the frank and
+noble nature of Henry: how he had not asked her to promise him, but
+seemed to take for granted her truth and faith; how he had looked so
+fondly, so clearly into her eyes, not for what he might find there,
+but to show the transparent goodness and sincerity of his own; and
+how he had told her of all his plans and hopes, of his wish and her
+father's intention that they should be married that very fall; how
+little he had said of his own overflowing affection, only that "he had
+never thought of anybody else." Dorcas only felt, without putting the
+sense into language, that in this life-boat there was safety. But
+then had she not sent her heart on a venture in the other,--that other
+which even now was tossing on the waves of a future, full-freighted
+with hope, and faith in her truth?
+
+She opened the little box again, and looked at the ring and painted
+pin. How sorrowfully she looked at them now, seen through tears of
+conscious experience! How mournful seemed the ground hair, and
+the tints woven of so many broken hopes, sad thoughts, and wrecked
+expectations! the hair, kissed so many times in the weary years of
+waiting, and then wept over in the drearier desolation, when the sight
+could only bring thoughts of the salt waves dashing amongst it in the
+deep sea! What a life that had been of poor Aunt Dorcas! Then came
+across her busy thought the words of her mother,--"It's 'most always
+so!"
+
+Swan sailed very far away, in these tearful reveries, and took hope
+and life with him.
+
+When the next Sunday evening came, and the next, and the next,--and
+when Dorcas had ceased to say, blushing and smiling,--"Don't, Henry!
+you know I should make such a poor kind of a wife for you! and your
+mother wouldn't think anything of me!"--and when, Henry had had an
+offer to go to Western New York, where there were nobody knew how many
+beautiful girls, all waiting to pounce on the tall, fine-looking
+young farmer,--when Colonel Fox forgot he was a deacon, and swore
+that Dorcas was undeserving of such a happy lot as was offered to
+her,--when the tears, and the reveries, and the pictures of far-away
+lands, and the hopes that might wither with long years of waiting,
+were all merged and effaced in the healthy happiness of the
+present,--Dorcas dried her tears, and applied herself diligently to
+building up her flaxen _trousseau_, and smothered in her heart the
+image of dark and brilliant beauty that had for a time occupied it.
+
+"She waited--a long time!--years--and years!" murmured Dorcas,
+sorrowfully, as she looked at the pin and ring, which in her mind were
+associated strongly with only one person,--and that one hereafter to
+be dead to her. As soon as events clearly defined her duties, Dorcas
+had no further questions with herself. If the box had been Pandora's,
+not the less resolutely would she have shut it forever, and so crushed
+the hope that it could never have leaped out.
+
+So, with choking tears, and throbbing pulses, she followed many
+brilliant fancies and hopes to their last resting-place. Henceforth
+her path was open and clear, her duties defined, and with daily
+occupation of hand and thought she strove to displace all that had
+ever made her other than the cheerful and busy Dorcas. For the last
+time, she closed and put away the box.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THRENODY.
+
+[Among the imprinted papers of the author of "Charles Auchester" and
+"Counterparts" was found this poem, addressed to a father on the death
+of a favorite son, whose noble disposition and intellectual gifts were
+all enlisted on the side of suffering humanity.]
+
+ O mourner by the ever-mourning deep,
+ Full as the sea of tears! imperial heart,
+ King in thy sorrow over all who weep!
+ O wrestler with the darkness set apart
+
+ In clouds of woe whose lightnings are the throb
+ Of thy fast-flashing pulses! pause to hear
+ The lullabies of many an alien sob,
+ A storm of alien sighs,--so far! so near!
+
+ Oh that our vigils with thy gentle dead
+ Could charm thee from thy night-long agonies,
+ Could steep thy brain in slumber mild, and shed
+ Elysian dreams upon thy closing eyes!
+
+ In vain! all vain!--'tis yet the feast of tears;
+ Sorrow for sorrow is the only spell;
+ Nor wanders yet to melt in unspent years
+ The wringing murmur of our fresh farewell!
+
+ Thousands bereft strew wide the ashes dim;
+ Rich hearts, poor hands, the lovely, the unlearned,
+ Bemoan the angel of the age in him,
+ A star unto its starlight strength returned,
+
+ The City of Delights hath lost its gem,
+ The Sea the changeful glance so like its own,
+ Genius the darling of her diadem,
+ Whose smile made moonlight round her awful throne.
+
+ Those elfin steps their music moves no more
+ Beneath light domes to tune the festal train,
+ Nor at the moony eves along the shore
+ To brim with fairy forms that wizard brain.
+
+ Cold rocks, wild winds, and ever-changing waves,
+ Sad rains that fret the sea and drown the day,
+ We hail,--well pleased that stricken Autumn raves,
+ Though not with Winter shall our griefs decay.
+
+ On lurid mornings, when the lustrous sea
+ Is violet-shadowed from the warm blue air,
+ When the dark grasses brighten over thee,
+ And the winged sunbeams flutter golden there,--
+
+ Then to the wild green slope, thy chosen rest,
+ The blossoms of our spirits we will bring,
+ (Again a babe upon thy mother's breast,
+ An infant seed of the eternal Spring,)--
+
+ Thoughts bright and dark as violets in their dew,
+ Unfading memories of a smile more sweet
+ Than perfume of pale roses, hopes that strew
+ Ethereal lilies on those silent feet
+
+ The ghost of Pain haunts not that garden-land
+ Where Passion's phantom is so softly laid;
+ But Charity beside that earth doth stand,
+ Most lovely left of all, thy sister-shade.
+
+ Her baby-loves like trembling snowdrops lean
+ Above thy calm hands and thy quiet head,
+ When morn is fair, or noonday's glory keen
+ Or the white star-fire glistens on thy bed.
+
+ Her eyes of heaven upon thy slumbers brood,
+ Her watch is o'er thy pillow, and her breath
+ Tells every breeze that stirs thy solitude
+ How thou didst earn that rest on earth called Death,--
+
+ Earned in such quickening youth and brilliant years!
+ For us too early, not too soon for thee!--
+ So may we rest, when Death shall dry our tears,
+ Till everlasting Morning makes us free!
+
+
+
+
+THE UTILITY AND THE FUTILITY OF APHORISMS.
+
+
+The best aphorisms are pointed expressions of the results of
+observation, experience, and reflection. They are portable wisdom,
+the quintessential extracts of thought and feeling. They furnish the
+largest amount of intellectual stimulus and nutriment in the smallest
+compass. About every weak point in human nature, or vicious spot
+in human life, there is deposited a crystallization of warning and
+protective proverbs. For instance, with what relishing force such
+sayings as the following touch the evil resident in indolence and
+delay!--"An unemployed mind is the Devil's workshop"; "The industrious
+tortoise wins the race from the lagging eagle"; "When God says,
+To-day, the Devil says, To-morrow." In like manner, another cluster
+of adages depict the certainty of the detection and punishment of
+crime:--"Murder will out"; "Justice has feet of wool, but hands of
+iron"; "God's mills grind slow, but they grind sure." So in relation
+to every marked exposure of our life, there will be found in the
+records of the common thought of mankind a set of deprecating
+aphorisms.
+
+The laconic compactness of these utterances, their constant
+applicability, the pungent patness with which they hit some fact of
+experience, principle of human nature, or phenomenon of life, the ease
+with which their racy sense may be apprehended and remembered, give
+them a powerful charm for the popular fancy. Accordingly, a multitude
+of proverbs are afloat in the writings and in the mouths of every
+civilized people. Groups of national proverbs exist in most of the
+languages of the world, each family of apothegms revealing the
+chief traits of the people who gave them birth. In these collective
+expressions of national mind, we can recognize--if so incomplete a
+characterization may be ventured--the indrawn meditativeness of the
+Hindu, the fiery imagination of the Arab, the devout and prudential
+understanding of the Hebrew, the æsthetic subtilty of the Greek,
+the legal breadth and sensual recklessness of the Roman, the martial
+frenzy of the Goth, the chivalric and dark pride of the Spaniard,
+the treacherous blood of the Italian, the mercurial vanity of the
+Frenchman, the blunt realism of the Englishman.
+
+It is obvious enough that the masses of moral statements or standing
+exhortations composing the aphorisms of a language cannot mix in the
+daily minds of men without deep cause and effect. It will be worth our
+while to inquire into the bearings of this matter; for, though many a
+gatherer has carried his basket through these diamond districts of the
+mind, we do not remember that any one has sharply examined the value
+of the treasures so often displayed, set forth the methods of their
+influence and its qualifications, and determined the respective limits
+of their use and their worthlessness. Undertaking this task, we must,
+in the outset, divide aphorisms into the two classes of proverbs
+and maxims, plebeian perceptions and aristocratic conclusions, moral
+axioms and philosophic rules. This distinction may easily be made
+clear, and will prove useful.
+
+Popular proverbs are national, or cosmopolitan, and they are
+anonymous,--rising from among the multitude, and floating on their
+breath. They are generalizations of the average observation of a
+people. Undoubtedly, as a general thing, each one was first struck
+out by some superior mind. But usually this happened so early that
+the name of the author is lost. Proverbs--as the etymology hints--are
+words held before the common mind, words in front of the public. Wise
+maxims, on the contrary, are individual, may more commonly be traced
+to their origin in the writings of some renowned author, and are
+more limited in their audience. They are the results of comprehensive
+insight, the ripened products of searching meditation, the weighty
+utterances of weighty minds. The proverb, "A burnt child dreads the
+fire," flies over all climes and alights on every tongue. The maxim,
+"All true life begins with renunciation," appeals to comparatively
+few, and tarries only in prepared and thoughtful minds. Proverbs
+are often mere statements of facts, barren truisms, too obvious to
+instruct our thought, affect our feeling, or in any way change our
+conduct, though the accuracy with which the arrow is shot fixes our
+attention. Notice a few examples of this sort:--"A friend in need is
+a friend indeed"; "Many a little makes a mickle"; "Anger is a brief
+madness"; "It is an ill wind that blows nobody any good." Such
+affirmations are too general and obvious to be provocative awakeners
+of original reflection, sentiment, or will. Maxims, on the other hand,
+instead of being general descriptions or condensed common-places, are
+usually definite directions, discriminative exhortations. Notice such
+specimens as these:--"Take care of the pence, and the pounds will take
+care of themselves"; "When angry, count ten before you speak"; "Do the
+duty nearest your hand, and the next will already have grown clearer";
+"Remember that a thing begun is half done." Proverbs, then, are
+results of observation, often affirmations of quite evident facts,
+as, "Necessity is the mother of invention," or, "Who follows the
+river will arrive at the sea." Maxims, in distinction, are results
+of reflection. They are experience generalized into rules for the
+guidance of action, as, "Think twice before you speak once," or,
+"Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will
+not depart from it." Proverbs are statical; maxims are dynamic. Those
+are wisdom embalmed; these wisdom vitalized. The former are literary
+fodder; the latter are literary pemmican.
+
+The commonest application of proverbs is as mental economics,
+_substitutes for thought_. They are constantly employed by the
+ordinary sort of persons as provisions to avoid spiritual exertion,
+artifices to dispose of a matter with the smallest amount of
+intellectual trouble, as when one ends a controversy with the adage,
+"Least said, soonest mended." The majority of people desire to get
+along with the least possible expenditure of thinking. To many a
+hard-headed laborer, five minutes of girded and continuous thinking
+are more exhaustive than a whole day of muscular toil. No fact is more
+familiar than that illiterate minds are furnished with an abundance of
+trite sayings which they readily cite on all occasions. They thus
+hit, or at least fancy they hit, the principle which applies to the
+exigency, without the trouble of extemporaneously thinking it out
+for themselves on the spot. Such saws as, "The pot must not call the
+kettle black," "One swallow does not make a Spring," "Nought is never
+in danger," "Out of sight, out of mind," often give employment to an
+otherwise freightless tongue, and serve as excusing makeshifts for a
+mind incompetent, from ignorance, indolence, or fatigue, to discharge
+the duty of furnishing its own thought and expression for the
+occasion.
+
+Proverbs are more frequently used as _explanations_ than as _guides_
+of conduct, as the reason why we _have_ acted in a certain manner than
+as a reason why we _should_ act so. "Look before you leap," is usually
+said _after_ we have leaped. When a miserly man refuses to give
+anything in behalf of some distant object, his refusal is not prompted
+by the remembrance of the proverb, "Charity begins at home"; but the
+stingy propensity first stirs in the man and actuates him, and then he
+expresses his motive, or evades the true issue, by quoting the selfish
+old saw ever ready at his hand. In such cases the axiom is not the
+forerunning cause of the action, but its justifying explanation.
+Sometimes, undeniably, an applicable proverb coming to mind does
+influence a man and decide his conduct. Coming at the right moment, in
+the wavering of his will, it suggests the principle which determines
+him, lends the needful balance of impulse for which he waited. An old
+proverb, indorsed by the usage of generations, strikes on the ear like
+a voice falling from the heights of antiquity; it is clothed with
+a kind of authority. Doubtless many a poor boy has received a sound
+flogging which he would have escaped, had not his father happened
+to recall the somewhat cruel and questionable aphorism of Solomon,
+currently abbreviated into "Spare the rod and spoil the child."
+When Charles IX. was hesitating as to the enactment of the Saint
+Bartholomew Massacre, his bigoted mother, infuriated with sectarian
+hate, whispered in his ear, "Clemency is sometimes cruelty, and
+cruelty clemency,"--and the fatal decree was sealed. But such
+instances are exceptional, and partly deceptive, too. Man is usually
+governed by his own passions, his own circumstances, or his own
+reason, not by any verbal propositions. And when an apt and timely
+adage seems to determine him, it is, for the most part, because
+it acts upon responsive feelings preëxistent in him and already
+struggling to express themselves. And thus, upon the whole, it is
+to be concluded that proverbs are the children of Epimetheus, or
+afterthought, rather than of Prometheus, or forethought. They are
+rather products than producers,--intellectual forms rather than
+intellectual forces. The prevalent notion of their influence is a
+huge and singular error. One of our wisest authors, himself a great
+aphorist, says,--"Proverbs are the sanctuaries of the intuitions." But
+the intuitions, for the very reason that they are intuitive, need no
+advisory guidance, and admit of no verbal help.
+
+But when we turn from the aphoristic proverbs of the people to
+the aphoristic maxims of the wise, a deep distinction and contrast
+confront us. These, so far from being evasions of effort or
+substitutes for thought, are direct stimulants to thought, provocative
+summonses to more earnest mental application. Seneca says, "Wouldst
+thou subject all things to thyself? Subject thyself to reason." A
+modern writer says, "They are not kings who have thrones, but they who
+know how to govern." Now any one meeting these maxims, if they have
+any effect on him, will be set a-thinking to discover the principle
+contained in them. He will feel that there is a profound significance
+in them; and his curiosity will be awakened, his intellect fired, to
+find out the grounds and bearings of the law they denote. In this way
+the words of the wise are goads to prick and urge the faculties of
+inferior minds. Pointed expressions of the experience of the sovereign
+masters of life and the world impel feebler and less agile natures to
+follow the tracks of light and emulate the choice examples set before
+them, with swifter movements and with richer results than they could
+ever have attained, if not thus encouraged. Proverbial axioms flourish
+copiously in the idiomatic ground and vernacular climate of unlearned,
+undisciplined, unreflective minds, as thistles on the highway where
+every ass may gather them. But precious maxims, those "short sentences
+drawn from a long experience," as Cervantes calls them, are found
+mostly in the writings of the greatest geniuses, Solomon, Aristotle,
+Shakspeare, Bacon, Goethe, Richter, Emerson: and they appeal
+comparatively but to a select class of minds, kindred in some degree
+to those that originated them.
+
+To appreciate and use correctly a valuable maxim requires a genius,
+a vital appropriating exercise of mind, closely allied to that which
+first created it. In order to secure genuine profit here, the disciple
+must for himself repeat the processes of the teacher, reach the same
+conclusion, see the same truth. Wisdom cannot be mechanically taken,
+but must be spiritually assimilated,--cannot be put on as a coat or
+hat, used as a hammer or a sling, but must be intelligently grasped,
+digested, and organized into the mental structure and habits. The
+truth of this is at once so palpable and so important that it has
+found embodiment in numerous proverbs known to almost every one: "An
+ounce of mother-wit is worth a pound of school-wit"; "A pennyweight of
+your own wit is worth a ton of other people's"; "Who cannot work out
+his salvation by heart will never do it by book."
+
+For the reason just indicated, we think the common estimate of
+the actual influence of even the costliest preceptive sayings is
+monstrously exaggerated. That an aphorism should really be of use, it
+must virtually be reproduced by the faculties of your own soul. But
+the mental energy and acquirement which thus recreate it in a great
+degree supersede the necessity of it, render it an expression not of
+a guidance you need from without, but of an insight and force already
+working within. Your character determines what maxims you will select
+or create far more than the maxims you choose or make determine what
+your character will be. Herbart says, "Characters with ruling plans
+are energetic; characters with ruling maxims are virtuous." This is
+true, since a continuous plan subsidizes the forces that would without
+it run to waste, and a deliberately chosen authority girds and guides
+the soul from perilous dallying and dissipation. Nevertheless, it is
+not so much that characters are energetic or virtuous because they
+have ruling plans or maxims as it is that they have ruling plans or
+maxims because they are energetic or virtuous. Say to a penurious,
+hard, grumpy man, "It is more blessed to give than to receive." Will
+you thus make him liberal, sympathetic, affable? No, his character
+will neutralize your precept, as vinegar receiving the sunshine into
+its bosom becomes more sour. Some persons seem to imagine that a wise
+maxim is a sort of fairy's wand, one touch of which will transform the
+loaded panniers of a donkey into the fiery wings of a Pegasus. Surely,
+it is a great error. Trench says, with an amusing _naïveté_, "There is
+scarcely a mistake which in the course of our lives we have committed,
+but some proverb, _had we known and attended to its lesson_, might
+have saved us from it." The two comprehensive conditions, "had we
+known and attended to its lesson," are discharging conductors, that
+empty the sentence of all proper meaning, and leave only a rank of
+hollow words behind. He might as well say, "Had we never been tempted,
+we had never fallen,--had we possessed all wisdom, we had never
+committed an error," The best maxim that ever was made cannot directly
+impart or create knowledge or virtue or spiritual force. It can only
+give a voice to those qualities where they already exist, and so set
+in motion a strengthening interchange of action and reaction. Though a
+fool's mouth be stuffed with proverbs, he still remains as much a fool
+as before. He is past preaching to who does not care to mend. As the
+brave Schiller affirms, "Heaven and earth fight in vain against a
+dunce." Eternal contact with nutritious wisdom can teach no lesson,
+nor profit at all one who has not a coöperative and assimilative
+mind. The anchor is always in the sea, but it never learns to swim.
+Philosophic precepts address the reason; but the springs of motive and
+regeneration are in the sentiments. To attempt the reformation of
+a bad man by means of fine aphorisms is as hopeless as to bombard
+a fortress with diamonds, or to strive to exhilarate the brain by
+pelting the forehead with grapes.
+
+And yet, notwithstanding these large limitations and abatements, it
+is not to be denied that both proverbs and maxims, when habitually
+recalled, generally have some effect, often are strongly influential,
+and may, by a faithful observance of the conditions, be made extremely
+efficacious. What, then, are the conditions of deriving profit from
+the contemplation of aphorisms? How can we make their futility end,
+their utility begin? The first, ever indispensable condition is fresh
+discrimination. There are false, cynical, mean, devilish aphorisms, as
+well as sound and worthy ones. Each style of character, kind and grade
+of experience breathes itself out in corresponding expressions. "Self
+is the man"; "Look out for Number One"; "Devil take the hindmost";
+"One for me is as good as two for you"; "Every man has his price";
+"Draw the snake from its hole by another man's hand"; "Vengeance is
+a feast fit for the gods." The fact that such infernal sentiments are
+proverbs must be no excuse for not trampling them out of sight with
+disgust and scorn. Discrimination is needed not only to reject bad
+sayings, but also to correct incomplete or extravagant ones. The
+maxim, "Never judge by appearances," must be modified, because in
+reality appearances are all that we have to judge from. Its true
+rendering is, "Judge cautiously, for appearances are often deceptive."
+A proverb is almost always partial, presenting one aspect of the
+matter,--or excessive, making no allowance for exceptions. Here
+independent insight is requisite, that we may not err. As a general
+thing, aphorisms are particular truths put into forms of universality,
+and they must be severely scrutinized, lest a mere characteristic
+of the individual be mistaken for a normal faculty of the race. For
+instance, it is said, "A reconciled friend is an enemy in disguise."
+Not always, by any means; it depends greatly on the character of
+the man, "Forewarned is forearmed." Generally this is true, but not
+invariably; as sometimes a man, by being forewarned of danger, is
+unnerved with terror, and undone. So the two maxims, "Never abandon
+a certainty for an uncertainty," "Nothing venture, nothing have,"
+destroy each other. Whether you shall give up the one bird in the hand
+and try for the two in the bush depends on the relative worth of the
+one and the two, and the probabilities of success in the trial.
+No abstract maxim can help solve that problem: it requires living
+intelligence. To follow a foreign rule empirically will often be to
+fare as the monkey fared, who, undertaking to shave, as he had seen
+his master do, gashed his face and paws. Fearful incisions of the soul
+will he get who accepts unqualifyingly the class of impulsive proverbs
+with their enormously overdrawn inferences: such as that of David,
+when he said in his haste, "All men are liars"; or that of Moore,
+when he said in his song, "The world is all a fleeting show, for man's
+illusion given"; or that maxim of Schopenhauer, so full of deadly
+misanthropy and melancholy that one would gladly turn his back on a
+world in which he believed such a rule necessary, "Love no one, hate
+no one, is the first half of all worldly wisdom; say nothing, believe
+nothing, is the other half."
+
+The first condition of a profitable use of maxims being a thorough
+mastery of the rule proposed, with its limits, the next condition
+is an accurate self-knowledge. Know yourself, your weaknesses, your
+aptitudes, your exposures, your gifts and strength, in order that you
+may know what to seek or avoid, what to cherish or spurn, what to spur
+or curb, what to fortify or assail. For example, if your head is made
+of butter, it is clear that it will not do for you to be a baker. If
+you are a coward, you must not volunteer to lead a forlorn hope. The
+advantage of self-knowledge is that it enables us to prescribe for
+ourselves the contemplation of such principles and motives as we
+need. If our thought is narrow and our fancy cold, we should study the
+maxims that instruct,--as, "Joys are wings, sorrows are spurs." If
+our heart is faint and our will weak, we should study the maxims that
+inspire,--as, "The reward of a thing well done is to have done it."
+The instructive maxim opens a vista of truth to the intellect, as when
+Goethe said, "A man need not be an architect in order to live in a
+house." The inspiring maxim strikes a martial chord in the soul,
+as when Alexander said to his Greeks, shrinking at the sight of
+the multitudinous host of Persians, "One butcher does not fear many
+sheep." The evil of self-ignorance is, that it permits men to choose
+as their favorite and guiding maxims those adages which express and
+foster their already rampant propensities, leaving their drooping
+deficiencies to pine and cramp in neglect. The miser pampers his
+avarice by repeating a hundred times a day, "A penny saved is a penny
+gained": as if that were the maxim _he_ needed! The spend-thrift
+comforts and confirms himself in his prodigality by saying, "God
+loveth a cheerful giver": as if that were not precisely the saying
+he ought never to recall! Audacity and arrogance constantly say to
+themselves, "Be bold, be bold, and evermore be bold." Timidity and
+distrust are ever whispering, "Be not too bold." Thus what would be
+one man's meat proves another man's poison; whereas, were it rightly
+distributed, both would be nourished into healthy development. The
+over-reckless should restrain himself by remembering that "Fools
+rush in where angels fear to tread." The over-cautious should animate
+himself with the reflection that "The coward dies a thousand deaths,
+the brave man only one." A man who, with deep self-knowledge,
+carefully chooses and perseveringly applies maxims adapted to check
+his excess and arouse his defect may derive unspeakable profit from
+them.
+
+To do this with full success, however, he must have a discriminating
+knowledge of the circumstances as well as of the rule, and of himself.
+"Circumstances alter cases." What applies happily in one exigency may
+be perfectly absurd or ruinous in a different situation. The mule,
+loaded with salt, waded through a brook, and, as the salt melted,
+the burden grew light. The ass, loaded with wool, tried the same
+experiment; but the wool, saturated with water, was twice as heavy as
+before. So the Satyr, in Æsop's fable, asked the man coming in from
+the cold, "Why he blew on his fingers?" and was told, "To warm them."
+Soon after he asked, "Why he blew in his soup?" and was told, "To
+cool it." Whereupon he rushed on the man with a club and slew him as a
+liar. The ramifications of truth in varying emergencies are infinitely
+subtile and complicated, and often demand the very nicest care
+in distinguishing. Good advice, when empirically taken and rashly
+followed, is as an eye in the hand, sure to be put out the first thing
+on trying to use it. "Advice costs nothing and is good for nothing,"
+it is often said. But that depends on the quality of the advice, on
+the circumstances, and on what kind of persons impart and receive the
+counsel. Advice given with earnestness and wisdom, and applied with
+docility and discrimination, may cost a great deal and be invaluable.
+Competence and aptness, or folly and heedlessness, make a world of
+difference. The great difficulty in regard to the fruitfulness of
+advice is the universal readiness to impart, the usual unwillingness
+to accept it. We give advice by the bucket, take it by the grain. For
+these reasons the world is yet surfeited with precept and starving for
+example: and the applicability is by no means exhausted of the
+fable of Brabrius, who tells how when an old crab said to her child,
+"Awkward one, walk not so crookedly!" he replied, "Mother, walk you
+straight, I will watch and follow." Verbal wisdom would direct us;
+exemplified wisdom draws us.
+
+The first danger, then, from aphorisms is, that they may enable us
+to evade, instead of helping us to fulfil, the duty of meeting and
+solving for ourselves each mental exigency as it arises. In such a
+case, educative discipline and growth are forfeited. The other danger
+from them is, that they may be applied mechanically, without a just
+understanding of them, and thus that grievous mistakes may be made.
+Their genuine use is to excite our own minds to master the principles
+which their authors have set forth in them. Fresh honesty of personal
+thought, aspiration, and patience, is the spiritual talisman wherewith
+alone we can vivify truisms into truths, and transmute noble maxims
+into flesh and blood, nay, into immortal mind. The master-thinkers aid
+us to do this by the quickening power of their suggestions,--the great
+critic not only giving his readers direction, but also helping them to
+eyesight.
+
+To traverse the works of some authors is like going through a
+carefully arranged herbarium, where every specimen is lifeless,
+shrivelled, dusty, crumbling to the touch. The writings of genuine men
+of genius are like a conservatory, where every plant of thought and
+sentiment, whether indigenous or exotic, is alive, full of bloom and
+fragrance, the sap at work in its veins. Verbal statements which are
+petrifactions of wisdom can neither stimulate nor nourish; but verbal
+statements which are vital concentrations of wisdom do both. He
+has learned one of the most important lessons in human life who
+understands adequately the difference between formal perception and
+organic experience, contrasting the futility of detached and deathly
+proverbs with the utility of nutritious and electrical maxims.
+A mechanical teacher crowds the ear with mummified precepts and
+exhortations; an inspired teacher brings surcharged examples and
+rules into contact with the mind. The distinction is world-wide and
+inexhaustible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SHELLEY.
+
+BY ONE WHO KNEW HIM.
+
+
+If photography had existed during the lifetime of Shelley, it alone
+would have sufficed to correct many a misconception of his character
+founded upon imperfect portraiture; and even the most boyish
+recollections of him, matter-of-fact as they are, may help to solve
+the problem upon which many minds have been engaged without yet
+having finished the work. For Shelley still remains before the
+world misconceived because misdescribed; and if society is
+gradually clearing its ideas of the man, it is not only because
+the preconceptions of that multitudinous authority are themselves
+gradually drifting away, but also because substantial facts are slowly
+coming into view. Their development has been hindered by obstacles
+which will be understood when I have proceeded a little farther, and
+even within the compass of this brief sketch I hope that I shall be
+able to make readers on both sides of the Atlantic work their own way
+a little closer to the truth.
+
+Shelley is still regarded by the majority, either as a victim of
+persecution, or a rebel against authority, or both,--his friends
+probably inclining to hold him up as a philosopher-patriot, whose
+resistance to intellectual oppression placed him in the condition of
+a martyr and robbed him of his fair share of life. My own earliest
+memory presents him very much in that aspect. I first recall him
+pale and slender, worn with anxiety, openly alluding to the marks of
+premature age in his own aspect, bursting with aspirations against
+tyranny of all kinds, and yielding to fits of dreadful despondency
+under sufferings inflicted by the dignitaries of the land at the
+instance of his own family. The circumstances by which he was
+surrounded contributed to this guise of martyrdom.
+
+My own earliest recollections began in prison, where my father[A]
+was incarcerated for critical remarks which at the present day would
+scarcely attract attention, and which were put forth in no impulse of
+personal hostility, but under the strongest sense of duty, with the
+desire to vindicate the constitutional freedom of England against the
+perverted control of faction and the influences of a corrupt court. At
+that time my father was accounted a man prone to mutiny against "the
+powers that be," although his political opinions belonged to a class
+which would now be regarded as too moderate for popular liberalism.
+He has been censured for literary affectation and for personal
+improvidence, but only by those who do not understand the real
+elements of his character. The leading ideas of his mind were,
+first, earnest duty to his country at any cost to himself; next, the
+sacrifice of any ordinary consideration to personal affection and
+friendship; and lastly, the cultivation of "the ideal," especially as
+it is developed in imaginative literature. His life was passed in an
+absolute devotion to these three principles. A one-sided frankness has
+blazoned to the world the sacrifices which he accepted from friends,
+but has whispered nothing of the more than commensurate sacrifices
+made on his side; and the simplicity that rendered him the creature of
+the library in which he lived entered into the expression of all his
+thoughts and feelings.
+
+[Footnote A: Leigh Hunt.]
+
+Although I can remember some of the most eminent men who visited us
+in prison, Shelley I cannot; but I can well recall my father's
+description of the young stranger who came to him breathing the
+classic thoughts of college, ardent with aspirations for the
+emancipation of man from intellectual slavery, and endowed by Nature
+with an aspect truly "angelic."
+
+In the interval before his next visit to us, Shelley had passed
+through the first serious passion of his youth, had married Harriet
+Westbrooke, had become the father of two children, and had thus to all
+appearance secured the transmission of the estates strictly entailed
+with the baronetcy,--but had also been exiled from his family-home,
+as well as from college, for his revolutionary and infidel principles,
+had gone through a course of domestic disappointment, had separated
+from his wife, and was threatened with the removal of his children,
+on the ground of the impious and "immoral" training to which they were
+destined under his guardianship. He came to our house for support and
+consolation; he found in it a home for his intellect as well as for
+his feelings, and he was as strictly a part of the family as any of
+our blood-relations, for he came and went at pleasure. I can remember
+that I performed his bidding equally with that of my father; and as to
+personal deference or regard, the only distinction which my memory
+can discover is, that I found in Shelley a companion whom I better
+understood, and whose country rambles I was more pleased to share. For
+this there were many reasons, and amongst them that Shelley entered
+more unreservedly into the sports and even the thoughts of children.
+I had probably awakened interest in him, not only because I was my
+father's eldest child, but still more because I had already begun to
+read with great avidity, and with an especial sense of imaginative
+wonders and horrors; and, familiarized with the conversation amongst
+literary men, I had really been able to understand something of his
+position, insomuch that no doubt he saw the intense interest I took in
+himself and his sufferings.
+
+The emotions that he underwent were but too manifest in the
+unconcealed anxiety and the eager recital of newly awakened hopes,
+with intervals of the deepest depression. He suffered also from
+physical causes, which I then only in part understood. This suffering
+was traced to the attack made upon him at Tanyralt, in Wales, when, on
+the night of February the 26th, 1813, some man who had been prowling
+about the house in which he lived first fired at him through the
+window, and then entered the room, escaping when the man-servant was
+called in by the tumult and the screams of Mrs. Shelley. The whole
+incident has been doubted,--why, I can hardly understand, unless the
+reason is that some of the conjectures in which Mrs. Shelley indulged
+were over-imaginative. She mentions by name a political opponent who
+had said that "he would drive them out of the country." My own weak
+recollections point to reasons more personal. But what I do know is,
+that Shelley himself ascribed the injury from which he suffered to
+a pressure of the assassin's knee upon him in the struggle. The
+complaint was of long standing; the attacks were alarmingly severe,
+and the seizure very sudden. I can remember one day at Hampstead: it
+was soon after breakfast, and Shelley sat reading, when he suddenly
+threw up his book and hands, and fell back, the chair sliding sharply
+from under him, and he poured forth shrieks, loud and continuous,
+stamping his feet madly on the ground. My father rushed to him, and,
+while the women looked out for the usual remedies of cold water and
+hand-rubbing, applied a strong pressure to his side, kneading it with
+his hands; and the patient seemed gradually to be relieved by that
+process. This happened about the time when he was most anxious for the
+result of the trial which was to deprive him of his children. In
+the intervals he sought relief in reading, in conversation,--which
+especially turned upon classic literature,--in freedom of thought and
+action, and in play with the children of the house. I can remember
+well one day when we were both for some long time engaged in gambols,
+broken off by my terror at his screwing up his long and curling
+hair into a horn, and approaching me with rampant paws and frightful
+gestures as some imaginative monster.
+
+It was at this time that the incident happened which has been
+mentioned by my father. A poor woman had been attending her son before
+a criminal court in London. As they were returning home at night,
+fatigue and anxiety so overcame her that she fell on the ground in
+convulsions, where she was found by Shelley. He appealed to a very
+opulent person, who lived on the top of the hill, asking admission for
+the woman into the house, or the use of the carriage, which had just
+set the family down at the door. The stranger was repulsed with
+the cold remark that impostors swarmed everywhere, and that his own
+conduct was "extraordinary." The good Samaritan, whom the Christian
+would not help, warned the uncharitable man that such treatment of the
+poor is sometimes chastised by hard treatment of the rich in days
+of trouble; and I heard Shelley describe the manner in which the
+gentleman retreated into his mansion, exclaiming, "God bless me, Sir!
+dear me, Sir!" In the account of the occurrence given by my father,
+he has omitted to mention that Shelley and the woman's son, who had
+already carried her a considerable way up the main hill of Hampstead,
+brought her on from the inhospitable mansion to our house in their
+arms; and I believe, that, the son's strength failing, for some way
+down the hill into the Vale of Health Shelley carried her on his back.
+I cannot help contrasting this action of the wanderer with the careful
+self-regard of another friend who often came to see us, though I do
+not remember that any of us were ever inside his doors. He was, I
+believe, for some time actually a pensioner on Shelley's generosity,
+though he ultimately rose to be comparatively wealthy. One night, when
+he had been visiting us, he was in trouble because no person had been
+sent from a tavern at the top of the hill to light him up the pathway
+across the heath. That same self-caring gentleman afterwards became
+one of the apologists who most powerfully contributed to mislead
+public opinion in regard to his benefactor.
+
+Shelley often called me for a long ramble on the heath, or into
+regions which I then thought far distant; and I went with him rather
+than with my father, because he walked faster, and talked with
+me while he walked, instead of being lost in his own thoughts and
+conversing only at intervals. A love of wandering seemed to possess
+him in the most literal sense; his rambles appeared to be without
+design, or any limit but my fatigue; and when I was "done up,"
+he carried me home in his arms, on his shoulder, or pickback. Our
+communion was not always concord; as I have intimated, he took a
+pleasure in frightening me, though I never really lost my confidence
+in his protection, if he would only drop the fantastic aspects that
+he delighted to assume. Sometimes, but much more rarely, he teased me
+with exasperating banter; and, inheriting from some of my progenitors
+a vindictive temper, I once retaliated severely. We were in the
+sitting-room with my father and some others, while I was tortured. The
+chancery-suit was just then approaching its most critical point, and,
+to inflict the cruellest stroke I could think of, I looked him in the
+face, and expressed a hope that he would be beaten in the trial and
+have his children taken from him. I was sitting on his knee, and as
+I spoke, he let himself fall listlessly back in his chair, without
+attempting to conceal the shock I had given him. But presently he
+folded his arms round me and kissed me; and I perfectly understood
+that he saw how sorry I was, and was as anxious as I was to be friends
+again. It was not very long after that we were playing with paper
+boats on the pond in the Vale of Health, watching the way in which the
+wind carried some of them over, or swamped most of them before they
+had surmounted many billows; and Shelley then playfully said how
+much he should like it, if we could get into one of the boats and be
+shipwrecked,--it was a death he should like better than any other.
+
+After the death of Harriet, Shelley's life entirely changed; and I
+think I shall be able to show in the sequel that the change was far
+greater than any of his biographers, except perhaps one who was most
+likely to know, have acknowledged. Conventional form and Shelley are
+almost incompatible ideas; as his admirable wife has said of him, "He
+lived to idealize reality,--to ally the love of abstract truth, and
+adoration of abstract good, with the living sympathies. And long as he
+did this without injury to others, he had the reverse of any respect
+for the dictates of orthodoxy or convention." As soon, therefore,
+as the obstacle to a second marriage was removed, he and Mary
+Wollstonecraft Godwin were regularly joined in matrimony, and retired
+to Great Marlow, in Buckinghamshire. A brief year Shelley passed in
+the position of a country-gentleman on a small scale. His abode was
+a rough house in the village, with a garden at the back and nothing
+beyond but the country. Close to the house there was a small
+pleasure-ground, with a mound at the farther end of the lawn slightly
+inclosing the view. Behind the mound there was a kitchen-garden, not
+unintermixed with flowers and ornamental vegetation; and farther still
+was a piece of ground traversed by a lane deeply excavated in the
+chalk soil. At that time Shelley had a thousand a year allowed to
+him by his father; but although he was in no respect the unreckoning,
+wasteful person that many have represented him to be, such a sum must
+have been insufficient for the mode in which he lived. His family
+comprised himself, Mary, William their eldest son, and Claire
+Claremont,--the daughter of Godwin's second wife, and therefore
+the half-sister of Mary Shelley,--a girl of great ability, strong
+feelings, lively temper, and, though not regularly handsome, of
+brilliant appearance. They kept three servants, if not a fourth
+assistant: a cook; Élise, a Swiss _gouvernante_ for the child; and
+Harry, a man who did the work of gardener and man-servant in general.
+He kept something like open house; for while I was there with my
+father and mother, there also came, for a short time, several other
+friends, some of whom stopped for more than a passing visit. He played
+the Lord Bountiful among his humbler neighbors, not only helping them
+with money or money's-worth, but also advising them in sickness; for
+he had made some study of medicine, in part, I suspect, to be the more
+useful.
+
+I have already intimated that he had assisted certain of his
+companions; and I am convinced that these circumstances contributed to
+the resolution which Shelley formed to leave England for Italy in
+the year 1818, although he then ascribed his doing so to the score of
+health,--or rather, as he said, of life. He then believed himself
+to be laboring under a tendency to consumption, not without medical
+warnings to that effect, although there were strong reasons for
+doubting the validity of the belief, which was based upon less precise
+grounds before the introduction of auscultation and the careful
+examinations of our day. It was, however, characteristic of Shelley
+to rest his actions upon the dominant motive; so that, if several
+inducements operated to the same end, he absolutely discarded the
+minor considerations, and acted solely upon the grand one. I can well
+remember, that, when other persons urged upon him cumulative reasons
+for any course of action, whether in politics, or morality, or
+trifling personal matters of the day, he indignantly cast aside all
+such makeweights, and insisted upon the one sufficient motive. I
+mention this the more explicitly because the opposite course is the
+most common, and some who did not sympathize with his concentration
+of purpose afterwards imputed the suppression of all but one, out of
+several apparent motives, to reserve, or even to a want of candor.
+The accusation was first made by some of Shelley's false
+friends,--creatures who gathered round him to get what they could, and
+afterwards made a market of their connection, to his disadvantage. But
+I was shocked to find a sanction for the notion under the hand of one
+of Shelley's first and most faithful friends, and I discovered it,
+too, when death had barred me from the opportunity of controverting
+the mistake. It was easily accounted for. The writer to whom I allude
+was himself a person whose scrupulous conscience and strong mistrust
+of his own judgment, unless supported on every side, induced him to
+accumulate and to avow as many motives as possible for each single
+act. He could scarcely understand or believe the existence of a
+mind which, although powerful and comprehensive in its grasp, should
+nevertheless deliberately set aside all motives but one, and actually
+proceed upon that exclusive ground without regard to the others.
+
+Both Shelley and his friends seem to have underrated his strength, and
+one little incident will illustrate my meaning. He kept no horse or
+carriage; but in accordance with his ruling passion he had a boat on
+the river of sufficient size to carry a numerous party. It was made
+both for sailing and rowing; and I can remember being one of an
+expedition which went some distance up the Thames, when Shelley
+himself towed the boat on the return home, while I walked, by his
+side. His health had very much improved with the change that had
+taken place in his mode of life, his more settled condition, and the
+abatement of anxiety, with the absolute removal of some of its causes.
+I am well aware that he _had_ suffered severely, and that he continued
+to be haunted by certain recollections, partly real and partly
+imaginative, which pursued him like an Orestes. He frequently talked
+on such subjects; but it has always appeared to me that those who
+have reported what he said have been guilty of a singular confusion in
+their interpretations. As I proceed, you will find that certain facts
+in his life have never yet been distinctly related, and I have a
+strong reason for believing that some circumstances of which I became
+accidentally aware were never disclosed at all, except to Mary; while
+in her writings I can trace allusions to them, that remind me of
+passages in ancient authors,--in Ovid, for instance,--which would have
+been absolutely unintelligible, except for accidental references. In
+spite, however, of the rude trials to which his constitution had
+been subjected, and of new symptoms supposed to indicate pulmonary
+weakness, there was a marked improvement in his aspect since he had
+visited London. He still had that ultra-youthful figure that partook
+the traits of the hobbledehoy, arrived at man's stature, but not yet
+possessing the full manly proportions. His extremities were large, his
+limbs long, his face small, and his thorax very partially developed,
+especially in girth. An habitual eagerness of mood, thrusting forward
+his face, made him stoop, with sunken chest and rounded shoulders; and
+this was even more apparent in the easy costume of the country than
+in London dress. But in his countenance there was life instead of
+weariness; melancholy more often yielded to alternations of bright
+thoughts; and paleness had given way to a certain freshness of color,
+with something like roses in the cheeks. Notwithstanding the sense of
+weakness in the chest, which attacked him on any sudden effort,
+his power of exertion was considerable. Once, returning from a long
+excursion, and entering the house by the back way, up a precipitous,
+though not perpendicular bank, the women of the party had to be
+helped; and Shelley was the most active in rendering that assistance.
+While others were content to accomplish the feat for one, he, I think,
+helped three up the bank, sliding in a half-sitting posture when he
+returned to fetch a new charge. I well remember his shooting past me
+in a cloud of chalk-dust, as I was slowly climbing up. He had a fit
+of panting after it, but he made light of the exertion. I can also
+recollect, that, although he frequently preferred to steer rather than
+to put forth his strength, yet, if it were necessary, he would take
+an oar, and could stick to his seat for any time against any force of
+current or of wind, not only without complaining, but without being
+compelled to give in until the set task was accomplished, though it
+should involve some miles of hard pulling. These facts indicate the
+amount of "grit" that lay under the outward appearance of weakness and
+excitable nerves.
+
+Shelley's fulness of vitality did not at that time seem to be shared
+by the partner of his life. Mary's intellectual powers had already
+been manifested. He must to some extent have known the force of her
+affection, and the tenderness of her nature; but it is remarkable that
+her youth was not the period of her greatest beauty, and certainly at
+that date she did not do justice to herself either in her aspect or in
+the tone of her conversation. She was singularly pale. With a figure
+that needed to be set off, she was careless in her dress; and the
+decision of purpose which ultimately gained her the playful title of
+"Wilful Woman" then appeared, at least in society, principally in the
+negative form,--her temper being easily crossed, and her resentments
+taking a somewhat querulous and peevish tone. Both of the pair were
+still young, and their ideas of education were adverse to the
+received doctrines of the day, rather than substantive; and their
+own principles in this matter were exemplified somewhat perversely by
+little William. Even at that early age the child called forth frequent
+and poignant remonstrances from his _gouvernante_, and occasionally
+drew perplexed exclamations or desponding looks from his father, who
+took the child's little perversities seriously to heart, and sometimes
+vented his embarrassment in generalized remarks on human nature.
+
+Some years elapsed between the night when I saw Shelley pack up his
+pistols--which he allowed me to examine--for his departure for
+the South, and the moment when, after our own arrival in Italy, my
+attention was again called to his presence by the shrill sound of
+his voice, as he rushed into my father's arms, which he did with an
+impetuousness and a fervor scarcely to be imagined by any who did
+not know the intensity of his feelings and the deep nature of his
+affection for that friend. I remember his crying out that he was "so
+_inexpressibly_ delighted!--you cannot think how _inexpressibly_ happy
+it makes me!"
+
+The history of Shelley's brief visit to Pisa has been related by many,
+and is, I believe, told in his published letters; but it appears to me
+that those who have recounted it have in some respects fallen short.
+Excepting Mary Shelley, the best-informed spoke too soon after the
+event. Shelley's own letters are slightly misleading, from a very
+intelligible cause. After he had encouraged, if he did not suggest,
+the enterprise of "The Liberal,"--and I believe it would be nearly
+impossible for any one of the three men interested in that venture to
+ascertain exactly who was its author,--his mind misgave him. He knew
+my father's necessities and his childish capacities for business. With
+a keen sense of the power displayed in "Don Juan," and even in more
+melodramatic works, Shelley had acquired a full knowledge of the
+singularly licentious training from which Byron had then scarcely
+emerged, and of the vacillating caprice which enfeebled all his
+actions. His own ability to grapple with practical affairs was very
+great; but he himself had scarcely formed a sufficient estimate of it.
+Determined to maintain a thorough equality and freedom with the noble
+bard in their social relations, he shrank from any position which
+might raise in Byron's jealous and unstable mind the idea that he was
+under pressure; yet he was anxious to prevent disappointment for Leigh
+Hunt. He dreaded failure, and resolved that he would do his best to
+prevent it; and yet again he scarcely anticipated success.
+
+As early as the end of 1818, he described the way in which Byron spent
+his life, after he had been partly exiled, partly emancipated from the
+ordinary restraints of society. At that time, "the Italian women were
+the most contemptible of all who existed under the moon,--an ordinary
+Englishman could not approach them"; "but," writes Shelley, "Lord
+Byron is familiar with the lowest sort of these women,--the people
+his _gondolieri_ pick up in the streets." Byron's curiosity, indeed,
+tempted him to learn something of vice in its most revolting aspects.
+"He has," writes Shelley, "a certain degree of candor, while you talk
+to him, but unfortunately it does not outlast your departure." I am
+sure that before 1821 Byron had risen in his friend's estimation, or
+the "Liberal" scheme would never have been contemplated; and there
+were excellent reasons for the change. It is only by degrees that men
+have learned to appreciate at once the extraordinary nature and force
+of Byron's genius and the equally monstrous and marvellous nature
+of the evil training by which he was "dragged up." In the midst
+of extravagant license he gained experiences which might have
+extinguished his mind, but which, as they did not have that effect,
+added to his resources. In the process some of his personal qualities
+as a companion suffered severely. Very few grown men have been so
+extravagantly sensitive to personal approbation; and he was anxious
+to conciliate the liking of all who approached him, however foreign
+to his own set, however humble, or however insignificant. He was as
+mistrustful as a greedy child. He could be extravagant, but he was not
+open-handed; and yet he would give up what he coveted for himself,
+if he were urged by those whose esteem he desired to win. Now, of
+all persons who came near him, Shelley was the one that combined the
+greatest number of qualities calculated to influence a creature like
+Byron. He was of gentle blood; he was as resolute as he was able to
+maintain what is popularly called an independent position; he was
+truly sincere; and his way of life displayed a purity which Byron
+admired, though he fell from it so lamentably. On the other hand,
+Shelley was at odds with society on the very same questions of morals;
+he possessed all the philosophy for understanding the complicated
+perplexities of aberrant genius; did actually make allowances for
+Byron; estimated his powers more accurately, and therefore more
+highly, than any other person who came near him; and thus commanded at
+once his sympathies, his ambition, and his confidence. Everybody
+knows that in the interval between 1818 and the date of his death at
+Missolonghi, Byron's discipline of life had undergone a marked
+and beneficial change, and many agencies have been mentioned as
+contributing to that result, but I am sure that no one was so
+all-sufficient as the personal association with Shelley. Nothing of
+this is gainsaid by the fact that the greater part of this improvement
+was displayed after Shelley's death. Change of scene, intercourse with
+others, opportunities for acting upon his new principles, all helped,
+together, probably, with the graver sense of counsel bequeathed by
+the friend whom he had lost. Certain it is that Byron never mentioned
+Shelley in my hearing without a peculiarly emphatic manner. I know
+that to more than one person he performed acts of kindness and
+friendly aid as tributes to the memory of Shelley; and if any action
+were urged upon him as worthy of his own genius and dignity, nothing
+clenched the appeal like the name of Shelley. But if you will for a
+moment compare the characters of the two men,--if you will contrast
+the large self-sacrifice of the one with the self-indulgence of the
+other, the independence of the one with the craving of the other for
+approval, the absolute trust in human hope and goodness of Shelley
+with the _blasé_ cynicism of Byron, I think two conclusions must
+instantly strike you,--first, that Shelley must have possessed almost
+unequalled power of influence over those who surrounded him, and,
+secondly, that Byron himself must have been a much better man, or
+possessing much more in common with Shelley than society or some of
+his most intellectual companions at all imagined. Part of the facts
+bearing upon the subject have come out since the death of both. My own
+attention was drawn to the point by the striking discord between the
+way in which other people speak of their relations and the manner of
+Shelley and Byron towards each other, and especially Byron's way in
+speaking of Shelley. It is not probable that Shelley formed to himself
+any such idea of his own power; yet you will find hints at it in his
+letters, you will see, curious traces of it in the letters of others,
+and nothing else will fully explain the change in Byron's life.
+Moreover, it reconciles the apparent inconsistencies of Shelley's
+reservations in talking about Byron with his manifest and practical
+confidence in the result of their joint working.
+
+When I met Shelley again in Italy, it was easy to see that a grand
+change had come over his appearance and condition. The Southern
+climate had suited him, and the boat which caused his death had in the
+mean while been instrumental in developing his life. His retirement
+from painful personal conflict had given him greater ease; intercourse
+with Mary had made his life better; and, not to overlook one important
+fact, he had _grown_ since he left England. For physiologists attest
+the truth, that growth continues throughout human existence, even
+until after decay begins; and Shelley's constitution was of that
+kind--strong in some of its developments, slow in others--which needed
+longer time than many to arrive at its full proportions. For instance,
+in the interval since I had seen him his chest had manifestly become
+of a larger girth. I am speaking only upon distant recollection; but
+I should judge it to have been three or four inches larger round, or
+perhaps more. His voice was stronger, his manner more confident
+and downright, and, although not less emphatic, yet decidedly less
+impulsively changeful. I can recall his reading from an ancient
+author, translating as he went, a passage about the making of the
+first man; and I remember it from the subject and from the easy
+flow of his translation, but chiefly from the air of strength and
+cheerfulness which I noticed in his voice and manner. In nothing,
+however, does Shelley appear to me to have been so misdescribed as
+in the outward man,--partly, as usual, from overstatement of
+peculiarities, and partly because each artist has painted the portrait
+from his own favorite view. Many, through exaggeration, or imperfect
+knowledge, have equally misconstrued his moral character, and have
+omitted to report the real conduct of his understanding as he advanced
+towards "the middle of the way of life."
+
+From the story of his life after I first saw him, as well as from
+many things that I have heard him say of his family, and the strange
+recollections that he had of home, it is easy to understand the
+general tenor of his early life. Through some caprice in genealogical
+chemistry, in Percy the Shelley race struck out an entirely new idea:
+an apparent caprice in the sequence of houses that has often been
+noticed. For how often may we observe that the union of the most
+remarkable intellects produces a _tertium quid_ which is the reverse
+of an equivalent to the combined totals, representing only a fraction
+of their qualities, and that fraction in its negative aspect; while,
+on the other hand, rivulets of blood which have gained for themselves
+no name upon earth may combine to form a river illustrious to the
+whole world. In the latter case, not an unusual effect is that those
+who are charged with the infancy of the new type in the family are
+incompetent to their duty; and accordingly Shelley was regarded merely
+as "a strange boy," wayward, mutinous, and to be severely chastised
+into obedience. It has been said that he attracted no particular
+notice at school; but this is not true. At Eton his resentment of
+tyrannical authority displayed itself not only against the masters,
+but against the privileges of young patricians. He refused to be
+"fag"; and on one occasion he so braved the youthful public-opinion,
+that, on being dared to the act by the surrounding boys, he pinned
+a companion's hand to the table with a fork. According to my
+recollection, the immediate provocative was that he was dared to
+do it; but the incident arose out of his resistance to the seniors
+amongst the scholars and to the customs of the school. It was evident
+that the masters had their eye upon him. Such a youth, with a command
+of language that was a born faculty and not simply acquired, _must_
+have attracted very positive attention on the part of the teachers;
+but it was certain, that, with the tendencies of those days, they
+would have thought it discreet to say as little as possible about the
+slender mutineer. It is equally well known, that, notwithstanding his
+youth, religious opinions caused his expulsion from college; and when
+we turn to the earliest of his writings which assumed anything like a
+complete shape, we discover at once the nature of those powers
+which could not have been overlooked,--we detect the genius, the
+revolutionary ideas, and the extraordinary command which he had
+acquired over the subject-matter of much that is taught in schools
+and colleges. Amid the orthodox reaction that followed upon the French
+Revolution, he was struck with the excesses to which despotic power
+could be carried. He read history with sympathies for the natural
+impulses and aspirations of the race, as opposed to the small circles
+which comprise established authorities. He looked upon knowledge as
+the means of serving, not enslaving the race. And therefore, while he
+excused the crimes of the Revolution, on the score of the ignorance
+in which the people had been kept, their sufferings, and the natural
+revulsion against such painful down-treading, he regarded the counter
+acts of authority as a treachery to wisdom itself. He says,--
+
+ "Hath Nature's soul,
+ That formed this world so beautiful....
+ And filled the meanest worm that crawls in dust
+ With spirit, thought, and love, on Man alone,
+ Partial in causeless malice, wantonly
+ Heaped ruin, vice, and slavery?
+ Nature?--no!
+ Kings, priests, and statesmen blast the human flower
+ Even in its tender bud; their influence darts
+ Like subtle poison through the bloodless veins
+ Of desolate society."
+
+The pretension of authority to speak with a supernatural warrant
+provoked him to deny the warrant itself, or the sources from which it
+was said to emanate.
+
+ "Is there a God?--ay, an almighty God,
+ And vengeful as almighty? Once his voice
+ Was heard on earth; earth shuddered at the sound,
+ The fiery-visaged firmament expressed
+ Abhorrence, and the grave of Nature yawned
+ To swallow all the dauntless and the good
+ That dared to hurl defiance at his throne,
+ Girt as it was with power. None but slaves
+ Survived,--cold-blooded slaves, who did the work
+ Of tyrranous omnipotence."
+
+To these superstitious and ambitious pretensions he traced the
+corruption which disorganized society, leading it down even to the
+very worst immoralities.
+
+ "All things are sold: the very light of heaven
+ Is venal....
+ Those duties which heart of human love
+ Should urge him to perform instinctively
+ Are bought and sold as in a public mart.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Even love is sold; the solace of all woe
+ Is turned to deadliest agony, old age
+ Shivers in selfish beauty's loathing arms,
+ And youth's corrupted impulses prepare
+ A life of horror from the blighting bane
+ Of commerce; whilst the pestilence that springs
+ From unenjoying sensualism has filled
+ All human life with hydra-headed woes."
+
+"Shelley," says Mary, in her note on the poem, "was eighteen when he
+wrote 'Queen Mab.' He never published it. When it was written, he
+had come to the decision that he was too young to be a judge of
+controversies." The wife-editor refers to a series of
+articles published in the "New Monthly Magazine" for 1832 by a
+fellow-collegian, a warm friend of Shelley's, touching upon his
+school-life, and describing the state of his mind at college. The
+worst of all these biographical sketches of remarkable men is, that
+delicacy, discretion, or some other euphemistically named form of
+hesitancy, induces writers to suppress the incidents which supply the
+very angles of the form they want to delineate; and it is especially
+so in Shelley's case. I am sure, that, if Mary, or my father, or any
+of those with whom Shelley conversed most thoroughly, had related some
+of the more extravagant incidents of his early life exactly as they
+occurred, we should better understand the tenor of his thought,--and
+we should also have the most valuable complement to that part of
+his intellectual progress which stands in contrast with the earlier
+portion. Now, as I have said, at school Shelley was a more practical
+and impracticable mutineer than his friends have generally allowed.
+They have been anxious to soften his "faults"; and the consequence
+is, that we miss the force of the boy's logic and the vigor of his
+Catonian experiments.
+
+Again, accident has made me aware of facts which give me to
+understand, that, in passing through the usual curriculum of a college
+life in all its paths, Shelley did not go scathless,--but that, in
+the tampering with venal pleasures, his health was seriously, and not
+transiently, injured. The effect was far greater on his mind than on
+his body; and the intellectual being greater than the physical
+power, the healthy reaction was greater. But that reaction was
+also, especially in early youth, principally marked by horror and
+antagonism. Conscientious, far beyond even the ordinary maximum
+amongst ordinary men, he felt bound to denounce the mischief from
+which he saw others suffer more severely than himself, since in them
+there was no such reaction. I have no doubt that he himself would have
+spoken even plainer language, though to me his language is perfectly
+transparent, if he had not been restrained by a superstitious notion
+of his own, that the true escape from the pestilent and abhorrent
+brutalities which he detected around him in "real" life is found in
+"the ideal" form of thought and language. Ardent and romantic, he was
+eager to discover beauty "beneath" every natural aspect. Of all men
+living, I am the one most bound to be aware of the inconsistency; but
+you will see it reconciled a little later.
+
+Shelley left college prone "to fall in love,"--having already, indeed,
+gone through some very slight experiences of that process. In his
+wanderings, in a humble position which conciliated rather than
+repelled him, he met with Harriet Westbrooke, a very comely, pleasing,
+and simple type of girlhood. She was at some disadvantage, under some
+kind of domestic oppression; so she served at once as an object for
+his disengaged affection, and a subject for his liberating theories,
+and as a substratum for the idealizing process upon which he
+constructed a fictitious creation of Harriet Westbrooke. His dreams
+bearing but a faint and controversial resemblance to the Harriet
+Westbrooke of daily life, the fictitious image prevented him from
+knowing her, until the reality broke through the poetical vision only
+to shock him by its inferiority or repulsiveness. As to the poor girl
+herself, she never had the capacity for learning to know him. In the
+sequel she proved to be the not unwilling slave of a petty domestic
+intrigue,--oppression from which he would have rescued her. Married
+life enabled him to discover that she was the reverse of the being
+that he had fancied. They were first married in Scotland in 1811.
+Shelley made acquaintance with the Godwins in 1812, before his eldest
+child was born. I am not sure whether he was acquainted with Mary at
+that time; but some circumstances which I cannot verify make me doubt
+it. Harriet's daughter was born early in the summer of 1813, and it
+was before the close of that year that the couple began to disagree.
+The wife was evidently under the dominion of a relative whose
+influence was injurious to her. I do not find a hint of any imputation
+upon what is usually called her "fidelity"; but the relative
+manifestly desired to show her power over both. It is probable that at
+an early day Shelley's disposition to see "sermons in stones and good
+in everything" made him think better of that interloping lady than she
+deserved,--and that consequently he not only gave her encouragement,
+but committed himself to something which, to Harriet's mind, justified
+her deference for ill-considered advice. It is very likely that she
+was counselled to extend her power over Shelley in a manner which her
+own simple nature would not have suggested; but, being as foolish as
+it was cunning and vulgar, such conduct could no result but that of
+repelling a man like Shelley. That he acquired a detestation of the
+relative is a certain fact. He must have been expecting a second child
+when he formally remarried Harriet in England on the twenty-fourth of
+March, 1814; and that ceremony has been mentioned by several writers
+to prove the most opposite conclusions,--that Shelley was devoted to
+his first wife, and that he behaved to her with the basest hypocrisy.
+It proves nothing but his desire to place the hereditary rights of the
+second child, who might be a boy, beyond doubt; and the precaution
+was justified by the event. Before the close of the same year Harriet
+returned to her father's house, and there she gave birth to a son,
+Charles, who would have inherited the baronetcy, if he had not died
+in 1826, after his father's death. The parting took place about the
+twenty-fourth of June, 1814; and at the same time Shelley wrote a
+poem, of which fragments are given in the recently published "Relics."
+The verse shows, first, that Shelley was suffering severely from the
+chronic conflict which he had undergone, and, secondly, that he had
+found some novel comfort in the intercourse with Mary.
+
+ "To sit and curb the soul's mute rage,
+ Which preys upon itself alone;
+ To curse the life which is the cage
+ Of fettered grief that dares not groan,
+ Hiding from many a careless eye
+ The scorned load of agony.
+
+ "Upon my heart thy accents sweet
+ Of peace and pity fell like dew
+ On flowers half dead....
+
+ "We are not happy, sweet! our state
+ Is strange and full of doubt and fear;
+ More need of words that ills abate;--
+ Reserve or censure come not near
+ Our sacred friendship, lest there be
+ No solace left for thee and me."
+
+It is obvious that considerably after the date of this poem, Harriet
+remained in amicable correspondence with Shelley; and not only so,
+but, while she altogether abstained from opposing his new connection,
+she was actually on friendly terms with Mary. It is easy to understand
+how a limited nature like Harriet's should be worn out by the
+exaction and impracticability of one like Shelley; for to her most
+impracticable would seem his lofty and ideal requirements. On the
+other hand, it is evident that Shelley regarded the unfortunate girl
+with feelings of deep commiseration; and I know that he not only
+pitied her, but felt strong compunctions for the share which his own
+mistaken conduct at the beginning, even more than at the end, had had
+in drawing her aside from what would have been her natural course in
+ordinary life. Mary, I believe, clearly understood the whole case,
+and felt nothing but compassion for one who was a "victim to
+circumstances."
+
+The sequel has been alluded to in several publications, but so
+obscurely as to be more than unintelligible; for the reader is led to
+conclusions the reverse of the fact. In the "Memorials," at page 63,
+the subject is barely touched upon. I take the whole passage.
+
+"Towards the close of 1813, estrangements, which for some time had
+been slowly growing between Mr. and Mrs. Shelley, came to a crisis.
+Separation ensued; and Mrs. Shelley returned to her father's house.
+Here she gave birth to her second child,--a son, who died in 1826.
+
+"The occurrences of this painful epoch in Shelley's life, and the
+causes which led to them, I am spared from relating. In Mary Shelley's
+own words:--'This is not the time to relate the truth; and I should
+reject any coloring of the truth.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Of those remaining who were intimate with Shelley at this time, each
+has given us a different version of this sad event, colored by his own
+views and personal feelings. Evidently, Shelley confided to none of
+these friends. We, who bear his name and are of his family, have in
+our possession papers written by his own hand, which, in after-years,
+may make the story of his life complete, and which few now living,
+except Shelley's own children, have ever perused.
+
+"One mistake which has gone forth to the world we feel ourselves
+called upon positively to contradict. Harriet's death has sometimes
+been ascribed to Shelley. This is entirely false. There was no
+immediate connection whatever between her tragic end and any conduct
+on the part of her husband."
+
+At the end of the "Relics" is a memorandum entitled, "Harriet
+Shelley and Mr. Thomas Love Peacock." Mr. Peacock had been writing in
+"Fraser's Magazine" a series of articles on Shelley; in "Macmillan's
+Magazine" for June, 1866, was an article by Mr. Richard Garnet,
+entitled, "Shelley in Pall-Mall"; to this Mr. Peacock replied in
+"Percy Bysshe Shelley: Supplementary Notice"; and Mr. Garnet rejoined
+in the new little volume which he ha; edited. The main purpose of
+this last notice is, to show that Mr. Peacock was not accurate in his
+chronology or in his interpretation of the severance between Shelley
+and Harriet. Alluding either to the discretion which prevented Shelley
+from making a confidant of Mr. Peacock, or to his grief occasioned by
+the fate of Harriet, the writer refers to "the proof which exists in a
+series of letters written by Shelley at this very time to one in whom
+he had confidence, and at present in possession of his family," and
+then proceeds thus:--"Nothing more beautiful or characteristic ever
+proceeded from his pen; and they afford the most unequivocal testimony
+of the grief and horror occasioned by the tragical incident to which
+they bear reference. Yet self-reproach formed no element of his
+sorrow, in the midst of which he could proudly say, '------, ------,'
+(mentioning two dry, unbiased men of business,) 'every one, does me
+full justice, bears testimony to the uprightness and liberality of my
+conduct to her.'"
+
+In the "Memorials" and the "Relics" there is no further allusion to
+the circumstances which preceded Harriet's suicide; but it appears to
+me very desirable that the whole story should be brought out much more
+distinctly, and I can at least show why I say so. The correspondence
+in question took place in the middle of December, 1816. Shelley was
+married to Mary about a fortnight later; and in the most emphatic
+terms he alluded not only to the solace which he derived from the
+conversation of his host, but to the manner in which my father spoke
+of Mary. My own recollection goes back to the period, and I have
+already testified to the state of Shelley's mind. He was just then
+instituting the process to recover the children, and he caught at
+an opinion that had been expressed, that, in the event of his again
+becoming contracted in marriage, there would be no longer any pretence
+to deprive him of the children.
+
+Let me for a moment pause on this incident, as it establishes two
+facts of some interest. In the first place, it shows some of the
+grounds of the very strong and unalterable friendship which subsisted
+between my father and Mary,--a friendship which stood the test of many
+vicissitudes, and even of some differences of opinion; both persons
+being very sensitive in feeling, quick in temper, thoroughly
+outspoken, and obstinately tenacious of their own convictions.
+Secondly, it corroborates what I have said with regard to the
+community of spirit that Shelley found in his real wife,--the woman
+who became the companion of his fortunes, of his thoughts, of his
+sufferings, and of his hopes. It will be seen, that, even before
+marriage with his second wife, he was counting upon Mary's help in
+preventing his separation from the two children already born to him.
+She was a woman uniting intellectual faculties with strong ambitions
+of affection as well as intellect; and esteem thus substantially
+shown, at that early age, by two such men as Percy Shelley and Leigh
+Hunt, must have conveyed the deepest gratification.
+
+Throughout these communications Shelley evinced the strong pity that
+he felt for the unhappy being whom he had known. Circumstances had
+come to his knowledge which had thrown considerable light upon his
+relations with Harriet. There can be no doubt that one member of the
+family had hoped to derive gain from the connection with himself, as a
+person of rank and property. There seems also reason to suppose, that,
+about the same time, Harriet's father, an aged man, became so ill that
+his death might be regarded as approaching, and he had something to
+leave. Poor, foolish Harriet had undoubtedly formed an attachment to
+Shelley, whom she had been allowed to marry; but she had then
+suffered herself to become a tool in the hands of others, and the fact
+accounted for the idle way in which she importuned him to do things
+repugnant to his feelings and convictions. She thus exasperated his
+temper, and lost her own; they quarrelled, in the ordinary conjugal
+sense, and, from all I have learned, I am induced to guess, that, when
+she left him, it was not only in the indulgence of self-will, but also
+in the vain hope that her retreating would induce him to follow her,
+perhaps in a more obedient spirit. She sought refuge in her father's
+house, where she might have expected kindness; but, as the old man
+bent towards the grave, with rapid loss of faculties, he became more
+severe in his treatment of the poor woman; and she was driven from the
+paternal roof. This Shelley did not know at the time; nor did he until
+afterwards learn the process by which she arrived at her fate.
+Too late she became aware how fatal to her interests had been the
+intrigues of which she had been the passive instrument; and I suspect
+that she was debarred from seeking forgiveness and help partly by
+false shame, and partly by the terrible adaptability of weak natures
+to the condition of the society in which they find themselves. I have
+said that there is not a trace of evidence or a whisper of scandal
+against her before her voluntary departure from Shelley, and I have
+indicated the most probable motives of that step; but subsequently she
+forfeited her claim to a return, even in the eye of the law. Shelley
+had information which made him believe that she fell even to the depth
+of actual prostitution. If she left him, it would appear that she
+herself was deserted in turn by a man in a very humble grade of life;
+and it was in consequence of this desertion that she killed herself.
+
+The change in his personal aspect that showed itself at Marlow
+appeared also in his writings,--the most typical of his works for this
+period being naturally the most complete that issued from his pen, the
+"Revolt of Islam." We find there identically the same doctrine that
+there is in "Queen Mab,"--a systematic abhorrence of the servility
+which renders man captive to power, denunciation of the love of gain
+which blinds his insight and destroys his energy, of the prostitution
+of religious faith, and, above all, of the slavery of womanhood. But
+by this time the doctrine has more distinct in its expression, and far
+more powerful in its utterance.
+
+ "Man seeks for gold in mines, that he may weave
+ A lasting chain for his own slavery;
+ In fear and restless care that he may live,
+ He toils for others, who must ever be
+ The joyless thralls of like captivity;
+ He murders, for his chiefs delight in ruin;
+ He builds the altar, that its idol's fee
+ May be his very blood; he is pursuing,
+ O blind and willing wretch! his own obscure undoing.
+
+ "Woman!--she is his slave, she has become
+ A thing I weep to speak,--the child of scorn,
+ The outcast of a desolated home.
+ Falsehood and fear and toil, like waves, have worn
+ Channels upon her cheek, which smiles adorn,
+ As calm decks the false ocean. Well ye know
+ What woman is; for none of woman born
+ Can choose but drain the bitter dregs of woe,
+ Which ever from the oppressed to the oppressors flow."
+
+The indignation against the revolting subjugation of womanhood comes
+out still more distinctly in the preceding canto, where Cythna relates
+the horrors to which she was subjected.
+
+ "One was she among the many there, the thralls
+ Of the cold tyrant's cruel lust; and they
+ Laughed mournfully in those polluted halls;
+ But she was calm and sad, musing alway
+ On loftiest enterprise, till on a day
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ She told me what a loathsome agony
+ Is that when selfishness mocks love's delight,
+ Foul as in dreams' most fearful imagery
+ To dally with the mowing dead;--that night
+ All torture, fear, or horror made seem light
+ Which the soul dreams or knows."
+
+The poet bears testimony to the spiritual power which rules throughout
+Nature; the monster recovering his dignity while he is under the
+higher influence.
+
+ "Even when he saw her wondrous loveliness,
+ One moment to great Nature's sacred power
+ He bent and was no longer passionless;
+ But when he bade her to his secret bower
+ Be borne a loveless victim, and she tore
+ Her locks in agony, and her words of flame
+ And mightier looks availed not, then he bore
+ Again his load of slavery, and became
+ A king, a heartless beast, a pageant and a name.
+
+ ...."When the day
+ Shone on her awful frenzy, from the sight,
+ Where like a spirit in fleshly chains she lay
+ Struggling, aghast and pale the tyrant fled away.
+
+ "Her madness was a beam of light, a power
+ Which dawned through the rent soul; and words it gave,
+ Gestures and looks, such as in whirlwinds bore
+ Which might not be withstood."
+
+The doctrine involved in this passage is very clear, and it marks a
+decided progress since the days of "Queen Mab." It will be observed
+that Shelley's mind had become familiarized with the idea of a spirit
+ruling throughout Nature, obedience to which constitutes human power.
+Most remarkable is the passage in which the tyrant recovers his
+faculties through his subjection to this spirit; because it indicates
+Shelley's faithful adhesion to the universal, though oft obscurely
+formed belief, that the ability to _receive_ influence is the most
+exalted faculty to which human nature can attain, while the exercise
+of an arbitrary power centring in self is not only debasing, but is an
+actual destroyer of human faculty.
+
+There can be no doubt that he had profited greatly in his moral
+condition, as well as in his bodily health, by the greater
+tranquillity which he enjoyed in the society of Mary, and also by the
+sympathy which gave full play to his ideas, instead of diverting and
+disappointing them. She was, indeed, herself a woman of extraordinary
+power, of heart as well as head. Many circumstances conspired to
+conceal some of her natural faculties. She lost her mother very young;
+her father--speaking with great diffidence, from a very slight and
+imperfect knowledge--appeared to me a harsh and ungenial man. She
+inherited from him her thin voice, but not the steel-edged sharpness
+of his own; and she inherited, not from him, but from her mother, a
+largeness of heart that entered proportionately into the working
+of her mind. She had a masculine capacity for study; for, though I
+suspect her early schooling was irregular, she remained a student all
+her life, and by painstaking industry made herself acquainted with
+any subject that she had to handle. Her command of history and
+her imaginative power are shown in such books as "Valperga" and
+"Castruccio"; but the daring originality of her mind comes out most
+distinctly in her earliest published work, "Frankenstein." Its leading
+idea has been ascribed to her husband, but, I am sure, unduly; and the
+vividness with which she has brought out the monstrous tale in all its
+horror, but without coarse or revolting incidents, is a proof of the
+genius which she inherited alike from both her parents. It is clear,
+also, that the society of Shelley was to her a great school, which she
+did not appreciate to the full until most calamitously it was taken
+away; and yet, of course, she could not fail to learn the greater part
+of what it had become to her. This again showed itself even in her
+appearance, after she had spent some years in Italy; for, while she
+had grown far more comely than she was in her mere youth, she had
+acquired a deeper insight into many subjects that interested Shelley,
+and some others; and she had learned to express the force of natural
+affection, which she was born to feel, but which had somehow been
+stunted and suppressed in her youth. In the preface to the collected
+edition of his works, she says: "I have the liveliest recollection of
+all that was done and said during the period of my knowing him.
+Every impression is as clear as if stamped yesterday, and I have no
+apprehension of any mistake in my statements, as far as they go. In
+other respects I am, indeed, incompetent; but I feel the importance of
+the task, and regard it as my most sacred duty. I endeavor to fulfil
+it in a manner he would himself approve; and hope in this publication
+to lay the first stone of a monument due to Shelley's genius, his
+sufferings, and his virtues." And in the postscript, written in
+November, 1839, she says: "At my request, the publisher has restored
+the omitted passages of 'Queen Mab.' I now present this edition as
+a complete collection of my husband's poetical works, and I do not
+foresee that I can hereafter add to or take away a word or line." So
+writes the wife-editor; and then "The Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe
+Shelley" begin with a dedication to Harriet, restored to its place
+by Mary. While the biographers of Shelley are chargeable with
+suppression, the most straightforward and frank of all of them is
+Mary, who, although not insensible to the passion of jealousy, and
+carrying with her the painful sense of a life-opportunity not fully
+used, thus writes the name of Harriet the first on her husband's
+monument, while she has nobly abstained from telling those things that
+other persons should have supplied to the narrative. I have heard her
+accused of an over-anxiety to be admired; and something of the sort
+was discernible in society: it was a weakness as venial as it was
+purely superficial. Away from society, she was as truthful and simple
+a woman as I have ever met,--was as faithful a friend as the world
+has produced,--using that unreserved directness towards those whom she
+regarded with affection which is the very crowning glory of friendly
+intercourse. I suspect that these qualities came out in their greatest
+force after her calamity; for many things which she said in her
+regret, and passages in Shelley's own poetry, make me doubt whether
+little habits of temper, and possibly of a refined and exacting
+coquettishness, had not prevented him from acquiring so full a
+knowledge of her as she had of him. This was natural for many reasons,
+and especially two. Shelley had not the opportunity of retrospectively
+studying her character, and his mind was by nature more constructed
+than hers was to be preoccupied. If the reader desires a portrait
+of Mary, he has one in the well-known antique bust sometimes called
+"Isis" and sometimes "Clytie": a woman's head and shoulders rising
+from a lotus-flower. It is most probably the portrait of a Roman lady,
+is in some degree more elongated and "classic" than Mary; but, on the
+other hand, it falls short of her, for it gives no idea of her
+tall and intellectual forehead, nor has it any trace of the bright,
+animated, and sweet expression that so often lighted up her face.
+
+Attention has often been concentrated on the passage in
+"Epipsychidion" which appears to relate Shelley's experiences from
+earliest youth until he met with the noble and unfortunate "Lady
+Emilia V., now imprisoned in the convent of--," whose own words form
+the motto to the poem, and a key to the sympathy which the writer felt
+for her:--"The loving soul launches itself out of the created, and
+creates in the infinite a world all its own, far different from this
+dark and fearful abysm." The passage begins,--
+
+ "There was a being whom my spirit oft
+ Met on its visioned wanderings, far aloft,
+ In the clear golden prime of my youth's
+ dawn."
+
+And this being was the worshipped object of Shelley's adoring
+aspirations in extreme youth; but it passed by him as a vision,
+though--
+
+ "And as a man with mighty loss dismayed,
+ I would have followed, though the grave between
+ Yawned like a gulf whose spectres are unseen:
+ When a voice said,--'O thou of hearts the weakest,
+ The phantom is beside thee whom thou seekest.'
+ Then I,--'Where?' The world's echo answered, 'Where'!"
+
+She ever remained the veiled divinity of thoughts that worshipped her,
+while he went forth into the world with hope and fear,--
+
+ "Into the wintry forest of our life;
+ And struggling through its error with vain strife,
+ And stumbling in my weakness and my haste,
+ And half bewildered by new forms, I passed
+ Seeking among those untaught foresters
+ If I could find one form resembling hers
+ In which she might have masked herself from me."
+
+The passage grows more and more intelligible. Hitherto he has been
+simply a dreamy seeker; but now, at last, he thinks that Fate has
+answered his questioning exclamation, "Where?"
+
+ "There, one whose voice was venomed melody
+ Sat by a well, under the nightshade bowers;
+ The breath of her false mouth was like faint flowers;
+ Her touch was as electric poison; flame
+ Out of her looks into my vitals came;
+ And from her living cheeks and bosom flew
+ A killing air which pierced like honey-dew
+ Into the core of my green heart, and lay
+ Upon its leaves,--until, as hair grown gray
+ O'er a young brow, they hid its unblown prime
+ With ruins of unseasonable time."
+
+This is a plain and only too intelligible reference to the college
+experiences to which I have alluded. The youth for the moment thought
+that he had encountered her whom he was seeking, but, instead of the
+Florimel, he found her venal, hideous, and fatal _simulacrum_; and
+he indicates even the material consequences to himself in his injured
+aspect and hair touched with gray. He continues his search.
+
+ "In many mortal forms I rashly sought
+ The shadow of that idol of my thought:
+ And some were fair,--but beauty dies away;
+ Others were wise,--but honeyed words betray;
+ And one was true,--oh! why not true to me?
+ Then, as a hunted deer that could not flee,
+ I turned upon my thoughts and stood at bay."
+
+"Oh! why not true to me?" has been taken by some very few who were
+cognizant of the facts as constituting an imputation on the one whom
+he first married; but I am convinced that the interpretation is wrong,
+although the surmise on which that interpretation is based was partly
+correct. Nothing is more evident than the fact that Harriet possessed
+rather an unusual degree of ability, but enormously less than Shelley
+desired in the being whom he sought, and equally less than his
+idealizing estimate originally ascribed to her. It is also plain, from
+her own letters, that she courted his approval in a way far too common
+with the wives of the artist-tribe, and perhaps with most wives: not
+being exactly what he wished her to be, and lacking the faculties to
+become so, she tried to seem it. The desire was partly sincere, partly
+an affectation, as we discern in such little trifles as her suddenly
+using the word "thou" in a letter to Hookham where she had previously
+been using the ordinary colloquial "you." That she was not quite
+ingenuous we also detect in the fast-and-loose conduct which enabled
+her, while affecting to become what Shelley deemed her to be, also to
+play into the hands of very inferior people, who must sometimes have
+counselled her against him behind his back; and this, I am sure, is
+what he means by "Oh! why not true to me?" though he may include
+in the question a fervent regret for the fate which attended her
+wandering from him. "Then like a hunted deer he turned upon his
+thoughts and stood at bay," until
+
+ "The cold day
+ Trembled, for pity of my strife and pain,
+ When, like a noonday dawn, there shone again
+ Deliverance. One stood on my path who seemed
+ As like the glorious shape that I had dreamed
+ As is the Moon, whose changes ever run
+ Into themselves, to the eternal Sun."
+
+"The cold chaste moon" fails to satisfy the longing of his soul.
+"At her silver voice came death and life"; hope and despondency,
+expectation from her noble qualities, disappointment at the failure
+of response, were feelings that sprang from the exaggerations of his
+ideal longings.
+
+ "What storms then shook the ocean of my sleep,
+ Blotting that Moon whose pale and waning lips
+ Then shrank as in the sickness of eclipse!"
+
+The whole passage is worth perusing; and again wrong interpretation
+has been given to this portion of his writing. I am still more firmly
+convinced that in the other case, when he says, "The planet of that
+hour was quenched," he alludes to nothing more than the partial
+failure of his own ideal requirements. At length into the obscure
+forest came
+
+ "The vision I had sought through grief and shame.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I stood and felt the dawn of my long night
+ Was penetrating me with living light:
+ I knew it was the vision veiled from me
+ So many years,--that it was Emily."
+
+To grasp the entire meaning of this autobiographical episode, we must
+remember the extent to which Shelley idealizes. "More popular poets
+clothe the ideal with familiar and sensible imagery; Shelley loved
+to idealize the real,--to gift the mechanism of the material universe
+with a soul and a voice, and to bestow such also on the most delicate
+and abstract emotions and thoughts of the mind. Sophocles was
+his great master in this species of imagery." The heroine of the
+"Epipsychidion" is an imagination; a creature, like Raphael's Galatea,
+copied from no living model, but from "_una certa idea_"; a thing
+originally created by himself, and suggested only by the living
+portrait, as each one of the admired had previously suggested its
+ideal counterpart. Emilia, then, was the bride of a dream, and, in the
+indulgence of disappointed longing for a fuller satisfaction of his
+soul, Shelley mournfully contrasts this vision, who had so eloquently
+responded to his idealizing through her convent-bars, with Mary, whose
+stubborn, independent realism had checked and daunted him.
+
+But the last year of Shelley's life had involved a very considerable
+progress in the formation of his intellectual character. The
+"Prometheus Unbound," perhaps at once the most characteristic and the
+most perfect of all his works, is identical in spirit and tendency
+even with the earliest, "Queen Mab"; but a re-perusal of it in
+comparison with the other writings, even the "Revolt of Islam," will
+show a more distinct presentment of the original ideas, coupled with
+a much more measured suggestion for acting on them, and a far less
+bitter allusion to the obstacles; while the charity and love are more
+all-embracing and apparent than ever. Imperfect as it is for dramatic
+representation, shortcoming even in the power to trace the working
+of emotions and ideas in utterly diverse characters, the "Cenci" does
+indicate a stronger aptitude for sympathy with other creatures
+on their own terms than any other of the poet's writings. He had,
+therefore, sobered in judgment, without declining in his inborn
+genius; but, on the contrary, with a clearer sense of the limits
+placed upon individual action, he had gained strength; and I feel
+certain that a corresponding change had taken place in his perception
+of the true import and value of characters unlike his own. The last
+few months of his life at Lerici had very materially contributed to
+this change. Although I cannot recall any distinct statement to that
+effect by Mary Shelley, her conversation had left that impression on
+me; it is also suggested by the way in which he himself spoke of it,
+and is fully confirmed by the tone of the letters addressed to her
+from Pisa.
+
+
+All who have attempted to portray Shelley, either intellectually or
+physically, have done so from some appreciable, almost personal point
+of view. When many eyes see one object, it presents itself in as many
+different aspects, and the description given by each bears often a
+slight resemblance to that of others. So it has been with Shelley. The
+artistic portraits of him have happened to be particularly imperfect.
+I remember seeing a miniature by an amateur friend which actually
+suggested a form broad and square. The ordinarily received miniature
+is like almost all of its tribe, and resembles Shelley about as
+much as a lady in a book of fashions resembles real women; and it
+constitutes evidence all the more detrimental and misleading, since it
+appears to give as well as to receive a color of verisimilitude from
+the usual written description, which represents Shelley as "feminine,"
+"almost girlish," "ideal," "angelic," and so forth. The accounts of
+him by firmer hands are still cramped by the individuality of the
+authorship.
+
+His school-friend, Hogg, is a gentleman of independent property;
+Shelley detected the sensitiveness of his nature; and I know that the
+man has been capable of truly generous conduct. How is it, then, that
+he has written such utterly unintelligible stuff, and has descended to
+such evasions as to insert initials, lest people should detect amongst
+Shelley's correspondents a most admirable friend, who happened, it
+is supposed, to be of plebeian origin? Mr. Thomas Jefferson Hogg,
+I surmise, was conscious, somewhat early in life, that his better
+qualities were not fully appreciated; and his love of ease, his wit,
+his perception of the ludicrous, made him take refuge in cynicism
+until he learned almost to forget the origin of the real meaning of
+the things he talked about. His account of Shelley is like a figure
+seen through fantastically distorting panes of glass.
+
+Thomas Love Peacock, again, is a man to whose extraordinary powers
+Shelley did full justice. He has worked through a long official career
+without losing his very peculiar dry wit; but a dry wit was not the
+man exactly to discern the form of Shelley's mind, or to portray it
+with accuracy and distinctness.
+
+Few men knew the poet better than my father; but a mind checked by
+"over-refinement," excessive conscientiousness, and an irresistible
+tendency to find out niceties of difference,--a mind, in short, like
+that of Hamlet, cultivated rather than corrected by the trials
+of life, was scarcely suited to comprehend the strong instincts,
+indomitable will, and complete unity of idea which distinguished
+Shelley. Accordingly we have from my father a very doubtful portrait,
+seldom advancing beyond details, which are at once exaggerated and
+explained away by qualifications.
+
+Byron, I suspect, through the natural strength of his perceptive
+power, was likely to have formed a better design; but the two were
+separated soon after he had begun to learn that such a man as Shelley
+might be found on the same earth with himself.
+
+One or two others that have written have been mere tourists or
+acquaintances. Unquestionably the companion who knew him best of all
+was Mary; and although she lacked the power of distinct, positive, and
+absolute portraiture, her writings will be found to contain, together
+with his own, the best materials for forming an estimate of his
+natural character.
+
+The real man was reconcilable with all these descriptions. His traits
+suggested everything that has been said of him; but his aspect,
+conformation, and personal qualities contained more than any one has
+ascribed to him, and more indeed than all put together. A few plain
+matters-of-fact will make this intelligible. Shelley was a tall
+man,--nearly, if not quite, five feet ten in height. He was peculiarly
+slender, and, as I have said already, his chest had palpably
+enlarged after the usual growing period. He retained the same kind
+of straitness in the perpendicular outline on each side of him; his
+shoulders were the reverse of broad, but yet they were not sloping,
+and a certain squareness in them was naturally incompatible with
+anything feminine in his appearance. To his last days he still
+suffered his chest to collapse; but it was less a stoop than a
+peculiar mode of holding the head and shoulders,--the face thrown a
+little forward, and the shoulders slightly elevated; though the whole
+attitude below the shoulders, when standing, was unusually upright,
+and had the appearance of litheness and activity. I have mentioned
+that bodily vigor which he could display; and from his action when I
+last saw him, as well as from Mary's account, it is evident that he
+had not abandoned his exercises, but the reverse. He had an oval face
+and delicate features, not unlike those given to him in the well-known
+miniature. His forehead was high. His fine, dark brown hair, when not
+cut close, disposed itself in playful and very beautiful curls over
+his brows and round the back of his neck. He had brown eyes, with
+a color in his cheek "like a girl's"; but as he grew older, his
+complexion bronzed. So far the reality agrees with the current
+descriptions; nevertheless they omit material facts. The outline of
+the features and face possessed a firmness and _hardness_ entirely
+inconsistent with a feminine character. The outline was sharp and
+firm; the markings distinct, and indicating an energetic _physique_.
+The outline of the bone was distinctly perceptible at the temples, on
+the bridge of the nose, at the back portion of the cheeks, and in the
+jaw, and the artist could trace the principal muscles of the face.
+The beard also, although the reverse of strong, was clearly marked,
+especially about the chin. Thus, although the general aspect was
+peculiarly slight, youthful, and delicate, yet, when you looked to
+"the points" of the animal, you saw well enough the indications of a
+masculine vigor, in many respects far above the average. And what I
+say of the physical aspect of course bears upon the countenance. That
+changed with every feeling. It usually looked earnest,--when
+joyful, was singularly bright and animated, like that of a gay young
+girl,--when saddened, had an aspect of sorrow peculiarly touching, and
+sometimes it fell into a listless weariness still more mournful; but
+for the most part there was a look of active movement, promptitude,
+vigor, and decision, which bespoke a manly, and even a commanding
+character.
+
+The general tendency that all who approached Shelley displayed to
+yield to his dictate is a practical testimony to these qualities;
+for his earnestness was apt to take a tone of command so generous,
+so free, so simple, as to be utterly devoid of offence, and yet to
+constitute him a sort of tyrant over all who came within his reach.
+
+The weakness ascribed to Shelley's voice was equally taken from
+exceptional instances, and the account of it usually suggests the idea
+that he spoke in a falsetto which might almost be mistaken for the
+"shriek" of a harsh-toned woman. Nothing could be more unlike the
+reality. The voice was indeed quite peculiar, and I do not know where
+any parallel to it is likely to be found unless in Lancashire. Shelley
+had no ear for music,--the words that he wrote for existing airs
+being, strangely enough, inappropriate in rhythm and even in cadence;
+and though he had a manifest relish for music and often talked of it,
+I do not remember that I ever heard him sing even the briefest snatch.
+I cannot tell, therefore, what was the "register" of his singing
+voice; but his speaking voice unquestionably was then of a high
+natural counter-tenor. I should say that he usually spoke at a pitch
+somewhere about the D natural above the base line; but it was in no
+respect a falsetto. It was a natural chest-voice, not powerful, but
+telling, musical, and expressive. In reading aloud, the strain was
+peculiarly clear, and had a sustained, song-like quality, which came
+out more strongly when, as he often did, he recited verse. When he
+called out in pain,--a very rare occurrence,--or sometimes in comic
+playfulness, you might hear the "shrillness" of which people talk; but
+it was only because the organ was forced beyond the ordinary effort.
+His usual speech was clear, and yet with a breath in it, with an
+especially distinct articulation, a soft, vibrating tone, emphatic,
+pleasant, and persuasive.
+
+It seems to me that these physical characteristics forcibly illustrate
+the moral and intellectual genius of the man. The impulsiveness which
+has been ascribed to him is a wrong expression, for it is usually
+interpreted to mean the action of sudden motives waywardly,
+capriciously, or at least intermittingly working; whereas the
+character which Shelley so constantly displayed was an overbearing
+strength of conviction and feeling, a species of audacious, but
+chivalrous readiness to act upon conviction as promptly as possible,
+and, above all, a zealous disposition to say out all that was in his
+mind. It is better expressed by the word which some satirist put
+into the mouth of Coleridge, speaking of himself, and, instead of
+impulsiveness, it should have been called an "utterancy," coupled with
+decision and promptitude of action. The physical development of the
+man with the progress of time may be traced in the advancement of his
+writings. The physical qualities which are equally to be found in his
+poetry and prose were quite as manifest in his aspect, and not less
+so in his conduct of affairs. It must be remembered that his life
+terminated long before he had arrived half-way, "_nel mezzo del cammin
+di nostra vita_," when more than one other great intellect has been
+but commencing its true work. I believe, that, if Shelley had lived,
+he would himself have been the most potent and useful commentator on
+his own writings, in the production of other and more complete works.
+But meanwhile the true measure of his genius is to be found in the
+influence which he has had, not only over those who have proclaimed
+their debt to him, but over numbers who have mistrusted and even
+denounced him.
+
+
+
+
+THE TEST.
+
+ "Farewell awhile, my bonnie darling!
+ One long, close kiss, and I depart:
+ I hear the angry trumpet snarling,
+ The drum-beat tingles at my heart."
+
+ Behind him, softest flutes were breathing
+ Across the vale their sweet recall;
+ Before him burst the battle, seething
+ In flame beneath its thunder-pall.
+
+ All sights and sounds to stay invited;
+ The meadows tossed their foam of flowers;
+ The lingering Day beheld, delighted,
+ The dances of his amorous Hours.
+
+ He paused: again the fond temptation
+ Assailed his heart, so firm before,
+ And tender dreams, of Love's creation,
+ Persuaded from the peaceful shore.
+
+ "But no!" he sternly cried; "I follow
+ The trumpet, not the shepherd's reed:
+ Let idlers pipe in pastoral hollow,--
+ Be mine the sword, and mine the deed!
+
+ "Farewell to Love!" he murmured, sighing:
+ "Perchance I lose what most is dear;
+ But better there, struck down and dying,
+ Than be a man and wanton here!"
+
+ He went where battle's voice was loudest;
+ He pressed where danger nearest came;
+ His hand advanced, among the proudest,
+ Their banner through the lines of flame.
+
+ And there, when wearied Carnage faltered,
+ He, foremost of the fallen, lay,
+ While Night looked down with brow unaltered,
+ And breathed the battle's dust away.
+
+ There lying, sore from wounds untended,
+ A vision crossed the starry gleam:
+ The girl he loved beside him bended,
+ And kissed him in his fever-dream.
+
+ "Oh, love!" she cried, "you fled, to find me;
+ I left with you the daisied vale;
+ I turned from flutes that wailed behind me,
+ To hear your trumpet's distant hail.
+
+ "Your tender vows, your peaceful kisses,
+ They scarce outlived the moment's breath;
+ But now we clasp immortal blisses
+ Of passion proved on brinks of Death!
+
+ "No fate henceforward shall estrange her
+ Who finds a heart more brave than fond;
+ For Love, forsook this side of danger,
+ Waits for the man who goes beyond!"
+
+
+
+
+THE PREACHER'S TRIAL.
+
+Sitting in my New-England study, as do so many of my tribe, to peruse
+the "Atlantic," I wonder whether, like its namesake, hospitable to
+many persons and things, it will for once let me write as well as
+read, and launch from my own calling a theme on its bosom. Our cloth
+has been worn so long in the world, I doubt how far it may suit with
+new fashions in fine company-parlors; but, seeing room is so cordially
+made for some of my brethren, as the Reverend Mr. Wilbur and "The
+Country Parson," to keep up the dignity of the profession, I am
+emboldened to come for a day with what the editorial piety may accept,
+"rejected article" as it might be elsewhere.
+
+The pulpit has lost something of its old sacredness in the general
+mind. There is little popular superstition to endure its former
+dictation. No exclusive incarnate theocracy in any particular persons
+is left, Leviticus and the Hebrew priesthood are gone. Church,
+ministry, and Sabbath are the regular targets taken out by our moral
+riflemen and archers, though so seldom to hit fair in the centre, that
+we may find ourselves, like spectators at the match, respecting the
+old targets more than we do the shots. Yet homilies and exporters are
+thought fair game. I have even heard splendid lecturers whose wit
+ran so low or who were so pushed for matter as to talk of what
+divinity-students wear round their necks, which seems a superficial
+consideration. The anciently venerated desk has two sharp enemies,
+the radical and the conservative, aiming their artillery from opposite
+sides, putting it somewhat in the position of the poor fish who is in
+danger from diverse classes of its fellow-creatures, one in the air
+and one in the water, and knows not whether to dive or rise to the
+surface, till it can conclude which is the more pleasant exit from
+life, to be hawked at or swallowed outright.
+
+While, however, critics and reformers fail to furnish a fit substitute
+for the sermon, and the finest essays show not only Bacon's "dry
+light," but a very cold one too, and the wit and humor of the lyceum
+fall short of any mark in the conscience of mankind, and philanthropy
+uses stabbing often instead of surgery, a clerical institution, on
+whose basis direct admonition can be administered by individuals
+without egotism or impertinence, maintains an indefeasible claim.
+Indeed, as was fancied of the innocent in the ordeal by fire, or like
+the children from the furnace, it comes out the other side of all
+censure, with some odor of sanctity yet on its unsinged robes and new
+power in higher quarters in its hands. Defective, indeed, it is. If
+some of its organs could speak a little more in their natural voice,
+and could, moreover, wash off the deformity of this Indian war-paint
+of high-wrought rhetoric,--if they could use a little more of the
+colloquial earnestness of the street and table in their style, instead
+of those freaks of eloquence which, among all our associations,
+there ought to be a society to put down,--they would more honor their
+vocation, and effect its purpose of saving human souls. Let us not be
+so loudmouthed, or bluster as we do. Our declamation will have to hush
+its barbarian noise some time. Nothing but conversation will be
+left in heaven; and it were well, could we have on earth sober and
+thoughtful assemblies, at blood-warmth instead of fever-heat, rather
+than those over-crowded halls from which _hundreds go away unable to
+obtain admission_.
+
+But the present design is a plea for justice, not a fresh charge.
+The pulpit is to teach religion in application to life. But when we
+reflect what life is, how deep in the soul, how wide in the world,
+how complicated and delicate in its affairs and ties,--and when, we
+consider what religion is, the whole truth of heaven respecting
+all the operations of earth,--a kindly judgment is required for
+unavoidable short-comings and ministerial mistakes. With different
+ages, sexes, experiences, states of mind, degrees of intelligence and
+impressibleness in a congregation, it is a rare felicity for a sermon
+to reach all its members with equal impressiveness or acceptance. Who
+ever heard a uniform estimate of any discourse? There seems almost a
+curse upon the preacher's office from its very greatness, so that it
+is never finished, and no portion of it can be done perfectly well and
+secure against all objection. If he try to unfold the deep things
+of the Spirit, and bring his best thoughts, which he would not throw
+away, before his audience, though in language clearer than many a
+chapter of Paul's Epistles, _some_ will call the topic obscure, and
+complain that their children cannot understand it, quoting, perhaps,
+the old sentence, that all truth necessary to salvation is so plain
+that he who runs may read, and the wayfaring man, though a fool,
+cannot err therein, and commending superficial homilies on other
+tongues to censure whatever is profound from his. But should the
+poor occupant of the desk venture to emulate this eulogized sonorous
+exhortation, exerting himself to come down to the ignorant and the
+young, there will be _some_ to stigmatize that, too, as a sort of
+trifling and disrespect to mature minds. He has by a senior now and
+then been blamed for excessive attention to the lambs of his flock,
+and annoyed with the menace to stay away, if they were especially
+to be noticed. If a visitation of special grace or an exaltation of
+physical strength make the mortal incumbent happy in his exposition,
+so that he is listened to with edification and delight, it is, by
+some, not passed over to his credit at the ebb-tide of his power. Half
+the time the house is not half full, as though the institution which
+all order to be conducted nobody but he is bound to shoulder. If the
+preacher labor to express the mysterious relationship between God and
+Christ, the divine and human nature, he will be considered by _some_
+a sectarian, controversialist, or heretic. If he unfold what is
+above all denominational disputes, he will be fortunate to escape
+accusations of transcendentalism, pantheism, spiritualism. If, lucky
+man, he go scot-free of such indictment, a last stunning stroke, in
+the gantlet he runs, will be sure to fetch him up, in the vague and
+unanswerable imputation of being _very peculiar in his views_. If
+he insist on the miracles as literal facts, he will be laughed at as
+old-fashioned in one pew; if he slight them, he will be mourned over
+as unsound in the next. Men grumble at taxes and tolls; alas! nobody
+is stopped at so many gates and questioned in so many ways as he. If
+he take in hand the tender matter of consoling stricken hearts, the
+ecstasy of his visions will not save his topic from being regarded by
+some as painful, and by others as a mere shining of the moon. He will
+receive special requests not to harrow up the feelings he only meant
+to bind up in balm. He may be informed of an aversion, more or less
+extensive, to naming the _grave_ or _coffin_ and what it contains,
+though he only puts one foot by pall or bier to plant the other in
+paradise. If he turn the everlasting verities he is intrusted with to
+events transpiring on the public stage, though he never sided with any
+party in his life, and has no more committed himself to men than did
+his Master, _some_ will be grieved at his _preaching politics_. His
+head has throbbed, his heart ached, his eyes were hot and wet
+once before he uttered himself; but he must suffer and weep worse
+afterwards, because he went too far for one man and not far enough for
+another. He is told, one day, that he is too severe on seceders, and
+the next, ironically, that, with such merciful sentiments towards
+them, he ought always to wear a cravat completely white. One man is
+amused at his sermon, and another thinks the same is sad. He will be
+asked if he cannot give a little less of one thing or more of another,
+as though he were a dealer in wares or an exhibiter of curious
+documents for a price, and could take an article from this or that
+shelf, or a paper from any one of a hundred pigeon-holes, when, if he
+be a servant of the Lord and organ of the Holy Ghost, he has no choice
+and is shut up to his errand,--necessity is laid upon him, woe is unto
+him if he deliver it not, but, like another Jonah, flee to Tarshish
+when the Lord tells him to go to Nineveh and cry against its
+wickedness; and he feels through every nerve that truth is not a
+thing to be carried round as merchandise or peddled out at all to suit
+particular tastes, to retain old friends or win new ones, hard as it
+may go, to the anguish of his soul, to lose the good-will of those he
+loves, and whose distrust is a chronic pang, though they come to love
+him again all the more for what he has suffered and said. But if,
+passing by discussions of general interest, and exposing himself
+to the hint of being behind the times, he grapple with the sins
+immediately about him, board the false customs of society and trade,
+and strike with the sword of the Lord at private vices and family
+faults, he will be blamed as very _personal_, and be apprised of his
+insults to those of whom in his delivery he never thought, as he may
+never preach _at_ anybody, or even _to_ anybody, in his most direct
+thrusting, more than to himself, reaching others only through his own
+wounded heart. Meantime, some of his ecclesiastical constituents
+will suspect him, in his local ethics, of leniency to wide-spread
+corruption; and professed philanthropists will brand him as a trimmer
+and coward, recreant, fawning, and dumb,--the term _spaniel_ having
+been flung at one of the best men and most conscientious ministers
+that ever lived, simply because he could not vituperate as harshly
+as some of his neighbors. Some would have him remember only those in
+bonds; others say they cannot endure from him even the word _slavery_.
+Blessed, if, from all these troubles, he can, for solace, and with a
+sense of its significance, bethink himself of Christ's saying to
+his disciples, "Woe unto you, when all men shall speak well of you!"
+Thrice blessed, if he have an assurance and in that inward certificate
+possess the peace which passeth understanding!
+
+I intend not, by my simple story, which has in it no fiction, to add
+to the lamentations of the old prophet, nor will allow Jeremiah to
+represent all my mood. It is perfectly fit the laity should criticize
+the clergy. The minister,--who is he but one of the people, set apart
+to particular functions, open to a judgment on the manner of their
+discharge, from which no sacred mission or supposed apostolic
+succession can exempt, the Apostles having been subject to it
+themselves? Under their robes and ordinances, in high-raised desks,
+priest and bishop are but men, after all. Ministers should be grateful
+for all the folk's frankness. Only let the criticism be considerate
+and fair; and in order to its becoming so, let us ascertain the
+perfect model of their calling. Did not their Master give it, when he
+said, "The field is the world"? If so, then to everything in the world
+must the pulpit apply the moral law. What department of it shall be
+excused? _Politics_,--because it embraces rival schools in the same
+worshipping body, and no disinterested justice in alluding to its
+principles can be expected from a preacher, or because whoever
+disagrees with his opinions must be silent, there being on Sunday and
+in the sanctuary no decency allowed of debate or reply, and therefore
+whatever concerns the civil welfare and salvation of the community is
+out of the watchman's beat now, though God so expressly bade him warn
+the city of old? _Commerce_,--because a minister understands nothing
+of the elements and necessities of business, and must blunder in
+pointing to banks and shops or any transactions of the street, though
+an old preacher, called Solomon, in his Proverbs refers so sharply to
+the buyer and the seller? _Pleasure_,--because the servant of the Lord
+cannot be supposed to sympathize with, but only to denounce, amusement
+which poor tired humanity employs for its recreation, though Miriam's
+smiting of her timbrel, which still rings from the borders of the
+raging Red Sea, and David's dancing in a linen ephod with all his
+might before the Lord, when the ark on a new cart came into the
+city, were a sort of refreshment of triumphant sport? _The social
+circle_,--because of course he cannot go to parties or comprehend the
+play of feeling in which the natural affections run to and fro,
+and should rather be at home reading his Bible, turning over his
+Concordance, and writing his sermon, letting senate and dance, market
+and exchange, opera and theatre, fights and negotiations go to the
+winds, so he only comes duly with his _exegesis_ Sunday morning to his
+place? In short, is the minister's concern and call of God only, with
+certain imposing formalities and prearranged dogmas, to greet in their
+Sunday-clothes his friends who have laid aside their pursuits and
+delights with the gay garments or working-dress of the week, never
+reminding them of what, during the six days, they have heard or where
+they have been? "No!" let him say; "if this is to be a minister, no
+minister can I be!" For what is left of the field the Lord sends the
+minister into? It is cut up and fenced off into countless divisions,
+to every one of which some earthly-agent or interest brings a
+title-deed. The minister finds the land of the world, like some vast
+tract of uncivilized territory, seized by wild squatters, owned and
+settled by other parties, and, as a famous political-economist said
+in another connection, there is no cover at Nature's table for him.
+As with the soldier in the play, whose wars were over, _his_
+"occupation's gone."
+
+What is the minister, then? A ghost, or a figure like some in the
+shop-window, all made up of dead cloth and color into an appearance of
+life? Verily, he comes almost to that. But no such shape, no spectre
+from extinct animation of thousands of years ago, like the geologist's
+skeletons reconstructed from lifeless strata of the earth, can answer
+the vital purposes of the revelation from God. Of no pompous or
+abstract ritual administration did the Son of God set an example. He
+had a parable for the steward living when _He_ did; He called
+King Herod, then reigning, _a fox_, and the Scribes and Pharisees
+hypocrites; He declared the prerogatives of His Father beyond Cæsar's;
+He maintained a responsibility of human beings coextensive with the
+stage and inseparable from the smallest trifle of their existence. He
+did not limit His marvellous tongue to antiquities and traditions. He
+used the mustard-seed in the field and the leaven in the lump for His
+everlasting designs. His finger was stretched out to the cruel stones
+of self-righteousness flying through the air, and phylacteries of
+dissimulation worn on the walk. He was so _political_, He would have
+saved Jerusalem and Judea from Roman ruin, and wept because He could
+not, with almost the only tears mentioned of His. Those who teach in
+His name should copy after His pattern.
+
+"_Confine yourselves to the old first Gospel, preach Christianity,
+early Christianity_," we ministers are often told. But what is
+Christianity, early or late, and what does the Gospel mean, but a rule
+of holy living in every circumstance now? Grief and offence may come,
+as Jesus says they must; misapplications and complaints, which are
+almost always misapprehensions, may be made; but are not these better
+than indifference and death? No doubt there is a prudence, and still
+more an impartial candor and equity, in treating every matter, but
+no beauty in timid flight from any matter there is to treat. The
+clergyman, like every man, speaks at his peril, and is as accountable
+as any one for what he says. He ought justly and tenderly to remember
+the diverse tenets represented among his auditors, to side with
+no sect as such, to give no individual by his indorsement a mean
+advantage over any other, nor any one a handle of private persecution
+by his open anathema. Moreover, he should abstain from that
+particularity in secular themes which so easily wanders from all
+sight of spiritual law amid regions of uncertainty and speculative
+conjecture. He should shun explorations less fit for prophets than for
+experts. He should lay his finger on no details in which questions of
+right and wrong are not plainly involved. He must be public-spirited;
+he cannot be more concerned for his country and his race, that
+righteousness and liberty and love may prevail, than divine seers have
+ever been, as their books of record show; but, if he becomes a mere
+diplomatist, financier, secretary-of-state, or military general, in
+his counsels or his tone, he evacuates his own position, flees as
+a craven from his post, and assumes that of other men. Yet it is an
+extreme still worse for him to resort to lifeless generalities of
+doctrine and duty, producing as little effect as comes from electric
+batteries or telegraphic wires when no magnetic current is established
+and no object reached. What section, of the world should evade or defy
+the law of God?
+
+O preachers, beware of your sentimental descant on the worth of
+goodness, the goodness of being good, and the sinfulness of sin,
+without specifying either! It is a blank cartridge, or one of
+treacherous sand instead of powder, or a spiked gun, only whose
+priming explodes without noise or execution. Let nobody dodge the sure
+direction of that better than lead or iron shot with which from you
+the conscience is pierced and iniquity slain. Suffer not the statesman
+to withdraw his policy, nor the broker his funds, nor the captain the
+cause he fights for, from the sentence of divine truth on the good or
+evil in all the acts of men.
+
+The preacher, however, as he pronounces or reports that sentence, must
+never forget the bond he is under in his own temper to the spirit of
+impartial love. Whatever is vindictive vitiates his announcement all
+the more that he cannot be rebuked for it, as he ought to be, on the
+spot. Only let not the hearers mistake earnestness for vindictiveness.
+If kindly and with intense serenity he communicates what he has
+struggled long and hard to attain, then for their own sake, if not for
+his, they should beware of visiting him either with silent distrust or
+open reproach. He, just like them, must stand or fall according to his
+fidelity to the oracles of God. Only, once more, let him and let
+the Church comprehend that those oracles are not summed up in any
+laborious expounding of verbal texts. "The letter killeth," unless
+itself enlivened through the immediate Providence.
+
+To be true to God, the preacher must be true to his time, as the
+Prophets, Jesus, and the Apostles were to theirs. The pulpit dies of
+its dignity, when it creeps into the exhausted receiver of foregone
+conclusions, and has nothing to say but of Adam and Pharaoh, Jew
+and Gentile, Palestine and Tyre so far away. Its decorum of being
+inoffensive to others is suicidal for itself. It is the sleep of
+death for all. As the inductive philosopher took all knowledge for
+his province, it must take all life. We have, indeed, a glorious and
+venerable charter of inestimable worth in our map of the religious
+history of mankind through centuries that are gone. We must study
+the true meaning of the Bible, _the book_ and chief collection of
+the records of faith, precious above all for the immortal image and
+photograph, in so many a shifting light and various expression, of
+the transcendent form of divinity through manhood in Him to be ever
+reverently and lovingly named, Jesus Christ. But there is a spirit in
+man. "The word of God," says an Apostle, "is not bound"; nor can it
+be wholly bound up. The Holy Spirit of God that first descended never
+died, and never ceased to act on the human soul. The day of miracles
+is not past,--or, if none precisely like those of Jesus are
+still wrought, miracles of grace, the principal workings of the
+supernatural, of which external prodigies are the lowest species, are
+performed abundantly in the living breast. Jesus Himself, after all
+the sufficient and summary grandeur of His instructions, assures
+His followers of the Spirit that would come to lead them, beyond
+whatsoever He had said, into all truth. In that dispensation of the
+Spirit we live. Its sphere endures through all change, impregnable.
+It is "builded far from accident." No progress of earthly science can
+threat or hurt its eternal proportions. It is the supreme knowledge,
+and to whoever enters it a whisper comes whose only response is the
+confession of our noble hymn,--
+
+ "True science is to read Thy name."
+
+Much is said of a contradictory relation of science to faith. But the
+statement is a misnomer. True faith is the lushest science, even the
+knowledge of God. Putting fishes or birds, shells or flowers, stones
+or stars, in a circle or a row is a lower science than the sublime
+intercommunication of the soul by prayer and love with its Father.
+Mere physical, without spiritual science, has no bottom to hold
+anything, and no foundation of peace. The king of science is not the
+naturalist as such, but the saint conversing with Divinity,--not so
+much Humboldt or La Place as Fénelon or Luther. So far as the progress
+of outward science saps accredited writings, they must give way, or
+rather any false conceptions of Nature they imply must yield, leaving
+whatever spirituality there is in them untouched. But this is from
+no essential contradiction between science and religious faith. What
+faith or religion is there in believing the world was made in six
+days? Less than in calculating, with Agassiz, by the coral reefs of
+Florida, that to make one bit of it took more than sixty thousand
+years. Religious faith, what is it? It is the trembling transport with
+which the soul hearkens and gives itself up to God, in sympathy with
+all likewise entranced souls. But from such consecrated listening to
+the voice of Deity, fresh in our bosom or echoed from without by those
+He has inspired, we verify the rule already affirmed, and fetch
+advice and command for all the affairs of life. It is emphatically
+the minister's duty thus to join the vision to the fact, that they
+may strike through and through one another. Certainly, so the true
+minister's speech should run. Let him stand up and boldly say, or
+always imply, "I so construe it; and if the _Church_ interpret it
+otherwise, the Church is no place for me. If the _world_ will accept
+no such method, the world is no place for me. I see not why I was
+born, or what with Church or world I have to do. From Church and world
+I should beg leave to retire, trusting that God's Universe, somewhere
+beyond this dingy spot, is true to the persuasion of His mind. I must
+apply religion universally to life, or not at all. If, when my country
+is in peril, I cannot bring her to the altar and ask that she may be
+lifted up in the arms of a common supplication,--if, in the terrible
+game of honesty with political corruption, when '_Check_' is said
+to the adverse power, I cannot wish and pray that '_Checkmate_' may
+follow,--when some huge evil, sorely wounded, in its fierce throes
+spreads destruction about, as the dying monster in Northern seas casts
+up boat-loads of dying men who fall bruised and bleeding among the
+fragments into the waves with the threshing of its angry tail, if
+then I cannot hope that the struggle may be short, and the ship of the
+Republic gather back her crew from prevailing in the conflict to sail
+prosperous with all her rich cargo of truth and freedom on the voyage
+over the sea of Time,--if no sound of the news-boy's cry must mix with
+the echoes of solemn courts, and no reflection of wasting fires in
+which life and treasure melt can flash through their windows, and
+no deeds of manly heroism or womanly patriotism are to have applause
+before God and Christ in the temple,--if nothing but some preexisting
+scheme of salvation, distinct from all living activity, must absorb
+the mind,--then I totally misunderstand and am quite out of my place.
+Then let me go. It is high time I were away. I have stayed too long
+already." Such should be the speech of the minister, knowing he is
+not tempted to be a partisan, and is possessed with but an over-kind
+sensibility to dread any ruffling of others' feelings or discord with
+those that are dear.
+
+In the first year of a young minister's service, Dr. Channing besought
+him to let no possible independence of parochial support relax his
+industry: a needless caution to one not constituted to feel seductions
+of sloth, in whom active energy is no merit, and who can have no
+motive but the people's good. What else is there for him to seek?
+There is no by-end open, and no virtue in a devotedness there is no
+lure to forego. There is no position he can covet, as politicians are
+said to bid for the Presidency. But one thing is indispensable: he
+must tell what he thinks; he is strong only in his convictions; the
+sacrifice of them he cannot make; it were but his debility, if he did;
+and the treasury of all the fortunes of the richest parish were no
+more than a cipher to purchase it from any one who, quick as he may
+be to human kindness, may have a more tremulous rapture for the
+approbation of God.
+
+After all, to his profession and parish the preacher is in debt.
+Exquisite rewards his work yields. If controversy arise on some point
+with his friends, there may, after a while, be no remnant of hard
+feeling,--as there are heavy cannonades, and no bit of wadding picked
+up. Those who have striven with or defamed may come to cherish him all
+the more for their alienation. Those who could not hear him, or, when
+they heard, thought him too long, or what they heard did not like, may
+own with him, out of their discontent, closer and sweeter bonds. His
+business is expansive in its nature. The seasons of human life in
+broad representation are always before him. How many moral springs and
+summers, autumns and winters he sees, till he can hardly tell whether
+his musing on this curious existence be memory or hope, retrospect
+of earth or prospect of heaven! and he begins to think the spiritual
+world abolishes distinctions of spheres and times, as parents, that
+were his lambs, bring their babes to his arms, and, even in the
+flesh, his mortal passing into eternal vision, he beholds, as in
+vivid dreaming, other parents leading their children on other shores,
+unseen, though hard by. Where, after a score or two of years, is his
+church? He has several congregations,--one within the dedicated walls,
+one of emigrants whom his fancy instead of the bell assembles, and
+a third of elders and little ones gone back through the shadow of
+mystery whence they came. In what abides of the flock nothing remains
+as it was. Wondrous transformations snow maturity or decline in the
+very forms that, to his also changing eye and hand, once wore soft
+cheeks and silken locks. In his experience, miracle is less than
+creation and lower than truth. He cannot credit Memory's ever losing
+her seat, he has such things to remember. The best thereof can never
+be written down, published, uttered by orators, or blown from the
+trumpet of Fame, whose "brave instrument" must put up with a meaner
+message and inferior breath. Out of his affections are born his
+beliefs; earth is the cradle of his expectancy and persuasion of
+heaven; and not otherwise than through the glass of his experience
+could he have sight of a sphere of ineffable glory for better growth
+than Nature here affords in all her gardens and fields.
+
+So let the preacher stand by his order. But let him be just, also, to
+the constituency from which it springs. Hearty and cheerful, though
+obscure worker, let him be. Let him fling his weaver's shuttle still,
+daily while he lives, through the crossing party-colored threads of
+human life, till, in his factory too, beauty flows from confusion,
+contradiction ends in harmony, and the blows with which each one has
+been stricken form the perfect pattern from all. There is a unity
+which all faithful labor, through whatever jars, consults and creates.
+Of all criticisms the resultant is truth; be the conflicts what they
+may, the issue shall be peace; and one music of affection is yet
+angelically to flow from the many divided notes of human life. Who is
+the _minister_, then? No ordained functionary alone, but every man or
+woman that has lived and served, loved and lamented, and now, for such
+ends, suffers and hopes.
+
+
+
+
+THE GHOST OF LITTLE JACQUES.
+
+
+How quiet the saloon was, that morning, as I groped my way through the
+little white tables, the light chairs, and the dimness of early dawn
+to the windows. It was my business to open the windows every morning,
+finding my way down as best I could; for it was not permitted to light
+the gas at that hour, and no candles were allowed, lest they should
+soil the furniture. This morning the glass dome which brightened the
+ceiling, and helped to lighten the saloon, was of very little effect,
+so cloudy and dusk was the sky. The high houses which shut in the
+strip of garden on all sides reflected not a ray of light. A
+chill struck through me, as I passed along the marble pavement; a
+saloon-dampness, empty, vault-like, hung about the fireless, sunless
+place; and the plashing of the fountain which dripped into the marble
+basin beyond--dropping, dropping, incessantly--struck upon my ear like
+water trickling down the side of a cave.
+
+It had never occurred to me to think the place lonely or dreary
+before, or to demur at this morning operation of opening it for the
+day; a tawdry, gilded, showy hall, it had seemed to me quite a grand
+affair, compared with those in which I had hitherto found employment.
+Now I shuddered and shivered, and felt the task, always regarded as a
+compliment to my honesty, to be indeed hard and heavy enough.
+
+It might have been--yet I was not a coward--that the little coffin
+in that little room at the end of the saloon had something to do with
+this uneasiness. On each side of that narrow room (which opened upon a
+long hall leading to the front of the building) were the small windows
+looking out upon the garden, which I always unbolted first. I say I
+do not know that this presence of death had anything to do with my
+trepidation. The death of a child was no very solemn or very uncommon
+thing in my master's family. He had many children, and, when death
+thinned their ranks, took the loss like a philosopher,--as he was,--a
+French philosopher. He philosophized that his utmost exertions could
+not do much more for the child than bequeath to him just such a
+life as he led, and a share in just such a saloon as he owned; and
+therefore, if a priest and a coffin insured the little innocent
+admission into heaven without any extra charge, he would not betray
+such lack of wisdom as to demur at the proposition. Therefore, very
+quietly, since I had been in his employ, (about a twelvemonth,) three
+of his children, one by one, had been brought down to that little room
+at the end of the saloon, and thence through the long hall, through
+the crowded street out to some unheard-of burying-ground, where a pot
+of flowers and a painted cross supplied the place of a head-stone.
+The shop was not shut up on these occasions: that would have been an
+unnecessary interference with the comfort of customers, and loss
+of time and money. The necessity of providing for his little living
+family had quite disenthralled Monsieur C---- from any weakly
+sentimentality in regard to his little dead family.
+
+So I do not know why I shuddered, being also myself somewhat of a
+philosopher,--of such cool philosophy as grows out inevitably from the
+hard and stony strata of an overworked life. The sleeper within
+was certainly better cared for now than he ever had been in life.
+Monsieur's purse afforded no holiday-dress but a shroud; three of
+these in requisition within so short a time quite scanted the wardrobe
+of the other children. Little Jacques had always been a somewhat
+restless and unhappy baby, longing for fresh air, and a change which
+he never got; it seemed likely, so far as the child's promise was
+concerned, that the "great change" was his only chance of variety, and
+the very best thing that could have happened to him.
+
+And yet, after all, there was something about his death which
+individualized it, and hung a certain sadness over its occurrence that
+does not often belong to the death of children, or at least had not
+marked the departure of his two stout little brothers. Scarlet-fever
+and croup and measles are such every-day, red-winged, mottled angels,
+that no one is appalled at their presence; they take off the little
+sufferer in such vigorous fashion, clutch him with so hearty a
+grip, that one is compelled to open the door, let them out, and
+feel relieved when the exit is made. It is only when some dim-eyed,
+white-robed shape, scarcely seen, scarcely felt, steps softly in and
+steals away the little troublesome bundle of life with solemn eye and
+hushed lip, that we have time to pause, to look, to grieve.
+
+This little Jacques, when I came to his father's house, was a rampant,
+noisy, cunning child, with the vivacity of French and American blood
+mingling in his veins, and filling him with strongest tendencies to
+mischief, and prompting elfish feats of activity. He was not by any
+means a fascinating child,--in fact, no children ever fascinated
+me,--but this little fellow was rather disagreeable, a wonder to his
+father, a horror to his mother, and a great annoyance generally;
+we were all rather cross with him, and he was universally put down,
+thrust aside, and ordered out of the way.
+
+This was the state of affairs when I came. It was little Jacques, with
+a high forehead, white, tightly curling hair, and mischief-full blue
+eye, who made himself translator of all imaginable inquisitorial
+French phrases for my benefit,--who questioned, and tormented,
+and made faces at me,--who pulled my apron, disappeared with my
+carpet-bag, and placed a generous slice of molasses-candy upon the
+seat of my chair, when I sat down to rest myself.
+
+Little Jacques ardently loved a sly fishing-expedition on the edge
+of the marble fountain-basin, and had lured one or two unthinking
+gold-fish to destruction with fly and a crooked pin. He would sit
+perched up there at an odd chance, when his father was away, and he
+dared venture into the saloon,--his little bare feet twinkling against
+the water, his plump figure curled up into the minutest size, but
+ready for a spring and a dart up-stairs at the shortest notice of
+danger. This piscatory propensity had been severely punished by both
+Monsieur and Madame C----, who could not afford to encourage such an
+expensive Izaak Walton; but there was no managing the child. He
+seemed to possess an impish capability of eluding detection and angry
+denunciations. To be sure, circumstances were against any very strict
+guard being kept over the youngster. Madame C---- was a very weak
+woman, a very weak woman indeed,--she declared that such was the
+case,--a nervous, dispirited woman, whom everything troubled, who
+could not bear the noise and tramp of life, and altogether sank under
+it. Destiny had had no mercy on her weakness, however, and had left
+her to get along with an innumerable family of children, a philosophic
+husband, who took all her troubles coolly, and a constant demand
+for her services either in the shop or at the cradle. She could not,
+therefore, have patience with the incessant anxiety which little
+Jacques excited by his pranks.
+
+One day Madame C---- had gone out for a walk, leaving the children
+locked in a room above, five of them, two younger and two older
+than Jacques; and these together had been in a state of riotous
+insurrection the whole morning. Little Jacques was not of a
+disposition to submit to ignominious imprisonment, when human
+ingenuity could devise means of escape; while his brothers were
+running wild together, he soberly hunted up another key, screwed and
+scraped and got it into the key-hole; it turned, and he was out.
+
+Half an hour afterwards, his mother, returning, caught the unfortunate
+fugitive contemplatively perched on the edge of the fountain-basin. In
+such a frenzy of anger as only unreasonable people are subject to,
+she caught the child, shivering with terror, and thrust him into the
+water. The gold-fish splashed and swirled, and the water streamed over
+the sides of the basin. It was only an instant's work; snatching up
+the forlorn fisher, she shook him unmercifully, and set him upon the
+floor, dripping and breathless. I saw nothing of them until night.
+His mother had then recovered her usual peevishness, weakness, and
+inefficiency; the ebullition of energy had entirely subsided. I was
+curious to know whether the summary punishment had had any effect upon
+Jacques; but he was asleep, as soundly as usual after a day's hard
+frolic.
+
+My curiosity was likely to be gratified to satiety. A strange change
+came over the little fellow after this. To one accustomed to his apish
+activity, and to being annoyed by it, there was something plaintive
+in the fact of having got rid of that trouble. The child was silent,
+mopish, "good," as his mother said, congratulating herself on the
+effect of her summary visitation upon the offender.
+
+When, however, a month passed without any return of the evil
+propensities, this continued quiescence grew to be something ghostly,
+and, to people who had only their own hands to depend on for a living,
+a subject of anxiety and alarm: it was expensive to clothe and feed a
+child who promised but little service in future.
+
+"The _enfant_ will never come to anything," said Monsieur; "we could
+better have spared him than Jean."
+
+To which his wife shook her head, and solemnly assented.
+
+The '_enfant_,' however, gave no signs of taking the hint. Day after
+day his little ministerial head and flaxen curls were visible over
+the top of his old-fashioned arm-chair, and day after day his food was
+demanded, and his appetite was as good as ever.
+
+Watching the child, whose blue eyes, now the mischief was out of them,
+grew utterly vacant of expression, I unaccountably to myself came to
+feel an uncomfortable interest in, a morbid sympathy with him,--an
+uneasy, unhappy sympathy, more physical than mental.
+
+No fault could have been found with the motherly carefulness and
+attention of Madame C----. It was charmingly polite and French. But
+the sight of her preparing the child's food, or coaxing him
+with unaccustomed delicacies and _bonbons_, grew to be utterly
+distasteful,--an infliction so nervously annoying that I could not
+overcome it. A secret antipathy which I had nourished against Madame
+seemed to be germinating; every action of hers irritated me, every
+sound of her sharp, yet well-modulated voice gave me a tremor. The
+truth was, that plunge into the water, taking place so unexpectedly in
+my presence, had startled and upset me almost as completely as if it
+had befallen myself. A hard-working woman had no business with such
+nerves. I knew that, and tried to annihilate them; but the more I
+cut them down, the more they bled. The thing was a mere trifle,--the
+fountain-basin was shallow, the water healthy,--nothing could be more
+healthy than bathing,--and, at any rate, it was no affair of mine.
+Yet my mind in some unhealthy mood aggravated the circumstances, and
+colored everything with its own dark hue.
+
+I could not give up my place, of course not; I was not likely to get
+so good a situation anywhere else; I could not risk it; and yet the
+servitude of horror under which I was held for a few weeks was almost
+enough to reconcile one to starvation. Only that I was kept busy
+in the shop most of the time, and had little leisure to observe the
+course of affairs, or to be in Madame's society, I should have given
+warning,--foolishly enough,--for there was not a tangible thing of
+which I had to complain. But a shapeless suspicion which for some days
+had been brooding in my mind was taking form, too dim for me to
+dare to recognize it, but real enough to make me feel a miserable
+fascination to the house while little Jacques still lived, a magnetic,
+uncomfortable necessity for my presence, as though it were in some
+sort a protection against an impending evil.
+
+Such suspicion I did not, of course, presume to name, scarcely
+presumed to think, it seemed so like an unnatural monstrosity of my
+own mind. But when, one morning, the child died, holding in his
+hands the _bonbons_ his mother had given him, and Madame C----, all
+agitation and frenzy and weeping, still contrived to extract them from
+the tightly closed, tiny fists, and threw them into the grate, I felt
+a horrid thrill like the effect of the last scene in a tragedy. _I
+knew that the bonbons were poisoned_.
+
+So that is the reason I shuddered as I passed through the saloon.
+
+Throwing open the window, a dim light flickered through, and a sickly
+ray fell upon the fountain. It shivered upon the dripping marble
+column in its centre, and struck with an icy hue the water in the
+basin below. The fountain was not in my range of vision from the
+window; but I often turned to look at it as I opened the shutters,
+thinking it a pretty sight when the drops sparkled in the misty light
+against the background of the otherwise darkened room. It pleased my
+imagination to watch the effect produced by a little more or a little
+less opening of the shutters,--a nonsensical morning play-spell, which
+quite enlivened me for the sedate occupations of the day. It was,
+however, not imagination now which whispered to me that there was
+something else to look at beside the jet of water and the shadowy
+play of light. Stooping down upon the fountain-brink, absorbed in
+contemplating the gold-fish swimming below, and with its naked little
+feet touching the water's edge, a tiny figure sat. My first thought
+(the first thoughts of fear are never reasonable) was, that some child
+from up-stairs had stolen down unawares, (as children are quite as
+fond as grown folks of forbidden pleasures,) to amuse itself with the
+water. But the children were not risen yet, and the saloon was too
+utterly dark and dismal at that hour to tempt the bravest of them.
+Second thoughts reminded me of that certainty, and I looked again. The
+figure raised its head from its drooping posture, and gazed vacantly,
+out of a pair of dim blue eyes, at me. The eyes were the eyes of
+little Jacques.
+
+I do not know how I should have been so utterly overcome, but I
+started up in terror as I felt the dreamy phantom-gaze fixed upon me,
+raising my hands wildly above my head. The hammer which I held in my
+hand to drive back the bolts of the shutters flew from my grasp and
+struck the great mirror,--the new mirror which had just been bought,
+and was not yet hung up. All the savings of a year were shivered to
+fragments in an instant. My horror at this catastrophe recalled my
+presence of mind; for I was a poor woman, dependent for my bread on
+the family. Poor women cannot afford to have fancies; some prompt
+reality always startles them out of dream or superstition. My
+superstition fled in dismay as I stooped over the fragments of
+the looking-glass. What should I do? Where should I hide myself? I
+involuntarily took hold of the mirror with the instinctive intention
+of turning it to the wall. It was very heavy; I could scarcely lift
+it. Pausing a moment, and looking forward at its shattered face in
+utter anguish of despair, I saw again, repeated in a hundred jagged
+splinters, up and down in zigzag confusion, in demoniac omnipresence,
+the uncanny eye, the spectral shape, which had so appalled me. The
+little phantom had arisen, its slim finger was outstretched,--it
+beckoned, slowly beckoned, growing indistinct, it receded farther and
+farther out from the saloon towards the shop.
+
+The fascination of a spell was upon me; I turned and followed the
+retreating figure. The shutters of the show-window were not yet taken
+down, but thin lines of light filtered through them,--light enough to
+see that the apparition made its way to a forbidden spot slyly haunted
+by the little boy in his days of mischief,--a certain shelf where a
+box of some peculiar sort of expensive confections was kept. I had
+seen his mother, with unwonted generosity, give the child a handful of
+these a day or two before his death. I could go no farther. A mighty
+fear fell upon me, a dimness of vision and a terrible faintness; for
+that child-phantom, gliding on before, stopped like a retribution at
+that very spot, and, raising its little hand, pointed to that very
+box, glancing upward with its solemn eye, as, rising slowly in the
+air, it grew indistinct, its outlines fading into darkness, and
+disappeared.
+
+I did not fall or faint, however; I hastened out to the saloon again.
+The door of the little room where the coffin stood was open, and
+Madame stepping out, looked vaguely about her.
+
+"Madame! Madame!" I cried, "oh, I have seen--I have seen a terrible
+sight!"
+
+Madame's face grew white, very white. She grasped me harshly by the
+arm.
+
+"What _are_ you talking about, you crazy woman? You are getting quite
+wild, I think. Do you imagine you can hide your guilt in that way?"
+and she shook me with a savage fierceness that made my very bones
+ache. "This is carrying it with a high hand, to be sure, to flatter
+yourself that such wilful carelessness will not be discovered. Do you
+suppose," she cried, pointing to the fragments of glass, "that _my_
+nerves could feel a crash like that, and I not come down to see what
+had happened?"
+
+She spoke so volubly, and kept so firm a grip of my arm, that I could
+not get breath to utter a word of self-defence,--indeed, what defence
+could I make? Yet I should say, from my mistress's singular manner,
+that _she_ had seen that vision too, so wild were her eyes, so haggard
+her face.
+
+Little Jacques was buried. His attentive parents enjoyed a
+carriage-ride, with his miniature coffin between them, quite as
+well as if the little fellow had accompanied them alive and full of
+mischief.
+
+Outside matters, as Monsieur said, being now off his mind, he could
+attend to business again.
+
+The mirror belonged to "business." I had been writhing under that
+knowledge all the morning of their absence.
+
+Monsieur took the sight of his despoiled glass as calmly as Diogenes
+might have viewed a similar disaster from his tub. Monsieur's
+philosophy was grounded upon common sense. He knew that the frame
+was valuable. He knew also that I had saved enough to pay for the
+accident. I knew it, too, and was well aware that he would exact
+payment to the uttermost farthing. Monsieur, therefore, was quite
+cool. He laughed loudly at Madame's excitement, and the feverish
+account she gave of my fright, my deceitfulness, and pretending to see
+what nobody else saw.
+
+"Little Jacques!" I heard him exclaim, as I entered the room,
+shrugging his shoulders with such a contemptuously good-natured
+sneer as only a Frenchman can manufacture; and raising both his hands
+derisively, he went off with vivacity to his business.
+
+In the morning I left. Monsieur endeavored to persuade me to stay. But
+my business there was finished. I was quite as cool as Monsieur,--in
+fact, a little chilly. I was determined to go. Madame was determined
+also; we could no longer get along together; each hated and feared
+the other; and Madame C---- having used overnight what influence she
+possessed to bring her husband to see the necessity of my departure,
+his objections were not very difficult to remove.
+
+I could not afford to be out of work, that was true, and it might take
+me a long time to get it; but I was tired to death, and glad of any
+excuse for a little rest. What, after all, if I did lie by for a
+little while? there was not much pleasure or profit either way.
+
+I should not grow rich by my work; I could not grow much poorer
+by being idle. The past year, which I had spent in the service of
+Monsieur and Madame C----, had been one of constant annoyance and
+irritating variety of employment. I had grown fretful in the constant
+hurry and drive, and the baneful atmosphere of Madame's peevishness.
+Body and soul cried out for a season of release, which never in all my
+life of service had I thought of before.
+
+I had my desire now. I had put away my bondage. I had ceased my
+unprofitable labor. The rest I had so long craved was at hand. I might
+take a jubilee, a siesta, if I pleased, of half a year, and nobody be
+the wiser. I was responsible to nobody. Nobody had any demands upon
+my time or exertion. Free! I stood in a vacuum; no rush of air, no
+tempest or whirlpool stirred its infinite profundity. At length I
+was at peace,--a peace which seemed likely to last as long as my slim
+purse held out; for employment was not easy to obtain. Did I enjoy it?
+Did I lap myself in the long-desired repose in thankful quiescence
+of spirit? Perhaps,--I cannot tell; restlessness had become a chronic
+disease with me. I felt like a ship drifted from its moorings: the
+winds and the tides were pleasant; the ocean was at lull; but the ship
+rocked aimless and unsteady upon the waters. The heavy weights of
+life and activity so suddenly withdrawn left painful lightness akin to
+emptiness. The broken chains trailed noisily after me. The time hung
+heavily which I had so long prayed for. Long years of monotonous
+servitude had made a very machine of me. I could only rust in
+inaction. Some other power, to rack and grind and urge me on, was
+necessary to my very existence.
+
+So it happened, that, at last, my holiday having spun out to the end
+of my means, I left the city, and engaged work at very low wages in
+a country-village. The situation and the remuneration were not in
+the least calculated to stimulate ambition or avarice; and I remained
+obscurely housed, incessantly busy, and coarsely clothed and fed, in
+this place, for two years. They were not long years either. I had
+no hard taskmaster, however hard my task, no uneasy, unexplainable
+apprehensions, no moody forebodings of evil, no troublesome children
+to distress me. At the end of that time I heard of a better situation,
+and returned to the city.
+
+I had been engaged about a twelvemonth in my new place, a very
+pleasant little shop, though the pay was less and the work harder
+than I had had with Monsieur C----, when, one morning, standing at the
+shop-window, I saw that gentleman pass: very brisk, very spruce, very
+plump he looked. Glancing in, (I flatter myself that a show-window
+arranged as I could arrange it would attract any one's eye,) he espied
+me. A speedy recognition and a long conversation were the result. It
+was early morning, and we had the store to ourselves. Monsieur was
+very friendly. His business was very good. Poor Madame! he wished
+she could have lived to see it; but she was gone, poor soul! out of a
+world of trouble. And Monsieur plaintively fixed his eyes on the black
+crape upon his hat. The unhappy exit took place a few months after my
+departure. The children had gone to one or another relative. Monsieur
+was all alone; he had been away since then himself, had been doing as
+well as a bereaved man could do, and, having saved a snug little sum,
+had returned to buy out the old stand, and reëstablish himself in the
+old place. No one was with him; he wished he could get a good hand to
+superintend the concern, now his own hands were so full. It would be a
+good situation for somebody. In short, Monsieur came again and again,
+until, as I was poor and lonely, and had almost overworked myself
+just to keep soul and body together, whose union, after all, was of
+no importance to any one save myself, and as I was quite glad to
+find some one else who was interested in the preservation of the
+partnership, I consented to be his wife. It was a very sensible and
+philosophic arrangement for both of us. We could make more money
+together than apart, and were stout and well able to help each other,
+if only well taken care of. So we settled the business, and settled
+ourselves as partners in the saloon.
+
+
+Three years had passed, and we were in the old place still. We had
+been very busy that day. Many orders to fill, many customers to wait
+upon. Monsieur, completely worn out, was sound asleep on the sofa
+up-stairs. It was late; I was very much fatigued, as I descended,
+according to my usual custom, to see that everything was safe about
+the house and shop. The place was all shut and empty; the lights were
+all out. A cushioned lounge in one corner of the saloon--_my_ saloon
+now--attracted my weary limbs, and I threw myself upon it, setting the
+lamp upon a marble table by its side. With a complacent sense of rest
+settling upon me, I drowsily looked about at the dim magnificence of
+loneliness which surrounded me. The night-lamp made more shadow than
+shine; but even by its obscured rays one who had known the old place
+would have been struck with the wonderful improvement we had made. So
+I thought. It was almost like a palace, gilded, and mirrored, and hung
+with silken curtains. Monsieur and I had thriven together, had worked
+hard and saved much these many years to produce the change. But the
+change had been, as everything we effected was, well considered, and
+had proved very profitable in the end. Better reception-rooms brought
+better customers; higher prices a higher class of patronage. It
+was very pleasant, lying there, to reflect that we were actually
+succeeding in the world; and a pleasant and quiet mood fell upon me,
+as, hopeful of the future, I looked back at the past. I thought of my
+old days in that saloon; I thought of little Jacques. Little Jacques
+was still a thought of some horror to me, and I generally avoided any
+allusion to him. But to-night, in this subdued and contemplative mood,
+I even let the little phantom glide into my reverie without being
+startled. I even speculated on the old theme which had so haunted
+me. I wondered whether my suspicions had been correct, and
+whether--whether Madame C---- was guilty of sending her little son
+before her into the other world. So thinking,--I might have been
+almost dreaming,--a slight rustle in the shop aroused me. I was not
+alarmed; my nerves are now much healthier, and I wisely make a point
+of not getting them unstrung by violent movements, or unaccustomed
+feats of activity, when anything astonishing happens. I therefore
+lifted my head calmly and looked about,--it might be a mouse. The
+noise ceased that instant, as if the intruder were aware of being
+observed. Mice sometimes have this instinct. We had some valuable
+new confections, which I had no desire should be disposed of by such
+customers. So, taking up my lamp, and peering cautiously about me, I
+proceeded to the shop. The light flickered,--flickered on something
+tall and white,--something white and shadowy, standing erect,
+and shrinking aside, behind the counter. My heart stood still;
+a sepulchral chill came over me. My old self, trembling,
+angry, foreboding, stepped suddenly within the niche whence the
+self-confident, full-grown, sensible woman had vanished utterly. For
+an instant, I felt like a ghost myself. It seemed natural that ghosts,
+if such there were, should spy me out, and appall my heart with their
+presence. For there, in that old, haunted spot, where long years ago
+the spectre of little Jacques had lifted its menacing finger, stood
+the form of Marie, Madame C----. I knew it well; shuddering and
+shivering myself, more like an intruder than one intruded upon, I laid
+my hand upon the chill marble counter for support. It was no creation
+of imagination; the figure laid its hand also upon the marble, and,
+stretching over its gaunt neck, stood and peered into my eyes.
+
+"Madame C----! Madame C----!" I cried; "what in the name of God would
+you have of me?"
+
+"Nothing," she answered,--"nothing of you,--and nothing in the name
+of God. Oh, you need not shudder at me,--Christine C----! I know _you_
+well enough. You haven't got over your old tricks yet. I'm no ghost,
+though. Mayhap you'd rather I'd be, for all your nerves, eh?"--and she
+shook her head in the old vengeful, threatening way.
+
+It was true enough. "What evil atmosphere surrounded me? What fell
+snare environed me? I looked about like a hunted animal brought to
+bay,--like a robber suddenly entrapped in the midst of his ill-gotten
+gains. For this was no dead woman, but a living vengeance, more
+terrible than death, brought to my very door. Some unseen power, it
+seemed, full of evil influence, full of malignant justice, stretched
+its long arms through my life, and would not let me by any means
+escape to peace, to rest. A direful vision of horrible struggles yet
+to come--of want, despair, disgrace in reservation--sickened my soul.
+
+"I will call--I will call," said I, gasping,--"I will call Monsieur
+C----; he"----
+
+"Don't, don't, I beg of you!" she cried, catching me by the sleeve,
+with a sardonic laugh; low, whispering, full of direful meaning, it
+stealthily echoed through the saloon. "Don't disturb the good man. He
+sleeps so soundly after his well-spent days! _He_ doesn't have any bad
+dreams, I fancy,--rid of such a troublesome, vicious wife,--a wife who
+harassed her husband to death, and murdered her little boy,--he sleeps
+sound, doesn't he? And yet--I declare, in the name of God, Christine
+C----,"--and she lifted up her bony finger like an avenging
+fate,--"_he did it_!"
+
+I had been endeavoring to calm myself while this woman of spectral
+face and form stared at me with her maniac eye across the counter. I
+had succeeded. At any rate, this was a tangible horror, and could be
+grappled with; it was not beyond human reach, a shadowy retribution
+from the invisible world. To face the circumstances, however
+repulsive, is less depressing than to await in suspense the coming
+of their footsteps, and the descent of that blow we know they will
+inflict. I had always found that policy best which was bravest. I
+remembered this now. Dropping my high tone, and soothing my excited
+features, I beckoned the woman and gave her a chair; I took a chair
+myself, wrapping a shawl close about me to repress the shivering I
+could not yet overcome, and I and that woman, returned from the grave,
+as it seemed to me, sat calmly down in business-fashion, and held a
+long conversation.
+
+
+Madame C---- had loved her husband with that sort of respectful,
+awe-filled affection which lower natures experience towards those
+which are a grade above them. She had loved her children, too,
+although they were her torment. Her inability to manage or keep
+them in order fretted and irritated her excessively. Monsieur, as a
+philosopher, could not understand the anomaly, that a woman who was
+perpetually unhappy and ill-tempered, while her children, young,
+buoyant, and mischievous, were about her, should sympathize with
+and care for them when sick. He could not understand her
+conscience-stricken misery when little Jacques drooped after her
+severity towards him. Monsieur was a kind husband, however, and a wise
+man in many things. He had studied much in his youth, chiefly medical
+works, of which he had quite a collection. He could not understand
+the whimsical nervousness of women, but, when so slight a thing as a
+child's illness appeared to be the cause of it, could unhesitatingly
+undertake to remove the difficulty. He had prescribed attentively
+for the two children who died before Jacques, thereby rendering them
+comfortable and quiet, and saving quite an item in the doctor's bill.
+
+When little Jacques fell ill, and Madame fretted incessantly about
+his loss of vigor and vivacity, Monsieur, with fatherly kindness,
+undertook, in the midst of his pressing business, to give the child
+his medicine, which had to be most carefully prepared. Sometimes the
+powders were disguised in _bonbons_, the more agreeably to dose
+the patient little fellow; these were prepared with Monsieur's own
+fatherly hands, and during his absence were once in a while left
+for Madame to administer. Madame had great faith in these
+medicines,--great faith in her husband's skill; but the child's
+disease was obstinate, very; no progress could be discovered. It was
+a comforting thought, at least, that, if his recovery was beyond
+possibility, something had been done to soothe his pain and quiet
+the vexed spirit in its bitter struggle with dissolution. Yes, the
+medicines were certainly very quieting,--so quieting, so death-like
+in their influence,--she could not tell how a suspicion (perhaps the
+strange expression of the child's eye, when they were administered)
+glided into her imagination (having so great a reverence for her
+husband, it took no place in her mind for an instant,--it was merely a
+spectral, haunting shadow) that these things were getting the child
+no better,--that they were not medicine for keeping him here, but for
+helping him away. This suspicion, breathing its baleful breath across
+her mind, weak, vacillating, incapable of energetic action, had
+rendered her miserable, morose, irritable, more so than ever before.
+Yet little Jacques in his last hour hankered for the medicine, and
+craved feverishly the delicate powder, the sweet confection, his
+father prepared for him.
+
+While inwardly brooding over this unnamed terror, and cowering before
+this shapeless thought which loomed in the darkness of her mental
+gloom, an idea entered her mind that I, too, was suspicious that
+something was going wrong,--that I was watching,--waiting the evil to
+come. The child died. Her fear for him was utterly superseded by fear
+for her husband. What if I should find him out and betray him? The
+anxiety occasioned by this possibility made her hate me. The agony
+of her little one's departure, the fear of some dire discovery, the
+consciousness of guilt near enough of vicinage almost to seem her
+own, combined to nearly distract her mind, and it seemed like a joyful
+relief when I departed. The sudden release from that constant pressure
+of fear (she knew I could do nothing against them without money,
+credit, or friends) made her ill for a time, quite ill, she said. She
+knew not what was done for her during this sickness,--who nursed her,
+or who gave her medicine. But one morning, on waking from what seemed
+a long sleep, in which she had dreamed strangely and talked wildly,
+she beheld Monsieur, smiling kindly, standing beside her bed with a
+vial and a spoon in his hand.
+
+"It is a cordial, my dear, which will strengthen and bring you round
+again very soon. You need a sedative,--something to allay fever and
+excitement."
+
+"Is it little Jacques's medicine?"
+
+"Quite similar, my dear,--not the powders,--the liquid. Equally
+soothing to the nerves, and promotive of sleep."
+
+She turned her face away. She had slept long enough. She thanked
+Monsieur, not daring to look up, but capriciously refused to touch
+little Jacques's medicine.
+
+"And Monsieur," she said, "Monsieur was very angry. He said I was a
+disobedient wife, who did not wish to get well, but desired to be a
+constant expense and trouble to her husband.
+
+"And so, Christine C----, I trembled and shook, and let fall words I
+never meant to have uttered to Monsieur, and I said he had killed
+the child, and wished to kill me, that he might marry Mademoiselle
+Christine. I did not say any more that day. In the morning, Monsieur
+and I discoursed together again. I declared I would get well and go
+away. Oh! Monsieur knew well I would not betray him. He was willing,
+very willing to consent to my departure. He cared for me well, and
+gave me much money; and I went away to my old aunt, who lived in
+Paris. I have been dead,--I have died to Monsieur. I should never have
+returned, but that my good aunt is gone. When I buried her,--shut her
+kind eyes, and wrapped her so snugly in her shroud,--I thought it a
+horrible thing to be living without a soul to care for me, or comfort
+me, or even to wrap me up as I did her when the time was come. I felt
+then a thirsty spirit rising within me to see my old place where I had
+comfort and shelter long ago, and to see my children. I have been to
+see them: they are in B----; they did not know me there. I did not
+tell them who I was. I have been faithful to my promise. I tell no one
+but you, Christine C----, who have stepped into my place, and stolen
+away my home. A prettier home you have made of it for a prettier wife;
+but it's the old place yet, with the old stain upon it."
+
+
+Wishing to consider a moment what I should do, half paralyzed, like
+one who is stricken with death, I left that other ME, (for was she not
+also my husband's wife?) apparently exhausted, lying upon the sofa,
+and went wearily up-stairs, with heavy steps, like one whose life
+has suddenly become a weight to him. What, indeed, _should_ I do?
+Starvation and misery stared me in the face. If I left the house,
+casting its guilt and its comfort behind me, where could I go? I could
+do nothing, earn nothing now. My reputation, now that we were so lone
+established, would be entirely gone. And if I left all for which I had
+labored so hard, for another to enjoy, would that better the matter?
+Great God! would _anything_ help me? Before me in terrific vision
+rose a dim vista of future ruin, of ineffectual years writhing in the
+inescapable power of the law, of long trial, of horrible suspense, of
+garish publicity, of my name handed from mouth to mouth, a forlorn,
+duped, degraded thing, whose blighted life was a theme of newspaper
+comment and cavil. These thoughts swept over me as a tempest sweeps
+over the young tree whose roots are not firm in the soil, whose
+writhing and wrestling are impotent to defend it from certain
+destruction. There was no one I loved especially, no one I cared for
+anxiously, to relieve the bitter thoughts which centred in myself
+alone. Monsieur awoke as I was sitting thus, in ineffectual effort to
+compose myself. Seeing me sitting near him, still dressed, the door
+open, and the light burning, he inquired what was the matter. I had
+something below requiring his attention, I said, and, taking up the
+lamp, ushered him down-stairs. My chaotic thoughts were beginning to
+settle themselves,--to form a nucleus about the first circumstance
+that thrust itself definitely before them. That poor wretch waiting
+below,--that forsaken, abject, dishonored wife,--I would confront him
+with her, and charge him with his guilt. Opening the saloon-door, I
+stepped in before him. The lamp which I had left upon the stand was
+out, and the slender thread of light which fell from the one in my
+hand, sweeping across the gloom, rested upon the deserted sofa. The
+saloon was empty; no trace, no sign could be discovered of any human
+being. The hush, the solemnity of night brooded over the place.
+Monsieur mockingly, but unsteadily, inquired what child's game I
+was playing,--he was too tired to be fooled with. He spoke hotly and
+quickly, as he never had spoken to me before,--like one who has long
+been ill at ease, and deems a slight circumstance portentous.
+
+So I turned upon him, with all the bitterness in my heart rising to
+my tongue. I told him the story. I charged him with the guilt. He
+listened in silence; marble-like he stood with folded arms, and heard
+the conclusion of the whole matter. When I was silent, he strode up
+to me, and, stooping, peered into my face steadily. His teeth were
+clenched, his eyes shot fire; otherwise he was calm, quite composed.
+He said, quietly,--
+
+"Would you blame me for making an angel out of an idiot?"
+
+Monsieur's philosophy was too subtile for me. GUILTY seemed a coarse
+word to apply to so fine a nature.
+
+He denied having attempted to injure his wife in any way.
+
+"Women are all fools," he said; "they are all alike,--go just as
+they are led, and do just as they are taught. They cannot think
+for themselves. They have no ideas of justice but just what the law
+furnishes them with. It was silly to complain; it argued a narrow mind
+to condemn merely because the laws condemn. In that case all should
+be acquitted whom the laws acquit,--did we ever do this? Would his
+darling Jacques, happy, angelic, condemn his parent for releasing him
+from the drudgery of life? Was it not better to play on a golden harp
+than to be a confectioner? Were not all men, in fact, more or less
+slayers of their brothers? Was I not myself guilty in attributing
+to Madame a deed in my eyes worthy of death, and of which she was
+innocent? It was only those whose courage induced them to venture a
+little farther who received condemnation. In some way or other,
+every soul is wearing out and overtasking somebody else's soul, and
+shortening somebody's days. A man who should throw his child into the
+water, in order to save him from being burned to death, would not
+be arraigned for the fierce choice. Little Jacques, if he had lived,
+would have lingered in misery and imbecility. Was a lingering death of
+torture to be preferred by a tenderhearted woman to one more rapid and
+less painful, where the certainty of death left only such preference?
+Ah, well! it was consolation that his little son was safe from all
+vicissitude, whatever might befall his devoted father!" and Monsieur
+wiped his eyes, and drew out a little miniature he always carried in
+his bosom. It was the portrait of little Jacques.
+
+Well, as I have said, Monsieur was a philosopher, and I was a
+philosopher; and yet I must have been a woman incapable of reason,
+incapable of comprehending an argument; for the thought of this thing,
+and of being in the presence of a man capable of such a deed, made me
+uneasy, restless, unhappy, as though I were in some sort a partaker of
+the crime. I could not sleep; I was haunted with horrific dreams; and
+when, in few days, among the "accidents" the death of an unknown woman
+was recorded, whose body had drifted ashore at night, and I recognized
+by the description poor, unknown, uncared-for Madame C----, a wild
+fever burned in my veins, a frenzy of anguish akin to remorse, as if
+_I_ had wronged the dead, and sent her drifting, helpless, out to the
+unknown world. A pitiable soul, who preferred misery for her portion,
+rather than betray the man she loved, or become partaker of his crime,
+had crept back, after years of self-imposed absence, with death in her
+heart, to see the old place and the new wife,--and how had I received
+her? With horror and shuddering, as though she were some guilty thing,
+to be held at arm's-length. Not as one woman, generous, forgiving,
+hoping for mercy hereafter, should receive another, however erring. It
+was a sad boon, perhaps, she had endowed me with; yet it was all she
+prized and cherished.
+
+With a nobleness of magnanimity, a passionate self-sacrifice, which
+none but a woman could be capable of, Madame C---- had divested
+herself of all peculiarities of clothing by which she could be
+identified. It was only by recognizing the features, and a singular
+scar upon the forehead, that I knew it was herself. She was buried by
+stranger hands, however; we dared not come forward to claim her.
+
+The excitement attendant on this miserable death, and the
+circumstances which preceded it, laid me, for the first time in my
+life, upon a sick-bed. I was unconscious for many weeks of anything
+save intolerable pain and intolerable heat. A fiery agony of fever
+leaped in my veins, and scorched up my life-blood. I believe Monsieur
+cared for me, and nursed me attentively during this illness.
+
+The fever left me; exhausted, spent, my life shrunken up within me, my
+energy burned out, a puny, spiritless remnant of the strong woman who
+lay down upon that couch, I lay despondent, vacant of all interest in
+the world hitherto so exciting to me. I had not seen Monsieur since
+this apparent commencement of recovery. A great, good-natured nurse
+kept watch over me, and fed me with spiritless dainties, tasteless,
+unsatisfying.
+
+One day, when my senses began to settle a little, and things began
+to take shape again, I asked for Monsieur. He came and stood at my
+bedside.
+
+"Christine," said he, "you have no faith in my power of making angels.
+I have not made one of you. Being divided in our theories, we will
+divide our earthly goods. We will part. Should you as a woman deem it
+your duty to inform against me, I shall not think it wrong. I shall
+bear it as a philosopher. You have no proof, you can substantiate
+nothing; but it may be a satisfaction. I do not understand women;
+therefore I cannot tell."
+
+"Monsieur," I answered, "leave it to God to fill His heaven as He
+thinks best. He has not invited your assistance; neither has He
+invited me to avenge Him. Since He does not punish, dare I invade His
+prerogative?"
+
+And we did not part.
+
+We will live together in peace, we said, and the past shall be utterly
+forgotten; shall not a whole lifetime of unwavering rectitude atone
+for this one crime?
+
+I accepted my fate,--weakly, in the dread of poverty, in the horror
+of disgrace, shrinking within myself with the secret thrust upon me.
+I said we are all the makers of our own destiny, and there is
+nothing supernatural in life. If this course is best and wisest in my
+judgment, nothing evil will come of it. I said this, ignorant of the
+mystery of existence, and inexperienced in that subtile power which
+penetrates all the windings and turnings of humanity, searching out
+hidden things,--the Purifier, and the Avenger, allotting to each one
+his portion of bitterness, his inexorable punishment. "We will live
+together in peace": it was the thought of a sudden moment of fervor,
+which overleaped the dreary length of life, and assumed to compass the
+repentance of a whole existence in a single day.
+
+But destiny holds always in store its retribution. God suffers no
+dropped stitches in the web of His universe, and the smallest truth
+evaded, the least wretch neglected, will surely be picked up again
+in the unending circle that is winding its certain thread around all
+beings, connecting by invisible links the most insignificant chances
+with the most significant events.
+
+When I said we will be one, we will endure together, I thought that
+so, in my enduring strength, I could bear up whatever burden came. I
+know not how, by what invisible process, the load which I had lifted
+to my shoulders grew into leaden heaviness,--heavy, heavy, like the
+weight of some dead soul resting its lifeless shape upon my living
+spirit, till I staggered under the unbearable presence. I had doomed
+myself to stand side by side, to work hand in hand with guilt, to feel
+hourly the dread lest in some moment of frenzy engendered by the dumb
+anguish within me I might betray the secret whose rust was eating into
+my soul, and shriek out my misery in the ears of all men.
+
+Monsieur, seeing me grow thin and pale, declared that I must have a
+change, I must go somewhere, to the sea-shore. To the sea-shore! No,
+I would not go to the sea-shore, or to any other shore; a stranded
+vessel, I could not struggle from the place of shipwreck.
+
+Monsieur grew vexed and anxious, when I stubbornly shook my head. And
+when week after week I still refused, he grew strangely uneasy. I had
+better go; if I would not go alone, he would go with me, shut up the
+shop, and take a holiday.
+
+I considered the matter that day. The project was a wild one; at this
+busiest season of the year, it would be an injury to our business.
+And what might the neighbors say? It might lead them to unpleasant
+suspicions. We were not popular among them. No, it would not do.
+
+I explained this to Monsieur very calmly at the supper-table. His
+face was pale and quiet as usual. He did not interrupt me. When I
+concluded, he rose as if he would go out, but turning back suddenly
+and striking the table with his clenched fist,--
+
+"God!" he exclaimed. "Woman would you see me die like a dog? The
+neighbors! for all I know, they have got me at their finger-ends
+now,--the vile rabble! That old hag, Madame Justine, at the
+ribbon-shop below,--some demon possessed her to look out that night
+when SHE came crawling home. She noted her well with her greedy eyes;
+some one _so_ like my dear first wife, she told me. There is mischief
+and death in her eyes. She knows or guesses too much."
+
+"What can she guess?" I asked; "she has only lately come into the
+neighborhood."
+
+In answer to this, Monsieur informed me that she professed to
+have been an old friend of his wife's, who, in times gone by, half
+bewildered with her troubles, had probably dropped many unguarded
+words in this woman's presence. Madame C---- had died (to her old
+home) while this woman was away on a visit. "Ah!" she said, "she had
+her misgivings many a time. Did the same doctor attend Madame C----
+who prescribed for little Jacques? _He_ ought to be hung, then. Ah,
+well, if all men had their deserts, she knew many things that would
+hang some folks who looted all fair and square, and held their guilty
+heads higher than their neighbors."
+
+"Well?" I said.
+
+"Well!--you women are so virtuous, you have no mercy, Madame. Go,
+hang--go, drown the wretch who comes under the malediction of the
+ladies! Oh, there is nothing too hard for him! And this one owed me a
+grudge lately about a mistake,--a little mistake I made in an account
+with her, and would not alter because I thought it all right."
+
+
+The preparations were going on silently and steadily that night. I
+would go anywhere now, anything would I do, to escape the fate whose
+stealthy footsteps were tracking us out. Well I knew, that, once in
+the power of the law, its firm grasp would wrest every secret from
+the deepest depths where it was hidden. Once out of the city, we could
+readily take flight, if immediate danger threatened.
+
+The doors were all closed; the trunks stood corded in the hall. I was
+down-stairs, getting the silver together. Monsieur was in his room,
+packing up his medicine-chest. There was no weakness in my nerves
+now, no trembling in my limbs. I was determined. While thus engaged,
+pausing a moment amid the light tinkle of the silver spoons, I thought
+I heard footsteps in the saloon above. Softly ascending the stairs, I
+met Monsieur at the door. He had come down under the same impression,
+that some one was walking in the saloon, still holding in his hand the
+tiny cup in which he measured his medicines. It was full, and Monsieur
+carried it very carefully, as, opening the door, he looked cautiously
+about. Nothing stirred; all was silent as death; and walking forward
+toward the fountain, he straightened himself up, and his white face
+flushed as he said in a whisper,--
+
+"Christine, everything is ready. We are safe yet; we shall escape.
+Once away, we will never return to this doomed place, let what will
+come of it. Yes, I am certain that we shall escape!"
+
+Monsieur took a step forward as he said this, and stood transfixed.
+The light shook which he held in his hand, as if a strong wind
+had passed over it; his eye quailed; his cheek blanched to ghastly
+whiteness. I thought that undue excitement had brought on a
+fainting-fit of some kind, and was stooping to dip my hands in the
+water and bathe his forehead, when I saw, distinctly, like a white
+mist in the darkness, a visible shape sitting solemn upon the
+basin-edge; the room was very dim, and the falling spray fell over the
+shape like a weeping-willow, yet my eyes discerned it clearly. Oh, it
+was no dream that I had dreamed in my young days long ago! That little
+figure was no stranger to my vision, no stranger to the changeless
+waterfall. Did Monsieur see it also? He stood close beside the
+fountain now, with his face towards the spectre. The tiny cup in his
+hand fell from the loosened fingers down into the water; a lonely
+gold-fish, swimming there, turned over on its golden side and floated
+motionless upon the surface.
+
+I scarcely noticed this, for, at the time, I heard the knob of the
+shop-door turn quickly, and the door was shaken violently. It was
+probably the night-watchman going his rounds; but, in my alarm and
+excitement, I thought we were betrayed. I stepped swiftly to the door,
+and pushed an extra bolt inside.
+
+"Monsieur!" I cried, under my breath, "hide! hide yourself! Quick! in
+the name of Heaven!"
+
+But he did not answer, and, hastening to his side, I saw the faint
+outlines of that shadowy visitant growing indistinct and disappearing.
+As it vanished, Monsieur turned deliberately toward me; his eyes were
+clear, the faintness was over; his voice was grave and steady, as he
+said,--
+
+"Christine! I have seen it. It is the warning of death. There is
+no future and no escape for me. The retribution is at hand,"--and
+stooping swiftly down, he lifted the tiny cup brimming to his lips.
+"Go you," he said, huskily, "to the sea-shore. I have an errand
+elsewhere."
+
+In the morning came the officers of justice; my dim eyes saw them, my
+ears heard unshrinking their stern voices demanding Monsieur C----. I
+did not answer; I pointed vaguely forward; and forward they marched,
+with a heavy tramp, to where the one whom they were seeking lay prone
+upon the marble floor, his head hanging nervelessly down over the
+water. He had been arrested by a Higher Power. Monsieur C---- was
+dead.
+
+
+
+
+BOSTON HYMN.
+
+
+ The word of the Lord by night
+ To the watching Pilgrims came,
+ As they sat by the sea-side,
+ And filled their hearts with flame.
+
+ God said,--I am tired of kings,
+ I suffer them no more;
+ Up to my ear the morning brings
+ The outrage of the poor.
+
+ Think ye I made this ball
+ A field of havoc and war,
+ Where tyrants great and tyrants small
+ Might harry the weak and poor?
+
+ My angel,--his name is Freedom,
+ Choose him to be your king;
+ He shall cut pathways east and west,
+ And fend you with his wing.
+
+ Lo! I uncover the land
+ Which I hid of old time in the West,
+ As the sculptor uncovers his statue,
+ When he has wrought his best.
+
+ I show Columbia, of the rocks
+ Which dip their foot in the seas
+ And soar to the air-borne flocks
+ Of clouds, and the boreal fleece.
+
+ I will divide my goods,
+ Call in the wretch and slave:
+ None shall rule but the humble,
+ And none but Toil shall have.
+
+ I will have never a noble,
+ No lineage counted great:
+ Fishers and choppers and ploughmen
+ Shall constitute a State.
+
+ Go, cut down trees in the forest,
+ And trim the straightest boughs;
+ Cut down trees in the forest,
+ And build me a wooden house.
+
+ Call the people together,
+ The young men and the sires,
+ The digger in the harvest-field,
+ Hireling, and him that hires.
+
+ And here in a pine state-house
+ They shall choose men to rule
+ In every needful faculty,
+ In church, and state, and school.
+
+ Lo, now! if these poor men
+ Can govern the land and sea,
+ And make just laws below the sun,
+ As planets faithful be.
+
+ And ye shall succor men;
+ 'T is nobleness to serve;
+ Help them who cannot help again;
+ Beware from right to swerve.
+
+ I break your bonds and masterships,
+ And I unchain the slave:
+ Free be his heart and hand henceforth,
+ As wind and wandering wave.
+
+ I cause from every creature
+ His proper good to flow:
+ So much as he is and doeth,
+ So much he shall bestow.
+
+ But, laying his hands on another
+ To coin his labor and sweat,
+ He goes in pawn to his victim
+ For eternal years in debt.
+
+ Pay ransom to the owner,
+ And fill the bag to the brim.
+ Who is the owner? The slave is owner,
+ And ever was. Pay him.
+
+ O North! give him beauty for rags,
+ And honor, O South! for his shame;
+ Nevada! coin thy golden crags
+ With Freedom's image and name.
+
+ Up! and the dusky race
+ That sat in darkness long,--
+ Be swift their feet as antelopes,
+ And as behemoth strong.
+
+ Come, East, and West, and North,
+ By races, as snow-flakes,
+ And carry my purpose forth,
+ Which neither halts nor shakes.
+
+ My will fulfilled shall be,
+ For, in daylight or in dark,
+ My thunderbolt has eyes to see
+ His way home to the mark.
+
+
+
+
+THE SIEGE OF CINCINNATI.
+
+
+The live man of the old Revolution, the daring Hotspur of those
+troublous days, was Anthony Wayne. The live man to-day of the great
+Northwest is Lewis Wallace. With all the chivalric clash of the
+stormer of Stony Point, he has a cooler head, with a capacity for
+larger plans, and the steady nerve to execute whatever he conceives.
+When a difficulty rises in his path, the difficulty, no matter what
+its proportions, moves aside; he does not. When a river like the Ohio
+at Cincinnati intervenes between him and his field of operations,
+there is a sudden sound of saws and hammers at sunset, and the
+next morning beholds the magic spectacle of a great pontoon-bridge
+stretching between the shores of Freedom and Slavery, its planks
+resounding to the heavy tread of almost endless regiments and
+army-wagons. Is a city like Cincinnati menaced by a hungry foe,
+striding on by forced marches, that foe sees his path suddenly blocked
+by ten miles of fortifications thoroughly manned and armed, and he
+finds it prudent, even with his twenty thousand veterans, to retreat
+faster than he came, strewing the road with whatever articles impede
+his haste. Some few incidents in the career of such a man, since he
+has taken the field, ought not to be uninteresting to those for whom
+he has fought so bravely; and we believe his services, when known,
+will be appreciated, otherwise we will come under the old ban against
+Republics, that they are ungrateful.
+
+While returning from New York at the expiration of a short leave of
+absence, the first asked for since the beginning of the war, General
+Wallace was persuaded by Governor Morton to stump the State of Indiana
+in favor of voluntary enlistments, which at that time were progressing
+slowly. Wallace went to work in all earnestness. His idea was to
+obtain command of the new levies, drill them, and take them to the
+field; and this idea was circulated throughout the State. The result
+was, enlisting increased rapidly; the ardor for it rose shortly into
+a fever, and has not yet abated. Regiments are still forming, shedding
+additional lustre upon the name of patriotic Indiana.
+
+General Wallace was thus engaged when the news was received from
+Morgan of the invasion of Kentucky by Kirby Smith. All eyes turned
+at once to Governor Morton, many of whose regiments were now ready to
+take the field, if they only had officers to lead them. Wallace came
+promptly to the Governor's assistance, and offered to take command of
+a regiment for the crisis. His offer was accepted, and he was sent to
+New Albany, where the Sixty-Sixth Indiana was in camp. In twelve
+hours he mustered it, paid its bounty money, clothed and armed it, and
+marched it to Louisville. Brigadier-General Boyle was in command of
+Kentucky. Wallace, who is a Major-General, reported to him at the
+above-named city, and a peculiar scene occurred.
+
+"General Boyle," said Wallace, "I report to you the Sixty-Sixth
+Indiana Regiment."
+
+"Who commands it?" asked the General.
+
+"I have that honor, Sir," was the reply.
+
+"You want orders, I suppose?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"It is a difficult matter for me," said Boyle. "I have no right to
+order you."
+
+"That difficulty is easily solved," Wallace replied, with
+characteristic promptness. "I come to report to you as a Colonel. I
+come to take orders as such."
+
+General Boyle consulted with his Adjutant-General, and the result was
+_a request_ that General Wallace would proceed to Lexington with his
+command. Here was exhibited the ready, self-sacrificing spirit of
+a true patriot: he did not stand and wait until he could find the
+position to which his high rank entitled him, but stepped into the
+place where he could best and quickest serve his country in her hour
+of peril.
+
+While Wallace was still at the railway-station, he received an order
+from General Boyle, putting him in command of all the forces in
+Lexington. Here was a golden opportunity for our young commander. What
+higher honor could be coveted than to relieve the brave Morgan,
+pent up as he was with his little army in the mountain-gorges of the
+Cumberland? The idea fired the soul of Wallace, and he pushed on to
+Lexington. But here he was sadly disappointed. He found the forces
+waiting there inadequate to the task: instead of an army, there were
+only three regiments. He telegraphed for more troops. Indiana and Ohio
+responded promptly and nobly. In three days he received and brigaded
+nine regiments and started them toward the Gap.
+
+No one but an experienced soldier, one who has indeed tried it, can
+conceive of the labor involved in such an undertaking. The material in
+his hands was, to say the best of it, magnificently _raw_. Officers,
+from colonels to corporals, brave though they might be as lions, knew
+literally nothing of military affairs. The men had not learned even to
+load their guns. Companies had to be led, like little children, by
+the hand as it were, into their places in line of battle. There was
+no cavalry, no artillery. It happened, however, that guns, horses, and
+supplies intended for Morgan at the Gap were in depot at Lexington.
+Then Wallace began to catch a glimpse of dawn through the dark tangle
+of the wilderness. Some kind of order, prompt and immediate, must be
+forced out of this chaos; and it came, for the master-spirit was there
+to arrange and compel. He mounted several hundred men, giving them
+rifles instead of sabres. He manned new guns, procuring harness and
+ammunition for them from Louisville. Where there were no caissons, he
+supplied wagons. But his regiments were not his sole reliance; he is
+a believer in riflemen, a fighting class of which Kentucky was full.
+These he summoned to his assistance, and was met by a ready and hearty
+response: they came trooping to him by hundreds. Among others,
+Garrett Davis, United States Senator, led a company of Home-Guards to
+Lexington. In this way General Wallace composed, or rather improvised
+a little army, and all without help, his regular staff being absent,
+mostly in Memphis.
+
+"Kentucky has not been herself in this war," exclaimed General
+Wallace; "she must be aroused; and I propose to do it thoroughly."
+
+"How will you do it?" asked a skeptic.
+
+"Easily enough, Sir. Kentucky has a host of great names. Kentuckians
+believe in great names. It is to this tune that the traitors have
+carried them to the field against us. I will take with me to the field
+all the men living, old and young, who have made those names great.
+Buckner took the young Crittendens and Clays; by Heaven, I'll take
+their fathers!"
+
+"But they can't march."
+
+"I'll haul them, then."
+
+"They can be of no service in that way."
+
+"But the magic of their names!" exclaimed Wallace. "What will the
+young Kentuckians say, when they hear John J. Crittenden, Leslie
+Combs, Robert Breckenridge, Tom Clay, Garrett Davis, Judge Goodloe,
+and fathers of that kind, are going down to battle with me?"
+
+The skeptics held their peace.
+
+General Wallace now constituted a volunteer staff. Wadsworth, M.C.
+from Maysville district, was his adjutant-general. Brand, Gratz,
+Goodloe, and young Tom Clay were his aids. Old Tom Clay, John J.
+Crittenden, Leslie Combs, Judge Goodloe, Garrett Davis, were all
+prepared and going, when General Wallace was suddenly relieved of his
+command by General Nelson.
+
+Without instituting any comparison between these two generals, it
+is enough to say that the supersession of Wallace by Nelson at that
+moment was most unfortunate and untimely, as the sequel proved,
+fraught as it was with disastrous consequences. The circumstances were
+these.
+
+Scott's Rebel cavalry had whipped Metcalf's regiment of Loyalists at
+Big Hill, some twelve or fifteen miles beyond Richmond, Kentucky,
+and followed them to within four miles of that town, where they were
+stopped by Lenck's brigade of infantry. The affair was reported to
+Wallace, with the number and situation of the enemy. He at once took
+prompt measures to meet the exigence of the situation. He could throw
+Lenck's and Clay's brigades upon the Rebel front; the brigade at
+Nicholasville could take them in flank by crossing the Kentucky River
+at Tatt's Ford; while, by uniting Clay Smith's command with that of
+Jacob, then _en route_ for Nicholasville, he could plant seventeen
+hundred cavalry in their rear between Big Hill and Mount Vernon.
+
+The enemy at this time were at least twenty miles in advance of their
+supports, and a night's march would have readily placed the several
+forces mentioned in position to attack them by daylight. This was
+Wallace's plan,--simple, feasible, and soldier-like. All his orders
+were given. A supply-train with extra ammunition and abundant rations
+was in line on the road to Richmond. Clay's brigade was drawn up ready
+to move, and General Wallace's horse was saddled. He was writing a
+last order in reference to the city of Lexington in his absence, and
+directing the officer left in charge to forward regiments to him at
+Richmond as fast as they should arrive, when General Nelson came and
+instantly took the command. Fifteen minutes more and General Wallace
+would have been on the road to Richmond to superintend the execution
+of his plan of attack. The supersession was, of course, a bitter
+disappointment; yet he never grumbled or demurred in the least, but,
+like a true soldier who knows his duty, offered that evening to serve
+his successor in any capacity, a generosity which General Nelson
+declined. The well-conceived plan which Wallace had matured failed for
+the simple reason, that, instead of marching to execute it that night,
+as common sense would seem to have dictated, Nelson did not leave
+Lexington until the next day at one o'clock; and at daylight, when the
+attack was to have been made, the Rebel leader, Scott, discovered his
+danger, and wisely retreated, finding nobody in his rear. The result
+was, Nelson went to Richmond and was defeated. It is possible that
+the same result might have followed Wallace; but by those competent to
+judge it is thought otherwise.
+
+He had a plan adapted to the troops he was leading, who, although very
+raw, would have been invincible behind breastworks, as American troops
+have always shown themselves to be. Wallace never intended arraying
+these inexperienced men in the open field against the veteran troops
+of the Rebels. Neither did he intend they should dig. He had collected
+large quantities of intrenching tools, and was rapidly assembling
+a corps of negroes, nearly five hundred of whom he had already in
+waiting in Morgan's factory, all prepared to follow his column, armed
+with spades and picks. In Madison County he intended getting at least
+five hundred more. "I will march," he said, "like Cæsar in Gaul, and
+intrench my camp every night. If I am attacked at any time in too
+great numbers, I can drop back to my nearest works, and wait for
+reinforcements." Such was his plan, and those who know him believe
+firmly that he could have been at the Cumberland Gap in time not only
+to succor our little army there, but to have prevented the destruction
+and evacuation of that very important post.
+
+Wallace, finding himself thus suddenly superseded, his plans ignored,
+and his voluntary service bluffly refused, left Lexington for
+Cincinnati. While there the Battle of Richmond was fought, the
+disastrous results of which are still too fresh in the public mind to
+require repeating. Nelson, who did not arrive upon the field until the
+day was about lost, and only in time to use his sword against his own
+men in a fruitless endeavor to rally them, received a flesh-wound,
+and hastened back the same night to Cincinnati, leaving many dead and
+wounded on the field, and thousands of our brave boys prisoners to be
+paroled by the Rebels. These are simple matters of record, and are not
+here set down in any spirit of prejudice, or to throw a shadow upon
+the memory of the misguided, unfortunate, but courageous Nelson.
+
+At this juncture General Wallace was again ordered to Lexington, this
+time by General Wright, a general whose gentlemanly bearing in all
+capacities makes him an ornament to the American army. Wallace was
+ordered thither to resume command of the forces; but on arriving
+at Paris, the order was countermanded, and he was sent back to take
+charge of the city of Cincinnati. Shrewdly suspecting that our forces
+would evacuate Lexington, he hastened to his new post. General Wright
+was at that time in Louisville. On his way back, Wallace was asked by
+one of his aids,--
+
+"Do you believe the enemy will come to Cincinnati?"
+
+"Yes," was the reply. "Kirby Smith will first go to Frankfort. He must
+have that place, if possible, for the political effect it will have.
+If he gets it, he will surely come to Cincinnati. He is an idiot, if
+he does not. Here is the material of war,--goods, groceries, salt,
+supplies, machinery, etc.,--enough to restock the whole bogus
+Confederacy."
+
+"What are you going to do? You have nothing to defend the city with."
+
+"I will show you," was the reply.
+
+Within the first half-hour after his arrival in Cincinnati, General
+Wallace wrote and sent to the daily papers the following proclamation,
+which fully and clearly develops his whole plan.
+
+
+"PROCLAMATION.
+
+"The undersigned, by order of Major-General Wright, assumes command of
+Cincinnati, Covington, and Newport.
+
+"It is but fair to inform the citizens, that an active, daring, and
+powerful enemy threatens them with every consequence of war; yet the
+cities must be defended, and their inhabitants must assist in the
+preparation.
+
+"Patriotism, duty, honor, self-preservation, call them to the labor,
+and it must be performed equally by all classes.
+
+"First. All business must be suspended at nine o'clock to-day. Every
+business-house must be closed.
+
+"Second. Under the direction of the Mayor, the citizens must, within
+an hour after the suspension of business, (ten o'clock, A.M.,)
+assemble in convenient public places ready for orders. As soon as
+possible they will then be assigned to their work.
+
+"This labor ought to be that of love, and the undersigned trusts and
+believes it will be so. Anyhow, it must be done.
+
+"The willing shall be properly credited; the unwilling promptly
+visited. The principle adopted is, Citizens for the labor, soldiers
+for the battle.
+
+"Third. The ferry-boats will cease plying the river after four
+o'clock, A.M., until further orders.
+
+"Martial law is hereby proclaimed in the three cities; but until they
+can be relieved by the military, the injunctions of this proclamation
+will be executed by the police.
+
+ "LEWIS WALLACE,
+ "Maj.-Gen'r'l Commanding."
+
+Could anything be bolder and more to the purpose? It placed Cincinnati
+under martial law. It totally suspended business, and sent every
+citizen, without distinction, to the ranks or into the trenches.
+"Citizens for labor, soldiers for battle," was the principle
+underlying the whole plan,--a motto by which he reached every
+able-bodied man in the metropolis, and united the energies of forty
+thousand people,--a motto original with himself, and for which he
+should have the credit.
+
+Imagine the astonishment that seized the city, when, in the morning,
+this bold proclamation was read,--a city unused to the din of war and
+its impediments. As yet there was no word of an advance of the enemy
+in the direction of Cincinnati. It was a question whether they would
+come or not. Thousands did not believe in the impending danger; yet
+the proclamation was obeyed to the letter, and this, too, when there
+was not a regiment to enforce it. The secret is easy of comprehension:
+it was the universal confidence reposed in the man who issued the
+order; and he was equally confident, not only in his own judgment, but
+in the people with whom he had to deal.
+
+"If the enemy should not come after all this fuss," said one of the
+General's friends, "you will be ruined."
+
+"Very well," he replied; "but they will come. And if they do not, it
+will be because this same fuss has caused them to think better of it."
+
+The ten days ensuing will be forever memorable in the annals of the
+city of Cincinnati. The cheerful alacrity with which the people rose
+_en masse_ to swell the ranks and crowd into the trenches was a sight
+worth seeing, and being seen could not readily be forgotten.
+
+Here were the representatives of all nations and classes. The sturdy
+German, the lithe and gay-hearted Irishman, went shoulder to shoulder
+in defence of their adopted country. The man of money, the man of law,
+the merchant, the artist, and the artisan swelled the lines hastening
+to the scene of action, armed either with musket, pick, or spade.
+Added to these was seen Dickson's long and dusky brigade of colored
+men, cheerfully wending their way to labor on the fortifications,
+evidently holding it their especial right to put whatever impediments
+they could in the northward path of those whom they considered their
+own peculiar foe. But the pleasantest and most picturesque sight of
+those remarkable days was the almost endless stream of sturdy men who
+rushed to the rescue from the rural districts of the State. These
+were known as the "Squirrel-Hunters." They came in files numbering
+thousands upon thousands, in all kinds of costumes, and armed with all
+kinds of fire-arms, but chiefly the deadly rifle, which they knew so
+well bow to use. Old men, middle-aged men, young men, and often mere
+boys, like the "minute-men" of the old Revolution, they left the
+plough in the furrow, the flail on the half-threshed sheaves, the
+unfinished iron upon the anvil,--in short, dropped all their peculiar
+avocations, and with their leathern pouches full of bullets and their
+ox-horns full of powder, poured into the city by every highway and
+by-way in such numbers that it seemed as if the whole State of Ohio
+were peopled only with hunters, and that the spirit of Daniel Boone
+stood upon the hills opposite the town beckoning them into Kentucky.
+The pontoon-bridge, which had been begun and completed between sundown
+and sundown, groaned day and night with the perpetual stream of
+life all setting southward. In three days there were ten miles of
+intrenchments lining the hills, making a semicircle from the river
+above the city to the banks of the river below; and these were thickly
+manned from end to end, and made terrible to the astonished enemy by
+black and frowning cannon. General Heath, with his twenty thousand
+Rebel veterans, flushed with their late success at Richmond, drew up
+before these formidable preparations, and deemed it prudent to take
+the matter into serious consideration before making the attack.
+
+Our men were eagerly awaiting their approach, thousands in rifle-pits
+and tens of thousands along the whole line of the fortifications,
+while our scouts and pickets were skirmishing with their outposts in
+the plains in front. Should the foe make a sudden dash and carry any
+point of our lines, it was thought by some that nothing would prevent
+them from entering Cincinnati.
+
+But for this also provision was made. The river about the city, above
+and below, was well protected by a flotilla of gun-boats improvised
+from the swarm of steamers which lay at the wharves. A storm of shot
+and shell, such as they had not dreamed of, would have played upon
+their advancing columns, while our regiments, pouring down from the
+fortifications, would have fallen upon their rear. The shrewd leaders
+of the Rebel army were probably kept well posted by traitors within
+our own lines in regard to the reception prepared for them, and,
+taking advantage of the darkness of night and the violence of a
+thunder-storm, made a hasty and ruinous retreat. Wallace was anxious
+to follow them, and was confident of success, but was overruled by
+those higher in authority.
+
+The address which he now published to the citizens of Cincinnati,
+Covington, and Newport was manly and well-deserved. He said,--
+
+
+"For the present, at least, the enemy has fallen back, and your cities
+are safe. It is the time for acknowledgments. I beg leave to make you
+mine. When I assumed command, there was nothing to defend you with,
+except a few half-finished works and some dismounted guns; yet I was
+confident. The energies of a great city are boundless; they have only
+to be aroused, united, and directed. You were appealed to. The answer
+will never be forgotten. Paris may have seen something like it in her
+revolutionary days, but the cities of America never did. Be proud that
+you have given them an example so splendid. The most commercial of
+people, you submitted to a total suspension of business, and without
+a murmur adopted my principle, 'Citizens for labor, soldiers for
+battle.' In coming times, strangers viewing the works on the hills of
+Newport and Covington will ask, 'Who built these intrenchments? You
+can answer, 'We built them.' If they ask, 'Who guarded them?' you
+can reply, 'We helped in thousands.' If they inquire the result, your
+answer will be, 'The enemy came and looked at them, and stole away in
+the night.' You have won much honor. Keep your organizations ready to
+win more. Hereafter be always prepared to defend yourselves.
+
+ "LEWIS WALLACE,
+ "Maj.-Gen'r'l."
+
+
+It can safely be claimed for our young General, that he was the moving
+spirit which inspired and directed the people, and thereby saved
+Cincinnati and the surrounding cities, and, in the very face of Heath
+and his victorious horde from Richmond, organized a new and formidable
+army. That the citizens fully indorsed this was well exemplified on
+the occasion of his leading back into the metropolis a number of her
+volunteer regiments when the danger was over. They lined the streets,
+crowded the doors and windows, and filled the air with shouts of
+applause, in honor of the great work he had done.
+
+
+In writing this notice of Wallace and the siege, we have had no
+intention to overlook the services of his co-laborers, especially
+those rendered to the West by the gallant Wright, who holds command
+of the department. The writer has attempted to give what came directly
+under his own observation, and what he believes to be the core of the
+matter, and consequently most interesting to the public.
+
+
+
+
+JANE AUSTEN.
+
+
+In the old Cathedral of Winchester stand the tombs of kings, with
+dates stretching back to William Rufus and Canute; here, too, are the
+marble effigies of queens and noble ladies, of crusaders and warriors,
+of priests and bishops. But our pilgrimage led us to a slab of black
+marble set into the pavement of the north aisle, and there, under the
+grand old arches, we read the name of Jane Austen. Many-colored as the
+light which streams through painted windows, came the memories which
+floated in our soul as we read the simple inscription: happy hours,
+gladdened by her genius, weary hours, soothed by her touch; the
+honored and the wise who first placed her volumes in our hand; the
+beloved ones who had lingered over her pages, the voices of our
+distant home, associated with every familiar story.
+
+The personal history of Jane Austen belongs to the close of the last
+and the beginning of the present century. Her father through forty
+years was rector of a parish in the South of England. Mr. Austen was
+a man of great taste in all literary matters; from him his daughter
+inherited many of her gifts. He probably guided her early education
+and influenced the direction of her genius. Her life was passed
+chiefly in the country. Bath, then a fashionable watering-place, with
+occasional glimpses of London, must have afforded all the intercourse
+which she held with what is called "the world." Her travels were
+limited to excursions in the vicinity of her father's residence.
+Those were days of post-chaises and sedan-chairs, when the rush of
+the locomotive was unknown. Steam, that genie of the vapor, was yet a
+little household elf, singing pleasant times by the evening fire, at
+quiet hearthstones; it has since expanded into a mighty giant, whose
+influences are no longer domestic. The circles of fashion are changed
+also. Those were the days of country-dances and India muslins; the
+beaux and belles of "the upper rooms" at Bath knew not the whirl of
+the waltz, nor the ceaseless involvements of "the German." Yet the
+measures of love and jealousy, of hope and fear, to which their hearts
+beat time, would be recognized to-night in every ballroom. Infinite
+sameness, infinite variety, are not more apparent in the outward than
+in the inward world, and the work of that writer will alone be lasting
+who recognizes and embodies this eternal law of the great Author.
+
+Jane Austen possessed in a remarkable degree this rare intuition. The
+following passage is found in Sir Walter Scott's journal, under date
+of the fourteenth of March, 1826:--"Read again, and for the third time
+at least, Miss Austen's finely written novel of 'Pride and Prejudice.'
+That young lady had a talent for describing the involvements and
+feelings and characters of ordinary life, which is to me the most
+wonderful I ever met with. The Big Bow-wow strain I can do myself
+like any now going; but the exquisite touch which renders ordinary
+commonplace things and characters interesting from truth of the
+description and the sentiment is denied to me." This is high praise,
+but it is something more when we recur to the time at which Sir Walter
+writes this paragraph. It is amid the dreary entries in his journal
+of 1826, many of which make our hearts ache and our eyes overflow. He
+read the pages of Jane Austen on the fourteenth of March, and on the
+fifteenth he writes, "This morning I leave 39 Castle Street for the
+last time." It was something to have written a book sought for by him
+at such a moment. Even at Malta, in December, 1831, when the pressure
+of disease, as well as of misfortune, was upon him, Sir Walter was
+often found with a volume of Miss Austen in his hand, and said to a
+friend, "There is a finishing-off in some of her scenes that is really
+quite above everybody else."
+
+Jane Austen's life-world presented such a limited experience that it
+is marvellous where she could have found the models from which she
+studied such a variety of forms. It is only another proof that the
+secret lies in the genius which seizes, not in the material which is
+seized. We have been told by one who knew her well, that Miss Austen
+never intentionally drew portraits from individuals, and avoided,
+if possible, all sketches that could be recognized. But she was so
+faithful to Nature, that many of her acquaintance, whose characters
+had never entered her mind, were much offended, and could not be
+persuaded that they or their friends had not been depicted in some
+of her less attractive personages: a feeling which we have frequently
+shared; for, as the touches of her pencil brought out the light
+and shades very quietly, we have been startled to recognize our own
+portrait come gradually out on the canvas, especially since we are not
+equal to the courage of Cromwell, who said, "Paint me as I am."
+
+In the "Autobiography of Sir Egerton Brydges" we find the following
+passage: it is characteristic of the man:--
+
+"I remember Jane Austen, the novelist, a little child. Her mother was
+a Miss Leigh, whose paternal grandmother was a sister of the first
+Duke of Chandos. Mr. Austen was of a Kentish family, of which several
+branches have been settled in the Weald, and some are still remaining
+there. When I knew Jane Austen, I never suspected she was an
+authoress; but my eyes told me that she was fair and handsome, slight
+and elegant, with cheeks a little too full. The last time, I think,
+I saw her was at Ramsgate, in 1803; perhaps she was then about
+twenty-seven years old. Even then I did not know that she was addicted
+to literary composition."
+
+We can readily suppose that the spheres of Jane Austen and Sir Egerton
+could not be very congenial; and it does not appear that he was ever
+tempted from the contemplation of his own performances, to read her
+"literary compositions." A letter from Robert Southey to Sir Egerton
+shows that the latter had not quite forgotten her. Southey writes,
+under the dale of Keswick, April, 1830:--
+
+"You mention Miss Austen; her novels are more true to Nature, and have
+(for my sympathies) passages of finer feeling than any others of
+this age. She was a person of whom I have heard so much, and think so
+highly, that I regret not having seen her, or ever had an opportunity
+of testifying to her the respect which I felt for her."
+
+A pleasant anecdote, told to us on good authority in England, is
+illustrative of Miss Austen's power over various minds. A party of
+distinguished literary men met at a country-seat; among them was
+Macaulay, and, we believe, Hallam; at all events, they were men of
+high reputation. While discussing the merits of various authors, it
+was proposed that each should write down the name of that work of
+fiction which had given him the greatest pleasure. Much surprise and
+amusement followed; for, on opening the slips of paper, _seven_ bore
+the name of "Mansfield Park,"--a coincidence of opinion most rare, and
+a tribute to an author unsurpassed.
+
+Had we been of that party at the English country-house, we should have
+written, "The _last_ novel by Miss Austen which we have read"; yet,
+forced to a selection, we should have named "Persuasion." But we
+withdraw our private preference, and, yielding to the decision of
+seven wise men, place "Mansfield Park" at the head of the list, and
+leave it there without further comment.
+
+"Persuasion" was her latest work, and bears the impress of a matured
+mind and perfected style. The language of Miss Austen is, in all her
+pages, drawn from the "wells of English undefiled." Concise and clear,
+simple and vigorous, no word can be omitted that she puts down,
+and none can be added to heighten the effect of her sentences. In
+"Persuasion" there are passages whose depth and tenderness, welling
+up from deep fountains of feeling, impress us with the conviction that
+the angel of sorrow or suffering had troubled the waters, yet had left
+in them a healing influence, which is felt rather than revealed. Of
+all the heroines we have known through a long and somewhat varied
+experience, there is not one whose life-companionship we should so
+desire to secure as that of Anne Elliot. Ah! could she also forgive
+our faults and bear with our weaknesses, while we were animated by
+her sweet and noble example, existence would be, under any aspect, a
+blessing. This felicity was reserved for Captain Wentworth. Happy man!
+In "Persuasion" we also find the subtle Mr. Elliot. Here, as with Mr.
+Crawford in "Mansfield Park," Miss Austen deals dexterously with the
+character of a man of the world, and uses a nicer discernment than is
+often found in the writings of women, even those who assume masculine
+names.
+
+"Emma" we know to have been a favorite with the author. "I have drawn
+a character full of faults," said she, "nevertheless I like her."
+In Emma's company we meet Mr. Knightley, Harriet Smith, and Frank
+Churchill. We sit beside good old Mr. Woodhouse, and please him by
+tasting his gruel. We walk through Highbury, we are patronized by Mrs.
+Elton, listen forbearingly to the indefatigable Miss Bates, and take
+an early walk to the post-office with Jane Fairfax. Once we found
+ourselves actually on "Box Hill," but it did not seem half so real as
+when we "explored" there with the party from Highbury.
+
+"Pride and Prejudice" is piquant In style and masterly in portraiture.
+We make perhaps too many disagreeable acquaintances to enjoy ourselves
+entirely; yet who would forego Mr. Collins, or forget Lady Catherine
+de Bourgh, though each in their way is more stupid and odious than any
+one but Miss Austen could induce us to endure. Mr. Darcy's character
+is ably given; a very difficult one to sustain under all the
+circumstances in which he is placed. It is no small tribute to the
+power of the author to concede that she has so managed the workings
+of his real nature as to make it possible, and even probable, that a
+high-born, high-bred Englishman of Mr. Darcy's stamp could become the
+son-in-law of Mrs. Bennet. The scene of Darcy's declaration of love
+to Elizabeth, at the Hunsford Parsonage, is one of the most remarkable
+passages in Miss Austen's writings, and, indeed, we remember nothing
+equal to it among the many writers of fiction who have endeavored to
+describe that culminating point of human destiny.
+
+"Northanger Abbey" is written in a fine vein of irony, called forth,
+in some degree, by the romantic school of Mrs. Radcliffe and her
+imitators. We doubt whether Miss Austen was not over-wise with regard
+to these romances. Though born after the Radcliffe era, we well
+remember shivering through the "Mysteries of Udolpho" with as quaking
+a heart as beat in the bosom of Catherine Morland. If Miss Austen was
+not equally impressed by the power of these romances, we rejoice
+that they were written, as with them we should have lost "Northanger
+Abbey." For ourselves, we spent one very rainy day in the streets of
+Bath, looking up every nook and corner familiar in the adventures
+of Catherine, and time, not faith, failed, for a visit to Northanger
+itself. Bath was also sanctified by the presence of Anne Elliot. Our
+inn, the "White Hart," (made classic by the adventures of various
+well-remembered characters,) was hallowed by exquisite memories
+which connected one of the rooms (we faithfully believed it was our
+apartment) with the conversation of Anne Elliot and Captain Harville,
+as they stood by the window, while Captain Wentworth listened and
+wrote. In vain did we gaze at the windows of Camden Place. No Anne
+Elliot appeared.
+
+"Sense and Sensibility" was the first novel published by Miss Austen.
+It is marked by her peculiar genius, though it may be wanting in the
+nicer finish which experience gave to her later writings.
+
+The Earl of Carlisle, when Lord Morpheth, wrote a poem for some now
+forgotten annual, entitled "The Lady and the Novel." The following
+lines occur among the verses:--
+
+ "Or is it thou, all-perfect Austen? here
+ Let one poor wreath adorn thy early bier,
+ That scarce allowed thy modest worth to claim
+ The living portion of thy honest fame:
+ Oh, Mrs. Bennet, Mrs. Morris, too,
+ While Memory survives, she'll dream of you;
+ And Mr. Woodhouse, with abstemious lip,
+ Must thin, but not too thin, the gruel sip;
+ Miss Bates, _our_ idol, though the village bore,
+ And Mrs. Elton, ardent to explore;
+ While the clear style flows on without pretence,
+ With unstained purity, and unmatched sense."
+
+If the Earl of Carlisle, in whose veins flows "the blood of all the
+Howards," is willing to acknowledge so many of our friends, who are
+anything but aristocratic, our republican soul shrinks not from the
+confession that we should like to accompany good-natured Mrs. Jennings
+in her hospitable carriage, (so useful to our young ladies of sense
+and sensibility,) witness the happiness of Elinor at the parsonage,
+and the reward of Colonel Brandon at the manor-house of Delaford, and
+share with Mrs. Jennings all the charms of the mulberry-tree and the
+yew arbor.
+
+An article on "Recent Novels," in "Fraser's Magazine" for
+December, 1847, written by Mr. G.H. Lewes, contains the following
+paragraphs:--"What we most heartily enjoy and applaud is truth in the
+delineations of life and character.... To make our meaning precise, we
+would say that Fielding and Miss Austen are the greatest novelists in
+our language.... We would rather have written 'Pride and Prejudice,'
+or 'Tom Jones,' than any of the 'Waverley Novels'.... Miss Austen has
+been called a prose Shakspeare,--and among others, by Macaulay. In
+spite of the sense of incongruity which besets us in the words _prose_
+Shakspeare, we confess the greatness of Miss Austen, her marvellous
+dramatic power, seems, more than anything in Scott, akin to
+Shakspeare."
+
+The conclusion of this article is devoted to a review of 'Jane Eyre,'
+and led to the correspondence between Miss Brontè and Mr. Lewes
+which will be found in the memoir of her life. In these letters it is
+apparent that Mr. Lewes wishes Miss Brontè to read and to enjoy Miss
+Austen's works, as he does himself. Mr. Lewes is disappointed, and
+felt, doubtless, what all true lovers of Jane Austen have experienced,
+a surprise to find how obtuse otherwise clever people sometimes
+are. In this instance, however, we think Mr. Lewes expected what was
+impossible. Charlotte Brontè could not harmonize with Jane Austen. The
+luminous and familiar star which comes forth into the quiet evening
+sky when the sun sets amid the amber light of an autumn evening, and
+the comet which started into sight, unheralded and unnamed, and flamed
+across the midnight sky, have no affinity, except in the Divine Mind,
+whence both originate.
+
+The notice of Miss Austen, by Macaulay, to which Mr. Lewes alludes,
+must be, we presume, the passage which occurs in Macaulay's article on
+Madame D'Arblay, in the "Edinburgh Review," for January, 1843. We do
+not find the phrase, "prose Shakspeare," but the meaning is the same;
+we give the passage as it stands before us:--
+
+"Shakspeare has neither equal nor second; but among writers who, in
+the point we have noticed, have approached nearest the manner of the
+great master, we have no hesitation in placing Jane Austen, as a
+woman of whom England is justly proud. She has given us a multitude of
+characters, all, in a certain sense, commonplace, all such as we meet
+every day. Yet they are all as perfectly discriminated from each other
+as if they were the most eccentric of human beings. There are, for
+example, four clergymen, none of whom we should be surprised to
+find in any parsonage in the kingdom,--Mr. Edward Ferrars, Mr. Henry
+Tilney, Mr. Edward Bertram, and Mr. Elton. They are all specimens
+of the upper part of the middle class. They have been all liberally
+educated. They all lie under the restraints of the same sacred
+profession. They are all young. They are all in love. Not any one of
+them has any hobby-horse, to use the phrase of Sterne. Not one has any
+ruling passion, such as we read in Pope. Who would not have expected
+them to be insipid likenesses of each other? No such thing. Harpagon
+is not more unlike Jourdain, Joseph Surface is not more unlike Sir
+Lucius O'Trigger, than every one of Miss Austen's young divines to
+all his reverend brethren. And almost all this is done by touches
+so delicate that they elude analysis, that they defy the powers of
+description, and that we know them to exist only by the general effect
+to which they have contributed."
+
+Dr. Whately, the Archbishop of Dublin, in the "Quarterly Review,"
+1821, sums up his estimate of Miss Austen with these words: "The
+Eastern monarch who proclaimed a reward to him who should discover a
+new pleasure would have deserved well of mankind, had he stipulated
+it should be blameless. Those again who delight in the study of human
+nature may improve in the knowledge of it, and in the profitable
+application of that knowledge, by the perusal of such fictions. Miss
+Austen introduces very little of what is technically called religion
+into her books, yet that must be a blinded soul which does not
+recognize the vital essence, everywhere present in her pages, of a
+deep and enlightened piety.
+
+There are but few descriptions of scenery in her novels. The figures
+of the piece are her care; and if she draws in a tree, a hill, or a
+manor-house, it is always in the background. This fact did not arise
+from any want of appreciation for the glories or the beauties of the
+outward creation, for we know that the pencil was as often in her hand
+as the pen. It was that unity of purpose, ever present to her mind,
+which never allowed her to swerve from the actual into the ideal, nor
+even to yield to tempting descriptions of Nature which might be near,
+and yet aside from the main object of her narrative. Her creations
+are living people, not masks behind which the author soliloquizes
+or lectures. These novels are impersonal; Miss Austen never herself
+appears; and if she ever had a lover, we cannot decide whom he
+resembled among the many masculine portraits she has drawn.
+
+Very much has been said in her praise, and we, in this brief article,
+have summoned together witnesses to the extent of her powers, which
+are fit and not few. Yet we are aware that to a class of readers Miss
+Austen's novels must ever remain sealed books. So be it. While the
+English language is read, the world will always be provided with souls
+who can enjoy the rare excellence of that rich legacy left to them by
+her genius.
+
+Once in our lifetime we spent three delicious days in the Isle of
+Wight, and then crossed the water to Portsmouth. After taking a turn
+on the ramparts in memory of Fanny Price, and looking upon the harbor
+whence the Thrush went out, we drove over Portsdown Hill to visit the
+surviving member of that household which called Jane Austen their own.
+
+We had been preceded by a letter, introducing us to Admiral Austen as
+fervent admirers of his sister's genius, and were received by him with
+a gentle courtesy most winning to our heart.
+
+In the finely-cut features of the brother, who retained at eighty
+years of age much of the early beauty of his youth, we fancied we must
+see a resemblance to his sister, of whom there exists no portrait.
+
+It was delightful to us to hear him speak of "Jane," and to be brought
+so near the actual in her daily life. Of his sister's fame as a writer
+the Admiral spoke understandingly, but reservedly.
+
+We found the old Admiral safely moored in that most delightful of
+havens, a quiet English country-home, with the beauty of Nature around
+the mansion, and the beauty of domestic love and happiness beneath its
+hospitable roof.
+
+There we spent a summer day, and the passing hours seemed like the
+pages over which we had often lingered, written by her hand whose
+influence had guided us to those she loved. That day, with all its
+associations, has become a sacred memory, and links us to the sphere
+where dwells that soul whose gift of genius has rendered immortal the
+name of Jane Austen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PROCLAMATION.
+
+
+ "I order and declare that all persons held as slaves in the
+ said designated States and parts of States are and hereafter
+ shall be free,... and I hereby enjoin upon the people so
+ declared to be free to abstain from all violence, unless in
+ necessary self-defence."
+
+ ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
+
+ Saint Patrick, slave to Milcho of the herds
+ Of Ballymena, sleeping, heard these words:
+ "Arise, and flee
+ Out from the land of bondage, and be free!"
+
+ Glad as a soul in pain, who hears from heaven
+ The angels singing of his sins forgiven,
+ And, wondering, sees
+ His prison opening to their golden keys,
+
+ He rose a man who laid him down a slave,
+ Shook from his locks the ashes of the grave,
+ And outward trod
+ Into the glorious liberty of God.
+
+ He cast the symbols of his shame away;
+ And passing where the sleeping Milcho lay,
+ Though back and limb
+ Smarted with wrong, he prayed, "God pardon him!"
+
+ So went he forth: but in God's time he came
+ To light on Uilline's hills a holy flame;
+ And, dying, gave
+ The land a saint that lost him as a slave.
+
+ O dark, sad millions, patiently and dumb
+ Waiting for God, your hour, at last, has come,
+ And freedom's song
+ Breaks the long silence of your night of wrong!
+
+ Arise and flee! shake off the vile restraint
+ Of ages! but, like Ballymena's saint,
+ The oppressor spare,
+ Heap only on his head the coals of prayer!
+
+ Go forth, like him! like him, return again,
+ To bless the land whereon in bitter pain
+ Ye toiled at first,
+ And heal with freedom what your slavery cursed!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LAW OF COSTS.
+
+
+Our nation is now paying the price, not only of its vice, but also
+of its virtue,--not alone of its evil doing, but of its noble and
+admirable doing as well. It has of late been a customary cry with
+a certain class, that those who cherish freedom and advocate social
+justice are the proper authors of the present war. No doubt there
+is in this allegation an ungracious kind of truth; that is, had the
+nation been destitute of a political faith and of moral feeling, there
+would have been no contest. But were one lying ill of yellow-fever
+or small-pox, there would be the same sort of lying truth in the
+statement, that the _life_ in him, which alone resists the disease, is
+really its cause; since to yellow-fever, or to any malady, dead bodies
+are not subject. There is no preventive of disease so effectual as
+death itself,--no place so impregnable to pestilence as the grave. So,
+had the vitality gone out of the nation's heart, had that lamp of love
+for freedom and justice and of homage to the being of man, which once
+burned in its bosom so brightly, already sunk into death-flicker and
+extinction, then in the sordid and icy dark that would remain there
+could be no war of like nature with this that to-day gives the land
+its woful baptism of blood and tears. Oh, no! there would have been
+peace--_and_ putrefaction: peace, but without its sweetness, and
+death, but without its hopes.
+
+In one important sense, however, this war--hateful and horrible though
+it be--is the price which the nation must pay for its ideas and its
+magnanimity. If you take a clear initial step toward any great end,
+you thereby assume as a debt to destiny the pursuit and completion of
+your action; and should you fail to meet this debt, it will not fail
+to meet you, though now in the shape of retribution and with a biting
+edge. The seaman who has signed shipping-papers owes a voyage, and
+must either sail or suffer. The nation which has recognized absolute
+rights of man, and in their name assumed to shed blood, has taken
+upon itself the burden of a high destination, and must bear it, if
+not willingly, reluctantly, if not in joy and honor, then in shame and
+weeping.
+
+Our nation, by the early nobility of its faith and action, assumed
+such a debt to destiny, and now must pay it. It needed not to come in
+this shape: there need have been no horror of carnage,--no feast of
+vultures, and carnival of fiends,--no weeping of Rachel, mourning
+for her children, and refusing to be comforted, because they are not.
+There was required only a magnanimity in proceeding to sustain that of
+our beginning,--only a sympathy broad enough to take our little planet
+and all her human tribes in its arms, deep enough to go beneath
+the skin in which men differ, to the heart's blood in which they
+agree,--only pains and patience, faith and forbearance,--only a
+national obedience to that profound precept of Christianity which
+prescribes service to him that would be greatest, making the knowledge
+of the wise due to the ignorant, and the strength of the strong due
+to the weak. The costs of freedom would have been paid in the patient
+lifting up of a degraded race from the slough of servitude; and the
+nation would at the same time have avoided that slough of lava and
+fire wherein it is now ingulfed.
+
+It was not to be so. History is coarse; it gets on by gross feeding
+and fevers, not by delicacy of temperance and wisdom of regimen. Our
+debt was to be paid, not in a pure form, but mixed with the costs of
+unbelief, cowardice, avarice. Yet primarily it is the cost, not of
+meanness, but of magnanimity, that we are now paying,--not of a base
+skepticism, but of a noble faith. For, in truth, normal qualities and
+actions involve costs no less than vicious and abnormal. Such is the
+law of the world; and it is this law of the costs of worthiness, of
+knowledge and nobility, of all memorable being and doing, that I now
+desire to set forth. Having obtained the scope and power of the law,
+having considered it also as applying to individuals, we may proceed
+to exhibit its bearing upon the present struggle of our Republic.
+
+The general statement is this,--that whatever has a worth has also
+a cost. "The law of the universe," says a wise thinker, "is, Pay and
+take." If you desire silks of the mercer or supplies at the grocery,
+you, of course, pay money. Is it a harvest from the field that
+you seek? Tillage must be paid. Would you have the river toil in
+production of cloths for your raiment? Only pay the due modicum of
+knowledge, labor, and skill, and you shall bind its hand to your
+water-wheels, and turn all its prone strength into pliant service. Or
+perhaps you wish the comforts of a household. By payment of the
+due bearing of its burdens, you may hope to obtain it,--surely not
+otherwise. Do you ask that this house may be a true home, a treasury
+for wealth of the heart, a little heaven? Once more the word
+is _pay_,--pay your own heart's unselfish love, pay a generous
+trustfulness, a pure sympathy, a tender consideration, and a sweet
+firm-heartedness withal. And so, wherever there is a gaining, there
+is a warning,--wherever a well-being, a well-doing,--wherever a
+preciousness, a price of possession; and he who scants the payment
+stints the purchase; and he that will proffer nothing shall profit
+nothing; but he that freely and wisely gives shall receive as freely.
+
+But these _desiderata_ which I have named are all prices either of
+ordinary use, of comfort, or felicity; and it is generally understood
+that happiness is costly: but virtue? Virtue, so far from costing
+anything, is often supposed to be itself a price that you pay for
+happiness. It is told us that we shall be rewarded for our virtue;
+what moralistic commonplace is more common than this? But rewarded
+for your virtue you are not to be; you are to pay for it; at least,
+payment made, rather than received, is the principal fact. He who
+is honest for reward is a knave without reward. He who asks pay for
+telling truth has truth only on his tongue and a double lie in his
+heart. Do you think that the true artist strives to paint well that he
+may get money for his work? Or rather, is not his desire to pay money,
+to pay anything in reason, for the sake of excellence in his art? And,
+indeed, what is worthier than Worth? What fitter, therefore, to be
+paid for? And that payment is made, even under penal forms, every one
+may see. For what did Raleigh give his lofty head? For the privilege
+of being Raleigh, of being a man of great heart and a statesman of
+great mind, with a King James, a burlesque of all sovereignty, on the
+throne. For what did Socrates quaff the poison? For the privilege of
+that divine sincerity and penetration which characterized his life.
+For what did Kepler endure the last straits of poverty, his children
+crying for bread, while his own heart was pierced with their wailing?
+For the privilege--in his own noble words--"of reading God's thoughts
+after Him,"--God's thoughts written in stellar signs on the scroll of
+the skies. And Cicero and Thomas Cromwell, John Huss and John Knox,
+John Rogers and John Brown, and many another, high and low, famed and
+forgotten, must they not all make, as it were, penal payment for the
+privilege of being true men, truest among true? And again I say, that,
+if one knows something worthier than Worth, something more excellent
+than Excellence, then only does he know something fitter than they to
+be paid for.
+
+Payment _may_ assume a penal form: do not think this its only form.
+And to take the law at once out of the limitations which these
+examples suggest, let me show you that it is a law of healthy and
+unlamenting Nature. Look at the scale of existence, and you will see
+that for every step of advance in that scale payment is required.
+The animal is higher than the vegetable; the animal, accordingly, is
+subject to the sense of pain, the vegetable not; and among animals the
+pain may be keener as the organization is nobler. The susceptibility
+not only to pain, but to vital injury, observes the same gradation.
+A little girdling kills an oak; but some low fungus may be cut and
+troubled and trampled _ad libitum_, and it will not perish; and along
+the shores, farmers year after year pluck sea-weed from the rocks,
+and year after year it springs again lively as ever. Among the lowest
+orders of animals you shall find a creature that, if you cut it in
+two, straightway duplicates its existence and floats away twice as
+happy as before; but of the prick of a bodkin or the sting of a bee
+the noblest of men may die.
+
+In the animal body the organs make a draft from the general vigors
+of the system just in proportion to their dignity. The eye,--what
+an expensive boarder at the gastric tables is that! Considerable
+provinces of the brain have to be made over to its exclusive use;
+and it will be remembered that a single ounce of delicate, sensitive
+brain, full of mysterious and marvellous powers, requires more vital
+support than many pounds of common muscle. The powers of the eye are
+great; it has a right to cost much, and it does cost. Also we observe
+that in this organ there is the exceeding susceptibility to injury,
+which, as we have observed, invariably accompanies powers of a lofty
+grade.
+
+Noble senses cost much; noble susceptibilities cost vastly more.
+Compare oxen with men in respect to the amount of feeling and nervous
+wear and tear which they severally experience. The ox enjoys grass and
+sleep; he feels hunger and weariness, and he is wounded by that which
+goes through his hide. But upon the nerve of the man what an incessant
+thousandfold play! Out of the eyes of the passers-by pleasures and
+pains are rained upon him; a word, a look, a tone thrills his every
+fibre; the touch of a hand warms or chills the very marrow in his
+bones. Anticipation and memory, hope and regret, love and hate,
+ideal joy and sorrow and shame, ah, what troops of visitants are
+ever present with his soul, each and all, whether welcome guests or
+unwelcome, to be nourished from the resources of his bosom! And out of
+this high sensibility of man must come what innumerable stabs of quick
+agony, what slow, gasping hours of grief and pain, that to the cattle
+upon the hills are utterly unknown! But do you envy the ox his bovine
+peace? It is precisely that which makes him an ox, It is due to
+nothing but his insensibility,--by no means, as I take occasion to
+assure those poets who laud outward Nature and inferior creatures
+to the disparagement of man,--by no means due to composure and
+philosophy. The ox is no great hero, after all, for he will bellow at
+a thousandth part the sense of pain which from a Spartan child wrings
+no tear nor cry.
+
+Yes, it is precisely this sensibility which makes man human. Were he
+incapable of ideal joy and sorrow, he, too, were brute. It is through
+this delicacy of conscious relationship, it is through this openness
+to the finest impressions, that he can become an organ of supernal
+intelligence, that he is capable of social and celestial inspirations.
+High spiritual sensibility is the central condition of a noble and
+admirable life; it is the hinge on which turn and open to man the
+gates of his highest glory and purest peace. Yet for this he must pay
+away all that induration of brutes and boors which sheds off so many
+a wasting excitement and stinging chagrin, as the feathers of the
+water-fowl shed rain.
+
+In entering, therefore, upon any noble course of life, any generous
+and brave pursuit of excellence, understand, that, so far as ordinary
+coin is concerned, you are rather to pay, than to be paid, for your
+superiorities. Understand that the pursuit of excellence must indeed
+be brave to be prosperous,--that is, it is always in some way opposed
+and imperilled. Understand, that, with every step of spiritual
+elevation which you attain, some part of your audience and
+companionship will be left behind. Understand, that, if you carry
+lofty principles and philosophic intelligence into camps, these
+possessions will in general not be passed to your credit, but will be
+charged against you; and you must surpass your inferiors in their
+own kinds of virtue to regain what of popular regard these cost you.
+Understand, that, if you have a reverence for theoretical and absolute
+truth, less of common fortune will come to you in answer to equal
+business and professional ability than to those who do care for money,
+and do not care for truth. Are you a physician? Let me tell you that
+there is a possible excellence in your profession which will rather
+limit than increase your practice; yet that very excellence you must
+strive to attain, for your soul's life is concerned in your doing so.
+Are you a lawyer? Know that there is a depth and delicacy in the sense
+of justice, which will sometimes send clients from your office, and
+sometimes tie your tongue at the bar; yet, as you would preserve the
+majesty of your manhood, strive just for that unprofitable sense of
+justice,--unprofitable only because infinitely, rather than finitely,
+profitable. In a stormy and critical time, when much is ending
+and much beginning, and a great land is heaving and quivering with
+commingled agonies of dissolution and throes of new birth, are you a
+statesman of earnestness and insight, with your eye on the cardinal
+question of your epoch, its answer clearly in your heart, and your
+will irrevocably set to give it due enunciation and emphasis? Expect
+calumny and affected contempt from the base; expect alienation
+and misconstruction and undervaluing on the part of some who are
+honorable. Are you a woman rich in high aims, in noble sympathies and
+thrilling sensibilities, and, as must ever be the case with such, not
+too rich in a meet companionship? Expect loneliness, and wear it as
+a grace upon your brow; it is your laurel. Are you a true artist or
+thinker? Expect to go beyond popular appreciation; _go_ beyond it,
+or the highest appreciation you will not deserve. In fine, for all
+excellence expect and _seek_ to pay.
+
+No one ever held this law more steadily in view than Jesus; and when
+ardent young people came to him proposing pupilage, he was wont at
+once to bring it before their eyes. It was on such an occasion that he
+uttered the words, so simple and intense that they thrill to the touch
+like the string of a harp, "The foxes have holes, and the birds of the
+air have nests; but the Son of Man hath not where to lay his head."
+Of like suggestion his question of the king going to war, who first
+sitteth down and consulteth whether he be able, and of the man about
+to build a house, who begins by counting the cost.
+
+The cost,--question of this must arise; question of this must on all
+sides either be honestly met or dishonestly eluded. For observe, that
+attempt to escape payment for the purest values, no less than for
+the grossest, _is_ dishonest. If one seek to compass possession of
+ordinary goods without compensation, we at once apply the opprobrious
+term of _theft_ or _fraud_. Why does the same sort of attempt cease to
+be fraudulent when it is carried up to a higher degree and applied to
+possessions more precious? If he that evades the revenue law of the
+State be guilty of fraud, what of him who would import Nature's
+goods and pay no duties? For Nature has her own system of impost, and
+permits no smuggling. There was a tax on truth ere there was one on
+tea or on silver plate. Character, genius, high parts in history are
+all assessed upon. Nature lets out her houses and lands on liberal
+terms; but resorts to distraint, if her dues be not forthcoming. Be
+sure, therefore, that little success and little honor will wait upon
+any would-be thieving from God. He who attempts to purloin on this
+high scale has set all the wit of the universe at work to thwart him,
+and will certainly be worsted sorely in the end.
+
+The moment, therefore, that any man is found engaged in this business,
+how to estimate him is clear. Daniel O'Connell tried the experiment of
+being an heroic patriot and making money by it. It is conceded by
+his friends that he applied to his private uses, to sustaining the
+magnificence of his household, the rent-moneys sweated from the
+foreheads of Irish peasants. But, they say, he had sacrificed many
+ambitions in taking up the _rôle_ of a patriot; and he felt entitled
+to revenues as liberal as any indulgence of them could have procured
+him! The apology puts his case beyond all apology. He who--to employ
+the old phraseology--seeks to exact the same bribe of God that he
+might have obtained from the Devil is always the Devil's servant, no
+matter whose livery he wears. Had one often to apply the good word
+_patriot_ to such men, it would soon blister his mouth. I find, in
+fact, no vice so bad as this spurious virtue, no sinners so unsavory
+as these mock saints.
+
+To nations, also, this comprehensive law applies. Would you have
+a noble and orderly freedom? Buy it, and it is yours. "Liberty or
+death," cried eloquent Henry; and the speech is recited as bold and
+peculiar; but, by an enduring ordinance of Nature, the people that
+does not in its heart of hearts say, "Liberty or death," cannot have
+liberty. Many of us had learned to fancy that the stern tenure by
+which ancient communities held their civilization was now become an
+obsolete fact, and that without peril or sacrifice we might forever
+appropriate all that blesses nations; but by the iron throat of this
+war Providence is thundering down upon us the unalterable law, that
+man shall hold no ideal possession longer than he places all his lower
+treasures at its command.
+
+But there was a special form of cost, invited by the virtue of our
+national existence; and it is this in particular that we are now
+paying,--paying it, I am sorry to say, in the form of retribution
+because the nation declined to meet it otherwise. But the peculiarity
+of the case is, as has been affirmed, that it was chiefly the virtue
+and nobility of the nation which created this debt at the outset.
+
+And now what is the peculiar virtue and glory of this nation? Why,
+that its national existence is based upon a recognition of the
+absolute rights and duties of humanity. Theoretically this is our
+basis; practically there is a commixture; much of this cosmopolitan
+faith is mingled with much of confined self-regard. But the
+theoretical fact is the one here in point: since the question now
+is not of the national _un_faith or infidelity, but of the national
+faith. And beyond a question, the real faith of the nation, so far as
+it has one, is represented by its formal declaration, made sacred by
+the shedding of blood. Our belief really is not in the special
+right or privilege of Americans, but in the prerogative of man.
+This prerogative we may have succeeded well or ill in stating and
+interpreting; the fact, that our appeal is to this, alone concerns us
+here.
+
+Now this national attitude, so far as history informs me, is
+unprecedented. The true-born son of Albion, save as an exceptional
+culture enlarges his soul, believes religiously that God is an
+Englishman, and that the interests of England precede those of the
+universe. When, therefore, he sees anything done which depletes the
+pocket of England, it affects him with a sense of infidelity in those
+to whom this loss is due. England professes to have a _national_
+religion; she has, and in a deeper sense than is commonly meant.
+
+We will not disparage England overmuch; she has done good service in
+history. We will not boast of ourselves; the actual politics of this
+country have been, in no small part, base and infidel to a degree
+that is simply sickening. Nevertheless, it remains true that the
+fundamental idea of the State here represents a new phase of human
+history. Every European nationality had taken shape and character
+while yet our globe was not known to be a globe, while before the eyes
+of all lookers land and sea faded away into darkness and mystery; and
+it was not possible that common human sympathy should take into its
+arms a world of which it could not conceive. But a national spirit
+was here generated when the ocean had been crossed, when the earth had
+been rounded, when, too, Newton had, as it were, circumnavigated the
+solar system,--when, therefore, there could be, and must be, a new
+recognition of humanity. Our country, again, was peopled from the
+minorities of Europe, from those whom the spirit of the new time
+had touched, and taken away their content with old institutions,--a
+population restless, uncertain, yeasty, chaotic, it might be, full of
+the rawness of new conditions, mean and magnanimous by turns, as such
+people are wont, but all leavened more or less with a sentiment new in
+history,--all leavened with a kind of whole-world feeling, a sense
+of the oneness of humanity, and, as derived from this, a sense of
+absolute rights of man, of prerogatives belonging to human nature as
+such.
+
+The truth of all this has been brought under suspicion by the
+flatulent oratory of our Fourth-of-Julys; but truth it remains. Our
+nation did enunciate a grand idea never equally felt by any other. Our
+nation has said, and said with the sword in its right hand, "Every man
+born into this world has the right from God to make the most and best
+of his existence, and society is established only to further and guard
+this sacred right." We thus established a new scale of justice; we
+raised a demand for the individual which had not been so made before.
+Freedom and order were made one; both were identified with justice,
+simple, broad, equal, universal justice. The American idea, then, what
+is it? _The identification of politics with justice_, this it is. With
+justice, and this, too, not on a scale of conventional usage, but
+on the scale of natural right. That, as I read, is the American
+idea,--making politics moral by their unity with natural justice,
+justice world-old and world-wide.
+
+This conception--obscurely seen and felt, and mixed with the
+inevitable amount of folly and self-seeking, yet, after, all,
+this conception--our nation dared to stand up and announce, and to
+consecrate it by the shedding of blood, calling God and all good men
+to witness. The deed was grand; the hearts of men everywhere were more
+or less its accomplices; all the tides of history ran in its favor;
+kings, forgetting themselves into virtue and generosity, lent it
+good wishes or even good arms; it was successful; and on its primary
+success waited such prosperities as the world has seldom seen.
+
+But, because the deed was noble, great costs must needs attend it,
+attend it long. And first of all the cost of _applying our principle
+within our own borders_. For, when a place had been obtained for us
+among nations, we looked down, and, lo! at our feet the African--in
+chains. A benighted and submissive race, down-trodden and despised
+from of old, a race of outcasts, of Pariahs, covered with the shame of
+servitude, and held by the claim of that terrible talisman, the
+word _property_,--here it crouched at our feet, lifting its hands,
+imploring. Yes, America, here is your task now; never flinch nor
+hesitate, never begin to question now; thrust your right hand deep
+into your heart's treasury, bring forth its costliest, purest justice,
+and lay its immeasurable bounty into this sable palm, bind its
+blessing on this degraded brow. Ah, but America did falter and
+question. "How can I?" it said. "This is a Negro, a _Negro_! Besides,
+he is PROPERTY!" And so America looked up, determined to ignore
+the kneeling form. With pious blasphemy it said, "He is here
+providentially; God in His own good time will dispose of him"; as
+if God's hour for a good effect were not the earliest hour at
+which courage and labor can bring it about, not the latest to which
+indolence and infidelity can postpone it. Then it looked away across
+oceans to other continents, and began again the chant, "Man is man;
+natural right is sacred forever; and of politics the sole basis is
+universal justice." Joyfully it sang for a while, but soon there began
+to come up the clank of chains mingling with its chant, and the groans
+of oppressed men and violated women, and prayers to Heaven for another
+justice than this; and then the words of its chant grew bitter in the
+mouth of our nation, and a sickness came in its heart, and an evil
+blush mounted and stood on its brow; and at length a devil spoke in
+its bosom and said, "The negro has no rights that a white man is bound
+to respect"; and ere the words were fairly uttered, their meaning, as
+was indeed inevitable, changed to this,--"A Northern 'mudsill' has no
+rights that a Southern gentleman is bound to respect"; and soon guns
+were heard booming about Sumter, and a new chapter in our history and
+in the world's history began.
+
+Our nation refused allegiance to its own principles, refused to pay
+the lawful costs of its virtue and nobility; therefore it is sued in
+the courts of destiny, and the case is this day on trial.
+
+The case is plain, the logic clear. Natural right is sacred, or it is
+not. If it is, the negro is lawfully free; if it is not, you may be
+lawfully a slave. Just how all this stands in the Constitution of the
+United States I do not presume to say. Other heads, whose business it
+is, must attend to that. Every man to his vocation. I speak from the
+stand-point of philosophy, not of politics; I attend to the logic of
+history, the logic of destiny, according to which, of course, final
+judgment will be rendered. It is not exactly to be supposed that
+the statute of any nation makes grass green, or establishes the
+relationship between cause and effect. The laws of the world are
+considerably older than our calendar, and therefore date yet more
+considerably beyond the year 1789. And by the laws of the world, by
+the eternal relationship between cause and effect, it stands enacted
+beyond repeal, and graven upon somewhat more durable than marble or
+brass, that the destiny of this nation for more than one century to
+come hinges upon its justice to that outcast race,--outcast, but not
+henceforth to be cast out by us, save to the utter casting down of
+ourselves. Once it might have been otherwise; now we have made it
+so. Justice to the African is salvation to the white man upon this
+continent. Oh, my America, you must not, cannot, shall not be blind
+to this fact! America, deeper in my love and higher in my esteem than
+ever before, newly illustrated in worth, newly proven to be capable
+still, in some directions, of exceeding magnanimity, open your eyes
+that your feet may have guidance, now when there is such need! Open
+your eyes to see, that, if you deliberately deny justice and human
+recognition to one innocent soul in all your borders, you stab at your
+own existence; for, in violating the unity of humanity, you break the
+principle that makes you a nation and alive. Give justice to black
+and white, recognize man as man; or the constituting idea, the vital
+faith, the crystallizing principle of the nation perishes, and the
+whole disintegrates, falls into dust.
+
+I invite the attention of conservative men to the fact that in this
+due paying of costs lies the true conservation. I invite them to
+observe, that, as every living body has a principle which makes it
+alive, makes it a unit, harmonizing the action of its members,--as
+every crystal has a unitary law, which commands the arrangement of its
+particles, the number and arrangement of its faces and angles,--so
+it is with every orderly or living state. To this also there is a
+central, clarifying, unifying faith. Without this you may collect
+hordes into the brief, brutal empire of a Chingis Khan or Tamerlane;
+but you can have no firm, free, orderly, inspiring national life.
+
+Whenever and wherever in history this central condition of national
+existence has been destroyed, there a nation has fallen into chaos,
+into imbecility, losing all power to produce genius, to generate able
+souls, to sustain the trust of men in each other, or to support any of
+the conditions of social health and order. Even advances in the right
+line of progress have to be made slowly, gradually, lest the shock of
+newness be too great, and break off a people from the traditions in
+which its faith is embodied; but a mere recoil, a mere denial and
+destruction of its centralizing principle, is the last and utmost
+calamity which can befall any nation.
+
+This is no fine-spun doctrine, fit for parlors and lecture-rooms, but
+not for counting-rooms and congressional halls. It is solid, durable
+fact. History is full of it; and he is a mere mole, and blinder than
+midnight, who cannot perceive it. The spectacle of nations falling
+into sudden, chronic, careless imbecility is frequent and glaring
+enough for even wilfulness to see; and the central secret of this
+sad phenomenon, so I am _sure_, has been suggested here. When the
+socializing faith of a nation has perished, the alternative for
+it becomes this, that it can be stable only as it is stagnant, and
+vigorous only as it is lawless.
+
+Of this I am sure; but whether Bullion Street can be willing to
+understand it I am not so sure. Yet if it cannot, or some one in its
+behalf, grass will grow there. And why should it refuse heed? Who is
+more concerned? Does Bullion Street desire chaos? Does it wish that
+the pith should be taken out of every statute, and the chief value
+from every piece of property? If not, its course is clear. This nation
+has a vital faith,--or had one,--well grounded in its traditions.
+Conserve this; or, if it has been impaired, renew its vigor. This
+faith is our one sole pledge of order, of peace, of growth, of all
+that we prize in the present, or hope for the future. That it is
+a noble faith, new in its breadth, its comprehension and
+magnanimity,--this would seem in my eyes rather to enhance than
+diminish the importance of its conservation. Yet the only argument
+against it is, that it is generous, broad, inspiring; and the only
+appeal in opposition to it must be made to the coldness of skepticism,
+the suicidal miserliness of egotism, or the folly and fatuity of
+ignorance.
+
+Our nation has a political faith. Will you, conservative men, conserve
+this, and so regain and multiply the blessing it has already brought?
+or will you destroy it, and wait till, through at least a century
+of tossing and tumult, another, and that of less value, is grown? A
+faith, a crystallizing principle for many millions of people is not
+grown in a day; if it can be grown in a century is problematical. The
+fact, and the choice, are before you.
+
+Our nation _had_ a faith which it cherished with sincerity and
+sureness. If half the nation has fallen away from this,--if half the
+remaining moiety is doubtful, skeptical about it,--if, therefore,
+we are already a house divided against itself and tottering to its
+fall,--to what is all due? Simply to the fact that no nation can long
+unsay its central principle, and yet preserve it in faithfulness and
+power,--that no nation can long preach the sanctity of natural right,
+the venerableness of man's nature, and the identity of pure justice
+with political interest, from an auction-block on which men and
+maidens are sold,--that, in fine, a nation cannot continue long with
+impunity to play within its own borders the part both of Gessler and
+Tell, both of Washington and Benedict Arnold, both of Christ and of
+him that betrayed him.
+
+We must choose. For our national faith we must make honest payment,
+so conserving it, and with it all for which nations may hope; or else,
+refusing to meet these costs, we must suffer the nation's soul to
+perish, and in the imbecility, the chaos, and shame that will follow,
+suffer therewith all that nations may lawfully fear.
+
+What good omens, then, attend our time, now when the first officer of
+the land has put the trumpet to his mouth and blown round the world an
+intimation that, to the extent of the nation's power, these costs will
+begin to be paid, this true conservation to be practised! The work
+is not yet done; and the late elections betoken too much of moral
+debility in the people. But my trust continues firm. The work will be
+done,--at least, so far as we are responsible for its doing. And then!
+Then our shame, our misery, our deadly sickness will be taken away;
+no more that poison in our politics; no more that degradation in our
+commercial relations; no more that careful toning down of sentiment
+to low levels, that it may harmonize with low conditions; no more that
+need to shun the company of all healthful and heroic thoughts, such
+as are fit, indeed, to brace the sinews of a sincere social order, but
+sure to crack the sinews of a feeble and faithless conventionalism.
+Base men there will yet be, and therefore base politics; but when once
+our nation has paid the debt it owes to itself and the human race,
+when once it has got out of its blood the venom of this great
+injustice, it will, it must, arise beautiful in its young strength,
+noble in its new-consecrated faith, and stride away with a generous
+and achieving pace upon the great highways of historical progress.
+Other costs will come, if we are worthy; other lessons there will be
+to learn. I anticipate a place for brave and wise restrictions,--for
+I am no Red Republican,--as well as for brave and generous expansions.
+Lessons to learn, errors to unlearn, there will surely be; tasks to
+attempt, and disciplines to practise; but once place the nation in the
+condition of _health_, once get it at one with its own heart, once get
+it out of these aimless eddies into clear sea, out of these accursed
+"doldrums," (as the sailors phrase it,) this commixture of broiling
+calm and sky-bursting thunder-gust, into the great trade-winds of
+natural tendency that are so near at hand,--and I can trust it to meet
+all future emergency. All the freshest blood of the world is flowing
+hither: we have but to wed this with the life-blood of the universe,
+with eternal truth and justice, and God has in store no blessing for
+noblest nations that will not be secured for ours.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE CHASSEURS À PIED.
+
+
+Among the most celebrated corps of the French army, one of the most
+conspicuous and remarkable is that peculiar body of troops to which
+has been given the name of _Chasseurs à Pied_, or _Foot-Chasseurs_,
+to distinguish it from an organization of mounted men in the same
+service, uniformed and trained on similar principles. The Chasseurs
+à Pied have not attained the same romantic renown as that acquired
+by their brethren and rivals in arms, the Zouaves, but, nevertheless,
+they have had an exceedingly brilliant career in the late wars
+and conquests of France. They possess their own characteristics of
+originality, too, and are, in many respects, one of the most efficient
+and formidable forces in existence.
+
+In order to convey a clear and correct idea of the new principles
+adopted in the organization and equipment of the Chasseurs, and to
+furnish our readers with some facts that may be interesting to them
+as historical students, and most useful to such among them as are
+connected with or may have any aspiration for military life, we must
+beg them to go back with us, for a moment, to the very period of the
+invention of gunpowder. It would be out of the question, of course, to
+attempt, in these pages, a description of all the curious weapons
+that were at first employed under the name of fire-arms. We will only
+remark that such weapons were, despite the anathemas of Bayard and
+the sarcasms of Ariosto, very much used as early as the middle of the
+sixteenth century, and played an important part on the battle-fields
+of that epoch.
+
+To the Spaniards belongs the credit of having rendered the use of
+fire-arms more easy, more regular, and more general among the nations.
+For more than a hundred years the Spaniards were the very masters
+of the art of war. Their power had begun to decline, but they still
+retained their military superiority; and from the Battle of Ceresole,
+won by the Count of Enghien in 1544, down to the memorable victory of
+Rocroy, gained in 1643 by a hero of the same race and the same name,
+they had the upper-hand in all pitched engagements. Their generals
+were the very best and most thoroughly instructed, and formed a real
+school; they, too, were the only officers who practised strategy.
+Their organization was better than any other, and their celebrated
+_tercios_ were the very model of all regiments. Their armament was
+likewise superior, as they had adopted the musket, which was the
+first fire-arm that a man could handle with any facility, load with
+rapidity, and aim with any precision. Each of their _tercios_ or
+battalions contained a regulated proportion of these musketeers, and
+the number was large, compared to the whole mass of troops.
+
+The excellent results attained by the Spaniards, in the more perfect
+organization and equipment of their infantry, did not escape the
+attention of the French officers; and one of them especially, the Duke
+Francis de Guise, endeavored to turn his observations to good account.
+It is to him that we are indebted for the first rough sketch of
+regimental organization modelled upon that of the _tercios_, and, in
+more than one encounter with the Huguenots, the numbers of thoroughly
+skilled arquebuse-men embodied in the old French bands in Picardy and
+Piedmont secured advantages to the Catholic armies. In the opposite
+party, a young general who was destined to become a great king,
+endowed with that creative instinct, that genius which is as readily
+applicable to the science of government as to that of war, and which,
+when tempered with good sense, may bestow glory and happiness upon
+whole nations, Henry IV., had taken particular pains to increase the
+number and the efficiency of his arquebuse-men, and frequently managed
+to employ them in ways as novel as they were successful. At the Battle
+of Coutras, he distributed them in groups of twenty-five, in the midst
+of his squadrons of cavalry, so that, when the royal _gendarmerie_
+advanced to charge the latter, they were suddenly received with
+murderous volleys by these arquebuse-men _of the spur_, as they were
+called, owing to their combination with the cavalry, and the shock
+they thus encountered gave victory to the Protestants. Henry IV. went
+even too far with his passion for fire-arms. He increased their number
+and their use among cavalry so extravagantly, that the latter arm was
+perverted from its proper object. The cavalry, for a long time, forgot
+that their strength lay in the points of their sabres, in the dash of
+the men, and the speed of their horses.
+
+Most of the great captains of an early day thus signalized their
+progress by some improvement in the equipment of their infantry. One
+of the most formidable enemies of Spanish power, Maurice of Nassau,
+a skilful engineer and tactician, was the first to array infantry in
+such a manner as to combine the simultaneous use of the musket and the
+pike. Before his time, fire-arms had been used only for skirmishing
+service; he commenced to use them in line. This reform was, however,
+only foreshadowed, as it were, by the Dutch General; it was reserved
+for Gustavus Adolphus to complete it. While he was executing a series
+of military operations such as the world had not beheld since the days
+of Cæsar, he was also creating a movable artillery, and giving to the
+fire of his infantry an efficacy which had not been attained before.
+For the heavy machines of war which were drawn by oxen to the field
+of battle, and which remained there motionless and paralyzed by the
+slightest movements of the contending armies, he substituted light
+cannon drawn by horses and following up all the manoeuvres of either
+cavalry or foot. He had found the infantry formed in dense battalions.
+His system arranged it in long continuous lines in which each rank
+of musketeers was sustained by several ranks of pikemen, so that his
+array, thus distributed, should present to the enemy a front bristling
+with steel, while, at the same time, it could cover a large space of
+ground with its discharge of lead. Attentive to all kinds of detail,
+he also gave his soldiers the cartouch-box and knapsack instead of
+the cumbersome apparatus to which they had been accustomed. In fact,
+Gustavus Adolphus was the founder of the modern science of battle. In
+strategy and the grand combinations of warfare, he was the disciple
+and rival of the ancient masters; for, even if this "divine portion"
+of the military art be inaccessible to the vast number of its
+votaries, and if history can easily enumerate those who were capable
+of comprehending it, and, more especially, of applying it, its rules
+and principles have, nevertheless, been by no means the same in all
+ages. On the contrary, the invention of fire-arms demanded an entirely
+new system of tactics, and this the Swedish hero introduced.
+
+The example set by Gustavus was not, however, very rapidly followed,
+and, although some slight improvements were introduced by French
+officers during the seventeenth century, it was not until the time
+of Louis XIV. that the reforms started by Maurice of Nassau, and so
+successfully continued by the Swedish army, began to attain their
+consummation. The progress made in that direction was due to Vauban,
+whose eminent genius had mastered every question and every branch of
+study so completely, that, when applied to on any subject connected
+with politics or war, his opinion was always clear and correct.
+The very numerous essays and sketches from his hand which are found
+deposited in the fortresses and in the archives of France all reveal
+some flash of genius, and even his wildest speculations bear the stamp
+of his high intellect and excellent heart. Engineering science was
+carried by him to such a degree of perfection that it has made but few
+advances since his time; and it was Vauban who induced Louis XIV. to
+replace the pike and the musket with a weapon which should be, at
+one and the same time, an instrument for both firing and thrusting,
+namely, the bayonet-gun. The Royal Fusileer Regiment, since called the
+Royal Artillery, was the first one armed with this weapon, (in
+1670,) and in 1703 the whole French army finally gave up the pike.
+Notwithstanding some reverses sustained by the infantry thus armed,
+and notwithstanding the disapproval of Puységur and others, this gun
+was soon adopted by all Europe, and the success of the great Frederick
+put a conclusive indorsement on this new style of weapon. Frederick
+had taken up and perfected the ideas of Gustavus Adolphus; and he now
+laid down certain rules for the formation and manoeuvring of infantry,
+which are still followed at this day; and since that time, no one has
+disputed the fact that the strength of foot-troops lies in their guns
+and their legs.
+
+Our present firelock differs from the article used during the
+Seven Years' War only in its more careful construction and some
+modifications of detail. The most important of these relates to the
+more rapid explosion of the charge. In 1840 the old flint-locks were
+generally replaced by the percussion-lock, which is simpler, is
+less exposed to the effects of dampness, and more quickly and surely
+ignites the powder. Even the ordinary regulation-musket with its
+bayonet was spoken of by Napoleon in his time as "the best engine of
+warfare ever invented by man." Since the day of the Great Emperor, and
+even during the reign of the present Napoleon, continued improvements
+have been made in the character of the weapon used by the French
+infantry. The weight, length, correctness of aim, durability, and
+handiness of the gun have all been carefully examined and modified, to
+the advantage of the soldier, until, finally, we have a weapon which
+combines wonderful qualities of lightness, strength, correctness of
+equipoise, ease and rapidity of loading, with perfect adaptability as
+a combination of the lance, pike, and sword, when it has ceased to be
+a fire-arm.
+
+We have not here the space to enter upon a disquisition concerning
+these progressive changes; but suffice it to say that nearly all the
+peculiar styles of fire-arms were well known at an early period,
+and that the rifling, etc., of guns and cannon, with the other
+modifications now adopted, are merely the development and consummation
+of old ideas. For instance, the rifled arquebuse was known and used
+at the close of the fifteenth century, and, although the rifled musket
+was not put in general use by the French infantry, from the fact that
+its reduced length and the greater complication of movements required
+in loading and discharging it deprived it of other advantages when
+in the hands of troops of the line, still it was adopted in a certain
+proportion in some branches of the French service.
+
+As early as the middle of the seventeenth century, some corps of light
+cavalry called _Carabins_ were armed with the short rifle-musket, and
+hence the derivation of the term _carabines_ applied to the weapon.
+These "carabines" were also very promptly adopted by hunters and
+sportsmen everywhere. The Swiss and the Tyrolese employed them in
+chasing the chamois among their mountains, and practised their skill
+in the use of them at general shooting-matches, which to this very day
+are celebrated as national festivals. The Austrian Government was the
+first to profit by this preference on the part of certain populations
+for accurate fire-arms, and at once proceeded to organize battalions
+of Tyrolese _Chasseurs_, or _Huntsmen_,--to give the meaning of the
+French word. These Chasseurs were applied in the Austrian service as
+light troops, and so great was their efficiency against the Prussians
+that Frederick the Great was compelled, in his turn, to organize a
+battalion of Chasseur sharp-shooters. France followed suit, in the
+course of the eighteenth century, and called into existence various
+corps of the same description, under different names. These, however,
+were but short-lived, although some of them, for instance, the Grassin
+Legion, acquired quite a reputation.
+
+Finally came the French Revolution. The troops of the Republic were
+more remarkable for courage and enthusiasm than for tactics and drill.
+They usually attacked as skirmishers,--a system which may be employed
+successfully by even the most regularly disciplined armies, but which
+is sometimes more especially useful to raw troops, because it
+gives the private soldier an opportunity to compensate by personal
+intelligence for the lack of thorough instruction. Struck by the
+aptitude of the French recruits for that kind of fighting, the
+Convention, in reorganizing the army, decreed the formation of some
+half-brigades of light infantry. The picked men were to be armed with
+the new weapon, and received the name of _Carabiniers_. The carabine
+of 1793 is the first specimen of that kind of arm which was regularly
+employed in France.
+
+Subsequently, owing to many practical defects, when Napoleon
+reorganized the equipment of the French armies, the carabine was
+dropped from the service, although the regiments of light infantry
+were retained, and their picked companies preserved the title of
+Carabiniers. In the Imperial Guard, too, there were companies of
+Skirmishers, Flankers, and Chasseurs, but neither one of these corps
+was distinguished by any particular style of arms or drill. The
+Emperor's wish was to have the armament and training of all his
+infantry uniform, so that all the regiments should be equally adapted
+to the service of troops of the line or light troops. Finally, to
+carry out his design with greater ease, he formed all the men who were
+more active and agile than the rest, or whose low stature prevented
+them from becoming Grenadiers, into companies of Voltigeurs,--and this
+was one of his finest military creations.
+
+However, notwithstanding the correctness of Napoleon's views, as a
+general principle, the thousand and one uses of a corps of picked
+marksmen as light troops were so universally admitted that the
+different nations of Europe continued and even augmented that branch
+of their military service. Under different names they were found not
+only in the armies of England, Austria, Prussia, and Russia, but also
+under the banners of the secondary powers, such as Sweden, Piedmont,
+and Switzerland.
+
+After the disasters of 1815, the reorganization of the French army
+was confided to Marshal Gouvion de St. Cyr, who united to sincere
+patriotism every qualification of an able general. He gave to the
+French service the basis of its present success, his suggestions
+having, of course, been perfected and expanded in the mean time. Among
+other things, he prescribed the formation of battalions of Chasseurs,
+to be organized in legions, side by side with the infantry of
+the line, but with their own special equipment. This plan was not
+efficiently executed, and the Chasseur battalions shared the fate
+of the Department Legions of France, and were merged in the existing
+regiments.
+
+The project, in a different form, was revived by Marshal Soult, who,
+as Minister of War, in 1833, succeeded in securing the passage of
+a royal ordinance prescribing the formation of companies of
+sharp-shooters "armed with carabines and uniformed in a manner
+befitting their special service." These companies were to be united
+subsequently into battalions, and were to undergo a particular course
+of training. Although the ordinance was not immediately carried
+into execution, the impulse had been given, and erelong successful
+improvements in the rifle having been effected by an old officer of
+the Royal Guard, named Delvigne, and a certain Colonel Poncharra,
+inspector of the manufacture of arms, the Duke of Orléans brought
+about the formation of a company of marksmen peculiarly trained and
+equipped, and provided with the so-called Delvigne-Poncharra carabine.
+This company was placed in garrison at Vincennes, where, under skilful
+and popular commanders, it gave such satisfaction that it was finally
+decided to try the experiment on a larger scale, and a decree of
+November 14, 1838, created a battalion of the same character.
+
+This corps, then, and even now, known to the people as the
+_Tirailleurs de Vincennes_, wore a uniform very similar to that of the
+present Chasseurs, but quite different from that of the infantry of
+the period. Instead of the stiff accoutrements and heavy headgear of
+the latter, they assumed a frock, wide and roomy pantaloons, and a
+light military shako. The double folds of white buckskin, which were
+very fine to look at, to be sure, but which oppressed the lungs and
+offered a conspicuous mark to the enemy, were discarded; the sabre was
+no longer allowed to dangle between the legs of the soldier and impede
+his movements; while the necessary munitions were carried in a manner
+more convenient and better adapted to their preservation. The arms
+consisted of a carabine, and a long, solid, sharpened appendage to
+it, termed the _sword-bayonet_. This latter weapon was provided with
+a hilt, and could be used for both cut and thrust, with considerable
+effect, while, affixed to the end of the carabine, it furnished a most
+formidable pike.
+
+Although the Delvigne-Poncharra carabine had great advantages, it
+still did not command the range of the coarser and heavier muskets of
+the line, and, in order to make up for this in some degree, the most
+robust and skilful men of the corps were armed with a heavier gun,
+constructed on the same principles, but capable of throwing a heavier
+charge with precision, to greater distances. The proportion of men so
+armed was one-eighth of the battalion. The use of these two
+different calibres of fire-arms had some drawbacks, but they were
+counterbalanced by some curious advantages. For instance, the
+battalion could keep up a steady fire at ordinary distances, while,
+at the same moment, the men armed with the heavy carabines, or
+_Carabiniers_, as they were distinctively called, even within their
+own battalion, could reach the enemy at points where he deemed himself
+beyond the range of the force he saw in front of him. United in
+groups, the Carabiniers could thus produce severe effect, and actually
+formed a sort of _hand artillery_,--to use an expression often
+employed concerning them.
+
+The Tirailleurs thus composed were, owing to the shortness of their
+carabines, drawn up in two ranks, instead of in the regimental style
+of three ranks. They manoeuvred in line, like all other infantry
+battalions, but, in addition to the ordinary drill, were trained in
+gymnastics and double-quick evolutions, as well as in fencing with the
+bayonet, a special course of sharp-shooting, and what was termed _the
+new Tirailleur drill_.
+
+Gymnastics have always been encouraged in the French army, and, when
+not carried to excess, they are of the greatest use, particularly in
+developing the strength of young men, giving suppleness and confidence
+to raw recruits, and facilitating their manoeuvres. Running was
+naturally a portion of these exercises, although it was rarely
+permitted in the evolutions of French troops, since it was found to
+produce much disorder. The Tirailleurs were so trained, however, that
+they could move, with all their accoutrements, in ranks, without noise
+and without confusion, at a cadenced and measured running step termed
+the _pas gymnastique_, or gymnastic step,--and they could use it
+even during complicated field-manoeuvres. This was a most excellent
+innovation, for it enabled infantry to pass rapidly to any important
+point, and to execute many evolutions with the promptitude in some
+degree which cavalry obtains from the combination of the two gaits.
+
+The bayonet-exercise was very acceptable to the men, for it augmented
+their confidence in their weapons and their skill in handling them.
+
+The target or sharp-shooting drill was much the most complicated and
+difficult, as the troops were taught to fire when kneeling and lying
+on the ground, and to avail themselves of the slightest favoring
+circumstances of the soil. The rules and methods adopted in this
+branch of the drill have been the subject of profound and careful
+study, and are exceedingly ingenious.
+
+The approval of these measures by the French Government was such,
+that, by a decree of August 28th, 1839, the merely temporary
+organization of the Tirailleurs was made permanent and separate, and
+the corps was sent to camp at Fontainebleau. There, the agility of
+the men, their neat and convenient uniforms and equipments, and their
+rapid and orderly evolutions struck every one who saw them. When, at
+the close of their period of encampment, the King was passing them in
+review as a special compliment, he warmly asked Marshal Soult what
+he thought of the new corps. The Marshal, in replying, emphatically
+expressed the wish that His Majesty had thirty such battalions instead
+of only one.
+
+However, the new organization found some opponents, and many urgent
+arguments were adduced to prevent its extension. In order to put all
+these to the test, it was finally determined to submit the Tirailleurs
+to the ordeal of actual warfare; and they were speedily shipped to
+Africa, where it was quickly discovered that their gymnastic training
+had so prepared them that they easily became inured to the fatigues
+and privations of campaigning life. Their heavy carabines succeeded
+admirably, and the skill of their marksmen--among others, of a certain
+Sergeant Pistouley--was the theme of universal praise.
+
+The Tirailleurs were now brigaded with the Zouaves, and erelong had
+shared glorious laurels with those celebrated troops.
+
+Finally, in 1840, the dangers that seemed to be accumulating over
+France on all sides assumed so dark a form that the patriotism of the
+whole nation was aroused, and, in the midst of the general outpouring
+of men and means, the Duke of Orléans was authorized to form no less
+than ten battalions of Chasseurs.
+
+The Duke set himself about this important task with all the zeal that
+had characterized his first effort to create the organization, and
+all the erudition he had gleaned from years of military study and
+research. In the first place, he abandoned the title of Tirailleurs,
+as being not sufficiently distinctive, and adopted that of Chasseurs à
+Pied, or Foot-Chasseurs. The organization by battalions was retained,
+and the one formed two years before at Vincennes was designated as the
+First Battalion, and recalled from Africa to St. Omer as a model for
+the other nine that were to be organized. St. Omer offered extensive
+barracks, a vast field suitable to military exercise, and, in fine,
+all the establishments requisite for a large concourse of troops. The
+ranks were soon filled with picked men from all sides, and ardent,
+ambitious officers from every corps of the army sought commands. Among
+the latter we may mention a certain Captain, since Marshal de M'Mahon,
+who was put at the head of the Tenth Battalion.
+
+Under the eyes of the Prince Royal, and in accordance with a series
+of regulations drawn up by him with the greatest care, and constantly
+modified to suit circumstances, the battalions were drilled and
+trained assiduously in all the walks of their profession connected
+with their own destined service. Every branch of their military life
+was illustrated by their exercises, and even the officers went through
+a thorough course of special instruction under accomplished tutors,
+who were also officers of peculiar ability and experience. While
+the Duke of Orléans, with the distinguished General Rostolan and two
+picked lieutenant-colonels, remained at St. Omer in charge of the
+growing force, another lieutenant-colonel was intrusted with the task
+of training subordinates to serve as teachers in sharp-shooting, and
+for this purpose a detachment was assembled at Vincennes, consisting
+of ten officers and a number of subalterns who had attracted attention
+by their particular aptitude. These, after having been thoroughly
+instructed in the manufacture of small arms, the preparation of
+munitions, and the rules and practice of sharp-shooting, were sent to
+St. Omer to furnish the new battalions with the officers who were to
+form part of the permanent organization. The weapon selected was an
+improvement upon the former carabines of the Tirailleurs; and while
+the old proportion, to wit, the eighth part of each battalion, were
+armed with guns of longer range, and styled distinctively Carabiniers,
+these were set apart as the picked company of each battalion. The
+Duke, taking up his residence at St. Omer, attended in person to all
+that was going forward; and so constant were his exertions, and so
+warm the zeal of those who assisted the enterprise, that in a few
+months all the battalions were equipped, armed, and well drilled.
+
+One fine spring morning,--it was in May, 1841,--a long column of
+troops entered Paris with a celerity hitherto unknown. There was no
+false glitter, no tinsel; everything was neat and martial, with bugles
+for their only music, and a uniform that was sombre, indeed, but of
+such harmonious simplicity as to be by no means devoid of elegance.
+This column consisted of the Chasseurs, coming to receive their
+standard from the hands of Louis Philippe, and speeding through the
+streets with their _gymnastic step_. On the very next day, as though
+to signalize the serious and entirely military character of the
+organization, four of these battalions were sent off to Africa,
+and the remaining six posted at the different leading fortresses of
+France, where the collections of artillery, etc., enabled them to
+proceed with the perfect development of their training.
+
+It was only a year later, when the Duke of Orléans was snatched away,
+on the very eve of some crowning experiments he was about to make in
+illustration of the full uses and capacities of this force, that it
+received the title of Chasseurs d'Orléans, which the modesty of
+its founder would not tolerate during his lifetime. This name they
+gallantly bore through the combats that marked their novitiate in
+Africa, where it was at once found that the complete preparation of
+both officers and men made victory comparatively easy for them. The
+deadly precision of their aim struck terror into the Arabs, and, as
+early as 1842, the splendid behavior of the Sixth Battalion in the
+bloody fights of the Oued Foddah at once ranged the Chasseurs among
+the finest troops in Africa. To attempt to follow them step by step
+in their career would be idle in the space we have here allotted to
+ourselves. We shall therefore cite merely a few instances where their
+courage and efficiency shone with peculiar lustre.
+
+In the course of the year 1845, an impostor, playing upon the
+credulity of the Arabs, and artfully availing himself of the
+organization ready furnished by the religious sect to which he
+belonged, succeeded in bringing about a revolt of a great portion of
+the tribes in Algiers and Oran. He went by the title of "Master of the
+Hour," a sort of Messiah who had been long expected in that region.
+But he was more generally known as Bou-Maza, or _The Father with the
+She-Goat_, from the fact that a she-goat was his customary companion,
+and was supposed by the populace to serve him as a medium of
+communication with the supernatural Powers. This man exhibited a great
+deal of skill and audacity. His activity was so extraordinary, and
+he had been seen at so many different points at almost the same time,
+that his very existence was at first doubted, and many supposed him to
+be a myth. At one time it was thought that the insurrection had been
+quelled, as a chief calling himself Bou-Maza had been captured and
+shot, when, suddenly, the real leader reappeared among the Flittas,
+one of the most warlike tribes of Algeria, and living in a region very
+difficult of access. Against these and the Prophet, General Bourjolly,
+the French commander, marched at once, but unfortunately with very
+inadequate force. A terrible combat ensued, the Fourth Regiment of the
+Chasseurs d'Afrique and the Ninth Battalion of the Chasseurs d'Orléans
+having to sustain the brunt of it. Both these corps performed
+prodigies of valor, and it was worth while to hear the men of
+each reciprocally narrating the glory and the peril of their
+comrades,--these telling by what noble exploits the mounted Chasseurs
+(d'Afrique) had saved the remains of Lieutenant-Colonel Berthier, and
+the others describing the Chasseurs à Pied, how they stood immovable,
+although without cartridges, around the body of their commander,
+Clère, with their terrible sword-bayonets bloody to the hilt!
+
+On almost the same day, the Eighth Battalion succumbed to a frightful
+catastrophe. At a period of supposed tranquillity, the Souhalia
+tribe, who had been steadfast allies of the French, were unexpectedly
+attacked by Abd-el-Kader at the head of an overwhelming force.
+Lieutenant-Colonel Montagnac, with only sixty-two horsemen of the
+Second Hussars and three hundred and fifty men of the Eighth Chasseurs
+d'Orléans, hurried to the rescue. He was repeatedly warned of the
+danger, but, despite all that could be said, he dashed at the whole
+force of Abd-el-Kader. At the very first discharge, Montagnac fell
+mortally wounded, and in a few moments all the horses and nearly all
+the men were disabled. Captain Cognord, of the Second Hussars, rallied
+the survivors, and this little handful of heroes, huddled together
+upon a hillock, fought like tigers, until their ammunition was
+exhausted. The Arabs then closed in upon the group, which had become
+motionless and silent, and, to use the expressive language of an
+eye-witness, "felled them to the earth as they would overturn a wall."
+The enemy found none remaining but the dead, or those who were
+so badly wounded that they gave no sign of life. Before expiring,
+Montagnac had summoned to his aid a small detachment he had left in
+reserve. The latter, on its approach, was immediately surrounded, and
+perished to the very last man. There was now surviving of the whole
+French force only the Carabinier company of the Eighth Chasseurs, upon
+whom the Arabs rushed with fury, from every side. After a resistance
+of almost fabulous heroism, during which the flag of the company was
+shot away in shreds, and the Carabiniers cut their bullets into
+six and eight pieces so as to prolong their defence, every volley
+decimating the foe, this little band of seventy men, encumbered with
+ten wounded, succeeded in wearying and disheartening the Emir to such
+an extent that he determined to abandon the direct assault which was
+costing him so dearly, and to surround the French detachment in the
+ruined building which served them for a refuge, and so starve them
+out. Captain Dutertre, Adjutant of the Eighth, who had been captured
+by the Arabs in the early part of the action, was sent forward by the
+enemy toward his old comrades. For a moment the firing ceased, and
+the Captain shouted so that all could hear him,--"Chasseurs, they have
+sworn to behead me, if you do not lay down your arms; and I say to
+you, Die, rather than surrender one single man!"
+
+The Captain was instantly sabred, and the conflict recommenced. The
+same summons was repeated twice afterwards, and twice failed, when,
+finally, the firing ceased, and the Arabs bivouacked around their
+prey. Every possible approach was closed and guarded, and, thus caged
+in, the Chasseurs remained for three nights and days without food or
+drink. At length, by a sudden and desperate dash, on the morning
+of September 20th, the seventy heroes, bearing their ten wounded
+comrades, succeeded in breaking through the line of Arab sentinels,
+and escaped to a neighboring chain of hills. Thither they were pursued
+by their wild foemen, who, although infuriated at the daring and
+success of this sally, had a sufficient respect for the heavy
+carabines of the French, and merely hovered closely on their rear,
+awaiting some favorable opportunity to dash in upon them. This moment
+soon came. The French soldiers, no longer able to withstand the
+torments of thirst, descending from the hills, in spite of the
+entreaties of their officers, dashed into a neighboring stream to cool
+their burning lips. The instant of doom had come, and, in less time
+than it takes to recite the narrative, all but twelve of the little
+band were massacred by the exulting Arabs. The twelve escaped to
+Djemaa only after terrible privations and sufferings.
+
+We might readily fill a volume with episodes equally glorious and
+equally gloomy in the career of the Chasseurs. They were in nearly
+all the brilliant actions of the ensuing Algerian campaigns, and, at
+Zaatcha, Isly, and other famed engagements, they contended side by
+side with the renowned Zouaves for the palm of military excellence.
+Their agility, their promptitude in action, their ardor in attack, and
+their solidity in retreat, their endurance on the march, their skill
+and intelligence in availing themselves of every inequality of ground
+and in turning everything to account, made them so conspicuously
+preferable, as an infantry corps, for certain operations, that Marshal
+Bugeaud caused the number of battalions employed in Africa to be
+increased to six. From that time to the present, continual progress
+has been, made in the organization, discipline, and instruction of
+the Chasseurs, and all the objections which at different periods were,
+raised against the special composition and details of the force having
+been one by one met and obviated, France now counts no less than
+twenty-one battalions of them in her army.
+
+It was for a long time thought by some, that, although the Chasseurs,
+like the Zouaves, had been successful in the skirmishing engagements
+of Algeria, they would not be found so useful in European warfare.
+This opinion was proved to be erroneous at the siege of Rome, in 1849,
+where the Chasseurs, armed with their new and terrible weapon, the
+_carabine à tige_, in the management of which they had been thoroughly
+drilled, rendered the most important service; and from what was seen
+of them there it became evident that the existence of such a force,
+so perfected in every particular, would hereafter greatly modify the
+relations and conditions of the defence and attack of fortified works.
+The importance of this fact will impress the reader, when he remembers
+how large a part fortresses have played in warfare since 1815, and
+especially when he glances at the tendency everywhere perceptible now
+toward transforming military strongholds into great intrenched camps,
+as revealed at Antwerp in Belgium, Fredericia in Denmark, Buda and
+Comorn in Hungary, Peschiera, Mantua, Venice, Verona, and Rome in
+Italy, Silistria and Sebastopol in the East, and Washington, Manassas,
+and Richmond in America.
+
+Other nations have not been slow to follow French example. Russia
+is rapidly manufacturing rifled pieces for her service; England
+is providing her whole army with the Minié musket, and Austria and
+Prussia are applying inventions of their own to the armament of corps
+organized and trained on the principle of the French Chasseurs.
+
+The Duke of Wellington is said to have remarked, not long before his
+death, while speaking of the English troops, that they had, indeed,
+adopted the new musket, but that it would be physically difficult for
+them to transform themselves into light infantry. The same observation
+will undoubtedly apply to all the Continental nations excepting the
+French; but in the United States, while we could muster the finest
+heavy troops in the world, we have also the most abundant material for
+just such light infantry as those described in the foregoing sketch.
+
+The Chasseurs are not merely distinguished as perfect light infantry,
+but they also form excellent troops of the line. By the weight of
+their fire, they are capable of producing in battles and sieges
+effects unknown before their appearance on the scene, and that is the
+great point, the entirely new feature about them.
+
+The creation of these battalions, well planned and happily executed
+as it has been, remains a most important event in military history.
+Consecrated by the valor and the intelligence of the officers and
+soldiers of France, it has been the signal and the source of new
+and rapid reforms. One of these battalions attached to each infantry
+division adds fresh force to that fine classification which first
+arose under the Republic, and, although somewhat perverted under the
+Empire, still remains the basis of the French grand organization,
+recalling, as it does, the immortal idea of the Roman Legion.
+
+With the aid of its example, and the emulation inspired by the success
+of the Chasseurs, the splendid system of the French infantry-service
+has been completed under the present Napoleon; and we now behold the
+race he rules so disciplined for war, the respective qualities of the
+North and the South of France, the firmness and solidity of the former
+and the enthusiasm and ardor of the latter, so beautifully blended,
+that we may well exclaim, "Here, indeed, is a whole nation armed! _in
+pedite robur_!"
+
+In conclusion, the writer and compiler of this sketch would not be
+venturing too far, perhaps, were he to remark that so excellent an
+example can be nowhere better followed than in this country, if, as
+would to-day appear a certainty, we are to turn aside from the ways of
+peace to study the art of war. We have here precisely the material
+for whole armies of light infantry, the most favorable conditions
+for their equipment and instruction, and, owing to the nature of the
+region we inhabit, its dense woodlands, its wide savannas, its broad
+rivers, and its numerous ranges of rough mountains, the very land
+in which the tactics and marksmanship of the Chasseurs would be most
+available.
+
+
+
+
+LATEST VIEWS OF MR. BIGLOW.
+
+PRELIMINARY NOTE.
+
+
+[It is with feelings of the liveliest pain that we inform our readers
+of the death of the Reverend Homer Wilbur, A.M., which took place
+suddenly, by an apoplectic stroke, on the afternoon of Christmas day,
+1862. Our venerable friend (for so we may venture to call him, though
+we never enjoyed the high privilege of his personal acquaintance)
+was in his eighty-fourth year, having been born June 12, 1779, at
+Pigsgusset Precinct (now West Jerusha) in the then District of Maine.
+Graduated with distinction at Hubville College in 1805, he pursued his
+theological studies with the late Reverend Preserved Thacker, D.D.,
+and was called to the charge of the First Society in Jaalam in 1809,
+where he remained till his death.
+
+"As an antiquary he has probably left no superior, if, indeed,
+an equal," writes his friend and colleague, the Reverend Jeduthun
+Hitchcock, to whom we are indebted for the above facts; "in proof
+of which I need only allude to his 'History of Jaalam, Genealogical,
+Topographical, and Ecclesiastical,' 1849, which has won him an eminent
+and enduring place in our more solid and useful literature. It is only
+to be regretted that his intense application to historical studies
+should have so entirely withdrawn him from the pursuit of poetical
+composition, for which he was endowed by Nature with a remarkable
+aptitude. His well-known hymn, beginning, 'With clouds of care
+encompassed round,' has been attributed in some collections to the
+late President Dwight, and it is hardly presumptuous to affirm that
+the simile of the rainbow in the eighth stanza would do no discredit
+to that polished pen."
+
+We regret that we have not room at present for the whole of Mr.
+Hitchcock's exceedingly valuable communication. We hope to lay more
+liberal extracts from it before our readers at an early day. A summary
+of its contents will give some notion of its importance and interest.
+It contains: 1st, A biographical sketch of Mr. Wilbur, with notices
+of his predecessors in the pastoral office, and of eminent clerical
+contemporaries; 2d, An obituary of deceased, from the Punkin-Falls
+"Weekly Parallel"; 3d, A list of his printed and manuscript
+productions and of projected works; 4th, Personal anecdotes and
+recollections, with specimens of table-talk; 5th, A tribute to his
+relict, Mrs. Dorcas (Pilcox) Wilbur; 6th, A list of graduates fitted
+for different colleges by Mr. Wilbur, with biographical memoranda
+touching the more distinguished; 7th, Concerning learned, charitable,
+and other societies, of which Mr. Wilbur was a member, and of those
+with which, had his life been prolonged, he would doubtless have been
+associated, with a complete catalogue of such Americans as have been
+Fellows of the Royal Society; 8th, A brief summary of Mr. Wilbur's
+latest conclusions concerning the Tenth Horn of the Beast in its
+special application to recent events, for which the public, as Mr.
+Hitchcock assures us, have been waiting with feelings of lively
+anticipation; 10th, Mr. Hitchcock's own views on the same topic; and,
+11th, A brief essay on the importance of local histories. It will be
+apparent that the duty of preparing Mr. Wilbur's biography could not
+have fallen into more sympathetic hands.
+
+In a private letter with which the reverend gentleman has since
+favored us, he expresses the opinion that Mr. Wilbur's life was
+shortened by our unhappy civil war. It disturbed his studies,
+dislocated all his habitual associations and trains of thought, and
+unsettled the foundations of a faith, rather the result of habit than
+conviction, in the capacity of man for self-government. "Such has
+been the felicity of my life," he said to Mr. Hitchcock, on the very
+morning of the day he died, "that, through the divine mercy, I could
+always say, _Summum nec metuo diem, nec opto_. It has been my habit,
+as you know, on every recurrence of this blessed anniversary, to read
+Milton's 'Hymn of the Nativity' till its sublime harmonies so dilated
+my soul and quickened its spiritual sense that I seemed to hear that
+other song which gave assurance to the shepherds that there was
+One who would lead them also in green pastures and beside the still
+waters. But to-day I have been unable to think of anything but that
+mournful text, 'I came not to send peace, but a sword,' and, did it
+not smack of pagan presumptuousness, could almost wish I had never
+lived to see this day."
+
+Mr. Hitchcock also informs us that his friend "lies buried in the
+Jaalam graveyard, under a large red-cedar which he specially admired.
+A neat and substantial monument is to be erected over his remains,
+with a Latin epitaph written by himself; for he was accustomed to say
+pleasantly that there was at least one occasion in a scholar's life
+when he might show the advantages of a classical training."
+
+The following fragment of a letter addressed to us, and apparently
+intended to accompany Mr. Biglow's contribution to the present
+number, was found upon his table after his decease.--EDITORS ATLANTIC
+MONTHLY.]
+
+_To the Editors of the_ ATLANTIC MONTHLY.
+
+Jaalam, 24th Dec'r, 1862
+
+RESPECTED SIRS,--The infirm state of my bodily health would be a
+sufficient apology for not taking up the pen at this time, wholesome
+as I deem it for the mind to apricate in the shelter of epistolary
+confidence, were it not that a considerable, I might even say a large,
+number of individuals in this parish expect from their pastor some
+publick expression of sentiment at this crisis. Moreover, _Qui tacitus
+ardet magis uritur_. In trying times like these, the besetting sin of
+undisciplined minds is to seek refuge from inexplicable realities
+in the dangerous stimulant of angry partisanship or the indolent
+narcotick of vague and hopeful vaticination; _fortunamque suo temperat
+arbitrio_. Both by reason of my age and my natural temperament, I am
+unfitted for either. Unable to penetrate the inscrutable judgments of
+God, I am more than ever thankful that my life has been prolonged till
+I could in some small measure comprehend His mercy. As there is no man
+who does not at some time render himself amenable to the one,--_quum
+vix Justus sit securus_,--so there is none that does not feel himself
+in daily need of the other.
+
+I confess, I cannot feel, as some do, a personal consolation for the
+manifest evils of this war in any remote or contingent advantages
+that may spring from it. I am old and weak, I can bear little, and can
+scarce hope to see better days; nor is it any adequate compensation
+to know that Nature is old and strong and can bear much. Old men
+philosophize over the past, but the present is only a burthen and a
+weariness. The one lies before them like a placid evening landscape;
+the other is full of the vexations and anxieties of housekeeping.
+It may be true enough that _miscet haec illis, prohibetque Clotho
+fortunam stare_, but he who said it was fain at last to call in
+Atropos with her shears before her time; and I cannot help selfishly
+mourning that the fortune of our Republick could not at least stand
+till my days were numbered.
+
+Tibullus would find the origin of wars in the great exaggeration of
+riches, and does not stick to say that in the days of the beechen
+trencher there was peace. But averse as I am by nature from all wars,
+the more as they have been especially fatal to libraries, I would have
+this one go on till we are reduced to wooden platters again, rather
+than surrender the principle to defend which it was undertaken. Though
+I believe Slavery to have been the cause of it, by so thoroughly
+demoralizing Northern politicks for its own purposes as to give
+opportunity and hope to treason, yet I would not have our thought and
+purpose diverted from their true object,--the maintenance of the idea
+of Government. We are not merely suppressing an enormous riot, but
+contending for the possibility of permanent order coexisting with
+democratical fickleness; and while I would not superstitiously
+venerate form to the sacrifice of substance, neither would I forget
+that an adherence to precedent and prescription can alone give that
+continuity and coherence under a democratical constitution which are
+inherent in the person of a despotick monarch and the selfishness of
+an aristocratical class. _Stet pro ratione voluntas_ is as dangerous
+in a majority as in a tyrant.
+
+I cannot allow the present production of my young friend to go out
+without a protest from me against a certain extremeness in his views,
+more pardonable in the poet than the philosopher. While I agree with
+him that the only cure for rebellion is suppression by force, yet I
+must animadvert upon certain phrases where I seem to see a coincidence
+with a popular fallacy on the subject of compromise. On the one hand
+there are those who do not see that the vital principle of Government
+and the seminal principle of Law cannot properly be made a subject of
+compromise at all, and on the other those who are equally blind to the
+truth that without a compromise of individual opinions, interests, and
+even rights, no society would be possible. _In medio tutissimus_. For
+my own part, I would gladly----
+
+ Ef I a song or two could make,
+ Like rockets druv by their own burnin',
+ All leap an' light, to leave a wake
+ Men's hearts an' faces skyward turnin'!--
+ But, it strikes me, 't ain't jest the time
+ Fer stringin' words with settisfaction:
+ Wut's wanted now's the silent rhyme
+ 'Twixt upright Will an' downright Action.
+
+ Words, ef you keep 'em, pay their keep,
+ But gabble's the short cut to ruin;
+ It's gratis, (gals half-price,) but cheap
+ At no rate, ef it henders doin';
+ Ther' 's nothin' wuss, 'less 't is to set
+ A martyr-prem'um upon jawrin':
+ Teapots git dangerous, ef you shet
+ Their lids down on 'em with Fort Warren.
+
+ 'Bout long enough it's ben discussed
+ Who sot the magazine afire,
+ An' whether, ef Bob Wickliffe bust,
+ 'T would scare us more or blow us higher,
+ D' ye s'pose the Gret Foreseer's plan
+ Wuz settled fer him in town-meetin'?
+ Or thet ther' 'd ben no Fall o' Man,
+ Ef Adam'd on'y bit a sweetin'?
+
+ Oh, Jon'than, ef you want to be
+ A rugged chap agin an' hearty,
+ Go fer wutever'll hurt Jeff D.,
+ Nut wut'll boost up ary party.
+ Here's hell broke loose, an' we lay flat
+ With half the univarse a-singein',
+ Till Sen'tor This an' Gov'nor Thet
+ Stop squabblin' fer the garding-ingin'.
+
+ It's war we're in, not politics;
+ It's systems wrastlin' now, not parties;
+ An' victory in the eend'll fix
+ Where longest will an' truest heart is.
+ An' wut's the Guv'ment folks about?
+ Tryin' to hope ther' 's nothin' doin',
+ An' look ez though they didn't doubt
+ Sunthin' pertickler wuz a-brewin'.
+
+ Ther' 's critters yit thet talk an' act
+ Fer wut they call Conciliation;
+ They'd hand a buff'lo-drove a tract
+ When they wuz madder than all Bashan.
+ Conciliate? it jest means _be kicked_,
+ No metter how they phrase an' tone it;
+ It means thet we're to set down licked,
+ Thet we're poor shotes an' glad to own it!
+
+ A war on tick's ez dear'z the deuce,
+ But it wun't leave no lastin' traces,
+ Ez't would to make a sneakin' truce
+ Without no moral specie-basis:
+ Ef green-backs ain't nut jest the cheese,
+ I guess ther' 's evils thet's extremer,--
+ Fer instance,--shinplaster idees
+ Like them put out by Gov'nor Seymour.
+
+ Last year, the Nation, at a word,
+ When tremblin' Freedom cried to shield her,
+ Flamed weldin' into one keen sword
+ Waitin' an' longin' fer a wielder:
+ A splendid flash!--an' how'd the grasp
+ With sech a chance ez thet wuz tally?
+ Ther' warn't no meanin' in our clasp,--
+ Half this, half thet, all shilly-shally.
+
+ More men? More Man! It's there we fail;
+ Weak plans grow weaker yit by lengthenin':
+ Wut use in addin' to the tail,
+ When it's the head's in need o' strengthenin'?
+ We wanted one thet felt all Chief
+ From roots o' hair to sole o' stockin',
+ Square-sot with thousan'-ton belief
+ In him an' us, ef earth went rockin'!
+
+ Ole Hick'ry wouldn't ha' stood see-saw
+ 'Bout doin' things till they wuz done with,--
+ He'd smashed the tables o' the Law
+ In time o' need to load his gun with;
+ He couldn't see but jest one side,--
+ Ef his, 'twuz God's, an' thet wuz plenty;
+ An' so his "_Forrards_!" multiplied
+ An army's fightin' weight by twenty.
+
+ But this 'ere histin', creak, creak, creak,
+ Your cappen's heart up with a derrick,
+ This tryin' to coax a lightnin'-streak
+ Out of a half-discouraged hay-rick,
+ This hangin' on mont' arter mont'
+ Fer one sharp purpose 'mongst the twitter,--
+ I tell ye, it doos kind o' stunt
+ The peth an' sperit of a critter.
+
+ In six months where'll the People be,
+ Ef leaders look on revolution
+ Ez though it wuz a cup o' tea,--
+ Jest social el'ments in solution?
+ This weighin' things doos wal enough
+ When war cools down, an' comes to writin';
+ But while it's makin', the true stuff
+ Is pison-mad, pig-headed fightin'.
+
+ Democ'acy gives every man
+ A right to be his own oppressor;
+ But a loose Gov'ment ain't the plan,
+ Helpless ez spilled beans on a dresser:
+ I tell ye one thing we might larn
+ From them smart critters, the Seceders,--
+ Ef bein' right's the fust consarn,
+ The 'fore-the-fust 's cast-iron leaders.
+
+ But 'pears to me I see some signs
+ Thet we're a-goin' to use our senses:
+ Jeff druv us into these hard lines,
+ An' ough' to bear his half th' expenses;
+ Slavery's Secession's heart an' will,
+ South, North, East, West, where'er you find it,
+ An' ef it drors into War's mill,
+ D' ye say them thunder-stones sha'n't grind it?
+
+ D' ye s'pose, ef Jeff giv _him_ a lick,
+ Ole Hick'ry'd tried his head to sof'n
+ So 's 't wouldn't hurt thet ebony stick
+ Thet's made our side see stars so of'n?
+ "No!" he'd ha' thundered, "on your knees,
+ An' own one flag, one road to glory!
+ Soft-heartedness, in times like these,
+ Shows sof'ness in the upper story!"
+
+ An' why should we kick up a muss
+ About the Pres'dunt's proclamation?
+ It ain't a-goin' to lib'rate us,
+ Ef we don't like emancipation:
+ The right to be a cussed fool
+ Is safe from all devices human,
+ It's common (ez a gin'l rule)
+ To every critter born o' woman.
+
+ So _we_'re all right, an' I, fer one,
+ Don't think our cause'll lose in vally
+ By rammin' Scriptur' in our gun,
+ An' gittin' Natur' fer an ally:
+ Thank God, say I, fer even a plan
+ To lift one human bein's level,
+ Give one more chance to make a man,
+ Or, anyhow, to spile a devil!
+
+ Not thet I'm one thet much expec'
+ Millennium by express to-morrer;
+ They _will_ miscarry,--I rec'lec'
+ Tu many on 'em, to my sorrer:
+ Men ain't made angels in a day,
+ No matter how you mould an' labor 'em,--
+ Nor 'riginal ones, I guess, don't stay
+ With Abe so of'n ez with Abraham,
+
+ The'ry thinks Fact a pooty thing,
+ An' wants the banns read right ensuin';
+ But Fact wun't noways wear the ring
+ 'Thout years o' settin' up an' wooin':
+ But, arter all, Time's dial-plate
+ Marks cent'ries with the minute-finger,
+ An' Good can't never come tu late,
+ Though it doos seem to try an' linger.
+
+ An' come wut will, I think it's grand
+ Abe's gut his will et last bloom-furnaced
+ In trial-flames till it'11 stand
+ The strain o' bein' in deadly earnest:
+ Thet's wut we want,--we want to know
+ The folks on our side hez the bravery
+ To b'lieve ez hard, come weal, come woe,
+ In Freedom ez Jeff doos in Slavery.
+
+ Set the two forces foot to foot,
+ An' every man knows who'll be winner,
+ Whose faith in God hez ary root
+ Thet goes down deeper than his dinner:
+ _Then_ 'twill be felt from pole to pole,
+ Without no need o' proclamation,
+ Earth's Biggest Country's gut her soul
+ An' risen up Earth's Greatest Nation!
+
+
+
+
+REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES.
+
+
+_Slavery and Secession in America, Historical and Economical; together
+with a Practical Scheme of Emancipation_. By THOMAS ELLISON, F.S.S.,
+etc. Second Edition: Enlarged. With a Reply to the Fundamental
+Arguments of Mr. James Spence, contained in his Work on the American
+Union, and Remarks on the Productions of Other Writers. With Map and
+Appendices. London: Sampson Low, Son, & Co.
+
+We have too long delayed to speak of Mr. Ellison's book. More than a
+year ago, before Mr. Stuart Mill or Professor Cairnes had written
+in our behalf, before we had received a word of sympathy from any
+representative Englishman, save Mr. John Bright, the first edition of
+this work was placed before the British public. And we could not
+have asked for a better informed or more judicious defender than Mr.
+Ellison. "Slavery and Secession in America" is a temperate and concise
+statement of the essential features of our national struggle. The
+supposed interest of half a million of slaveholders in the extension
+of the Southern institution is truly represented as the cause of their
+guilty insurrection against the liberties of their countrymen.
+Mr. Ellison does not desire immediate emancipation, and wastes no
+sentiment upon the sufferings of the negro. But the economical and
+social position of Slavery is given with the unanswerable emphasis of
+careful figures. He traces the rise and increase of the institution
+in the States, until its disgrace culminates in a bloody rebellion.
+He clearly shows, that, by acknowledging the doctrine involved in
+Secession, by allowing it to govern the intercourse between
+nations, the morality of society would be shaken from its base. The
+anti-slavery character of the strife in which we are involved is
+made to appear,--slavery-diffusion being the object of the South,
+slavery-restriction the aim of the North. It is shown that the
+Secession ordinances utterly failed to point out a single instance
+in which the rights of the Southern people were infringed upon by
+the National Executive; also, that the alleged right of Secession is
+neither Constitutional, nor, when backed by no tangible grievance,
+can it he called revolutionary. In short, Mr. Ellison takes the only
+ground which seems possible to loyalists in America: namely, that
+Secession--in other words, the treason of slaveholders against the
+Constitution of their country--is of necessity punishable by law; and
+that good men of all nationalities should unite in the moral support
+of a benignant government thus wantonly assailed.
+
+The "practical scheme of emancipation" promised us in the title can
+hardly be said to amount to a scheme at all; but there are suggestions
+worth attending to, if that delicate matter might be managed as we
+would, not as we must.
+
+We have marked but two passages for a questioning comment. General
+Taylor, by an inadvertency strange to pass to a second edition, is
+represented as putting down the South-Carolina Nullifiers in 1838.
+Also, Dr. Charles Mackay, the New-York Correspondent of the London
+"Times," is quoted as having once borne anti-slavery testimony. This
+is certainly hard. Whatever emoluments slave-masters or their allies
+may hereafter have it in their power to bestow this gentleman has
+fairly earned. If he ever did say anything that was disagreeable to
+them, it should not be remembered against him.
+
+The merit of Mr. Ellison's book is neither in rhetoric, philanthropic
+sentiment, nor any exalted theory of political philosophy; it is in an
+unanswerable appeal to statistics, and a condensed statement of facts.
+The work may be commended to all desirous of arriving at the truth.
+
+But no conventional phrases of a book-notice can express our
+obligations to Mr. Ellison and those few of his countrymen who have
+publicly rebuked the noisy bitterness of writers striving, with too
+much success, to debauch the sentiment of England. Most dear to us is
+an occasional lull in that storm of insolence and mendacity designed
+to embarrass the Government of the United States in the august and
+solemn championship of human liberty committed to its charge. And let
+it be remarked that our expectations of English approval were never
+Utopian. The great principle involved in the American contest was so
+far above the level of the ordinary pursuits of men, that, even
+among ourselves, few have been able to transfuse it into their daily
+consciousness. We never looked to England for the encouragement of a
+popular enthusiasm,--hardly, perhaps, for a cold acquiescence. John
+Bull, we said, is proverbially a grumbler, proverbially indifferent to
+all affairs but his own; he will be annoyed by tariffs, and plagued
+by scarcity of cotton;--what wonder, if we are a little misunderstood?
+The minor contributors to his daily press will not be able to think
+long or wisely of what they write; we must be ready to pardon a
+certain amount of irritation and misstatement. That such was the
+feeling of intelligent Americans towards England, at the beginning of
+our troubles, we have no doubt. But for the scurrility heaped upon
+us by what claims to be the higher British press we were totally
+unprepared,--and for this good reason, that such malignity of
+criticism as is possible in America could never have suggested it. Let
+us not be misunderstood. We acknowledge the "Rowdy Journal" and Mr.
+Jefferson Brick. Undoubtedly, newspapers exist among us of which the
+description of Mr. Dickens is no very extravagant caricature. But
+their editors, if not of notoriously infamous life, are those whose
+minds are unenlarged by any generous education,--men whose lack of
+grammar suggests a certain palliation of their want of veracity and
+good-breeding. Such journals are seldom or never seen by the
+large class of cultivated American readers, and are in no sense
+representative of them. The "Saturday Review" and "Blackwood's
+Magazine" are said to be conducted by men of University training.
+Their articles are written in clear and precise English, and often
+contain vigorous thought. They publish few papers which do not give
+evidence of at least tolerable scholarship in their writers. Of
+kindred periodicals on this side of the ocean it may be safely said,
+that the intelligence of the reader forces their criticism up to
+some decent standard of honest painstaking. We may thus explain the
+bewilderment which came over us at that burst of vulgar ribaldry
+from the leading British press, in which the organs above named have
+achieved a scandalous preeminence. Vibrating from the extreme of
+shallowness to the extreme of sufficiency, scorning to be limited in
+abuse by adhering to any single hypothesis, the current literature
+of England has gloated over the rebellion of Slavery with the cynical
+chuckles of a sour spinster. Would that language less strong could
+express our meaning! President Lincoln--whatever may be judged his
+deficiency in resources of statesmanship--will be embalmed by history
+as one possessing many qualities peculiarly adapted to our perilous
+crisis, together with an integrity of life and purpose honorably
+representing the yeomanry of the Republic. This man, the ruler of a
+friendly people, British journalists have proclaimed guilty of crimes
+to which the records of the darkest despotisms can scarcely furnish a
+parallel. The precious blood of Ellsworth was taken by the "Saturday
+Review" as the text of such disgraceful banter as we trust few
+bar-keepers in America would bestow upon a bully killed in a
+pot-house fray. General Butler, for a verbal infelicity in an order
+of imperative necessity and wholesome effect, has been befouled by
+language which no careful historian would apply to Tiberius or Louis
+XV. But enough of this. We should be glad to believe that these
+utterers of false witness were boorish men, in dark and desperate
+ignorance of the true bearing of our current affairs. We are unable so
+to believe.
+
+It is a relief to turn to that small company of Englishmen who
+have extended brother-hands to us in the day of our necessity. No
+world-homage of literary admiration is worth the personal emotion with
+which they are recognized in America as representatives of that
+_Old_ England which has place in the affection and gratitude of every
+cultivated man among us. They have done us justice, when contempt for
+justice alone was popular, and a cynical skepticism seemed the only
+retreat from blatant abuse. Cairnes, Mill, Ellison, and others whom we
+need not name,--for the sake of such men let us still think of England
+in generous temper. Their sympathies have been with us through this
+terrible arbitrament of arms; they were with us in that solemn close
+of the old year, when the destiny of our dumb four millions weighed
+upon the night. These men have told us that the principle for which we
+contend is sound and worthy: they may also tell us that we have made
+occasional mistakes in reducing the principle to practice; and of this
+we are painfully conscious. It is well for us to forego that reckless
+bravado of unexampled prosperity once so offensive to foreign ears.
+Yet the best thing we ever had to boast of has been with us in the
+storm. According to the admirable observation of Niebuhr,--"Liberty
+exists where public opinion can constrain Government to fulfil its
+duties, and where, on the other side, in times of popular infatuation,
+the Government can maintain a wise course in spite of public opinion."
+This liberty has been preserved to us through all the turbulence of
+war. Like some divine element, it has mingled in the convulsion of
+human passion, and already prophesies the day when the service of man
+to man, as of man to God, shall be rendered in perfect freedom.
+
+
+_A Treatise on Military Law and the Practice of Courts-Martial_. By
+CAPTAIN S.V. BENÉT, Ordnance Department, U.S. Army, late Assistant
+Professor of Ethics, Law, etc., Military Academy, West Point. Mew
+York: D. Van Nostrand.
+
+In these days of large armies and intense military enthusiasm, the
+very title of a military book commends it, _primâ facie_, to public
+interest; and when it promises to elucidate and systematize the
+intricate subject of military law, it has great specific importance
+in the eyes of the tens of thousands of officers who are constantly
+called upon to administer that law, and to whom the duties of
+courts-martial are new and difficult. But, to understand still more
+clearly the great value of such a work, supposing it to be well
+written, we must go back in the history of military courts, and see
+how little had been done to render them systematic and uniform,--what
+a comparatively unoccupied field the author had to reap in,--what
+needs there were to supply; and then we shall be better able to
+criticize his work, and to judge of its practical value.
+
+For a very long period we followed, in our army, the practice of the
+English courts-martial, as we adopted the English Common Law in our
+civic courts.
+
+The military code to be applied and administered by courts-martial is
+contained in the Act of Congress of the 10th of April, 1806, commonly
+called "The Rules and Articles of War," and in a few other acts and
+parts of acts, supplementary to these, which have been enacted from
+time to time, as circumstances seemed to require.
+
+In the year 1839, Major-General Macomb, commander-in-chief of the
+army, prepared a little treatise on "The Practice of Courts-Martial,"
+which, in lieu of something better, was generally used; and the modes
+of proceeding and forms of orders and records there given established
+uniformity in the actions and duties of such courts throughout the
+army.
+
+Five or six years later, Captain John P. O'Brien, of the Fourth
+Artillery, issued "A Treatise on American Military Law and Practice of
+Courts-Martial." This work evinced a great deal of legal research, and
+a thorough knowledge of the practical applications of military law;
+but it is voluminous, wanting in arrangement, and, while valuable as
+a storehouse from which to draw materials, not suited for ready
+reference, or for the study of beginners. It is now, we believe, out
+of print; and, as its accomplished author is not living, it can hardly
+be adapted to the wants of the army at the present day.
+
+In the year 1846, Captain William C. De Hart, of the Second Artillery,
+published his excellent work, entitled, "Observations on Military Law,
+and the Constitution and Practice of Courts-Martial." In his Preface
+he says,--"Since the legal establishment of the army and navy of
+the United States, there has been no work produced, written for the
+express purpose,... and intended as a guide for the administration
+of military justice." And, in a note, he adds, "The small treatise on
+courts-martial by the late Major-General Macomb is no exception to
+the remark." He makes, if we remember rightly, no reference to Captain
+O'Brien's work, which appeared but a short time before his own.
+
+The work of Captain De Hart, so far in advance of what had yet
+appeared on this subject, written, too, by an expert, who had been
+long employed under the orders of the War Department as the acting
+judge-advocate of the army, (the office of judge-advocate not being
+created till a later day,) was regarded as the chief authority in the
+army. But it was never designed, nor can it be easily adapted,
+for instruction. It is a philosophical discussion of the subject,
+containing many historical citations and illustrations, which show
+the reader his authorities without fortifying his positions. For a
+text-book, therefore, it lacks arrangement, and is too discursive.
+
+Up to this time, the subject of military law was not studied at the
+Military Academy; but in the year 1856, when the course of studies in
+that institution was lengthened, so as to consume five years instead
+of four, this branch was added to the curriculum, and has since been
+retained,--its importance being made every day more manifest. Then a
+treatise was wanted, which, while it could be used as authority in our
+vast army, should be also suited as a text-book for the cadets, from
+which they could recite in the section-room, and which should be their
+_vade-mecum_ for future reference,--originally learned, and always
+consulted.
+
+This was Captain Benét's self-appointed task, and he has performed it
+admirably. He has examined all the authorities, French and English,
+and his book bears the evidences of this original investigation. For
+purposes of study, his system is clear, his arrangement logical, and
+his divisions numerous and just. All the directions as to _trials_ are
+very practically set forth, so that any sensible volunteer officer,
+appointed upon a court unexpectedly, could very soon, by the aid of
+these pages, make himself "master of the position." And as there is
+much concurrent, and sometimes apparently conflicting, jurisdiction of
+military and civic courts, this volume ought to be on every lawyer's
+table as the special expounder of military law, wherever it may
+approach the action of the civil code.
+
+Having said thus much of the general plan, scope, and merits of the
+work, let us cast a brief glance at the nature of its contents. It is
+called a treatise on _Military Law_. What is military law? It is that
+law which governs the army, and all individuals connected with it. In
+other words, it has respect to military organization and discipline.
+It must not be confounded with _Martial Law_, which is the suspension
+of civic law, and the substitution of military law over citizens, not
+soldiers, in extraordinary circumstances.
+
+Military law, which cannot wait for the slow processes of civic
+courts, is immediate and condign in its action, and is administered
+by courts-martial, to which are confided the powers of judge and jury.
+These courts examine into the cases, find verdicts, and pronounce
+sentences,--all, however, subject to the revision and sanction of the
+supreme authority which convened them.
+
+Courts--martial are divided into two classes: _General Courts_, for
+the trial of officers, and of the higher grades of offences; and
+_Regimental_ or _Garrison Courts_, for the consideration of less
+important cases in a regiment or garrison. General courts vary in the
+number of members: they must be composed of not less than _five_, and
+of never more than _thirteen_. Regimental or garrison courts are
+never composed of more than three members. For general courts, only, a
+judge-advocate is appointed to conduct the prosecution for the United
+States.
+
+The offences against military law are determined by the "Rules and
+Articles of War," in which the principal offences are distinctly set
+forth and forbidden; and, that unanticipated misconduct may not be
+without cognizance and punishment, the _ninety-ninth_ article includes
+all such cases under the charge of "conduct to the prejudice of good
+order and military discipline," which is of universal scope.
+
+The punishments are also set forth in the Articles of War. Those
+prescribed for officers include death,--cashiering,[A]--cashiering,
+with a clause disabling the officer from ever holding any office
+under the United States,--dismissal,--suspension from rank and
+pay,--reprimand. For soldiers the principal punishments are
+death,--confinement,--confinement on bread-and-water diet,--solitary
+confinement,--forfeiture of pay and allowances,--discharges.
+
+[Footnote A: Cashiering implies something infamous in the British
+service; and although it has been attempted to make no distinction
+between cashiering and dismissing in our service, something of the
+opprobrium still attaches to the former punishment.]
+
+The conduct of the trial, the duties of all persons concerned,
+members, judge-advocate, prisoner, witnesses, counsel, etc., are
+given in detail, and will be very easily learned. Forms of orders for
+convening courts-martial, modes of recording the proceedings, the form
+of a general order confirming or disapproving the proceedings, the
+form of the judge-advocate's certificate, and the forms of charges
+and specifications under different articles of war, are given in
+the Appendix, and are used _verbatim_ by all judge-advocates and
+recorders. There are also explanations of the duties of courts of
+inquiry, and of boards for retiring disabled officers; and extracts
+from the Acts of Congress bearing upon military law. The Articles of
+War are also given for reference. The book is thus rendered complete
+as a manual for the conduct of courts-martial, from the original order
+to the execution of the sentence.
+
+From what has been said, it will be gathered that the work was needed,
+that it admirably supplies the need, and that it may be recommended,
+without qualification, as providing all the information which it
+purports to provide, and which could be demanded of it, in a lucid,
+systematic, and simple manner. It is an octavo volume, containing
+377 pages, clearly printed in large type, and on excellent paper;
+the binding is serviceable, being in strong buff leather, like other
+law-books.
+
+
+_Lectures on Moral Science_. Delivered before the Lowell Institute,
+Boston. By MARK HOPKINS, D.D., LL.D. Boston: Gould and Lincoln. 12mo.
+
+It is a little curious that there is not a single science in which
+man is constitutionally, and therefore directly interested, to which
+Emanuel Kant has not, in one way or another, written a _Prolegomena_.
+Professionally he did so in the case of Metaphysic: and out of the
+great original claim which he here established there emanates a
+separate claim, in each particular science of the order already
+indicated, to a sublime dictatorship. And chiefly is this claim valid
+in Moral Philosophy; for it was his province, the first of all men,
+clearly to reveal, as a scientific fact certified by demonstration,
+the divine eminence of the practical above the merely speculative
+powers of man,--the fulfilment of which mission justly entitled him
+to all the privileges incident to the vantage-ground thus
+gained,--privileges widely significant in a survey of that field where
+chiefly these practical powers hold their Olympian supremacy, the
+field of Moral Philosophy.
+
+Nothing could have afforded us a better excuse for a _résumé_ of Kant,
+in this connection, than the new work of Dr. Hopkins. Of the many
+treatises on Moral Science with which the reading world has been
+flooded and bewildered since the time of Coleridge, there is this one
+alone found worthy of being ranged along-side of the works of the
+old Königsberg seer,--the one alone which, like his, deals with
+the grander features of the science. It is the best realization
+objectively of Kant's subjective principles that has yet been given.
+But how, the plain English reader will ask, are we to understand from
+this the place which the new work takes in literature? Not readily,
+indeed, unless one has already taken the trouble to examine such of
+Kant's treatises as have found their way out of German into hardly
+tolerable English, and has, moreover, reflected upon the importance of
+the principles therein established. But, of those who will read
+this notice, not one out of fifty has had even the opportunity
+for examination, not one out of five thousand has really taken the
+opportunity, and, of those that have, one half, at least, have done so
+independently of any philosophic aim, and have therefore reflected to
+very little purpose on the principles involved. Therefore, what the
+reader could not or has not chosen to do for himself we will do for
+him, at the same time congratulating him that there is now placed in
+his hands as complete and perfect a structure outwardly, in the work
+under notice, as the groundwork furnished by the old master was, in
+its subjective analysis, simple and profound.
+
+Those who approach human nature, or the nature outside of us, with
+a reverence for reality, will give precedence, after the manner of
+Nature, to those powers which are predominant and determinative; and
+in man these are Reason and Will. These two exist as identical in
+Personality, which we may denominate as we choose, whether Rational
+Will, or, as Kant does more frequently, Practical Reason. Here, in the
+identity of these two powers in Personality, and still more in
+their relation to each other as they are differentiated in personal
+existence, does Morality originate and develop according to
+principles.
+
+Now let it be remembered that Kant's mission was, as above indicated,
+to exclude the speculative side of our nature from any direct relation
+to human destiny, inasmuch as it could not answer either of the
+three great questions which every man everywhere and of necessity
+puts,--Whence am I? What am I? and Whither do I tend?--and therefore
+stood confused in the presence of any grand reality, whether human or
+divine, and to make the Practical Reason the sole and immediate link
+of connection between ourselves and the realities from the presence of
+which the Speculative Reason had been driven. Then will it be
+clearly seen how he would answer the fundamental question of Moral
+Philosophy,--Wherein does the quality of Goodness originally reside?
+
+The answer, from Kant's own lips, is this: "There is nothing in
+the world, nor, generally speaking, even out of it, possible to be
+conceived, which can without limitation be held good, but a _Good
+Will_." The good is not in the end attained, not even in the volition,
+but is a principle resident in the will itself. "The volition is
+between its principle _a priori_, which is formal, and its spring _a
+posteriori_, which is material; and since it must be determined by
+something, and being deprived of every material principle, it must be
+determined by the formal."
+
+Now, although President Hopkins considers Moral Philosophy as a
+philosophy of _ends_, he evidently does not mean ends _a posteriori_
+and _material_, but ends _a priori_, using the term as the best
+objective translation of _principles_. Almost as if with the conscious
+design of making his work harmonize with the groundwork furnished by
+Kant, he has developed a graduated series of conditions, according
+to which we ascend "the great world's altar-stairs," from lower and
+conditioned good up to that good which is the condition of all, itself
+unlimited, namely, in the will fulfilling its original design. The
+"law of limitation," according to which not only the subordinate
+powers of man, but even the forces of Nature, from those concerned in
+the highest animal organization down to that of gravitation, are made
+to take their places in the chain of dependence which hangs from the
+human will, is the most important part, scientifically, of the whole
+work. It is in accordance with this law that the science of Morals
+becomes a structure,--universal in its base and regularly ascending
+after the order of Nature, harmonious in all its parts, and proceeding
+upward within hearing of universal harmonies. Hitherto there has been
+no such structure; but only tabernacles have been built, because there
+was no Solomon to build a temple.
+
+Once having determined the connection which there is between the Will
+and the principle of Good, there still remains to be determined the
+place which Reason has in this connection.
+
+Merely to act according to some teleological or determining principle
+gives man no preëminence above Nature, except in degree. That which is
+peculiar to man is that he has the faculty of acting according to laws
+_as represented and reflected upon in the light of thought_,--to which
+reason is absolutely indispensable. Reason is therefore necessary to
+choice,--to freedom. There can, therefore, no more be goodness without
+reason than there can be without will. Yet there might be, as Kant
+justly argues, if good were to be in any case identified with mere
+happiness. "For," says he, "all the actions which man has to perform
+with a view to happiness, and the whole rule of his conduct, would be
+much more exactly presented to him by instinct, and that end had been
+much more certainly attained than it ever can be by reason; and should
+the latter also be bestowed on the favored creature, it must be of use
+only in contemplating the happy predisposition lodged in instinct,
+to admire this, to rejoice in it, and be grateful for it to the
+beneficent Cause; in short, Nature would have prevented reason from
+any practical use in subduing appetite, etc., and from excogitating
+for itself a project of happiness; she would have taken upon herself
+not only the choice of ends, but the means, and had with wise care
+intrusted both to instinct merely." The fact, then, that reason has
+been given, and has been endowed with a practical use, is sufficient
+to prove that some more worthy end than felicity is designed,--namely,
+a will good in itself,--rationally good,--that is, _from choice_.
+
+Out of the _rationality_ of will is developed its _morality_. Here,
+only, is found the possibility of failure in respect of the end
+constitutionally indicated,--here only the avenues of temptation, by
+which alien elements come in to array the man against himself in
+a terrible conflict, so sublime that it is a spectacle to heavenly
+powers. It is only as this rationality is clearly developed, and is
+allotted its just place in Moral Science, that the universal structure
+to which we have already alluded, and which, as we saw, culminated
+in the will, assumes its peculiar sublimity. For the _voluntariness_
+which is consciously realized in reason gives man the mastery over
+constitutional processes, not merely to direct, but even to thwart
+them; nor this merely for himself, but it is in his power, through
+the nullification of his own constitution, to nullify also that of the
+world, to dally with the institutions of Nature, and on the grandest
+scale to play the meddler.
+
+Merely of itself, apart from reason, the will could only work out its
+teleological type in darkness and by blind necessity; there could be
+no goodness, for this involves conscious elements. But through reason,
+that which of itself the will would yield as unconscious impulse
+obtains _representation_, and thus becomes a recognized principle,
+which in connection with the feelings involves an element of
+obligation.
+
+Conscience, thus, instead of being a separate and independent faculty,
+is, as Dr. Hopkins also places it, a function of the moral reason.
+Into the courts of this reason come not only the higher indications of
+will, but also the impulses of appetite, instinct, and affection,--not
+moral in themselves, indeed, but yet assuming the garments of morality
+as seen in this high presence.
+
+That which was made fundamental by Kant, in all that he has left on
+the subject of Moral Philosophy, is the position that it is wholly
+to be developed out of practical reason, or will as represented in
+reason. The same position is fundamental in President Hopkins's work,
+and it is here that its philosophic value chiefly rests. This position
+is developed in plain English, with strict scientific truth, and yet
+with a warm and sympathetic glow, as regards outward embodiment,
+that very much heightens the elevating power of the principles
+and conclusions evolved. Nor is man, because of his independent
+personality, made to stand alone, but always is he seen in the
+higher and All-Comprehending Presence. Ideal truth is reached without
+necessitating Idealism, and harmony is attained without Pantheism.
+
+We have purposely confined ourselves to the most general feature of
+the work, because it is this which gives it its great and distinctive
+importance; yet the whole structure is as elaborately and beautifully
+wrought as it is fitly grounded in the truth of Nature.
+
+
+_The National Almanac and Annual Record for 1863_. Philadelphia:
+George W. Childs. 12mo. pp. 600.
+
+
+Volumes like this are the very staff of history. What a stride in
+literature from the "Prognostications" of Nostradamus and Partridge,
+and the imposture of such prophetic chap-books as the almanacs of
+Moore and Poor Robin, to the bulky volumes teeming with all manner of
+information, such as the "Almanach Impérial," the "New Edinburgh," or
+"Thorn's Irish Almanac"! In the list of superior works ranking with
+those just named is to be included the new "National Almanac." We have
+here assuredly a vast improvement over anything in this way which
+has heretofore been attempted among us. A more comprehensive range of
+topics is presented, and such standard subjects as we should naturally
+expect to find introduced are worked up with much more copiousness and
+accuracy of treatment. It is evident on every page that a thoroughly
+active and painstaking industry has presided over the preparation of
+the volume. Statistics have not been taken at second-hand, where the
+primary sources of knowledge could be rendered available. The details
+of the great Departments of the Federal Government have been revised
+by the Departments themselves. In like manner, the particulars
+concerning the several States have in most cases been corrected by a
+State officer. Thus, as respects the leading subjects in the book, we
+have here not only the most accurate information before the public,
+but we have it in the latest authorized or official form. Facts are
+as a general rule brought down to date, instead of being six or
+twelve months behind-hand, as has been the case heretofore in similar
+publications, the compilers of which were content to await the tardy
+printing by Congress of documents and reports. Hence the work is
+pervaded by an air of freshness and vitality. It is not merely
+a receptacle of outgrown facts and accomplished events, but the
+companion and interpreter of the scenes and activities of the stirring
+present. It strives to seize and embody the whole being and doing of
+the passing time.
+
+It is quite impossible to exhibit in these few lines any adequate
+conception of the diversity and fulness of the subjects. All the
+valuable results of the last census are classified and incorporated.
+Then we have the entire organization of the military, naval, and
+civil service,--the tariff and tax laws conveniently arranged,--the
+financial, industrial, commercial, agricultural, literary,
+educational, and ecclesiastical elements of our condition,--the
+legislation of the last three sessions of Congress, and full and
+detailed statistics of the individual States,--to which is added a
+minute sketch of the foreign Governments. Nor can we overlook the
+fact, that, in the abundant matter relating to our present war,
+the narrative of events, obituary notices, etc., reach back to
+the commencement of the Rebellion, so as to furnish a complete and
+unbroken record of the contest from its outbreak. So much for the
+diversified nature of the matter; and an idea may be formed of its
+aggregate bulk from the fact that it exceeds, by nearly one-third, the
+size of the "American Almanac."
+
+The publication is, we trust, the dawning of a new era in this
+department of our literature. We have done well heretofore, but we
+have been behind many of the leading foreign works. There are in this
+initial volume indications that the new series which it inaugurates
+will be conducted with a thoroughness, enterprise, and skill which
+cannot fail to supply a great want. The politician, statesman,
+and scholar, the merchant, mechanic, and tradesman, every
+newspaper-reader, and, in truth, every observant and thoughtful man,
+of whatsoever profession or business, always wants at hand a minute
+and trustworthy exhibition of the manifold elements which constitute
+the changeful present as it ebbs and flows around him. Such hand-books
+are indispensable for present reference, and they constitute an
+invaluable storehouse for the future.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Atlantic Monthly, Vol. XI., February,
+1863, No. LXIV., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATLANTIC MONTHLY ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Atlantic Monthly, Vol. XI., February, 1863,
+No. LXIV., 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: Atlantic Monthly, Vol. XI., February, 1863, No. LXIV.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: June 30, 2004 [EBook #12785]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATLANTIC MONTHLY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Leonard Johnson
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+ATLANTIC MONTHLY.
+
+A MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, ART, AND POLITICS.
+
+VOL. XI--FEBRUARY, 1863.--NO. LXIV.
+
+
+
+
+SOVEREIGNS AND SONS.
+
+
+The sudden death of Prince Albert caused profound regret, and the
+Royal Family of Britain had the sincere sympathies of the civilized
+world on that sad occasion. The Prince Consort was a man of brilliant
+talents, and those talents he had cultivated with true German
+thoroughness. His knowledge was extensive, various, and accurate.
+There was no affectation in his regard for literature, art, and
+science; for he felt toward them all as it was natural that an
+educated gentleman of decided abilities, and who had strongly
+pronounced intellectual tastes, should feel. Though he could not be
+said to hold any official position, his place in the British Empire
+was one of the highest that could be held by a person not born to the
+sceptre. His knowledge of affairs, and the confidence that was placed
+in him by the sovereign, made it impossible that he should not be
+a man of much influence, no matter whether he was recognized by the
+Constitution or not. As the director of the education of the princes
+and princesses, his children, his character and ideas are likely to be
+felt hereafter, when those personages shall have become the occupants
+of high and responsible stations. The next English sovereign will be
+pretty much what he was made by his father; and it is no light thing
+to have had the formation of a mind that may be made to act, with
+more or less directness, on the condition of two hundred millions of
+people.
+
+We know it is the custom to speak of the Government of England as if
+there were no other powerful institution in that Empire than the House
+of Commons; and that very arrogant gentleman, Mr. John Arthur Roebuck,
+has told us, in his usual style, that the crown is a word, and nothing
+more. "The crown!" exclaimed the member for Sheffield, in 1858,--"the
+crown! it is the House of Commons!" Theoretically Mr. Roebuek is
+right, and the British practice conforms to the theory, whenever the
+reigning prince is content to receive the theory, and to act upon it:
+but all must depend upon that prince's character; and should a British
+sovereign resolve to rule as well as to reign, he might give the House
+of Commons much trouble, in which the whole Empire would share. The
+House of Commons was never stronger than it was in the latter part of
+1760. For more than seventy years it had been the first institution in
+the State, and for forty-six years the interest of the sovereign had
+been to maintain its supremacy. The king was a cipher. Yet a new
+king had but to appear to change everything. George III. ascended the
+throne with the determination not to be the slave of any minister,
+himself the slave of Parliament; and from the day that he became king
+to the day that the decline of his faculties enforced his retirement,
+his personal power was everywhere felt, and his personal character
+everywhere impressed itself on the British world, and to no ordinary
+extent on other countries. George III. was not a great man, and it has
+been argued that his mind was never really sound; and yet of all men
+who then lived, and far more than either Washington or Napoleon, he
+gave direction and color and tone to all public events, and to not
+a little of private life, and much of his work will have everlasting
+endurance. He did not supersede the House of Commons, but he would not
+be the simple vizier of that many-headed sultan, which for the most
+part became his humble tool. Yet he was not a popular sovereign until
+he had long occupied the throne, and had perpetrated deeds that should
+have destroyed the greatest popularity that sovereign ever possessed.
+It was not until after the overthrow of the Fox-and-North Coalition
+that he found himself popular, and so he remained unto the end. The
+change that he wrought, and the power that he wielded in the State,--a
+power as arbitrary as that of Louis XV.,--were the fruits of his
+personal character, and that character was the consequence of the
+peculiar education which he had received.
+
+Lord Brougham tells us that George III. "was impressed with a lofty
+feeling of his prerogative, and a firm determination to maintain,
+perhaps extend it. At all events, he was resolved not to be a mere
+name or a cipher in public affairs; and whether from a sense of the
+obligations imposed upon him by his station, or from a desire to enjoy
+all its powers and privileges, he certainly, while his reason remained
+entire, but especially during the earlier period of his reign,
+interfered in the affairs of government more than any prince who ever
+sat upon the throne of this country since our monarchy was distinctly
+admitted to be a limited one, and its executive functions were
+distributed among responsible ministers. The correspondence which he
+carried on with his confidential servants during the ten most critical
+years of his life lies before us, and it proves that his attention was
+ever awake to all the occurrences of the government. Not a step was
+taken in foreign, colonial, or domestic affairs, that he did not
+form his opinion upon it, and exercise his influence over it. The
+instructions to ambassadors, the orders to governors, the movements of
+forces, down to the marching of a single battalion, in the districts
+of this country, the appointment to all offices in Church and State,
+not only the giving away of judgeships, bishoprics, regiments, but the
+subordinate promotions, lay and clerical,--all these form the topics
+of his letters; on all his opinion is pronounced decisively; in
+all his will is declared peremptorily. In one letter he decides the
+appointment of a Scotch puisne judge; in another the march of a troop
+from Buckinghamshire into Yorkshire; in a third the nomination to
+the Deanery of Westminster; in a fourth he says, that, 'if Adam, the
+architect, succeeds Worsley at the Board of Works, he shall think
+Chambers ill used.' For the greater affairs of State it is well known
+how substantially he insisted upon being the king _de facto_ as well
+as _de jure_. The American War, the long exclusion of the Liberal
+party, the French Revolution, the Catholic question, are all sad
+monuments of his real power."
+
+This is a true picture of George III., and why it should be supposed
+that no descendant of that monarch will ever be able to make himself
+potently felt in the government of his Empire we are at a loss to
+understand. The exact part of that monarch would not be repeated, the
+world having changed so much as to render such repetition impossible;
+but the end at which George III. aimed, and which he largely
+accomplished for himself, that end being the vindication of the
+monarchical element in the British polity, might be undertaken by one
+of his great-grandsons with every reason to expect success. The means
+employed would have to be different from those which George III. made
+use of, but that would prove nothing against the project itself.
+The men who followed Cromwell to the Long Parliament and the men who
+followed Bonaparte into the Council of Five Hundred were differently
+clothed and armed, but the pikemen of the future Protector were
+engaged in the same kind of work that was afterward done by the
+grenadiers of the future Emperor. The one set of men had never
+heard of the bayonet, and the other set had faith in nothing but the
+bayonet, believing it to be as "holy" as M. Michelet asserts it to
+be. The pikemen were the most pious of men, and could have eaten an
+Atheist with relish, after having roasted him. The grenadiers were
+Atheists, and cared no more for Christianity than for Mahometanism,
+their chief having testified his regard for the latter, and
+consequently his contempt for both, only the year before, in Egypt.
+Yet both detachments were successfully employed in doing the same
+thing, and that was the clearing away of what was regarded as
+legislative rubbish, in order that military monarchies might be
+erected on the cleared ground. In each instance there was the element
+of violence actively at work, and it makes no possible difference that
+the English Commons went out because they did not care to come to push
+of pike, and that the French Representatives departed rather than risk
+the consequence of a bayonet-charge. So if the Prince of Wales should
+see fit to tread in the footsteps of his great-grandfather, he would
+have very different instruments from those "king's friends" whose
+existence and actions were so fatal to ministers in the early part of
+those days when George III. was king.
+
+It is a common remark, that the institutions of England have been so
+far reformed in a democratic direction, that no monarch could ever
+expect to become powerful in that country. We think the observation
+unphilosophical; and it is because the old aristocratical system of
+England received a heavy blow in 1832 that we believe a king of that
+country could make himself a ruler in fact as well as in theory.
+Between a king and an aristocracy there never can be anything like a
+sincere attachment, unless the king be content to be recognized as
+the first member of the patrician order, to be _primus inter pares_ in
+strict good faith, an agent of his class, but not the sovereign of his
+kingdom. Kings generally prefer new men to men of established position
+and old descent. They have a fondness for low-born favorites, who are
+not only cleverer than most aristocrats will condescend to be, but who
+recognize a chief in a monarch, and enable him to feel and to enjoy
+his superiority when in their company. The hostility that prevails
+between the peer and the _parvenu_ is the most natural thing in the
+world, and is no more to be wondered at than that between the hare and
+the hound. In earlier times the peerage had the best of it, and could
+hang up the _parvenus_ with wonderful despatch,--as witness the
+fate of Cochrane and his associates, favorites of the third James of
+Scotland, who swung in the wind over Lauder Bridge. In later times
+brains and intelligence tell in and on the world, and the peers,
+having no longer pit and gallows for the punishment of presumptuous
+plebeians who dare to get between them and the regal sunshine, must be
+content to see those plebeians basking in the royal rays, if they are
+not capable of outdoing them in those arts that ever have been found
+most useful in the advancement of the interest of courtiers. Hanging
+and heading have gone mostly out of date, or the peer would be in more
+danger than the upstart.
+
+The Reform Bill has made it much easier for a king of Great Britain to
+become a ruler than it was for George III. to carry his point over
+the old aristocracy, for it has created a class of voters who could be
+easily won over to the aid of a king engaged in a project that should
+not injure them, while its success should reduce the power of the
+aristocracy. The father of the Reform Bill made a strange mistake
+as to the character of that measure. "I hope," said the old Tory and
+Pittite, Lord Sidmouth, to him, "God will forgive you on account of
+this bill: I don't think I can." "Mark my words," was Earl Grey's
+answer,--"within two years you will find that we have become unpopular
+for having brought forward the most aristocratic measure that ever was
+proposed in Parliament." The great Whig statesman was but half right.
+The Whigs became unpopular within the time named, but it was for very
+different reasons from that assigned by Earl Grey in advance for their
+fall in the people's favor. The Reform Bill, instead of proving an
+aristocratic measure, has wellnigh rendered aristocratical government
+impossible in England; and as a democracy in that country is as much
+out of the question as a well-ordered monarchy is in America, a return
+to a true regal government would seem to be the only course left for
+England, if she desires to have a strong government. When the Duke of
+Wellington, seeing the breaking up of the old system because of the
+triumph of the Whig measure, asked the question, "How is the King's
+government to be carried on?" he meant, "How will it be possible to
+maintain the old aristocratical system of party-government?"
+
+Since the grand organic change that was effected thirty years ago,
+there has been no strong and stable government in England. Lord Grey
+went out of office because he could not keep his party together. The
+King, under the spurring of his wife, made an effort to play the part
+of his father in 1783, with Peel for Pitt, and was beaten. Peel was
+floored, and Lord Melbourne became Premier again; and though he held
+office six years, he never had a working majority in the Commons, nor
+a majority of any kind in the Peers. The largest majorities that he
+could command in the lower House would have been considered something
+like very weak support in the ante-Reform times, and would have caused
+the ministers of those times to resign themselves to resignation.
+When the Tories came back to power, in 1841, with about one hundred
+majority in the Commons, they thought they were secure for a decade
+at least; but in a few months they found they were not secure of even
+their own chief; and in five years they were compelled to abandon
+protection, and to consent to the death and burial of their own party,
+which was denied even the honor of embalmment, young Conservatism
+being nothing but old Toryism, and therefore it was beyond even the
+power of spices to prolong its decay. It had rotted of the potato-rot,
+and the League's powerful breath blew it over. The Whigs returned
+to office, but not to power, the Russell Government proving a most
+ridiculous concern, and living through only five years of rickety
+rule. A spasmodic Tory Government, that discarded Tory principles,
+endured for less than a year, not even the vigorous intellect of the
+Earl of Derby, seconded though it was by the genius of Disraeli, being
+sufficient to insure it a longer term of existence. Then came the
+Aberdeen Ministry, a regular coalition concern, a no-party government,
+and necessarily so, because all parties but the extreme Tories were
+represented in it, and were engaged in neutralizing each other. How
+could there be a party government, or, indeed, for long a government
+of any kind, by a ministry in which were such men as Aberdeen and
+Russell, Palmerston and Grahame, Gladstone and Clarendon, all pigging
+together in the same truckle-bed, to use Mr. Burke's figure concerning
+the mixture that was called the Chatham Ministry? The coalition went
+to pieces on the Russian rock, having managed the war much worse
+than any American Administration ever mismanaged one. The Palmerston
+Government followed, and has existed ever since, deducting the
+fifteen months that the second Derby-Disraeli Ministry lasted; but the
+Palmerston Ministry has seldom had a majority in Parliament, and has
+lived, partly through the forbearance of its foes, partly through the
+support of men who are neither its friends nor its enemies, and partly
+through the personal popularity of its vigorous old chief, who is
+as lively at seventy-eight as he was at forty-five, when he was a
+Canningite. Ministries now maintain themselves because men do not know
+what might happen, if they were to be dismissed; and this has been the
+political state of England for more than a quarter of a century, with
+no indications of a change so long as the government shall remain
+purely Parliamentary in its character, Parliament meaning the House of
+Commons. There is no party in the United Kingdom capable of electing a
+strong majority to the House of Commons, and hence a strong government
+is impossible so long as that body shall control the country. With the
+removal of Lord Palmerston something like anarchy might be expected,
+there being no man but him who is competent to keep the Commons in
+order without the aid of a predominating party. The tendency has been
+for some time to lean upon individuals, at the same time that
+the number of individuals possessed of influence of the requisite
+character has greatly diminished. Sir Robert Peel, had he lived, would
+have been all that Lord Palmerston is, and more, and would have been
+more acceptable to the middle class than is the Irish peer.
+
+The state of things that is thus presented, and which must become
+every year of a more pronounced character, is one that would be highly
+favorable to the exertions of a prince who should seek to make himself
+felt as the wielder of the sceptre, and who should exert himself to
+rise from the presidency of an aristocratical corporation, which is
+all that a British monarch now is, to the place of king of a great and
+free people. A prince with talent, and with a hold on the affection of
+his nominal subjects, might confer the blessing of strong government
+on Britain, and rule over the first of empires, instead of being a
+mere doge, or, as Napoleon coarsely had it, a pig to fatten at the
+public expense. The time would appear to be near at hand when England
+shall be the scene of a new struggle for power, with the aristocracy
+on the one side, and the sovereign and most of the people on the
+other. A nation like England cannot exist long with weakness
+organized for its government, and there is nothing in the condition
+of Parliament or of parties that allows us to suppose that from them
+strength could proceed, any more than that grapes could be gathered
+from thorns or figs from thistles. A monarch who should effect the
+change indicated might be called a usurper, and certainly would be a
+revolutionist; but, as Mommsen says, "Any revolution or any usurpation
+is justified before the bar of history by exclusive ability to
+govern,"--and government is what most nations now stand most in need
+of. The reason why George III.'s conduct is generally condemned is,
+that he was a clumsy creature, and that he made a bad use of the power
+which he monopolized, or sought to monopolize, his whole course being
+unrelieved by a single trait of genius, or even of that tact which is
+the genius of small minds.
+
+
+It has been charged upon the princes of the House of Hanover that they
+are given to quarrelling, and that between sovereign and heir-apparent
+there has never been good-will, while they have on several occasions
+disgusted the world by the vehemence of their hatred for each other.
+That George I. hated his heir is well known; and George II. hated his
+son Frederick with far more intensity than he himself had been hated
+by his own father. The Memoirs of Lord Hervey show the state of
+feeling that existed in the English royal family during the first
+third of the reign of George II., and the spectacle is hideous beyond
+parallel; and for many years longer, until Frederick's death,
+there was no abatement of paternal and filial hate. George III.
+was disgusted with his eldest son's personal conduct and political
+principles, as well he might be; for while the father was a model of
+decorum, and a bitter Tory, the son was a profligate, and a Whig,--and
+the King probably found it harder to forgive the Whig than the
+profligate. The Prince cared no more for Whig principles than he did
+for his marriage-vows, but affected them as a means of annoying his
+father, whose Toryism was of proof. He, as a man, toasted the buff and
+blue, when that meant support of Washington and his associates,
+for the same reason that, as a boy, he had cheered for Wilkes and
+Liberty,--because it was the readiest way of annoying his father; but
+he ever deserted the Whigs when his aid and countenance could have
+been useful to them. George IV. had no child with whom to quarrel, but
+while Prince Regent he did his worst to make his daughter unhappy,
+as we find established in Miss Knight's Memoirs. The good-natured
+and kind-hearted William IV. had no legitimate children, but he was
+strongly attached to the Fitzclarences, who were borne to him by Mrs.
+Jordan. Indeed, monarchs have often been as full of love for their
+offspring born out of wedlock as of hate for their children born in
+that holy state. Being men, they must love something, and what
+so natural as that they should love their natural children, whose
+helpless condition appeals so strongly to all their better feelings,
+and who never can become their rivals?
+
+Queen Victoria is the first sovereign of the House of Hanover who,
+having children, has not pained the world by quarrelling with them.
+A model sovereign, she has not allowed an infirmity supposed to be
+peculiar to her illustrious House to control her clear and just mind,
+so that her career as a mother is as pleasing as her career as a
+sovereign is splendid. About the time of the death of Prince Albert,
+a leading British journal published some articles in which it was
+insinuated, not asserted, that there had been trouble in the Royal
+Family, and that that quarrelling between parent and child which
+had been so common in that family in former times was about to
+be exhibited again. It was even said that domestic peace was an
+impossibility in the House of Hanover, which was but an indorsement
+of Earl Granville's remark, in George II.'s reign. "This family," said
+that eccentric peer, "always has quarrelled, and always will quarrel,
+from generation to generation"; and he did not live to see the ill
+feeling that existed between George III. and his eldest son.
+
+There is no reason for saying that the Hanover family is more
+quarrelsome than most other royal lines; and the domestic dissensions
+of great houses are more noted than those of lesser houses only
+because kings and nobles are so placed as to live in sight of the
+world. When a king falls out with his eldest son, the entertainment is
+one to which all men go as spectators, and historians consider it
+to be the first of their duties to give full details of that
+entertainment. Since the Hanoverians have reigned over the English,
+the world has been a writing and a reading world, and nothing has more
+interested writers and readers than the dissensions of sovereigns and
+their sons. If we extend our observation to those days when German
+sovereigns were unthought of in England, we shall find that kings
+and princes did not always agree; and if we go farther, and scan the
+histories of other royal houses, we shall learn that it is not in
+Britain alone that the wearers of crowns have looked with aversion
+upon their heirs, and have had sons who have loved them so well and
+truly as to wish to witness their promotion to heavenly crowns. The
+Hanoverian monarchs of England, and their sons, have shared only the
+common lot of those who reign and those who wish to reign.
+
+The Norman kings of England did not always live on good terms with
+their sons. William the Conqueror had a very quarrelsome family. His
+children quarrelled with one another, and the King quarrelled with his
+wife. The oldest son of William and Matilda was Robert, afterward Duke
+of Normandy,--and a very trying time this young man caused his father
+to have; while the mother favored the son, probably out of revenge for
+the beatings she had received, with fists and bridles, from her royal
+husband, who used to swear "By the Splendor of God!"--his favorite
+oath, and one that has as much merit as can belong to any piece of
+blasphemy,--that he never would be governed by a woman. The father and
+son went to war, and they actually met in battle, when the son ran the
+old gentleman through the arm with his lance, and dropped him out of
+the saddle with the utmost dexterity. This was the first time that
+the Conqueror was ever conquered, and perhaps it was not altogether
+without complacency that "the governor" saw what a clever fellow his
+eldest son was with his tools. At the time of William's death Robert
+was on bad terms with him, and is believed to have been bearing arms
+against him. Henry I. lost his sons before he could well quarrel
+with them, the wreck of the White Ship causing the death of his
+heir-apparent, and also of his natural son Richard. He compensated for
+this omission by quarrelling with his daughter Matilda, and with her
+husband, Geoffrey of Anjou. He made war on his brother Robert, took
+from him the Duchy of Normandy, and shut him up for life; but the
+story, long believed, that he put out Robert's eyes, has been called
+in question by modern writers. King Stephen, who bought his breeches
+at so low a figure, had a falling-out with his son Eustace, when he
+and Henry Plantagenet sought to restore peace to England, and nothing
+but Eustace's death made a settlement possible. William Rufus, the Red
+King, who was the second of the Norman sovereigns of England, had
+no legitimate children, for he was never married. He was a jolly
+bachelor, and as such he has had the honor of having his history
+written by one of the ablest literary ladies of our time, Miss Agnes
+Strickland. He was the only king of England, who arrived at years of
+indiscretion, who did not marry. The other bachelor kings were Edward
+V. and Edward VI., whose united ages were short of thirty years. His
+character does not tend to make the single state of man respected.
+"Never did a ruler die less regretted than William Rufus," says Dr.
+Lappenberg, "although still young, being little above forty, not a
+usurper, and successful in his undertakings. He was never married,
+and, besides the crafty and officious tools of his power, was
+surrounded only by a few Normans of quality, and harlots. In his last
+struggle with the clergy, the most shameless rapacity is especially
+prominent, and so glaring, that, notwithstanding some exaggerations
+and errors that may be pointed out in the Chronicles, he still appears
+in the same light. Effeminacy, drunkenness, gluttony, dissoluteness,
+and unnatural crimes were the distinguishing characteristics of his
+court. He was himself an example of incontinence." This is a nice
+character to travel with down the page of history. He quarrelled with
+his brothers, and with his uncle, and kept up the family character in
+an exceedingly satisfactory manner, considering that he was unmarried.
+The statement that he was slain by Walter Tirel, accidentally, in the
+New Forest, is now disregarded. Our theory of his death is, that he
+fell a victim to the ambition of his brother, Henry I., who succeeded
+him, and who certainly had good information as to his fall, and made
+good use of it, like a sensible fellow.
+
+Of all the royal races of the Middle Ages, no one stands out more
+boldly on the historic page than the Plantagenets, who ruled over
+England from 1154 to 1485, the line of descent being frequently
+broken, and family quarrels constantly occurring. They were a bold and
+an able race, and if they had possessed a closer resemblance to the
+Hapsburgs, they would have become masters of Western Europe; but their
+quarrelsome disposition more than undid all that they could effect
+through the exercise of their talents. On the female side they were
+descended from the Conqueror; and, as we have seen, the Conqueror's
+family was one in which sons rebelled against the fathers, and brother
+fought with brother. Matilda, daughter of Henry I., became the wife of
+Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, and from their union came Henry II., first
+of the royal Plantagenets. Now the Angevine Plantagenets were "a hard
+set," as we should say in these days. Dissensions were common enough
+in the family, and they descended to the offspring of Geoffrey and
+Matilda, being in fact intensified by the elevation of the House to a
+throne. Henry II. married Eleanora of Aquitaine, one of the greatest
+matches of those days, a marriage which has had great effect on modern
+history. The Aquitanian House was as little distinguished for the
+practice of the moral virtues as were the lines of Anjou and Normandy.
+One of the Countesses of Anjou was reported to be a demon, which
+probably meant only that her husband had caught a Tartar in marrying
+her; but the story was enough to satisfy the credulous people of those
+times, who, very naturally, considering their conduct, believed that
+the Devil was constant in his attention to their affairs. It was to
+this lady that Richard Cocur de Lion referred, when he said, speaking
+of the family contentions, "Is it to be wondered at, that, coming from
+such a source, we live ill with one another? What comes from the Devil
+must to the Devil return." With such an origin on his father's side,
+crossing the fierce character of his mother, Henry II. thought he
+could not do better than marry Eleanora, whose origin was almost as
+bad as his own. Her grandfather had been a "fast man" in his youth and
+middle life, and it was not until he had got nigh to seventy that he
+began to think that it was time to repent. He had taken Eleanora's
+grandmother from her husband, and a pious priest had said to them,
+"Nothing good will be born to you," which prediction the event
+justified. The old gentleman resigned his rich dominions, supposed to
+be the best in Europe, to his grand-daughter, and she married Louis
+VII., King of France, and accompanied him in the crusade that he was
+so foolish as to take part in. She had women-warriors, who did their
+cause immense mischief; and unless she has been greatly scandalized,
+she made her husband fit for heaven in a manner approved neither by
+the law nor the gospel. The Provencal ladies had no prejudices against
+Saracens. After her return to Europe, she got herself divorced from
+Louis, and married Henry Plantagenet, who was much her junior, she
+having previously been the mistress of his father. It was a _mariage
+de convenance_, and, as is sometimes the case with such marriages,
+it turned out very inconveniently for both parties to it. It was not
+unfruitful, but all the fruit it produced was bad, and to the husband
+and father that fruit became the bitterest of bitter ashes. No
+romancer would have dared to bring about such a scries of unions as
+led to the creation of Plantagenet royalty, and to so much misery
+as well as greatness. There is no exaggeration in Michelet's lively
+picture of the Plantagenets. "In this family," he says, "it was a
+succession of bloody wars and treacherous treaties. Once, when King
+Henry had met his sons in a conference, their soldiers drew upon him.
+This conduct was traditionary in the two Houses of Anjou and Normandy.
+More than once had the children of William the Conqueror and Henry II.
+pointed their swords against their father's breast. Fulk had placed
+his foot on the neck of his vanquished son. The jealous Eleanora, with
+the passion and vindictiveness of her Southern blood, encouraged her
+sons' disobedience, and trained them to parricide. These youths, in
+whose veins mingled the blood of so many different races,--Norman,
+Saxon, and Aquitanian,--seemed to entertain, over and above the
+violence of the Fulks of Anjou and the Williams of England, all the
+opposing hatreds and discords of those races. They never knew whether
+they were from the South or the North: they only knew that they hated
+one another, and their father worse than all. They could not trace
+back their ancestry, without finding, at each descent, or rape, or
+incest, or parricide." Henry II. quarrelled with all his sons, and
+they all did him all the mischief they could, under the advice and
+direction of their excellent mother, whom Henry imprisoned. A priest
+once sought to effect a reconciliation between Henry and his son
+Geoffrey. He went to the Prince with a crucifix in his hand, and
+entreated him not to imitate Absalom.
+
+"What!" exclaimed the Prince, "would you have me renounce my
+birthright?"
+
+"God forbid!" answered the holy man; "I wish you to do nothing to your
+own injury."
+
+"You do not understand my words," said Geoffrey; "it is our family
+fate not to love one another. 'T is our inheritance; and not one of us
+will ever forego it."
+
+That must have been a pleasant family to marry into! When the King's
+eldest son, Henry, died, regretting his sins against his father,
+that father durst not visit him, fearing treachery; and the immediate
+occasion of the King's death was the discovery of the hostility of his
+son John, who, being the worst of his children, was, of course, the
+best-beloved of them all. The story was, that, when Richard entered
+the Abbey of Fontevraud, in which his father's body lay, the corpse
+bled profusely, which was held to indicate that the new king was his
+father's murderer. Richard was very penitent, as his elder brother
+Henry had been, on his death-bed. They were very sorrowful, were those
+Plantagenet princes, when they had been guilty of atrocious acts,
+and when it was too late for their repentance to have any practical
+effect.
+
+Richard I. had no children, and so he could not get up a perfect
+family-quarrel, though he and his brother John were enemies. He died
+at forty-two, and but a few years after his marriage with Berengaria
+of Navarre, an English queen who never was in England. When on his
+death-bed, Richard was advised by the Bishop of Rouen to repent, and
+to separate himself from his children. "I have no children," the King
+answered. But the good priest told him that he had children, and that
+they were avarice, luxury, and pride. "True," said Richard, who was
+a humorist,--"and I leave my avarice to the Cistercians, my luxury
+to the Gray Friars, and my pride to the Templars." History has fewer
+sharper sayings than this, every word of which told like a cloth-yard
+shaft sent against a naked bosom. Richard certainly never quarrelled
+with the children whom he thus left to his _friends_.
+
+King John did not live long enough to illustrate the family character
+by fighting with his children. When he died, in 1216, his eldest son,
+Henry III., was but nine years old, and even a Plantagenet could not
+well fall out with a son of that immature age. However, John did his
+best to make his mark on his time. If he could not quarrel with his
+children, because of their tender years, he, with a sense of duty that
+cannot be too highly praised, devoted his venom to his wife. He was
+pleased to suspect her of being as regardless of marriage-vows as he
+had been himself, and so he hanged her supposed lover over her bed,
+with two others, who were suspected of being their accomplices.
+The Queen was imprisoned. On their being reconciled, he stinted her
+wardrobe, a refinement of cruelty that was aggravated by his monstrous
+expenditure on his own ugly person. Queen Isabella was very handsome,
+and perhaps John was of the opinion of some modern husbands, who think
+that dress extinguishes beauty as much as it inflames bills. Having
+no children to torment, John turned his disagreeable attentions to his
+nephew, Arthur, Duke of Brittany, who, according to modern ideas, was
+the lawful King of England. The end was the end of Arthur. How he was
+disposed of is not exactly known, but, judging from John's character
+and known actions, we incline to agree with those writers who say that
+the uncle slew the nephew with his own royal hand. He never could
+deny himself an attainable luxury, and to him the murder of a youthful
+relative must have been a rich treat, and have created for him a new
+sensation, something like the new pleasure for which the Persian king
+offered a great reward. Besides, all uncles are notoriously bad, and
+seem, indeed, to have been made only for the misery of their nephews
+and nieces, of whose commands they are most reprehensibly negligent.
+We mean to write a book, one of these days, for the express purpose of
+showing what a mistake it was to allow any such relationship to exist,
+and tracing all the evil that ever has afflicted humanity to the
+innate wickedness of uncles, and requiring their extirpation. We
+err, then, on the safe side, in supposing that John despatched Arthur
+himself,--not to say, that, when you require that a delicate piece of
+work should be done, you must do it with your own hand, or you may
+be disappointed. John did the utmost that he could do to keep up the
+discredit of the family; for, when a man has no son to whip and to
+curse, he should not be severely censured for having done no more than
+to kill his nephew. Men of large and charitable minds will take all
+the circumstances of John's case into the account, and not allow their
+judgment of his conduct to be harsh. What better can a man do than his
+worst?
+
+Henry III. appears to have managed to live without quarrelling
+with his children; but then he was a poor creature, and even was so
+unkingly, and so little like what a Plantagenet should have been, that
+he actually disliked war! He might with absolute propriety have worn
+the lowly broom-corn from which his family-name was taken, while it
+was a sweeping satire on almost all others who bore it. His heir,
+Edward I., was a king of "high stomach," and as a prince he stood
+stoutly by his father in the baronial wars. He, too, though the father
+of sixteen children, dispensed with family dissensions, thus showing
+that "The more, the merrier," is a true saying. Edward II. came to
+grief from having a bad wife, Isabella of France, who made use of
+his son against him. That son was Edward III., who became king in his
+father's lifetime, and whose marriage with Philippa of Hainault is
+one of the best-known facts of history, not only because it was an
+uncommonly happy marriage, but that it had remarkable consequences.
+This royal couple got along very happily with their children; but the
+ambition of their fourth son, the Duke of Lancaster, troubled the
+last days of the King, and prepared the way for great woes in the next
+century. The King was governed by Lancaster, and the Black Prince, who
+was then in a dying state, was at the head of what would now be called
+the Opposition, as if he foresaw what evils his brother's ambition
+would be the means of bringing upon his son.
+
+Richard II., son of the Black Prince, had no children, though he
+was twice married. He was dethroned, the rebels being headed by his
+cousin, Henry of Lancaster, who became Henry IV. Thus was brought
+about that change in the course of descent which John of Gaunt seems
+to have aimed at, but which he died just too soon to see effected.
+It was a violent change, and one which had its origin in a family
+quarrel, added to political dissatisfaction. Had the revolutionist
+wished merely to set aside a bad king, they would have called the
+House of Mortimer to the throne, the chief member of that House being
+the next heir, as descended from the Duke of Clarence, elder brother
+of the Duke of Lancaster; but more was meant than a political
+revolution, and so the line of Clarence was passed over, and its right
+to the crown treated with neglect, to be brought forward in bloody
+fashion in after-days. In fact, the Englishmen who made Henry of
+Lancaster king prepared the way for that long and terrible struggle
+which took place in the fifteenth century, and which was, its
+consequences as well as its course considered, the greatest civil
+war that has ever afflicted Christendom. The movement that led to the
+elevation of Henry of Holingbroke to the throne, though not precisely
+a palace-revolution, resembles a revolution of that kind more than
+anything else with which it can be compared; and it was as emphatic
+a departure from the principle of hereditary right as can be found in
+history. So much was this the case, that liberals in polities mostly
+place their historical sympathies with the party of the Red Rose, for
+no other reason, that we have ever been able to see, than that the
+House of Lancaster's possession of the throne testified to the triumph
+of revolutionary principles; for that House was jealous of its power
+and cruel in the exercise of it, and was so far from being friendly to
+the people, that it derived its main support from the aristocracy,
+and was the ally of the Church in the harsh work of exterminating the
+Lollards. The House of York, on the other hand, while it had, to use
+modern words, the legitimate right to the throne, was a popular House,
+and represented and embodied whatever there was then existing in
+politics that could be identified with the idea of progress.
+
+The character of the troubles that existed between Henry IV. and his
+eldest son and successor, Shakspeare's Prince Hal, is involved in much
+obscurity. It used to be taken for granted that the poet's Prince was
+an historical character, but that is no longer the case,--Falstaff's
+royal associate being now regarded in the same light in which Falstaff
+himself is regarded. The one is a poetic creation, and so is the
+other. Prince Henry was neither a robber nor a rowdy, but from his
+early youth a much graver character than most men are in advanced
+life. He had great faults, but they were not such as are made to
+appear in the pages of the player. The hero of Agincourt was a mean
+fellow,--a tyrant, a persecutor, a false friend and a cruel enemy, and
+the wager of most unjust wars; but he was not the "fast" youth that
+he has been generally drawn. He had neither the good nor the bad
+qualities that belong to young gentlemen who do not live on terms with
+their papas. He was of a grave and sad temperament, and much more of
+a Puritan than a Cavalier. It is a little singular that Shakspeare
+should have given portraits so utterly false of the most unpopular of
+the kings of the York family, and of the most popular of the kings of
+the rival house,--of Richard III., that is, and of the fifth Henry
+of Lancaster. Neither portrait has any resemblance to the original,
+a point concerning which the poet probably never troubled himself, as
+his sole purpose was to make good acting plays. Had it been necessary
+to that end to make Richard walk on three legs, or Henry on one leg,
+no doubt he would have done so,--just as Monk Lewis said he would have
+made Lady Angela blue, in his "Castle Spectre," if by such painting
+he could have made the play more effective. Prince Henry was a very
+precocious youth, and had the management of great affairs when he was
+but a child, and when it would have been better for his soul's and
+his body's health, had he been engaged in acting as an esquire of some
+good knight, and subjected to rigid discipline. The jealousy that
+his father felt was the natural consequence of the popularity of the
+Prince, who was young, and had highly distinguished himself in both
+field and council, was not a usurper, and was not held responsible for
+any of the unpopular acts done by the Government of his father. They
+were at variance not long before Henry IV.'s death, but little is
+known as to the nature of their quarrels. The crown scene, in which
+the Prince helps himself to the crown while his father is yet alive,
+is taken by Shakspeare from Monstrelet, who is supposed to have
+invented all that he narrates in order to weaken the claim of the
+English monarch to the French throne. If Henry IV., when dying, could
+declare that he had no right to the crown of England, on what could
+Henry V. base his claim to that of France?
+
+Henry V. died before his only son, Henry VI., had completed his first
+year; and Henry VI. was early separated from his only son, Edward
+of Lancaster, the same who was slain while flying from the field
+of Tewkesbury, at the age of eighteen. There was, therefore, no
+opportunity for quarrels between English kings and their sons for the
+sixty years that followed the death of Henry IV.; but there was
+much quarrelling, and some murdering, in the royal family, in those
+years,--brothers and other relatives being fierce rivals, even unto
+death, and zealous even unto slaying of one another. It would be hard
+to say of what crime those Plantagenets were not guilty.[A] Edward
+IV., with whom began the brief ascendency of the House of York, died
+at forty-one, after killing his brother of Clarence, his eldest son
+being but twelve years old. He had no opportunity to have troubles
+with his boys, and he loved women too well to fall out with his
+daughters, the eldest of whom was but just turned of seventeen. The
+history of Edward IV. is admirably calculated to furnish matter for a
+sermon on the visitation of the sins of parents on their children. He
+had talent enough to have made himself master of Western Europe,
+but he followed a life of debauchery, by which he was cut off in his
+prime, leaving a large number of young children to encounter the worst
+of fortunes. Both of his sons disappeared, whether murdered by Richard
+III. or Henry VII. no one can say; and his daughters had in part to
+depend upon that bastard slip of the Red-Rose line, Henry VII., for
+the means to enable them to live as gentlewomen,--all but the eldest,
+whom Henry took to wife as a point of policy, which her father would
+have considered the greatest misfortune of all those that befell his
+offspring. Richard III's only legitimate son died a mere boy.
+
+[Footnote A: It has been said of the Plantagenets that they "never
+shed the blood of a woman." This is nonsense, as we could, time and
+space permitting, show by the citation of numerous facts, but we shall
+here mention only one. King John had a noble woman shut up with her
+son, and starved to death. Perhaps that was not shedding her blood,
+but it was something worse. Before English statesmen and orators and
+writers take all the harlotry of Secessia under their kind care and
+championship, it would be well for them to read up their own country's
+history, and see how abominably women have been used in England for a
+thousand years, from queens to queans.]
+
+The Tudors fame to the English throne in 1485. There was no want of
+domestic quarrelling with them. Arthur, Henry VII.'s eldest son, died
+young, but left a widow, Catharine of Aragon, whom the King treated
+badly; and he appears to have been jealous of the Prince of Wales,
+afterward Henry VIII., but died too soon to allow of that jealousy's
+blooming into quarrels. According to some authorities, the Prince
+thought of seizing the crown, on the ground that it belonged to him in
+right of his mother, Elizabeth Plantagenet, who was unquestionably the
+legitimate heir. Henry VIII. himself, who would have made a splendid
+tyrant over a son who should have readied to man's estate,--an
+absolute model in that way to all after-sovereigns,--was denied
+by fortune an opportunity to round and perfect his character as
+a domestic despot. Only one of his legitimate sons lived even to
+boyhood, Edward VI., and Henry died when the heir-apparent was in his
+tenth year. Of his illegitimate son, the Duke of Richmond, Henry
+was extravagantly fond, and at one time thought of making him
+heir-apparent, which might have been done, for the English dread of
+a succession war was then at its height. Richmond died in his
+seventeenth year. Having no sons of a tormentable age, Henry made his
+daughters as unhappy as he could make them by the harsh exercise of
+paternal authority, and bastardized them both, in order to clear the
+way to the throne for his son. Edward VI. died a bachelor, in his
+sixteenth year, so that we can say nothing of him as a parent; but he
+treated his sister Mary with much harshness, and exhibited on various
+occasions a disposition to have things his own way that would have
+delighted his father, provided it had been directed against anybody
+but that severe old gentleman himself. Mary I. was the best sovereign
+of her line, domestically considered; but then she had neither son nor
+daughter with whom to quarrel, and the difficulties she had with her
+half-sister, Elizabeth, like the differences between the Archangel
+Michael and the Fallen Angel, were purely political in their
+character. We do not think that she would have done much injustice,
+if she had made Elizabeth's Tower-dungeon the half-way house to the
+scaffold. But though political, the half-sisterly dissensions between
+these ladies serve to keep Mary I. within the rules of the royal
+houses to which she belonged. Mary, dying of the loss of Calais and
+the want of children, was succeeded by Elizabeth, who, being a
+maiden queen, had no issue with whom to make issue concerning
+things political or personal. But observe how basely she treated her
+relatives, those poor girls, the Greys, Catharine and Mary, sisters of
+poor Lady Jane, whose fair and clever head Mary I. had taken off. The
+barren Queen, too jealous to share her power with a husband, hated
+marriage with all "the sour malevolence of antiquated virginity," and
+was down upon the Lady Catharine and the Lady Mary because they chose
+to become wives. Then she imprisoned her cousin, Mary Stuart, for
+nineteen years, and finally had her butchered under an approach to
+the forms of law, and in total violation of its spirit. She, too, kept
+within the royal rules, and made herself as great a pest as possible
+to her relatives.
+
+The English throne passed to the House of Stuart in 1603, and, after
+a lapse of six-and-fifty years, England had a sovereign with sons and
+daughters, the first since the death of Henry VIII. at the beginning
+of 1547. There was little opportunity for family dissensions in the
+days of most of the Stuarts, as either political troubles of the most
+serious nature absorbed the attention of kings and princes, or the
+reigning monarchs had no legitimate children. The open quarrel
+between Charles I. and the Parliament began before his eldest son had
+completed his eleventh year; and after that quarrel had increased to
+war, and it was evident that the sword alone could decide the issue,
+the King parted with his son forever. They had no opportunity to
+become rivals, and to fall out. There is so much that can be said
+against Charles I. with truth, that it is pleasing--as are most
+novelties--to be able to mention something to his credit. Instead
+of being jealous of his son, or desiring to keep him in ignorance of
+affairs, he early determined to train him to business. According
+to Clarendon, he said that he wished to "unboy him." Therefore he
+conferred high military offices upon him before he had completed his
+fifteenth year; and sent him to the West of England, to be the
+nominal head of the Western Association. Charles II. had no legitimate
+children, and so he could not have any quarrels with a Prince of
+Wales. He was fond of his numerous bastards, and, like an affectionate
+royal father, provided handsomely for them at the public-expense. What
+more could a father do, situated as that father was, and always in
+want of his people's money? Some of them were not his sons,--Monmouth,
+the best beloved of them all, being the son of Robert Sidney, a
+brother of the renowned Algernon, a fact that partially excuses the
+harsh conduct of James II. toward his nominal nephew. James II. had
+no legitimate son until the last year of his reign; but his two eldest
+daughters treated him far worse than any sovereign of the Hanoverian
+line was ever used by a son. They were most respectable women, and
+their deficiency in piety has worked well for the world; but it must
+ever be repugnant to humanity to regard the conduct of Mary and Anne
+with respect. No wonder that people called Mary the modern Tullia.
+Mary II. died young, and childless; and Queen Anne, though a most
+prolific wife, and but fifty-one at her death, survived all her
+children. Anne believed that her children's deaths were sent in
+punishment of her unfilial conduct; and she would have restored her
+nephew, the Pretender, to the British throne, but that the Jacobites
+were the silliest political creatures that ever triumphed in the
+how-not-to-do-it business, and could not even hold their mouths open
+for the rich and ripened fruit to drop into them.
+
+The first of the English Stuarts, James I., is suspected of having
+allowed his jealousy of his eldest son, the renowned Prince Henry, to
+carry him to the extent of child-murder. The Stuarts are called the
+Fated Line, and it is certain that none of their number, from Robert
+II.--who got the Scottish throne in virtue of his veins containing a
+portion of the blood of the Bruce, and so regalized the family, which,
+like the Bruces, was of Norman origin, and originally Fitzalan
+by name--to Charles Edward, and the Cardinal York, who died but
+yesterday, as it were, but had a wonderful run of bad luck. They had
+capital cards, but they knew not how to play them. With them, to play
+was to lose, and the most fortunate of their number were those kings
+who played as little as they could, such as James I. and Charles II.
+Those who lost the most were those who played the hardest, as Charles
+I. and his second son, James II. Yet the family was a clever one, with
+strong traits, both of character and talent, that ought to have made
+it the most successful of ruling races, and would have made it so,
+if its chiefs could have learned to march with the times. They had to
+contend, in Scotland, with one of the fiercest and most unprincipled
+aristocracies that ever tried the patience and traversed the purposes
+of monarchs who really aimed at the good government of their people;
+and the idiosyncrasy contracted during more than two centuries of
+Scottish rule clung to the family after it went to England, and found
+itself living under altogether a different state of things. What was
+virtue in Scotland became vice in England; and the ultra-monarchists,
+who came into existence not long after James I. succeeded to
+Elizabeth, helped to spoil the Stuarts. Both James and his successor
+were dominated by Scotch traditions, and supposed that they were
+contending with men who had the same end in view that had been
+regarded by the Douglases, the Hamiltons, the Ruthvens, the Lindsays,
+and others of the old Scotch baronage. What helped to deceive them was
+this,--that their opponents in England, like the opponents of their
+ancestors in Scotland, were aristocrats; and they supposed, that, as
+aristocratical movements in their Northern kingdom had always been
+subversive of order and peace, the same kind of movements would
+produce similar results in their Southern kingdom. They could not
+understand that one aristocracy may differ much from another, and
+that, while in Scotland the interest of the people, or rather of the
+whole nation, required the exaltation of the kingly power, in England
+it was that exaltation which was most to be feared. Sufficient
+allowance has not been made for the Stuarts in this respect, little
+regard being paid to the effect of the family's long training at home,
+which had rendered hostility to the nobility second nature to it. Had
+the Stuarts been the supporters of liberal ideas in England, their
+conduct would have given the lie to every known principle of human
+action. As their distrust of aristocracy rendered them despotically
+disposed, because the Scotch aristocracy had been the most lawless of
+mankind, so did they become attached to the Church of England because
+of the tyranny they had seen displayed by the Church of Scotland, the
+most illiberal ecclesiastical body, in those times, that men had ever
+seen, borne with, or suffered from. James I. and his grandson Charles
+II. had their whole conduct colored, and dyed in the wool, too, by
+their recollections of the odious treatment to which they had
+been subjected by a harsh and intolerant clergy. They had not the
+magnanimity to overlook, in the day of their power, what they had
+suffered in the day of their weakness.
+
+James I. undoubtedly disliked his eldest son, and was jealous of him;
+but it is by no means clear that he killed him, or caused him to
+be killed. He used to say of him, "What! will he bury me alive?"
+He ordered that the court should not go into mourning for Henry, a
+circumstance that makes in his favor, as murderers are apt to affect
+all kinds of hypocrisy in regard to their victims, and to weep in
+weeds very copiously. Yet his conduct may have been a refinement of
+hypocrisy, and, though a coward in the common acceptation of the word,
+James had much of that peculiar kind of hardihood which enables its
+possessor to treat commonly received ideas with contempt. His conduct
+in "The Great Oyer of Poisoning" was most extraordinary, it must
+be allowed, and is not reconcilable with innocence; but it does not
+follow that the guilt which the great criminals in that business could
+have established as against James related only to the death of Henry.
+It bore harder upon the King than even that crime could have borne,
+and must have concerned his conduct in matters that are peculiarly
+shocking to the ears of Northern peoples, though Southern races have
+ears that are less delicate. It was in Somerset's power to
+explain James's conduct respecting some things that puzzled his
+contemporaries, and which have continued to puzzle their descendants;
+but the explanation would have ruined the monarch in the estimation of
+even the most vicious portion of his subjects, and probably would have
+given an impetus to the growing power of the Puritans that might have
+led to their ascendency thirty years earlier than it came to pass
+in the reign of his son. James was capable of almost any crime or
+baseness; but in the matter of poisoning his eldest son he is entitled
+to the Scotch verdict of _Not Proven_.
+
+Whether James killed his son or not, it is certain that the Prince's
+death was a matter of extreme importance. Henry was one of those
+characters who are capable of giving history a twist that shall
+last forever. He had a fondness for active life, was very partial
+to military pursuits, and was friendly to those opinions which
+the bigoted chiefs of Austria and Bavaria were soon to combine to
+suppress. Henry would have come to the throne in 1625, had he lived,
+and there seems no reason to doubt that he would have anticipated the
+part which Gustavus Adolphus played a few years later. He would have
+made himself the champion of Protestantism, and not the less readily
+because his sister, the Electress-Palatine and Winter-Queen of
+Bohemia, would have been benefited by his successes in war. Bohemia
+might have become the permanent possession of the Palatine, and
+Protestantism have maintained its hold on Southern Germany, had Henry
+lived and reigned, and had his conduct as a king justified the hopes
+and expectations that were created by his conduct as a prince. The
+House of Austria would in that case have had a very different
+career from that which it has had since 1625, when Ferdinand II. was
+preparing so much evil for the future of Europe. Had Henry returned
+from Continental triumphs at the head of a great and an attached army,
+what could have prevented him from establishing arbitrary power in
+his insular dominions? His brother failed to make himself absolute,
+because he had no army, and was personally unpopular; but Henry would
+have had an army, and one, too, that would have stood high in English
+estimation, because of what it had done for the English name and the
+Protestant religion in Germany,--and Henry himself would have been
+popular, as a successful military man is sure to be in any country.
+Pym and Hampden would have found him a very different man to deal with
+from his foolish brother, who had all the love of despotism that man
+can have, but little of that kind of ability which enables a sovereign
+to reign despotically. Charles I. had no military capacity or taste,
+or he would have taken part in the Thirty Years' War, and in that way,
+and through the assistance of his army, have accomplished his domestic
+purpose. His tyranny was of a hard, iron character, unrelieved by
+a single ray of glory, but aggravated by much disgrace from the ill
+working of his foreign policy; so that it was well calculated to
+create the resistance which it encountered, and by which it was
+shivered to pieces. Henry would have gone to work in a different way,
+and, like Cromwell, would have given England glory, while taking from
+her freedom. There is nothing that the wearer of a crown cannot do,
+provided that crown is encircled with laurel. But the Stuarts seldom
+produced a man of military talent, which was a fortunate thing for
+their subjects, who would have lost their right to boast of their
+Constitutional polity, had Charles I. or James II. been a good
+soldier. We Americans, too, would have had a very different sort
+of annals to write, if the Stuarts, who have given so many names to
+American places, had known how to use that sword which they were so
+fond of handling.
+
+
+The royal families of England did by no means monopolize the share of
+domestic dissensions set apart for kings. The House of Stuart, even
+before it ascended the English throne, and when it reigned over only
+poor, but stout Scotland, was anything but famous for the love of its
+fathers for their sons, or for its sons' love for their fathers; and
+dissensions were common in the royal family. Robert III., second king
+of the line, had great grief with his eldest son, the Duke of Rothsay;
+and the King's brother, the Duke of Albany, did much to increase the
+evil that had been caused by the loose life of the heir-apparent. The
+end was, that Rothsay was imprisoned, and then murdered by his uncle.
+Scott has used the details of this court-tragedy in his "Fair Maid of
+Perth," one of the best of his later novels, most of the incidents in
+which are strictly historical. James I. was murdered while he was yet
+young, and James II. lost his life at twenty-nine; but James III. lost
+both throne and life in a war that was waged against him in the name
+of his son, who became king in consequence of his father's defeat and
+death. When James IV. fell at Flodden, because he fought like a brave
+fool, and not like a skilful general, he left a son who was not three
+years old; and that son, James V., when he died, left a daughter, the
+hapless Mary Stuart, who was but a week old. There was not much room
+for quarrelling in either of these cases. Mary Stuart's son, then an
+infant, was made the head of the party that dethroned his mother,
+and forced her into that long exile that terminated in her murder by
+Elizabeth of England. Mary's quarrels with her husband, Darnley, were
+of so bitter a character as to create the belief that she caused
+him to be murdered,--a belief that is as common now as it was in the
+sixteenth century, though the Marian Controversy has been going on for
+wellnigh three hundred years, and it has been distinctly proved by a
+host of clever writers and skilful logicians that it was impossible
+for her to have had any thing to do with that summary act of divorce.
+
+Several of the sovereigns of Continental Europe have had great
+troubles with their children, and these children have often had very
+disobedient fathers. In France, the Dauphin, afterward Louis XI.,
+could not always keep on good terms with his father, Charles VII., who
+has the reputation of having restored the French monarchy, after the
+English had all but subverted it, Charles at one time being derisively
+called King of Bourges. Nothing annoyed Louis so much as being
+compelled to run away before the army which his father was leading
+against him. He would, he declared, have stayed and fought, but that
+he had not even half so many men as composed the royal force. He
+would have killed his father as readily as he killed his brother in
+after-days,--if he did kill his brother, of which there is some
+doubt, of which he should have the benefit. As was but natural, he
+was jealous of his son, though he died when that prince was thirteen.
+Owing to various causes, however, there have been fewer quarrels
+between French kings and their eldest sons than between English kings
+and their eldest sons. Few French monarchs have been succeeded by
+their sons during the last three hundred years,--but two, in fact,
+namely, Louis XIII., who followed his father, Henry IV., and Louis
+XIV., who succeeded to Louis XIII., his father. It is two hundred
+and twenty years since a father was succeeded by a son in France,--a
+circumstance that Napoleon III. should lay to heart, and not be too
+sure that the Prince Imperial is to become Napoleon IV. There seems
+to be something fatal about the French purple, which has a strange
+tendency to spread itself, and to settle upon shoulders that could not
+have counted upon experiencing its weight and its warmth. Sometimes it
+is hung up for the time, and becomes dusty, while republicans take a
+turn at governing, though seldom with success. There were troubles
+in the families of Louis XIV., who was too heartless, selfish, and
+unfeeling not to be that worst kind of king, the domestic tyrant. He
+tyrannized over even his mistresses.
+
+Philip II., the greatest monarch of modern times,--perhaps the
+greatest of all time, the extent and diversity of his dominions
+considered, and the ability of the races over which he ruled taken
+into the account,--was under the painful necessity of putting his
+eldest son, Don Carlos, in close confinement, from which he never came
+forth until he was brought out feet foremost, the presumption being
+that he had been put to death by his father's orders. Carlos has been
+made a hero of romance, but a more worthless character never lived.
+On his death-bed Philip II. was compelled to see how little his son
+Philip, who succeeded him, cared for his feelings and wishes. Peter
+the Great put to death his son Alexis; and Frederick William I.
+of Prussia came very near taking the life of that son of his who
+afterward became Frederick the Great.
+
+Jealousy is so common a feeling in Oriental royal houses, that it is
+hardly allowable to quote anything from their history; but we may be
+permitted to allude to the effect of one instance of paternal hate in
+the Ottoman family at the time of its utmost greatness. Solyman
+the Magnificent was jealous of his eldest son, Mustapha, who is
+represented by all writers on the Turkish history of those times as
+a remarkably superior man, and who, had he lived, would have been a
+mighty foe to Christendom. This son the Sultan caused to be put to
+death, and there are few incidents of a more tragical cast than those
+which accompanied Mustapha's murder. They might be turned to great
+use by an historical romancer, who would find matters all made to his
+hand. The effect of this murder was to substitute for the succession
+that miserable drunkard, Selim II., who was utterly unable to lead the
+Turks in those wars that were absolutely essential to their existence
+as a dominant people. "With him," says Ranke, "begins the series of
+those inactive Sultans, in whose dubious character we may trace one
+main cause of the decay of the Ottoman fortunes." Solyman's hatred of
+his able son was a good thing for Christendom; for, if Mustapha had
+lived, and become Sultan, the War of Cyprus--that contest in
+which occurred the Battle of Lepanto--might have Lad a different
+termination, and the Osmanlis have been successful invaders of both
+Spain and Italy. It was a most fortunate circumstance for Europe,
+that, while it was engaged in carrying on civil wars and wars of
+religion, the Turks should have had for their chiefs men incapable of
+carrying on that work of war and conquest through which alone it was
+possible for those Mussulmans to maintain their position in Europe;
+and that they were thus favored was owing to the causeless jealousy
+felt by Sultan Solyman for the son who most resembled himself: and
+Solyman was the greatest of his line, which some say ended with him.
+
+
+
+
+UNDER THE PEAR-TREE.
+
+IN TWO PARTS.
+
+PART I.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+One Sunday morning, long ago, a girl stood in her bed-room,
+lingeringly occupied with the last touches of her toilet.
+
+A string of beads, made of pure gold and as large as peas, lay before
+her. They had been her mother's,--given to her when the distracted
+state of American currency made a wedding-present of the precious
+metal as welcome as it was valuable. Three several times, under
+circumstances of great pecuniary urgency, had the beads sufficed, one
+by one, to restore the family to comfort,--to pay the expenses of a
+journey, to buy seed-grain, and to make out the payment of a yoke of
+oxen. Afterwards, when peace and plenty came to be housemates in the
+land, the gold beads were redeemed, and the necklace, dearer than
+ever, encircled the neck of the only daughter.
+
+The only daughter took them up, and clasped them round her throat with
+a decisive snap. But the crowning graces remained in the shape of two
+other ornaments that lay in a small China box. It had a head on the
+cover, beautifully painted, of some queen,--perhaps of the Empress
+Josephine, the girl thought. The hat had great ostrich-feathers, that
+seemed proper to royalty, and it was a pretty face.
+
+In the box lay a pin and ring. On the back of the pin was braided
+hair, and letters curiously intertwined. The young girl slipped the
+ring on her own finger once more, and smiled. Then she took it off,
+with a sigh that had no pain in it, and looked at the name engraved
+inside,--DORCAS FOX.
+
+Whoever saw this name in the town records would naturally image to
+himself the town tailoress or nurse, or somebody's single sister
+who had been wise too long,--somebody tall, a little bent, and
+bony,--somebody weather-beaten and determined--looking, with a sharp,
+shrewd glance of a gray eye that said you could not possibly get the
+better of her and so need not try,--somebody who goes out unattended
+and fearless at night; for, as she very properly observes, "Who'd want
+to speak to _me_?"
+
+This might have described the original owner of the pin and ring, who
+had died years before, and left the ornaments for her namesake and
+niece, when she was too young to remember or care for her, but not the
+niece herself. She was young, blooming, twenty-two, and the belle of
+the country-village where she dwelt.
+
+The bed-room where the girl stood and meditated, after her fashion,
+was six feet by ten in dimensions, and the oval mirror before which
+she stood was six inches by ten. It was a genuine relic of the
+Mayflower, and had been brought over, together with the great chest in
+the entry, by the grand-grand-grandmother of all the Foxes. If anybody
+were disposed to be skeptical on this point, Colonel Fox had only to
+point to the iron clamp at the end, by which it had been confined to
+the deck; that would have produced conviction, if he had declared it
+came out of the Ark. This was a queer-looking little mirror, in which
+the young Dorcas saw her round face reflected: framed in black oak,
+delicately carved, and cut on the edge with a slant that gave the
+plate an appearance of being an inch thick.
+
+Sixty years ago there were not many mirrors in country-towns in New
+England; and in Colonel Fox's house this and one more sufficed for the
+family-reflections. In the "square room," a modern long looking-glass,
+framed in mahogany, and surmounted by the American emblem of triumph,
+was the astonishment of the neighbors,--and in Walton those were many,
+though the population was small.
+
+Dorcas looked wistfully and wishingly at the oval pin; but with no
+more notion of what she was looking at than the child who gazes into
+the heavens on a winter night. When she looked into the oval mirror,
+no dream of the centuries through which it had received on its surface
+fair and suffering faces, grave, noble, self-sacrificing men, and
+scenes of trial deep and agonizing,--no dream of the past disturbed
+the serene unconsciousness of her gaze. She looked at the large
+pearls that formed the long oval pin, and at the exquisite allegorical
+painting, which, in the quaint fashion of the time of its execution,
+was colored with the "ground hair" of the beloved; so materializing
+sentiment, and, as it were, getting as near as possible to the very
+heart's blood. Yet the old gold, the elaborate execution of the quaint
+classical device, and the fanciful arrangement of the braided hair
+interwoven with twisted gold letters, all told no tales to the
+observer, whose unwakened nature, indeed, asked no questions.
+
+The little room, so small that in these days a College of Physicians
+would at once condemn it, as a cradle of disease and death, had
+nevertheless for twenty years been the nightly abode of as perfect a
+piece of health as the country produced. Whatever might be wanting
+in height and space was amply made up in inevitable and involuntary
+ventilation. Health walked in at the wide cracks around the little
+window-frame, peeped about in all directions with the snow-flakes in
+winter and the ready breezes in summer, and settled itself permanently
+on the fresh cheeks and lips of the light sleeper and early riser.
+
+Beside the white-covered cot there stood a straight-backed,
+list-seated oaken chair, a mahogany chest of drawers that reached from
+floor to ceiling, and a little three-legged light-stand. Everything
+was covered with white, and the room was fragrant with the lavender
+and dried rose-leaves with which every drawer was scrupulously
+perfumed. There was no toilet-table, for Dorcas had use neither for
+perfumes nor ointment. No Kalydors and no Glycerines came within the
+category of her healthful experience. Alert and graceful, she neither
+burnt her fingers nor cut her hands, and had need therefore of no
+soothing salves or sirups; and as she did not totter in scrimped shoes
+or tight laces, and so did not fall and break her bones, she had no
+need even of that modern necessity in all well-regulated families,
+"Prepared Glue." There was no medicine-chest in Colonel Fox's house.
+Healthy, occupied, active, and wise--but not too wise--was Dorcas Fox.
+
+It is no proof that Dorcas was a beauty, that she looked often in the
+little mirror. Ugliness is quite as anxious as beauty on that point,
+and is even oftener found gazing with sad solicitude at itself, if
+haply there may be found some mollifying or mitigating circumstance,
+either in outline or expression. But Dorcas's face pleased herself and
+everybody else.
+
+A certain freedom and ease, the result partly of a symmetrical form,
+and partly of conscious good-looks, gave the grace of movement to
+Dorcas which attracted all eyes. Almost every one has a sense of
+harmony, and old and young loved to watch the musical motion of Dorcas
+Fox, whatever she might be doing,--whether she queened it at the
+"Thanksgiving Ball," and from heel-and-toe, pigeon-wing, or mazy
+double-shuffle, evolved the finest and subtlest intricacies of muscle,
+or whether, on the Sabbath, walking behind her parents to meeting,
+she married the movement to the solemnity of the day, and, as it were,
+walked in long metre.
+
+She always was in Hallelujah metre to the Blacks, Whites, Grays,
+Greens, and Browns that color so largely every New-England community;
+and the youths who were wont to form the crowd that invariably settled
+at the corner of the meeting-house waited only till Dorcas Fox went up
+the "broad-oil" to express open-mouthed admiration. After her fashion,
+she was as much wondered at as the Duchess of Hamilton in her time,
+and with much more reason, since Dorcas was composed of real roses and
+lilies.
+
+On Sunday, though the Puritanic doctrine prevailed, as far as doctrine
+can, of not speaking week-day thoughts, or having them, if they would
+keep away, yet inevitably, among the younger portion of the flock, the
+day of "meeting" was one of more than religious importance; and many
+lads and lasses who were never attracted by Father Boardman's eloquent
+sedatives still made it a point to be regular in their attendance at
+meeting twice on every Sunday. From far and near came open one-horse
+wagons, piled high with weekly shaven and dressed humanity,--young
+and old with solemn and demure faces, with brown-ribboned queues, and
+garments of domestic making. Fresh, strong, tall girls of five feet
+ten, dressed in straw bonnets of their own handiwork, and sometimes
+with scarlet cardinals lightly flung over their shoulders, sprang over
+the wagon-thills to the ground. Now and then the more remote dwellers
+came on horseback, each Jack with his Gill on a pillion behind, and
+holding him with a proper and dignified embrace.
+
+Hard-handed youths, with bright, determined faces,--men nursed in
+blockhouses, born in forts,--men who had raised their corn when the
+loaded gun went every step with the hoe and the plough,--such men,
+of whom the Revolution had been made, who could say nothing, and do
+everything, stood in a crowd around the meeting-house door. There was
+some excitement in meeting each other, though there was very little,
+if anything, to say. There was time enough in those days. Progress
+wasn't in such a hurry as now. Inventions came calmly along, once in
+a man's life, and not, as now, each heel-trodden by that of his
+neighbor, tripping up and passing it, in the speed of the breathless
+race.
+
+The sun itself seemed to shine with a calmer and silenter radiance
+over the broad, leisurely land.
+
+Time enough, bless you! and the Sunday, any way, is _so_ long!
+
+This Sunday morning, at ten o'clock, Dorcas has already been up and
+dressed six hours. Everything having the remotest connection with
+domestic duties has been finished and laid aside long ago, and she has
+devoted the last two hours to solitary meditations, mostly of the kind
+already mentioned.
+
+In the great oven, since last night, has lain the Sunday supper of
+baked pork-and-beans, Indian-pudding, and brown bread, all the
+better the longer they bake, and all unfailing in their character
+of excellence. In the square room, in the green arm-chair, sits the
+Colonel, fast asleep.
+
+Four hours ago, he fumed and fretted about barn and cow-house,
+breakfasted, and had family-prayers. Since then, he has donned his
+Sabbath array, both mental and bodily. Mentally, having dismissed the
+cares of the week, he has strictly united himself with his body, and
+gone to sleep. Bodily, he appears in a suit of hemlock-dyed, with
+Matherman buttons, knee- and shoe-buckles of silver. His gray hair is
+neatly composed in a queue, his full cheeks rest on his portly chest,
+and the outward visibly harmonizes with the inward man. He
+sleeps soundly now, purposing faithfully to keep awake during the
+three-and-twenty heads of the minister's discourse. If he finds it
+too much for him, he means to stand, as he often does. Sometimes he
+partakes freely of the aromatic stimulants carried by his wife and
+daughter as bouquets. The southernwood wakes him, and the green seeds
+of the caraway get him well along through the sermon.
+
+Mrs. Fox steps softly in, rustling in the same black taffeta she
+always wears, and the same black silk bonnet,--worn just fifty-two
+days in a year, and carefully pinned and boxed away for all the other
+three hundred and thirteen.
+
+As fashions did not come to Walton oftener than once in ten years,
+it followed that apparel among the young people wore very much the
+expression of individual taste, while among the elders it was wont to
+assume the cast now irreverently designated by "fossil remains." And,
+really, it did not much matter. Whatever our country-grandmothers were
+admired and esteemed for, be sure it was not dress.
+
+As the clock pointed to half-past ten, the door opened quickly, and
+Dorcas stood on the threshold, like a summer breeze that has stopped
+one moment its fluttering, and hovers fresh, sweet, and sunny in
+the morning air. The breath of her presence, if indeed it were not
+association, roused old Colonel Fox from his sleep. He glanced at her,
+took the ready arm of his wife, looked again at the clock, and passed
+out over the flat door-stone with his cocked hat and cane, as became
+an invalid soldier and a gentleman. Behind them, hymn-book in hand
+and with downcast eyes, walked Dorcas. Not a word passed between the
+parents and their only daughter. On Sunday, people were not to think
+their own thoughts. And familiarity between parents and children,
+never allowed even on week-days, would have been unpardonable
+unfitness on the Sabbath.
+
+They reached the church-door just as the minister, with his white wig
+shedding powder on his venerable back, passed up the broad-aisle.
+A perfectly decorous throng of the loiterers followed, and the
+pews rapidly filled. The Colonel and his wife, being persons of
+consequence, took their way with suitable dignity and deliberation. In
+the three who turned, about half-way up the broad-aisle, into a square
+pew, a physiognomist would have seen at one glance the characteristic
+features of each mind. In the Colonel, choleric, fresh, and
+warm-hearted, a good lover, and not very good hater. In his wife, "a
+chronicler of small-beer," with a perfectly negative expression. One
+might guess she did no harm, and fear she did no good,--that she saved
+the hire of an upper servant,--that she was an inveterate sewer and
+cleaner, and would leave the world in time with an epitaph.
+
+On the third figure and face the physiognomist might dwell
+longer,--but that rather because youth, hope, and inexperience had
+refused to make any of the life-marks that tell stories in faces.
+There was abundant room for imagination and prophecy.
+
+A figure not too tall, but full of wavy lines,--two dark-blue eyes,
+whose full under-lids gave an expression of arch sweetness to the
+glance,--a delicate complexion of roses and lilies, as suggestive of
+fading as of blossoming,--features small, and not at all of the Greek
+pattern,--and the rather large head and slightly developed bust,
+typical of American rural beauty.
+
+To this summary of youthful charms would be at once added the grace of
+motion before spoken of, which made Dorcas Fox a favorite with all the
+young men in Walton, and which gave her a reputation of beauty which
+in strictness she did not deserve. A little habitual ill-health,
+and the glamour is gone, with the roses and lilies and the music
+of motion. In our climate of fierce extremes, both field- and
+garden-flowers speedily wilt and chill. Dorcas herself had been a
+thousand times told she was the very picture of her mother at her age.
+And just to look now at Mrs. Colonel Fox!
+
+A tall young man stood on the doorsteps of the meeting-house, as
+Dorcas went demurely behind her parents in at the open door. He looked
+at her with a quick, inquiring glance from his keen Yankee eyes, which
+she answered with an almost imperceptible nod of her graceful head.
+She dropped her eyes, and passed on. This young man was Henry Mowers,
+and he owned the Mowers farm. He was a very good, sensible fellow, and
+had "kept company," as the country-phrase is, with Dorcas Fox for
+the last few weeks, having, indeed, had his eye on her ever since the
+New-Year's sleigh-ride and ball.
+
+After Dorcas had reached her seat in the pew, and adjusted her
+spotless Sunday chintz and the ribbon that confined her jaunty
+gypsy-hat over her sunny hair, she raised her eyes carelessly to a pew
+in a side-aisle. The Dorrs generally occupied it alone; but sometimes
+Swan Day, when he wasn't in the choir, sat there too.
+
+Swan Day, or, as he might better have been called, Night Raven, kept
+the country-store in Walton. One naturally thought of afternoon
+rather than morning at seeing his olive complexion, dark eyes, and
+thick-clustering black curls. Such romance as was to be had in Walton,
+without the aid of a circulating library, certainly gathered about
+Swan Day. An orphan, born of a Creole mother and a British sergeant,
+he had been left early to his own resources. He had found them
+sufficient thus far, in a cordial neighborhood like Walton, when
+industry and temperance were cardinal virtues not carried to excess;
+and he was rather a favorite among the young women.
+
+The peculiar languor and richness of his complexion,--the dark eyes,
+soft as an Indian girl's,--the mouth, melting and red as the grapes
+where under a tropical sun his foreign mother had lain, and, gathering
+them ripe, had dropped them lazily into his baby mouth: these were new
+and strange features in the Saxon community where he had accidentally
+been left on the death of his father, who was shot at Saratoga. The
+mother lingered awhile, and then dropped away, leaving Swan to thrive
+in the bracing air in which she had shivered to death.
+
+Many Sundays before this, Swan had looked at Colonel Fox's pew, and,
+looking, loved.
+
+Dorcas looked occasionally.
+
+All the time, while the minister preached, she twiddled her
+caraway-stems, sometimes biting a seed in two very softly between her
+little teeth, and keeping, on the whole, an appearance of exemplary
+devoutness. When Father Boardman reached "sixthly," she raised her
+eyes, and saw Henry Mowers looking straight at her. Then she
+dropped her eyelids at once, sniffed delicately at her bouquet of
+southernwood, and, gaining strength from its pungency, applied herself
+to staring once more at the great pine pulpit, where, like a very old
+sparrow on the house-top, Father Boardman denounced and anathematized
+at leisure all who did not think as he did. By degrees, all the eyes
+in Dorcas's neighborhood that had been any length of time in the world
+were dozing and closing with the full leave of the spirit. Finally,
+when Father Boardman entered on the "improvement," Dorcas, who had
+not heard a word, looked again in the direction of the Dorr pew. Henry
+Mowers had succumbed to Morpheus half an hour before. Still there
+flamed on the deep, bewitching eyes of Day; and as all the rest in her
+neighborhood had gone to sleep, and the young girl had really nothing
+specially to keep herself awake with, she looked up, too, and then
+down, and then rosily, and timidly, and consciously, and then at
+him once more. By that time she blushed again, and a smile was just
+beginning to wake from its sleep in the corner of her mouth, when
+a rush, a rising, and a general clatter and banging of pew-seats
+announced the blessed news of suspended instruction.
+
+In the fashion of sixty years ago, the congregation waited reverently,
+until the pastor walked down the broad-aisle and out at the door,
+before a soul stirred. Then the men followed, and last of all the
+women. In the crowd, there were frequent opportunities for whispered
+words, all the sweeter for the stealing; and in the crowd, after he
+had seen Henry Mowers jump into the wagon and drive off his three
+sisters half a mile to their home, and after seeing Jenny Post ride
+off on a pillion behind her old brother, as in the gone-by days when
+wide roads and wagons were not, Swan sauntered carelessly towards
+Dorcas, and said, in a tone too low for her parents to hear, but very
+distinctly,--
+
+"I must see you to-morrow night."
+
+"I can't," was the murmured reply.
+
+"For the last time, Dorcas! come down to the old pear-tree to-morrow,
+before sunset," he whispered, imploringly.
+
+He was wise to turn suddenly away before her parents could hear him,
+touching on secular subjects, and before she could herself get up any
+new objection. Her objections, truly, were very faint and few, and,
+being tossed about awhile, finally settled out of sight. Henry
+would, she knew, come to his weekly wooing as soon as the setting sun
+proclaimed the Sabbath-day over. After that time she was safe. She
+could slip down the orchard to the pear-tree, and hear what was the
+important word, and what Swan meant by "the last."
+
+Eight or ten persons, who lived at a distance from "meeting," were in
+the habit of partaking the hospitality of Colonel Fox, of a Sunday,
+as the hour's intermission gave them no opportunity to return to
+their distant homes. After the Puritan fashion, unlike enough to the
+present, families were restricted on Sunday to two meals, and those
+were provided with a Jewish regard to the fourth commandment. All
+labor was scrupulously anticipated or postponed, but such hospitality
+as consisted with the strict observance of the Sabbath was at the
+service of their friends.
+
+On coming in at the door of the square room, with its sanded floor,
+its old desk, its spare bed in the corner, and its cherry table with
+wavy outlines, which had belonged to Colonel Fox's mother, Dorcas
+found the cloth already laid, and the bonnets and cardinals of half a
+dozen old friends on the bed.
+
+In five minutes, early apples, old cider, and a plate of raised
+doughnuts, flanked by plates of mince- and apple-pie, rewarded the
+patience and piety of the company. Colonel Fox, solemnly, and as if
+he were quite accustomed to it, poured from a jug into large tumblers
+that held at least a pint, dropped three large lumps of loaf-sugar,
+filled the glass with water, grated some nutmeg on the top, and bade
+his guests refresh themselves with toddy, unless they preferred flip:
+if they did, they had only to say so: the poker was hot.
+
+They all ate and drank, and by that time the bell rang again; and then
+they all went again. And if they heard Father Boardman at all, it was
+with utterly composed minds, when he told them it was their duty to be
+contented, even should their condemnation be eternally decreed, since
+it must, of course, be for the good of the whole, and for the glory of
+God. Hopkinsianism was in fashion then, and the minds of men in many
+parts of the country had accepted the logic of its founder, negatived
+as it was, in its practical application, by the sweetness of his
+Christian benevolence and his large humanity. Then the toddy helped
+them to swallow many doctrines that in our cold-water days are sharply
+and defiantly contested. The head is much clearer; whether hearts are
+better is doubtful.
+
+After supper, and while yet the sun lingered smilingly over the
+Great Meadows and on the hills, behind which he sank, Dorcas, who had
+meanwhile adorned herself with Aunt Dorcas's bequest, broke the long
+silence, by whispering so low that her father's sleep should not be
+disturbed,--
+
+"Mother, do you set much by this pin?"
+
+"Of course I do, child! 'T was your Aunt Dorcas's," said Mrs. Fox,
+"your father's own sister."
+
+"Yes, I know it, mother; but how did she come by it?"
+
+All these years, and this was the first time Dorcas had asked the
+question! She colored a little, too, as if some secret thought or
+story were busy about her heart, as she looked at the ring.
+
+"Well,--it was a man she 'xpected to 'a' bed. They was to 'a' ben
+merried, an' he was to 'a' gi'n up v'yagin'. But he was cast away, an'
+she never heerd nothin' about neither him nor the ship. He was waitin'
+to git means, an' he did, privateerin' an' so; but I 'xpect he was
+drownded," concluded Mrs. Fox, in a suitably plaintive tone.
+
+And that was Aunt Dorcas's story.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+If anybody is curious to know why there should be mystery or secrecy
+connected with Swan Day's meeting with Dorcas, or why they should meet
+under a pear-tree, instead of her father's roof-tree, in a rational
+way, it might be a sufficient answer, that there never was and never
+will be anything direct and straightforward about Cupid or his doings.
+But the real and more important reason was, that Colonel Fox did not
+like Swan, and had said, in so many words, that "he wouldn't have
+Swan Day a-hangin' round, no _how_!--that he was a poor kind of a
+shote,--that he wished both him and his clutter well out o' town,--and
+that he needn't think to make swans out of his geese, no _time_!"
+
+In the first and last sentence, Colonel Fox indicated the ground of
+his dislike to the handsome young store-keeper, and his dread that
+Swan's eyes would somehow interfere with his own cherished plans of a
+union between the Fox and Mower farms. Whatever Colonel Fox determined
+on was done or to be done. He had anticipated the French proverb;
+and the "impossibility" made not the slightest difference. Therefore
+Dorcas had no notion of disobedience in her head, permanently. She
+solaced herself by the occasional luxury of departure from set rules,
+and she intended to depart in that way to-morrow,--for just five
+minutes,--just to hear what that foolish fellow wanted of her; and
+what could it be? and why was it the last time?--would he give her up?
+
+Dorcas pondered the matter while the sun still crowned the heights,
+and glanced at her sleeping father in silence. Why should Colonel Fox
+dislike Swan so very much because he was a Britisher? All that was
+done with, long ago, and why not be peaceable? Just then her father
+drew the breath sharply between his teeth, as if in pain. It was the
+old wound, that had never been healed since the Battle of Bennington.
+He had lain on the ground,--Dorcas had often heard him tell the
+tale,--and had striven to slake his deathly thirst with the blood that
+he scooped up in the hollow of his hand from the ground about him. So
+terrible was the carnage where he lay. "A d----d Britisher had shot
+him,--another had driven his horse over him, and afterwards, while
+he lay half-dead, had tried to rob him!" Would he ever forget it?
+He would have continued, on the contrary, to fire and hack till the
+present day, but for the wound in his knee, which had disabled him for
+life, long before a peace was patched up with the mother-country. So
+he had retired to Walton, and before Continental money had depreciated
+more than half had bought acres by the thousand, and become
+generalissimo of flocks and herds. Through the admiration of his
+townsmen for his wounds, he rapidly and easily attained the rank
+of Colonel, without the discomfort of fighting for it; and from his
+excellent sense and the executive ability induced by military
+habits, became, in turn, justice of the peace, deacon of the church,
+town-clerk, and manager-general of Walton.
+
+Nobody--that is to say, nobody in the family--spoke, when Colonel Fox
+was in the house, unless first spoken to,--not even Dorcas. Such were
+the domestic tactics of the last century, and Colonel Fox held fast to
+old notions.
+
+The social ones were far more liberal,--so very liberal, indeed, so
+very free and easy, in the rural districts especially, that only a
+knowledge of the primitive conditions under which such manners grew
+up could possibly reconcile with them any impressions of purity and
+discretion. In hearing of manners, therefore, it is always necessary
+to remember that the children of country Puritans are and were wholly
+different _in the grain_ from Paris or London society of the same
+period,--as different, for example, as the Goddess of Reason from
+our first mother, though at first glance one might think those two
+similar. New-England parents had the utmost confidence in their
+daughters, and almost no restraint was laid on social intercourse.
+Their personal dignity and propriety wore presupposed, as matters of
+course. Religion and virtue needed only to point, not to restrain.
+
+The Colonel, on his part, took little heed of Dorcas's movements in
+the way of balls and sleigh-rides. Content that her face showed health
+and enjoyment, he never thought or cared what passed in her mind. If
+only the hay-crop proved abundant, and the Davis lot yielded well,--if
+neither wheat got the blight, nor sheep the rot,--if it were better to
+buy Buckhorn for milk, or sell the Calico-Trotter,--these thoughts so
+filled his soul that there was very little room to let in any nonsense
+about Dorcas, only "to have Swan Day shet up before he begins," for,
+as he often said, "he wouldn't give the snap of his thumb for as many
+Swan Days as could stand between this and Jerusalem!"
+
+She had met him twice before, and both times rather accidentally, as
+she supposed, under the pear-tree,--both times, when she went to the
+well for water. He had drawn the water, and had talked some with
+his tongue, but more, far more, with his eyes of Oriental depth and
+fascination. Dorcas thought and meant no harm in meeting Swan. Even if
+her nature had been more wakened and conscious,--even if she had had
+either the habit or the power of analyzing her own sensations,--even
+if she had seen her soul from without, as she certainly did not
+within,--she would have recoiled from the thought of deliberate
+coquetry.
+
+In the nature even of a coquette there is not necessarily either
+cruelty or hardness. It cannot be a fine nature, and must be deficient
+in the tact which appreciates the feelings of another, and
+the sympathy that shrinks from injuring them. It may be called
+selfishness, which is another term for thoughtlessness or want of
+consideration or perception, but it is not deliberate selfishness.
+This last is often found with fine perceptions and intuitive tact. It
+is rather a natural obtuseness, a want of thought on the subject. Such
+persons remember and connect their own sensations with the object,
+thinking little or nothing of the feelings they may themselves excite
+by the heedlessness of their manner.
+
+If Dorcas had once thought of the value of the hearts she played with,
+and as it were tossed from hand to hand,--if she had even weighed one
+against another, she might have had some sorrow in grieving either.
+But having no standard of delicacy and tenderness in her own nature
+by which to judge theirs, Dorcas cannot be accused of intentional
+injustice, which is generally understood by coquetry. On the contrary,
+if she had been able to express her emotions,--
+
+ "How happy could I be with either!"
+
+would have done so. Dorcas was very young in experience.
+
+In those days of freedom there was no such word as "engaged"; least
+of all, did the parties concerned violate all their own notions of
+decorum by "announcing an engagement." The lists were free to all
+to enter, and the bravest won the day. After weeks and months of
+shy "company-keeping," it was "expected it would be a match" by the
+keen-sighted or deeply interested. Sometimes the dissolution of an
+engagement was mentioned as "a shame! after keeping company so many
+years, and she had got all her quilts made and everything!" But best
+of all was for the parties to be married outright, by a justice of
+the peace, without a word of public warning, and then to enjoy
+the pleasure of outwitting the neighbors, and coming down like a
+thunderclap on a social sunshine unsuspicious of banns, which had been
+published on some three literally public days, but when nobody
+was hearing. That was something worth doing, and very much worth
+remembering!
+
+The sun set. The Sabbath was done. The Colonel heaved a sigh of
+relief. The Colonel's wife took her knitting-work; and the Colonel's
+daughter looked up with a shy smile at Henry Mowers fastening his
+horse by the corn-barn. It was time Sunday was over, indeed! Such a
+long supper! but it must end sometime!--and then prayers, and then
+Dorcas had amused herself with Bel and the Dragon and Tobit awhile.
+All would not do, and the family had been obliged to resort to the
+sweet restorer for the last ten minutes. Now they could think their
+own thoughts in peace, and talk of what interested them,--cattle,
+people, and the like. Poor Dorcas! what with Father Boardman's
+preaching, and the Westminster Catechism, she associated religion with
+all that was dull and inexplicable, though she did not doubt it was
+good in case of dying. In the Nature and life that surrounded her
+she had not seen God, but a refuge from Him. In the crimson floods
+of sunshine, in the brilliant moonrise, or the pulsating stars of a
+winter night, she found a sort of guilty relief from the dulness of
+what she supposed was Revelation. But she never thought of questioning
+or doubting any teachings, in the pulpit or out. A woman cannot, like
+a man, fight a subject down. Her intellect shrinks from being tossed
+and pierced on the pricks of doctrine. She is gentle and cowardly. She
+sets the matter aside, and is contented to wait till she dies to
+find out. But the men in Walton were all theologians, and sharp at
+polemics. In the bar-room the spirit of liberty throve, which was
+crushed in the pulpit. In that small New-England town, where, like
+a great white sheep, Father Boardman now led his docile flock to the
+fold, whoever looked long enough would see many new folds and many new
+shepherds. Every shape of religious thinking will have its exponent,
+and the widest liberty be claimed and enjoyed. Though he slept through
+Father Boardman's sermons, it is doubtful if Henry Mowers did not in
+his dreams lay the corner-stone of the new meeting-house on the hill.
+
+Monday, and the hurly-burly of washing over. Dorcas had nearly
+finished her "stent" on the little wheel. As she sat by the open door,
+diligently trotting her foot, and softly pulling the last flax from
+her distaff, her glance went hastily and often towards the setting
+sun. She could see beyond the sloping orchard, no longer loaded
+with fruit, the Great Meadows, extending along the banks of the
+Connecticut. She could see on the eastern side great white mountains,
+that went modestly by the name of hills, and that came in after-years
+to draw pilgrims from the ends of the earth. They were white-capped
+and solemn-looking, and girdled by majestic forests; while the Green
+Mountains, that lay along the horizon, not so high as "the Hills,"
+were crowned with verdure to the very top, and flaming with autumn
+dyes. As far as the eye reached, beyond the immediate view rose an
+immense solitude of forest that had lasted through centuries.
+
+Dorcas's eyes rested and roamed alternately over these massive natural
+features. She felt dimly in her heart the effect of the solemn aspect
+of these great wastes,--these sublime possibilities, concealed and
+waiting for the energy of man to discover them. A melancholy, sweet
+and soft, composed partly of the effect of the view, and partly of the
+languor of the Indian-summer weather, diffused itself over her. She
+accused herself of various sins,--of levity, vanity, and not knowing
+her own mind. Soon, however, feeling her unskilfulness to steer, she
+abandoned the bark, and left it to drift. She must see Swan Day.
+
+"And as to Henry!"--here Dorcas set back the little wheel,--"and as
+to Henry!"--and here Dorcas threw her apron over her face,--"why, what
+harm is there? I'm only going to see what he wants."
+
+Under the apron rippled and rushed a thousand warm blushes, that
+contradicted every word Dorcas said to herself. They made her remember
+how, only the evening before, Henry had said words to her, which,
+although she pretended not to understand him, had made her heart beat
+proudly and tenderly; and how she had thought whoever was chosen to
+be Henry's wife would be a happy woman! How many times had he said, as
+they stood parting on the stoop, how sorry he was to go, and she,
+like Juliet, had whispered, 't was "not yet day"! Yes, of course
+Henry Mowers would be her husband, and she would tell Swan Day so,
+if--if----But then, perhaps, there was no such nonsense in Swan's
+head, after all.
+
+Why could not the gypsy be satisfied with her almost angelic
+happiness? But no. She shivered a little as the sun went down, and
+exchanged her working-dress of petticoat and short-gown for something
+warmer.
+
+Because Cely Temple was cutting apples and pumpkins, and stringing
+them across the kitchen and pantry to dry, and because black Dinah
+was making the "bean-porridge" for supper, it came to pass that the
+daughter of the house was called on to lay the table. Dorcas bit her
+lip, as she hastily did the duty, and postponed the pleasure.
+
+The laboring-season is nearly over, the eight hired men reduced to
+two, and the family-table is spread in the kitchen. How is the table
+spread for supper in the house of Colonel Fox, one of the richest
+farmers in Walton?
+
+This is the way.
+
+Dorcas brushes a scrap from the long table, scoured as white as snow,
+but puts no linen on it. On the buttery-shelves, a set of pewter
+rivals silver in brightness, but Dorcas does not touch them. She
+places a brown rye-and-Indian loaf, of the size of a half-peck, in the
+centre of the table,--a pan of milk, with the cream stirred in,--brown
+earthen bowls, with bright pewter spoons by the dozen,--a delicious
+cheese, whole, and the table is ready. When Dinah appears, with
+her bright Madras turban, and says she is ready to dish the
+"bean-porridge, nine days old," Dorcas tells her she is going
+down beyond the cider-mill, to bring up the yarn, and, throwing a
+handkerchief over her head, is out of sight before Dinah has finished
+blowing the tin horn that summons to supper.
+
+In five minutes, she was beyond the cider-mill, beyond the well, and
+standing under the old pear-tree. Behind her, hiding her from the
+house, is the corn-barn, stuffed and laden with the heavy harvest of
+maize and wheat, and the cider-mill, where twenty bushels of apples
+lie uncrushed on the ground, ready for the morrow's fate. A long row
+of barrels already filled from the foaming vat stand ready to be taken
+to the Colonel's own cellar, for the Colonel's own drinking, and as
+far as one can see in one direction is the Colonel's own land. The
+heiress of all would still be sought for herself.
+
+Dorcas stood in the departing light, and leaned against the pear-tree.
+Not yet come? A flush went up to her forehead, as, dropping her
+handkerchief, she raised her hand to her eyes and glanced hastily
+about her. Her chestnut curls were fastened with a blue ribbon on the
+side of her head, and the floating ends fell on her shoulder.
+
+This was the one departure from the severe simplicity of her dress,
+for neither bright-hued calicoes nor muslins found their way to
+Walton. Once in a long while, a print, at five times the present
+prices, was introduced into the social circles of Walton by an
+occasional peddler, or possibly by the adventurous spirit of Swan Day.
+But these were rare instances.
+
+Flannel of domestic manufacture, pressed till you could almost see
+your face in it, stood instead of the French woollen fabric of modern
+days. It left the jimp little waist as round and definite as the eye
+could ask, while the full flow of the skirt exposed the neat foot,
+deftly incased in stout Jefferson shoes. A plaited lawn, technically
+termed a "modesty-piece," was folded over the bosom, and concealed
+all but the upper part of the throat. Above that rose a face full of
+delicacy and healthy sweetness. Eyes full of sparkles, and dimples
+all about the cheeks, chin, and rather large mouth. Youth, and the
+radiance of a happy, unconscious nature, of the capabilities or
+possibilities of which she was as ignorant as the robin on the branch
+above her, whose evening song had just closed, and who has just shut
+his coquettish eyes.
+
+A minute more, and Swan sprang over the stone wall, and with three
+steps was standing by her. He stood still and looked at her, drawing
+deep breaths of haste and agitation.
+
+Dorcas spoke first.
+
+"You wanted to see me. What is the matter?"
+
+"Nothing,--but--you know I've got home."
+
+"Why, yes, that is clear," answered Dorcas, mischievously, and
+entirely easy herself, now that she saw Swan's cheeks aflame, and his
+voice choking so he could not speak.
+
+"We might as well go towards the house, if that is all," added she,
+gathering in her hand some skeins of yarn that had been spread out to
+whiten.
+
+Swan caught the yarn and threw it away with an impatient jerk. Then he
+took both of Dorcas's hands in his, holding them with a fierce grasp
+that made her almost scream.
+
+"You know I can't go near the house."
+
+"Yes, I know," said Dorcas, half frightened at his manner. "When did
+you get back from Boston?"
+
+"Saturday night. And I am going again to-morrow. And then--Dorcas--I
+shall stay."
+
+"Stay?"
+
+"Stay,--till you tell me to come back, maybe!"
+
+"Why, where are you going, Swan?"
+
+"To China, Dorcas."
+
+"I want to know!" exclaimed she.
+
+"Just it,--and no two ways about it. Sold out to Sawtell. Now you have
+it, Dorcas!"
+
+This curt and abrupt dialogue needed no more words. The rest was made
+out fully by the bright color on each face, the sparkling interest
+on the bent brow of Dorcas, and the deep, mellow voice, full of
+tenderness and hope, mixed with stern decision, on the part of Swan
+Day.
+
+No wonder Dorcas's eyes had a glamour over them as she listened and
+looked. What did she see? A slight, erect figure, with Napoleonic
+features, animated with admiration and sensibility; emotion glorifying
+the rich, deep eyes, and making them look in the twilight like stars;
+and over all, the indefinable ease that comes from knowledge of the
+world, however small that world may be.
+
+Swan had little gift of language. The foregoing short dialogue is a
+specimen of his ability in that way. But looks are a refinement on
+speech, and say what words never can say.
+
+"You see, Dorcas, I'm going out for the Perkinses with Orrin Tileston.
+We each put in five hundred, and have our share of the profits."
+
+"But to China! that's right under our feet! You'll never come back!"
+murmured the girl.
+
+"Do you ever want I should? Dorcas, if I come back rich, shall you be
+glad? It will be all for you,--dear!" the last word low and timidly.
+
+The mist went over her eyes again. A vision of Solomon in all his
+glory swept across her. Even to Walton had spread rumors of the
+immense fortunes acquired in the China and India trade, and the gold
+of Cathay seemed to shimmer over the form before her, so strong, so
+able to contend with, and compel, if need were, Fortune.
+
+As to Swan, he looked over the river of Time that separated him from
+love and happiness, and saw his idol and ideal standing on the
+farther bank, dressed in purple and fine linen, with jewels of his own
+adorning. Like Bunyan's "shining ones," she seemed to him far lifted
+out of the range of ordinary thought and expression, into the regions
+of inspired song. Now that he was really going to the East, the image
+of Dorcas in his heart took on itself, with a graceful readiness, the
+gold of Ophir, the pomps of Palmyra, and the shining glories of Zion.
+He longed to "crown her with rose-buds, to fill her with costly wine
+and ointments,"--to pour over her the measureless bounty of his love,
+from the cornucopia of Fortune.
+
+"Dorcas," said he,--and his words showed how inadequately thoughts can
+be represented,--"Dorcas, I know your father thinks nothing at all
+of me now; _but_, supposing I come back in two years, with--with--say
+five thousand dollars!--then, Dorcas!"
+
+The bright, soft eyes looked pleadingly at her.
+
+Truly, in those days of simplicity and scant earnings, five thousand
+dollars did seem likely to be an overwhelming temptation to the owner
+of the Fox farm.
+
+"But,--Swan!" said the blushing girl, releasing herself from his
+grasp, and stepping back.
+
+"Yes, Dorcas!--yes!--once!--only once!"
+
+He came between her and the image of Henry Mowers; he was going
+away; she might never see him again. A vague sentiment, composed of
+pleasure, pity, admiration, and ambition, but having the semblance
+only of timidity in her rosy face and downcast eyes, made her yield
+her shrinking form, for one moment, to his trembling and passionate
+caress, and the next, she ran as swiftly as a deer to the house.
+
+Swan's eyes followed her. With his feet, he dared not. His bounding
+heart half-choked him with pleasant pain. All be had not said,--all he
+had meant to say to Dorcas, of his well-laid plans, his good-luck,
+his hopes,--all he had meant to entreat of her constancy, for in the
+infrequent communications between the two countries there was no hope
+of a correspondence,--all he had meant to say to her of his fervent
+love, of his anguish at separation, of the joy of reunion, and that
+his love would leave him only with his life,--if he could only have
+told her! But then he never would or could have put it all into
+words, if Dorcas had stayed with him under the pear-tree till the next
+morning.
+
+He thought of the Colonel's pride, and how it would come down, at the
+sight of Swan Day returning to Walton with five thousand dollars in
+his coat-pocket, and mounted, perhaps, on an elephant! If he had held
+a foremost social position in Walton, even while selling tape and
+mop-sticks, molasses and rum, at the country-store, what might not be
+the impression on the public mind at seeing the glittering plumage of
+this "bird let loose from Eastern skies, when hastening fondly home"?
+There was much balm for wounded pride to be gathered in this Oriental
+project.
+
+Swan collected his energies and his clothes, finished his remaining
+last words and duties, and took his seat with the mail-carrier, who
+had the only public conveyance at that period from the town of Walton
+to the town of Boston. His parents were dead; his immediate relatives
+were scattered already in different States; and he left Walton with
+his heart full of one image, that of Dorcas Fox.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+"They du say Swan Day's gun off for good!" said Cely Temple, as she
+returned from the store, with a Dutch-oven in her hand, which she had
+purchased,--"an' to th' East Injees!"
+
+"I want to know!" rejoined Mrs. Fox.
+
+"I know some'll be sorry!" continued Cely, while Dorcas diligently
+stirred a five-pail kettle of apple-sauce, that hung stewing over the
+low fire.
+
+Mrs. Fox looked up quickly at her daughter, but Dorcas continued
+quietly stirring, and without turning round.
+
+"Mahala Dorr, I guess," said she.
+
+"Wall, M'hala'll be, an' so'll others," answered Cely, prudently.
+"But I expect likely Swan'll do well, ef he don't die. They say the
+atemuspere is pison there!--especially for dark-complected folks."
+
+To this hopeful remark Mrs. Fox rejoined, that "old Miss Day come
+herself from a warm country, and 't was likely her son would settle
+there for good, and enjoy his health there better than what he would
+here."
+
+"He'll look out well for Number One, anyhow!" said Cely, lifting the
+lid of the Dutch-oven from the fire.
+
+Dorcas shot an angry glance at the apple-sauce.
+
+Nothing further passed on the subject, and Dorcas somehow felt, as she
+stirred, as if Swan were already a long, long way off,--as if the ship
+had sailed, and would stay sailed, like an enchanted ship, hovering
+on the horizon, and never come near enough for the passengers to be
+distinguished,--or else, maybe, go up into the clouds, and rest there
+with all its masts and spars distinct against the rose-mist, as she
+had read of once in a book of travels,--or, perhaps, even be inverted,
+and stand there on its head, as it were, always: but everything must
+be upside down, of course, in China. Already the thought of Swan Day
+had mingled with the mists of the past. The outline became indefinite,
+and softened into a golden splendor, that belonged no more to her, but
+was essentially of another hemisphere. He had by this time cut loose
+from home and country. Whether a hundred, or a hundred thousand miles,
+it mattered not. Since she could not grasp the idea, the distance was
+as good as infinite to her.
+
+This, you see, is not exactly coquetry. But events drifted her.
+
+When supper was over, and Dinah had gone to sleep, and Cely to visit
+the neighbors, as usual, Dorcas shyly approached the subject which
+occupied her thoughts, by getting the little box of jewelry, and
+looking at it. Her mother called her from the kitchen, out of which
+the bed-room opened.
+
+"Does mother want me?" asked Dorcas, turning round, with the box in
+her hand.
+
+"No, no matter," answered the mother; and, possibly with an intuitive
+feeling of what was in her daughter's thought, she went into the
+bed-room, and looked with her at the pin and ring of Aunt Dorcas.
+
+"Was it--was it a long time, mother,--I mean, before he came back?"
+said Dorcas.
+
+"Who? Captain Waterhouse? Bless you! they was as good as merried for
+ten year, an' he was goin' all the time, an' then, jest at the last
+minute, to be 'racked! It's 'most always so, when people goes to sea,"
+added she, in a plaintive tone.
+
+Dorcas meditated; she looked wistfully at her mother.
+
+"It's a pretty pin,--dreadful pretty round the edge."
+
+"Yes, 't is! I expect likely them's di'mon's. 'T was made over in
+foreign parts. He was goin' to bring his picter, too, from there. But
+he's lost and gone! Your Aunt Dorcas never had no more suitors after
+that, and she kind o' gin in, and never had no sperits."
+
+Dorcas's eyes filled, and she closed the box.
+
+
+Henry Mowers would not come to the Fox farm till the next Sunday
+night. That was as much settled as the new moon. So Dorcas had the
+whole week to herself, to be thoroughly unhappy in,--all the more so,
+a thousand times more so, for being utterly incapable of saying or
+seeing why. An instinctive delicacy kept her from showing to any
+of the family that she was even depressed; and her voice was heard
+steadily warbling one of Wesley's hymns, or "Wolfe's Address to his
+Army," in clear, brilliant tones, that rang up-stairs and down. The
+general impression of distance and water associated her absent lover
+with all that was heroic and romantic in song; for of novels she knew
+nothing,--the Colonel's library being limited, in the imaginative
+line, to a torn copy of the "Iliad," which had been left at the house
+by a travelling cobbler.
+
+However, romance is before all rules, and shapes its own adventures.
+The beauty of Swan Day, which, dark and slight as it was, gleamed with
+a power for Dorcas's eye and heart before which Buonarotti's
+would have been only pale stone forever,--that beauty dwelt in her
+imagination and memory, as only first romantic impressions can.
+Distance canonized him, enthroned him, glorified him. And when she
+thought of his setting forth so boldly, so bravely, to tread the
+wide water, to tempt the hot sun, the foreign exposure, the perpetual
+dangers of heathen countries, for her unworthy sake, all that was
+tenderest, most grateful, in her now first wakened nature, rose up in
+distressful tumult, and agitated the depths that are in all women's
+souls.
+
+If there had been anybody to whom she could confide the sad wrenching
+of her spirit, any one who would have cleared her vision, and taught
+her to look on "this picture and on this," she might not have been so
+puzzled between her two Hyperions. But as it was, it was a sorrowful
+struggle. One had the advantage of distance and imagination,--one of
+presence, and of the magnetism of eye and lip.
+
+"I am a wicked, wicked girl!" said she, as she stood before the glass,
+and loosened the locks that fell like sunshine over her shoulders. But
+this confession, with true New-England reticence, was uttered only to
+one listener,--herself.
+
+Then, she recalled, for it was Monday night once more, the frank and
+noble nature of Henry: how he had not asked her to promise him, but
+seemed to take for granted her truth and faith; how he had looked so
+fondly, so clearly into her eyes, not for what he might find there,
+but to show the transparent goodness and sincerity of his own; and
+how he had told her of all his plans and hopes, of his wish and her
+father's intention that they should be married that very fall; how
+little he had said of his own overflowing affection, only that "he had
+never thought of anybody else." Dorcas only felt, without putting the
+sense into language, that in this life-boat there was safety. But
+then had she not sent her heart on a venture in the other,--that other
+which even now was tossing on the waves of a future, full-freighted
+with hope, and faith in her truth?
+
+She opened the little box again, and looked at the ring and painted
+pin. How sorrowfully she looked at them now, seen through tears of
+conscious experience! How mournful seemed the ground hair, and
+the tints woven of so many broken hopes, sad thoughts, and wrecked
+expectations! the hair, kissed so many times in the weary years of
+waiting, and then wept over in the drearier desolation, when the sight
+could only bring thoughts of the salt waves dashing amongst it in the
+deep sea! What a life that had been of poor Aunt Dorcas! Then came
+across her busy thought the words of her mother,--"It's 'most always
+so!"
+
+Swan sailed very far away, in these tearful reveries, and took hope
+and life with him.
+
+When the next Sunday evening came, and the next, and the next,--and
+when Dorcas had ceased to say, blushing and smiling,--"Don't, Henry!
+you know I should make such a poor kind of a wife for you! and your
+mother wouldn't think anything of me!"--and when, Henry had had an
+offer to go to Western New York, where there were nobody knew how many
+beautiful girls, all waiting to pounce on the tall, fine-looking
+young farmer,--when Colonel Fox forgot he was a deacon, and swore
+that Dorcas was undeserving of such a happy lot as was offered to
+her,--when the tears, and the reveries, and the pictures of far-away
+lands, and the hopes that might wither with long years of waiting,
+were all merged and effaced in the healthy happiness of the
+present,--Dorcas dried her tears, and applied herself diligently to
+building up her flaxen _trousseau_, and smothered in her heart the
+image of dark and brilliant beauty that had for a time occupied it.
+
+"She waited--a long time!--years--and years!" murmured Dorcas,
+sorrowfully, as she looked at the pin and ring, which in her mind were
+associated strongly with only one person,--and that one hereafter to
+be dead to her. As soon as events clearly defined her duties, Dorcas
+had no further questions with herself. If the box had been Pandora's,
+not the less resolutely would she have shut it forever, and so crushed
+the hope that it could never have leaped out.
+
+So, with choking tears, and throbbing pulses, she followed many
+brilliant fancies and hopes to their last resting-place. Henceforth
+her path was open and clear, her duties defined, and with daily
+occupation of hand and thought she strove to displace all that had
+ever made her other than the cheerful and busy Dorcas. For the last
+time, she closed and put away the box.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THRENODY.
+
+[Among the imprinted papers of the author of "Charles Auchester" and
+"Counterparts" was found this poem, addressed to a father on the death
+of a favorite son, whose noble disposition and intellectual gifts were
+all enlisted on the side of suffering humanity.]
+
+ O mourner by the ever-mourning deep,
+ Full as the sea of tears! imperial heart,
+ King in thy sorrow over all who weep!
+ O wrestler with the darkness set apart
+
+ In clouds of woe whose lightnings are the throb
+ Of thy fast-flashing pulses! pause to hear
+ The lullabies of many an alien sob,
+ A storm of alien sighs,--so far! so near!
+
+ Oh that our vigils with thy gentle dead
+ Could charm thee from thy night-long agonies,
+ Could steep thy brain in slumber mild, and shed
+ Elysian dreams upon thy closing eyes!
+
+ In vain! all vain!--'tis yet the feast of tears;
+ Sorrow for sorrow is the only spell;
+ Nor wanders yet to melt in unspent years
+ The wringing murmur of our fresh farewell!
+
+ Thousands bereft strew wide the ashes dim;
+ Rich hearts, poor hands, the lovely, the unlearned,
+ Bemoan the angel of the age in him,
+ A star unto its starlight strength returned,
+
+ The City of Delights hath lost its gem,
+ The Sea the changeful glance so like its own,
+ Genius the darling of her diadem,
+ Whose smile made moonlight round her awful throne.
+
+ Those elfin steps their music moves no more
+ Beneath light domes to tune the festal train,
+ Nor at the moony eves along the shore
+ To brim with fairy forms that wizard brain.
+
+ Cold rocks, wild winds, and ever-changing waves,
+ Sad rains that fret the sea and drown the day,
+ We hail,--well pleased that stricken Autumn raves,
+ Though not with Winter shall our griefs decay.
+
+ On lurid mornings, when the lustrous sea
+ Is violet-shadowed from the warm blue air,
+ When the dark grasses brighten over thee,
+ And the winged sunbeams flutter golden there,--
+
+ Then to the wild green slope, thy chosen rest,
+ The blossoms of our spirits we will bring,
+ (Again a babe upon thy mother's breast,
+ An infant seed of the eternal Spring,)--
+
+ Thoughts bright and dark as violets in their dew,
+ Unfading memories of a smile more sweet
+ Than perfume of pale roses, hopes that strew
+ Ethereal lilies on those silent feet
+
+ The ghost of Pain haunts not that garden-land
+ Where Passion's phantom is so softly laid;
+ But Charity beside that earth doth stand,
+ Most lovely left of all, thy sister-shade.
+
+ Her baby-loves like trembling snowdrops lean
+ Above thy calm hands and thy quiet head,
+ When morn is fair, or noonday's glory keen
+ Or the white star-fire glistens on thy bed.
+
+ Her eyes of heaven upon thy slumbers brood,
+ Her watch is o'er thy pillow, and her breath
+ Tells every breeze that stirs thy solitude
+ How thou didst earn that rest on earth called Death,--
+
+ Earned in such quickening youth and brilliant years!
+ For us too early, not too soon for thee!--
+ So may we rest, when Death shall dry our tears,
+ Till everlasting Morning makes us free!
+
+
+
+
+THE UTILITY AND THE FUTILITY OF APHORISMS.
+
+
+The best aphorisms are pointed expressions of the results of
+observation, experience, and reflection. They are portable wisdom,
+the quintessential extracts of thought and feeling. They furnish the
+largest amount of intellectual stimulus and nutriment in the smallest
+compass. About every weak point in human nature, or vicious spot
+in human life, there is deposited a crystallization of warning and
+protective proverbs. For instance, with what relishing force such
+sayings as the following touch the evil resident in indolence and
+delay!--"An unemployed mind is the Devil's workshop"; "The industrious
+tortoise wins the race from the lagging eagle"; "When God says,
+To-day, the Devil says, To-morrow." In like manner, another cluster
+of adages depict the certainty of the detection and punishment of
+crime:--"Murder will out"; "Justice has feet of wool, but hands of
+iron"; "God's mills grind slow, but they grind sure." So in relation
+to every marked exposure of our life, there will be found in the
+records of the common thought of mankind a set of deprecating
+aphorisms.
+
+The laconic compactness of these utterances, their constant
+applicability, the pungent patness with which they hit some fact of
+experience, principle of human nature, or phenomenon of life, the ease
+with which their racy sense may be apprehended and remembered, give
+them a powerful charm for the popular fancy. Accordingly, a multitude
+of proverbs are afloat in the writings and in the mouths of every
+civilized people. Groups of national proverbs exist in most of the
+languages of the world, each family of apothegms revealing the
+chief traits of the people who gave them birth. In these collective
+expressions of national mind, we can recognize--if so incomplete a
+characterization may be ventured--the indrawn meditativeness of the
+Hindu, the fiery imagination of the Arab, the devout and prudential
+understanding of the Hebrew, the aesthetic subtilty of the Greek,
+the legal breadth and sensual recklessness of the Roman, the martial
+frenzy of the Goth, the chivalric and dark pride of the Spaniard,
+the treacherous blood of the Italian, the mercurial vanity of the
+Frenchman, the blunt realism of the Englishman.
+
+It is obvious enough that the masses of moral statements or standing
+exhortations composing the aphorisms of a language cannot mix in the
+daily minds of men without deep cause and effect. It will be worth our
+while to inquire into the bearings of this matter; for, though many a
+gatherer has carried his basket through these diamond districts of the
+mind, we do not remember that any one has sharply examined the value
+of the treasures so often displayed, set forth the methods of their
+influence and its qualifications, and determined the respective limits
+of their use and their worthlessness. Undertaking this task, we must,
+in the outset, divide aphorisms into the two classes of proverbs
+and maxims, plebeian perceptions and aristocratic conclusions, moral
+axioms and philosophic rules. This distinction may easily be made
+clear, and will prove useful.
+
+Popular proverbs are national, or cosmopolitan, and they are
+anonymous,--rising from among the multitude, and floating on their
+breath. They are generalizations of the average observation of a
+people. Undoubtedly, as a general thing, each one was first struck
+out by some superior mind. But usually this happened so early that
+the name of the author is lost. Proverbs--as the etymology hints--are
+words held before the common mind, words in front of the public. Wise
+maxims, on the contrary, are individual, may more commonly be traced
+to their origin in the writings of some renowned author, and are
+more limited in their audience. They are the results of comprehensive
+insight, the ripened products of searching meditation, the weighty
+utterances of weighty minds. The proverb, "A burnt child dreads the
+fire," flies over all climes and alights on every tongue. The maxim,
+"All true life begins with renunciation," appeals to comparatively
+few, and tarries only in prepared and thoughtful minds. Proverbs
+are often mere statements of facts, barren truisms, too obvious to
+instruct our thought, affect our feeling, or in any way change our
+conduct, though the accuracy with which the arrow is shot fixes our
+attention. Notice a few examples of this sort:--"A friend in need is
+a friend indeed"; "Many a little makes a mickle"; "Anger is a brief
+madness"; "It is an ill wind that blows nobody any good." Such
+affirmations are too general and obvious to be provocative awakeners
+of original reflection, sentiment, or will. Maxims, on the other hand,
+instead of being general descriptions or condensed common-places, are
+usually definite directions, discriminative exhortations. Notice such
+specimens as these:--"Take care of the pence, and the pounds will take
+care of themselves"; "When angry, count ten before you speak"; "Do the
+duty nearest your hand, and the next will already have grown clearer";
+"Remember that a thing begun is half done." Proverbs, then, are
+results of observation, often affirmations of quite evident facts,
+as, "Necessity is the mother of invention," or, "Who follows the
+river will arrive at the sea." Maxims, in distinction, are results
+of reflection. They are experience generalized into rules for the
+guidance of action, as, "Think twice before you speak once," or,
+"Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will
+not depart from it." Proverbs are statical; maxims are dynamic. Those
+are wisdom embalmed; these wisdom vitalized. The former are literary
+fodder; the latter are literary pemmican.
+
+The commonest application of proverbs is as mental economics,
+_substitutes for thought_. They are constantly employed by the
+ordinary sort of persons as provisions to avoid spiritual exertion,
+artifices to dispose of a matter with the smallest amount of
+intellectual trouble, as when one ends a controversy with the adage,
+"Least said, soonest mended." The majority of people desire to get
+along with the least possible expenditure of thinking. To many a
+hard-headed laborer, five minutes of girded and continuous thinking
+are more exhaustive than a whole day of muscular toil. No fact is more
+familiar than that illiterate minds are furnished with an abundance of
+trite sayings which they readily cite on all occasions. They thus
+hit, or at least fancy they hit, the principle which applies to the
+exigency, without the trouble of extemporaneously thinking it out
+for themselves on the spot. Such saws as, "The pot must not call the
+kettle black," "One swallow does not make a Spring," "Nought is never
+in danger," "Out of sight, out of mind," often give employment to an
+otherwise freightless tongue, and serve as excusing makeshifts for a
+mind incompetent, from ignorance, indolence, or fatigue, to discharge
+the duty of furnishing its own thought and expression for the
+occasion.
+
+Proverbs are more frequently used as _explanations_ than as _guides_
+of conduct, as the reason why we _have_ acted in a certain manner than
+as a reason why we _should_ act so. "Look before you leap," is usually
+said _after_ we have leaped. When a miserly man refuses to give
+anything in behalf of some distant object, his refusal is not prompted
+by the remembrance of the proverb, "Charity begins at home"; but the
+stingy propensity first stirs in the man and actuates him, and then he
+expresses his motive, or evades the true issue, by quoting the selfish
+old saw ever ready at his hand. In such cases the axiom is not the
+forerunning cause of the action, but its justifying explanation.
+Sometimes, undeniably, an applicable proverb coming to mind does
+influence a man and decide his conduct. Coming at the right moment, in
+the wavering of his will, it suggests the principle which determines
+him, lends the needful balance of impulse for which he waited. An old
+proverb, indorsed by the usage of generations, strikes on the ear like
+a voice falling from the heights of antiquity; it is clothed with
+a kind of authority. Doubtless many a poor boy has received a sound
+flogging which he would have escaped, had not his father happened
+to recall the somewhat cruel and questionable aphorism of Solomon,
+currently abbreviated into "Spare the rod and spoil the child."
+When Charles IX. was hesitating as to the enactment of the Saint
+Bartholomew Massacre, his bigoted mother, infuriated with sectarian
+hate, whispered in his ear, "Clemency is sometimes cruelty, and
+cruelty clemency,"--and the fatal decree was sealed. But such
+instances are exceptional, and partly deceptive, too. Man is usually
+governed by his own passions, his own circumstances, or his own
+reason, not by any verbal propositions. And when an apt and timely
+adage seems to determine him, it is, for the most part, because
+it acts upon responsive feelings preexistent in him and already
+struggling to express themselves. And thus, upon the whole, it is
+to be concluded that proverbs are the children of Epimetheus, or
+afterthought, rather than of Prometheus, or forethought. They are
+rather products than producers,--intellectual forms rather than
+intellectual forces. The prevalent notion of their influence is a
+huge and singular error. One of our wisest authors, himself a great
+aphorist, says,--"Proverbs are the sanctuaries of the intuitions." But
+the intuitions, for the very reason that they are intuitive, need no
+advisory guidance, and admit of no verbal help.
+
+But when we turn from the aphoristic proverbs of the people to
+the aphoristic maxims of the wise, a deep distinction and contrast
+confront us. These, so far from being evasions of effort or
+substitutes for thought, are direct stimulants to thought, provocative
+summonses to more earnest mental application. Seneca says, "Wouldst
+thou subject all things to thyself? Subject thyself to reason." A
+modern writer says, "They are not kings who have thrones, but they who
+know how to govern." Now any one meeting these maxims, if they have
+any effect on him, will be set a-thinking to discover the principle
+contained in them. He will feel that there is a profound significance
+in them; and his curiosity will be awakened, his intellect fired, to
+find out the grounds and bearings of the law they denote. In this way
+the words of the wise are goads to prick and urge the faculties of
+inferior minds. Pointed expressions of the experience of the sovereign
+masters of life and the world impel feebler and less agile natures to
+follow the tracks of light and emulate the choice examples set before
+them, with swifter movements and with richer results than they could
+ever have attained, if not thus encouraged. Proverbial axioms flourish
+copiously in the idiomatic ground and vernacular climate of unlearned,
+undisciplined, unreflective minds, as thistles on the highway where
+every ass may gather them. But precious maxims, those "short sentences
+drawn from a long experience," as Cervantes calls them, are found
+mostly in the writings of the greatest geniuses, Solomon, Aristotle,
+Shakspeare, Bacon, Goethe, Richter, Emerson: and they appeal
+comparatively but to a select class of minds, kindred in some degree
+to those that originated them.
+
+To appreciate and use correctly a valuable maxim requires a genius,
+a vital appropriating exercise of mind, closely allied to that which
+first created it. In order to secure genuine profit here, the disciple
+must for himself repeat the processes of the teacher, reach the same
+conclusion, see the same truth. Wisdom cannot be mechanically taken,
+but must be spiritually assimilated,--cannot be put on as a coat or
+hat, used as a hammer or a sling, but must be intelligently grasped,
+digested, and organized into the mental structure and habits. The
+truth of this is at once so palpable and so important that it has
+found embodiment in numerous proverbs known to almost every one: "An
+ounce of mother-wit is worth a pound of school-wit"; "A pennyweight of
+your own wit is worth a ton of other people's"; "Who cannot work out
+his salvation by heart will never do it by book."
+
+For the reason just indicated, we think the common estimate of
+the actual influence of even the costliest preceptive sayings is
+monstrously exaggerated. That an aphorism should really be of use, it
+must virtually be reproduced by the faculties of your own soul. But
+the mental energy and acquirement which thus recreate it in a great
+degree supersede the necessity of it, render it an expression not of
+a guidance you need from without, but of an insight and force already
+working within. Your character determines what maxims you will select
+or create far more than the maxims you choose or make determine what
+your character will be. Herbart says, "Characters with ruling plans
+are energetic; characters with ruling maxims are virtuous." This is
+true, since a continuous plan subsidizes the forces that would without
+it run to waste, and a deliberately chosen authority girds and guides
+the soul from perilous dallying and dissipation. Nevertheless, it is
+not so much that characters are energetic or virtuous because they
+have ruling plans or maxims as it is that they have ruling plans or
+maxims because they are energetic or virtuous. Say to a penurious,
+hard, grumpy man, "It is more blessed to give than to receive." Will
+you thus make him liberal, sympathetic, affable? No, his character
+will neutralize your precept, as vinegar receiving the sunshine into
+its bosom becomes more sour. Some persons seem to imagine that a wise
+maxim is a sort of fairy's wand, one touch of which will transform the
+loaded panniers of a donkey into the fiery wings of a Pegasus. Surely,
+it is a great error. Trench says, with an amusing _naivete_, "There is
+scarcely a mistake which in the course of our lives we have committed,
+but some proverb, _had we known and attended to its lesson_, might
+have saved us from it." The two comprehensive conditions, "had we
+known and attended to its lesson," are discharging conductors, that
+empty the sentence of all proper meaning, and leave only a rank of
+hollow words behind. He might as well say, "Had we never been tempted,
+we had never fallen,--had we possessed all wisdom, we had never
+committed an error," The best maxim that ever was made cannot directly
+impart or create knowledge or virtue or spiritual force. It can only
+give a voice to those qualities where they already exist, and so set
+in motion a strengthening interchange of action and reaction. Though a
+fool's mouth be stuffed with proverbs, he still remains as much a fool
+as before. He is past preaching to who does not care to mend. As the
+brave Schiller affirms, "Heaven and earth fight in vain against a
+dunce." Eternal contact with nutritious wisdom can teach no lesson,
+nor profit at all one who has not a cooeperative and assimilative
+mind. The anchor is always in the sea, but it never learns to swim.
+Philosophic precepts address the reason; but the springs of motive and
+regeneration are in the sentiments. To attempt the reformation of
+a bad man by means of fine aphorisms is as hopeless as to bombard
+a fortress with diamonds, or to strive to exhilarate the brain by
+pelting the forehead with grapes.
+
+And yet, notwithstanding these large limitations and abatements, it
+is not to be denied that both proverbs and maxims, when habitually
+recalled, generally have some effect, often are strongly influential,
+and may, by a faithful observance of the conditions, be made extremely
+efficacious. What, then, are the conditions of deriving profit from
+the contemplation of aphorisms? How can we make their futility end,
+their utility begin? The first, ever indispensable condition is fresh
+discrimination. There are false, cynical, mean, devilish aphorisms, as
+well as sound and worthy ones. Each style of character, kind and grade
+of experience breathes itself out in corresponding expressions. "Self
+is the man"; "Look out for Number One"; "Devil take the hindmost";
+"One for me is as good as two for you"; "Every man has his price";
+"Draw the snake from its hole by another man's hand"; "Vengeance is
+a feast fit for the gods." The fact that such infernal sentiments are
+proverbs must be no excuse for not trampling them out of sight with
+disgust and scorn. Discrimination is needed not only to reject bad
+sayings, but also to correct incomplete or extravagant ones. The
+maxim, "Never judge by appearances," must be modified, because in
+reality appearances are all that we have to judge from. Its true
+rendering is, "Judge cautiously, for appearances are often deceptive."
+A proverb is almost always partial, presenting one aspect of the
+matter,--or excessive, making no allowance for exceptions. Here
+independent insight is requisite, that we may not err. As a general
+thing, aphorisms are particular truths put into forms of universality,
+and they must be severely scrutinized, lest a mere characteristic
+of the individual be mistaken for a normal faculty of the race. For
+instance, it is said, "A reconciled friend is an enemy in disguise."
+Not always, by any means; it depends greatly on the character of
+the man, "Forewarned is forearmed." Generally this is true, but not
+invariably; as sometimes a man, by being forewarned of danger, is
+unnerved with terror, and undone. So the two maxims, "Never abandon
+a certainty for an uncertainty," "Nothing venture, nothing have,"
+destroy each other. Whether you shall give up the one bird in the hand
+and try for the two in the bush depends on the relative worth of the
+one and the two, and the probabilities of success in the trial.
+No abstract maxim can help solve that problem: it requires living
+intelligence. To follow a foreign rule empirically will often be to
+fare as the monkey fared, who, undertaking to shave, as he had seen
+his master do, gashed his face and paws. Fearful incisions of the soul
+will he get who accepts unqualifyingly the class of impulsive proverbs
+with their enormously overdrawn inferences: such as that of David,
+when he said in his haste, "All men are liars"; or that of Moore,
+when he said in his song, "The world is all a fleeting show, for man's
+illusion given"; or that maxim of Schopenhauer, so full of deadly
+misanthropy and melancholy that one would gladly turn his back on a
+world in which he believed such a rule necessary, "Love no one, hate
+no one, is the first half of all worldly wisdom; say nothing, believe
+nothing, is the other half."
+
+The first condition of a profitable use of maxims being a thorough
+mastery of the rule proposed, with its limits, the next condition
+is an accurate self-knowledge. Know yourself, your weaknesses, your
+aptitudes, your exposures, your gifts and strength, in order that you
+may know what to seek or avoid, what to cherish or spurn, what to spur
+or curb, what to fortify or assail. For example, if your head is made
+of butter, it is clear that it will not do for you to be a baker. If
+you are a coward, you must not volunteer to lead a forlorn hope. The
+advantage of self-knowledge is that it enables us to prescribe for
+ourselves the contemplation of such principles and motives as we
+need. If our thought is narrow and our fancy cold, we should study the
+maxims that instruct,--as, "Joys are wings, sorrows are spurs." If
+our heart is faint and our will weak, we should study the maxims that
+inspire,--as, "The reward of a thing well done is to have done it."
+The instructive maxim opens a vista of truth to the intellect, as when
+Goethe said, "A man need not be an architect in order to live in a
+house." The inspiring maxim strikes a martial chord in the soul,
+as when Alexander said to his Greeks, shrinking at the sight of
+the multitudinous host of Persians, "One butcher does not fear many
+sheep." The evil of self-ignorance is, that it permits men to choose
+as their favorite and guiding maxims those adages which express and
+foster their already rampant propensities, leaving their drooping
+deficiencies to pine and cramp in neglect. The miser pampers his
+avarice by repeating a hundred times a day, "A penny saved is a penny
+gained": as if that were the maxim _he_ needed! The spend-thrift
+comforts and confirms himself in his prodigality by saying, "God
+loveth a cheerful giver": as if that were not precisely the saying
+he ought never to recall! Audacity and arrogance constantly say to
+themselves, "Be bold, be bold, and evermore be bold." Timidity and
+distrust are ever whispering, "Be not too bold." Thus what would be
+one man's meat proves another man's poison; whereas, were it rightly
+distributed, both would be nourished into healthy development. The
+over-reckless should restrain himself by remembering that "Fools
+rush in where angels fear to tread." The over-cautious should animate
+himself with the reflection that "The coward dies a thousand deaths,
+the brave man only one." A man who, with deep self-knowledge,
+carefully chooses and perseveringly applies maxims adapted to check
+his excess and arouse his defect may derive unspeakable profit from
+them.
+
+To do this with full success, however, he must have a discriminating
+knowledge of the circumstances as well as of the rule, and of himself.
+"Circumstances alter cases." What applies happily in one exigency may
+be perfectly absurd or ruinous in a different situation. The mule,
+loaded with salt, waded through a brook, and, as the salt melted,
+the burden grew light. The ass, loaded with wool, tried the same
+experiment; but the wool, saturated with water, was twice as heavy as
+before. So the Satyr, in AEsop's fable, asked the man coming in from
+the cold, "Why he blew on his fingers?" and was told, "To warm them."
+Soon after he asked, "Why he blew in his soup?" and was told, "To
+cool it." Whereupon he rushed on the man with a club and slew him as a
+liar. The ramifications of truth in varying emergencies are infinitely
+subtile and complicated, and often demand the very nicest care
+in distinguishing. Good advice, when empirically taken and rashly
+followed, is as an eye in the hand, sure to be put out the first thing
+on trying to use it. "Advice costs nothing and is good for nothing,"
+it is often said. But that depends on the quality of the advice, on
+the circumstances, and on what kind of persons impart and receive the
+counsel. Advice given with earnestness and wisdom, and applied with
+docility and discrimination, may cost a great deal and be invaluable.
+Competence and aptness, or folly and heedlessness, make a world of
+difference. The great difficulty in regard to the fruitfulness of
+advice is the universal readiness to impart, the usual unwillingness
+to accept it. We give advice by the bucket, take it by the grain. For
+these reasons the world is yet surfeited with precept and starving for
+example: and the applicability is by no means exhausted of the
+fable of Brabrius, who tells how when an old crab said to her child,
+"Awkward one, walk not so crookedly!" he replied, "Mother, walk you
+straight, I will watch and follow." Verbal wisdom would direct us;
+exemplified wisdom draws us.
+
+The first danger, then, from aphorisms is, that they may enable us
+to evade, instead of helping us to fulfil, the duty of meeting and
+solving for ourselves each mental exigency as it arises. In such a
+case, educative discipline and growth are forfeited. The other danger
+from them is, that they may be applied mechanically, without a just
+understanding of them, and thus that grievous mistakes may be made.
+Their genuine use is to excite our own minds to master the principles
+which their authors have set forth in them. Fresh honesty of personal
+thought, aspiration, and patience, is the spiritual talisman wherewith
+alone we can vivify truisms into truths, and transmute noble maxims
+into flesh and blood, nay, into immortal mind. The master-thinkers aid
+us to do this by the quickening power of their suggestions,--the great
+critic not only giving his readers direction, but also helping them to
+eyesight.
+
+To traverse the works of some authors is like going through a
+carefully arranged herbarium, where every specimen is lifeless,
+shrivelled, dusty, crumbling to the touch. The writings of genuine men
+of genius are like a conservatory, where every plant of thought and
+sentiment, whether indigenous or exotic, is alive, full of bloom and
+fragrance, the sap at work in its veins. Verbal statements which are
+petrifactions of wisdom can neither stimulate nor nourish; but verbal
+statements which are vital concentrations of wisdom do both. He
+has learned one of the most important lessons in human life who
+understands adequately the difference between formal perception and
+organic experience, contrasting the futility of detached and deathly
+proverbs with the utility of nutritious and electrical maxims.
+A mechanical teacher crowds the ear with mummified precepts and
+exhortations; an inspired teacher brings surcharged examples and
+rules into contact with the mind. The distinction is world-wide and
+inexhaustible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SHELLEY.
+
+BY ONE WHO KNEW HIM.
+
+
+If photography had existed during the lifetime of Shelley, it alone
+would have sufficed to correct many a misconception of his character
+founded upon imperfect portraiture; and even the most boyish
+recollections of him, matter-of-fact as they are, may help to solve
+the problem upon which many minds have been engaged without yet
+having finished the work. For Shelley still remains before the
+world misconceived because misdescribed; and if society is
+gradually clearing its ideas of the man, it is not only because
+the preconceptions of that multitudinous authority are themselves
+gradually drifting away, but also because substantial facts are slowly
+coming into view. Their development has been hindered by obstacles
+which will be understood when I have proceeded a little farther, and
+even within the compass of this brief sketch I hope that I shall be
+able to make readers on both sides of the Atlantic work their own way
+a little closer to the truth.
+
+Shelley is still regarded by the majority, either as a victim of
+persecution, or a rebel against authority, or both,--his friends
+probably inclining to hold him up as a philosopher-patriot, whose
+resistance to intellectual oppression placed him in the condition of
+a martyr and robbed him of his fair share of life. My own earliest
+memory presents him very much in that aspect. I first recall him
+pale and slender, worn with anxiety, openly alluding to the marks of
+premature age in his own aspect, bursting with aspirations against
+tyranny of all kinds, and yielding to fits of dreadful despondency
+under sufferings inflicted by the dignitaries of the land at the
+instance of his own family. The circumstances by which he was
+surrounded contributed to this guise of martyrdom.
+
+My own earliest recollections began in prison, where my father[A]
+was incarcerated for critical remarks which at the present day would
+scarcely attract attention, and which were put forth in no impulse of
+personal hostility, but under the strongest sense of duty, with the
+desire to vindicate the constitutional freedom of England against the
+perverted control of faction and the influences of a corrupt court. At
+that time my father was accounted a man prone to mutiny against "the
+powers that be," although his political opinions belonged to a class
+which would now be regarded as too moderate for popular liberalism.
+He has been censured for literary affectation and for personal
+improvidence, but only by those who do not understand the real
+elements of his character. The leading ideas of his mind were,
+first, earnest duty to his country at any cost to himself; next, the
+sacrifice of any ordinary consideration to personal affection and
+friendship; and lastly, the cultivation of "the ideal," especially as
+it is developed in imaginative literature. His life was passed in an
+absolute devotion to these three principles. A one-sided frankness has
+blazoned to the world the sacrifices which he accepted from friends,
+but has whispered nothing of the more than commensurate sacrifices
+made on his side; and the simplicity that rendered him the creature of
+the library in which he lived entered into the expression of all his
+thoughts and feelings.
+
+[Footnote A: Leigh Hunt.]
+
+Although I can remember some of the most eminent men who visited us
+in prison, Shelley I cannot; but I can well recall my father's
+description of the young stranger who came to him breathing the
+classic thoughts of college, ardent with aspirations for the
+emancipation of man from intellectual slavery, and endowed by Nature
+with an aspect truly "angelic."
+
+In the interval before his next visit to us, Shelley had passed
+through the first serious passion of his youth, had married Harriet
+Westbrooke, had become the father of two children, and had thus to all
+appearance secured the transmission of the estates strictly entailed
+with the baronetcy,--but had also been exiled from his family-home,
+as well as from college, for his revolutionary and infidel principles,
+had gone through a course of domestic disappointment, had separated
+from his wife, and was threatened with the removal of his children,
+on the ground of the impious and "immoral" training to which they were
+destined under his guardianship. He came to our house for support and
+consolation; he found in it a home for his intellect as well as for
+his feelings, and he was as strictly a part of the family as any of
+our blood-relations, for he came and went at pleasure. I can remember
+that I performed his bidding equally with that of my father; and as to
+personal deference or regard, the only distinction which my memory
+can discover is, that I found in Shelley a companion whom I better
+understood, and whose country rambles I was more pleased to share. For
+this there were many reasons, and amongst them that Shelley entered
+more unreservedly into the sports and even the thoughts of children.
+I had probably awakened interest in him, not only because I was my
+father's eldest child, but still more because I had already begun to
+read with great avidity, and with an especial sense of imaginative
+wonders and horrors; and, familiarized with the conversation amongst
+literary men, I had really been able to understand something of his
+position, insomuch that no doubt he saw the intense interest I took in
+himself and his sufferings.
+
+The emotions that he underwent were but too manifest in the
+unconcealed anxiety and the eager recital of newly awakened hopes,
+with intervals of the deepest depression. He suffered also from
+physical causes, which I then only in part understood. This suffering
+was traced to the attack made upon him at Tanyralt, in Wales, when, on
+the night of February the 26th, 1813, some man who had been prowling
+about the house in which he lived first fired at him through the
+window, and then entered the room, escaping when the man-servant was
+called in by the tumult and the screams of Mrs. Shelley. The whole
+incident has been doubted,--why, I can hardly understand, unless the
+reason is that some of the conjectures in which Mrs. Shelley indulged
+were over-imaginative. She mentions by name a political opponent who
+had said that "he would drive them out of the country." My own weak
+recollections point to reasons more personal. But what I do know is,
+that Shelley himself ascribed the injury from which he suffered to
+a pressure of the assassin's knee upon him in the struggle. The
+complaint was of long standing; the attacks were alarmingly severe,
+and the seizure very sudden. I can remember one day at Hampstead: it
+was soon after breakfast, and Shelley sat reading, when he suddenly
+threw up his book and hands, and fell back, the chair sliding sharply
+from under him, and he poured forth shrieks, loud and continuous,
+stamping his feet madly on the ground. My father rushed to him, and,
+while the women looked out for the usual remedies of cold water and
+hand-rubbing, applied a strong pressure to his side, kneading it with
+his hands; and the patient seemed gradually to be relieved by that
+process. This happened about the time when he was most anxious for the
+result of the trial which was to deprive him of his children. In
+the intervals he sought relief in reading, in conversation,--which
+especially turned upon classic literature,--in freedom of thought and
+action, and in play with the children of the house. I can remember
+well one day when we were both for some long time engaged in gambols,
+broken off by my terror at his screwing up his long and curling
+hair into a horn, and approaching me with rampant paws and frightful
+gestures as some imaginative monster.
+
+It was at this time that the incident happened which has been
+mentioned by my father. A poor woman had been attending her son before
+a criminal court in London. As they were returning home at night,
+fatigue and anxiety so overcame her that she fell on the ground in
+convulsions, where she was found by Shelley. He appealed to a very
+opulent person, who lived on the top of the hill, asking admission for
+the woman into the house, or the use of the carriage, which had just
+set the family down at the door. The stranger was repulsed with
+the cold remark that impostors swarmed everywhere, and that his own
+conduct was "extraordinary." The good Samaritan, whom the Christian
+would not help, warned the uncharitable man that such treatment of the
+poor is sometimes chastised by hard treatment of the rich in days
+of trouble; and I heard Shelley describe the manner in which the
+gentleman retreated into his mansion, exclaiming, "God bless me, Sir!
+dear me, Sir!" In the account of the occurrence given by my father,
+he has omitted to mention that Shelley and the woman's son, who had
+already carried her a considerable way up the main hill of Hampstead,
+brought her on from the inhospitable mansion to our house in their
+arms; and I believe, that, the son's strength failing, for some way
+down the hill into the Vale of Health Shelley carried her on his back.
+I cannot help contrasting this action of the wanderer with the careful
+self-regard of another friend who often came to see us, though I do
+not remember that any of us were ever inside his doors. He was, I
+believe, for some time actually a pensioner on Shelley's generosity,
+though he ultimately rose to be comparatively wealthy. One night, when
+he had been visiting us, he was in trouble because no person had been
+sent from a tavern at the top of the hill to light him up the pathway
+across the heath. That same self-caring gentleman afterwards became
+one of the apologists who most powerfully contributed to mislead
+public opinion in regard to his benefactor.
+
+Shelley often called me for a long ramble on the heath, or into
+regions which I then thought far distant; and I went with him rather
+than with my father, because he walked faster, and talked with
+me while he walked, instead of being lost in his own thoughts and
+conversing only at intervals. A love of wandering seemed to possess
+him in the most literal sense; his rambles appeared to be without
+design, or any limit but my fatigue; and when I was "done up,"
+he carried me home in his arms, on his shoulder, or pickback. Our
+communion was not always concord; as I have intimated, he took a
+pleasure in frightening me, though I never really lost my confidence
+in his protection, if he would only drop the fantastic aspects that
+he delighted to assume. Sometimes, but much more rarely, he teased me
+with exasperating banter; and, inheriting from some of my progenitors
+a vindictive temper, I once retaliated severely. We were in the
+sitting-room with my father and some others, while I was tortured. The
+chancery-suit was just then approaching its most critical point, and,
+to inflict the cruellest stroke I could think of, I looked him in the
+face, and expressed a hope that he would be beaten in the trial and
+have his children taken from him. I was sitting on his knee, and as
+I spoke, he let himself fall listlessly back in his chair, without
+attempting to conceal the shock I had given him. But presently he
+folded his arms round me and kissed me; and I perfectly understood
+that he saw how sorry I was, and was as anxious as I was to be friends
+again. It was not very long after that we were playing with paper
+boats on the pond in the Vale of Health, watching the way in which the
+wind carried some of them over, or swamped most of them before they
+had surmounted many billows; and Shelley then playfully said how
+much he should like it, if we could get into one of the boats and be
+shipwrecked,--it was a death he should like better than any other.
+
+After the death of Harriet, Shelley's life entirely changed; and I
+think I shall be able to show in the sequel that the change was far
+greater than any of his biographers, except perhaps one who was most
+likely to know, have acknowledged. Conventional form and Shelley are
+almost incompatible ideas; as his admirable wife has said of him, "He
+lived to idealize reality,--to ally the love of abstract truth, and
+adoration of abstract good, with the living sympathies. And long as he
+did this without injury to others, he had the reverse of any respect
+for the dictates of orthodoxy or convention." As soon, therefore,
+as the obstacle to a second marriage was removed, he and Mary
+Wollstonecraft Godwin were regularly joined in matrimony, and retired
+to Great Marlow, in Buckinghamshire. A brief year Shelley passed in
+the position of a country-gentleman on a small scale. His abode was
+a rough house in the village, with a garden at the back and nothing
+beyond but the country. Close to the house there was a small
+pleasure-ground, with a mound at the farther end of the lawn slightly
+inclosing the view. Behind the mound there was a kitchen-garden, not
+unintermixed with flowers and ornamental vegetation; and farther still
+was a piece of ground traversed by a lane deeply excavated in the
+chalk soil. At that time Shelley had a thousand a year allowed to
+him by his father; but although he was in no respect the unreckoning,
+wasteful person that many have represented him to be, such a sum must
+have been insufficient for the mode in which he lived. His family
+comprised himself, Mary, William their eldest son, and Claire
+Claremont,--the daughter of Godwin's second wife, and therefore
+the half-sister of Mary Shelley,--a girl of great ability, strong
+feelings, lively temper, and, though not regularly handsome, of
+brilliant appearance. They kept three servants, if not a fourth
+assistant: a cook; Elise, a Swiss _gouvernante_ for the child; and
+Harry, a man who did the work of gardener and man-servant in general.
+He kept something like open house; for while I was there with my
+father and mother, there also came, for a short time, several other
+friends, some of whom stopped for more than a passing visit. He played
+the Lord Bountiful among his humbler neighbors, not only helping them
+with money or money's-worth, but also advising them in sickness; for
+he had made some study of medicine, in part, I suspect, to be the more
+useful.
+
+I have already intimated that he had assisted certain of his
+companions; and I am convinced that these circumstances contributed to
+the resolution which Shelley formed to leave England for Italy in
+the year 1818, although he then ascribed his doing so to the score of
+health,--or rather, as he said, of life. He then believed himself
+to be laboring under a tendency to consumption, not without medical
+warnings to that effect, although there were strong reasons for
+doubting the validity of the belief, which was based upon less precise
+grounds before the introduction of auscultation and the careful
+examinations of our day. It was, however, characteristic of Shelley
+to rest his actions upon the dominant motive; so that, if several
+inducements operated to the same end, he absolutely discarded the
+minor considerations, and acted solely upon the grand one. I can well
+remember, that, when other persons urged upon him cumulative reasons
+for any course of action, whether in politics, or morality, or
+trifling personal matters of the day, he indignantly cast aside all
+such makeweights, and insisted upon the one sufficient motive. I
+mention this the more explicitly because the opposite course is the
+most common, and some who did not sympathize with his concentration
+of purpose afterwards imputed the suppression of all but one, out of
+several apparent motives, to reserve, or even to a want of candor.
+The accusation was first made by some of Shelley's false
+friends,--creatures who gathered round him to get what they could, and
+afterwards made a market of their connection, to his disadvantage. But
+I was shocked to find a sanction for the notion under the hand of one
+of Shelley's first and most faithful friends, and I discovered it,
+too, when death had barred me from the opportunity of controverting
+the mistake. It was easily accounted for. The writer to whom I allude
+was himself a person whose scrupulous conscience and strong mistrust
+of his own judgment, unless supported on every side, induced him to
+accumulate and to avow as many motives as possible for each single
+act. He could scarcely understand or believe the existence of a
+mind which, although powerful and comprehensive in its grasp, should
+nevertheless deliberately set aside all motives but one, and actually
+proceed upon that exclusive ground without regard to the others.
+
+Both Shelley and his friends seem to have underrated his strength, and
+one little incident will illustrate my meaning. He kept no horse or
+carriage; but in accordance with his ruling passion he had a boat on
+the river of sufficient size to carry a numerous party. It was made
+both for sailing and rowing; and I can remember being one of an
+expedition which went some distance up the Thames, when Shelley
+himself towed the boat on the return home, while I walked, by his
+side. His health had very much improved with the change that had
+taken place in his mode of life, his more settled condition, and the
+abatement of anxiety, with the absolute removal of some of its causes.
+I am well aware that he _had_ suffered severely, and that he continued
+to be haunted by certain recollections, partly real and partly
+imaginative, which pursued him like an Orestes. He frequently talked
+on such subjects; but it has always appeared to me that those who
+have reported what he said have been guilty of a singular confusion in
+their interpretations. As I proceed, you will find that certain facts
+in his life have never yet been distinctly related, and I have a
+strong reason for believing that some circumstances of which I became
+accidentally aware were never disclosed at all, except to Mary; while
+in her writings I can trace allusions to them, that remind me of
+passages in ancient authors,--in Ovid, for instance,--which would have
+been absolutely unintelligible, except for accidental references. In
+spite, however, of the rude trials to which his constitution had
+been subjected, and of new symptoms supposed to indicate pulmonary
+weakness, there was a marked improvement in his aspect since he had
+visited London. He still had that ultra-youthful figure that partook
+the traits of the hobbledehoy, arrived at man's stature, but not yet
+possessing the full manly proportions. His extremities were large, his
+limbs long, his face small, and his thorax very partially developed,
+especially in girth. An habitual eagerness of mood, thrusting forward
+his face, made him stoop, with sunken chest and rounded shoulders; and
+this was even more apparent in the easy costume of the country than
+in London dress. But in his countenance there was life instead of
+weariness; melancholy more often yielded to alternations of bright
+thoughts; and paleness had given way to a certain freshness of color,
+with something like roses in the cheeks. Notwithstanding the sense of
+weakness in the chest, which attacked him on any sudden effort,
+his power of exertion was considerable. Once, returning from a long
+excursion, and entering the house by the back way, up a precipitous,
+though not perpendicular bank, the women of the party had to be
+helped; and Shelley was the most active in rendering that assistance.
+While others were content to accomplish the feat for one, he, I think,
+helped three up the bank, sliding in a half-sitting posture when he
+returned to fetch a new charge. I well remember his shooting past me
+in a cloud of chalk-dust, as I was slowly climbing up. He had a fit
+of panting after it, but he made light of the exertion. I can also
+recollect, that, although he frequently preferred to steer rather than
+to put forth his strength, yet, if it were necessary, he would take
+an oar, and could stick to his seat for any time against any force of
+current or of wind, not only without complaining, but without being
+compelled to give in until the set task was accomplished, though it
+should involve some miles of hard pulling. These facts indicate the
+amount of "grit" that lay under the outward appearance of weakness and
+excitable nerves.
+
+Shelley's fulness of vitality did not at that time seem to be shared
+by the partner of his life. Mary's intellectual powers had already
+been manifested. He must to some extent have known the force of her
+affection, and the tenderness of her nature; but it is remarkable that
+her youth was not the period of her greatest beauty, and certainly at
+that date she did not do justice to herself either in her aspect or in
+the tone of her conversation. She was singularly pale. With a figure
+that needed to be set off, she was careless in her dress; and the
+decision of purpose which ultimately gained her the playful title of
+"Wilful Woman" then appeared, at least in society, principally in the
+negative form,--her temper being easily crossed, and her resentments
+taking a somewhat querulous and peevish tone. Both of the pair were
+still young, and their ideas of education were adverse to the
+received doctrines of the day, rather than substantive; and their
+own principles in this matter were exemplified somewhat perversely by
+little William. Even at that early age the child called forth frequent
+and poignant remonstrances from his _gouvernante_, and occasionally
+drew perplexed exclamations or desponding looks from his father, who
+took the child's little perversities seriously to heart, and sometimes
+vented his embarrassment in generalized remarks on human nature.
+
+Some years elapsed between the night when I saw Shelley pack up his
+pistols--which he allowed me to examine--for his departure for
+the South, and the moment when, after our own arrival in Italy, my
+attention was again called to his presence by the shrill sound of
+his voice, as he rushed into my father's arms, which he did with an
+impetuousness and a fervor scarcely to be imagined by any who did
+not know the intensity of his feelings and the deep nature of his
+affection for that friend. I remember his crying out that he was "so
+_inexpressibly_ delighted!--you cannot think how _inexpressibly_ happy
+it makes me!"
+
+The history of Shelley's brief visit to Pisa has been related by many,
+and is, I believe, told in his published letters; but it appears to me
+that those who have recounted it have in some respects fallen short.
+Excepting Mary Shelley, the best-informed spoke too soon after the
+event. Shelley's own letters are slightly misleading, from a very
+intelligible cause. After he had encouraged, if he did not suggest,
+the enterprise of "The Liberal,"--and I believe it would be nearly
+impossible for any one of the three men interested in that venture to
+ascertain exactly who was its author,--his mind misgave him. He knew
+my father's necessities and his childish capacities for business. With
+a keen sense of the power displayed in "Don Juan," and even in more
+melodramatic works, Shelley had acquired a full knowledge of the
+singularly licentious training from which Byron had then scarcely
+emerged, and of the vacillating caprice which enfeebled all his
+actions. His own ability to grapple with practical affairs was very
+great; but he himself had scarcely formed a sufficient estimate of it.
+Determined to maintain a thorough equality and freedom with the noble
+bard in their social relations, he shrank from any position which
+might raise in Byron's jealous and unstable mind the idea that he was
+under pressure; yet he was anxious to prevent disappointment for Leigh
+Hunt. He dreaded failure, and resolved that he would do his best to
+prevent it; and yet again he scarcely anticipated success.
+
+As early as the end of 1818, he described the way in which Byron spent
+his life, after he had been partly exiled, partly emancipated from the
+ordinary restraints of society. At that time, "the Italian women were
+the most contemptible of all who existed under the moon,--an ordinary
+Englishman could not approach them"; "but," writes Shelley, "Lord
+Byron is familiar with the lowest sort of these women,--the people
+his _gondolieri_ pick up in the streets." Byron's curiosity, indeed,
+tempted him to learn something of vice in its most revolting aspects.
+"He has," writes Shelley, "a certain degree of candor, while you talk
+to him, but unfortunately it does not outlast your departure." I am
+sure that before 1821 Byron had risen in his friend's estimation, or
+the "Liberal" scheme would never have been contemplated; and there
+were excellent reasons for the change. It is only by degrees that men
+have learned to appreciate at once the extraordinary nature and force
+of Byron's genius and the equally monstrous and marvellous nature
+of the evil training by which he was "dragged up." In the midst
+of extravagant license he gained experiences which might have
+extinguished his mind, but which, as they did not have that effect,
+added to his resources. In the process some of his personal qualities
+as a companion suffered severely. Very few grown men have been so
+extravagantly sensitive to personal approbation; and he was anxious
+to conciliate the liking of all who approached him, however foreign
+to his own set, however humble, or however insignificant. He was as
+mistrustful as a greedy child. He could be extravagant, but he was not
+open-handed; and yet he would give up what he coveted for himself,
+if he were urged by those whose esteem he desired to win. Now, of
+all persons who came near him, Shelley was the one that combined the
+greatest number of qualities calculated to influence a creature like
+Byron. He was of gentle blood; he was as resolute as he was able to
+maintain what is popularly called an independent position; he was
+truly sincere; and his way of life displayed a purity which Byron
+admired, though he fell from it so lamentably. On the other hand,
+Shelley was at odds with society on the very same questions of morals;
+he possessed all the philosophy for understanding the complicated
+perplexities of aberrant genius; did actually make allowances for
+Byron; estimated his powers more accurately, and therefore more
+highly, than any other person who came near him; and thus commanded at
+once his sympathies, his ambition, and his confidence. Everybody
+knows that in the interval between 1818 and the date of his death at
+Missolonghi, Byron's discipline of life had undergone a marked
+and beneficial change, and many agencies have been mentioned as
+contributing to that result, but I am sure that no one was so
+all-sufficient as the personal association with Shelley. Nothing of
+this is gainsaid by the fact that the greater part of this improvement
+was displayed after Shelley's death. Change of scene, intercourse with
+others, opportunities for acting upon his new principles, all helped,
+together, probably, with the graver sense of counsel bequeathed by
+the friend whom he had lost. Certain it is that Byron never mentioned
+Shelley in my hearing without a peculiarly emphatic manner. I know
+that to more than one person he performed acts of kindness and
+friendly aid as tributes to the memory of Shelley; and if any action
+were urged upon him as worthy of his own genius and dignity, nothing
+clenched the appeal like the name of Shelley. But if you will for a
+moment compare the characters of the two men,--if you will contrast
+the large self-sacrifice of the one with the self-indulgence of the
+other, the independence of the one with the craving of the other for
+approval, the absolute trust in human hope and goodness of Shelley
+with the _blase_ cynicism of Byron, I think two conclusions must
+instantly strike you,--first, that Shelley must have possessed almost
+unequalled power of influence over those who surrounded him, and,
+secondly, that Byron himself must have been a much better man, or
+possessing much more in common with Shelley than society or some of
+his most intellectual companions at all imagined. Part of the facts
+bearing upon the subject have come out since the death of both. My own
+attention was drawn to the point by the striking discord between the
+way in which other people speak of their relations and the manner of
+Shelley and Byron towards each other, and especially Byron's way in
+speaking of Shelley. It is not probable that Shelley formed to himself
+any such idea of his own power; yet you will find hints at it in his
+letters, you will see, curious traces of it in the letters of others,
+and nothing else will fully explain the change in Byron's life.
+Moreover, it reconciles the apparent inconsistencies of Shelley's
+reservations in talking about Byron with his manifest and practical
+confidence in the result of their joint working.
+
+When I met Shelley again in Italy, it was easy to see that a grand
+change had come over his appearance and condition. The Southern
+climate had suited him, and the boat which caused his death had in the
+mean while been instrumental in developing his life. His retirement
+from painful personal conflict had given him greater ease; intercourse
+with Mary had made his life better; and, not to overlook one important
+fact, he had _grown_ since he left England. For physiologists attest
+the truth, that growth continues throughout human existence, even
+until after decay begins; and Shelley's constitution was of that
+kind--strong in some of its developments, slow in others--which needed
+longer time than many to arrive at its full proportions. For instance,
+in the interval since I had seen him his chest had manifestly become
+of a larger girth. I am speaking only upon distant recollection; but
+I should judge it to have been three or four inches larger round, or
+perhaps more. His voice was stronger, his manner more confident
+and downright, and, although not less emphatic, yet decidedly less
+impulsively changeful. I can recall his reading from an ancient
+author, translating as he went, a passage about the making of the
+first man; and I remember it from the subject and from the easy
+flow of his translation, but chiefly from the air of strength and
+cheerfulness which I noticed in his voice and manner. In nothing,
+however, does Shelley appear to me to have been so misdescribed as
+in the outward man,--partly, as usual, from overstatement of
+peculiarities, and partly because each artist has painted the portrait
+from his own favorite view. Many, through exaggeration, or imperfect
+knowledge, have equally misconstrued his moral character, and have
+omitted to report the real conduct of his understanding as he advanced
+towards "the middle of the way of life."
+
+From the story of his life after I first saw him, as well as from
+many things that I have heard him say of his family, and the strange
+recollections that he had of home, it is easy to understand the
+general tenor of his early life. Through some caprice in genealogical
+chemistry, in Percy the Shelley race struck out an entirely new idea:
+an apparent caprice in the sequence of houses that has often been
+noticed. For how often may we observe that the union of the most
+remarkable intellects produces a _tertium quid_ which is the reverse
+of an equivalent to the combined totals, representing only a fraction
+of their qualities, and that fraction in its negative aspect; while,
+on the other hand, rivulets of blood which have gained for themselves
+no name upon earth may combine to form a river illustrious to the
+whole world. In the latter case, not an unusual effect is that those
+who are charged with the infancy of the new type in the family are
+incompetent to their duty; and accordingly Shelley was regarded merely
+as "a strange boy," wayward, mutinous, and to be severely chastised
+into obedience. It has been said that he attracted no particular
+notice at school; but this is not true. At Eton his resentment of
+tyrannical authority displayed itself not only against the masters,
+but against the privileges of young patricians. He refused to be
+"fag"; and on one occasion he so braved the youthful public-opinion,
+that, on being dared to the act by the surrounding boys, he pinned
+a companion's hand to the table with a fork. According to my
+recollection, the immediate provocative was that he was dared to
+do it; but the incident arose out of his resistance to the seniors
+amongst the scholars and to the customs of the school. It was evident
+that the masters had their eye upon him. Such a youth, with a command
+of language that was a born faculty and not simply acquired, _must_
+have attracted very positive attention on the part of the teachers;
+but it was certain, that, with the tendencies of those days, they
+would have thought it discreet to say as little as possible about the
+slender mutineer. It is equally well known, that, notwithstanding his
+youth, religious opinions caused his expulsion from college; and when
+we turn to the earliest of his writings which assumed anything like a
+complete shape, we discover at once the nature of those powers
+which could not have been overlooked,--we detect the genius, the
+revolutionary ideas, and the extraordinary command which he had
+acquired over the subject-matter of much that is taught in schools
+and colleges. Amid the orthodox reaction that followed upon the French
+Revolution, he was struck with the excesses to which despotic power
+could be carried. He read history with sympathies for the natural
+impulses and aspirations of the race, as opposed to the small circles
+which comprise established authorities. He looked upon knowledge as
+the means of serving, not enslaving the race. And therefore, while he
+excused the crimes of the Revolution, on the score of the ignorance
+in which the people had been kept, their sufferings, and the natural
+revulsion against such painful down-treading, he regarded the counter
+acts of authority as a treachery to wisdom itself. He says,--
+
+ "Hath Nature's soul,
+ That formed this world so beautiful....
+ And filled the meanest worm that crawls in dust
+ With spirit, thought, and love, on Man alone,
+ Partial in causeless malice, wantonly
+ Heaped ruin, vice, and slavery?
+ Nature?--no!
+ Kings, priests, and statesmen blast the human flower
+ Even in its tender bud; their influence darts
+ Like subtle poison through the bloodless veins
+ Of desolate society."
+
+The pretension of authority to speak with a supernatural warrant
+provoked him to deny the warrant itself, or the sources from which it
+was said to emanate.
+
+ "Is there a God?--ay, an almighty God,
+ And vengeful as almighty? Once his voice
+ Was heard on earth; earth shuddered at the sound,
+ The fiery-visaged firmament expressed
+ Abhorrence, and the grave of Nature yawned
+ To swallow all the dauntless and the good
+ That dared to hurl defiance at his throne,
+ Girt as it was with power. None but slaves
+ Survived,--cold-blooded slaves, who did the work
+ Of tyrranous omnipotence."
+
+To these superstitious and ambitious pretensions he traced the
+corruption which disorganized society, leading it down even to the
+very worst immoralities.
+
+ "All things are sold: the very light of heaven
+ Is venal....
+ Those duties which heart of human love
+ Should urge him to perform instinctively
+ Are bought and sold as in a public mart.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Even love is sold; the solace of all woe
+ Is turned to deadliest agony, old age
+ Shivers in selfish beauty's loathing arms,
+ And youth's corrupted impulses prepare
+ A life of horror from the blighting bane
+ Of commerce; whilst the pestilence that springs
+ From unenjoying sensualism has filled
+ All human life with hydra-headed woes."
+
+"Shelley," says Mary, in her note on the poem, "was eighteen when he
+wrote 'Queen Mab.' He never published it. When it was written, he
+had come to the decision that he was too young to be a judge of
+controversies." The wife-editor refers to a series of
+articles published in the "New Monthly Magazine" for 1832 by a
+fellow-collegian, a warm friend of Shelley's, touching upon his
+school-life, and describing the state of his mind at college. The
+worst of all these biographical sketches of remarkable men is, that
+delicacy, discretion, or some other euphemistically named form of
+hesitancy, induces writers to suppress the incidents which supply the
+very angles of the form they want to delineate; and it is especially
+so in Shelley's case. I am sure, that, if Mary, or my father, or any
+of those with whom Shelley conversed most thoroughly, had related some
+of the more extravagant incidents of his early life exactly as they
+occurred, we should better understand the tenor of his thought,--and
+we should also have the most valuable complement to that part of
+his intellectual progress which stands in contrast with the earlier
+portion. Now, as I have said, at school Shelley was a more practical
+and impracticable mutineer than his friends have generally allowed.
+They have been anxious to soften his "faults"; and the consequence
+is, that we miss the force of the boy's logic and the vigor of his
+Catonian experiments.
+
+Again, accident has made me aware of facts which give me to
+understand, that, in passing through the usual curriculum of a college
+life in all its paths, Shelley did not go scathless,--but that, in
+the tampering with venal pleasures, his health was seriously, and not
+transiently, injured. The effect was far greater on his mind than on
+his body; and the intellectual being greater than the physical
+power, the healthy reaction was greater. But that reaction was
+also, especially in early youth, principally marked by horror and
+antagonism. Conscientious, far beyond even the ordinary maximum
+amongst ordinary men, he felt bound to denounce the mischief from
+which he saw others suffer more severely than himself, since in them
+there was no such reaction. I have no doubt that he himself would have
+spoken even plainer language, though to me his language is perfectly
+transparent, if he had not been restrained by a superstitious notion
+of his own, that the true escape from the pestilent and abhorrent
+brutalities which he detected around him in "real" life is found in
+"the ideal" form of thought and language. Ardent and romantic, he was
+eager to discover beauty "beneath" every natural aspect. Of all men
+living, I am the one most bound to be aware of the inconsistency; but
+you will see it reconciled a little later.
+
+Shelley left college prone "to fall in love,"--having already, indeed,
+gone through some very slight experiences of that process. In his
+wanderings, in a humble position which conciliated rather than
+repelled him, he met with Harriet Westbrooke, a very comely, pleasing,
+and simple type of girlhood. She was at some disadvantage, under some
+kind of domestic oppression; so she served at once as an object for
+his disengaged affection, and a subject for his liberating theories,
+and as a substratum for the idealizing process upon which he
+constructed a fictitious creation of Harriet Westbrooke. His dreams
+bearing but a faint and controversial resemblance to the Harriet
+Westbrooke of daily life, the fictitious image prevented him from
+knowing her, until the reality broke through the poetical vision only
+to shock him by its inferiority or repulsiveness. As to the poor girl
+herself, she never had the capacity for learning to know him. In the
+sequel she proved to be the not unwilling slave of a petty domestic
+intrigue,--oppression from which he would have rescued her. Married
+life enabled him to discover that she was the reverse of the being
+that he had fancied. They were first married in Scotland in 1811.
+Shelley made acquaintance with the Godwins in 1812, before his eldest
+child was born. I am not sure whether he was acquainted with Mary at
+that time; but some circumstances which I cannot verify make me doubt
+it. Harriet's daughter was born early in the summer of 1813, and it
+was before the close of that year that the couple began to disagree.
+The wife was evidently under the dominion of a relative whose
+influence was injurious to her. I do not find a hint of any imputation
+upon what is usually called her "fidelity"; but the relative
+manifestly desired to show her power over both. It is probable that at
+an early day Shelley's disposition to see "sermons in stones and good
+in everything" made him think better of that interloping lady than she
+deserved,--and that consequently he not only gave her encouragement,
+but committed himself to something which, to Harriet's mind, justified
+her deference for ill-considered advice. It is very likely that she
+was counselled to extend her power over Shelley in a manner which her
+own simple nature would not have suggested; but, being as foolish as
+it was cunning and vulgar, such conduct could no result but that of
+repelling a man like Shelley. That he acquired a detestation of the
+relative is a certain fact. He must have been expecting a second child
+when he formally remarried Harriet in England on the twenty-fourth of
+March, 1814; and that ceremony has been mentioned by several writers
+to prove the most opposite conclusions,--that Shelley was devoted to
+his first wife, and that he behaved to her with the basest hypocrisy.
+It proves nothing but his desire to place the hereditary rights of the
+second child, who might be a boy, beyond doubt; and the precaution
+was justified by the event. Before the close of the same year Harriet
+returned to her father's house, and there she gave birth to a son,
+Charles, who would have inherited the baronetcy, if he had not died
+in 1826, after his father's death. The parting took place about the
+twenty-fourth of June, 1814; and at the same time Shelley wrote a
+poem, of which fragments are given in the recently published "Relics."
+The verse shows, first, that Shelley was suffering severely from the
+chronic conflict which he had undergone, and, secondly, that he had
+found some novel comfort in the intercourse with Mary.
+
+ "To sit and curb the soul's mute rage,
+ Which preys upon itself alone;
+ To curse the life which is the cage
+ Of fettered grief that dares not groan,
+ Hiding from many a careless eye
+ The scorned load of agony.
+
+ "Upon my heart thy accents sweet
+ Of peace and pity fell like dew
+ On flowers half dead....
+
+ "We are not happy, sweet! our state
+ Is strange and full of doubt and fear;
+ More need of words that ills abate;--
+ Reserve or censure come not near
+ Our sacred friendship, lest there be
+ No solace left for thee and me."
+
+It is obvious that considerably after the date of this poem, Harriet
+remained in amicable correspondence with Shelley; and not only so,
+but, while she altogether abstained from opposing his new connection,
+she was actually on friendly terms with Mary. It is easy to understand
+how a limited nature like Harriet's should be worn out by the
+exaction and impracticability of one like Shelley; for to her most
+impracticable would seem his lofty and ideal requirements. On the
+other hand, it is evident that Shelley regarded the unfortunate girl
+with feelings of deep commiseration; and I know that he not only
+pitied her, but felt strong compunctions for the share which his own
+mistaken conduct at the beginning, even more than at the end, had had
+in drawing her aside from what would have been her natural course in
+ordinary life. Mary, I believe, clearly understood the whole case,
+and felt nothing but compassion for one who was a "victim to
+circumstances."
+
+The sequel has been alluded to in several publications, but so
+obscurely as to be more than unintelligible; for the reader is led to
+conclusions the reverse of the fact. In the "Memorials," at page 63,
+the subject is barely touched upon. I take the whole passage.
+
+"Towards the close of 1813, estrangements, which for some time had
+been slowly growing between Mr. and Mrs. Shelley, came to a crisis.
+Separation ensued; and Mrs. Shelley returned to her father's house.
+Here she gave birth to her second child,--a son, who died in 1826.
+
+"The occurrences of this painful epoch in Shelley's life, and the
+causes which led to them, I am spared from relating. In Mary Shelley's
+own words:--'This is not the time to relate the truth; and I should
+reject any coloring of the truth.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Of those remaining who were intimate with Shelley at this time, each
+has given us a different version of this sad event, colored by his own
+views and personal feelings. Evidently, Shelley confided to none of
+these friends. We, who bear his name and are of his family, have in
+our possession papers written by his own hand, which, in after-years,
+may make the story of his life complete, and which few now living,
+except Shelley's own children, have ever perused.
+
+"One mistake which has gone forth to the world we feel ourselves
+called upon positively to contradict. Harriet's death has sometimes
+been ascribed to Shelley. This is entirely false. There was no
+immediate connection whatever between her tragic end and any conduct
+on the part of her husband."
+
+At the end of the "Relics" is a memorandum entitled, "Harriet
+Shelley and Mr. Thomas Love Peacock." Mr. Peacock had been writing in
+"Fraser's Magazine" a series of articles on Shelley; in "Macmillan's
+Magazine" for June, 1866, was an article by Mr. Richard Garnet,
+entitled, "Shelley in Pall-Mall"; to this Mr. Peacock replied in
+"Percy Bysshe Shelley: Supplementary Notice"; and Mr. Garnet rejoined
+in the new little volume which he ha; edited. The main purpose of
+this last notice is, to show that Mr. Peacock was not accurate in his
+chronology or in his interpretation of the severance between Shelley
+and Harriet. Alluding either to the discretion which prevented Shelley
+from making a confidant of Mr. Peacock, or to his grief occasioned by
+the fate of Harriet, the writer refers to "the proof which exists in a
+series of letters written by Shelley at this very time to one in whom
+he had confidence, and at present in possession of his family," and
+then proceeds thus:--"Nothing more beautiful or characteristic ever
+proceeded from his pen; and they afford the most unequivocal testimony
+of the grief and horror occasioned by the tragical incident to which
+they bear reference. Yet self-reproach formed no element of his
+sorrow, in the midst of which he could proudly say, '------, ------,'
+(mentioning two dry, unbiased men of business,) 'every one, does me
+full justice, bears testimony to the uprightness and liberality of my
+conduct to her.'"
+
+In the "Memorials" and the "Relics" there is no further allusion to
+the circumstances which preceded Harriet's suicide; but it appears to
+me very desirable that the whole story should be brought out much more
+distinctly, and I can at least show why I say so. The correspondence
+in question took place in the middle of December, 1816. Shelley was
+married to Mary about a fortnight later; and in the most emphatic
+terms he alluded not only to the solace which he derived from the
+conversation of his host, but to the manner in which my father spoke
+of Mary. My own recollection goes back to the period, and I have
+already testified to the state of Shelley's mind. He was just then
+instituting the process to recover the children, and he caught at
+an opinion that had been expressed, that, in the event of his again
+becoming contracted in marriage, there would be no longer any pretence
+to deprive him of the children.
+
+Let me for a moment pause on this incident, as it establishes two
+facts of some interest. In the first place, it shows some of the
+grounds of the very strong and unalterable friendship which subsisted
+between my father and Mary,--a friendship which stood the test of many
+vicissitudes, and even of some differences of opinion; both persons
+being very sensitive in feeling, quick in temper, thoroughly
+outspoken, and obstinately tenacious of their own convictions.
+Secondly, it corroborates what I have said with regard to the
+community of spirit that Shelley found in his real wife,--the woman
+who became the companion of his fortunes, of his thoughts, of his
+sufferings, and of his hopes. It will be seen, that, even before
+marriage with his second wife, he was counting upon Mary's help in
+preventing his separation from the two children already born to him.
+She was a woman uniting intellectual faculties with strong ambitions
+of affection as well as intellect; and esteem thus substantially
+shown, at that early age, by two such men as Percy Shelley and Leigh
+Hunt, must have conveyed the deepest gratification.
+
+Throughout these communications Shelley evinced the strong pity that
+he felt for the unhappy being whom he had known. Circumstances had
+come to his knowledge which had thrown considerable light upon his
+relations with Harriet. There can be no doubt that one member of the
+family had hoped to derive gain from the connection with himself, as a
+person of rank and property. There seems also reason to suppose, that,
+about the same time, Harriet's father, an aged man, became so ill that
+his death might be regarded as approaching, and he had something to
+leave. Poor, foolish Harriet had undoubtedly formed an attachment to
+Shelley, whom she had been allowed to marry; but she had then
+suffered herself to become a tool in the hands of others, and the fact
+accounted for the idle way in which she importuned him to do things
+repugnant to his feelings and convictions. She thus exasperated his
+temper, and lost her own; they quarrelled, in the ordinary conjugal
+sense, and, from all I have learned, I am induced to guess, that, when
+she left him, it was not only in the indulgence of self-will, but also
+in the vain hope that her retreating would induce him to follow her,
+perhaps in a more obedient spirit. She sought refuge in her father's
+house, where she might have expected kindness; but, as the old man
+bent towards the grave, with rapid loss of faculties, he became more
+severe in his treatment of the poor woman; and she was driven from the
+paternal roof. This Shelley did not know at the time; nor did he until
+afterwards learn the process by which she arrived at her fate.
+Too late she became aware how fatal to her interests had been the
+intrigues of which she had been the passive instrument; and I suspect
+that she was debarred from seeking forgiveness and help partly by
+false shame, and partly by the terrible adaptability of weak natures
+to the condition of the society in which they find themselves. I have
+said that there is not a trace of evidence or a whisper of scandal
+against her before her voluntary departure from Shelley, and I have
+indicated the most probable motives of that step; but subsequently she
+forfeited her claim to a return, even in the eye of the law. Shelley
+had information which made him believe that she fell even to the depth
+of actual prostitution. If she left him, it would appear that she
+herself was deserted in turn by a man in a very humble grade of life;
+and it was in consequence of this desertion that she killed herself.
+
+The change in his personal aspect that showed itself at Marlow
+appeared also in his writings,--the most typical of his works for this
+period being naturally the most complete that issued from his pen, the
+"Revolt of Islam." We find there identically the same doctrine that
+there is in "Queen Mab,"--a systematic abhorrence of the servility
+which renders man captive to power, denunciation of the love of gain
+which blinds his insight and destroys his energy, of the prostitution
+of religious faith, and, above all, of the slavery of womanhood. But
+by this time the doctrine has more distinct in its expression, and far
+more powerful in its utterance.
+
+ "Man seeks for gold in mines, that he may weave
+ A lasting chain for his own slavery;
+ In fear and restless care that he may live,
+ He toils for others, who must ever be
+ The joyless thralls of like captivity;
+ He murders, for his chiefs delight in ruin;
+ He builds the altar, that its idol's fee
+ May be his very blood; he is pursuing,
+ O blind and willing wretch! his own obscure undoing.
+
+ "Woman!--she is his slave, she has become
+ A thing I weep to speak,--the child of scorn,
+ The outcast of a desolated home.
+ Falsehood and fear and toil, like waves, have worn
+ Channels upon her cheek, which smiles adorn,
+ As calm decks the false ocean. Well ye know
+ What woman is; for none of woman born
+ Can choose but drain the bitter dregs of woe,
+ Which ever from the oppressed to the oppressors flow."
+
+The indignation against the revolting subjugation of womanhood comes
+out still more distinctly in the preceding canto, where Cythna relates
+the horrors to which she was subjected.
+
+ "One was she among the many there, the thralls
+ Of the cold tyrant's cruel lust; and they
+ Laughed mournfully in those polluted halls;
+ But she was calm and sad, musing alway
+ On loftiest enterprise, till on a day
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ She told me what a loathsome agony
+ Is that when selfishness mocks love's delight,
+ Foul as in dreams' most fearful imagery
+ To dally with the mowing dead;--that night
+ All torture, fear, or horror made seem light
+ Which the soul dreams or knows."
+
+The poet bears testimony to the spiritual power which rules throughout
+Nature; the monster recovering his dignity while he is under the
+higher influence.
+
+ "Even when he saw her wondrous loveliness,
+ One moment to great Nature's sacred power
+ He bent and was no longer passionless;
+ But when he bade her to his secret bower
+ Be borne a loveless victim, and she tore
+ Her locks in agony, and her words of flame
+ And mightier looks availed not, then he bore
+ Again his load of slavery, and became
+ A king, a heartless beast, a pageant and a name.
+
+ ...."When the day
+ Shone on her awful frenzy, from the sight,
+ Where like a spirit in fleshly chains she lay
+ Struggling, aghast and pale the tyrant fled away.
+
+ "Her madness was a beam of light, a power
+ Which dawned through the rent soul; and words it gave,
+ Gestures and looks, such as in whirlwinds bore
+ Which might not be withstood."
+
+The doctrine involved in this passage is very clear, and it marks a
+decided progress since the days of "Queen Mab." It will be observed
+that Shelley's mind had become familiarized with the idea of a spirit
+ruling throughout Nature, obedience to which constitutes human power.
+Most remarkable is the passage in which the tyrant recovers his
+faculties through his subjection to this spirit; because it indicates
+Shelley's faithful adhesion to the universal, though oft obscurely
+formed belief, that the ability to _receive_ influence is the most
+exalted faculty to which human nature can attain, while the exercise
+of an arbitrary power centring in self is not only debasing, but is an
+actual destroyer of human faculty.
+
+There can be no doubt that he had profited greatly in his moral
+condition, as well as in his bodily health, by the greater
+tranquillity which he enjoyed in the society of Mary, and also by the
+sympathy which gave full play to his ideas, instead of diverting and
+disappointing them. She was, indeed, herself a woman of extraordinary
+power, of heart as well as head. Many circumstances conspired to
+conceal some of her natural faculties. She lost her mother very young;
+her father--speaking with great diffidence, from a very slight and
+imperfect knowledge--appeared to me a harsh and ungenial man. She
+inherited from him her thin voice, but not the steel-edged sharpness
+of his own; and she inherited, not from him, but from her mother, a
+largeness of heart that entered proportionately into the working
+of her mind. She had a masculine capacity for study; for, though I
+suspect her early schooling was irregular, she remained a student all
+her life, and by painstaking industry made herself acquainted with
+any subject that she had to handle. Her command of history and
+her imaginative power are shown in such books as "Valperga" and
+"Castruccio"; but the daring originality of her mind comes out most
+distinctly in her earliest published work, "Frankenstein." Its leading
+idea has been ascribed to her husband, but, I am sure, unduly; and the
+vividness with which she has brought out the monstrous tale in all its
+horror, but without coarse or revolting incidents, is a proof of the
+genius which she inherited alike from both her parents. It is clear,
+also, that the society of Shelley was to her a great school, which she
+did not appreciate to the full until most calamitously it was taken
+away; and yet, of course, she could not fail to learn the greater part
+of what it had become to her. This again showed itself even in her
+appearance, after she had spent some years in Italy; for, while she
+had grown far more comely than she was in her mere youth, she had
+acquired a deeper insight into many subjects that interested Shelley,
+and some others; and she had learned to express the force of natural
+affection, which she was born to feel, but which had somehow been
+stunted and suppressed in her youth. In the preface to the collected
+edition of his works, she says: "I have the liveliest recollection of
+all that was done and said during the period of my knowing him.
+Every impression is as clear as if stamped yesterday, and I have no
+apprehension of any mistake in my statements, as far as they go. In
+other respects I am, indeed, incompetent; but I feel the importance of
+the task, and regard it as my most sacred duty. I endeavor to fulfil
+it in a manner he would himself approve; and hope in this publication
+to lay the first stone of a monument due to Shelley's genius, his
+sufferings, and his virtues." And in the postscript, written in
+November, 1839, she says: "At my request, the publisher has restored
+the omitted passages of 'Queen Mab.' I now present this edition as
+a complete collection of my husband's poetical works, and I do not
+foresee that I can hereafter add to or take away a word or line." So
+writes the wife-editor; and then "The Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe
+Shelley" begin with a dedication to Harriet, restored to its place
+by Mary. While the biographers of Shelley are chargeable with
+suppression, the most straightforward and frank of all of them is
+Mary, who, although not insensible to the passion of jealousy, and
+carrying with her the painful sense of a life-opportunity not fully
+used, thus writes the name of Harriet the first on her husband's
+monument, while she has nobly abstained from telling those things that
+other persons should have supplied to the narrative. I have heard her
+accused of an over-anxiety to be admired; and something of the sort
+was discernible in society: it was a weakness as venial as it was
+purely superficial. Away from society, she was as truthful and simple
+a woman as I have ever met,--was as faithful a friend as the world
+has produced,--using that unreserved directness towards those whom she
+regarded with affection which is the very crowning glory of friendly
+intercourse. I suspect that these qualities came out in their greatest
+force after her calamity; for many things which she said in her
+regret, and passages in Shelley's own poetry, make me doubt whether
+little habits of temper, and possibly of a refined and exacting
+coquettishness, had not prevented him from acquiring so full a
+knowledge of her as she had of him. This was natural for many reasons,
+and especially two. Shelley had not the opportunity of retrospectively
+studying her character, and his mind was by nature more constructed
+than hers was to be preoccupied. If the reader desires a portrait
+of Mary, he has one in the well-known antique bust sometimes called
+"Isis" and sometimes "Clytie": a woman's head and shoulders rising
+from a lotus-flower. It is most probably the portrait of a Roman lady,
+is in some degree more elongated and "classic" than Mary; but, on the
+other hand, it falls short of her, for it gives no idea of her
+tall and intellectual forehead, nor has it any trace of the bright,
+animated, and sweet expression that so often lighted up her face.
+
+Attention has often been concentrated on the passage in
+"Epipsychidion" which appears to relate Shelley's experiences from
+earliest youth until he met with the noble and unfortunate "Lady
+Emilia V., now imprisoned in the convent of--," whose own words form
+the motto to the poem, and a key to the sympathy which the writer felt
+for her:--"The loving soul launches itself out of the created, and
+creates in the infinite a world all its own, far different from this
+dark and fearful abysm." The passage begins,--
+
+ "There was a being whom my spirit oft
+ Met on its visioned wanderings, far aloft,
+ In the clear golden prime of my youth's
+ dawn."
+
+And this being was the worshipped object of Shelley's adoring
+aspirations in extreme youth; but it passed by him as a vision,
+though--
+
+ "And as a man with mighty loss dismayed,
+ I would have followed, though the grave between
+ Yawned like a gulf whose spectres are unseen:
+ When a voice said,--'O thou of hearts the weakest,
+ The phantom is beside thee whom thou seekest.'
+ Then I,--'Where?' The world's echo answered, 'Where'!"
+
+She ever remained the veiled divinity of thoughts that worshipped her,
+while he went forth into the world with hope and fear,--
+
+ "Into the wintry forest of our life;
+ And struggling through its error with vain strife,
+ And stumbling in my weakness and my haste,
+ And half bewildered by new forms, I passed
+ Seeking among those untaught foresters
+ If I could find one form resembling hers
+ In which she might have masked herself from me."
+
+The passage grows more and more intelligible. Hitherto he has been
+simply a dreamy seeker; but now, at last, he thinks that Fate has
+answered his questioning exclamation, "Where?"
+
+ "There, one whose voice was venomed melody
+ Sat by a well, under the nightshade bowers;
+ The breath of her false mouth was like faint flowers;
+ Her touch was as electric poison; flame
+ Out of her looks into my vitals came;
+ And from her living cheeks and bosom flew
+ A killing air which pierced like honey-dew
+ Into the core of my green heart, and lay
+ Upon its leaves,--until, as hair grown gray
+ O'er a young brow, they hid its unblown prime
+ With ruins of unseasonable time."
+
+This is a plain and only too intelligible reference to the college
+experiences to which I have alluded. The youth for the moment thought
+that he had encountered her whom he was seeking, but, instead of the
+Florimel, he found her venal, hideous, and fatal _simulacrum_; and
+he indicates even the material consequences to himself in his injured
+aspect and hair touched with gray. He continues his search.
+
+ "In many mortal forms I rashly sought
+ The shadow of that idol of my thought:
+ And some were fair,--but beauty dies away;
+ Others were wise,--but honeyed words betray;
+ And one was true,--oh! why not true to me?
+ Then, as a hunted deer that could not flee,
+ I turned upon my thoughts and stood at bay."
+
+"Oh! why not true to me?" has been taken by some very few who were
+cognizant of the facts as constituting an imputation on the one whom
+he first married; but I am convinced that the interpretation is wrong,
+although the surmise on which that interpretation is based was partly
+correct. Nothing is more evident than the fact that Harriet possessed
+rather an unusual degree of ability, but enormously less than Shelley
+desired in the being whom he sought, and equally less than his
+idealizing estimate originally ascribed to her. It is also plain, from
+her own letters, that she courted his approval in a way far too common
+with the wives of the artist-tribe, and perhaps with most wives: not
+being exactly what he wished her to be, and lacking the faculties to
+become so, she tried to seem it. The desire was partly sincere, partly
+an affectation, as we discern in such little trifles as her suddenly
+using the word "thou" in a letter to Hookham where she had previously
+been using the ordinary colloquial "you." That she was not quite
+ingenuous we also detect in the fast-and-loose conduct which enabled
+her, while affecting to become what Shelley deemed her to be, also to
+play into the hands of very inferior people, who must sometimes have
+counselled her against him behind his back; and this, I am sure, is
+what he means by "Oh! why not true to me?" though he may include
+in the question a fervent regret for the fate which attended her
+wandering from him. "Then like a hunted deer he turned upon his
+thoughts and stood at bay," until
+
+ "The cold day
+ Trembled, for pity of my strife and pain,
+ When, like a noonday dawn, there shone again
+ Deliverance. One stood on my path who seemed
+ As like the glorious shape that I had dreamed
+ As is the Moon, whose changes ever run
+ Into themselves, to the eternal Sun."
+
+"The cold chaste moon" fails to satisfy the longing of his soul.
+"At her silver voice came death and life"; hope and despondency,
+expectation from her noble qualities, disappointment at the failure
+of response, were feelings that sprang from the exaggerations of his
+ideal longings.
+
+ "What storms then shook the ocean of my sleep,
+ Blotting that Moon whose pale and waning lips
+ Then shrank as in the sickness of eclipse!"
+
+The whole passage is worth perusing; and again wrong interpretation
+has been given to this portion of his writing. I am still more firmly
+convinced that in the other case, when he says, "The planet of that
+hour was quenched," he alludes to nothing more than the partial
+failure of his own ideal requirements. At length into the obscure
+forest came
+
+ "The vision I had sought through grief and shame.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I stood and felt the dawn of my long night
+ Was penetrating me with living light:
+ I knew it was the vision veiled from me
+ So many years,--that it was Emily."
+
+To grasp the entire meaning of this autobiographical episode, we must
+remember the extent to which Shelley idealizes. "More popular poets
+clothe the ideal with familiar and sensible imagery; Shelley loved
+to idealize the real,--to gift the mechanism of the material universe
+with a soul and a voice, and to bestow such also on the most delicate
+and abstract emotions and thoughts of the mind. Sophocles was
+his great master in this species of imagery." The heroine of the
+"Epipsychidion" is an imagination; a creature, like Raphael's Galatea,
+copied from no living model, but from "_una certa idea_"; a thing
+originally created by himself, and suggested only by the living
+portrait, as each one of the admired had previously suggested its
+ideal counterpart. Emilia, then, was the bride of a dream, and, in the
+indulgence of disappointed longing for a fuller satisfaction of his
+soul, Shelley mournfully contrasts this vision, who had so eloquently
+responded to his idealizing through her convent-bars, with Mary, whose
+stubborn, independent realism had checked and daunted him.
+
+But the last year of Shelley's life had involved a very considerable
+progress in the formation of his intellectual character. The
+"Prometheus Unbound," perhaps at once the most characteristic and the
+most perfect of all his works, is identical in spirit and tendency
+even with the earliest, "Queen Mab"; but a re-perusal of it in
+comparison with the other writings, even the "Revolt of Islam," will
+show a more distinct presentment of the original ideas, coupled with
+a much more measured suggestion for acting on them, and a far less
+bitter allusion to the obstacles; while the charity and love are more
+all-embracing and apparent than ever. Imperfect as it is for dramatic
+representation, shortcoming even in the power to trace the working
+of emotions and ideas in utterly diverse characters, the "Cenci" does
+indicate a stronger aptitude for sympathy with other creatures
+on their own terms than any other of the poet's writings. He had,
+therefore, sobered in judgment, without declining in his inborn
+genius; but, on the contrary, with a clearer sense of the limits
+placed upon individual action, he had gained strength; and I feel
+certain that a corresponding change had taken place in his perception
+of the true import and value of characters unlike his own. The last
+few months of his life at Lerici had very materially contributed to
+this change. Although I cannot recall any distinct statement to that
+effect by Mary Shelley, her conversation had left that impression on
+me; it is also suggested by the way in which he himself spoke of it,
+and is fully confirmed by the tone of the letters addressed to her
+from Pisa.
+
+
+All who have attempted to portray Shelley, either intellectually or
+physically, have done so from some appreciable, almost personal point
+of view. When many eyes see one object, it presents itself in as many
+different aspects, and the description given by each bears often a
+slight resemblance to that of others. So it has been with Shelley. The
+artistic portraits of him have happened to be particularly imperfect.
+I remember seeing a miniature by an amateur friend which actually
+suggested a form broad and square. The ordinarily received miniature
+is like almost all of its tribe, and resembles Shelley about as
+much as a lady in a book of fashions resembles real women; and it
+constitutes evidence all the more detrimental and misleading, since it
+appears to give as well as to receive a color of verisimilitude from
+the usual written description, which represents Shelley as "feminine,"
+"almost girlish," "ideal," "angelic," and so forth. The accounts of
+him by firmer hands are still cramped by the individuality of the
+authorship.
+
+His school-friend, Hogg, is a gentleman of independent property;
+Shelley detected the sensitiveness of his nature; and I know that the
+man has been capable of truly generous conduct. How is it, then, that
+he has written such utterly unintelligible stuff, and has descended to
+such evasions as to insert initials, lest people should detect amongst
+Shelley's correspondents a most admirable friend, who happened, it
+is supposed, to be of plebeian origin? Mr. Thomas Jefferson Hogg,
+I surmise, was conscious, somewhat early in life, that his better
+qualities were not fully appreciated; and his love of ease, his wit,
+his perception of the ludicrous, made him take refuge in cynicism
+until he learned almost to forget the origin of the real meaning of
+the things he talked about. His account of Shelley is like a figure
+seen through fantastically distorting panes of glass.
+
+Thomas Love Peacock, again, is a man to whose extraordinary powers
+Shelley did full justice. He has worked through a long official career
+without losing his very peculiar dry wit; but a dry wit was not the
+man exactly to discern the form of Shelley's mind, or to portray it
+with accuracy and distinctness.
+
+Few men knew the poet better than my father; but a mind checked by
+"over-refinement," excessive conscientiousness, and an irresistible
+tendency to find out niceties of difference,--a mind, in short, like
+that of Hamlet, cultivated rather than corrected by the trials
+of life, was scarcely suited to comprehend the strong instincts,
+indomitable will, and complete unity of idea which distinguished
+Shelley. Accordingly we have from my father a very doubtful portrait,
+seldom advancing beyond details, which are at once exaggerated and
+explained away by qualifications.
+
+Byron, I suspect, through the natural strength of his perceptive
+power, was likely to have formed a better design; but the two were
+separated soon after he had begun to learn that such a man as Shelley
+might be found on the same earth with himself.
+
+One or two others that have written have been mere tourists or
+acquaintances. Unquestionably the companion who knew him best of all
+was Mary; and although she lacked the power of distinct, positive, and
+absolute portraiture, her writings will be found to contain, together
+with his own, the best materials for forming an estimate of his
+natural character.
+
+The real man was reconcilable with all these descriptions. His traits
+suggested everything that has been said of him; but his aspect,
+conformation, and personal qualities contained more than any one has
+ascribed to him, and more indeed than all put together. A few plain
+matters-of-fact will make this intelligible. Shelley was a tall
+man,--nearly, if not quite, five feet ten in height. He was peculiarly
+slender, and, as I have said already, his chest had palpably
+enlarged after the usual growing period. He retained the same kind
+of straitness in the perpendicular outline on each side of him; his
+shoulders were the reverse of broad, but yet they were not sloping,
+and a certain squareness in them was naturally incompatible with
+anything feminine in his appearance. To his last days he still
+suffered his chest to collapse; but it was less a stoop than a
+peculiar mode of holding the head and shoulders,--the face thrown a
+little forward, and the shoulders slightly elevated; though the whole
+attitude below the shoulders, when standing, was unusually upright,
+and had the appearance of litheness and activity. I have mentioned
+that bodily vigor which he could display; and from his action when I
+last saw him, as well as from Mary's account, it is evident that he
+had not abandoned his exercises, but the reverse. He had an oval face
+and delicate features, not unlike those given to him in the well-known
+miniature. His forehead was high. His fine, dark brown hair, when not
+cut close, disposed itself in playful and very beautiful curls over
+his brows and round the back of his neck. He had brown eyes, with
+a color in his cheek "like a girl's"; but as he grew older, his
+complexion bronzed. So far the reality agrees with the current
+descriptions; nevertheless they omit material facts. The outline of
+the features and face possessed a firmness and _hardness_ entirely
+inconsistent with a feminine character. The outline was sharp and
+firm; the markings distinct, and indicating an energetic _physique_.
+The outline of the bone was distinctly perceptible at the temples, on
+the bridge of the nose, at the back portion of the cheeks, and in the
+jaw, and the artist could trace the principal muscles of the face.
+The beard also, although the reverse of strong, was clearly marked,
+especially about the chin. Thus, although the general aspect was
+peculiarly slight, youthful, and delicate, yet, when you looked to
+"the points" of the animal, you saw well enough the indications of a
+masculine vigor, in many respects far above the average. And what I
+say of the physical aspect of course bears upon the countenance. That
+changed with every feeling. It usually looked earnest,--when
+joyful, was singularly bright and animated, like that of a gay young
+girl,--when saddened, had an aspect of sorrow peculiarly touching, and
+sometimes it fell into a listless weariness still more mournful; but
+for the most part there was a look of active movement, promptitude,
+vigor, and decision, which bespoke a manly, and even a commanding
+character.
+
+The general tendency that all who approached Shelley displayed to
+yield to his dictate is a practical testimony to these qualities;
+for his earnestness was apt to take a tone of command so generous,
+so free, so simple, as to be utterly devoid of offence, and yet to
+constitute him a sort of tyrant over all who came within his reach.
+
+The weakness ascribed to Shelley's voice was equally taken from
+exceptional instances, and the account of it usually suggests the idea
+that he spoke in a falsetto which might almost be mistaken for the
+"shriek" of a harsh-toned woman. Nothing could be more unlike the
+reality. The voice was indeed quite peculiar, and I do not know where
+any parallel to it is likely to be found unless in Lancashire. Shelley
+had no ear for music,--the words that he wrote for existing airs
+being, strangely enough, inappropriate in rhythm and even in cadence;
+and though he had a manifest relish for music and often talked of it,
+I do not remember that I ever heard him sing even the briefest snatch.
+I cannot tell, therefore, what was the "register" of his singing
+voice; but his speaking voice unquestionably was then of a high
+natural counter-tenor. I should say that he usually spoke at a pitch
+somewhere about the D natural above the base line; but it was in no
+respect a falsetto. It was a natural chest-voice, not powerful, but
+telling, musical, and expressive. In reading aloud, the strain was
+peculiarly clear, and had a sustained, song-like quality, which came
+out more strongly when, as he often did, he recited verse. When he
+called out in pain,--a very rare occurrence,--or sometimes in comic
+playfulness, you might hear the "shrillness" of which people talk; but
+it was only because the organ was forced beyond the ordinary effort.
+His usual speech was clear, and yet with a breath in it, with an
+especially distinct articulation, a soft, vibrating tone, emphatic,
+pleasant, and persuasive.
+
+It seems to me that these physical characteristics forcibly illustrate
+the moral and intellectual genius of the man. The impulsiveness which
+has been ascribed to him is a wrong expression, for it is usually
+interpreted to mean the action of sudden motives waywardly,
+capriciously, or at least intermittingly working; whereas the
+character which Shelley so constantly displayed was an overbearing
+strength of conviction and feeling, a species of audacious, but
+chivalrous readiness to act upon conviction as promptly as possible,
+and, above all, a zealous disposition to say out all that was in his
+mind. It is better expressed by the word which some satirist put
+into the mouth of Coleridge, speaking of himself, and, instead of
+impulsiveness, it should have been called an "utterancy," coupled with
+decision and promptitude of action. The physical development of the
+man with the progress of time may be traced in the advancement of his
+writings. The physical qualities which are equally to be found in his
+poetry and prose were quite as manifest in his aspect, and not less
+so in his conduct of affairs. It must be remembered that his life
+terminated long before he had arrived half-way, "_nel mezzo del cammin
+di nostra vita_," when more than one other great intellect has been
+but commencing its true work. I believe, that, if Shelley had lived,
+he would himself have been the most potent and useful commentator on
+his own writings, in the production of other and more complete works.
+But meanwhile the true measure of his genius is to be found in the
+influence which he has had, not only over those who have proclaimed
+their debt to him, but over numbers who have mistrusted and even
+denounced him.
+
+
+
+
+THE TEST.
+
+ "Farewell awhile, my bonnie darling!
+ One long, close kiss, and I depart:
+ I hear the angry trumpet snarling,
+ The drum-beat tingles at my heart."
+
+ Behind him, softest flutes were breathing
+ Across the vale their sweet recall;
+ Before him burst the battle, seething
+ In flame beneath its thunder-pall.
+
+ All sights and sounds to stay invited;
+ The meadows tossed their foam of flowers;
+ The lingering Day beheld, delighted,
+ The dances of his amorous Hours.
+
+ He paused: again the fond temptation
+ Assailed his heart, so firm before,
+ And tender dreams, of Love's creation,
+ Persuaded from the peaceful shore.
+
+ "But no!" he sternly cried; "I follow
+ The trumpet, not the shepherd's reed:
+ Let idlers pipe in pastoral hollow,--
+ Be mine the sword, and mine the deed!
+
+ "Farewell to Love!" he murmured, sighing:
+ "Perchance I lose what most is dear;
+ But better there, struck down and dying,
+ Than be a man and wanton here!"
+
+ He went where battle's voice was loudest;
+ He pressed where danger nearest came;
+ His hand advanced, among the proudest,
+ Their banner through the lines of flame.
+
+ And there, when wearied Carnage faltered,
+ He, foremost of the fallen, lay,
+ While Night looked down with brow unaltered,
+ And breathed the battle's dust away.
+
+ There lying, sore from wounds untended,
+ A vision crossed the starry gleam:
+ The girl he loved beside him bended,
+ And kissed him in his fever-dream.
+
+ "Oh, love!" she cried, "you fled, to find me;
+ I left with you the daisied vale;
+ I turned from flutes that wailed behind me,
+ To hear your trumpet's distant hail.
+
+ "Your tender vows, your peaceful kisses,
+ They scarce outlived the moment's breath;
+ But now we clasp immortal blisses
+ Of passion proved on brinks of Death!
+
+ "No fate henceforward shall estrange her
+ Who finds a heart more brave than fond;
+ For Love, forsook this side of danger,
+ Waits for the man who goes beyond!"
+
+
+
+
+THE PREACHER'S TRIAL.
+
+Sitting in my New-England study, as do so many of my tribe, to peruse
+the "Atlantic," I wonder whether, like its namesake, hospitable to
+many persons and things, it will for once let me write as well as
+read, and launch from my own calling a theme on its bosom. Our cloth
+has been worn so long in the world, I doubt how far it may suit with
+new fashions in fine company-parlors; but, seeing room is so cordially
+made for some of my brethren, as the Reverend Mr. Wilbur and "The
+Country Parson," to keep up the dignity of the profession, I am
+emboldened to come for a day with what the editorial piety may accept,
+"rejected article" as it might be elsewhere.
+
+The pulpit has lost something of its old sacredness in the general
+mind. There is little popular superstition to endure its former
+dictation. No exclusive incarnate theocracy in any particular persons
+is left, Leviticus and the Hebrew priesthood are gone. Church,
+ministry, and Sabbath are the regular targets taken out by our moral
+riflemen and archers, though so seldom to hit fair in the centre, that
+we may find ourselves, like spectators at the match, respecting the
+old targets more than we do the shots. Yet homilies and exporters are
+thought fair game. I have even heard splendid lecturers whose wit
+ran so low or who were so pushed for matter as to talk of what
+divinity-students wear round their necks, which seems a superficial
+consideration. The anciently venerated desk has two sharp enemies,
+the radical and the conservative, aiming their artillery from opposite
+sides, putting it somewhat in the position of the poor fish who is in
+danger from diverse classes of its fellow-creatures, one in the air
+and one in the water, and knows not whether to dive or rise to the
+surface, till it can conclude which is the more pleasant exit from
+life, to be hawked at or swallowed outright.
+
+While, however, critics and reformers fail to furnish a fit substitute
+for the sermon, and the finest essays show not only Bacon's "dry
+light," but a very cold one too, and the wit and humor of the lyceum
+fall short of any mark in the conscience of mankind, and philanthropy
+uses stabbing often instead of surgery, a clerical institution, on
+whose basis direct admonition can be administered by individuals
+without egotism or impertinence, maintains an indefeasible claim.
+Indeed, as was fancied of the innocent in the ordeal by fire, or like
+the children from the furnace, it comes out the other side of all
+censure, with some odor of sanctity yet on its unsinged robes and new
+power in higher quarters in its hands. Defective, indeed, it is. If
+some of its organs could speak a little more in their natural voice,
+and could, moreover, wash off the deformity of this Indian war-paint
+of high-wrought rhetoric,--if they could use a little more of the
+colloquial earnestness of the street and table in their style, instead
+of those freaks of eloquence which, among all our associations,
+there ought to be a society to put down,--they would more honor their
+vocation, and effect its purpose of saving human souls. Let us not be
+so loudmouthed, or bluster as we do. Our declamation will have to hush
+its barbarian noise some time. Nothing but conversation will be
+left in heaven; and it were well, could we have on earth sober and
+thoughtful assemblies, at blood-warmth instead of fever-heat, rather
+than those over-crowded halls from which _hundreds go away unable to
+obtain admission_.
+
+But the present design is a plea for justice, not a fresh charge.
+The pulpit is to teach religion in application to life. But when we
+reflect what life is, how deep in the soul, how wide in the world,
+how complicated and delicate in its affairs and ties,--and when, we
+consider what religion is, the whole truth of heaven respecting
+all the operations of earth,--a kindly judgment is required for
+unavoidable short-comings and ministerial mistakes. With different
+ages, sexes, experiences, states of mind, degrees of intelligence and
+impressibleness in a congregation, it is a rare felicity for a sermon
+to reach all its members with equal impressiveness or acceptance. Who
+ever heard a uniform estimate of any discourse? There seems almost a
+curse upon the preacher's office from its very greatness, so that it
+is never finished, and no portion of it can be done perfectly well and
+secure against all objection. If he try to unfold the deep things
+of the Spirit, and bring his best thoughts, which he would not throw
+away, before his audience, though in language clearer than many a
+chapter of Paul's Epistles, _some_ will call the topic obscure, and
+complain that their children cannot understand it, quoting, perhaps,
+the old sentence, that all truth necessary to salvation is so plain
+that he who runs may read, and the wayfaring man, though a fool,
+cannot err therein, and commending superficial homilies on other
+tongues to censure whatever is profound from his. But should the
+poor occupant of the desk venture to emulate this eulogized sonorous
+exhortation, exerting himself to come down to the ignorant and the
+young, there will be _some_ to stigmatize that, too, as a sort of
+trifling and disrespect to mature minds. He has by a senior now and
+then been blamed for excessive attention to the lambs of his flock,
+and annoyed with the menace to stay away, if they were especially
+to be noticed. If a visitation of special grace or an exaltation of
+physical strength make the mortal incumbent happy in his exposition,
+so that he is listened to with edification and delight, it is, by
+some, not passed over to his credit at the ebb-tide of his power. Half
+the time the house is not half full, as though the institution which
+all order to be conducted nobody but he is bound to shoulder. If the
+preacher labor to express the mysterious relationship between God and
+Christ, the divine and human nature, he will be considered by _some_
+a sectarian, controversialist, or heretic. If he unfold what is
+above all denominational disputes, he will be fortunate to escape
+accusations of transcendentalism, pantheism, spiritualism. If, lucky
+man, he go scot-free of such indictment, a last stunning stroke, in
+the gantlet he runs, will be sure to fetch him up, in the vague and
+unanswerable imputation of being _very peculiar in his views_. If
+he insist on the miracles as literal facts, he will be laughed at as
+old-fashioned in one pew; if he slight them, he will be mourned over
+as unsound in the next. Men grumble at taxes and tolls; alas! nobody
+is stopped at so many gates and questioned in so many ways as he. If
+he take in hand the tender matter of consoling stricken hearts, the
+ecstasy of his visions will not save his topic from being regarded by
+some as painful, and by others as a mere shining of the moon. He will
+receive special requests not to harrow up the feelings he only meant
+to bind up in balm. He may be informed of an aversion, more or less
+extensive, to naming the _grave_ or _coffin_ and what it contains,
+though he only puts one foot by pall or bier to plant the other in
+paradise. If he turn the everlasting verities he is intrusted with to
+events transpiring on the public stage, though he never sided with any
+party in his life, and has no more committed himself to men than did
+his Master, _some_ will be grieved at his _preaching politics_. His
+head has throbbed, his heart ached, his eyes were hot and wet
+once before he uttered himself; but he must suffer and weep worse
+afterwards, because he went too far for one man and not far enough for
+another. He is told, one day, that he is too severe on seceders, and
+the next, ironically, that, with such merciful sentiments towards
+them, he ought always to wear a cravat completely white. One man is
+amused at his sermon, and another thinks the same is sad. He will be
+asked if he cannot give a little less of one thing or more of another,
+as though he were a dealer in wares or an exhibiter of curious
+documents for a price, and could take an article from this or that
+shelf, or a paper from any one of a hundred pigeon-holes, when, if he
+be a servant of the Lord and organ of the Holy Ghost, he has no choice
+and is shut up to his errand,--necessity is laid upon him, woe is unto
+him if he deliver it not, but, like another Jonah, flee to Tarshish
+when the Lord tells him to go to Nineveh and cry against its
+wickedness; and he feels through every nerve that truth is not a
+thing to be carried round as merchandise or peddled out at all to suit
+particular tastes, to retain old friends or win new ones, hard as it
+may go, to the anguish of his soul, to lose the good-will of those he
+loves, and whose distrust is a chronic pang, though they come to love
+him again all the more for what he has suffered and said. But if,
+passing by discussions of general interest, and exposing himself
+to the hint of being behind the times, he grapple with the sins
+immediately about him, board the false customs of society and trade,
+and strike with the sword of the Lord at private vices and family
+faults, he will be blamed as very _personal_, and be apprised of his
+insults to those of whom in his delivery he never thought, as he may
+never preach _at_ anybody, or even _to_ anybody, in his most direct
+thrusting, more than to himself, reaching others only through his own
+wounded heart. Meantime, some of his ecclesiastical constituents
+will suspect him, in his local ethics, of leniency to wide-spread
+corruption; and professed philanthropists will brand him as a trimmer
+and coward, recreant, fawning, and dumb,--the term _spaniel_ having
+been flung at one of the best men and most conscientious ministers
+that ever lived, simply because he could not vituperate as harshly
+as some of his neighbors. Some would have him remember only those in
+bonds; others say they cannot endure from him even the word _slavery_.
+Blessed, if, from all these troubles, he can, for solace, and with a
+sense of its significance, bethink himself of Christ's saying to
+his disciples, "Woe unto you, when all men shall speak well of you!"
+Thrice blessed, if he have an assurance and in that inward certificate
+possess the peace which passeth understanding!
+
+I intend not, by my simple story, which has in it no fiction, to add
+to the lamentations of the old prophet, nor will allow Jeremiah to
+represent all my mood. It is perfectly fit the laity should criticize
+the clergy. The minister,--who is he but one of the people, set apart
+to particular functions, open to a judgment on the manner of their
+discharge, from which no sacred mission or supposed apostolic
+succession can exempt, the Apostles having been subject to it
+themselves? Under their robes and ordinances, in high-raised desks,
+priest and bishop are but men, after all. Ministers should be grateful
+for all the folk's frankness. Only let the criticism be considerate
+and fair; and in order to its becoming so, let us ascertain the
+perfect model of their calling. Did not their Master give it, when he
+said, "The field is the world"? If so, then to everything in the world
+must the pulpit apply the moral law. What department of it shall be
+excused? _Politics_,--because it embraces rival schools in the same
+worshipping body, and no disinterested justice in alluding to its
+principles can be expected from a preacher, or because whoever
+disagrees with his opinions must be silent, there being on Sunday and
+in the sanctuary no decency allowed of debate or reply, and therefore
+whatever concerns the civil welfare and salvation of the community is
+out of the watchman's beat now, though God so expressly bade him warn
+the city of old? _Commerce_,--because a minister understands nothing
+of the elements and necessities of business, and must blunder in
+pointing to banks and shops or any transactions of the street, though
+an old preacher, called Solomon, in his Proverbs refers so sharply to
+the buyer and the seller? _Pleasure_,--because the servant of the Lord
+cannot be supposed to sympathize with, but only to denounce, amusement
+which poor tired humanity employs for its recreation, though Miriam's
+smiting of her timbrel, which still rings from the borders of the
+raging Red Sea, and David's dancing in a linen ephod with all his
+might before the Lord, when the ark on a new cart came into the
+city, were a sort of refreshment of triumphant sport? _The social
+circle_,--because of course he cannot go to parties or comprehend the
+play of feeling in which the natural affections run to and fro,
+and should rather be at home reading his Bible, turning over his
+Concordance, and writing his sermon, letting senate and dance, market
+and exchange, opera and theatre, fights and negotiations go to the
+winds, so he only comes duly with his _exegesis_ Sunday morning to his
+place? In short, is the minister's concern and call of God only, with
+certain imposing formalities and prearranged dogmas, to greet in their
+Sunday-clothes his friends who have laid aside their pursuits and
+delights with the gay garments or working-dress of the week, never
+reminding them of what, during the six days, they have heard or where
+they have been? "No!" let him say; "if this is to be a minister, no
+minister can I be!" For what is left of the field the Lord sends the
+minister into? It is cut up and fenced off into countless divisions,
+to every one of which some earthly-agent or interest brings a
+title-deed. The minister finds the land of the world, like some vast
+tract of uncivilized territory, seized by wild squatters, owned and
+settled by other parties, and, as a famous political-economist said
+in another connection, there is no cover at Nature's table for him.
+As with the soldier in the play, whose wars were over, _his_
+"occupation's gone."
+
+What is the minister, then? A ghost, or a figure like some in the
+shop-window, all made up of dead cloth and color into an appearance of
+life? Verily, he comes almost to that. But no such shape, no spectre
+from extinct animation of thousands of years ago, like the geologist's
+skeletons reconstructed from lifeless strata of the earth, can answer
+the vital purposes of the revelation from God. Of no pompous or
+abstract ritual administration did the Son of God set an example. He
+had a parable for the steward living when _He_ did; He called
+King Herod, then reigning, _a fox_, and the Scribes and Pharisees
+hypocrites; He declared the prerogatives of His Father beyond Caesar's;
+He maintained a responsibility of human beings coextensive with the
+stage and inseparable from the smallest trifle of their existence. He
+did not limit His marvellous tongue to antiquities and traditions. He
+used the mustard-seed in the field and the leaven in the lump for His
+everlasting designs. His finger was stretched out to the cruel stones
+of self-righteousness flying through the air, and phylacteries of
+dissimulation worn on the walk. He was so _political_, He would have
+saved Jerusalem and Judea from Roman ruin, and wept because He could
+not, with almost the only tears mentioned of His. Those who teach in
+His name should copy after His pattern.
+
+"_Confine yourselves to the old first Gospel, preach Christianity,
+early Christianity_," we ministers are often told. But what is
+Christianity, early or late, and what does the Gospel mean, but a rule
+of holy living in every circumstance now? Grief and offence may come,
+as Jesus says they must; misapplications and complaints, which are
+almost always misapprehensions, may be made; but are not these better
+than indifference and death? No doubt there is a prudence, and still
+more an impartial candor and equity, in treating every matter, but
+no beauty in timid flight from any matter there is to treat. The
+clergyman, like every man, speaks at his peril, and is as accountable
+as any one for what he says. He ought justly and tenderly to remember
+the diverse tenets represented among his auditors, to side with
+no sect as such, to give no individual by his indorsement a mean
+advantage over any other, nor any one a handle of private persecution
+by his open anathema. Moreover, he should abstain from that
+particularity in secular themes which so easily wanders from all
+sight of spiritual law amid regions of uncertainty and speculative
+conjecture. He should shun explorations less fit for prophets than for
+experts. He should lay his finger on no details in which questions of
+right and wrong are not plainly involved. He must be public-spirited;
+he cannot be more concerned for his country and his race, that
+righteousness and liberty and love may prevail, than divine seers have
+ever been, as their books of record show; but, if he becomes a mere
+diplomatist, financier, secretary-of-state, or military general, in
+his counsels or his tone, he evacuates his own position, flees as
+a craven from his post, and assumes that of other men. Yet it is an
+extreme still worse for him to resort to lifeless generalities of
+doctrine and duty, producing as little effect as comes from electric
+batteries or telegraphic wires when no magnetic current is established
+and no object reached. What section, of the world should evade or defy
+the law of God?
+
+O preachers, beware of your sentimental descant on the worth of
+goodness, the goodness of being good, and the sinfulness of sin,
+without specifying either! It is a blank cartridge, or one of
+treacherous sand instead of powder, or a spiked gun, only whose
+priming explodes without noise or execution. Let nobody dodge the sure
+direction of that better than lead or iron shot with which from you
+the conscience is pierced and iniquity slain. Suffer not the statesman
+to withdraw his policy, nor the broker his funds, nor the captain the
+cause he fights for, from the sentence of divine truth on the good or
+evil in all the acts of men.
+
+The preacher, however, as he pronounces or reports that sentence, must
+never forget the bond he is under in his own temper to the spirit of
+impartial love. Whatever is vindictive vitiates his announcement all
+the more that he cannot be rebuked for it, as he ought to be, on the
+spot. Only let not the hearers mistake earnestness for vindictiveness.
+If kindly and with intense serenity he communicates what he has
+struggled long and hard to attain, then for their own sake, if not for
+his, they should beware of visiting him either with silent distrust or
+open reproach. He, just like them, must stand or fall according to his
+fidelity to the oracles of God. Only, once more, let him and let
+the Church comprehend that those oracles are not summed up in any
+laborious expounding of verbal texts. "The letter killeth," unless
+itself enlivened through the immediate Providence.
+
+To be true to God, the preacher must be true to his time, as the
+Prophets, Jesus, and the Apostles were to theirs. The pulpit dies of
+its dignity, when it creeps into the exhausted receiver of foregone
+conclusions, and has nothing to say but of Adam and Pharaoh, Jew
+and Gentile, Palestine and Tyre so far away. Its decorum of being
+inoffensive to others is suicidal for itself. It is the sleep of
+death for all. As the inductive philosopher took all knowledge for
+his province, it must take all life. We have, indeed, a glorious and
+venerable charter of inestimable worth in our map of the religious
+history of mankind through centuries that are gone. We must study
+the true meaning of the Bible, _the book_ and chief collection of
+the records of faith, precious above all for the immortal image and
+photograph, in so many a shifting light and various expression, of
+the transcendent form of divinity through manhood in Him to be ever
+reverently and lovingly named, Jesus Christ. But there is a spirit in
+man. "The word of God," says an Apostle, "is not bound"; nor can it
+be wholly bound up. The Holy Spirit of God that first descended never
+died, and never ceased to act on the human soul. The day of miracles
+is not past,--or, if none precisely like those of Jesus are
+still wrought, miracles of grace, the principal workings of the
+supernatural, of which external prodigies are the lowest species, are
+performed abundantly in the living breast. Jesus Himself, after all
+the sufficient and summary grandeur of His instructions, assures
+His followers of the Spirit that would come to lead them, beyond
+whatsoever He had said, into all truth. In that dispensation of the
+Spirit we live. Its sphere endures through all change, impregnable.
+It is "builded far from accident." No progress of earthly science can
+threat or hurt its eternal proportions. It is the supreme knowledge,
+and to whoever enters it a whisper comes whose only response is the
+confession of our noble hymn,--
+
+ "True science is to read Thy name."
+
+Much is said of a contradictory relation of science to faith. But the
+statement is a misnomer. True faith is the lushest science, even the
+knowledge of God. Putting fishes or birds, shells or flowers, stones
+or stars, in a circle or a row is a lower science than the sublime
+intercommunication of the soul by prayer and love with its Father.
+Mere physical, without spiritual science, has no bottom to hold
+anything, and no foundation of peace. The king of science is not the
+naturalist as such, but the saint conversing with Divinity,--not so
+much Humboldt or La Place as Fenelon or Luther. So far as the progress
+of outward science saps accredited writings, they must give way, or
+rather any false conceptions of Nature they imply must yield, leaving
+whatever spirituality there is in them untouched. But this is from
+no essential contradiction between science and religious faith. What
+faith or religion is there in believing the world was made in six
+days? Less than in calculating, with Agassiz, by the coral reefs of
+Florida, that to make one bit of it took more than sixty thousand
+years. Religious faith, what is it? It is the trembling transport with
+which the soul hearkens and gives itself up to God, in sympathy with
+all likewise entranced souls. But from such consecrated listening to
+the voice of Deity, fresh in our bosom or echoed from without by those
+He has inspired, we verify the rule already affirmed, and fetch
+advice and command for all the affairs of life. It is emphatically
+the minister's duty thus to join the vision to the fact, that they
+may strike through and through one another. Certainly, so the true
+minister's speech should run. Let him stand up and boldly say, or
+always imply, "I so construe it; and if the _Church_ interpret it
+otherwise, the Church is no place for me. If the _world_ will accept
+no such method, the world is no place for me. I see not why I was
+born, or what with Church or world I have to do. From Church and world
+I should beg leave to retire, trusting that God's Universe, somewhere
+beyond this dingy spot, is true to the persuasion of His mind. I must
+apply religion universally to life, or not at all. If, when my country
+is in peril, I cannot bring her to the altar and ask that she may be
+lifted up in the arms of a common supplication,--if, in the terrible
+game of honesty with political corruption, when '_Check_' is said
+to the adverse power, I cannot wish and pray that '_Checkmate_' may
+follow,--when some huge evil, sorely wounded, in its fierce throes
+spreads destruction about, as the dying monster in Northern seas casts
+up boat-loads of dying men who fall bruised and bleeding among the
+fragments into the waves with the threshing of its angry tail, if
+then I cannot hope that the struggle may be short, and the ship of the
+Republic gather back her crew from prevailing in the conflict to sail
+prosperous with all her rich cargo of truth and freedom on the voyage
+over the sea of Time,--if no sound of the news-boy's cry must mix with
+the echoes of solemn courts, and no reflection of wasting fires in
+which life and treasure melt can flash through their windows, and
+no deeds of manly heroism or womanly patriotism are to have applause
+before God and Christ in the temple,--if nothing but some preexisting
+scheme of salvation, distinct from all living activity, must absorb
+the mind,--then I totally misunderstand and am quite out of my place.
+Then let me go. It is high time I were away. I have stayed too long
+already." Such should be the speech of the minister, knowing he is
+not tempted to be a partisan, and is possessed with but an over-kind
+sensibility to dread any ruffling of others' feelings or discord with
+those that are dear.
+
+In the first year of a young minister's service, Dr. Channing besought
+him to let no possible independence of parochial support relax his
+industry: a needless caution to one not constituted to feel seductions
+of sloth, in whom active energy is no merit, and who can have no
+motive but the people's good. What else is there for him to seek?
+There is no by-end open, and no virtue in a devotedness there is no
+lure to forego. There is no position he can covet, as politicians are
+said to bid for the Presidency. But one thing is indispensable: he
+must tell what he thinks; he is strong only in his convictions; the
+sacrifice of them he cannot make; it were but his debility, if he did;
+and the treasury of all the fortunes of the richest parish were no
+more than a cipher to purchase it from any one who, quick as he may
+be to human kindness, may have a more tremulous rapture for the
+approbation of God.
+
+After all, to his profession and parish the preacher is in debt.
+Exquisite rewards his work yields. If controversy arise on some point
+with his friends, there may, after a while, be no remnant of hard
+feeling,--as there are heavy cannonades, and no bit of wadding picked
+up. Those who have striven with or defamed may come to cherish him all
+the more for their alienation. Those who could not hear him, or, when
+they heard, thought him too long, or what they heard did not like, may
+own with him, out of their discontent, closer and sweeter bonds. His
+business is expansive in its nature. The seasons of human life in
+broad representation are always before him. How many moral springs and
+summers, autumns and winters he sees, till he can hardly tell whether
+his musing on this curious existence be memory or hope, retrospect
+of earth or prospect of heaven! and he begins to think the spiritual
+world abolishes distinctions of spheres and times, as parents, that
+were his lambs, bring their babes to his arms, and, even in the
+flesh, his mortal passing into eternal vision, he beholds, as in
+vivid dreaming, other parents leading their children on other shores,
+unseen, though hard by. Where, after a score or two of years, is his
+church? He has several congregations,--one within the dedicated walls,
+one of emigrants whom his fancy instead of the bell assembles, and
+a third of elders and little ones gone back through the shadow of
+mystery whence they came. In what abides of the flock nothing remains
+as it was. Wondrous transformations snow maturity or decline in the
+very forms that, to his also changing eye and hand, once wore soft
+cheeks and silken locks. In his experience, miracle is less than
+creation and lower than truth. He cannot credit Memory's ever losing
+her seat, he has such things to remember. The best thereof can never
+be written down, published, uttered by orators, or blown from the
+trumpet of Fame, whose "brave instrument" must put up with a meaner
+message and inferior breath. Out of his affections are born his
+beliefs; earth is the cradle of his expectancy and persuasion of
+heaven; and not otherwise than through the glass of his experience
+could he have sight of a sphere of ineffable glory for better growth
+than Nature here affords in all her gardens and fields.
+
+So let the preacher stand by his order. But let him be just, also, to
+the constituency from which it springs. Hearty and cheerful, though
+obscure worker, let him be. Let him fling his weaver's shuttle still,
+daily while he lives, through the crossing party-colored threads of
+human life, till, in his factory too, beauty flows from confusion,
+contradiction ends in harmony, and the blows with which each one has
+been stricken form the perfect pattern from all. There is a unity
+which all faithful labor, through whatever jars, consults and creates.
+Of all criticisms the resultant is truth; be the conflicts what they
+may, the issue shall be peace; and one music of affection is yet
+angelically to flow from the many divided notes of human life. Who is
+the _minister_, then? No ordained functionary alone, but every man or
+woman that has lived and served, loved and lamented, and now, for such
+ends, suffers and hopes.
+
+
+
+
+THE GHOST OF LITTLE JACQUES.
+
+
+How quiet the saloon was, that morning, as I groped my way through the
+little white tables, the light chairs, and the dimness of early dawn
+to the windows. It was my business to open the windows every morning,
+finding my way down as best I could; for it was not permitted to light
+the gas at that hour, and no candles were allowed, lest they should
+soil the furniture. This morning the glass dome which brightened the
+ceiling, and helped to lighten the saloon, was of very little effect,
+so cloudy and dusk was the sky. The high houses which shut in the
+strip of garden on all sides reflected not a ray of light. A
+chill struck through me, as I passed along the marble pavement; a
+saloon-dampness, empty, vault-like, hung about the fireless, sunless
+place; and the plashing of the fountain which dripped into the marble
+basin beyond--dropping, dropping, incessantly--struck upon my ear like
+water trickling down the side of a cave.
+
+It had never occurred to me to think the place lonely or dreary
+before, or to demur at this morning operation of opening it for the
+day; a tawdry, gilded, showy hall, it had seemed to me quite a grand
+affair, compared with those in which I had hitherto found employment.
+Now I shuddered and shivered, and felt the task, always regarded as a
+compliment to my honesty, to be indeed hard and heavy enough.
+
+It might have been--yet I was not a coward--that the little coffin
+in that little room at the end of the saloon had something to do with
+this uneasiness. On each side of that narrow room (which opened upon a
+long hall leading to the front of the building) were the small windows
+looking out upon the garden, which I always unbolted first. I say I
+do not know that this presence of death had anything to do with my
+trepidation. The death of a child was no very solemn or very uncommon
+thing in my master's family. He had many children, and, when death
+thinned their ranks, took the loss like a philosopher,--as he was,--a
+French philosopher. He philosophized that his utmost exertions could
+not do much more for the child than bequeath to him just such a
+life as he led, and a share in just such a saloon as he owned; and
+therefore, if a priest and a coffin insured the little innocent
+admission into heaven without any extra charge, he would not betray
+such lack of wisdom as to demur at the proposition. Therefore, very
+quietly, since I had been in his employ, (about a twelvemonth,) three
+of his children, one by one, had been brought down to that little room
+at the end of the saloon, and thence through the long hall, through
+the crowded street out to some unheard-of burying-ground, where a pot
+of flowers and a painted cross supplied the place of a head-stone.
+The shop was not shut up on these occasions: that would have been an
+unnecessary interference with the comfort of customers, and loss
+of time and money. The necessity of providing for his little living
+family had quite disenthralled Monsieur C---- from any weakly
+sentimentality in regard to his little dead family.
+
+So I do not know why I shuddered, being also myself somewhat of a
+philosopher,--of such cool philosophy as grows out inevitably from the
+hard and stony strata of an overworked life. The sleeper within
+was certainly better cared for now than he ever had been in life.
+Monsieur's purse afforded no holiday-dress but a shroud; three of
+these in requisition within so short a time quite scanted the wardrobe
+of the other children. Little Jacques had always been a somewhat
+restless and unhappy baby, longing for fresh air, and a change which
+he never got; it seemed likely, so far as the child's promise was
+concerned, that the "great change" was his only chance of variety, and
+the very best thing that could have happened to him.
+
+And yet, after all, there was something about his death which
+individualized it, and hung a certain sadness over its occurrence that
+does not often belong to the death of children, or at least had not
+marked the departure of his two stout little brothers. Scarlet-fever
+and croup and measles are such every-day, red-winged, mottled angels,
+that no one is appalled at their presence; they take off the little
+sufferer in such vigorous fashion, clutch him with so hearty a
+grip, that one is compelled to open the door, let them out, and
+feel relieved when the exit is made. It is only when some dim-eyed,
+white-robed shape, scarcely seen, scarcely felt, steps softly in and
+steals away the little troublesome bundle of life with solemn eye and
+hushed lip, that we have time to pause, to look, to grieve.
+
+This little Jacques, when I came to his father's house, was a rampant,
+noisy, cunning child, with the vivacity of French and American blood
+mingling in his veins, and filling him with strongest tendencies to
+mischief, and prompting elfish feats of activity. He was not by any
+means a fascinating child,--in fact, no children ever fascinated
+me,--but this little fellow was rather disagreeable, a wonder to his
+father, a horror to his mother, and a great annoyance generally;
+we were all rather cross with him, and he was universally put down,
+thrust aside, and ordered out of the way.
+
+This was the state of affairs when I came. It was little Jacques, with
+a high forehead, white, tightly curling hair, and mischief-full blue
+eye, who made himself translator of all imaginable inquisitorial
+French phrases for my benefit,--who questioned, and tormented,
+and made faces at me,--who pulled my apron, disappeared with my
+carpet-bag, and placed a generous slice of molasses-candy upon the
+seat of my chair, when I sat down to rest myself.
+
+Little Jacques ardently loved a sly fishing-expedition on the edge
+of the marble fountain-basin, and had lured one or two unthinking
+gold-fish to destruction with fly and a crooked pin. He would sit
+perched up there at an odd chance, when his father was away, and he
+dared venture into the saloon,--his little bare feet twinkling against
+the water, his plump figure curled up into the minutest size, but
+ready for a spring and a dart up-stairs at the shortest notice of
+danger. This piscatory propensity had been severely punished by both
+Monsieur and Madame C----, who could not afford to encourage such an
+expensive Izaak Walton; but there was no managing the child. He
+seemed to possess an impish capability of eluding detection and angry
+denunciations. To be sure, circumstances were against any very strict
+guard being kept over the youngster. Madame C---- was a very weak
+woman, a very weak woman indeed,--she declared that such was the
+case,--a nervous, dispirited woman, whom everything troubled, who
+could not bear the noise and tramp of life, and altogether sank under
+it. Destiny had had no mercy on her weakness, however, and had left
+her to get along with an innumerable family of children, a philosophic
+husband, who took all her troubles coolly, and a constant demand
+for her services either in the shop or at the cradle. She could not,
+therefore, have patience with the incessant anxiety which little
+Jacques excited by his pranks.
+
+One day Madame C---- had gone out for a walk, leaving the children
+locked in a room above, five of them, two younger and two older
+than Jacques; and these together had been in a state of riotous
+insurrection the whole morning. Little Jacques was not of a
+disposition to submit to ignominious imprisonment, when human
+ingenuity could devise means of escape; while his brothers were
+running wild together, he soberly hunted up another key, screwed and
+scraped and got it into the key-hole; it turned, and he was out.
+
+Half an hour afterwards, his mother, returning, caught the unfortunate
+fugitive contemplatively perched on the edge of the fountain-basin. In
+such a frenzy of anger as only unreasonable people are subject to,
+she caught the child, shivering with terror, and thrust him into the
+water. The gold-fish splashed and swirled, and the water streamed over
+the sides of the basin. It was only an instant's work; snatching up
+the forlorn fisher, she shook him unmercifully, and set him upon the
+floor, dripping and breathless. I saw nothing of them until night.
+His mother had then recovered her usual peevishness, weakness, and
+inefficiency; the ebullition of energy had entirely subsided. I was
+curious to know whether the summary punishment had had any effect upon
+Jacques; but he was asleep, as soundly as usual after a day's hard
+frolic.
+
+My curiosity was likely to be gratified to satiety. A strange change
+came over the little fellow after this. To one accustomed to his apish
+activity, and to being annoyed by it, there was something plaintive
+in the fact of having got rid of that trouble. The child was silent,
+mopish, "good," as his mother said, congratulating herself on the
+effect of her summary visitation upon the offender.
+
+When, however, a month passed without any return of the evil
+propensities, this continued quiescence grew to be something ghostly,
+and, to people who had only their own hands to depend on for a living,
+a subject of anxiety and alarm: it was expensive to clothe and feed a
+child who promised but little service in future.
+
+"The _enfant_ will never come to anything," said Monsieur; "we could
+better have spared him than Jean."
+
+To which his wife shook her head, and solemnly assented.
+
+The '_enfant_,' however, gave no signs of taking the hint. Day after
+day his little ministerial head and flaxen curls were visible over
+the top of his old-fashioned arm-chair, and day after day his food was
+demanded, and his appetite was as good as ever.
+
+Watching the child, whose blue eyes, now the mischief was out of them,
+grew utterly vacant of expression, I unaccountably to myself came to
+feel an uncomfortable interest in, a morbid sympathy with him,--an
+uneasy, unhappy sympathy, more physical than mental.
+
+No fault could have been found with the motherly carefulness and
+attention of Madame C----. It was charmingly polite and French. But
+the sight of her preparing the child's food, or coaxing him
+with unaccustomed delicacies and _bonbons_, grew to be utterly
+distasteful,--an infliction so nervously annoying that I could not
+overcome it. A secret antipathy which I had nourished against Madame
+seemed to be germinating; every action of hers irritated me, every
+sound of her sharp, yet well-modulated voice gave me a tremor. The
+truth was, that plunge into the water, taking place so unexpectedly in
+my presence, had startled and upset me almost as completely as if it
+had befallen myself. A hard-working woman had no business with such
+nerves. I knew that, and tried to annihilate them; but the more I
+cut them down, the more they bled. The thing was a mere trifle,--the
+fountain-basin was shallow, the water healthy,--nothing could be more
+healthy than bathing,--and, at any rate, it was no affair of mine.
+Yet my mind in some unhealthy mood aggravated the circumstances, and
+colored everything with its own dark hue.
+
+I could not give up my place, of course not; I was not likely to get
+so good a situation anywhere else; I could not risk it; and yet the
+servitude of horror under which I was held for a few weeks was almost
+enough to reconcile one to starvation. Only that I was kept busy
+in the shop most of the time, and had little leisure to observe the
+course of affairs, or to be in Madame's society, I should have given
+warning,--foolishly enough,--for there was not a tangible thing of
+which I had to complain. But a shapeless suspicion which for some days
+had been brooding in my mind was taking form, too dim for me to
+dare to recognize it, but real enough to make me feel a miserable
+fascination to the house while little Jacques still lived, a magnetic,
+uncomfortable necessity for my presence, as though it were in some
+sort a protection against an impending evil.
+
+Such suspicion I did not, of course, presume to name, scarcely
+presumed to think, it seemed so like an unnatural monstrosity of my
+own mind. But when, one morning, the child died, holding in his
+hands the _bonbons_ his mother had given him, and Madame C----, all
+agitation and frenzy and weeping, still contrived to extract them from
+the tightly closed, tiny fists, and threw them into the grate, I felt
+a horrid thrill like the effect of the last scene in a tragedy. _I
+knew that the bonbons were poisoned_.
+
+So that is the reason I shuddered as I passed through the saloon.
+
+Throwing open the window, a dim light flickered through, and a sickly
+ray fell upon the fountain. It shivered upon the dripping marble
+column in its centre, and struck with an icy hue the water in the
+basin below. The fountain was not in my range of vision from the
+window; but I often turned to look at it as I opened the shutters,
+thinking it a pretty sight when the drops sparkled in the misty light
+against the background of the otherwise darkened room. It pleased my
+imagination to watch the effect produced by a little more or a little
+less opening of the shutters,--a nonsensical morning play-spell, which
+quite enlivened me for the sedate occupations of the day. It was,
+however, not imagination now which whispered to me that there was
+something else to look at beside the jet of water and the shadowy
+play of light. Stooping down upon the fountain-brink, absorbed in
+contemplating the gold-fish swimming below, and with its naked little
+feet touching the water's edge, a tiny figure sat. My first thought
+(the first thoughts of fear are never reasonable) was, that some child
+from up-stairs had stolen down unawares, (as children are quite as
+fond as grown folks of forbidden pleasures,) to amuse itself with the
+water. But the children were not risen yet, and the saloon was too
+utterly dark and dismal at that hour to tempt the bravest of them.
+Second thoughts reminded me of that certainty, and I looked again. The
+figure raised its head from its drooping posture, and gazed vacantly,
+out of a pair of dim blue eyes, at me. The eyes were the eyes of
+little Jacques.
+
+I do not know how I should have been so utterly overcome, but I
+started up in terror as I felt the dreamy phantom-gaze fixed upon me,
+raising my hands wildly above my head. The hammer which I held in my
+hand to drive back the bolts of the shutters flew from my grasp and
+struck the great mirror,--the new mirror which had just been bought,
+and was not yet hung up. All the savings of a year were shivered to
+fragments in an instant. My horror at this catastrophe recalled my
+presence of mind; for I was a poor woman, dependent for my bread on
+the family. Poor women cannot afford to have fancies; some prompt
+reality always startles them out of dream or superstition. My
+superstition fled in dismay as I stooped over the fragments of
+the looking-glass. What should I do? Where should I hide myself? I
+involuntarily took hold of the mirror with the instinctive intention
+of turning it to the wall. It was very heavy; I could scarcely lift
+it. Pausing a moment, and looking forward at its shattered face in
+utter anguish of despair, I saw again, repeated in a hundred jagged
+splinters, up and down in zigzag confusion, in demoniac omnipresence,
+the uncanny eye, the spectral shape, which had so appalled me. The
+little phantom had arisen, its slim finger was outstretched,--it
+beckoned, slowly beckoned, growing indistinct, it receded farther and
+farther out from the saloon towards the shop.
+
+The fascination of a spell was upon me; I turned and followed the
+retreating figure. The shutters of the show-window were not yet taken
+down, but thin lines of light filtered through them,--light enough to
+see that the apparition made its way to a forbidden spot slyly haunted
+by the little boy in his days of mischief,--a certain shelf where a
+box of some peculiar sort of expensive confections was kept. I had
+seen his mother, with unwonted generosity, give the child a handful of
+these a day or two before his death. I could go no farther. A mighty
+fear fell upon me, a dimness of vision and a terrible faintness; for
+that child-phantom, gliding on before, stopped like a retribution at
+that very spot, and, raising its little hand, pointed to that very
+box, glancing upward with its solemn eye, as, rising slowly in the
+air, it grew indistinct, its outlines fading into darkness, and
+disappeared.
+
+I did not fall or faint, however; I hastened out to the saloon again.
+The door of the little room where the coffin stood was open, and
+Madame stepping out, looked vaguely about her.
+
+"Madame! Madame!" I cried, "oh, I have seen--I have seen a terrible
+sight!"
+
+Madame's face grew white, very white. She grasped me harshly by the
+arm.
+
+"What _are_ you talking about, you crazy woman? You are getting quite
+wild, I think. Do you imagine you can hide your guilt in that way?"
+and she shook me with a savage fierceness that made my very bones
+ache. "This is carrying it with a high hand, to be sure, to flatter
+yourself that such wilful carelessness will not be discovered. Do you
+suppose," she cried, pointing to the fragments of glass, "that _my_
+nerves could feel a crash like that, and I not come down to see what
+had happened?"
+
+She spoke so volubly, and kept so firm a grip of my arm, that I could
+not get breath to utter a word of self-defence,--indeed, what defence
+could I make? Yet I should say, from my mistress's singular manner,
+that _she_ had seen that vision too, so wild were her eyes, so haggard
+her face.
+
+Little Jacques was buried. His attentive parents enjoyed a
+carriage-ride, with his miniature coffin between them, quite as
+well as if the little fellow had accompanied them alive and full of
+mischief.
+
+Outside matters, as Monsieur said, being now off his mind, he could
+attend to business again.
+
+The mirror belonged to "business." I had been writhing under that
+knowledge all the morning of their absence.
+
+Monsieur took the sight of his despoiled glass as calmly as Diogenes
+might have viewed a similar disaster from his tub. Monsieur's
+philosophy was grounded upon common sense. He knew that the frame
+was valuable. He knew also that I had saved enough to pay for the
+accident. I knew it, too, and was well aware that he would exact
+payment to the uttermost farthing. Monsieur, therefore, was quite
+cool. He laughed loudly at Madame's excitement, and the feverish
+account she gave of my fright, my deceitfulness, and pretending to see
+what nobody else saw.
+
+"Little Jacques!" I heard him exclaim, as I entered the room,
+shrugging his shoulders with such a contemptuously good-natured
+sneer as only a Frenchman can manufacture; and raising both his hands
+derisively, he went off with vivacity to his business.
+
+In the morning I left. Monsieur endeavored to persuade me to stay. But
+my business there was finished. I was quite as cool as Monsieur,--in
+fact, a little chilly. I was determined to go. Madame was determined
+also; we could no longer get along together; each hated and feared
+the other; and Madame C---- having used overnight what influence she
+possessed to bring her husband to see the necessity of my departure,
+his objections were not very difficult to remove.
+
+I could not afford to be out of work, that was true, and it might take
+me a long time to get it; but I was tired to death, and glad of any
+excuse for a little rest. What, after all, if I did lie by for a
+little while? there was not much pleasure or profit either way.
+
+I should not grow rich by my work; I could not grow much poorer
+by being idle. The past year, which I had spent in the service of
+Monsieur and Madame C----, had been one of constant annoyance and
+irritating variety of employment. I had grown fretful in the constant
+hurry and drive, and the baneful atmosphere of Madame's peevishness.
+Body and soul cried out for a season of release, which never in all my
+life of service had I thought of before.
+
+I had my desire now. I had put away my bondage. I had ceased my
+unprofitable labor. The rest I had so long craved was at hand. I might
+take a jubilee, a siesta, if I pleased, of half a year, and nobody be
+the wiser. I was responsible to nobody. Nobody had any demands upon
+my time or exertion. Free! I stood in a vacuum; no rush of air, no
+tempest or whirlpool stirred its infinite profundity. At length I
+was at peace,--a peace which seemed likely to last as long as my slim
+purse held out; for employment was not easy to obtain. Did I enjoy it?
+Did I lap myself in the long-desired repose in thankful quiescence
+of spirit? Perhaps,--I cannot tell; restlessness had become a chronic
+disease with me. I felt like a ship drifted from its moorings: the
+winds and the tides were pleasant; the ocean was at lull; but the ship
+rocked aimless and unsteady upon the waters. The heavy weights of
+life and activity so suddenly withdrawn left painful lightness akin to
+emptiness. The broken chains trailed noisily after me. The time hung
+heavily which I had so long prayed for. Long years of monotonous
+servitude had made a very machine of me. I could only rust in
+inaction. Some other power, to rack and grind and urge me on, was
+necessary to my very existence.
+
+So it happened, that, at last, my holiday having spun out to the end
+of my means, I left the city, and engaged work at very low wages in
+a country-village. The situation and the remuneration were not in
+the least calculated to stimulate ambition or avarice; and I remained
+obscurely housed, incessantly busy, and coarsely clothed and fed, in
+this place, for two years. They were not long years either. I had
+no hard taskmaster, however hard my task, no uneasy, unexplainable
+apprehensions, no moody forebodings of evil, no troublesome children
+to distress me. At the end of that time I heard of a better situation,
+and returned to the city.
+
+I had been engaged about a twelvemonth in my new place, a very
+pleasant little shop, though the pay was less and the work harder
+than I had had with Monsieur C----, when, one morning, standing at the
+shop-window, I saw that gentleman pass: very brisk, very spruce, very
+plump he looked. Glancing in, (I flatter myself that a show-window
+arranged as I could arrange it would attract any one's eye,) he espied
+me. A speedy recognition and a long conversation were the result. It
+was early morning, and we had the store to ourselves. Monsieur was
+very friendly. His business was very good. Poor Madame! he wished
+she could have lived to see it; but she was gone, poor soul! out of a
+world of trouble. And Monsieur plaintively fixed his eyes on the black
+crape upon his hat. The unhappy exit took place a few months after my
+departure. The children had gone to one or another relative. Monsieur
+was all alone; he had been away since then himself, had been doing as
+well as a bereaved man could do, and, having saved a snug little sum,
+had returned to buy out the old stand, and reestablish himself in the
+old place. No one was with him; he wished he could get a good hand to
+superintend the concern, now his own hands were so full. It would be a
+good situation for somebody. In short, Monsieur came again and again,
+until, as I was poor and lonely, and had almost overworked myself
+just to keep soul and body together, whose union, after all, was of
+no importance to any one save myself, and as I was quite glad to
+find some one else who was interested in the preservation of the
+partnership, I consented to be his wife. It was a very sensible and
+philosophic arrangement for both of us. We could make more money
+together than apart, and were stout and well able to help each other,
+if only well taken care of. So we settled the business, and settled
+ourselves as partners in the saloon.
+
+
+Three years had passed, and we were in the old place still. We had
+been very busy that day. Many orders to fill, many customers to wait
+upon. Monsieur, completely worn out, was sound asleep on the sofa
+up-stairs. It was late; I was very much fatigued, as I descended,
+according to my usual custom, to see that everything was safe about
+the house and shop. The place was all shut and empty; the lights were
+all out. A cushioned lounge in one corner of the saloon--_my_ saloon
+now--attracted my weary limbs, and I threw myself upon it, setting the
+lamp upon a marble table by its side. With a complacent sense of rest
+settling upon me, I drowsily looked about at the dim magnificence of
+loneliness which surrounded me. The night-lamp made more shadow than
+shine; but even by its obscured rays one who had known the old place
+would have been struck with the wonderful improvement we had made. So
+I thought. It was almost like a palace, gilded, and mirrored, and hung
+with silken curtains. Monsieur and I had thriven together, had worked
+hard and saved much these many years to produce the change. But the
+change had been, as everything we effected was, well considered, and
+had proved very profitable in the end. Better reception-rooms brought
+better customers; higher prices a higher class of patronage. It
+was very pleasant, lying there, to reflect that we were actually
+succeeding in the world; and a pleasant and quiet mood fell upon me,
+as, hopeful of the future, I looked back at the past. I thought of my
+old days in that saloon; I thought of little Jacques. Little Jacques
+was still a thought of some horror to me, and I generally avoided any
+allusion to him. But to-night, in this subdued and contemplative mood,
+I even let the little phantom glide into my reverie without being
+startled. I even speculated on the old theme which had so haunted
+me. I wondered whether my suspicions had been correct, and
+whether--whether Madame C---- was guilty of sending her little son
+before her into the other world. So thinking,--I might have been
+almost dreaming,--a slight rustle in the shop aroused me. I was not
+alarmed; my nerves are now much healthier, and I wisely make a point
+of not getting them unstrung by violent movements, or unaccustomed
+feats of activity, when anything astonishing happens. I therefore
+lifted my head calmly and looked about,--it might be a mouse. The
+noise ceased that instant, as if the intruder were aware of being
+observed. Mice sometimes have this instinct. We had some valuable
+new confections, which I had no desire should be disposed of by such
+customers. So, taking up my lamp, and peering cautiously about me, I
+proceeded to the shop. The light flickered,--flickered on something
+tall and white,--something white and shadowy, standing erect,
+and shrinking aside, behind the counter. My heart stood still;
+a sepulchral chill came over me. My old self, trembling,
+angry, foreboding, stepped suddenly within the niche whence the
+self-confident, full-grown, sensible woman had vanished utterly. For
+an instant, I felt like a ghost myself. It seemed natural that ghosts,
+if such there were, should spy me out, and appall my heart with their
+presence. For there, in that old, haunted spot, where long years ago
+the spectre of little Jacques had lifted its menacing finger, stood
+the form of Marie, Madame C----. I knew it well; shuddering and
+shivering myself, more like an intruder than one intruded upon, I laid
+my hand upon the chill marble counter for support. It was no creation
+of imagination; the figure laid its hand also upon the marble, and,
+stretching over its gaunt neck, stood and peered into my eyes.
+
+"Madame C----! Madame C----!" I cried; "what in the name of God would
+you have of me?"
+
+"Nothing," she answered,--"nothing of you,--and nothing in the name
+of God. Oh, you need not shudder at me,--Christine C----! I know _you_
+well enough. You haven't got over your old tricks yet. I'm no ghost,
+though. Mayhap you'd rather I'd be, for all your nerves, eh?"--and she
+shook her head in the old vengeful, threatening way.
+
+It was true enough. "What evil atmosphere surrounded me? What fell
+snare environed me? I looked about like a hunted animal brought to
+bay,--like a robber suddenly entrapped in the midst of his ill-gotten
+gains. For this was no dead woman, but a living vengeance, more
+terrible than death, brought to my very door. Some unseen power, it
+seemed, full of evil influence, full of malignant justice, stretched
+its long arms through my life, and would not let me by any means
+escape to peace, to rest. A direful vision of horrible struggles yet
+to come--of want, despair, disgrace in reservation--sickened my soul.
+
+"I will call--I will call," said I, gasping,--"I will call Monsieur
+C----; he"----
+
+"Don't, don't, I beg of you!" she cried, catching me by the sleeve,
+with a sardonic laugh; low, whispering, full of direful meaning, it
+stealthily echoed through the saloon. "Don't disturb the good man. He
+sleeps so soundly after his well-spent days! _He_ doesn't have any bad
+dreams, I fancy,--rid of such a troublesome, vicious wife,--a wife who
+harassed her husband to death, and murdered her little boy,--he sleeps
+sound, doesn't he? And yet--I declare, in the name of God, Christine
+C----,"--and she lifted up her bony finger like an avenging
+fate,--"_he did it_!"
+
+I had been endeavoring to calm myself while this woman of spectral
+face and form stared at me with her maniac eye across the counter. I
+had succeeded. At any rate, this was a tangible horror, and could be
+grappled with; it was not beyond human reach, a shadowy retribution
+from the invisible world. To face the circumstances, however
+repulsive, is less depressing than to await in suspense the coming
+of their footsteps, and the descent of that blow we know they will
+inflict. I had always found that policy best which was bravest. I
+remembered this now. Dropping my high tone, and soothing my excited
+features, I beckoned the woman and gave her a chair; I took a chair
+myself, wrapping a shawl close about me to repress the shivering I
+could not yet overcome, and I and that woman, returned from the grave,
+as it seemed to me, sat calmly down in business-fashion, and held a
+long conversation.
+
+
+Madame C---- had loved her husband with that sort of respectful,
+awe-filled affection which lower natures experience towards those
+which are a grade above them. She had loved her children, too,
+although they were her torment. Her inability to manage or keep
+them in order fretted and irritated her excessively. Monsieur, as a
+philosopher, could not understand the anomaly, that a woman who was
+perpetually unhappy and ill-tempered, while her children, young,
+buoyant, and mischievous, were about her, should sympathize with
+and care for them when sick. He could not understand her
+conscience-stricken misery when little Jacques drooped after her
+severity towards him. Monsieur was a kind husband, however, and a wise
+man in many things. He had studied much in his youth, chiefly medical
+works, of which he had quite a collection. He could not understand
+the whimsical nervousness of women, but, when so slight a thing as a
+child's illness appeared to be the cause of it, could unhesitatingly
+undertake to remove the difficulty. He had prescribed attentively
+for the two children who died before Jacques, thereby rendering them
+comfortable and quiet, and saving quite an item in the doctor's bill.
+
+When little Jacques fell ill, and Madame fretted incessantly about
+his loss of vigor and vivacity, Monsieur, with fatherly kindness,
+undertook, in the midst of his pressing business, to give the child
+his medicine, which had to be most carefully prepared. Sometimes the
+powders were disguised in _bonbons_, the more agreeably to dose
+the patient little fellow; these were prepared with Monsieur's own
+fatherly hands, and during his absence were once in a while left
+for Madame to administer. Madame had great faith in these
+medicines,--great faith in her husband's skill; but the child's
+disease was obstinate, very; no progress could be discovered. It was
+a comforting thought, at least, that, if his recovery was beyond
+possibility, something had been done to soothe his pain and quiet
+the vexed spirit in its bitter struggle with dissolution. Yes, the
+medicines were certainly very quieting,--so quieting, so death-like
+in their influence,--she could not tell how a suspicion (perhaps the
+strange expression of the child's eye, when they were administered)
+glided into her imagination (having so great a reverence for her
+husband, it took no place in her mind for an instant,--it was merely a
+spectral, haunting shadow) that these things were getting the child
+no better,--that they were not medicine for keeping him here, but for
+helping him away. This suspicion, breathing its baleful breath across
+her mind, weak, vacillating, incapable of energetic action, had
+rendered her miserable, morose, irritable, more so than ever before.
+Yet little Jacques in his last hour hankered for the medicine, and
+craved feverishly the delicate powder, the sweet confection, his
+father prepared for him.
+
+While inwardly brooding over this unnamed terror, and cowering before
+this shapeless thought which loomed in the darkness of her mental
+gloom, an idea entered her mind that I, too, was suspicious that
+something was going wrong,--that I was watching,--waiting the evil to
+come. The child died. Her fear for him was utterly superseded by fear
+for her husband. What if I should find him out and betray him? The
+anxiety occasioned by this possibility made her hate me. The agony
+of her little one's departure, the fear of some dire discovery, the
+consciousness of guilt near enough of vicinage almost to seem her
+own, combined to nearly distract her mind, and it seemed like a joyful
+relief when I departed. The sudden release from that constant pressure
+of fear (she knew I could do nothing against them without money,
+credit, or friends) made her ill for a time, quite ill, she said. She
+knew not what was done for her during this sickness,--who nursed her,
+or who gave her medicine. But one morning, on waking from what seemed
+a long sleep, in which she had dreamed strangely and talked wildly,
+she beheld Monsieur, smiling kindly, standing beside her bed with a
+vial and a spoon in his hand.
+
+"It is a cordial, my dear, which will strengthen and bring you round
+again very soon. You need a sedative,--something to allay fever and
+excitement."
+
+"Is it little Jacques's medicine?"
+
+"Quite similar, my dear,--not the powders,--the liquid. Equally
+soothing to the nerves, and promotive of sleep."
+
+She turned her face away. She had slept long enough. She thanked
+Monsieur, not daring to look up, but capriciously refused to touch
+little Jacques's medicine.
+
+"And Monsieur," she said, "Monsieur was very angry. He said I was a
+disobedient wife, who did not wish to get well, but desired to be a
+constant expense and trouble to her husband.
+
+"And so, Christine C----, I trembled and shook, and let fall words I
+never meant to have uttered to Monsieur, and I said he had killed
+the child, and wished to kill me, that he might marry Mademoiselle
+Christine. I did not say any more that day. In the morning, Monsieur
+and I discoursed together again. I declared I would get well and go
+away. Oh! Monsieur knew well I would not betray him. He was willing,
+very willing to consent to my departure. He cared for me well, and
+gave me much money; and I went away to my old aunt, who lived in
+Paris. I have been dead,--I have died to Monsieur. I should never have
+returned, but that my good aunt is gone. When I buried her,--shut her
+kind eyes, and wrapped her so snugly in her shroud,--I thought it a
+horrible thing to be living without a soul to care for me, or comfort
+me, or even to wrap me up as I did her when the time was come. I felt
+then a thirsty spirit rising within me to see my old place where I had
+comfort and shelter long ago, and to see my children. I have been to
+see them: they are in B----; they did not know me there. I did not
+tell them who I was. I have been faithful to my promise. I tell no one
+but you, Christine C----, who have stepped into my place, and stolen
+away my home. A prettier home you have made of it for a prettier wife;
+but it's the old place yet, with the old stain upon it."
+
+
+Wishing to consider a moment what I should do, half paralyzed, like
+one who is stricken with death, I left that other ME, (for was she not
+also my husband's wife?) apparently exhausted, lying upon the sofa,
+and went wearily up-stairs, with heavy steps, like one whose life
+has suddenly become a weight to him. What, indeed, _should_ I do?
+Starvation and misery stared me in the face. If I left the house,
+casting its guilt and its comfort behind me, where could I go? I could
+do nothing, earn nothing now. My reputation, now that we were so lone
+established, would be entirely gone. And if I left all for which I had
+labored so hard, for another to enjoy, would that better the matter?
+Great God! would _anything_ help me? Before me in terrific vision
+rose a dim vista of future ruin, of ineffectual years writhing in the
+inescapable power of the law, of long trial, of horrible suspense, of
+garish publicity, of my name handed from mouth to mouth, a forlorn,
+duped, degraded thing, whose blighted life was a theme of newspaper
+comment and cavil. These thoughts swept over me as a tempest sweeps
+over the young tree whose roots are not firm in the soil, whose
+writhing and wrestling are impotent to defend it from certain
+destruction. There was no one I loved especially, no one I cared for
+anxiously, to relieve the bitter thoughts which centred in myself
+alone. Monsieur awoke as I was sitting thus, in ineffectual effort to
+compose myself. Seeing me sitting near him, still dressed, the door
+open, and the light burning, he inquired what was the matter. I had
+something below requiring his attention, I said, and, taking up the
+lamp, ushered him down-stairs. My chaotic thoughts were beginning to
+settle themselves,--to form a nucleus about the first circumstance
+that thrust itself definitely before them. That poor wretch waiting
+below,--that forsaken, abject, dishonored wife,--I would confront him
+with her, and charge him with his guilt. Opening the saloon-door, I
+stepped in before him. The lamp which I had left upon the stand was
+out, and the slender thread of light which fell from the one in my
+hand, sweeping across the gloom, rested upon the deserted sofa. The
+saloon was empty; no trace, no sign could be discovered of any human
+being. The hush, the solemnity of night brooded over the place.
+Monsieur mockingly, but unsteadily, inquired what child's game I
+was playing,--he was too tired to be fooled with. He spoke hotly and
+quickly, as he never had spoken to me before,--like one who has long
+been ill at ease, and deems a slight circumstance portentous.
+
+So I turned upon him, with all the bitterness in my heart rising to
+my tongue. I told him the story. I charged him with the guilt. He
+listened in silence; marble-like he stood with folded arms, and heard
+the conclusion of the whole matter. When I was silent, he strode up
+to me, and, stooping, peered into my face steadily. His teeth were
+clenched, his eyes shot fire; otherwise he was calm, quite composed.
+He said, quietly,--
+
+"Would you blame me for making an angel out of an idiot?"
+
+Monsieur's philosophy was too subtile for me. GUILTY seemed a coarse
+word to apply to so fine a nature.
+
+He denied having attempted to injure his wife in any way.
+
+"Women are all fools," he said; "they are all alike,--go just as
+they are led, and do just as they are taught. They cannot think
+for themselves. They have no ideas of justice but just what the law
+furnishes them with. It was silly to complain; it argued a narrow mind
+to condemn merely because the laws condemn. In that case all should
+be acquitted whom the laws acquit,--did we ever do this? Would his
+darling Jacques, happy, angelic, condemn his parent for releasing him
+from the drudgery of life? Was it not better to play on a golden harp
+than to be a confectioner? Were not all men, in fact, more or less
+slayers of their brothers? Was I not myself guilty in attributing
+to Madame a deed in my eyes worthy of death, and of which she was
+innocent? It was only those whose courage induced them to venture a
+little farther who received condemnation. In some way or other,
+every soul is wearing out and overtasking somebody else's soul, and
+shortening somebody's days. A man who should throw his child into the
+water, in order to save him from being burned to death, would not
+be arraigned for the fierce choice. Little Jacques, if he had lived,
+would have lingered in misery and imbecility. Was a lingering death of
+torture to be preferred by a tenderhearted woman to one more rapid and
+less painful, where the certainty of death left only such preference?
+Ah, well! it was consolation that his little son was safe from all
+vicissitude, whatever might befall his devoted father!" and Monsieur
+wiped his eyes, and drew out a little miniature he always carried in
+his bosom. It was the portrait of little Jacques.
+
+Well, as I have said, Monsieur was a philosopher, and I was a
+philosopher; and yet I must have been a woman incapable of reason,
+incapable of comprehending an argument; for the thought of this thing,
+and of being in the presence of a man capable of such a deed, made me
+uneasy, restless, unhappy, as though I were in some sort a partaker of
+the crime. I could not sleep; I was haunted with horrific dreams; and
+when, in few days, among the "accidents" the death of an unknown woman
+was recorded, whose body had drifted ashore at night, and I recognized
+by the description poor, unknown, uncared-for Madame C----, a wild
+fever burned in my veins, a frenzy of anguish akin to remorse, as if
+_I_ had wronged the dead, and sent her drifting, helpless, out to the
+unknown world. A pitiable soul, who preferred misery for her portion,
+rather than betray the man she loved, or become partaker of his crime,
+had crept back, after years of self-imposed absence, with death in her
+heart, to see the old place and the new wife,--and how had I received
+her? With horror and shuddering, as though she were some guilty thing,
+to be held at arm's-length. Not as one woman, generous, forgiving,
+hoping for mercy hereafter, should receive another, however erring. It
+was a sad boon, perhaps, she had endowed me with; yet it was all she
+prized and cherished.
+
+With a nobleness of magnanimity, a passionate self-sacrifice, which
+none but a woman could be capable of, Madame C---- had divested
+herself of all peculiarities of clothing by which she could be
+identified. It was only by recognizing the features, and a singular
+scar upon the forehead, that I knew it was herself. She was buried by
+stranger hands, however; we dared not come forward to claim her.
+
+The excitement attendant on this miserable death, and the
+circumstances which preceded it, laid me, for the first time in my
+life, upon a sick-bed. I was unconscious for many weeks of anything
+save intolerable pain and intolerable heat. A fiery agony of fever
+leaped in my veins, and scorched up my life-blood. I believe Monsieur
+cared for me, and nursed me attentively during this illness.
+
+The fever left me; exhausted, spent, my life shrunken up within me, my
+energy burned out, a puny, spiritless remnant of the strong woman who
+lay down upon that couch, I lay despondent, vacant of all interest in
+the world hitherto so exciting to me. I had not seen Monsieur since
+this apparent commencement of recovery. A great, good-natured nurse
+kept watch over me, and fed me with spiritless dainties, tasteless,
+unsatisfying.
+
+One day, when my senses began to settle a little, and things began
+to take shape again, I asked for Monsieur. He came and stood at my
+bedside.
+
+"Christine," said he, "you have no faith in my power of making angels.
+I have not made one of you. Being divided in our theories, we will
+divide our earthly goods. We will part. Should you as a woman deem it
+your duty to inform against me, I shall not think it wrong. I shall
+bear it as a philosopher. You have no proof, you can substantiate
+nothing; but it may be a satisfaction. I do not understand women;
+therefore I cannot tell."
+
+"Monsieur," I answered, "leave it to God to fill His heaven as He
+thinks best. He has not invited your assistance; neither has He
+invited me to avenge Him. Since He does not punish, dare I invade His
+prerogative?"
+
+And we did not part.
+
+We will live together in peace, we said, and the past shall be utterly
+forgotten; shall not a whole lifetime of unwavering rectitude atone
+for this one crime?
+
+I accepted my fate,--weakly, in the dread of poverty, in the horror
+of disgrace, shrinking within myself with the secret thrust upon me.
+I said we are all the makers of our own destiny, and there is
+nothing supernatural in life. If this course is best and wisest in my
+judgment, nothing evil will come of it. I said this, ignorant of the
+mystery of existence, and inexperienced in that subtile power which
+penetrates all the windings and turnings of humanity, searching out
+hidden things,--the Purifier, and the Avenger, allotting to each one
+his portion of bitterness, his inexorable punishment. "We will live
+together in peace": it was the thought of a sudden moment of fervor,
+which overleaped the dreary length of life, and assumed to compass the
+repentance of a whole existence in a single day.
+
+But destiny holds always in store its retribution. God suffers no
+dropped stitches in the web of His universe, and the smallest truth
+evaded, the least wretch neglected, will surely be picked up again
+in the unending circle that is winding its certain thread around all
+beings, connecting by invisible links the most insignificant chances
+with the most significant events.
+
+When I said we will be one, we will endure together, I thought that
+so, in my enduring strength, I could bear up whatever burden came. I
+know not how, by what invisible process, the load which I had lifted
+to my shoulders grew into leaden heaviness,--heavy, heavy, like the
+weight of some dead soul resting its lifeless shape upon my living
+spirit, till I staggered under the unbearable presence. I had doomed
+myself to stand side by side, to work hand in hand with guilt, to feel
+hourly the dread lest in some moment of frenzy engendered by the dumb
+anguish within me I might betray the secret whose rust was eating into
+my soul, and shriek out my misery in the ears of all men.
+
+Monsieur, seeing me grow thin and pale, declared that I must have a
+change, I must go somewhere, to the sea-shore. To the sea-shore! No,
+I would not go to the sea-shore, or to any other shore; a stranded
+vessel, I could not struggle from the place of shipwreck.
+
+Monsieur grew vexed and anxious, when I stubbornly shook my head. And
+when week after week I still refused, he grew strangely uneasy. I had
+better go; if I would not go alone, he would go with me, shut up the
+shop, and take a holiday.
+
+I considered the matter that day. The project was a wild one; at this
+busiest season of the year, it would be an injury to our business.
+And what might the neighbors say? It might lead them to unpleasant
+suspicions. We were not popular among them. No, it would not do.
+
+I explained this to Monsieur very calmly at the supper-table. His
+face was pale and quiet as usual. He did not interrupt me. When I
+concluded, he rose as if he would go out, but turning back suddenly
+and striking the table with his clenched fist,--
+
+"God!" he exclaimed. "Woman would you see me die like a dog? The
+neighbors! for all I know, they have got me at their finger-ends
+now,--the vile rabble! That old hag, Madame Justine, at the
+ribbon-shop below,--some demon possessed her to look out that night
+when SHE came crawling home. She noted her well with her greedy eyes;
+some one _so_ like my dear first wife, she told me. There is mischief
+and death in her eyes. She knows or guesses too much."
+
+"What can she guess?" I asked; "she has only lately come into the
+neighborhood."
+
+In answer to this, Monsieur informed me that she professed to
+have been an old friend of his wife's, who, in times gone by, half
+bewildered with her troubles, had probably dropped many unguarded
+words in this woman's presence. Madame C---- had died (to her old
+home) while this woman was away on a visit. "Ah!" she said, "she had
+her misgivings many a time. Did the same doctor attend Madame C----
+who prescribed for little Jacques? _He_ ought to be hung, then. Ah,
+well, if all men had their deserts, she knew many things that would
+hang some folks who looted all fair and square, and held their guilty
+heads higher than their neighbors."
+
+"Well?" I said.
+
+"Well!--you women are so virtuous, you have no mercy, Madame. Go,
+hang--go, drown the wretch who comes under the malediction of the
+ladies! Oh, there is nothing too hard for him! And this one owed me a
+grudge lately about a mistake,--a little mistake I made in an account
+with her, and would not alter because I thought it all right."
+
+
+The preparations were going on silently and steadily that night. I
+would go anywhere now, anything would I do, to escape the fate whose
+stealthy footsteps were tracking us out. Well I knew, that, once in
+the power of the law, its firm grasp would wrest every secret from
+the deepest depths where it was hidden. Once out of the city, we could
+readily take flight, if immediate danger threatened.
+
+The doors were all closed; the trunks stood corded in the hall. I was
+down-stairs, getting the silver together. Monsieur was in his room,
+packing up his medicine-chest. There was no weakness in my nerves
+now, no trembling in my limbs. I was determined. While thus engaged,
+pausing a moment amid the light tinkle of the silver spoons, I thought
+I heard footsteps in the saloon above. Softly ascending the stairs, I
+met Monsieur at the door. He had come down under the same impression,
+that some one was walking in the saloon, still holding in his hand the
+tiny cup in which he measured his medicines. It was full, and Monsieur
+carried it very carefully, as, opening the door, he looked cautiously
+about. Nothing stirred; all was silent as death; and walking forward
+toward the fountain, he straightened himself up, and his white face
+flushed as he said in a whisper,--
+
+"Christine, everything is ready. We are safe yet; we shall escape.
+Once away, we will never return to this doomed place, let what will
+come of it. Yes, I am certain that we shall escape!"
+
+Monsieur took a step forward as he said this, and stood transfixed.
+The light shook which he held in his hand, as if a strong wind
+had passed over it; his eye quailed; his cheek blanched to ghastly
+whiteness. I thought that undue excitement had brought on a
+fainting-fit of some kind, and was stooping to dip my hands in the
+water and bathe his forehead, when I saw, distinctly, like a white
+mist in the darkness, a visible shape sitting solemn upon the
+basin-edge; the room was very dim, and the falling spray fell over the
+shape like a weeping-willow, yet my eyes discerned it clearly. Oh, it
+was no dream that I had dreamed in my young days long ago! That little
+figure was no stranger to my vision, no stranger to the changeless
+waterfall. Did Monsieur see it also? He stood close beside the
+fountain now, with his face towards the spectre. The tiny cup in his
+hand fell from the loosened fingers down into the water; a lonely
+gold-fish, swimming there, turned over on its golden side and floated
+motionless upon the surface.
+
+I scarcely noticed this, for, at the time, I heard the knob of the
+shop-door turn quickly, and the door was shaken violently. It was
+probably the night-watchman going his rounds; but, in my alarm and
+excitement, I thought we were betrayed. I stepped swiftly to the door,
+and pushed an extra bolt inside.
+
+"Monsieur!" I cried, under my breath, "hide! hide yourself! Quick! in
+the name of Heaven!"
+
+But he did not answer, and, hastening to his side, I saw the faint
+outlines of that shadowy visitant growing indistinct and disappearing.
+As it vanished, Monsieur turned deliberately toward me; his eyes were
+clear, the faintness was over; his voice was grave and steady, as he
+said,--
+
+"Christine! I have seen it. It is the warning of death. There is
+no future and no escape for me. The retribution is at hand,"--and
+stooping swiftly down, he lifted the tiny cup brimming to his lips.
+"Go you," he said, huskily, "to the sea-shore. I have an errand
+elsewhere."
+
+In the morning came the officers of justice; my dim eyes saw them, my
+ears heard unshrinking their stern voices demanding Monsieur C----. I
+did not answer; I pointed vaguely forward; and forward they marched,
+with a heavy tramp, to where the one whom they were seeking lay prone
+upon the marble floor, his head hanging nervelessly down over the
+water. He had been arrested by a Higher Power. Monsieur C---- was
+dead.
+
+
+
+
+BOSTON HYMN.
+
+
+ The word of the Lord by night
+ To the watching Pilgrims came,
+ As they sat by the sea-side,
+ And filled their hearts with flame.
+
+ God said,--I am tired of kings,
+ I suffer them no more;
+ Up to my ear the morning brings
+ The outrage of the poor.
+
+ Think ye I made this ball
+ A field of havoc and war,
+ Where tyrants great and tyrants small
+ Might harry the weak and poor?
+
+ My angel,--his name is Freedom,
+ Choose him to be your king;
+ He shall cut pathways east and west,
+ And fend you with his wing.
+
+ Lo! I uncover the land
+ Which I hid of old time in the West,
+ As the sculptor uncovers his statue,
+ When he has wrought his best.
+
+ I show Columbia, of the rocks
+ Which dip their foot in the seas
+ And soar to the air-borne flocks
+ Of clouds, and the boreal fleece.
+
+ I will divide my goods,
+ Call in the wretch and slave:
+ None shall rule but the humble,
+ And none but Toil shall have.
+
+ I will have never a noble,
+ No lineage counted great:
+ Fishers and choppers and ploughmen
+ Shall constitute a State.
+
+ Go, cut down trees in the forest,
+ And trim the straightest boughs;
+ Cut down trees in the forest,
+ And build me a wooden house.
+
+ Call the people together,
+ The young men and the sires,
+ The digger in the harvest-field,
+ Hireling, and him that hires.
+
+ And here in a pine state-house
+ They shall choose men to rule
+ In every needful faculty,
+ In church, and state, and school.
+
+ Lo, now! if these poor men
+ Can govern the land and sea,
+ And make just laws below the sun,
+ As planets faithful be.
+
+ And ye shall succor men;
+ 'T is nobleness to serve;
+ Help them who cannot help again;
+ Beware from right to swerve.
+
+ I break your bonds and masterships,
+ And I unchain the slave:
+ Free be his heart and hand henceforth,
+ As wind and wandering wave.
+
+ I cause from every creature
+ His proper good to flow:
+ So much as he is and doeth,
+ So much he shall bestow.
+
+ But, laying his hands on another
+ To coin his labor and sweat,
+ He goes in pawn to his victim
+ For eternal years in debt.
+
+ Pay ransom to the owner,
+ And fill the bag to the brim.
+ Who is the owner? The slave is owner,
+ And ever was. Pay him.
+
+ O North! give him beauty for rags,
+ And honor, O South! for his shame;
+ Nevada! coin thy golden crags
+ With Freedom's image and name.
+
+ Up! and the dusky race
+ That sat in darkness long,--
+ Be swift their feet as antelopes,
+ And as behemoth strong.
+
+ Come, East, and West, and North,
+ By races, as snow-flakes,
+ And carry my purpose forth,
+ Which neither halts nor shakes.
+
+ My will fulfilled shall be,
+ For, in daylight or in dark,
+ My thunderbolt has eyes to see
+ His way home to the mark.
+
+
+
+
+THE SIEGE OF CINCINNATI.
+
+
+The live man of the old Revolution, the daring Hotspur of those
+troublous days, was Anthony Wayne. The live man to-day of the great
+Northwest is Lewis Wallace. With all the chivalric clash of the
+stormer of Stony Point, he has a cooler head, with a capacity for
+larger plans, and the steady nerve to execute whatever he conceives.
+When a difficulty rises in his path, the difficulty, no matter what
+its proportions, moves aside; he does not. When a river like the Ohio
+at Cincinnati intervenes between him and his field of operations,
+there is a sudden sound of saws and hammers at sunset, and the
+next morning beholds the magic spectacle of a great pontoon-bridge
+stretching between the shores of Freedom and Slavery, its planks
+resounding to the heavy tread of almost endless regiments and
+army-wagons. Is a city like Cincinnati menaced by a hungry foe,
+striding on by forced marches, that foe sees his path suddenly blocked
+by ten miles of fortifications thoroughly manned and armed, and he
+finds it prudent, even with his twenty thousand veterans, to retreat
+faster than he came, strewing the road with whatever articles impede
+his haste. Some few incidents in the career of such a man, since he
+has taken the field, ought not to be uninteresting to those for whom
+he has fought so bravely; and we believe his services, when known,
+will be appreciated, otherwise we will come under the old ban against
+Republics, that they are ungrateful.
+
+While returning from New York at the expiration of a short leave of
+absence, the first asked for since the beginning of the war, General
+Wallace was persuaded by Governor Morton to stump the State of Indiana
+in favor of voluntary enlistments, which at that time were progressing
+slowly. Wallace went to work in all earnestness. His idea was to
+obtain command of the new levies, drill them, and take them to the
+field; and this idea was circulated throughout the State. The result
+was, enlisting increased rapidly; the ardor for it rose shortly into
+a fever, and has not yet abated. Regiments are still forming, shedding
+additional lustre upon the name of patriotic Indiana.
+
+General Wallace was thus engaged when the news was received from
+Morgan of the invasion of Kentucky by Kirby Smith. All eyes turned
+at once to Governor Morton, many of whose regiments were now ready to
+take the field, if they only had officers to lead them. Wallace came
+promptly to the Governor's assistance, and offered to take command of
+a regiment for the crisis. His offer was accepted, and he was sent to
+New Albany, where the Sixty-Sixth Indiana was in camp. In twelve
+hours he mustered it, paid its bounty money, clothed and armed it, and
+marched it to Louisville. Brigadier-General Boyle was in command of
+Kentucky. Wallace, who is a Major-General, reported to him at the
+above-named city, and a peculiar scene occurred.
+
+"General Boyle," said Wallace, "I report to you the Sixty-Sixth
+Indiana Regiment."
+
+"Who commands it?" asked the General.
+
+"I have that honor, Sir," was the reply.
+
+"You want orders, I suppose?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"It is a difficult matter for me," said Boyle. "I have no right to
+order you."
+
+"That difficulty is easily solved," Wallace replied, with
+characteristic promptness. "I come to report to you as a Colonel. I
+come to take orders as such."
+
+General Boyle consulted with his Adjutant-General, and the result was
+_a request_ that General Wallace would proceed to Lexington with his
+command. Here was exhibited the ready, self-sacrificing spirit of
+a true patriot: he did not stand and wait until he could find the
+position to which his high rank entitled him, but stepped into the
+place where he could best and quickest serve his country in her hour
+of peril.
+
+While Wallace was still at the railway-station, he received an order
+from General Boyle, putting him in command of all the forces in
+Lexington. Here was a golden opportunity for our young commander. What
+higher honor could be coveted than to relieve the brave Morgan,
+pent up as he was with his little army in the mountain-gorges of the
+Cumberland? The idea fired the soul of Wallace, and he pushed on to
+Lexington. But here he was sadly disappointed. He found the forces
+waiting there inadequate to the task: instead of an army, there were
+only three regiments. He telegraphed for more troops. Indiana and Ohio
+responded promptly and nobly. In three days he received and brigaded
+nine regiments and started them toward the Gap.
+
+No one but an experienced soldier, one who has indeed tried it, can
+conceive of the labor involved in such an undertaking. The material in
+his hands was, to say the best of it, magnificently _raw_. Officers,
+from colonels to corporals, brave though they might be as lions, knew
+literally nothing of military affairs. The men had not learned even to
+load their guns. Companies had to be led, like little children, by
+the hand as it were, into their places in line of battle. There was
+no cavalry, no artillery. It happened, however, that guns, horses, and
+supplies intended for Morgan at the Gap were in depot at Lexington.
+Then Wallace began to catch a glimpse of dawn through the dark tangle
+of the wilderness. Some kind of order, prompt and immediate, must be
+forced out of this chaos; and it came, for the master-spirit was there
+to arrange and compel. He mounted several hundred men, giving them
+rifles instead of sabres. He manned new guns, procuring harness and
+ammunition for them from Louisville. Where there were no caissons, he
+supplied wagons. But his regiments were not his sole reliance; he is
+a believer in riflemen, a fighting class of which Kentucky was full.
+These he summoned to his assistance, and was met by a ready and hearty
+response: they came trooping to him by hundreds. Among others,
+Garrett Davis, United States Senator, led a company of Home-Guards to
+Lexington. In this way General Wallace composed, or rather improvised
+a little army, and all without help, his regular staff being absent,
+mostly in Memphis.
+
+"Kentucky has not been herself in this war," exclaimed General
+Wallace; "she must be aroused; and I propose to do it thoroughly."
+
+"How will you do it?" asked a skeptic.
+
+"Easily enough, Sir. Kentucky has a host of great names. Kentuckians
+believe in great names. It is to this tune that the traitors have
+carried them to the field against us. I will take with me to the field
+all the men living, old and young, who have made those names great.
+Buckner took the young Crittendens and Clays; by Heaven, I'll take
+their fathers!"
+
+"But they can't march."
+
+"I'll haul them, then."
+
+"They can be of no service in that way."
+
+"But the magic of their names!" exclaimed Wallace. "What will the
+young Kentuckians say, when they hear John J. Crittenden, Leslie
+Combs, Robert Breckenridge, Tom Clay, Garrett Davis, Judge Goodloe,
+and fathers of that kind, are going down to battle with me?"
+
+The skeptics held their peace.
+
+General Wallace now constituted a volunteer staff. Wadsworth, M.C.
+from Maysville district, was his adjutant-general. Brand, Gratz,
+Goodloe, and young Tom Clay were his aids. Old Tom Clay, John J.
+Crittenden, Leslie Combs, Judge Goodloe, Garrett Davis, were all
+prepared and going, when General Wallace was suddenly relieved of his
+command by General Nelson.
+
+Without instituting any comparison between these two generals, it
+is enough to say that the supersession of Wallace by Nelson at that
+moment was most unfortunate and untimely, as the sequel proved,
+fraught as it was with disastrous consequences. The circumstances were
+these.
+
+Scott's Rebel cavalry had whipped Metcalf's regiment of Loyalists at
+Big Hill, some twelve or fifteen miles beyond Richmond, Kentucky,
+and followed them to within four miles of that town, where they were
+stopped by Lenck's brigade of infantry. The affair was reported to
+Wallace, with the number and situation of the enemy. He at once took
+prompt measures to meet the exigence of the situation. He could throw
+Lenck's and Clay's brigades upon the Rebel front; the brigade at
+Nicholasville could take them in flank by crossing the Kentucky River
+at Tatt's Ford; while, by uniting Clay Smith's command with that of
+Jacob, then _en route_ for Nicholasville, he could plant seventeen
+hundred cavalry in their rear between Big Hill and Mount Vernon.
+
+The enemy at this time were at least twenty miles in advance of their
+supports, and a night's march would have readily placed the several
+forces mentioned in position to attack them by daylight. This was
+Wallace's plan,--simple, feasible, and soldier-like. All his orders
+were given. A supply-train with extra ammunition and abundant rations
+was in line on the road to Richmond. Clay's brigade was drawn up ready
+to move, and General Wallace's horse was saddled. He was writing a
+last order in reference to the city of Lexington in his absence, and
+directing the officer left in charge to forward regiments to him at
+Richmond as fast as they should arrive, when General Nelson came and
+instantly took the command. Fifteen minutes more and General Wallace
+would have been on the road to Richmond to superintend the execution
+of his plan of attack. The supersession was, of course, a bitter
+disappointment; yet he never grumbled or demurred in the least, but,
+like a true soldier who knows his duty, offered that evening to serve
+his successor in any capacity, a generosity which General Nelson
+declined. The well-conceived plan which Wallace had matured failed for
+the simple reason, that, instead of marching to execute it that night,
+as common sense would seem to have dictated, Nelson did not leave
+Lexington until the next day at one o'clock; and at daylight, when the
+attack was to have been made, the Rebel leader, Scott, discovered his
+danger, and wisely retreated, finding nobody in his rear. The result
+was, Nelson went to Richmond and was defeated. It is possible that
+the same result might have followed Wallace; but by those competent to
+judge it is thought otherwise.
+
+He had a plan adapted to the troops he was leading, who, although very
+raw, would have been invincible behind breastworks, as American troops
+have always shown themselves to be. Wallace never intended arraying
+these inexperienced men in the open field against the veteran troops
+of the Rebels. Neither did he intend they should dig. He had collected
+large quantities of intrenching tools, and was rapidly assembling
+a corps of negroes, nearly five hundred of whom he had already in
+waiting in Morgan's factory, all prepared to follow his column, armed
+with spades and picks. In Madison County he intended getting at least
+five hundred more. "I will march," he said, "like Caesar in Gaul, and
+intrench my camp every night. If I am attacked at any time in too
+great numbers, I can drop back to my nearest works, and wait for
+reinforcements." Such was his plan, and those who know him believe
+firmly that he could have been at the Cumberland Gap in time not only
+to succor our little army there, but to have prevented the destruction
+and evacuation of that very important post.
+
+Wallace, finding himself thus suddenly superseded, his plans ignored,
+and his voluntary service bluffly refused, left Lexington for
+Cincinnati. While there the Battle of Richmond was fought, the
+disastrous results of which are still too fresh in the public mind to
+require repeating. Nelson, who did not arrive upon the field until the
+day was about lost, and only in time to use his sword against his own
+men in a fruitless endeavor to rally them, received a flesh-wound,
+and hastened back the same night to Cincinnati, leaving many dead and
+wounded on the field, and thousands of our brave boys prisoners to be
+paroled by the Rebels. These are simple matters of record, and are not
+here set down in any spirit of prejudice, or to throw a shadow upon
+the memory of the misguided, unfortunate, but courageous Nelson.
+
+At this juncture General Wallace was again ordered to Lexington, this
+time by General Wright, a general whose gentlemanly bearing in all
+capacities makes him an ornament to the American army. Wallace was
+ordered thither to resume command of the forces; but on arriving
+at Paris, the order was countermanded, and he was sent back to take
+charge of the city of Cincinnati. Shrewdly suspecting that our forces
+would evacuate Lexington, he hastened to his new post. General Wright
+was at that time in Louisville. On his way back, Wallace was asked by
+one of his aids,--
+
+"Do you believe the enemy will come to Cincinnati?"
+
+"Yes," was the reply. "Kirby Smith will first go to Frankfort. He must
+have that place, if possible, for the political effect it will have.
+If he gets it, he will surely come to Cincinnati. He is an idiot, if
+he does not. Here is the material of war,--goods, groceries, salt,
+supplies, machinery, etc.,--enough to restock the whole bogus
+Confederacy."
+
+"What are you going to do? You have nothing to defend the city with."
+
+"I will show you," was the reply.
+
+Within the first half-hour after his arrival in Cincinnati, General
+Wallace wrote and sent to the daily papers the following proclamation,
+which fully and clearly develops his whole plan.
+
+
+"PROCLAMATION.
+
+"The undersigned, by order of Major-General Wright, assumes command of
+Cincinnati, Covington, and Newport.
+
+"It is but fair to inform the citizens, that an active, daring, and
+powerful enemy threatens them with every consequence of war; yet the
+cities must be defended, and their inhabitants must assist in the
+preparation.
+
+"Patriotism, duty, honor, self-preservation, call them to the labor,
+and it must be performed equally by all classes.
+
+"First. All business must be suspended at nine o'clock to-day. Every
+business-house must be closed.
+
+"Second. Under the direction of the Mayor, the citizens must, within
+an hour after the suspension of business, (ten o'clock, A.M.,)
+assemble in convenient public places ready for orders. As soon as
+possible they will then be assigned to their work.
+
+"This labor ought to be that of love, and the undersigned trusts and
+believes it will be so. Anyhow, it must be done.
+
+"The willing shall be properly credited; the unwilling promptly
+visited. The principle adopted is, Citizens for the labor, soldiers
+for the battle.
+
+"Third. The ferry-boats will cease plying the river after four
+o'clock, A.M., until further orders.
+
+"Martial law is hereby proclaimed in the three cities; but until they
+can be relieved by the military, the injunctions of this proclamation
+will be executed by the police.
+
+ "LEWIS WALLACE,
+ "Maj.-Gen'r'l Commanding."
+
+Could anything be bolder and more to the purpose? It placed Cincinnati
+under martial law. It totally suspended business, and sent every
+citizen, without distinction, to the ranks or into the trenches.
+"Citizens for labor, soldiers for battle," was the principle
+underlying the whole plan,--a motto by which he reached every
+able-bodied man in the metropolis, and united the energies of forty
+thousand people,--a motto original with himself, and for which he
+should have the credit.
+
+Imagine the astonishment that seized the city, when, in the morning,
+this bold proclamation was read,--a city unused to the din of war and
+its impediments. As yet there was no word of an advance of the enemy
+in the direction of Cincinnati. It was a question whether they would
+come or not. Thousands did not believe in the impending danger; yet
+the proclamation was obeyed to the letter, and this, too, when there
+was not a regiment to enforce it. The secret is easy of comprehension:
+it was the universal confidence reposed in the man who issued the
+order; and he was equally confident, not only in his own judgment, but
+in the people with whom he had to deal.
+
+"If the enemy should not come after all this fuss," said one of the
+General's friends, "you will be ruined."
+
+"Very well," he replied; "but they will come. And if they do not, it
+will be because this same fuss has caused them to think better of it."
+
+The ten days ensuing will be forever memorable in the annals of the
+city of Cincinnati. The cheerful alacrity with which the people rose
+_en masse_ to swell the ranks and crowd into the trenches was a sight
+worth seeing, and being seen could not readily be forgotten.
+
+Here were the representatives of all nations and classes. The sturdy
+German, the lithe and gay-hearted Irishman, went shoulder to shoulder
+in defence of their adopted country. The man of money, the man of law,
+the merchant, the artist, and the artisan swelled the lines hastening
+to the scene of action, armed either with musket, pick, or spade.
+Added to these was seen Dickson's long and dusky brigade of colored
+men, cheerfully wending their way to labor on the fortifications,
+evidently holding it their especial right to put whatever impediments
+they could in the northward path of those whom they considered their
+own peculiar foe. But the pleasantest and most picturesque sight of
+those remarkable days was the almost endless stream of sturdy men who
+rushed to the rescue from the rural districts of the State. These
+were known as the "Squirrel-Hunters." They came in files numbering
+thousands upon thousands, in all kinds of costumes, and armed with all
+kinds of fire-arms, but chiefly the deadly rifle, which they knew so
+well bow to use. Old men, middle-aged men, young men, and often mere
+boys, like the "minute-men" of the old Revolution, they left the
+plough in the furrow, the flail on the half-threshed sheaves, the
+unfinished iron upon the anvil,--in short, dropped all their peculiar
+avocations, and with their leathern pouches full of bullets and their
+ox-horns full of powder, poured into the city by every highway and
+by-way in such numbers that it seemed as if the whole State of Ohio
+were peopled only with hunters, and that the spirit of Daniel Boone
+stood upon the hills opposite the town beckoning them into Kentucky.
+The pontoon-bridge, which had been begun and completed between sundown
+and sundown, groaned day and night with the perpetual stream of
+life all setting southward. In three days there were ten miles of
+intrenchments lining the hills, making a semicircle from the river
+above the city to the banks of the river below; and these were thickly
+manned from end to end, and made terrible to the astonished enemy by
+black and frowning cannon. General Heath, with his twenty thousand
+Rebel veterans, flushed with their late success at Richmond, drew up
+before these formidable preparations, and deemed it prudent to take
+the matter into serious consideration before making the attack.
+
+Our men were eagerly awaiting their approach, thousands in rifle-pits
+and tens of thousands along the whole line of the fortifications,
+while our scouts and pickets were skirmishing with their outposts in
+the plains in front. Should the foe make a sudden dash and carry any
+point of our lines, it was thought by some that nothing would prevent
+them from entering Cincinnati.
+
+But for this also provision was made. The river about the city, above
+and below, was well protected by a flotilla of gun-boats improvised
+from the swarm of steamers which lay at the wharves. A storm of shot
+and shell, such as they had not dreamed of, would have played upon
+their advancing columns, while our regiments, pouring down from the
+fortifications, would have fallen upon their rear. The shrewd leaders
+of the Rebel army were probably kept well posted by traitors within
+our own lines in regard to the reception prepared for them, and,
+taking advantage of the darkness of night and the violence of a
+thunder-storm, made a hasty and ruinous retreat. Wallace was anxious
+to follow them, and was confident of success, but was overruled by
+those higher in authority.
+
+The address which he now published to the citizens of Cincinnati,
+Covington, and Newport was manly and well-deserved. He said,--
+
+
+"For the present, at least, the enemy has fallen back, and your cities
+are safe. It is the time for acknowledgments. I beg leave to make you
+mine. When I assumed command, there was nothing to defend you with,
+except a few half-finished works and some dismounted guns; yet I was
+confident. The energies of a great city are boundless; they have only
+to be aroused, united, and directed. You were appealed to. The answer
+will never be forgotten. Paris may have seen something like it in her
+revolutionary days, but the cities of America never did. Be proud that
+you have given them an example so splendid. The most commercial of
+people, you submitted to a total suspension of business, and without
+a murmur adopted my principle, 'Citizens for labor, soldiers for
+battle.' In coming times, strangers viewing the works on the hills of
+Newport and Covington will ask, 'Who built these intrenchments? You
+can answer, 'We built them.' If they ask, 'Who guarded them?' you
+can reply, 'We helped in thousands.' If they inquire the result, your
+answer will be, 'The enemy came and looked at them, and stole away in
+the night.' You have won much honor. Keep your organizations ready to
+win more. Hereafter be always prepared to defend yourselves.
+
+ "LEWIS WALLACE,
+ "Maj.-Gen'r'l."
+
+
+It can safely be claimed for our young General, that he was the moving
+spirit which inspired and directed the people, and thereby saved
+Cincinnati and the surrounding cities, and, in the very face of Heath
+and his victorious horde from Richmond, organized a new and formidable
+army. That the citizens fully indorsed this was well exemplified on
+the occasion of his leading back into the metropolis a number of her
+volunteer regiments when the danger was over. They lined the streets,
+crowded the doors and windows, and filled the air with shouts of
+applause, in honor of the great work he had done.
+
+
+In writing this notice of Wallace and the siege, we have had no
+intention to overlook the services of his co-laborers, especially
+those rendered to the West by the gallant Wright, who holds command
+of the department. The writer has attempted to give what came directly
+under his own observation, and what he believes to be the core of the
+matter, and consequently most interesting to the public.
+
+
+
+
+JANE AUSTEN.
+
+
+In the old Cathedral of Winchester stand the tombs of kings, with
+dates stretching back to William Rufus and Canute; here, too, are the
+marble effigies of queens and noble ladies, of crusaders and warriors,
+of priests and bishops. But our pilgrimage led us to a slab of black
+marble set into the pavement of the north aisle, and there, under the
+grand old arches, we read the name of Jane Austen. Many-colored as the
+light which streams through painted windows, came the memories which
+floated in our soul as we read the simple inscription: happy hours,
+gladdened by her genius, weary hours, soothed by her touch; the
+honored and the wise who first placed her volumes in our hand; the
+beloved ones who had lingered over her pages, the voices of our
+distant home, associated with every familiar story.
+
+The personal history of Jane Austen belongs to the close of the last
+and the beginning of the present century. Her father through forty
+years was rector of a parish in the South of England. Mr. Austen was
+a man of great taste in all literary matters; from him his daughter
+inherited many of her gifts. He probably guided her early education
+and influenced the direction of her genius. Her life was passed
+chiefly in the country. Bath, then a fashionable watering-place, with
+occasional glimpses of London, must have afforded all the intercourse
+which she held with what is called "the world." Her travels were
+limited to excursions in the vicinity of her father's residence.
+Those were days of post-chaises and sedan-chairs, when the rush of
+the locomotive was unknown. Steam, that genie of the vapor, was yet a
+little household elf, singing pleasant times by the evening fire, at
+quiet hearthstones; it has since expanded into a mighty giant, whose
+influences are no longer domestic. The circles of fashion are changed
+also. Those were the days of country-dances and India muslins; the
+beaux and belles of "the upper rooms" at Bath knew not the whirl of
+the waltz, nor the ceaseless involvements of "the German." Yet the
+measures of love and jealousy, of hope and fear, to which their hearts
+beat time, would be recognized to-night in every ballroom. Infinite
+sameness, infinite variety, are not more apparent in the outward than
+in the inward world, and the work of that writer will alone be lasting
+who recognizes and embodies this eternal law of the great Author.
+
+Jane Austen possessed in a remarkable degree this rare intuition. The
+following passage is found in Sir Walter Scott's journal, under date
+of the fourteenth of March, 1826:--"Read again, and for the third time
+at least, Miss Austen's finely written novel of 'Pride and Prejudice.'
+That young lady had a talent for describing the involvements and
+feelings and characters of ordinary life, which is to me the most
+wonderful I ever met with. The Big Bow-wow strain I can do myself
+like any now going; but the exquisite touch which renders ordinary
+commonplace things and characters interesting from truth of the
+description and the sentiment is denied to me." This is high praise,
+but it is something more when we recur to the time at which Sir Walter
+writes this paragraph. It is amid the dreary entries in his journal
+of 1826, many of which make our hearts ache and our eyes overflow. He
+read the pages of Jane Austen on the fourteenth of March, and on the
+fifteenth he writes, "This morning I leave 39 Castle Street for the
+last time." It was something to have written a book sought for by him
+at such a moment. Even at Malta, in December, 1831, when the pressure
+of disease, as well as of misfortune, was upon him, Sir Walter was
+often found with a volume of Miss Austen in his hand, and said to a
+friend, "There is a finishing-off in some of her scenes that is really
+quite above everybody else."
+
+Jane Austen's life-world presented such a limited experience that it
+is marvellous where she could have found the models from which she
+studied such a variety of forms. It is only another proof that the
+secret lies in the genius which seizes, not in the material which is
+seized. We have been told by one who knew her well, that Miss Austen
+never intentionally drew portraits from individuals, and avoided,
+if possible, all sketches that could be recognized. But she was so
+faithful to Nature, that many of her acquaintance, whose characters
+had never entered her mind, were much offended, and could not be
+persuaded that they or their friends had not been depicted in some
+of her less attractive personages: a feeling which we have frequently
+shared; for, as the touches of her pencil brought out the light
+and shades very quietly, we have been startled to recognize our own
+portrait come gradually out on the canvas, especially since we are not
+equal to the courage of Cromwell, who said, "Paint me as I am."
+
+In the "Autobiography of Sir Egerton Brydges" we find the following
+passage: it is characteristic of the man:--
+
+"I remember Jane Austen, the novelist, a little child. Her mother was
+a Miss Leigh, whose paternal grandmother was a sister of the first
+Duke of Chandos. Mr. Austen was of a Kentish family, of which several
+branches have been settled in the Weald, and some are still remaining
+there. When I knew Jane Austen, I never suspected she was an
+authoress; but my eyes told me that she was fair and handsome, slight
+and elegant, with cheeks a little too full. The last time, I think,
+I saw her was at Ramsgate, in 1803; perhaps she was then about
+twenty-seven years old. Even then I did not know that she was addicted
+to literary composition."
+
+We can readily suppose that the spheres of Jane Austen and Sir Egerton
+could not be very congenial; and it does not appear that he was ever
+tempted from the contemplation of his own performances, to read her
+"literary compositions." A letter from Robert Southey to Sir Egerton
+shows that the latter had not quite forgotten her. Southey writes,
+under the dale of Keswick, April, 1830:--
+
+"You mention Miss Austen; her novels are more true to Nature, and have
+(for my sympathies) passages of finer feeling than any others of
+this age. She was a person of whom I have heard so much, and think so
+highly, that I regret not having seen her, or ever had an opportunity
+of testifying to her the respect which I felt for her."
+
+A pleasant anecdote, told to us on good authority in England, is
+illustrative of Miss Austen's power over various minds. A party of
+distinguished literary men met at a country-seat; among them was
+Macaulay, and, we believe, Hallam; at all events, they were men of
+high reputation. While discussing the merits of various authors, it
+was proposed that each should write down the name of that work of
+fiction which had given him the greatest pleasure. Much surprise and
+amusement followed; for, on opening the slips of paper, _seven_ bore
+the name of "Mansfield Park,"--a coincidence of opinion most rare, and
+a tribute to an author unsurpassed.
+
+Had we been of that party at the English country-house, we should have
+written, "The _last_ novel by Miss Austen which we have read"; yet,
+forced to a selection, we should have named "Persuasion." But we
+withdraw our private preference, and, yielding to the decision of
+seven wise men, place "Mansfield Park" at the head of the list, and
+leave it there without further comment.
+
+"Persuasion" was her latest work, and bears the impress of a matured
+mind and perfected style. The language of Miss Austen is, in all her
+pages, drawn from the "wells of English undefiled." Concise and clear,
+simple and vigorous, no word can be omitted that she puts down,
+and none can be added to heighten the effect of her sentences. In
+"Persuasion" there are passages whose depth and tenderness, welling
+up from deep fountains of feeling, impress us with the conviction that
+the angel of sorrow or suffering had troubled the waters, yet had left
+in them a healing influence, which is felt rather than revealed. Of
+all the heroines we have known through a long and somewhat varied
+experience, there is not one whose life-companionship we should so
+desire to secure as that of Anne Elliot. Ah! could she also forgive
+our faults and bear with our weaknesses, while we were animated by
+her sweet and noble example, existence would be, under any aspect, a
+blessing. This felicity was reserved for Captain Wentworth. Happy man!
+In "Persuasion" we also find the subtle Mr. Elliot. Here, as with Mr.
+Crawford in "Mansfield Park," Miss Austen deals dexterously with the
+character of a man of the world, and uses a nicer discernment than is
+often found in the writings of women, even those who assume masculine
+names.
+
+"Emma" we know to have been a favorite with the author. "I have drawn
+a character full of faults," said she, "nevertheless I like her."
+In Emma's company we meet Mr. Knightley, Harriet Smith, and Frank
+Churchill. We sit beside good old Mr. Woodhouse, and please him by
+tasting his gruel. We walk through Highbury, we are patronized by Mrs.
+Elton, listen forbearingly to the indefatigable Miss Bates, and take
+an early walk to the post-office with Jane Fairfax. Once we found
+ourselves actually on "Box Hill," but it did not seem half so real as
+when we "explored" there with the party from Highbury.
+
+"Pride and Prejudice" is piquant In style and masterly in portraiture.
+We make perhaps too many disagreeable acquaintances to enjoy ourselves
+entirely; yet who would forego Mr. Collins, or forget Lady Catherine
+de Bourgh, though each in their way is more stupid and odious than any
+one but Miss Austen could induce us to endure. Mr. Darcy's character
+is ably given; a very difficult one to sustain under all the
+circumstances in which he is placed. It is no small tribute to the
+power of the author to concede that she has so managed the workings
+of his real nature as to make it possible, and even probable, that a
+high-born, high-bred Englishman of Mr. Darcy's stamp could become the
+son-in-law of Mrs. Bennet. The scene of Darcy's declaration of love
+to Elizabeth, at the Hunsford Parsonage, is one of the most remarkable
+passages in Miss Austen's writings, and, indeed, we remember nothing
+equal to it among the many writers of fiction who have endeavored to
+describe that culminating point of human destiny.
+
+"Northanger Abbey" is written in a fine vein of irony, called forth,
+in some degree, by the romantic school of Mrs. Radcliffe and her
+imitators. We doubt whether Miss Austen was not over-wise with regard
+to these romances. Though born after the Radcliffe era, we well
+remember shivering through the "Mysteries of Udolpho" with as quaking
+a heart as beat in the bosom of Catherine Morland. If Miss Austen was
+not equally impressed by the power of these romances, we rejoice
+that they were written, as with them we should have lost "Northanger
+Abbey." For ourselves, we spent one very rainy day in the streets of
+Bath, looking up every nook and corner familiar in the adventures
+of Catherine, and time, not faith, failed, for a visit to Northanger
+itself. Bath was also sanctified by the presence of Anne Elliot. Our
+inn, the "White Hart," (made classic by the adventures of various
+well-remembered characters,) was hallowed by exquisite memories
+which connected one of the rooms (we faithfully believed it was our
+apartment) with the conversation of Anne Elliot and Captain Harville,
+as they stood by the window, while Captain Wentworth listened and
+wrote. In vain did we gaze at the windows of Camden Place. No Anne
+Elliot appeared.
+
+"Sense and Sensibility" was the first novel published by Miss Austen.
+It is marked by her peculiar genius, though it may be wanting in the
+nicer finish which experience gave to her later writings.
+
+The Earl of Carlisle, when Lord Morpheth, wrote a poem for some now
+forgotten annual, entitled "The Lady and the Novel." The following
+lines occur among the verses:--
+
+ "Or is it thou, all-perfect Austen? here
+ Let one poor wreath adorn thy early bier,
+ That scarce allowed thy modest worth to claim
+ The living portion of thy honest fame:
+ Oh, Mrs. Bennet, Mrs. Morris, too,
+ While Memory survives, she'll dream of you;
+ And Mr. Woodhouse, with abstemious lip,
+ Must thin, but not too thin, the gruel sip;
+ Miss Bates, _our_ idol, though the village bore,
+ And Mrs. Elton, ardent to explore;
+ While the clear style flows on without pretence,
+ With unstained purity, and unmatched sense."
+
+If the Earl of Carlisle, in whose veins flows "the blood of all the
+Howards," is willing to acknowledge so many of our friends, who are
+anything but aristocratic, our republican soul shrinks not from the
+confession that we should like to accompany good-natured Mrs. Jennings
+in her hospitable carriage, (so useful to our young ladies of sense
+and sensibility,) witness the happiness of Elinor at the parsonage,
+and the reward of Colonel Brandon at the manor-house of Delaford, and
+share with Mrs. Jennings all the charms of the mulberry-tree and the
+yew arbor.
+
+An article on "Recent Novels," in "Fraser's Magazine" for
+December, 1847, written by Mr. G.H. Lewes, contains the following
+paragraphs:--"What we most heartily enjoy and applaud is truth in the
+delineations of life and character.... To make our meaning precise, we
+would say that Fielding and Miss Austen are the greatest novelists in
+our language.... We would rather have written 'Pride and Prejudice,'
+or 'Tom Jones,' than any of the 'Waverley Novels'.... Miss Austen has
+been called a prose Shakspeare,--and among others, by Macaulay. In
+spite of the sense of incongruity which besets us in the words _prose_
+Shakspeare, we confess the greatness of Miss Austen, her marvellous
+dramatic power, seems, more than anything in Scott, akin to
+Shakspeare."
+
+The conclusion of this article is devoted to a review of 'Jane Eyre,'
+and led to the correspondence between Miss Bronte and Mr. Lewes
+which will be found in the memoir of her life. In these letters it is
+apparent that Mr. Lewes wishes Miss Bronte to read and to enjoy Miss
+Austen's works, as he does himself. Mr. Lewes is disappointed, and
+felt, doubtless, what all true lovers of Jane Austen have experienced,
+a surprise to find how obtuse otherwise clever people sometimes
+are. In this instance, however, we think Mr. Lewes expected what was
+impossible. Charlotte Bronte could not harmonize with Jane Austen. The
+luminous and familiar star which comes forth into the quiet evening
+sky when the sun sets amid the amber light of an autumn evening, and
+the comet which started into sight, unheralded and unnamed, and flamed
+across the midnight sky, have no affinity, except in the Divine Mind,
+whence both originate.
+
+The notice of Miss Austen, by Macaulay, to which Mr. Lewes alludes,
+must be, we presume, the passage which occurs in Macaulay's article on
+Madame D'Arblay, in the "Edinburgh Review," for January, 1843. We do
+not find the phrase, "prose Shakspeare," but the meaning is the same;
+we give the passage as it stands before us:--
+
+"Shakspeare has neither equal nor second; but among writers who, in
+the point we have noticed, have approached nearest the manner of the
+great master, we have no hesitation in placing Jane Austen, as a
+woman of whom England is justly proud. She has given us a multitude of
+characters, all, in a certain sense, commonplace, all such as we meet
+every day. Yet they are all as perfectly discriminated from each other
+as if they were the most eccentric of human beings. There are, for
+example, four clergymen, none of whom we should be surprised to
+find in any parsonage in the kingdom,--Mr. Edward Ferrars, Mr. Henry
+Tilney, Mr. Edward Bertram, and Mr. Elton. They are all specimens
+of the upper part of the middle class. They have been all liberally
+educated. They all lie under the restraints of the same sacred
+profession. They are all young. They are all in love. Not any one of
+them has any hobby-horse, to use the phrase of Sterne. Not one has any
+ruling passion, such as we read in Pope. Who would not have expected
+them to be insipid likenesses of each other? No such thing. Harpagon
+is not more unlike Jourdain, Joseph Surface is not more unlike Sir
+Lucius O'Trigger, than every one of Miss Austen's young divines to
+all his reverend brethren. And almost all this is done by touches
+so delicate that they elude analysis, that they defy the powers of
+description, and that we know them to exist only by the general effect
+to which they have contributed."
+
+Dr. Whately, the Archbishop of Dublin, in the "Quarterly Review,"
+1821, sums up his estimate of Miss Austen with these words: "The
+Eastern monarch who proclaimed a reward to him who should discover a
+new pleasure would have deserved well of mankind, had he stipulated
+it should be blameless. Those again who delight in the study of human
+nature may improve in the knowledge of it, and in the profitable
+application of that knowledge, by the perusal of such fictions. Miss
+Austen introduces very little of what is technically called religion
+into her books, yet that must be a blinded soul which does not
+recognize the vital essence, everywhere present in her pages, of a
+deep and enlightened piety.
+
+There are but few descriptions of scenery in her novels. The figures
+of the piece are her care; and if she draws in a tree, a hill, or a
+manor-house, it is always in the background. This fact did not arise
+from any want of appreciation for the glories or the beauties of the
+outward creation, for we know that the pencil was as often in her hand
+as the pen. It was that unity of purpose, ever present to her mind,
+which never allowed her to swerve from the actual into the ideal, nor
+even to yield to tempting descriptions of Nature which might be near,
+and yet aside from the main object of her narrative. Her creations
+are living people, not masks behind which the author soliloquizes
+or lectures. These novels are impersonal; Miss Austen never herself
+appears; and if she ever had a lover, we cannot decide whom he
+resembled among the many masculine portraits she has drawn.
+
+Very much has been said in her praise, and we, in this brief article,
+have summoned together witnesses to the extent of her powers, which
+are fit and not few. Yet we are aware that to a class of readers Miss
+Austen's novels must ever remain sealed books. So be it. While the
+English language is read, the world will always be provided with souls
+who can enjoy the rare excellence of that rich legacy left to them by
+her genius.
+
+Once in our lifetime we spent three delicious days in the Isle of
+Wight, and then crossed the water to Portsmouth. After taking a turn
+on the ramparts in memory of Fanny Price, and looking upon the harbor
+whence the Thrush went out, we drove over Portsdown Hill to visit the
+surviving member of that household which called Jane Austen their own.
+
+We had been preceded by a letter, introducing us to Admiral Austen as
+fervent admirers of his sister's genius, and were received by him with
+a gentle courtesy most winning to our heart.
+
+In the finely-cut features of the brother, who retained at eighty
+years of age much of the early beauty of his youth, we fancied we must
+see a resemblance to his sister, of whom there exists no portrait.
+
+It was delightful to us to hear him speak of "Jane," and to be brought
+so near the actual in her daily life. Of his sister's fame as a writer
+the Admiral spoke understandingly, but reservedly.
+
+We found the old Admiral safely moored in that most delightful of
+havens, a quiet English country-home, with the beauty of Nature around
+the mansion, and the beauty of domestic love and happiness beneath its
+hospitable roof.
+
+There we spent a summer day, and the passing hours seemed like the
+pages over which we had often lingered, written by her hand whose
+influence had guided us to those she loved. That day, with all its
+associations, has become a sacred memory, and links us to the sphere
+where dwells that soul whose gift of genius has rendered immortal the
+name of Jane Austen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PROCLAMATION.
+
+
+ "I order and declare that all persons held as slaves in the
+ said designated States and parts of States are and hereafter
+ shall be free,... and I hereby enjoin upon the people so
+ declared to be free to abstain from all violence, unless in
+ necessary self-defence."
+
+ ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
+
+ Saint Patrick, slave to Milcho of the herds
+ Of Ballymena, sleeping, heard these words:
+ "Arise, and flee
+ Out from the land of bondage, and be free!"
+
+ Glad as a soul in pain, who hears from heaven
+ The angels singing of his sins forgiven,
+ And, wondering, sees
+ His prison opening to their golden keys,
+
+ He rose a man who laid him down a slave,
+ Shook from his locks the ashes of the grave,
+ And outward trod
+ Into the glorious liberty of God.
+
+ He cast the symbols of his shame away;
+ And passing where the sleeping Milcho lay,
+ Though back and limb
+ Smarted with wrong, he prayed, "God pardon him!"
+
+ So went he forth: but in God's time he came
+ To light on Uilline's hills a holy flame;
+ And, dying, gave
+ The land a saint that lost him as a slave.
+
+ O dark, sad millions, patiently and dumb
+ Waiting for God, your hour, at last, has come,
+ And freedom's song
+ Breaks the long silence of your night of wrong!
+
+ Arise and flee! shake off the vile restraint
+ Of ages! but, like Ballymena's saint,
+ The oppressor spare,
+ Heap only on his head the coals of prayer!
+
+ Go forth, like him! like him, return again,
+ To bless the land whereon in bitter pain
+ Ye toiled at first,
+ And heal with freedom what your slavery cursed!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE LAW OF COSTS.
+
+
+Our nation is now paying the price, not only of its vice, but also
+of its virtue,--not alone of its evil doing, but of its noble and
+admirable doing as well. It has of late been a customary cry with
+a certain class, that those who cherish freedom and advocate social
+justice are the proper authors of the present war. No doubt there
+is in this allegation an ungracious kind of truth; that is, had the
+nation been destitute of a political faith and of moral feeling, there
+would have been no contest. But were one lying ill of yellow-fever
+or small-pox, there would be the same sort of lying truth in the
+statement, that the _life_ in him, which alone resists the disease, is
+really its cause; since to yellow-fever, or to any malady, dead bodies
+are not subject. There is no preventive of disease so effectual as
+death itself,--no place so impregnable to pestilence as the grave. So,
+had the vitality gone out of the nation's heart, had that lamp of love
+for freedom and justice and of homage to the being of man, which once
+burned in its bosom so brightly, already sunk into death-flicker and
+extinction, then in the sordid and icy dark that would remain there
+could be no war of like nature with this that to-day gives the land
+its woful baptism of blood and tears. Oh, no! there would have been
+peace--_and_ putrefaction: peace, but without its sweetness, and
+death, but without its hopes.
+
+In one important sense, however, this war--hateful and horrible though
+it be--is the price which the nation must pay for its ideas and its
+magnanimity. If you take a clear initial step toward any great end,
+you thereby assume as a debt to destiny the pursuit and completion of
+your action; and should you fail to meet this debt, it will not fail
+to meet you, though now in the shape of retribution and with a biting
+edge. The seaman who has signed shipping-papers owes a voyage, and
+must either sail or suffer. The nation which has recognized absolute
+rights of man, and in their name assumed to shed blood, has taken
+upon itself the burden of a high destination, and must bear it, if
+not willingly, reluctantly, if not in joy and honor, then in shame and
+weeping.
+
+Our nation, by the early nobility of its faith and action, assumed
+such a debt to destiny, and now must pay it. It needed not to come in
+this shape: there need have been no horror of carnage,--no feast of
+vultures, and carnival of fiends,--no weeping of Rachel, mourning
+for her children, and refusing to be comforted, because they are not.
+There was required only a magnanimity in proceeding to sustain that of
+our beginning,--only a sympathy broad enough to take our little planet
+and all her human tribes in its arms, deep enough to go beneath
+the skin in which men differ, to the heart's blood in which they
+agree,--only pains and patience, faith and forbearance,--only a
+national obedience to that profound precept of Christianity which
+prescribes service to him that would be greatest, making the knowledge
+of the wise due to the ignorant, and the strength of the strong due
+to the weak. The costs of freedom would have been paid in the patient
+lifting up of a degraded race from the slough of servitude; and the
+nation would at the same time have avoided that slough of lava and
+fire wherein it is now ingulfed.
+
+It was not to be so. History is coarse; it gets on by gross feeding
+and fevers, not by delicacy of temperance and wisdom of regimen. Our
+debt was to be paid, not in a pure form, but mixed with the costs of
+unbelief, cowardice, avarice. Yet primarily it is the cost, not of
+meanness, but of magnanimity, that we are now paying,--not of a base
+skepticism, but of a noble faith. For, in truth, normal qualities and
+actions involve costs no less than vicious and abnormal. Such is the
+law of the world; and it is this law of the costs of worthiness, of
+knowledge and nobility, of all memorable being and doing, that I now
+desire to set forth. Having obtained the scope and power of the law,
+having considered it also as applying to individuals, we may proceed
+to exhibit its bearing upon the present struggle of our Republic.
+
+The general statement is this,--that whatever has a worth has also
+a cost. "The law of the universe," says a wise thinker, "is, Pay and
+take." If you desire silks of the mercer or supplies at the grocery,
+you, of course, pay money. Is it a harvest from the field that
+you seek? Tillage must be paid. Would you have the river toil in
+production of cloths for your raiment? Only pay the due modicum of
+knowledge, labor, and skill, and you shall bind its hand to your
+water-wheels, and turn all its prone strength into pliant service. Or
+perhaps you wish the comforts of a household. By payment of the
+due bearing of its burdens, you may hope to obtain it,--surely not
+otherwise. Do you ask that this house may be a true home, a treasury
+for wealth of the heart, a little heaven? Once more the word
+is _pay_,--pay your own heart's unselfish love, pay a generous
+trustfulness, a pure sympathy, a tender consideration, and a sweet
+firm-heartedness withal. And so, wherever there is a gaining, there
+is a warning,--wherever a well-being, a well-doing,--wherever a
+preciousness, a price of possession; and he who scants the payment
+stints the purchase; and he that will proffer nothing shall profit
+nothing; but he that freely and wisely gives shall receive as freely.
+
+But these _desiderata_ which I have named are all prices either of
+ordinary use, of comfort, or felicity; and it is generally understood
+that happiness is costly: but virtue? Virtue, so far from costing
+anything, is often supposed to be itself a price that you pay for
+happiness. It is told us that we shall be rewarded for our virtue;
+what moralistic commonplace is more common than this? But rewarded
+for your virtue you are not to be; you are to pay for it; at least,
+payment made, rather than received, is the principal fact. He who
+is honest for reward is a knave without reward. He who asks pay for
+telling truth has truth only on his tongue and a double lie in his
+heart. Do you think that the true artist strives to paint well that he
+may get money for his work? Or rather, is not his desire to pay money,
+to pay anything in reason, for the sake of excellence in his art? And,
+indeed, what is worthier than Worth? What fitter, therefore, to be
+paid for? And that payment is made, even under penal forms, every one
+may see. For what did Raleigh give his lofty head? For the privilege
+of being Raleigh, of being a man of great heart and a statesman of
+great mind, with a King James, a burlesque of all sovereignty, on the
+throne. For what did Socrates quaff the poison? For the privilege of
+that divine sincerity and penetration which characterized his life.
+For what did Kepler endure the last straits of poverty, his children
+crying for bread, while his own heart was pierced with their wailing?
+For the privilege--in his own noble words--"of reading God's thoughts
+after Him,"--God's thoughts written in stellar signs on the scroll of
+the skies. And Cicero and Thomas Cromwell, John Huss and John Knox,
+John Rogers and John Brown, and many another, high and low, famed and
+forgotten, must they not all make, as it were, penal payment for the
+privilege of being true men, truest among true? And again I say, that,
+if one knows something worthier than Worth, something more excellent
+than Excellence, then only does he know something fitter than they to
+be paid for.
+
+Payment _may_ assume a penal form: do not think this its only form.
+And to take the law at once out of the limitations which these
+examples suggest, let me show you that it is a law of healthy and
+unlamenting Nature. Look at the scale of existence, and you will see
+that for every step of advance in that scale payment is required.
+The animal is higher than the vegetable; the animal, accordingly, is
+subject to the sense of pain, the vegetable not; and among animals the
+pain may be keener as the organization is nobler. The susceptibility
+not only to pain, but to vital injury, observes the same gradation.
+A little girdling kills an oak; but some low fungus may be cut and
+troubled and trampled _ad libitum_, and it will not perish; and along
+the shores, farmers year after year pluck sea-weed from the rocks,
+and year after year it springs again lively as ever. Among the lowest
+orders of animals you shall find a creature that, if you cut it in
+two, straightway duplicates its existence and floats away twice as
+happy as before; but of the prick of a bodkin or the sting of a bee
+the noblest of men may die.
+
+In the animal body the organs make a draft from the general vigors
+of the system just in proportion to their dignity. The eye,--what
+an expensive boarder at the gastric tables is that! Considerable
+provinces of the brain have to be made over to its exclusive use;
+and it will be remembered that a single ounce of delicate, sensitive
+brain, full of mysterious and marvellous powers, requires more vital
+support than many pounds of common muscle. The powers of the eye are
+great; it has a right to cost much, and it does cost. Also we observe
+that in this organ there is the exceeding susceptibility to injury,
+which, as we have observed, invariably accompanies powers of a lofty
+grade.
+
+Noble senses cost much; noble susceptibilities cost vastly more.
+Compare oxen with men in respect to the amount of feeling and nervous
+wear and tear which they severally experience. The ox enjoys grass and
+sleep; he feels hunger and weariness, and he is wounded by that which
+goes through his hide. But upon the nerve of the man what an incessant
+thousandfold play! Out of the eyes of the passers-by pleasures and
+pains are rained upon him; a word, a look, a tone thrills his every
+fibre; the touch of a hand warms or chills the very marrow in his
+bones. Anticipation and memory, hope and regret, love and hate,
+ideal joy and sorrow and shame, ah, what troops of visitants are
+ever present with his soul, each and all, whether welcome guests or
+unwelcome, to be nourished from the resources of his bosom! And out of
+this high sensibility of man must come what innumerable stabs of quick
+agony, what slow, gasping hours of grief and pain, that to the cattle
+upon the hills are utterly unknown! But do you envy the ox his bovine
+peace? It is precisely that which makes him an ox, It is due to
+nothing but his insensibility,--by no means, as I take occasion to
+assure those poets who laud outward Nature and inferior creatures
+to the disparagement of man,--by no means due to composure and
+philosophy. The ox is no great hero, after all, for he will bellow at
+a thousandth part the sense of pain which from a Spartan child wrings
+no tear nor cry.
+
+Yes, it is precisely this sensibility which makes man human. Were he
+incapable of ideal joy and sorrow, he, too, were brute. It is through
+this delicacy of conscious relationship, it is through this openness
+to the finest impressions, that he can become an organ of supernal
+intelligence, that he is capable of social and celestial inspirations.
+High spiritual sensibility is the central condition of a noble and
+admirable life; it is the hinge on which turn and open to man the
+gates of his highest glory and purest peace. Yet for this he must pay
+away all that induration of brutes and boors which sheds off so many
+a wasting excitement and stinging chagrin, as the feathers of the
+water-fowl shed rain.
+
+In entering, therefore, upon any noble course of life, any generous
+and brave pursuit of excellence, understand, that, so far as ordinary
+coin is concerned, you are rather to pay, than to be paid, for your
+superiorities. Understand that the pursuit of excellence must indeed
+be brave to be prosperous,--that is, it is always in some way opposed
+and imperilled. Understand, that, with every step of spiritual
+elevation which you attain, some part of your audience and
+companionship will be left behind. Understand, that, if you carry
+lofty principles and philosophic intelligence into camps, these
+possessions will in general not be passed to your credit, but will be
+charged against you; and you must surpass your inferiors in their
+own kinds of virtue to regain what of popular regard these cost you.
+Understand, that, if you have a reverence for theoretical and absolute
+truth, less of common fortune will come to you in answer to equal
+business and professional ability than to those who do care for money,
+and do not care for truth. Are you a physician? Let me tell you that
+there is a possible excellence in your profession which will rather
+limit than increase your practice; yet that very excellence you must
+strive to attain, for your soul's life is concerned in your doing so.
+Are you a lawyer? Know that there is a depth and delicacy in the sense
+of justice, which will sometimes send clients from your office, and
+sometimes tie your tongue at the bar; yet, as you would preserve the
+majesty of your manhood, strive just for that unprofitable sense of
+justice,--unprofitable only because infinitely, rather than finitely,
+profitable. In a stormy and critical time, when much is ending
+and much beginning, and a great land is heaving and quivering with
+commingled agonies of dissolution and throes of new birth, are you a
+statesman of earnestness and insight, with your eye on the cardinal
+question of your epoch, its answer clearly in your heart, and your
+will irrevocably set to give it due enunciation and emphasis? Expect
+calumny and affected contempt from the base; expect alienation
+and misconstruction and undervaluing on the part of some who are
+honorable. Are you a woman rich in high aims, in noble sympathies and
+thrilling sensibilities, and, as must ever be the case with such, not
+too rich in a meet companionship? Expect loneliness, and wear it as
+a grace upon your brow; it is your laurel. Are you a true artist or
+thinker? Expect to go beyond popular appreciation; _go_ beyond it,
+or the highest appreciation you will not deserve. In fine, for all
+excellence expect and _seek_ to pay.
+
+No one ever held this law more steadily in view than Jesus; and when
+ardent young people came to him proposing pupilage, he was wont at
+once to bring it before their eyes. It was on such an occasion that he
+uttered the words, so simple and intense that they thrill to the touch
+like the string of a harp, "The foxes have holes, and the birds of the
+air have nests; but the Son of Man hath not where to lay his head."
+Of like suggestion his question of the king going to war, who first
+sitteth down and consulteth whether he be able, and of the man about
+to build a house, who begins by counting the cost.
+
+The cost,--question of this must arise; question of this must on all
+sides either be honestly met or dishonestly eluded. For observe, that
+attempt to escape payment for the purest values, no less than for
+the grossest, _is_ dishonest. If one seek to compass possession of
+ordinary goods without compensation, we at once apply the opprobrious
+term of _theft_ or _fraud_. Why does the same sort of attempt cease to
+be fraudulent when it is carried up to a higher degree and applied to
+possessions more precious? If he that evades the revenue law of the
+State be guilty of fraud, what of him who would import Nature's
+goods and pay no duties? For Nature has her own system of impost, and
+permits no smuggling. There was a tax on truth ere there was one on
+tea or on silver plate. Character, genius, high parts in history are
+all assessed upon. Nature lets out her houses and lands on liberal
+terms; but resorts to distraint, if her dues be not forthcoming. Be
+sure, therefore, that little success and little honor will wait upon
+any would-be thieving from God. He who attempts to purloin on this
+high scale has set all the wit of the universe at work to thwart him,
+and will certainly be worsted sorely in the end.
+
+The moment, therefore, that any man is found engaged in this business,
+how to estimate him is clear. Daniel O'Connell tried the experiment of
+being an heroic patriot and making money by it. It is conceded by
+his friends that he applied to his private uses, to sustaining the
+magnificence of his household, the rent-moneys sweated from the
+foreheads of Irish peasants. But, they say, he had sacrificed many
+ambitions in taking up the _role_ of a patriot; and he felt entitled
+to revenues as liberal as any indulgence of them could have procured
+him! The apology puts his case beyond all apology. He who--to employ
+the old phraseology--seeks to exact the same bribe of God that he
+might have obtained from the Devil is always the Devil's servant, no
+matter whose livery he wears. Had one often to apply the good word
+_patriot_ to such men, it would soon blister his mouth. I find, in
+fact, no vice so bad as this spurious virtue, no sinners so unsavory
+as these mock saints.
+
+To nations, also, this comprehensive law applies. Would you have
+a noble and orderly freedom? Buy it, and it is yours. "Liberty or
+death," cried eloquent Henry; and the speech is recited as bold and
+peculiar; but, by an enduring ordinance of Nature, the people that
+does not in its heart of hearts say, "Liberty or death," cannot have
+liberty. Many of us had learned to fancy that the stern tenure by
+which ancient communities held their civilization was now become an
+obsolete fact, and that without peril or sacrifice we might forever
+appropriate all that blesses nations; but by the iron throat of this
+war Providence is thundering down upon us the unalterable law, that
+man shall hold no ideal possession longer than he places all his lower
+treasures at its command.
+
+But there was a special form of cost, invited by the virtue of our
+national existence; and it is this in particular that we are now
+paying,--paying it, I am sorry to say, in the form of retribution
+because the nation declined to meet it otherwise. But the peculiarity
+of the case is, as has been affirmed, that it was chiefly the virtue
+and nobility of the nation which created this debt at the outset.
+
+And now what is the peculiar virtue and glory of this nation? Why,
+that its national existence is based upon a recognition of the
+absolute rights and duties of humanity. Theoretically this is our
+basis; practically there is a commixture; much of this cosmopolitan
+faith is mingled with much of confined self-regard. But the
+theoretical fact is the one here in point: since the question now
+is not of the national _un_faith or infidelity, but of the national
+faith. And beyond a question, the real faith of the nation, so far as
+it has one, is represented by its formal declaration, made sacred by
+the shedding of blood. Our belief really is not in the special
+right or privilege of Americans, but in the prerogative of man.
+This prerogative we may have succeeded well or ill in stating and
+interpreting; the fact, that our appeal is to this, alone concerns us
+here.
+
+Now this national attitude, so far as history informs me, is
+unprecedented. The true-born son of Albion, save as an exceptional
+culture enlarges his soul, believes religiously that God is an
+Englishman, and that the interests of England precede those of the
+universe. When, therefore, he sees anything done which depletes the
+pocket of England, it affects him with a sense of infidelity in those
+to whom this loss is due. England professes to have a _national_
+religion; she has, and in a deeper sense than is commonly meant.
+
+We will not disparage England overmuch; she has done good service in
+history. We will not boast of ourselves; the actual politics of this
+country have been, in no small part, base and infidel to a degree
+that is simply sickening. Nevertheless, it remains true that the
+fundamental idea of the State here represents a new phase of human
+history. Every European nationality had taken shape and character
+while yet our globe was not known to be a globe, while before the eyes
+of all lookers land and sea faded away into darkness and mystery; and
+it was not possible that common human sympathy should take into its
+arms a world of which it could not conceive. But a national spirit
+was here generated when the ocean had been crossed, when the earth had
+been rounded, when, too, Newton had, as it were, circumnavigated the
+solar system,--when, therefore, there could be, and must be, a new
+recognition of humanity. Our country, again, was peopled from the
+minorities of Europe, from those whom the spirit of the new time
+had touched, and taken away their content with old institutions,--a
+population restless, uncertain, yeasty, chaotic, it might be, full of
+the rawness of new conditions, mean and magnanimous by turns, as such
+people are wont, but all leavened more or less with a sentiment new in
+history,--all leavened with a kind of whole-world feeling, a sense
+of the oneness of humanity, and, as derived from this, a sense of
+absolute rights of man, of prerogatives belonging to human nature as
+such.
+
+The truth of all this has been brought under suspicion by the
+flatulent oratory of our Fourth-of-Julys; but truth it remains. Our
+nation did enunciate a grand idea never equally felt by any other. Our
+nation has said, and said with the sword in its right hand, "Every man
+born into this world has the right from God to make the most and best
+of his existence, and society is established only to further and guard
+this sacred right." We thus established a new scale of justice; we
+raised a demand for the individual which had not been so made before.
+Freedom and order were made one; both were identified with justice,
+simple, broad, equal, universal justice. The American idea, then, what
+is it? _The identification of politics with justice_, this it is. With
+justice, and this, too, not on a scale of conventional usage, but
+on the scale of natural right. That, as I read, is the American
+idea,--making politics moral by their unity with natural justice,
+justice world-old and world-wide.
+
+This conception--obscurely seen and felt, and mixed with the
+inevitable amount of folly and self-seeking, yet, after, all,
+this conception--our nation dared to stand up and announce, and to
+consecrate it by the shedding of blood, calling God and all good men
+to witness. The deed was grand; the hearts of men everywhere were more
+or less its accomplices; all the tides of history ran in its favor;
+kings, forgetting themselves into virtue and generosity, lent it
+good wishes or even good arms; it was successful; and on its primary
+success waited such prosperities as the world has seldom seen.
+
+But, because the deed was noble, great costs must needs attend it,
+attend it long. And first of all the cost of _applying our principle
+within our own borders_. For, when a place had been obtained for us
+among nations, we looked down, and, lo! at our feet the African--in
+chains. A benighted and submissive race, down-trodden and despised
+from of old, a race of outcasts, of Pariahs, covered with the shame of
+servitude, and held by the claim of that terrible talisman, the
+word _property_,--here it crouched at our feet, lifting its hands,
+imploring. Yes, America, here is your task now; never flinch nor
+hesitate, never begin to question now; thrust your right hand deep
+into your heart's treasury, bring forth its costliest, purest justice,
+and lay its immeasurable bounty into this sable palm, bind its
+blessing on this degraded brow. Ah, but America did falter and
+question. "How can I?" it said. "This is a Negro, a _Negro_! Besides,
+he is PROPERTY!" And so America looked up, determined to ignore
+the kneeling form. With pious blasphemy it said, "He is here
+providentially; God in His own good time will dispose of him"; as
+if God's hour for a good effect were not the earliest hour at
+which courage and labor can bring it about, not the latest to which
+indolence and infidelity can postpone it. Then it looked away across
+oceans to other continents, and began again the chant, "Man is man;
+natural right is sacred forever; and of politics the sole basis is
+universal justice." Joyfully it sang for a while, but soon there began
+to come up the clank of chains mingling with its chant, and the groans
+of oppressed men and violated women, and prayers to Heaven for another
+justice than this; and then the words of its chant grew bitter in the
+mouth of our nation, and a sickness came in its heart, and an evil
+blush mounted and stood on its brow; and at length a devil spoke in
+its bosom and said, "The negro has no rights that a white man is bound
+to respect"; and ere the words were fairly uttered, their meaning, as
+was indeed inevitable, changed to this,--"A Northern 'mudsill' has no
+rights that a Southern gentleman is bound to respect"; and soon guns
+were heard booming about Sumter, and a new chapter in our history and
+in the world's history began.
+
+Our nation refused allegiance to its own principles, refused to pay
+the lawful costs of its virtue and nobility; therefore it is sued in
+the courts of destiny, and the case is this day on trial.
+
+The case is plain, the logic clear. Natural right is sacred, or it is
+not. If it is, the negro is lawfully free; if it is not, you may be
+lawfully a slave. Just how all this stands in the Constitution of the
+United States I do not presume to say. Other heads, whose business it
+is, must attend to that. Every man to his vocation. I speak from the
+stand-point of philosophy, not of politics; I attend to the logic of
+history, the logic of destiny, according to which, of course, final
+judgment will be rendered. It is not exactly to be supposed that
+the statute of any nation makes grass green, or establishes the
+relationship between cause and effect. The laws of the world are
+considerably older than our calendar, and therefore date yet more
+considerably beyond the year 1789. And by the laws of the world, by
+the eternal relationship between cause and effect, it stands enacted
+beyond repeal, and graven upon somewhat more durable than marble or
+brass, that the destiny of this nation for more than one century to
+come hinges upon its justice to that outcast race,--outcast, but not
+henceforth to be cast out by us, save to the utter casting down of
+ourselves. Once it might have been otherwise; now we have made it
+so. Justice to the African is salvation to the white man upon this
+continent. Oh, my America, you must not, cannot, shall not be blind
+to this fact! America, deeper in my love and higher in my esteem than
+ever before, newly illustrated in worth, newly proven to be capable
+still, in some directions, of exceeding magnanimity, open your eyes
+that your feet may have guidance, now when there is such need! Open
+your eyes to see, that, if you deliberately deny justice and human
+recognition to one innocent soul in all your borders, you stab at your
+own existence; for, in violating the unity of humanity, you break the
+principle that makes you a nation and alive. Give justice to black
+and white, recognize man as man; or the constituting idea, the vital
+faith, the crystallizing principle of the nation perishes, and the
+whole disintegrates, falls into dust.
+
+I invite the attention of conservative men to the fact that in this
+due paying of costs lies the true conservation. I invite them to
+observe, that, as every living body has a principle which makes it
+alive, makes it a unit, harmonizing the action of its members,--as
+every crystal has a unitary law, which commands the arrangement of its
+particles, the number and arrangement of its faces and angles,--so
+it is with every orderly or living state. To this also there is a
+central, clarifying, unifying faith. Without this you may collect
+hordes into the brief, brutal empire of a Chingis Khan or Tamerlane;
+but you can have no firm, free, orderly, inspiring national life.
+
+Whenever and wherever in history this central condition of national
+existence has been destroyed, there a nation has fallen into chaos,
+into imbecility, losing all power to produce genius, to generate able
+souls, to sustain the trust of men in each other, or to support any of
+the conditions of social health and order. Even advances in the right
+line of progress have to be made slowly, gradually, lest the shock of
+newness be too great, and break off a people from the traditions in
+which its faith is embodied; but a mere recoil, a mere denial and
+destruction of its centralizing principle, is the last and utmost
+calamity which can befall any nation.
+
+This is no fine-spun doctrine, fit for parlors and lecture-rooms, but
+not for counting-rooms and congressional halls. It is solid, durable
+fact. History is full of it; and he is a mere mole, and blinder than
+midnight, who cannot perceive it. The spectacle of nations falling
+into sudden, chronic, careless imbecility is frequent and glaring
+enough for even wilfulness to see; and the central secret of this
+sad phenomenon, so I am _sure_, has been suggested here. When the
+socializing faith of a nation has perished, the alternative for
+it becomes this, that it can be stable only as it is stagnant, and
+vigorous only as it is lawless.
+
+Of this I am sure; but whether Bullion Street can be willing to
+understand it I am not so sure. Yet if it cannot, or some one in its
+behalf, grass will grow there. And why should it refuse heed? Who is
+more concerned? Does Bullion Street desire chaos? Does it wish that
+the pith should be taken out of every statute, and the chief value
+from every piece of property? If not, its course is clear. This nation
+has a vital faith,--or had one,--well grounded in its traditions.
+Conserve this; or, if it has been impaired, renew its vigor. This
+faith is our one sole pledge of order, of peace, of growth, of all
+that we prize in the present, or hope for the future. That it is
+a noble faith, new in its breadth, its comprehension and
+magnanimity,--this would seem in my eyes rather to enhance than
+diminish the importance of its conservation. Yet the only argument
+against it is, that it is generous, broad, inspiring; and the only
+appeal in opposition to it must be made to the coldness of skepticism,
+the suicidal miserliness of egotism, or the folly and fatuity of
+ignorance.
+
+Our nation has a political faith. Will you, conservative men, conserve
+this, and so regain and multiply the blessing it has already brought?
+or will you destroy it, and wait till, through at least a century
+of tossing and tumult, another, and that of less value, is grown? A
+faith, a crystallizing principle for many millions of people is not
+grown in a day; if it can be grown in a century is problematical. The
+fact, and the choice, are before you.
+
+Our nation _had_ a faith which it cherished with sincerity and
+sureness. If half the nation has fallen away from this,--if half the
+remaining moiety is doubtful, skeptical about it,--if, therefore,
+we are already a house divided against itself and tottering to its
+fall,--to what is all due? Simply to the fact that no nation can long
+unsay its central principle, and yet preserve it in faithfulness and
+power,--that no nation can long preach the sanctity of natural right,
+the venerableness of man's nature, and the identity of pure justice
+with political interest, from an auction-block on which men and
+maidens are sold,--that, in fine, a nation cannot continue long with
+impunity to play within its own borders the part both of Gessler and
+Tell, both of Washington and Benedict Arnold, both of Christ and of
+him that betrayed him.
+
+We must choose. For our national faith we must make honest payment,
+so conserving it, and with it all for which nations may hope; or else,
+refusing to meet these costs, we must suffer the nation's soul to
+perish, and in the imbecility, the chaos, and shame that will follow,
+suffer therewith all that nations may lawfully fear.
+
+What good omens, then, attend our time, now when the first officer of
+the land has put the trumpet to his mouth and blown round the world an
+intimation that, to the extent of the nation's power, these costs will
+begin to be paid, this true conservation to be practised! The work
+is not yet done; and the late elections betoken too much of moral
+debility in the people. But my trust continues firm. The work will be
+done,--at least, so far as we are responsible for its doing. And then!
+Then our shame, our misery, our deadly sickness will be taken away;
+no more that poison in our politics; no more that degradation in our
+commercial relations; no more that careful toning down of sentiment
+to low levels, that it may harmonize with low conditions; no more that
+need to shun the company of all healthful and heroic thoughts, such
+as are fit, indeed, to brace the sinews of a sincere social order, but
+sure to crack the sinews of a feeble and faithless conventionalism.
+Base men there will yet be, and therefore base politics; but when once
+our nation has paid the debt it owes to itself and the human race,
+when once it has got out of its blood the venom of this great
+injustice, it will, it must, arise beautiful in its young strength,
+noble in its new-consecrated faith, and stride away with a generous
+and achieving pace upon the great highways of historical progress.
+Other costs will come, if we are worthy; other lessons there will be
+to learn. I anticipate a place for brave and wise restrictions,--for
+I am no Red Republican,--as well as for brave and generous expansions.
+Lessons to learn, errors to unlearn, there will surely be; tasks to
+attempt, and disciplines to practise; but once place the nation in the
+condition of _health_, once get it at one with its own heart, once get
+it out of these aimless eddies into clear sea, out of these accursed
+"doldrums," (as the sailors phrase it,) this commixture of broiling
+calm and sky-bursting thunder-gust, into the great trade-winds of
+natural tendency that are so near at hand,--and I can trust it to meet
+all future emergency. All the freshest blood of the world is flowing
+hither: we have but to wed this with the life-blood of the universe,
+with eternal truth and justice, and God has in store no blessing for
+noblest nations that will not be secured for ours.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE CHASSEURS A PIED.
+
+
+Among the most celebrated corps of the French army, one of the most
+conspicuous and remarkable is that peculiar body of troops to which
+has been given the name of _Chasseurs a Pied_, or _Foot-Chasseurs_,
+to distinguish it from an organization of mounted men in the same
+service, uniformed and trained on similar principles. The Chasseurs
+a Pied have not attained the same romantic renown as that acquired
+by their brethren and rivals in arms, the Zouaves, but, nevertheless,
+they have had an exceedingly brilliant career in the late wars
+and conquests of France. They possess their own characteristics of
+originality, too, and are, in many respects, one of the most efficient
+and formidable forces in existence.
+
+In order to convey a clear and correct idea of the new principles
+adopted in the organization and equipment of the Chasseurs, and to
+furnish our readers with some facts that may be interesting to them
+as historical students, and most useful to such among them as are
+connected with or may have any aspiration for military life, we must
+beg them to go back with us, for a moment, to the very period of the
+invention of gunpowder. It would be out of the question, of course, to
+attempt, in these pages, a description of all the curious weapons
+that were at first employed under the name of fire-arms. We will only
+remark that such weapons were, despite the anathemas of Bayard and
+the sarcasms of Ariosto, very much used as early as the middle of the
+sixteenth century, and played an important part on the battle-fields
+of that epoch.
+
+To the Spaniards belongs the credit of having rendered the use of
+fire-arms more easy, more regular, and more general among the nations.
+For more than a hundred years the Spaniards were the very masters
+of the art of war. Their power had begun to decline, but they still
+retained their military superiority; and from the Battle of Ceresole,
+won by the Count of Enghien in 1544, down to the memorable victory of
+Rocroy, gained in 1643 by a hero of the same race and the same name,
+they had the upper-hand in all pitched engagements. Their generals
+were the very best and most thoroughly instructed, and formed a real
+school; they, too, were the only officers who practised strategy.
+Their organization was better than any other, and their celebrated
+_tercios_ were the very model of all regiments. Their armament was
+likewise superior, as they had adopted the musket, which was the
+first fire-arm that a man could handle with any facility, load with
+rapidity, and aim with any precision. Each of their _tercios_ or
+battalions contained a regulated proportion of these musketeers, and
+the number was large, compared to the whole mass of troops.
+
+The excellent results attained by the Spaniards, in the more perfect
+organization and equipment of their infantry, did not escape the
+attention of the French officers; and one of them especially, the Duke
+Francis de Guise, endeavored to turn his observations to good account.
+It is to him that we are indebted for the first rough sketch of
+regimental organization modelled upon that of the _tercios_, and, in
+more than one encounter with the Huguenots, the numbers of thoroughly
+skilled arquebuse-men embodied in the old French bands in Picardy and
+Piedmont secured advantages to the Catholic armies. In the opposite
+party, a young general who was destined to become a great king,
+endowed with that creative instinct, that genius which is as readily
+applicable to the science of government as to that of war, and which,
+when tempered with good sense, may bestow glory and happiness upon
+whole nations, Henry IV., had taken particular pains to increase the
+number and the efficiency of his arquebuse-men, and frequently managed
+to employ them in ways as novel as they were successful. At the Battle
+of Coutras, he distributed them in groups of twenty-five, in the midst
+of his squadrons of cavalry, so that, when the royal _gendarmerie_
+advanced to charge the latter, they were suddenly received with
+murderous volleys by these arquebuse-men _of the spur_, as they were
+called, owing to their combination with the cavalry, and the shock
+they thus encountered gave victory to the Protestants. Henry IV. went
+even too far with his passion for fire-arms. He increased their number
+and their use among cavalry so extravagantly, that the latter arm was
+perverted from its proper object. The cavalry, for a long time, forgot
+that their strength lay in the points of their sabres, in the dash of
+the men, and the speed of their horses.
+
+Most of the great captains of an early day thus signalized their
+progress by some improvement in the equipment of their infantry. One
+of the most formidable enemies of Spanish power, Maurice of Nassau,
+a skilful engineer and tactician, was the first to array infantry in
+such a manner as to combine the simultaneous use of the musket and the
+pike. Before his time, fire-arms had been used only for skirmishing
+service; he commenced to use them in line. This reform was, however,
+only foreshadowed, as it were, by the Dutch General; it was reserved
+for Gustavus Adolphus to complete it. While he was executing a series
+of military operations such as the world had not beheld since the days
+of Caesar, he was also creating a movable artillery, and giving to the
+fire of his infantry an efficacy which had not been attained before.
+For the heavy machines of war which were drawn by oxen to the field
+of battle, and which remained there motionless and paralyzed by the
+slightest movements of the contending armies, he substituted light
+cannon drawn by horses and following up all the manoeuvres of either
+cavalry or foot. He had found the infantry formed in dense battalions.
+His system arranged it in long continuous lines in which each rank
+of musketeers was sustained by several ranks of pikemen, so that his
+array, thus distributed, should present to the enemy a front bristling
+with steel, while, at the same time, it could cover a large space of
+ground with its discharge of lead. Attentive to all kinds of detail,
+he also gave his soldiers the cartouch-box and knapsack instead of
+the cumbersome apparatus to which they had been accustomed. In fact,
+Gustavus Adolphus was the founder of the modern science of battle. In
+strategy and the grand combinations of warfare, he was the disciple
+and rival of the ancient masters; for, even if this "divine portion"
+of the military art be inaccessible to the vast number of its
+votaries, and if history can easily enumerate those who were capable
+of comprehending it, and, more especially, of applying it, its rules
+and principles have, nevertheless, been by no means the same in all
+ages. On the contrary, the invention of fire-arms demanded an entirely
+new system of tactics, and this the Swedish hero introduced.
+
+The example set by Gustavus was not, however, very rapidly followed,
+and, although some slight improvements were introduced by French
+officers during the seventeenth century, it was not until the time
+of Louis XIV. that the reforms started by Maurice of Nassau, and so
+successfully continued by the Swedish army, began to attain their
+consummation. The progress made in that direction was due to Vauban,
+whose eminent genius had mastered every question and every branch of
+study so completely, that, when applied to on any subject connected
+with politics or war, his opinion was always clear and correct.
+The very numerous essays and sketches from his hand which are found
+deposited in the fortresses and in the archives of France all reveal
+some flash of genius, and even his wildest speculations bear the stamp
+of his high intellect and excellent heart. Engineering science was
+carried by him to such a degree of perfection that it has made but few
+advances since his time; and it was Vauban who induced Louis XIV. to
+replace the pike and the musket with a weapon which should be, at
+one and the same time, an instrument for both firing and thrusting,
+namely, the bayonet-gun. The Royal Fusileer Regiment, since called the
+Royal Artillery, was the first one armed with this weapon, (in
+1670,) and in 1703 the whole French army finally gave up the pike.
+Notwithstanding some reverses sustained by the infantry thus armed,
+and notwithstanding the disapproval of Puysegur and others, this gun
+was soon adopted by all Europe, and the success of the great Frederick
+put a conclusive indorsement on this new style of weapon. Frederick
+had taken up and perfected the ideas of Gustavus Adolphus; and he now
+laid down certain rules for the formation and manoeuvring of infantry,
+which are still followed at this day; and since that time, no one has
+disputed the fact that the strength of foot-troops lies in their guns
+and their legs.
+
+Our present firelock differs from the article used during the
+Seven Years' War only in its more careful construction and some
+modifications of detail. The most important of these relates to the
+more rapid explosion of the charge. In 1840 the old flint-locks were
+generally replaced by the percussion-lock, which is simpler, is
+less exposed to the effects of dampness, and more quickly and surely
+ignites the powder. Even the ordinary regulation-musket with its
+bayonet was spoken of by Napoleon in his time as "the best engine of
+warfare ever invented by man." Since the day of the Great Emperor, and
+even during the reign of the present Napoleon, continued improvements
+have been made in the character of the weapon used by the French
+infantry. The weight, length, correctness of aim, durability, and
+handiness of the gun have all been carefully examined and modified, to
+the advantage of the soldier, until, finally, we have a weapon which
+combines wonderful qualities of lightness, strength, correctness of
+equipoise, ease and rapidity of loading, with perfect adaptability as
+a combination of the lance, pike, and sword, when it has ceased to be
+a fire-arm.
+
+We have not here the space to enter upon a disquisition concerning
+these progressive changes; but suffice it to say that nearly all the
+peculiar styles of fire-arms were well known at an early period,
+and that the rifling, etc., of guns and cannon, with the other
+modifications now adopted, are merely the development and consummation
+of old ideas. For instance, the rifled arquebuse was known and used
+at the close of the fifteenth century, and, although the rifled musket
+was not put in general use by the French infantry, from the fact that
+its reduced length and the greater complication of movements required
+in loading and discharging it deprived it of other advantages when
+in the hands of troops of the line, still it was adopted in a certain
+proportion in some branches of the French service.
+
+As early as the middle of the seventeenth century, some corps of light
+cavalry called _Carabins_ were armed with the short rifle-musket, and
+hence the derivation of the term _carabines_ applied to the weapon.
+These "carabines" were also very promptly adopted by hunters and
+sportsmen everywhere. The Swiss and the Tyrolese employed them in
+chasing the chamois among their mountains, and practised their skill
+in the use of them at general shooting-matches, which to this very day
+are celebrated as national festivals. The Austrian Government was the
+first to profit by this preference on the part of certain populations
+for accurate fire-arms, and at once proceeded to organize battalions
+of Tyrolese _Chasseurs_, or _Huntsmen_,--to give the meaning of the
+French word. These Chasseurs were applied in the Austrian service as
+light troops, and so great was their efficiency against the Prussians
+that Frederick the Great was compelled, in his turn, to organize a
+battalion of Chasseur sharp-shooters. France followed suit, in the
+course of the eighteenth century, and called into existence various
+corps of the same description, under different names. These, however,
+were but short-lived, although some of them, for instance, the Grassin
+Legion, acquired quite a reputation.
+
+Finally came the French Revolution. The troops of the Republic were
+more remarkable for courage and enthusiasm than for tactics and drill.
+They usually attacked as skirmishers,--a system which may be employed
+successfully by even the most regularly disciplined armies, but which
+is sometimes more especially useful to raw troops, because it
+gives the private soldier an opportunity to compensate by personal
+intelligence for the lack of thorough instruction. Struck by the
+aptitude of the French recruits for that kind of fighting, the
+Convention, in reorganizing the army, decreed the formation of some
+half-brigades of light infantry. The picked men were to be armed with
+the new weapon, and received the name of _Carabiniers_. The carabine
+of 1793 is the first specimen of that kind of arm which was regularly
+employed in France.
+
+Subsequently, owing to many practical defects, when Napoleon
+reorganized the equipment of the French armies, the carabine was
+dropped from the service, although the regiments of light infantry
+were retained, and their picked companies preserved the title of
+Carabiniers. In the Imperial Guard, too, there were companies of
+Skirmishers, Flankers, and Chasseurs, but neither one of these corps
+was distinguished by any particular style of arms or drill. The
+Emperor's wish was to have the armament and training of all his
+infantry uniform, so that all the regiments should be equally adapted
+to the service of troops of the line or light troops. Finally, to
+carry out his design with greater ease, he formed all the men who were
+more active and agile than the rest, or whose low stature prevented
+them from becoming Grenadiers, into companies of Voltigeurs,--and this
+was one of his finest military creations.
+
+However, notwithstanding the correctness of Napoleon's views, as a
+general principle, the thousand and one uses of a corps of picked
+marksmen as light troops were so universally admitted that the
+different nations of Europe continued and even augmented that branch
+of their military service. Under different names they were found not
+only in the armies of England, Austria, Prussia, and Russia, but also
+under the banners of the secondary powers, such as Sweden, Piedmont,
+and Switzerland.
+
+After the disasters of 1815, the reorganization of the French army
+was confided to Marshal Gouvion de St. Cyr, who united to sincere
+patriotism every qualification of an able general. He gave to the
+French service the basis of its present success, his suggestions
+having, of course, been perfected and expanded in the mean time. Among
+other things, he prescribed the formation of battalions of Chasseurs,
+to be organized in legions, side by side with the infantry of
+the line, but with their own special equipment. This plan was not
+efficiently executed, and the Chasseur battalions shared the fate
+of the Department Legions of France, and were merged in the existing
+regiments.
+
+The project, in a different form, was revived by Marshal Soult, who,
+as Minister of War, in 1833, succeeded in securing the passage of
+a royal ordinance prescribing the formation of companies of
+sharp-shooters "armed with carabines and uniformed in a manner
+befitting their special service." These companies were to be united
+subsequently into battalions, and were to undergo a particular course
+of training. Although the ordinance was not immediately carried
+into execution, the impulse had been given, and erelong successful
+improvements in the rifle having been effected by an old officer of
+the Royal Guard, named Delvigne, and a certain Colonel Poncharra,
+inspector of the manufacture of arms, the Duke of Orleans brought
+about the formation of a company of marksmen peculiarly trained and
+equipped, and provided with the so-called Delvigne-Poncharra carabine.
+This company was placed in garrison at Vincennes, where, under skilful
+and popular commanders, it gave such satisfaction that it was finally
+decided to try the experiment on a larger scale, and a decree of
+November 14, 1838, created a battalion of the same character.
+
+This corps, then, and even now, known to the people as the
+_Tirailleurs de Vincennes_, wore a uniform very similar to that of the
+present Chasseurs, but quite different from that of the infantry of
+the period. Instead of the stiff accoutrements and heavy headgear of
+the latter, they assumed a frock, wide and roomy pantaloons, and a
+light military shako. The double folds of white buckskin, which were
+very fine to look at, to be sure, but which oppressed the lungs and
+offered a conspicuous mark to the enemy, were discarded; the sabre was
+no longer allowed to dangle between the legs of the soldier and impede
+his movements; while the necessary munitions were carried in a manner
+more convenient and better adapted to their preservation. The arms
+consisted of a carabine, and a long, solid, sharpened appendage to
+it, termed the _sword-bayonet_. This latter weapon was provided with
+a hilt, and could be used for both cut and thrust, with considerable
+effect, while, affixed to the end of the carabine, it furnished a most
+formidable pike.
+
+Although the Delvigne-Poncharra carabine had great advantages, it
+still did not command the range of the coarser and heavier muskets of
+the line, and, in order to make up for this in some degree, the most
+robust and skilful men of the corps were armed with a heavier gun,
+constructed on the same principles, but capable of throwing a heavier
+charge with precision, to greater distances. The proportion of men so
+armed was one-eighth of the battalion. The use of these two
+different calibres of fire-arms had some drawbacks, but they were
+counterbalanced by some curious advantages. For instance, the
+battalion could keep up a steady fire at ordinary distances, while,
+at the same moment, the men armed with the heavy carabines, or
+_Carabiniers_, as they were distinctively called, even within their
+own battalion, could reach the enemy at points where he deemed himself
+beyond the range of the force he saw in front of him. United in
+groups, the Carabiniers could thus produce severe effect, and actually
+formed a sort of _hand artillery_,--to use an expression often
+employed concerning them.
+
+The Tirailleurs thus composed were, owing to the shortness of their
+carabines, drawn up in two ranks, instead of in the regimental style
+of three ranks. They manoeuvred in line, like all other infantry
+battalions, but, in addition to the ordinary drill, were trained in
+gymnastics and double-quick evolutions, as well as in fencing with the
+bayonet, a special course of sharp-shooting, and what was termed _the
+new Tirailleur drill_.
+
+Gymnastics have always been encouraged in the French army, and, when
+not carried to excess, they are of the greatest use, particularly in
+developing the strength of young men, giving suppleness and confidence
+to raw recruits, and facilitating their manoeuvres. Running was
+naturally a portion of these exercises, although it was rarely
+permitted in the evolutions of French troops, since it was found to
+produce much disorder. The Tirailleurs were so trained, however, that
+they could move, with all their accoutrements, in ranks, without noise
+and without confusion, at a cadenced and measured running step termed
+the _pas gymnastique_, or gymnastic step,--and they could use it
+even during complicated field-manoeuvres. This was a most excellent
+innovation, for it enabled infantry to pass rapidly to any important
+point, and to execute many evolutions with the promptitude in some
+degree which cavalry obtains from the combination of the two gaits.
+
+The bayonet-exercise was very acceptable to the men, for it augmented
+their confidence in their weapons and their skill in handling them.
+
+The target or sharp-shooting drill was much the most complicated and
+difficult, as the troops were taught to fire when kneeling and lying
+on the ground, and to avail themselves of the slightest favoring
+circumstances of the soil. The rules and methods adopted in this
+branch of the drill have been the subject of profound and careful
+study, and are exceedingly ingenious.
+
+The approval of these measures by the French Government was such,
+that, by a decree of August 28th, 1839, the merely temporary
+organization of the Tirailleurs was made permanent and separate, and
+the corps was sent to camp at Fontainebleau. There, the agility of
+the men, their neat and convenient uniforms and equipments, and their
+rapid and orderly evolutions struck every one who saw them. When, at
+the close of their period of encampment, the King was passing them in
+review as a special compliment, he warmly asked Marshal Soult what
+he thought of the new corps. The Marshal, in replying, emphatically
+expressed the wish that His Majesty had thirty such battalions instead
+of only one.
+
+However, the new organization found some opponents, and many urgent
+arguments were adduced to prevent its extension. In order to put all
+these to the test, it was finally determined to submit the Tirailleurs
+to the ordeal of actual warfare; and they were speedily shipped to
+Africa, where it was quickly discovered that their gymnastic training
+had so prepared them that they easily became inured to the fatigues
+and privations of campaigning life. Their heavy carabines succeeded
+admirably, and the skill of their marksmen--among others, of a certain
+Sergeant Pistouley--was the theme of universal praise.
+
+The Tirailleurs were now brigaded with the Zouaves, and erelong had
+shared glorious laurels with those celebrated troops.
+
+Finally, in 1840, the dangers that seemed to be accumulating over
+France on all sides assumed so dark a form that the patriotism of the
+whole nation was aroused, and, in the midst of the general outpouring
+of men and means, the Duke of Orleans was authorized to form no less
+than ten battalions of Chasseurs.
+
+The Duke set himself about this important task with all the zeal that
+had characterized his first effort to create the organization, and
+all the erudition he had gleaned from years of military study and
+research. In the first place, he abandoned the title of Tirailleurs,
+as being not sufficiently distinctive, and adopted that of Chasseurs a
+Pied, or Foot-Chasseurs. The organization by battalions was retained,
+and the one formed two years before at Vincennes was designated as the
+First Battalion, and recalled from Africa to St. Omer as a model for
+the other nine that were to be organized. St. Omer offered extensive
+barracks, a vast field suitable to military exercise, and, in fine,
+all the establishments requisite for a large concourse of troops. The
+ranks were soon filled with picked men from all sides, and ardent,
+ambitious officers from every corps of the army sought commands. Among
+the latter we may mention a certain Captain, since Marshal de M'Mahon,
+who was put at the head of the Tenth Battalion.
+
+Under the eyes of the Prince Royal, and in accordance with a series
+of regulations drawn up by him with the greatest care, and constantly
+modified to suit circumstances, the battalions were drilled and
+trained assiduously in all the walks of their profession connected
+with their own destined service. Every branch of their military life
+was illustrated by their exercises, and even the officers went through
+a thorough course of special instruction under accomplished tutors,
+who were also officers of peculiar ability and experience. While
+the Duke of Orleans, with the distinguished General Rostolan and two
+picked lieutenant-colonels, remained at St. Omer in charge of the
+growing force, another lieutenant-colonel was intrusted with the task
+of training subordinates to serve as teachers in sharp-shooting, and
+for this purpose a detachment was assembled at Vincennes, consisting
+of ten officers and a number of subalterns who had attracted attention
+by their particular aptitude. These, after having been thoroughly
+instructed in the manufacture of small arms, the preparation of
+munitions, and the rules and practice of sharp-shooting, were sent to
+St. Omer to furnish the new battalions with the officers who were to
+form part of the permanent organization. The weapon selected was an
+improvement upon the former carabines of the Tirailleurs; and while
+the old proportion, to wit, the eighth part of each battalion, were
+armed with guns of longer range, and styled distinctively Carabiniers,
+these were set apart as the picked company of each battalion. The
+Duke, taking up his residence at St. Omer, attended in person to all
+that was going forward; and so constant were his exertions, and so
+warm the zeal of those who assisted the enterprise, that in a few
+months all the battalions were equipped, armed, and well drilled.
+
+One fine spring morning,--it was in May, 1841,--a long column of
+troops entered Paris with a celerity hitherto unknown. There was no
+false glitter, no tinsel; everything was neat and martial, with bugles
+for their only music, and a uniform that was sombre, indeed, but of
+such harmonious simplicity as to be by no means devoid of elegance.
+This column consisted of the Chasseurs, coming to receive their
+standard from the hands of Louis Philippe, and speeding through the
+streets with their _gymnastic step_. On the very next day, as though
+to signalize the serious and entirely military character of the
+organization, four of these battalions were sent off to Africa,
+and the remaining six posted at the different leading fortresses of
+France, where the collections of artillery, etc., enabled them to
+proceed with the perfect development of their training.
+
+It was only a year later, when the Duke of Orleans was snatched away,
+on the very eve of some crowning experiments he was about to make in
+illustration of the full uses and capacities of this force, that it
+received the title of Chasseurs d'Orleans, which the modesty of
+its founder would not tolerate during his lifetime. This name they
+gallantly bore through the combats that marked their novitiate in
+Africa, where it was at once found that the complete preparation of
+both officers and men made victory comparatively easy for them. The
+deadly precision of their aim struck terror into the Arabs, and, as
+early as 1842, the splendid behavior of the Sixth Battalion in the
+bloody fights of the Oued Foddah at once ranged the Chasseurs among
+the finest troops in Africa. To attempt to follow them step by step
+in their career would be idle in the space we have here allotted to
+ourselves. We shall therefore cite merely a few instances where their
+courage and efficiency shone with peculiar lustre.
+
+In the course of the year 1845, an impostor, playing upon the
+credulity of the Arabs, and artfully availing himself of the
+organization ready furnished by the religious sect to which he
+belonged, succeeded in bringing about a revolt of a great portion of
+the tribes in Algiers and Oran. He went by the title of "Master of the
+Hour," a sort of Messiah who had been long expected in that region.
+But he was more generally known as Bou-Maza, or _The Father with the
+She-Goat_, from the fact that a she-goat was his customary companion,
+and was supposed by the populace to serve him as a medium of
+communication with the supernatural Powers. This man exhibited a great
+deal of skill and audacity. His activity was so extraordinary, and
+he had been seen at so many different points at almost the same time,
+that his very existence was at first doubted, and many supposed him to
+be a myth. At one time it was thought that the insurrection had been
+quelled, as a chief calling himself Bou-Maza had been captured and
+shot, when, suddenly, the real leader reappeared among the Flittas,
+one of the most warlike tribes of Algeria, and living in a region very
+difficult of access. Against these and the Prophet, General Bourjolly,
+the French commander, marched at once, but unfortunately with very
+inadequate force. A terrible combat ensued, the Fourth Regiment of the
+Chasseurs d'Afrique and the Ninth Battalion of the Chasseurs d'Orleans
+having to sustain the brunt of it. Both these corps performed
+prodigies of valor, and it was worth while to hear the men of
+each reciprocally narrating the glory and the peril of their
+comrades,--these telling by what noble exploits the mounted Chasseurs
+(d'Afrique) had saved the remains of Lieutenant-Colonel Berthier, and
+the others describing the Chasseurs a Pied, how they stood immovable,
+although without cartridges, around the body of their commander,
+Clere, with their terrible sword-bayonets bloody to the hilt!
+
+On almost the same day, the Eighth Battalion succumbed to a frightful
+catastrophe. At a period of supposed tranquillity, the Souhalia
+tribe, who had been steadfast allies of the French, were unexpectedly
+attacked by Abd-el-Kader at the head of an overwhelming force.
+Lieutenant-Colonel Montagnac, with only sixty-two horsemen of the
+Second Hussars and three hundred and fifty men of the Eighth Chasseurs
+d'Orleans, hurried to the rescue. He was repeatedly warned of the
+danger, but, despite all that could be said, he dashed at the whole
+force of Abd-el-Kader. At the very first discharge, Montagnac fell
+mortally wounded, and in a few moments all the horses and nearly all
+the men were disabled. Captain Cognord, of the Second Hussars, rallied
+the survivors, and this little handful of heroes, huddled together
+upon a hillock, fought like tigers, until their ammunition was
+exhausted. The Arabs then closed in upon the group, which had become
+motionless and silent, and, to use the expressive language of an
+eye-witness, "felled them to the earth as they would overturn a wall."
+The enemy found none remaining but the dead, or those who were
+so badly wounded that they gave no sign of life. Before expiring,
+Montagnac had summoned to his aid a small detachment he had left in
+reserve. The latter, on its approach, was immediately surrounded, and
+perished to the very last man. There was now surviving of the whole
+French force only the Carabinier company of the Eighth Chasseurs, upon
+whom the Arabs rushed with fury, from every side. After a resistance
+of almost fabulous heroism, during which the flag of the company was
+shot away in shreds, and the Carabiniers cut their bullets into
+six and eight pieces so as to prolong their defence, every volley
+decimating the foe, this little band of seventy men, encumbered with
+ten wounded, succeeded in wearying and disheartening the Emir to such
+an extent that he determined to abandon the direct assault which was
+costing him so dearly, and to surround the French detachment in the
+ruined building which served them for a refuge, and so starve them
+out. Captain Dutertre, Adjutant of the Eighth, who had been captured
+by the Arabs in the early part of the action, was sent forward by the
+enemy toward his old comrades. For a moment the firing ceased, and
+the Captain shouted so that all could hear him,--"Chasseurs, they have
+sworn to behead me, if you do not lay down your arms; and I say to
+you, Die, rather than surrender one single man!"
+
+The Captain was instantly sabred, and the conflict recommenced. The
+same summons was repeated twice afterwards, and twice failed, when,
+finally, the firing ceased, and the Arabs bivouacked around their
+prey. Every possible approach was closed and guarded, and, thus caged
+in, the Chasseurs remained for three nights and days without food or
+drink. At length, by a sudden and desperate dash, on the morning
+of September 20th, the seventy heroes, bearing their ten wounded
+comrades, succeeded in breaking through the line of Arab sentinels,
+and escaped to a neighboring chain of hills. Thither they were pursued
+by their wild foemen, who, although infuriated at the daring and
+success of this sally, had a sufficient respect for the heavy
+carabines of the French, and merely hovered closely on their rear,
+awaiting some favorable opportunity to dash in upon them. This moment
+soon came. The French soldiers, no longer able to withstand the
+torments of thirst, descending from the hills, in spite of the
+entreaties of their officers, dashed into a neighboring stream to cool
+their burning lips. The instant of doom had come, and, in less time
+than it takes to recite the narrative, all but twelve of the little
+band were massacred by the exulting Arabs. The twelve escaped to
+Djemaa only after terrible privations and sufferings.
+
+We might readily fill a volume with episodes equally glorious and
+equally gloomy in the career of the Chasseurs. They were in nearly
+all the brilliant actions of the ensuing Algerian campaigns, and, at
+Zaatcha, Isly, and other famed engagements, they contended side by
+side with the renowned Zouaves for the palm of military excellence.
+Their agility, their promptitude in action, their ardor in attack, and
+their solidity in retreat, their endurance on the march, their skill
+and intelligence in availing themselves of every inequality of ground
+and in turning everything to account, made them so conspicuously
+preferable, as an infantry corps, for certain operations, that Marshal
+Bugeaud caused the number of battalions employed in Africa to be
+increased to six. From that time to the present, continual progress
+has been, made in the organization, discipline, and instruction of
+the Chasseurs, and all the objections which at different periods were,
+raised against the special composition and details of the force having
+been one by one met and obviated, France now counts no less than
+twenty-one battalions of them in her army.
+
+It was for a long time thought by some, that, although the Chasseurs,
+like the Zouaves, had been successful in the skirmishing engagements
+of Algeria, they would not be found so useful in European warfare.
+This opinion was proved to be erroneous at the siege of Rome, in 1849,
+where the Chasseurs, armed with their new and terrible weapon, the
+_carabine a tige_, in the management of which they had been thoroughly
+drilled, rendered the most important service; and from what was seen
+of them there it became evident that the existence of such a force,
+so perfected in every particular, would hereafter greatly modify the
+relations and conditions of the defence and attack of fortified works.
+The importance of this fact will impress the reader, when he remembers
+how large a part fortresses have played in warfare since 1815, and
+especially when he glances at the tendency everywhere perceptible now
+toward transforming military strongholds into great intrenched camps,
+as revealed at Antwerp in Belgium, Fredericia in Denmark, Buda and
+Comorn in Hungary, Peschiera, Mantua, Venice, Verona, and Rome in
+Italy, Silistria and Sebastopol in the East, and Washington, Manassas,
+and Richmond in America.
+
+Other nations have not been slow to follow French example. Russia
+is rapidly manufacturing rifled pieces for her service; England
+is providing her whole army with the Minie musket, and Austria and
+Prussia are applying inventions of their own to the armament of corps
+organized and trained on the principle of the French Chasseurs.
+
+The Duke of Wellington is said to have remarked, not long before his
+death, while speaking of the English troops, that they had, indeed,
+adopted the new musket, but that it would be physically difficult for
+them to transform themselves into light infantry. The same observation
+will undoubtedly apply to all the Continental nations excepting the
+French; but in the United States, while we could muster the finest
+heavy troops in the world, we have also the most abundant material for
+just such light infantry as those described in the foregoing sketch.
+
+The Chasseurs are not merely distinguished as perfect light infantry,
+but they also form excellent troops of the line. By the weight of
+their fire, they are capable of producing in battles and sieges
+effects unknown before their appearance on the scene, and that is the
+great point, the entirely new feature about them.
+
+The creation of these battalions, well planned and happily executed
+as it has been, remains a most important event in military history.
+Consecrated by the valor and the intelligence of the officers and
+soldiers of France, it has been the signal and the source of new
+and rapid reforms. One of these battalions attached to each infantry
+division adds fresh force to that fine classification which first
+arose under the Republic, and, although somewhat perverted under the
+Empire, still remains the basis of the French grand organization,
+recalling, as it does, the immortal idea of the Roman Legion.
+
+With the aid of its example, and the emulation inspired by the success
+of the Chasseurs, the splendid system of the French infantry-service
+has been completed under the present Napoleon; and we now behold the
+race he rules so disciplined for war, the respective qualities of the
+North and the South of France, the firmness and solidity of the former
+and the enthusiasm and ardor of the latter, so beautifully blended,
+that we may well exclaim, "Here, indeed, is a whole nation armed! _in
+pedite robur_!"
+
+In conclusion, the writer and compiler of this sketch would not be
+venturing too far, perhaps, were he to remark that so excellent an
+example can be nowhere better followed than in this country, if, as
+would to-day appear a certainty, we are to turn aside from the ways of
+peace to study the art of war. We have here precisely the material
+for whole armies of light infantry, the most favorable conditions
+for their equipment and instruction, and, owing to the nature of the
+region we inhabit, its dense woodlands, its wide savannas, its broad
+rivers, and its numerous ranges of rough mountains, the very land
+in which the tactics and marksmanship of the Chasseurs would be most
+available.
+
+
+
+
+LATEST VIEWS OF MR. BIGLOW.
+
+PRELIMINARY NOTE.
+
+
+[It is with feelings of the liveliest pain that we inform our readers
+of the death of the Reverend Homer Wilbur, A.M., which took place
+suddenly, by an apoplectic stroke, on the afternoon of Christmas day,
+1862. Our venerable friend (for so we may venture to call him, though
+we never enjoyed the high privilege of his personal acquaintance)
+was in his eighty-fourth year, having been born June 12, 1779, at
+Pigsgusset Precinct (now West Jerusha) in the then District of Maine.
+Graduated with distinction at Hubville College in 1805, he pursued his
+theological studies with the late Reverend Preserved Thacker, D.D.,
+and was called to the charge of the First Society in Jaalam in 1809,
+where he remained till his death.
+
+"As an antiquary he has probably left no superior, if, indeed,
+an equal," writes his friend and colleague, the Reverend Jeduthun
+Hitchcock, to whom we are indebted for the above facts; "in proof
+of which I need only allude to his 'History of Jaalam, Genealogical,
+Topographical, and Ecclesiastical,' 1849, which has won him an eminent
+and enduring place in our more solid and useful literature. It is only
+to be regretted that his intense application to historical studies
+should have so entirely withdrawn him from the pursuit of poetical
+composition, for which he was endowed by Nature with a remarkable
+aptitude. His well-known hymn, beginning, 'With clouds of care
+encompassed round,' has been attributed in some collections to the
+late President Dwight, and it is hardly presumptuous to affirm that
+the simile of the rainbow in the eighth stanza would do no discredit
+to that polished pen."
+
+We regret that we have not room at present for the whole of Mr.
+Hitchcock's exceedingly valuable communication. We hope to lay more
+liberal extracts from it before our readers at an early day. A summary
+of its contents will give some notion of its importance and interest.
+It contains: 1st, A biographical sketch of Mr. Wilbur, with notices
+of his predecessors in the pastoral office, and of eminent clerical
+contemporaries; 2d, An obituary of deceased, from the Punkin-Falls
+"Weekly Parallel"; 3d, A list of his printed and manuscript
+productions and of projected works; 4th, Personal anecdotes and
+recollections, with specimens of table-talk; 5th, A tribute to his
+relict, Mrs. Dorcas (Pilcox) Wilbur; 6th, A list of graduates fitted
+for different colleges by Mr. Wilbur, with biographical memoranda
+touching the more distinguished; 7th, Concerning learned, charitable,
+and other societies, of which Mr. Wilbur was a member, and of those
+with which, had his life been prolonged, he would doubtless have been
+associated, with a complete catalogue of such Americans as have been
+Fellows of the Royal Society; 8th, A brief summary of Mr. Wilbur's
+latest conclusions concerning the Tenth Horn of the Beast in its
+special application to recent events, for which the public, as Mr.
+Hitchcock assures us, have been waiting with feelings of lively
+anticipation; 10th, Mr. Hitchcock's own views on the same topic; and,
+11th, A brief essay on the importance of local histories. It will be
+apparent that the duty of preparing Mr. Wilbur's biography could not
+have fallen into more sympathetic hands.
+
+In a private letter with which the reverend gentleman has since
+favored us, he expresses the opinion that Mr. Wilbur's life was
+shortened by our unhappy civil war. It disturbed his studies,
+dislocated all his habitual associations and trains of thought, and
+unsettled the foundations of a faith, rather the result of habit than
+conviction, in the capacity of man for self-government. "Such has
+been the felicity of my life," he said to Mr. Hitchcock, on the very
+morning of the day he died, "that, through the divine mercy, I could
+always say, _Summum nec metuo diem, nec opto_. It has been my habit,
+as you know, on every recurrence of this blessed anniversary, to read
+Milton's 'Hymn of the Nativity' till its sublime harmonies so dilated
+my soul and quickened its spiritual sense that I seemed to hear that
+other song which gave assurance to the shepherds that there was
+One who would lead them also in green pastures and beside the still
+waters. But to-day I have been unable to think of anything but that
+mournful text, 'I came not to send peace, but a sword,' and, did it
+not smack of pagan presumptuousness, could almost wish I had never
+lived to see this day."
+
+Mr. Hitchcock also informs us that his friend "lies buried in the
+Jaalam graveyard, under a large red-cedar which he specially admired.
+A neat and substantial monument is to be erected over his remains,
+with a Latin epitaph written by himself; for he was accustomed to say
+pleasantly that there was at least one occasion in a scholar's life
+when he might show the advantages of a classical training."
+
+The following fragment of a letter addressed to us, and apparently
+intended to accompany Mr. Biglow's contribution to the present
+number, was found upon his table after his decease.--EDITORS ATLANTIC
+MONTHLY.]
+
+_To the Editors of the_ ATLANTIC MONTHLY.
+
+Jaalam, 24th Dec'r, 1862
+
+RESPECTED SIRS,--The infirm state of my bodily health would be a
+sufficient apology for not taking up the pen at this time, wholesome
+as I deem it for the mind to apricate in the shelter of epistolary
+confidence, were it not that a considerable, I might even say a large,
+number of individuals in this parish expect from their pastor some
+publick expression of sentiment at this crisis. Moreover, _Qui tacitus
+ardet magis uritur_. In trying times like these, the besetting sin of
+undisciplined minds is to seek refuge from inexplicable realities
+in the dangerous stimulant of angry partisanship or the indolent
+narcotick of vague and hopeful vaticination; _fortunamque suo temperat
+arbitrio_. Both by reason of my age and my natural temperament, I am
+unfitted for either. Unable to penetrate the inscrutable judgments of
+God, I am more than ever thankful that my life has been prolonged till
+I could in some small measure comprehend His mercy. As there is no man
+who does not at some time render himself amenable to the one,--_quum
+vix Justus sit securus_,--so there is none that does not feel himself
+in daily need of the other.
+
+I confess, I cannot feel, as some do, a personal consolation for the
+manifest evils of this war in any remote or contingent advantages
+that may spring from it. I am old and weak, I can bear little, and can
+scarce hope to see better days; nor is it any adequate compensation
+to know that Nature is old and strong and can bear much. Old men
+philosophize over the past, but the present is only a burthen and a
+weariness. The one lies before them like a placid evening landscape;
+the other is full of the vexations and anxieties of housekeeping.
+It may be true enough that _miscet haec illis, prohibetque Clotho
+fortunam stare_, but he who said it was fain at last to call in
+Atropos with her shears before her time; and I cannot help selfishly
+mourning that the fortune of our Republick could not at least stand
+till my days were numbered.
+
+Tibullus would find the origin of wars in the great exaggeration of
+riches, and does not stick to say that in the days of the beechen
+trencher there was peace. But averse as I am by nature from all wars,
+the more as they have been especially fatal to libraries, I would have
+this one go on till we are reduced to wooden platters again, rather
+than surrender the principle to defend which it was undertaken. Though
+I believe Slavery to have been the cause of it, by so thoroughly
+demoralizing Northern politicks for its own purposes as to give
+opportunity and hope to treason, yet I would not have our thought and
+purpose diverted from their true object,--the maintenance of the idea
+of Government. We are not merely suppressing an enormous riot, but
+contending for the possibility of permanent order coexisting with
+democratical fickleness; and while I would not superstitiously
+venerate form to the sacrifice of substance, neither would I forget
+that an adherence to precedent and prescription can alone give that
+continuity and coherence under a democratical constitution which are
+inherent in the person of a despotick monarch and the selfishness of
+an aristocratical class. _Stet pro ratione voluntas_ is as dangerous
+in a majority as in a tyrant.
+
+I cannot allow the present production of my young friend to go out
+without a protest from me against a certain extremeness in his views,
+more pardonable in the poet than the philosopher. While I agree with
+him that the only cure for rebellion is suppression by force, yet I
+must animadvert upon certain phrases where I seem to see a coincidence
+with a popular fallacy on the subject of compromise. On the one hand
+there are those who do not see that the vital principle of Government
+and the seminal principle of Law cannot properly be made a subject of
+compromise at all, and on the other those who are equally blind to the
+truth that without a compromise of individual opinions, interests, and
+even rights, no society would be possible. _In medio tutissimus_. For
+my own part, I would gladly----
+
+ Ef I a song or two could make,
+ Like rockets druv by their own burnin',
+ All leap an' light, to leave a wake
+ Men's hearts an' faces skyward turnin'!--
+ But, it strikes me, 't ain't jest the time
+ Fer stringin' words with settisfaction:
+ Wut's wanted now's the silent rhyme
+ 'Twixt upright Will an' downright Action.
+
+ Words, ef you keep 'em, pay their keep,
+ But gabble's the short cut to ruin;
+ It's gratis, (gals half-price,) but cheap
+ At no rate, ef it henders doin';
+ Ther' 's nothin' wuss, 'less 't is to set
+ A martyr-prem'um upon jawrin':
+ Teapots git dangerous, ef you shet
+ Their lids down on 'em with Fort Warren.
+
+ 'Bout long enough it's ben discussed
+ Who sot the magazine afire,
+ An' whether, ef Bob Wickliffe bust,
+ 'T would scare us more or blow us higher,
+ D' ye s'pose the Gret Foreseer's plan
+ Wuz settled fer him in town-meetin'?
+ Or thet ther' 'd ben no Fall o' Man,
+ Ef Adam'd on'y bit a sweetin'?
+
+ Oh, Jon'than, ef you want to be
+ A rugged chap agin an' hearty,
+ Go fer wutever'll hurt Jeff D.,
+ Nut wut'll boost up ary party.
+ Here's hell broke loose, an' we lay flat
+ With half the univarse a-singein',
+ Till Sen'tor This an' Gov'nor Thet
+ Stop squabblin' fer the garding-ingin'.
+
+ It's war we're in, not politics;
+ It's systems wrastlin' now, not parties;
+ An' victory in the eend'll fix
+ Where longest will an' truest heart is.
+ An' wut's the Guv'ment folks about?
+ Tryin' to hope ther' 's nothin' doin',
+ An' look ez though they didn't doubt
+ Sunthin' pertickler wuz a-brewin'.
+
+ Ther' 's critters yit thet talk an' act
+ Fer wut they call Conciliation;
+ They'd hand a buff'lo-drove a tract
+ When they wuz madder than all Bashan.
+ Conciliate? it jest means _be kicked_,
+ No metter how they phrase an' tone it;
+ It means thet we're to set down licked,
+ Thet we're poor shotes an' glad to own it!
+
+ A war on tick's ez dear'z the deuce,
+ But it wun't leave no lastin' traces,
+ Ez't would to make a sneakin' truce
+ Without no moral specie-basis:
+ Ef green-backs ain't nut jest the cheese,
+ I guess ther' 's evils thet's extremer,--
+ Fer instance,--shinplaster idees
+ Like them put out by Gov'nor Seymour.
+
+ Last year, the Nation, at a word,
+ When tremblin' Freedom cried to shield her,
+ Flamed weldin' into one keen sword
+ Waitin' an' longin' fer a wielder:
+ A splendid flash!--an' how'd the grasp
+ With sech a chance ez thet wuz tally?
+ Ther' warn't no meanin' in our clasp,--
+ Half this, half thet, all shilly-shally.
+
+ More men? More Man! It's there we fail;
+ Weak plans grow weaker yit by lengthenin':
+ Wut use in addin' to the tail,
+ When it's the head's in need o' strengthenin'?
+ We wanted one thet felt all Chief
+ From roots o' hair to sole o' stockin',
+ Square-sot with thousan'-ton belief
+ In him an' us, ef earth went rockin'!
+
+ Ole Hick'ry wouldn't ha' stood see-saw
+ 'Bout doin' things till they wuz done with,--
+ He'd smashed the tables o' the Law
+ In time o' need to load his gun with;
+ He couldn't see but jest one side,--
+ Ef his, 'twuz God's, an' thet wuz plenty;
+ An' so his "_Forrards_!" multiplied
+ An army's fightin' weight by twenty.
+
+ But this 'ere histin', creak, creak, creak,
+ Your cappen's heart up with a derrick,
+ This tryin' to coax a lightnin'-streak
+ Out of a half-discouraged hay-rick,
+ This hangin' on mont' arter mont'
+ Fer one sharp purpose 'mongst the twitter,--
+ I tell ye, it doos kind o' stunt
+ The peth an' sperit of a critter.
+
+ In six months where'll the People be,
+ Ef leaders look on revolution
+ Ez though it wuz a cup o' tea,--
+ Jest social el'ments in solution?
+ This weighin' things doos wal enough
+ When war cools down, an' comes to writin';
+ But while it's makin', the true stuff
+ Is pison-mad, pig-headed fightin'.
+
+ Democ'acy gives every man
+ A right to be his own oppressor;
+ But a loose Gov'ment ain't the plan,
+ Helpless ez spilled beans on a dresser:
+ I tell ye one thing we might larn
+ From them smart critters, the Seceders,--
+ Ef bein' right's the fust consarn,
+ The 'fore-the-fust 's cast-iron leaders.
+
+ But 'pears to me I see some signs
+ Thet we're a-goin' to use our senses:
+ Jeff druv us into these hard lines,
+ An' ough' to bear his half th' expenses;
+ Slavery's Secession's heart an' will,
+ South, North, East, West, where'er you find it,
+ An' ef it drors into War's mill,
+ D' ye say them thunder-stones sha'n't grind it?
+
+ D' ye s'pose, ef Jeff giv _him_ a lick,
+ Ole Hick'ry'd tried his head to sof'n
+ So 's 't wouldn't hurt thet ebony stick
+ Thet's made our side see stars so of'n?
+ "No!" he'd ha' thundered, "on your knees,
+ An' own one flag, one road to glory!
+ Soft-heartedness, in times like these,
+ Shows sof'ness in the upper story!"
+
+ An' why should we kick up a muss
+ About the Pres'dunt's proclamation?
+ It ain't a-goin' to lib'rate us,
+ Ef we don't like emancipation:
+ The right to be a cussed fool
+ Is safe from all devices human,
+ It's common (ez a gin'l rule)
+ To every critter born o' woman.
+
+ So _we_'re all right, an' I, fer one,
+ Don't think our cause'll lose in vally
+ By rammin' Scriptur' in our gun,
+ An' gittin' Natur' fer an ally:
+ Thank God, say I, fer even a plan
+ To lift one human bein's level,
+ Give one more chance to make a man,
+ Or, anyhow, to spile a devil!
+
+ Not thet I'm one thet much expec'
+ Millennium by express to-morrer;
+ They _will_ miscarry,--I rec'lec'
+ Tu many on 'em, to my sorrer:
+ Men ain't made angels in a day,
+ No matter how you mould an' labor 'em,--
+ Nor 'riginal ones, I guess, don't stay
+ With Abe so of'n ez with Abraham,
+
+ The'ry thinks Fact a pooty thing,
+ An' wants the banns read right ensuin';
+ But Fact wun't noways wear the ring
+ 'Thout years o' settin' up an' wooin':
+ But, arter all, Time's dial-plate
+ Marks cent'ries with the minute-finger,
+ An' Good can't never come tu late,
+ Though it doos seem to try an' linger.
+
+ An' come wut will, I think it's grand
+ Abe's gut his will et last bloom-furnaced
+ In trial-flames till it'11 stand
+ The strain o' bein' in deadly earnest:
+ Thet's wut we want,--we want to know
+ The folks on our side hez the bravery
+ To b'lieve ez hard, come weal, come woe,
+ In Freedom ez Jeff doos in Slavery.
+
+ Set the two forces foot to foot,
+ An' every man knows who'll be winner,
+ Whose faith in God hez ary root
+ Thet goes down deeper than his dinner:
+ _Then_ 'twill be felt from pole to pole,
+ Without no need o' proclamation,
+ Earth's Biggest Country's gut her soul
+ An' risen up Earth's Greatest Nation!
+
+
+
+
+REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES.
+
+
+_Slavery and Secession in America, Historical and Economical; together
+with a Practical Scheme of Emancipation_. By THOMAS ELLISON, F.S.S.,
+etc. Second Edition: Enlarged. With a Reply to the Fundamental
+Arguments of Mr. James Spence, contained in his Work on the American
+Union, and Remarks on the Productions of Other Writers. With Map and
+Appendices. London: Sampson Low, Son, & Co.
+
+We have too long delayed to speak of Mr. Ellison's book. More than a
+year ago, before Mr. Stuart Mill or Professor Cairnes had written
+in our behalf, before we had received a word of sympathy from any
+representative Englishman, save Mr. John Bright, the first edition of
+this work was placed before the British public. And we could not
+have asked for a better informed or more judicious defender than Mr.
+Ellison. "Slavery and Secession in America" is a temperate and concise
+statement of the essential features of our national struggle. The
+supposed interest of half a million of slaveholders in the extension
+of the Southern institution is truly represented as the cause of their
+guilty insurrection against the liberties of their countrymen.
+Mr. Ellison does not desire immediate emancipation, and wastes no
+sentiment upon the sufferings of the negro. But the economical and
+social position of Slavery is given with the unanswerable emphasis of
+careful figures. He traces the rise and increase of the institution
+in the States, until its disgrace culminates in a bloody rebellion.
+He clearly shows, that, by acknowledging the doctrine involved in
+Secession, by allowing it to govern the intercourse between
+nations, the morality of society would be shaken from its base. The
+anti-slavery character of the strife in which we are involved is
+made to appear,--slavery-diffusion being the object of the South,
+slavery-restriction the aim of the North. It is shown that the
+Secession ordinances utterly failed to point out a single instance
+in which the rights of the Southern people were infringed upon by
+the National Executive; also, that the alleged right of Secession is
+neither Constitutional, nor, when backed by no tangible grievance,
+can it he called revolutionary. In short, Mr. Ellison takes the only
+ground which seems possible to loyalists in America: namely, that
+Secession--in other words, the treason of slaveholders against the
+Constitution of their country--is of necessity punishable by law; and
+that good men of all nationalities should unite in the moral support
+of a benignant government thus wantonly assailed.
+
+The "practical scheme of emancipation" promised us in the title can
+hardly be said to amount to a scheme at all; but there are suggestions
+worth attending to, if that delicate matter might be managed as we
+would, not as we must.
+
+We have marked but two passages for a questioning comment. General
+Taylor, by an inadvertency strange to pass to a second edition, is
+represented as putting down the South-Carolina Nullifiers in 1838.
+Also, Dr. Charles Mackay, the New-York Correspondent of the London
+"Times," is quoted as having once borne anti-slavery testimony. This
+is certainly hard. Whatever emoluments slave-masters or their allies
+may hereafter have it in their power to bestow this gentleman has
+fairly earned. If he ever did say anything that was disagreeable to
+them, it should not be remembered against him.
+
+The merit of Mr. Ellison's book is neither in rhetoric, philanthropic
+sentiment, nor any exalted theory of political philosophy; it is in an
+unanswerable appeal to statistics, and a condensed statement of facts.
+The work may be commended to all desirous of arriving at the truth.
+
+But no conventional phrases of a book-notice can express our
+obligations to Mr. Ellison and those few of his countrymen who have
+publicly rebuked the noisy bitterness of writers striving, with too
+much success, to debauch the sentiment of England. Most dear to us is
+an occasional lull in that storm of insolence and mendacity designed
+to embarrass the Government of the United States in the august and
+solemn championship of human liberty committed to its charge. And let
+it be remarked that our expectations of English approval were never
+Utopian. The great principle involved in the American contest was so
+far above the level of the ordinary pursuits of men, that, even
+among ourselves, few have been able to transfuse it into their daily
+consciousness. We never looked to England for the encouragement of a
+popular enthusiasm,--hardly, perhaps, for a cold acquiescence. John
+Bull, we said, is proverbially a grumbler, proverbially indifferent to
+all affairs but his own; he will be annoyed by tariffs, and plagued
+by scarcity of cotton;--what wonder, if we are a little misunderstood?
+The minor contributors to his daily press will not be able to think
+long or wisely of what they write; we must be ready to pardon a
+certain amount of irritation and misstatement. That such was the
+feeling of intelligent Americans towards England, at the beginning of
+our troubles, we have no doubt. But for the scurrility heaped upon
+us by what claims to be the higher British press we were totally
+unprepared,--and for this good reason, that such malignity of
+criticism as is possible in America could never have suggested it. Let
+us not be misunderstood. We acknowledge the "Rowdy Journal" and Mr.
+Jefferson Brick. Undoubtedly, newspapers exist among us of which the
+description of Mr. Dickens is no very extravagant caricature. But
+their editors, if not of notoriously infamous life, are those whose
+minds are unenlarged by any generous education,--men whose lack of
+grammar suggests a certain palliation of their want of veracity and
+good-breeding. Such journals are seldom or never seen by the
+large class of cultivated American readers, and are in no sense
+representative of them. The "Saturday Review" and "Blackwood's
+Magazine" are said to be conducted by men of University training.
+Their articles are written in clear and precise English, and often
+contain vigorous thought. They publish few papers which do not give
+evidence of at least tolerable scholarship in their writers. Of
+kindred periodicals on this side of the ocean it may be safely said,
+that the intelligence of the reader forces their criticism up to
+some decent standard of honest painstaking. We may thus explain the
+bewilderment which came over us at that burst of vulgar ribaldry
+from the leading British press, in which the organs above named have
+achieved a scandalous preeminence. Vibrating from the extreme of
+shallowness to the extreme of sufficiency, scorning to be limited in
+abuse by adhering to any single hypothesis, the current literature
+of England has gloated over the rebellion of Slavery with the cynical
+chuckles of a sour spinster. Would that language less strong could
+express our meaning! President Lincoln--whatever may be judged his
+deficiency in resources of statesmanship--will be embalmed by history
+as one possessing many qualities peculiarly adapted to our perilous
+crisis, together with an integrity of life and purpose honorably
+representing the yeomanry of the Republic. This man, the ruler of a
+friendly people, British journalists have proclaimed guilty of crimes
+to which the records of the darkest despotisms can scarcely furnish a
+parallel. The precious blood of Ellsworth was taken by the "Saturday
+Review" as the text of such disgraceful banter as we trust few
+bar-keepers in America would bestow upon a bully killed in a
+pot-house fray. General Butler, for a verbal infelicity in an order
+of imperative necessity and wholesome effect, has been befouled by
+language which no careful historian would apply to Tiberius or Louis
+XV. But enough of this. We should be glad to believe that these
+utterers of false witness were boorish men, in dark and desperate
+ignorance of the true bearing of our current affairs. We are unable so
+to believe.
+
+It is a relief to turn to that small company of Englishmen who
+have extended brother-hands to us in the day of our necessity. No
+world-homage of literary admiration is worth the personal emotion with
+which they are recognized in America as representatives of that
+_Old_ England which has place in the affection and gratitude of every
+cultivated man among us. They have done us justice, when contempt for
+justice alone was popular, and a cynical skepticism seemed the only
+retreat from blatant abuse. Cairnes, Mill, Ellison, and others whom we
+need not name,--for the sake of such men let us still think of England
+in generous temper. Their sympathies have been with us through this
+terrible arbitrament of arms; they were with us in that solemn close
+of the old year, when the destiny of our dumb four millions weighed
+upon the night. These men have told us that the principle for which we
+contend is sound and worthy: they may also tell us that we have made
+occasional mistakes in reducing the principle to practice; and of this
+we are painfully conscious. It is well for us to forego that reckless
+bravado of unexampled prosperity once so offensive to foreign ears.
+Yet the best thing we ever had to boast of has been with us in the
+storm. According to the admirable observation of Niebuhr,--"Liberty
+exists where public opinion can constrain Government to fulfil its
+duties, and where, on the other side, in times of popular infatuation,
+the Government can maintain a wise course in spite of public opinion."
+This liberty has been preserved to us through all the turbulence of
+war. Like some divine element, it has mingled in the convulsion of
+human passion, and already prophesies the day when the service of man
+to man, as of man to God, shall be rendered in perfect freedom.
+
+
+_A Treatise on Military Law and the Practice of Courts-Martial_. By
+CAPTAIN S.V. BENET, Ordnance Department, U.S. Army, late Assistant
+Professor of Ethics, Law, etc., Military Academy, West Point. Mew
+York: D. Van Nostrand.
+
+In these days of large armies and intense military enthusiasm, the
+very title of a military book commends it, _prima facie_, to public
+interest; and when it promises to elucidate and systematize the
+intricate subject of military law, it has great specific importance
+in the eyes of the tens of thousands of officers who are constantly
+called upon to administer that law, and to whom the duties of
+courts-martial are new and difficult. But, to understand still more
+clearly the great value of such a work, supposing it to be well
+written, we must go back in the history of military courts, and see
+how little had been done to render them systematic and uniform,--what
+a comparatively unoccupied field the author had to reap in,--what
+needs there were to supply; and then we shall be better able to
+criticize his work, and to judge of its practical value.
+
+For a very long period we followed, in our army, the practice of the
+English courts-martial, as we adopted the English Common Law in our
+civic courts.
+
+The military code to be applied and administered by courts-martial is
+contained in the Act of Congress of the 10th of April, 1806, commonly
+called "The Rules and Articles of War," and in a few other acts and
+parts of acts, supplementary to these, which have been enacted from
+time to time, as circumstances seemed to require.
+
+In the year 1839, Major-General Macomb, commander-in-chief of the
+army, prepared a little treatise on "The Practice of Courts-Martial,"
+which, in lieu of something better, was generally used; and the modes
+of proceeding and forms of orders and records there given established
+uniformity in the actions and duties of such courts throughout the
+army.
+
+Five or six years later, Captain John P. O'Brien, of the Fourth
+Artillery, issued "A Treatise on American Military Law and Practice of
+Courts-Martial." This work evinced a great deal of legal research, and
+a thorough knowledge of the practical applications of military law;
+but it is voluminous, wanting in arrangement, and, while valuable as
+a storehouse from which to draw materials, not suited for ready
+reference, or for the study of beginners. It is now, we believe, out
+of print; and, as its accomplished author is not living, it can hardly
+be adapted to the wants of the army at the present day.
+
+In the year 1846, Captain William C. De Hart, of the Second Artillery,
+published his excellent work, entitled, "Observations on Military Law,
+and the Constitution and Practice of Courts-Martial." In his Preface
+he says,--"Since the legal establishment of the army and navy of
+the United States, there has been no work produced, written for the
+express purpose,... and intended as a guide for the administration
+of military justice." And, in a note, he adds, "The small treatise on
+courts-martial by the late Major-General Macomb is no exception to
+the remark." He makes, if we remember rightly, no reference to Captain
+O'Brien's work, which appeared but a short time before his own.
+
+The work of Captain De Hart, so far in advance of what had yet
+appeared on this subject, written, too, by an expert, who had been
+long employed under the orders of the War Department as the acting
+judge-advocate of the army, (the office of judge-advocate not being
+created till a later day,) was regarded as the chief authority in the
+army. But it was never designed, nor can it be easily adapted,
+for instruction. It is a philosophical discussion of the subject,
+containing many historical citations and illustrations, which show
+the reader his authorities without fortifying his positions. For a
+text-book, therefore, it lacks arrangement, and is too discursive.
+
+Up to this time, the subject of military law was not studied at the
+Military Academy; but in the year 1856, when the course of studies in
+that institution was lengthened, so as to consume five years instead
+of four, this branch was added to the curriculum, and has since been
+retained,--its importance being made every day more manifest. Then a
+treatise was wanted, which, while it could be used as authority in our
+vast army, should be also suited as a text-book for the cadets, from
+which they could recite in the section-room, and which should be their
+_vade-mecum_ for future reference,--originally learned, and always
+consulted.
+
+This was Captain Benet's self-appointed task, and he has performed it
+admirably. He has examined all the authorities, French and English,
+and his book bears the evidences of this original investigation. For
+purposes of study, his system is clear, his arrangement logical, and
+his divisions numerous and just. All the directions as to _trials_ are
+very practically set forth, so that any sensible volunteer officer,
+appointed upon a court unexpectedly, could very soon, by the aid of
+these pages, make himself "master of the position." And as there is
+much concurrent, and sometimes apparently conflicting, jurisdiction of
+military and civic courts, this volume ought to be on every lawyer's
+table as the special expounder of military law, wherever it may
+approach the action of the civil code.
+
+Having said thus much of the general plan, scope, and merits of the
+work, let us cast a brief glance at the nature of its contents. It is
+called a treatise on _Military Law_. What is military law? It is that
+law which governs the army, and all individuals connected with it. In
+other words, it has respect to military organization and discipline.
+It must not be confounded with _Martial Law_, which is the suspension
+of civic law, and the substitution of military law over citizens, not
+soldiers, in extraordinary circumstances.
+
+Military law, which cannot wait for the slow processes of civic
+courts, is immediate and condign in its action, and is administered
+by courts-martial, to which are confided the powers of judge and jury.
+These courts examine into the cases, find verdicts, and pronounce
+sentences,--all, however, subject to the revision and sanction of the
+supreme authority which convened them.
+
+Courts--martial are divided into two classes: _General Courts_, for
+the trial of officers, and of the higher grades of offences; and
+_Regimental_ or _Garrison Courts_, for the consideration of less
+important cases in a regiment or garrison. General courts vary in the
+number of members: they must be composed of not less than _five_, and
+of never more than _thirteen_. Regimental or garrison courts are
+never composed of more than three members. For general courts, only, a
+judge-advocate is appointed to conduct the prosecution for the United
+States.
+
+The offences against military law are determined by the "Rules and
+Articles of War," in which the principal offences are distinctly set
+forth and forbidden; and, that unanticipated misconduct may not be
+without cognizance and punishment, the _ninety-ninth_ article includes
+all such cases under the charge of "conduct to the prejudice of good
+order and military discipline," which is of universal scope.
+
+The punishments are also set forth in the Articles of War. Those
+prescribed for officers include death,--cashiering,[A]--cashiering,
+with a clause disabling the officer from ever holding any office
+under the United States,--dismissal,--suspension from rank and
+pay,--reprimand. For soldiers the principal punishments are
+death,--confinement,--confinement on bread-and-water diet,--solitary
+confinement,--forfeiture of pay and allowances,--discharges.
+
+[Footnote A: Cashiering implies something infamous in the British
+service; and although it has been attempted to make no distinction
+between cashiering and dismissing in our service, something of the
+opprobrium still attaches to the former punishment.]
+
+The conduct of the trial, the duties of all persons concerned,
+members, judge-advocate, prisoner, witnesses, counsel, etc., are
+given in detail, and will be very easily learned. Forms of orders for
+convening courts-martial, modes of recording the proceedings, the form
+of a general order confirming or disapproving the proceedings, the
+form of the judge-advocate's certificate, and the forms of charges
+and specifications under different articles of war, are given in
+the Appendix, and are used _verbatim_ by all judge-advocates and
+recorders. There are also explanations of the duties of courts of
+inquiry, and of boards for retiring disabled officers; and extracts
+from the Acts of Congress bearing upon military law. The Articles of
+War are also given for reference. The book is thus rendered complete
+as a manual for the conduct of courts-martial, from the original order
+to the execution of the sentence.
+
+From what has been said, it will be gathered that the work was needed,
+that it admirably supplies the need, and that it may be recommended,
+without qualification, as providing all the information which it
+purports to provide, and which could be demanded of it, in a lucid,
+systematic, and simple manner. It is an octavo volume, containing
+377 pages, clearly printed in large type, and on excellent paper;
+the binding is serviceable, being in strong buff leather, like other
+law-books.
+
+
+_Lectures on Moral Science_. Delivered before the Lowell Institute,
+Boston. By MARK HOPKINS, D.D., LL.D. Boston: Gould and Lincoln. 12mo.
+
+It is a little curious that there is not a single science in which
+man is constitutionally, and therefore directly interested, to which
+Emanuel Kant has not, in one way or another, written a _Prolegomena_.
+Professionally he did so in the case of Metaphysic: and out of the
+great original claim which he here established there emanates a
+separate claim, in each particular science of the order already
+indicated, to a sublime dictatorship. And chiefly is this claim valid
+in Moral Philosophy; for it was his province, the first of all men,
+clearly to reveal, as a scientific fact certified by demonstration,
+the divine eminence of the practical above the merely speculative
+powers of man,--the fulfilment of which mission justly entitled him
+to all the privileges incident to the vantage-ground thus
+gained,--privileges widely significant in a survey of that field where
+chiefly these practical powers hold their Olympian supremacy, the
+field of Moral Philosophy.
+
+Nothing could have afforded us a better excuse for a _resume_ of Kant,
+in this connection, than the new work of Dr. Hopkins. Of the many
+treatises on Moral Science with which the reading world has been
+flooded and bewildered since the time of Coleridge, there is this one
+alone found worthy of being ranged along-side of the works of the
+old Koenigsberg seer,--the one alone which, like his, deals with
+the grander features of the science. It is the best realization
+objectively of Kant's subjective principles that has yet been given.
+But how, the plain English reader will ask, are we to understand from
+this the place which the new work takes in literature? Not readily,
+indeed, unless one has already taken the trouble to examine such of
+Kant's treatises as have found their way out of German into hardly
+tolerable English, and has, moreover, reflected upon the importance of
+the principles therein established. But, of those who will read
+this notice, not one out of fifty has had even the opportunity
+for examination, not one out of five thousand has really taken the
+opportunity, and, of those that have, one half, at least, have done so
+independently of any philosophic aim, and have therefore reflected to
+very little purpose on the principles involved. Therefore, what the
+reader could not or has not chosen to do for himself we will do for
+him, at the same time congratulating him that there is now placed in
+his hands as complete and perfect a structure outwardly, in the work
+under notice, as the groundwork furnished by the old master was, in
+its subjective analysis, simple and profound.
+
+Those who approach human nature, or the nature outside of us, with
+a reverence for reality, will give precedence, after the manner of
+Nature, to those powers which are predominant and determinative; and
+in man these are Reason and Will. These two exist as identical in
+Personality, which we may denominate as we choose, whether Rational
+Will, or, as Kant does more frequently, Practical Reason. Here, in the
+identity of these two powers in Personality, and still more in
+their relation to each other as they are differentiated in personal
+existence, does Morality originate and develop according to
+principles.
+
+Now let it be remembered that Kant's mission was, as above indicated,
+to exclude the speculative side of our nature from any direct relation
+to human destiny, inasmuch as it could not answer either of the
+three great questions which every man everywhere and of necessity
+puts,--Whence am I? What am I? and Whither do I tend?--and therefore
+stood confused in the presence of any grand reality, whether human or
+divine, and to make the Practical Reason the sole and immediate link
+of connection between ourselves and the realities from the presence of
+which the Speculative Reason had been driven. Then will it be
+clearly seen how he would answer the fundamental question of Moral
+Philosophy,--Wherein does the quality of Goodness originally reside?
+
+The answer, from Kant's own lips, is this: "There is nothing in
+the world, nor, generally speaking, even out of it, possible to be
+conceived, which can without limitation be held good, but a _Good
+Will_." The good is not in the end attained, not even in the volition,
+but is a principle resident in the will itself. "The volition is
+between its principle _a priori_, which is formal, and its spring _a
+posteriori_, which is material; and since it must be determined by
+something, and being deprived of every material principle, it must be
+determined by the formal."
+
+Now, although President Hopkins considers Moral Philosophy as a
+philosophy of _ends_, he evidently does not mean ends _a posteriori_
+and _material_, but ends _a priori_, using the term as the best
+objective translation of _principles_. Almost as if with the conscious
+design of making his work harmonize with the groundwork furnished by
+Kant, he has developed a graduated series of conditions, according
+to which we ascend "the great world's altar-stairs," from lower and
+conditioned good up to that good which is the condition of all, itself
+unlimited, namely, in the will fulfilling its original design. The
+"law of limitation," according to which not only the subordinate
+powers of man, but even the forces of Nature, from those concerned in
+the highest animal organization down to that of gravitation, are made
+to take their places in the chain of dependence which hangs from the
+human will, is the most important part, scientifically, of the whole
+work. It is in accordance with this law that the science of Morals
+becomes a structure,--universal in its base and regularly ascending
+after the order of Nature, harmonious in all its parts, and proceeding
+upward within hearing of universal harmonies. Hitherto there has been
+no such structure; but only tabernacles have been built, because there
+was no Solomon to build a temple.
+
+Once having determined the connection which there is between the Will
+and the principle of Good, there still remains to be determined the
+place which Reason has in this connection.
+
+Merely to act according to some teleological or determining principle
+gives man no preeminence above Nature, except in degree. That which is
+peculiar to man is that he has the faculty of acting according to laws
+_as represented and reflected upon in the light of thought_,--to which
+reason is absolutely indispensable. Reason is therefore necessary to
+choice,--to freedom. There can, therefore, no more be goodness without
+reason than there can be without will. Yet there might be, as Kant
+justly argues, if good were to be in any case identified with mere
+happiness. "For," says he, "all the actions which man has to perform
+with a view to happiness, and the whole rule of his conduct, would be
+much more exactly presented to him by instinct, and that end had been
+much more certainly attained than it ever can be by reason; and should
+the latter also be bestowed on the favored creature, it must be of use
+only in contemplating the happy predisposition lodged in instinct,
+to admire this, to rejoice in it, and be grateful for it to the
+beneficent Cause; in short, Nature would have prevented reason from
+any practical use in subduing appetite, etc., and from excogitating
+for itself a project of happiness; she would have taken upon herself
+not only the choice of ends, but the means, and had with wise care
+intrusted both to instinct merely." The fact, then, that reason has
+been given, and has been endowed with a practical use, is sufficient
+to prove that some more worthy end than felicity is designed,--namely,
+a will good in itself,--rationally good,--that is, _from choice_.
+
+Out of the _rationality_ of will is developed its _morality_. Here,
+only, is found the possibility of failure in respect of the end
+constitutionally indicated,--here only the avenues of temptation, by
+which alien elements come in to array the man against himself in
+a terrible conflict, so sublime that it is a spectacle to heavenly
+powers. It is only as this rationality is clearly developed, and is
+allotted its just place in Moral Science, that the universal structure
+to which we have already alluded, and which, as we saw, culminated
+in the will, assumes its peculiar sublimity. For the _voluntariness_
+which is consciously realized in reason gives man the mastery over
+constitutional processes, not merely to direct, but even to thwart
+them; nor this merely for himself, but it is in his power, through
+the nullification of his own constitution, to nullify also that of the
+world, to dally with the institutions of Nature, and on the grandest
+scale to play the meddler.
+
+Merely of itself, apart from reason, the will could only work out its
+teleological type in darkness and by blind necessity; there could be
+no goodness, for this involves conscious elements. But through reason,
+that which of itself the will would yield as unconscious impulse
+obtains _representation_, and thus becomes a recognized principle,
+which in connection with the feelings involves an element of
+obligation.
+
+Conscience, thus, instead of being a separate and independent faculty,
+is, as Dr. Hopkins also places it, a function of the moral reason.
+Into the courts of this reason come not only the higher indications of
+will, but also the impulses of appetite, instinct, and affection,--not
+moral in themselves, indeed, but yet assuming the garments of morality
+as seen in this high presence.
+
+That which was made fundamental by Kant, in all that he has left on
+the subject of Moral Philosophy, is the position that it is wholly
+to be developed out of practical reason, or will as represented in
+reason. The same position is fundamental in President Hopkins's work,
+and it is here that its philosophic value chiefly rests. This position
+is developed in plain English, with strict scientific truth, and yet
+with a warm and sympathetic glow, as regards outward embodiment,
+that very much heightens the elevating power of the principles
+and conclusions evolved. Nor is man, because of his independent
+personality, made to stand alone, but always is he seen in the
+higher and All-Comprehending Presence. Ideal truth is reached without
+necessitating Idealism, and harmony is attained without Pantheism.
+
+We have purposely confined ourselves to the most general feature of
+the work, because it is this which gives it its great and distinctive
+importance; yet the whole structure is as elaborately and beautifully
+wrought as it is fitly grounded in the truth of Nature.
+
+
+_The National Almanac and Annual Record for 1863_. Philadelphia:
+George W. Childs. 12mo. pp. 600.
+
+
+Volumes like this are the very staff of history. What a stride in
+literature from the "Prognostications" of Nostradamus and Partridge,
+and the imposture of such prophetic chap-books as the almanacs of
+Moore and Poor Robin, to the bulky volumes teeming with all manner of
+information, such as the "Almanach Imperial," the "New Edinburgh," or
+"Thorn's Irish Almanac"! In the list of superior works ranking with
+those just named is to be included the new "National Almanac." We have
+here assuredly a vast improvement over anything in this way which
+has heretofore been attempted among us. A more comprehensive range of
+topics is presented, and such standard subjects as we should naturally
+expect to find introduced are worked up with much more copiousness and
+accuracy of treatment. It is evident on every page that a thoroughly
+active and painstaking industry has presided over the preparation of
+the volume. Statistics have not been taken at second-hand, where the
+primary sources of knowledge could be rendered available. The details
+of the great Departments of the Federal Government have been revised
+by the Departments themselves. In like manner, the particulars
+concerning the several States have in most cases been corrected by a
+State officer. Thus, as respects the leading subjects in the book, we
+have here not only the most accurate information before the public,
+but we have it in the latest authorized or official form. Facts are
+as a general rule brought down to date, instead of being six or
+twelve months behind-hand, as has been the case heretofore in similar
+publications, the compilers of which were content to await the tardy
+printing by Congress of documents and reports. Hence the work is
+pervaded by an air of freshness and vitality. It is not merely
+a receptacle of outgrown facts and accomplished events, but the
+companion and interpreter of the scenes and activities of the stirring
+present. It strives to seize and embody the whole being and doing of
+the passing time.
+
+It is quite impossible to exhibit in these few lines any adequate
+conception of the diversity and fulness of the subjects. All the
+valuable results of the last census are classified and incorporated.
+Then we have the entire organization of the military, naval, and
+civil service,--the tariff and tax laws conveniently arranged,--the
+financial, industrial, commercial, agricultural, literary,
+educational, and ecclesiastical elements of our condition,--the
+legislation of the last three sessions of Congress, and full and
+detailed statistics of the individual States,--to which is added a
+minute sketch of the foreign Governments. Nor can we overlook the
+fact, that, in the abundant matter relating to our present war,
+the narrative of events, obituary notices, etc., reach back to
+the commencement of the Rebellion, so as to furnish a complete and
+unbroken record of the contest from its outbreak. So much for the
+diversified nature of the matter; and an idea may be formed of its
+aggregate bulk from the fact that it exceeds, by nearly one-third, the
+size of the "American Almanac."
+
+The publication is, we trust, the dawning of a new era in this
+department of our literature. We have done well heretofore, but we
+have been behind many of the leading foreign works. There are in this
+initial volume indications that the new series which it inaugurates
+will be conducted with a thoroughness, enterprise, and skill which
+cannot fail to supply a great want. The politician, statesman,
+and scholar, the merchant, mechanic, and tradesman, every
+newspaper-reader, and, in truth, every observant and thoughtful man,
+of whatsoever profession or business, always wants at hand a minute
+and trustworthy exhibition of the manifold elements which constitute
+the changeful present as it ebbs and flows around him. Such hand-books
+are indispensable for present reference, and they constitute an
+invaluable storehouse for the future.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Atlantic Monthly, Vol. XI., February,
+1863, No. LXIV., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATLANTIC MONTHLY ***
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