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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror Of Literature, Amusement, And
+Instruction, No. 391, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Mirror Of Literature, Amusement, And Instruction, No. 391
+ Vol. 14, No. 391, Saturday, September 26, 1829
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: September 3, 2004 [EBook #13359]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, William Flis, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
+
+Vol. 14, No. 391.] SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1829. [PRICE 2d.
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+[Illustration: GURNEY'S IMPROVED STEAM CARRIAGE.]
+
+
+
+
+MR. GURNEY'S IMPROVED STEAM CARRIAGE.
+
+
+Mr. Gurney, in perfecting this invention, has followed Dr. Franklin's
+advice--to tire and begin again. It is now four years since he first
+commenced his ingenious enterprise; and nearly two years since we
+reported and illustrated the progress he had made. (_See_ MIRROR, vol.
+x. page 393, or No. 287.) He began with a large boiler, but public
+prejudice was too strong for it; and knowing people talked of high
+pressure accidents; the steam, could not, of course, be altogether got
+rid of, so to divide the danger, Mr. Gurney made his boiler in forty
+welded iron pipes; still the steam ran in a main pipe beneath the
+whole of the carriage, and the evil was but modified. At length the
+inventer has detached the engine and boiler, or locomotive part of
+the apparatus, which is now to be fastened to the carriage, and may
+be considered as a STEAM-HORSE, with no more danger than we should
+apprehend from a restive animal, in whose veins the steam or mettle
+circulates with too high a pressure. Fair trials have been made of
+the Improved Carriage on our common roads, the Premier has decided the
+machine "to be of great national importance," from sundry experiments
+witnessed by his grace, at Hounslow Barracks; and the coach is
+announced "really to start next month (the 1st) in working--not
+experimental journeys--for travellers between London and Bath."[1]
+Crack upon crack will follow joke upon joke; the _Omnibus_, with its
+phaeton-like coursers will be eclipsed; and a journey to Bath and the
+Hot Wells by steam will soon be an everyday event.
+
+Descriptions of Mr. Gurney's carriage have been so often before the
+public, that extended detail is unnecessary. Besides, all our liege
+subscribers will turn to the account in our No. 287. The recent
+improvements have been perspicuously stated by Mr. Herapath, of
+Cranford, in a letter in the _Times_ newspaper, and we cannot do
+better than adopt and abridge a portion of his communication.
+
+"The present differs from the earlier carriage, in several
+improvements in the machinery, suggested by experiment; also in
+having no propellers;[2] and in having only four wheels instead of
+six; the apparatus for guiding being applied immediately to the two
+fore-wheels, bearing a part of the weight, instead of two extra
+leading wheels bearing little or none. No person can conceive the
+absolute control this apparatus gives to the director of the carriage,
+unless he has had the same opportunities of observing it which I
+had in a ride with Mr. Gurney. Whilst the wheels obey the slightest
+motions of the hand, a trifling pressure of the foot keeps them
+inflexibly steady, however rough the ground. To the hind axle, which
+is very strong, and bent into two cranks of nine inches radius, at
+right angles to each other, is applied the propelling power by means
+of pistons from two horizontal cylinders. By this contrivance, and a
+peculiar mode of admitting the steam to the cylinders, Mr. Gurney has
+very ingeniously avoided that cumbersome appendage to steam-engines,
+the fly-wheel, and preserves uniformity of action by constantly having
+one cylinder on full pressure, whilst the other is on the reduced
+expansive. The dead points--that is, those in which a piston has no
+effect from being in the same right line with its crank,--are also
+cleared by the same means. For as the cranks are at right angles, when
+one piston is at a dead point, the other has a position of maximum
+effect, and is then urged by full steam power; but no sooner has the
+former passed the dead point, than an expansion valve opens on it with
+full steam, and closes on the latter. Firmly fixed to the extremities
+of the axle, and at right angles to it, are the two 'carriers'--(two
+strong irons extending each way to the felloes of the wheels.) These
+irons may be bolted to the felloes of the wheels or not, or to the
+felloes of one wheel only. Thus the power applied to the axle is
+carried at once to the parts of the wheels of least stress--the
+circumferences. By this artifice the wheels are required to be of no
+greater strength and weight than ordinary carriage-wheels; and, like
+them, they turn freely and independently on the axle; but one or
+both may be secured as part and parcel of the axle, as circumstances
+require. The carriage is consequently propelled by the friction or
+hold which either or both hind-wheels, according as the power is
+applied to them jointly or separately, have on the ground. Beneath
+the hind part drop two irons, with flat feet, called 'shoe-drags.' A
+well-contrived apparatus, with a spindle passing up through a hollow
+cylinder, to which the guiding handle is affixed, enables the director
+to force one or both drags tight on the road, so as to retard the
+progress in a descent, or if he please, to raise the wheels off
+the ground. The propulsive power of the wheels being by this means
+destroyed, the carriage is arrested in a yard or two, though going at
+the rate of eighteen or twenty miles an hour. On the right hand of the
+director lies the handle of the throttle-valve, by which he has the
+power of increasing or diminishing the supply of steam _ad libitum_,
+and hence of retarding or accelerating the carriage's velocity. The
+whole carriage and machinery weigh about 16 cwt., and with the full
+complement of water and coke 20 or 22 cwt., of which, I am informed,
+about 16 cwt. lie on the hind-wheels."
+
+Mr. H. then enumerates the principle of the improvements:--"That
+troublesome appendage the fly-wheel, as I have observed, Mr. Gurney
+has rendered unnecessary. The danger to be apprehended in going over
+rough pitching, from too rapid a generation of steam, he avoids by a
+curious application of springs; and should these be insufficient, one
+or two safety valves afford the _ultimatum_ of security. He ensures
+an easy descent down the steepest declivity by his 'shoe-drags,' and
+the power of reversing the action of the engines. His hands direct,
+and his foot literally pinches obedience to the course over the
+roughest and most refractory ground. The dreadful consequences of
+boiler-bursting are annihilated by a judicious application of tubular
+boilers. Should, indeed, a tube burst, a hiss about equal to that of a
+hot nail plunged into water, contains the sum total of alarm, while a
+few strokes with a hammer will set all to rights again. Lastly, he has
+so contrived his 'carriers,' that they shall act without confining the
+wheels, by which means there is none of that sliding and consequent
+cutting up of the road, which, in sharp turnings, would result from
+inflexible constraint.
+
+"Hills and loose, slippery ground are well known to be the _res
+adversae_ of steam-carriages; on ordinary level roads they roll
+along with rapid facility. In every ascent there are two additional
+circumstances inimical to progressive motion. One is, that carriages
+press less on the ground of a hill than on that of a plain, thus
+giving the wheels a less forcible grasp or bite. But this may be
+easily remedied in the structure of a carriage, and is not of very
+material consequence in the steepest hills that we have. The other is
+more serious. When a carriage ascends a hill, the weight or gravity of
+the whole is decomposable into two--one perpendicular, and the other
+parallel to the road. The former constitutes the pressure on the road,
+the latter the additional work the engine has to perform. Universally
+this is the same part of the whole carriage and its load together,
+which the perpendicular ascent of the hill is of its length. With
+these principles, if we knew the bite of the wheels on the road,
+we could at once subject the powers of Mr. Gurney's carriage to
+calculation.
+
+"Now, from one of the experiments made in the barrack-yard, at
+Hounslow, I find we can approximate towards it. For instance, with one
+wheel only fixed to the 'carriers,' the carriage drew itself and load
+of water and coke (about 1 ton), with three men on it, and a wagon
+behind of 16 cwt. containing 27 soldiers. This, at the rate of 1-1/2
+cwt. to a man, in round numbers is 4 tons. Estimating the force of
+traction of spring carriages at a twelfth of the total weight, it
+consequently gives a hold or bite on the road of 1-12 of 4 tons, or
+6 2-3rds cwt. per wheel, or 13 1-3rd cwt. for the two wheels. This is
+likewise the propelling force of the carriage. Supposing, therefore,
+we were ascending a hill of 1 foot rise in 8, which I am assured
+exceeds in steepness any hill we have, we should be able to draw a
+load behind of 2 tons 2 cwt., or between 3 and 4 tons altogether....
+
+"On a good level road I think it not improbable it might draw, instead
+of 7 tons which our experiment would give, from 10 to 11, besides
+its own weight, or 100 ordinary men, exclusive of 2 or 3 tons for
+carriages; and up one of our steepest hills, 3 tons besides itself, or
+25 men besides a ton for a carriage. This it would do at a rate of 8,
+9, or 10 miles an hour. For it is a singular feature in this carriage,
+and which was remarked by many at the time, that it maintained very
+nearly the same speed with a wagon and 27 men, that it did with the
+carriage and only 5 or 6 persons. But there is a fact connected with
+this machine still more extraordinary. For instance, every additional
+cwt. we shift on the hind or working wheels, will increase the power
+of traction in our steepest hills upwards of 4 cwt., and on the
+level road half a ton. Such, then, is the paradoxical nature of
+steam-carriages, that the very circumstance which in animal exertion
+would weaken and retard, will here multiply their strength and
+accelerate. This, no doubt, Mr. Gurney's ingenuity will soon turn to
+profitable account.
+
+"It has often been asserted that carriages of this sort could not
+go above 6 or 7 miles an hour. I can see no reasonable objection
+to 20. The following fact, decided before a large company in the
+barrack-yard, will best speak for itself:--At eighteen minutes after
+three I ascended the carriage with Mr. Gurney. After we had gone about
+half way round, 'Now,' said Mr. Gurney, 'I will show you her speed.'
+He did, and we completed seven turns round the outside of the road
+by twenty-eight minutes after three. If, therefore, as I was there
+assured, two and a half turns measured one mile, we went 2.8 miles
+in ten minutes; that is, at the rate of 16.8, or nearly 17 miles per
+hour. But as Mr. Gurney slackened its motion once or twice in the
+course of trial, to speak to some one, and did not go at an equal rate
+all the way round for fear of accident in the crowd, it is clear that
+sometimes we must have proceeded at the rate of upwards of twenty
+miles an hour."
+
+The Engraving will furnish the reader with a correct idea of such of
+Mr. Gurney's improvements as are most interesting to the public. The
+present arrangement is certainly very preferable to placing the boiler
+and engine in immediate contact with the carriage, which is to convey
+goods and passengers. Men of science are still much divided on the
+practical economy of using steam instead of horses as a travelling
+agent; but we hope, like all great contemporaries they may whet and
+cultivate each other till the desired object is attained. One of them,
+a writer in the _Atlas_, observes, that "if ultimately found capable
+of being brought into public use, it would probably be most convenient
+and desirable that several locomotive engines should be employed on
+one line of road, in order that they might be exchanged at certain
+stages for the purposes of examination, tightening of screws, and
+other adjustments, which the jolting on passing over the road might
+render necessary, and for the supply of fuel and water."
+
+An effectively-coloured lithographic of Mr. Gurney's carriage (by
+Shoesmith) has recently appeared at the printsellers', which we take
+this opportunity of recommending to the notice of collectors and
+scrappers.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Literary Gazette," Sept. 19, 1829.]
+
+[Footnote 2: The propellers, I am informed, are not absolutely
+discarded. They are now not fixed, but movable, and reserved for
+extreme possible emergencies, or for certain military purposes.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PUNNING SATIRE ON AN INCONSTANT LOVER.
+
+ You are as faithless as a _Carthaginian_,
+ To love at once, _Kate, Nell, Doll, Martha, Jenny, Anne._
+
+SWIFT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BRIMHAM ROCKS[3] BY MOONLIGHT.
+
+(_FOR THE MIRROR._)
+
+
+ The sun hath set, but yet I linger still,
+ Gazing with rapture on the face of night;
+ And mountain wild, deep vale, and heathy hill,
+ Lay like a lovely vision, mellow, bright,
+ Bathed in the glory of the sunset light,
+ Whose changing hues in flick'ring radiance play,
+ Faint and yet fainter on the outstretch'd sight,
+ Until at length they wane and die away,
+ And all th' horizon round fades into twilight gray.
+
+ But, slowly rising up the vaulted sky,
+ Forth comes the moon, night's joyous, sylvan queen,
+ With one lone, silent star, attendant by
+ Her side, all sparkling in its glorious sheen;
+ And, floating swan-like, stately, and serene,
+ A few light fleecy clouds, the drapery of heav'n,
+ Throw their pale shadows o'er this witching scene,
+ Deep'ning its mystic grandeur--and seem driven
+ Round these all shapeless piles like Time's wan spectres risen
+
+ From out the tombs of ages. All around
+ Lies hushed and still, save with large, dusky wing
+ The bird of night makes its ill-omened sound;
+ Or moor-game, nestling 'neath th' flowery ling
+ Low chuckle to their mates--or startled, spring
+ Away on rustling pinions to the sky,
+ Wheel round and round in many an airy ring,
+ Then swooping downward to their covert hie,
+ And, lodged beneath the heath again securely lie.
+
+ Ascend yon hoary rock's impending brow,
+ And on its windy summit take your stand--
+ Lo! Wilsill's lovely vale extends below,
+ And long, long heathy moors on either hand
+ Stretch dark and misty--a bleak tract of land,
+ Whereon but seldom human footsteps come;
+ Save when with dog, obedient at command,
+ And gun, the sportsman quits his city home,
+ And brushing through the ling in quest of game doth roam.
+
+ And lo! in wild confusion scattered round,
+ Huge, shapeless, naked, massy piles of stone
+ Rise, proudly towering o'er this barren ground,
+ Scowling in mutual hate--apart, alone,
+ Stern, desolate they stand--and seeming thrown
+ By some dire, dread convulsion of the earth
+ From her deep, silent caves, and hoary grown
+ With age and storms that Boreas issues forth
+ Replete with ire from his wild regions in the north.
+
+ How beautiful! yet wildly beautiful,
+ As group on group comes glim'ring on the eye,
+ Making the heart, soul, mind, and spirit full
+ Of holy rapture and sweet imagery;
+ Till o'er the lip escapes th' unconscious sigh,
+ And heaves the breast with feeling, too too deep
+ For words t' express the awful sympathy,
+ That like a dream doth o'er the senses creep,
+ Chaining the gazer's eye--and yet he cannot weep.
+
+ But stands entranced and rooted to the spot,
+ While grows the scene upon him vast, sublime,
+ Like some gigantic city's ruin, not
+ Inhabited by men, but Titans--Time
+ Here rests upon his scythe and fears to climb,
+ Spent by th' unceasing toil of ages past,
+ Musing he stands and listens to the chime
+ Of rock-born spirits howling in the blast,
+ While gloomily around night's sable shades are cast.
+
+ Well deemed I ween the Druid sage of old
+ In making this his dwelling place on high;
+ Where all that's huge and great from Nature's mould,
+ Spoke this the temple of his deity;
+ Whose walls and roof were the o'erhanging sky,
+ His altar th' unhewn rock, all bleak and bare,
+ Where superstition with red, phrensied eye
+ And look all wild, poured forth her idol prayer,
+ As rose the dying wail,[4] and blazed the pile in air.
+
+ Lost in the lapse of time, the Druid's lore
+ Hath ceased to echo these rude rocks among;
+ No altar new is stained with human gore;
+ No hoary bard now weaves the mystic song;
+ Nor thrust in wicker hurdles, throng on throng,
+ Whole multitudes are offered to appease
+ Some angry god, whose will and power of wrong
+ Vainly they thus essayed to soothe and please--
+ Alas! that thoughts so gross man's noblest powers should seize.
+
+ But, bowed beneath the cross, see! prostrate fall
+ The mummeries that long enthralled our isle;
+ So perish error! and wide over all
+ Let reason, truth, religion ever smile:
+ And let not man, vain, impious man defile
+ The spark heaven lighted in the human breast;
+ Let no enthusiastic rage, no sophist's wile
+ Lull the poor victim into careless rest,
+ Since the pure gospel page can teach him to be blest.
+
+ Weak, trifling man, O! come and ponder here
+ Upon the nothingness of human things--
+ How vain, how very vain doth then appear
+ The city's hum, the pomp and pride of kings;
+ All that from wealth, power, grandeur, beauty springs,
+ Alike must fade, die, perish, be forgot;
+ E'en he whose feeble hand now strikes the strings
+ Soon, soon within the silent grave must rot--
+ Yet Nature's still the same, though we see, we hear her not.
+
+J. HORNER.
+
+_Wilsill, near Pateley Bridge, Sept. 1829._
+
+[Footnote 3: Yorkshire. This wonderful assemblage lies scattered in
+groups, covering a surface of nearly forty acres of heathy moor.
+The numerous rocking-stones, rock-idols, altars, cannon rocks, &c.
+evidently point out this spot as having been used by the Druids in
+their horrid and mysterious ceremonies. The position of some of these
+rocks is truly astonishing; one in particular resting upon a base of
+a few inches, overhangs on all sides many feet; while others seem
+suspended and balanced as if they hung in air.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Human sacrifices formed part of the religious rites of
+the Druids.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+MANNERS & CUSTOMS OF ALL NATIONS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PLEDGING HEALTHS.
+
+The origin of the very common expression, to _pledge_ one drinking,
+is curious: it is thus related by a very celebrated antiquarian of
+the fifteenth century. "When the _Danes_ bore sway in this land, if
+a native did drink, they would sometimes stab him with a dagger or
+knife; hereupon people would not drink in company unless some one
+present would be their _pledge_ or surety, that they should receive no
+hurt, whilst they were in their draught; hence that usual phrase, I'll
+_pledge you_, or be a pledge for you." Others affirm the true sense of
+the word was, that if the party drank to, were not disposed to drink
+himself, he would put another for _a pledge_ to do it for him, else
+the party who began would take it ill.
+
+J.W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RUSSIAN SUPERSTITION.
+
+The extreme superstition of the Greek church, the national one of
+Russia, seems to exceed that of the Roman Catholic devotees, even in
+Spain and Portugal. The following instance will show the absurdity of
+it even among the higher classes:--
+
+A Russian princess, some few years since, had always a large silver
+crucifix following her in a separate carriage, and which was placed in
+her chamber. When any thing fortunate happened to her in the course
+of the day, and she was satisfied with all that had occurred, she
+had lighted tapers placed around the crucifix, and said to it in a
+familiar style, "See, now, as you have been very good to me to-day,
+you shall be treated well; you shall have candles all night; I will
+love you; I will pray to you." If on the contrary, any thing happened
+to vex the lady, she had the candles put out, ordered her servants not
+to pay any homage to the poor image, and loaded it herself with the
+bitterest reproaches.
+
+INA.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE SELECTOR;
+
+AND LITERARY NOTICES OF _NEW WORKS_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIBRARY OF ENTERTAINING KNOWLEDGE.
+
+_FRUITS_.
+
+This Part (5) completes the volume of "Vegetable Substances used in
+the Arts and in Domestic Economy." The first portion--_Timber Trees_
+was noticed at some length in our last volume (page 309,) and received
+our almost unqualified commendation, which we are induced to extend to
+the Part now before us. Still, we do not recollect to have pointed
+out to our readers that which appears to us the great recommendatory
+feature of this series of works--we mean the arrangement of the
+volumes--their subdivisions and exemplifications--and these evince a
+master-hand in compilation.
+
+Every general reader must be aware that little novelty could be
+expected in a brief History and Description of Timber Trees and
+Fruits, and that the object of the Useful Knowledge Society was not
+merely to furnish the public with new views, but to present in the
+most attractive form the most entertaining facts of established
+writers, and illustrate their views with the observations of
+contemporary authors as well as their own personal acquaintance with
+the subjects. In this manner, the Editor has taken "a general
+and rapid view of fruits," and, considering the great hold their
+description possesses on all readers, we are disposed to think almost
+too rapid. We should have enjoyed a volume or two more than half a
+volume of such reading as the present; but as we are not purchasers,
+and are unacquainted with the number to which the Society propose
+to extend their works, we ought not perhaps to raise this objection,
+which, to say the truth, is a sort of negative commendation. Hitherto,
+we have been accustomed to see compilations of pretensions similar
+to the present, executed with little regard to neatness or unity,
+or weight or consideration. Whole pages and long extracts have been
+stripped and sliced off books, with little rule or arrangement, and
+what is still worse, without any acknowledgment of the sources.
+The last defect is certainly the greatest, since, in spite of
+ill-arrangement, an intelligent inquirer may with much trouble, avail
+himself of further reference to the authors quoted, and thus complete
+in his own mind what the compiler had so indifferently begun. The work
+before us is, however, altogether of a much higher order than general
+compilations. The introductions and inferences are pointed and
+judicious, and the facts themselves of the most interesting character,
+are narrated in a condensed but perspicuous style; while the slightest
+reference will prove that the best and latest authorities have
+been appreciated. Thus, in the History and Description of Fruits,
+the Transactions of the Horticultural Society are frequently and
+pertinently quoted to establish disputed points, as well as the
+journals of intelligent travellers and naturalists; with occasional
+poetical embellishments, which lend a charm even to this attractive
+species of reading.
+
+To quote the history of either Fruit entire, would not so well denote
+the character of the work as would a few of the most striking passages
+in the descriptions. In the introductory chapter we are pleased with
+the following passage on _Monastic Gardens_.
+
+"The monks, after the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons to Christianity,
+appear to have been the only gardeners. As early as 674, we have
+a record, describing a pleasant and fruit-bearing close at Ely,
+then cultivated by Brithnoth, the first Abbot of that place. The
+ecclesiastics subsequently carried their cultivation of fruits as
+tar as was compatible with the nature of the climate, and the
+horticultural knowledge of the middle ages. Whoever has seen an old
+abbey, where for generations destruction only has been at work, must
+have almost invariably found it situated in one of the choicest spots,
+both as to soil and aspect; and if the hand of injudicious improvement
+has not swept it away, there is still the 'Abbey-garden.' Even though
+it has been wholly neglected--though its walls be in ruins, covered
+with stone-crop and wall-flower, and its area produce but the rankest
+weeds--there are still the remains of the aged fruit trees--the
+venerable pears, the delicate little apples, and the luscious black
+cherries. The chestnuts and the walnuts may have yielded to the axe,
+and the fig trees and vines died away;--but sometimes the mulberry is
+left, and the strawberry and the raspberry struggle among the ruins.
+There is a moral lesson in these memorials of the monastic ages. The
+monks, with all their faults, were generally men of peace and study;
+and these monuments show that they were improving the world, while the
+warriors were spending their lives to spoil it. In many parts of Italy
+and France, which had lain in desolation and ruin from the time of
+the Goths, the monks restored the whole surface to fertility; and in
+Scotland and Ireland there probably would not have been a fruit tree
+till the sixteenth century, if it had not been for their peaceful
+labours. It is generally supposed that the monastic orchards were in
+their greatest perfection from the twelfth to the fifteenth century."
+
+Again, the
+
+_NATURALIZATION OF PLANTS._
+
+"The large number of our native plants (for we call those native which
+have adapted themselves to our climate) mark the gradual progress of
+our civilization through the long period of two thousand years; whilst
+the almost infinite diversity of exotics which a botanical garden
+offers, attest the triumphs of that industry which has carried us
+as merchants or as colonists over every region of the earth, and has
+brought from every region whatever can administer to our comforts and
+our luxuries,--to the tastes and the needful desires of the humblest
+as well as the highest amongst us. To the same commerce we owe the
+potato and the pine-apple; the China rose, whose flowers cluster round
+the cottage-porch, and the Camellia which blooms in the conservatory.
+The addition even of a flower, or an ornamental shrub, to those which
+we already possess, is not to be regarded as a matter below the
+care of industry and science. The more we extend our acquaintance
+with the productions of nature, the more are our minds elevated by
+contemplating the variety, as well as the exceeding beauty, of the
+works of the Creator. The highest understanding does not stoop when
+occupied in observing the brilliant colour of a blossom, or the
+graceful form of a leaf. Hogarth, the great moral painter, a man in
+all respects of real and original genius, writes thus to his friend
+Ellis, a distinguished traveller and naturalist:--'As for your pretty
+little seed-cups, or vases, they are a sweet confirmation of the
+pleasure Nature seems to take in superadding an elegance of form to
+most of her works, wherever you find them. How poor and bungling are
+all the imitations of Art! When I have the pleasure of seeing you
+next, we will sit down, _nay, kneel down if you will_, and admire
+these things.'
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"It is one of the proudest attributes of man, and one which is most
+important for him to know, that he can improve every production
+of nature, if he will but once make it his own by possession and
+attachment. A conviction of this truth has rendered the cultivation of
+fruits, in the more polished countries of Europe, as successful as we
+now behold it."
+
+The work then divides into _Fruits of the Temperate Climates_, and
+of _Tropical Climates_; the first are subdivided into Fleshy, Pulpy,
+and Stone Fruits and Nuts, in preference to a strict geographical
+arrangement. Under "the Apple" occur some very judicious observations
+on
+
+_CIDER._
+
+"The cider counties of England have always been considered as highly
+interesting. They lie something in the form of a horse-shoe round
+the Bristol Channel; and the best are, Worcester and Hereford, on
+the north of the channel, and Somerset and Devon on the south. In
+appearance, they have a considerable advantage over those counties
+in which grain alone is cultivated. The blossoms cover an extensive
+district with a profusion of flowers in the spring, and the fruit is
+beautiful in autumn. Some of the orchards occupy a space of forty or
+fifty acres; and the trees being at considerable intervals, the land
+is also kept in tillage. A great deal of practical acquaintance with
+the qualities of soil is required in the culture of apple and pear
+trees; and his skill in the adaptation of trees to their situation
+principally determines the success of the manufacturer of cider
+and perry. The produce of the orchards is very fluctuating; and the
+growers seldom expect an abundant crop more than once in three years.
+The quantity of apples required to make a hogshead of cider is from
+twenty-four to thirty bushels; and in a good year an acre of orchard
+will produce somewhere about six hundred bushels, or from twenty to
+twenty-five hogsheads. The cider harvest is in September. When the
+season is favourable, the heaps of apples collected at the presses are
+immense--consisting of hundreds of tons. If any of the vessels used in
+the manufacture of cider are of lead, the beverage is not wholesome.
+The price of a hogshead of cider generally varies from 2l. to 5l.,
+according to the season and quality; but cider of the finest growth
+has sometimes been sold as high as 20l. by the hogshead, direct from
+the press--a price equal to that of many of the fine wines of the
+Rhine or the Garonne."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_OLD APPLE TREES._
+
+"At Horton, in Buckinghamshire, where Milton spent some of his earlier
+years, there is an apple tree still growing, of which the oldest
+people remember to have heard it said that the poet was accustomed
+to sit under it. And upon the low leads of the church at Romsey, in
+Hampshire, there is an apple tree still bearing fruit, which is said
+to be two hundred years old."
+
+The _Fig_ and the _Fine_ are equally interesting, and in connexion
+with the latter we notice the editor's mention of the fine vineyard
+at Arundel Castle. Aubrey describes a similar vineyard at Chart Park,
+near Dorking, another seat of the Howards. "Here was a vineyard,
+supposed to have been planted by the Hon. Charles Howard, who, it is
+said, erected his residence, as it were, in the vineyard." Again, "the
+vineyard flourished for some time, and tolerably good wine was made
+from the produce; but after the death of the noble planter, in 1713,
+it was much neglected, and nothing remained but the name. On taking
+down the house, a stone resembling a millstone, was found, by which
+the grapes were pressed."[5] We were on the spot at the time, and saw
+the stone in question. Vines are still very abundant at Dorking, the
+soil being very congenial to their growth. "Hence, almost every house
+in this part has its vine; and some of the plants are very productive.
+The cottages of the labouring poor are not without this ornament, and
+the produce is usually sold by them to their wealthier neighbours, for
+the manufacture of wine. The price per bushel is from 4s. to 16s.;
+but the variableness of the season frequently disappoints them in the
+crops, the produce of which is sometimes laid up as a setoff to the
+rent."[6]
+
+We have heard too of attempts in England to train the vine on
+the sides of hills, and a few years since an individual lost a
+considerable sum of money in making the experiment in the Isle of
+Wight.
+
+At page 257, observes the editor,
+
+_A VINEYARD_
+
+"Associated as it is with all our ideas of beauty and plenty, is,
+in general, a disappointing object. The hop plantations of our own
+country are far more picturesque. In France, the vines are trained
+upon poles, seldom more than three or four feet in height; and 'the
+pole-clipt vineyard' of poetry is not the most inviting of real
+objects. In Spain, poles for supporting vines are not used; but
+cuttings are planted, which are not permitted to grow very high, but
+gradually form thick and stout stocks. In Switzerland, and in the
+German provinces, the vineyards are as formal as those of France.
+But in Italy is found the true vine of poetry, 'surrounding the stone
+cottage with its girdle, flinging its pliant and luxuriant branches
+over the rustic veranda, or twining its long garland from tree to
+tree.'[7] It was the luxuriance and the beauty of her vines and her
+olives that tempted the rude people of the north to pour down upon her
+fertile fields:--
+
+ 'The prostrate South to the destroyer yields
+ Her boasted titles and her golden fields;
+ With grim delight the brood of winter view
+ A brighter day, and heavens of azure hue.
+ Scent the new fragrance of the breathing rose.
+ And quaff the pendent vintage as it grows.'[8]
+
+"In Greece, too, as well as Italy, the shoots of the vines are
+either trained upon trees, or supported, so as to display all their
+luxuriance, upon a series of props. This was the custom of the ancient
+vine-growers; and their descendants have preserved it in all its
+picturesque originality.[9] The vine-dressers of Persia train their
+vines to run up a wall, and curl over on the top. But the most
+luxurious cultivation of the vine in hot countries is where it covers
+the trellis-work which surrounds a well, inviting the owner and his
+family to gather beneath its shade. 'The fruitful bough by well' is of
+the highest antiquity."
+
+Passing over the Mulberry, Currant, Gooseberry, and the Strawberry,
+the account of the Egg Plant is particularly attractive; and that of
+the Olive is well-written, but too long for extract.
+
+Among the _Tropical Fruits_, the Orange and the Date are very
+delightful; and equal in importance and interest are the Cocoa Nut
+and Bread Fruit Tree. In short, it is impossible to open the volume
+without being gratified with the richness and variety of its contents,
+and the amiable feeling which pervades the inferences and incidental
+observations of the writer.
+
+A word or two on the embellishments and we have done. These are
+far behind the literary merits of the volume, and are discreditable
+productions. Where so much is well done it were better to omit
+engravings altogether than adopt such as these: "they imitate nature
+so abominably." The group at page 223 is a fair specimen of the whole,
+than which nothing can be more lifeless. After the excellent cuts of
+Mr. London's Gardener's and Natural History Magazines, we turn away
+from these with pain, and it must be equally vexatious to the editor
+to see such accompaniments to his pages.
+
+[Footnote 5: Picturesque Promenade round Dorking. Second Edit. 12mo.
+1823, p. 258, 259.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Ibid p. 143.]
+
+[Footnote 7: The Alpenstock, by C.J. Latrobe, 1829.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Gray's Alliance of Education and Government.]
+
+[Footnote 9: See the second Georgic of Virgil.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SHAKSPEARE'S BROOCH.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+(_TO THE EDITOR OF THE MIRROR._)
+
+Having frequently observed in your valuable publication the great
+attention which you have paid to every thing relating to the "Immortal
+Bard of Avon," I beg leave to transmit to you two drawings (the one
+back, the other front) of a brooch or buckle, found near the residence
+of the poet, at New Place, Stratford, among the rubbish brought out
+from the spot where the house stood. This brooch is considered by the
+most competent judges and antiquarians in and near Stratford, to have
+been the personal property of Shakspeare. A. is the back; 1 and 2,
+faint traces of the letters which were nearly obliterated, by the
+person who found the relic, in scraping to ascertain whether the
+metal was precious, the whole of it being covered with gangrene
+or verdigris. 3 and 4 are the remains of the hinge to the pin.
+Fortunately the W. at the corner was preserved. B. represents the
+front of the brooch; 1, 3, and 5, are red stones in the top part
+(similar in shape to a coronet) 2 and 4 are blue stones in the same;
+the other stones in the bottom or heart are white, though varying
+rather in hue, and all are set in silver.
+
+HJTHWC.
+
+N.B. The above is shown to the curious by the individual who found
+it--a poor man named Smith, living in Sheep Street, Stratford.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The greater portion of the following Notes will, we are persuaded, be
+new to all but the bibliomaniacs in theatrical lore. They occur in a
+paper of 45 pages in the last Edinburgh Review, in which the writer
+attributes the Decline of the Drama to a variety of causes--as
+late hours, costly representations, high salaries, and excessive
+taxation--some of which we have selected for extract. In our affection
+for the Stage, we have paid some attention to its history, as well
+as to its recent state, and readily do we subscribe to a few of the
+Reviewer's opinions of the cause of its neglect. But to attribute this
+falling off to "taxes innumerable" is rather too broad: perhaps the
+highly-taxed wax lights around the box circles suggested this new
+light. We need not go so far to detect the rottenness of the dramatic
+state; still, as the question involves controversy at every point,
+we had rather keep out of the fight, and leave our Reviewer without
+further note or comment.
+
+
+NOTES ON THE DRAMA.
+
+(_FROM THE EDINBURGH REVIEW, NO. 98._)
+
+_ORIGIN OF ADMISSION MONEY._
+
+There were at Athens various funds, applicable to public purposes; one
+of which, and among the most considerable, was appropriated for the
+expensed of sacrifices, processions, festivals, spectacles, and of
+the theatres. The citizens were admitted to the theatres for some time
+gratis; but in consequence of the disturbances caused by multitudes
+crowding to get seats, to introduce order, and as the phrase is,
+to keep out improper persons, a small sum of money was afterwards
+demanded for admission. That the poorer classes, however, might not
+be deprived of their favourite gratification, they received from the
+treasury, out of this fund, the price of a seat--and thus peace and
+regularity were secured, and the fund still applied to its original
+purpose. The money that was taken at the doors, having served as a
+ticket, was expended, together with that which had not been used in
+this manner, to maintain the edifice itself, and to pay the manifold
+charges of the representation.
+
+"_DRAMATIC REPRESENTATIONS NATURAL TO MAN._"
+
+Travellers inform us, that savages, even in a very rude state, are
+found to divert themselves by imitating some common event in life: but
+it is not necessary to leave our own quiet homes to satisfy ourselves,
+that dramatic representations are natural to man. All children
+delight in mimicking action; many of their amusements consist in such
+performances, and are in every sense _plays_. It is curious, indeed,
+to observe at how early an age the young of the most imitative animal,
+man, begin to copy the actions of others; how soon the infant displays
+its intimate conviction of the great truth, that "all the world's a
+Stage." The baby does not imitate those acts only, that are useful
+and necessary to be learned; but it instinctively mocks useless and
+unimportant actions and unmeaning sounds, for its amusement, and for
+the mere pleasure of imitation, and is evidently much delighted
+when it is successful. The diversions of children are very commonly
+dramatic. When they are not occupied with their hoops, tops, and
+balls, or engaged in some artificial game, they amuse themselves in
+playing at soldiers, in being at school, or at church, in going to
+market, in receiving company; and they imitate the various employments
+of life with so much fidelity, that the theatrical critic, who
+delights in chaste acting, will often find less to censure in his own
+little servants in the nursery, than in his majesty's servants in a
+theatre-royal. When they are somewhat older they dramatize the stories
+they read; most boys have represented Robin Hood, or one of his
+merry-men, and every one has enacted the part of Robinson Crusoe,
+and his man Friday. We have heard of many extraordinary tastes and
+antipathies; but we never knew an instance of a young person, who
+was not delighted the first time he visited a theatre. The true
+enjoyment of life consists in action; and happiness, according to
+the peripatetic definition, is to be found in energy; it accords,
+therefore, with the nature and etymology of the drama, which is,
+in truth, not less natural than agreeable. Its grand divisions
+correspond, moreover, with those of time; the contemplation of the
+present is Comedy--mirth for the most part being connected with the
+present only--and the past and the future are the dominions of the
+Tragic muse.
+
+_GRECIAN THEATRES._
+
+The climate of Athens being one of the finest and most agreeable in
+the world, the Athenians passed the greatest part of their time in the
+open air; and their theatres, like those in the rest of Greece and
+in ancient Rome, had no other covering than the sky. Their structure
+accordingly differed greatly from that of a modern playhouse, and the
+representation in many respects was executed in a different manner.
+But we will mention those peculiarities only which are necessary to
+render our observations intelligible.
+
+The ancient theatres, in the first place, were on a much larger scale
+than any that have been constructed in later days. It would have
+been impossible, by reason of the magnitude of the edifice, and
+consequently of the stage, to have changed the scenes in the same
+manner as in our smaller buildings. The scene, as it was called, was
+a permanent structure, and resembled the front of Somerset House, of
+the Horse Guards, or the Tuileries, and was in the same style of
+architecture as the rest of the spacious edifice. There were three
+large gateways, through each of which a view of streets, or of woods,
+or of whatever was suitable to the action represented, was displayed;
+this painting was fixed upon a triangular frame, that turned on an
+axis, like a swivel seal, or ring, so that any one of the three
+sides might be presented to the spectators, and perhaps the two that
+were turned away might be covered with other subjects, if it were
+necessary. If parts of Regent Street, or of Whitehall, or the Mansion
+House, and the Bank of England, were shown through the openings in
+the fixed scene, it would be plain that the fable was intended to be
+referred to London; and it would be removed to Edinburgh, or Paris,
+if the more striking portions of those cities were thus exhibited. The
+front of the scene was broken by columns, by bays and promontories in
+the line of the building, which gave beauty and variety to the facade,
+and aided the deception produced by the paintings that were seen
+through the three openings. In the Roman Theatres there were commonly
+two considerable projections, like large bow-windows, or bastions,
+in the spaces between the apertures; this very uneven line afforded
+assistance to the plot, in enabling different parties to be on the
+stage at the same time, without seeing one another. The whole front of
+the stage was called the scene, or covered building, to distinguish it
+from the rest of the theatre, which was open to the air, except that
+a covered portico frequently ran round the semicircular part of the
+edifice at the back of the highest row of seats, which answered to
+our galleries, and was occupied, like them, by the gods, who stood in
+crowds upon the level floor of their celestial abodes.
+
+Immediately in front of the stage, as with us, was the orchestra;
+but it was of much larger dimensions, not only positively, but
+in proportion to the theatre. In our playhouses it is exclusively
+inhabited by fiddles and their fiddlers; the ancients appropriated it
+to more dignified purposes; for there stood the high altar of Bacchus,
+richly ornamented and elevated, and around it moved the sacred Chorus
+to solemn measures, in stately array and in magnificent vestments,
+with crowns and incense, chanting at intervals their songs, and
+occupied in their various rites, as we have before mentioned. It is
+one of the many instances of uninterrupted traditions, that this part
+of our theatres is still devoted to receive musicians, although,
+in comparison with their predecessors, they are of an ignoble and
+degenerate race.
+
+The use of masks was another remarkable peculiarity of the ancient
+acting. It has been conjectured, that the tragic mask was invented
+to conceal the face of the actor, which, in a small city like Athens,
+must have been known to the greater part of the audience, as vulgar
+in expression, and it sometimes would have brought to mind most
+unseasonably the remembrance of a life and of habits, that would have
+repelled all sympathy with the character which he was to personate. It
+would not have been endured, that a player should perform the part of
+a monarch in his ordinary dress, nor that of a hero with his own mean
+physiognomy. It is probable, also, that the likeness of every hero of
+tragedy was handed down in statues, medals, and paintings, or even in
+a series of masks; and that the countenance of Theseus, or of Ajax,
+was as well known to the spectators as the face of any of their
+contemporaries. Whenever a living character was introduced by name, as
+Cleon or Socrates, in the old comedy, we may suppose that the mask was
+a striking, although not a flattering portrait. We cannot doubt, that
+these masks were made with great care, and were skilfully painted,
+and finished with the nicest accuracy; for every art was brought to
+a focus in the Greek theatres. We must not imagine, like schoolboys,
+that the tragedies of Sophocles were performed at Athens in such
+rude masks as are exhibited in our music shops. We have some
+representations of them in antique sculptures and paintings, with
+features somewhat distorted, but of exquisite and inimitable beauty.
+
+_THE ROMAN STAGE._
+
+The Drama of ancient Rome possesses little of originality or interest.
+The word _Histrio_ is said to be of Etruscan origin; the Tuscans,
+therefore, had their theatres; but little information can now be
+gleaned respecting them. It was long before theatres were firmly and
+permanently established in Rome; but the love of these diversions
+gradually became too powerful for the censors, and the Romans grew,
+at last, nearly as fond of them as the Greeks. The latter, as St.
+Augustine informs us, did not consider the profession of a player as
+dishonourable: "Ipsos scenicos non turpes judicaverunt, sed dignos
+etiam praeclaris honoribus habuerunt."--_De Civ. Dei_. The more prudish
+Romans, however, were less tolerant; and we find in the Code various
+constitutions levelled against actors, and one law especially, which
+would not suit our senate, forbidding senators to marry actresses; but
+this was afterwards relaxed by Justinian, who had broken it himself.
+He permitted such marriages to take place on obtaining the consent
+of the emperor, and afterwards without, so that the lady quitted the
+stage, and changed her manner of life. The Romans, however, had at
+least enough of kindly feeling towards a Comedian to pray for the
+safety, or refection, of his soul after death; this is proved by a
+pleasant epitaph on a player, which is published in the collection
+of Gori:--
+
+ Pro jocis, quibus cunctos
+ oblectabat,
+ Si quid oblectamenti apud
+ vos est
+ Manes, insontem reficite
+ Animulam."
+
+_COSTUME._
+
+It is probable that the imagination of the spectator could without
+difficulty dispense with scenes, particularly if the surrounding
+objects were somewhat removed from the ordinary aspect of every-day
+things; if the performance were to take place, for example, in the
+hall of a college, or in a church.
+
+The costume that prevails at present almost universally, is so
+barbarous and mean, and it changes in so many minute particulars so
+frequently, that it is impossible to conceive the hero of a tragedy
+actually wearing such attire. A more picturesque dress seems therefore
+to be indispensable; but the essentials of the costume of any time,
+from which dramatic subjects could be taken, are by no means costly.
+All that is absolutely necessary in vestments to content the fancy,
+might be procured at a trifling expense, and the hero or heroine
+might be supplied with the ordinary apparel of Greece, or Rome, or of
+any other country, at a small price. We must carefully distinguish,
+however, between the necessaries and the luxuries of deception; the
+form, and sometimes the colour, demand a scrupulous accuracy; the
+texture is always unimportant. We may comprehend, therefore, how the
+old English theatre, notwithstanding the small outlay on decorations,
+by a strict attention to essentials, possessed considerable
+attractions; we may readily believe, that there were many companies
+who were maintained by their trade; "that all those companies got
+money and lived in reputation, especially those of the Blackfriars,
+who were men of grave and sober behaviour."
+
+_THE OLD DRAMA._
+
+Our literature is remarkably rich in old dramas; but they are of
+little use to the present age. Fastidiousness and hypocrisy have grown
+for many years, slowly but surely, and have at last arrived at such
+a pitch, that there is hardly a line in the works of our old comic
+writers, which is not reprobated as immoral, or at least vulgar.
+The excessive squeamishness of taste of the present day is very
+unfavourable to the genius of comedy, which demands a certain liberty
+and a freedom from restraints. This morbid delicacy is a great
+evil, for it renders the time of limitation in all comic writings
+exceedingly short. The ephemeral duration of the fashion, which is
+all the production of a man of wit can now enjoy, discourages authors.
+There is no motive to bestow much care on such compositions, and they
+fall below the ambition of men of real talents--for the best part of
+the reward of literary labour consists in the lasting admiration of
+posterity; and as some new fastidiousness will consign to oblivion, in
+a short time, every comic production, it is plain that such a reward
+cannot be reasonably anticipated. We are more completely, than any
+other nation, the victims of fashion. Everything here must either be
+in the last and newest fashion, or it must cease to be. The despotism
+of fashion in dress, in furniture, and in the pattern of the edges of
+plate, is perhaps inconvenient--it is, however, not very important;
+but it is a cruel grievance that it should interfere with and
+annihilate an entire department of our literature.
+
+_HOURS OF REPRESENTATION._
+
+Dramatic representations were formerly given, not only in Greece and
+Rome, but in England also, in the daytime, and in the open air. "The
+Globe, Fortune, and Bull, were large houses, and partly open to the
+weather, and there they always acted by daylight;" and plays were
+first acted in Spain in the open courts of great houses, which were
+sometimes covered, in whole or in part, with an awning to keep off the
+sun. The word _sale_, which is used as a stage direction, meaning not
+_exit_, but he enters, i.e. he comes out of the house into the open
+air, is an evidence of the old practice. We are inclined to think
+that the morning is more favourable to dramatic excellence than the
+evening. The daylight accords with the truth and sobriety of nature,
+and it is the season of cool judgment: the gilded, the painted, the
+tawdry, the meretricious--spangles and tinsel, and tarnished and
+glittering trumpery--demand the glare of candle-light and the shades
+of night. It is certain, that the best pieces were written for the
+day; and it is probable, that the best actors were those who performed
+whilst the sun was above the horizon. The childish trash which now
+occupies so large a portion of the public attention could not, it is
+evident, keep possession of the stage, if it were to be presented, not
+at ten o'clock at night, but twelve hours earlier. Much would need to
+be changed in the dresses, scenery, and decorations, and in many other
+respects, in the pieces, the solid merits of which would be able to
+undergo the severe ordeal; and if we consider _what_ changes would be
+required to adapt them to the altered hours, we shall find that they
+will be all in favour of good taste, and on the side of nature and
+simplicity. The day is a holy thing; Homer aptly calls it [Greek:
+ieron aemar], and it still retains something of the sacred simplicity
+of ancient times. It is, at all events, less sophisticated and
+polluted than the modern night, a period which is not devoted to
+wholesome sleep, but to various constraints and sufferings, called,
+in bitter mockery, Pleasure. The late evening, being a modern
+invention, is therefore devoted to fashion; to recur to the simple and
+pure in theatricals, it would probably be necessary to effect an
+escape from a period of time, which has never been employed in the
+full integrity of tasteful elegance; and thus to break the spell, by
+which the whole realm of fancy has long been bewitched. An absurd and
+inconvenient practice, which is almost peculiar to this country, of
+attending public places in that uncomfortable condition, which is
+technically called being dressed, but which is in truth, especially in
+females, being more or less naked and undressed, might more easily be
+dispensed with by day, and on that account, and for many other reasons,
+it would be less difficult to return home.
+
+_DECLINE OF THE DRAMA._
+
+It is not unlikely that the drama would be more successful if it were
+conducted more plainly, and in a less costly style. The perfection
+of the machinery and scenery of the modern theatres, seems to be
+unfavourable to the goodness of composition and acting; since the
+accessaries are so excellent, the opinion is encouraged, that the
+principals are less important, and may be neglected with impunity.
+The effect of good scenery at the first glance is, no doubt, very
+striking, but it soon passes away. If we saw a Garrick acting
+Shakspeare in a large hall, without any scenes, we should cease in a
+few minutes to be sensible of the want of them. We are almost disposed
+to believe, that exactly in proportion as scenery has been improved,
+good acting has declined.
+
+The present age is too much inclined to make human life, in every
+department, resemble a great lottery, in which there are a very few
+enormous prizes, and all the rest of the tickets are blanks. The
+stage has not escaped the evil we complain of; on the contrary, it is
+a striking instance of the mischief of this unequal partition. The
+public are of opinion, that it is impossible to reward a small number
+of actors too highly, and to pay the remainder at too low a rate;
+to neglect the latter enough, or to be sufficiently attentive to the
+former. On our stage, therefore, the inferior parts, and indeed all
+but one or two, and especially in tragedies, where the inequality
+is more intolerable, and more inexcusable, are sustained in a
+very inadequate manner. In foreign theatres, on the contrary, and
+especially in France, the whole performance is more equal, and
+consequently more agreeable. There is perhaps less difference than is
+commonly supposed between the best performers and those in the next
+class. Whatever the difference be, it is an inconvenience and an
+imperfection that ought to be palliated; but we aggravate it. The
+first-rate actor always does his best, because the audience expect it,
+and reward him with their applause; but no one cares for, or observes,
+the performer of second-rate talents: whether he be perfect in his
+part, and exert himself to the utmost, or be slovenly and negligent
+throughout, he is unpraised and unblamed. The general effect,
+therefore, of our tragedies, is very unsatisfactory; for that is far
+greater, where all the characters are tolerably well supported, than
+where there is one good actor, and all the other parts are inhumanly
+murdered. This latter is too often the case on our stage for with
+us art does little, nothing being taught systematically. The French
+players, on the contrary, are thoroughly drilled, and well instructed,
+in every requisite.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+BISHOPS' SLEEVES.
+
+To Joan it has been always conceded that she is as good as her lady
+in the dark, but it is only of late years that Joan has presumed to
+rival her mistress in the light. The high price of silks and satins
+protected the mistress against this usurpation of her servant in the
+broad day. Clad in these, she was safe, as in a coat of mail, from
+the attack of the domestic aspirant, who was seldom able to obtain
+possession of the outworks of fashion beyond an Irish poplin or a
+Norwich crape. The silks and satins were a wall of separation, as
+impenetrable as the lines of Torres Vedras, or the court hoop and
+petticoat of a drawing-room in the reign of George III. The new
+liberal commercial system has entirely changed the position of the
+parties. The cheapness of French silks, and other articles of dress,
+has placed female finery within the reach of even moderate wages, and
+a kitchen-wench will not condescend to sweep the room in any thing
+less than a robe of _Gros de Naples_ or _batiste_. Something must be
+done on the part of the mistress to arrest the progress of invasion,
+and assert the vested rights of the superior classes of female
+society. Invention is the first quality of genius, and to woman it
+is granted in a high degree. Thus gifted, the mistress, in a happy
+moment, conceived the idea of bishops' sleeves, an article of dress
+which precludes all hope or chance of imitation in the kitchen. A
+muffled cat might as well attempt to catch mice, as a maid-servant to
+go about the business of the house in bishops' sleeves. She could not
+remove the tea-equipage from the table without the risk of sweeping
+the china upon the floor; if she handed her master a plate, he must
+submit to have his head wrapped up in her sleeve; and what a figure
+must the cook present after preparing her soups and sauces! The female
+servant thus accoutred might, indeed, perform the office of a flapper,
+and disperse the flies; but although this was an office of importance
+among the ancients, it is dispensed with at a modern table. With the
+introduction of bishops' sleeves, the rivalry on the part of the maid
+must cease, and the mistress remain in undisturbed possession of her
+pre-eminence. Every friend of good order, every one who would retain
+each individual female in her proper place in society, and prevent its
+members from trespassing on each other, must, therefore, rejoice in
+bishops' sleeves; and devoutly pray, that differing from every other
+fashion that ever preceded it, the fashion of bishops' sleeves may
+endure for ever.--New Monthly Magazine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_IRIS LUNARIS._
+
+That rare and beautiful phenomenon the _Iris Lunaris_, or moonlight
+rainbow, was observed by Mr. W. Colbourne, jun. and a friend of his,
+from an eminence about a quarter of a mile from Sturminster, on the
+evening of the 14th instant, about twenty minutes before nine o'clock,
+in the north-west. Its northern limb first made its appearance;
+but after a few minutes, the complete curvature was distinctly and
+beautifully displayed. The altitude of its apex seemed to be nearly
+forty degrees. Nothing could exceed the beauty of the appearance of
+this arch of milky whiteness, contrasted as it was with the sable
+rain fraught clouds which formed the background to this interesting
+picture. It continued visible more than five minutes, and gradually
+disappeared at the western limb.
+
+RURIS.
+
+_Sturminster_.
+
+
+_WESTPHALIA HAMS_
+
+Are prepared in November and March. The Germans place them in deep
+tubs, which they cover with layers of salt and saltpetre, and with a
+few laurel leaves. They are left four or five days in this state, and
+are then completely covered with strong brine. At the end of three
+weeks they are taken out, and left to soak for twelve hours in clear
+well-water; they are then exposed, during three weeks, to a smoke
+produced by the branches of juniper.--_From the French._
+
+
+_LONDON PORTER._
+
+The bitter contained in porter, if taken wholly from hops, would
+require an average quantity of ten or twelve pounds to the quarter
+of malt, or about three pounds per barrel; so that if we consider the
+fluctuation in the price of hops, we shall not be surprised at the
+numerous substitutes, by which means the brewer can procure as much
+bitter for sixpence as would otherwise cost him a pound.
+
+Quassia is, probably, the most harmless of all the illegal bitters.
+The physicians prescribe the decoction to their patients to the extent
+of a quarter of an ounce of the bark a day--as much as the brewer was
+accustomed to put into nine gallons of his porter.--_Library of Useful
+Knowledge_.
+
+
+_BLACK GAME_
+
+Have increased greatly in the southern counties of Scotland and north
+of England within the last few years. It is a pretty general opinion,
+though an erroneous one, that they drive away the red grouse; the
+two species require very different kinds of cover, and will never
+interfere.--_Note to White's Selborne, by Sir W. Jardine_.
+
+
+_BIRDS OF PREY._
+
+All birds of prey are capable of sustaining the want of food and water
+for long periods, particularly the latter, but of which they also seem
+remarkably fond, drinking frequently in a state of nature, and during
+summer washing almost daily.--Ibid.
+
+
+_EGYPT._
+
+M. Champollion, in one of his recent letters, tells us that the whole
+of the island of Elephantina would hardly make a park fit for a good
+citizen of Paris, although certain modern chronologists would fain
+make it into a kingdom, in order to dispose of the ancient Egyptian
+dynasty of the Elephantines.
+
+In another letter dated March last, he says, "Our establishment is in
+the Valley of Kings, which may truly be called the abode of death, as
+not a blade of grass is to be found in it, nor any living creature,
+except the jackall and hyaena, which the night before last devoured, at
+the distance of 100 steps from our palace, the ass which had carried
+my Barabra servant Mahomet, during the time that he was agreeably
+passing the night of the Ramadan in our kitchen, which is in a royal
+tomb, entirely dilapidated."--_Translated in the Literary Gazette_.
+
+
+_BEET-ROOT SUGAR._
+
+The Anti-Slavery Monthly Reporter for September, among the advantages
+which will probably lead to the discontinuance of the cultivation of
+sugar by slaves, enumerates the rapid extension of the manufacture of
+beet-root sugar in France; a prelude, as the editor conceives, to its
+introduction into this country, and especially into Ireland.
+
+
+_DRY ROT._
+
+The American Commodore Barron recommends pumping air from the holds of
+vessels as a remedy against dry rot; the common mode of ventilation,
+by forcing pure air, or dashing water into the hold, being found an
+imperfect preservative.
+
+
+_ALLOYED IRON PLATE._
+
+Iron, coated with an alloy of tin and lead, so as to imitate tin
+plate, and not to rust, is now manufactured to a considerable
+extent in Paris; and its use for sugar-pans and boilers, and in the
+construction of roofs and gutters is expected to be very considerable.
+
+
+_INTERESTING QUESTION._
+
+Whether in the sea there be depths where no creature is able to
+live, or whether a boundary be assigned to organic life within those
+depths, cannot be ascertained. It, however, clearly appears from
+the observations made by Biot, and other naturalists, that fishes,
+according to their different dispositions, live in different depths of
+the ocean.--_From the German_.
+
+
+_CATS._
+
+In Kamtschatka, Greenland, Lapland, and Iceland, there are no cats,
+nor does the lynx in Europe extend farther than Norway.--Ibid.
+
+
+_VESSELS MADE OF THE PAPYRUS._
+
+The last number of the _Magazine of Natural History_ contains an
+article of great interest, on Vessels made of the Papyrus, illustrated
+with cuts, from which it appears that vessels have from the earliest
+times, been formed from the paper reed, and that they are at present
+in use in Egypt and Abyssinia. The author is John Hogg, Esq. M.A.
+F.L.S. &c. whose antiquarian attainments have greatly assisted him in
+the elucidation of this very curious subject.
+
+
+_REMAINS OF LA PEROUSE._[10]
+
+M. Derville, who commanded the Astrolabe, in the lute-voyage
+undertaken to search for traces of the expedition of La Perouse,
+considers the island, the summits of which were observed fifteen
+leagues to windward, by the frigates La Recherche and L'Esperance,
+which composed the expedition of Admiral D'Entrecasteaux, in 1793, and
+to which the name of the Isle de la Recherche was then given, to be
+the identical island, Vanikoro (or Vanicolo) on the shores of which
+the remnants of La Perouse's vessel have been found. The geographical
+position of latitude and longitude of the Isle of Vanikoro, agrees
+exactly with that of the island to which the name of Recherche was
+given by D'Entrecasteaux. That island was then confounded with the
+number of other islands, which had been seen by the expedition, and
+which it had been found impossible to examine in detail.--_Athenaeum_.
+
+
+_STUDY OF CHEMISTRY._
+
+Numbers there are, far above the lower classes, who still consider the
+elements of all things as consisting of earth, air, fire, and water;
+an error which classical-learning, no less than the expressions of
+common parlance, tends to perpetuate. Let us hope that the days are
+at hand, if not already arrived, in which the acquirement of such
+fundamental knowledge will be looked upon as at least equally
+necessary with the study of languages, and the cultivation of taste
+and imagination.--_Library of Useful Knowledge_.
+
+[Footnote 10: For a Report of this discovery, see MIRROR, vol. xiii p.
+409.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+THE GATHERER.
+
+ A snapper up of unconsidered trifles.--SHAKSPEARE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ORIGIN OF THE WORD WORSTED.
+
+Worsted, in the county of Norfolk, though formerly a town of
+considerable trade, and much celebrity, is now reduced to a village,
+and the manufactures, which obtained a name from the place, are
+removed to Norwich and its vicinity.
+
+Shakspeare has not been very courteous towards the _worsted gentry_;
+had he lived in our times, they might have _worsted_ him for a libel:
+he says in King Lear, "A base, proud, shallow, beggarly, three suited,
+hundred pound, filthy, worsted stocking knave."
+
+P.T.W.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I asked a poor man, how he did? He said, he was like a washball,
+always in decay.--_Swift_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CAT-FANCIER.
+
+Lady Morgan gives the following anecdote in her _Book of the Boudoir_.
+"The first day we had the honour of dining at the palace of the
+Archbishop of Taranto, at Naples, he said to me, you must pardon my
+passion for cats, (_la mia passione gattesca_) but I never exclude
+them from my dining-room, and you will find they make excellent
+company." Between the first and second course the door opened, and
+several enormously large and beautiful Angola cats were introduced by
+the names of Pantalone, Desdemona, Otello, &c. They took their places
+on chairs near the table, and were as silent, as quiet, as motionless,
+and as well behaved, as the most _bon ton_ table in London could
+require. On the bishop requesting one of the chaplains to help
+the Signora Desdemona, the butler stepped up to his lordship, and
+observed, "My Lord, La Signora Desdemona will prefer waiting for the
+roast."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ANCIENT FAMILY.
+
+There was much sound truth in the speech of a country lad to an idler,
+who boasted his ancient family: "_So much the worse for you_," said
+the peasant, as we ploughmen say, "_the older the seed the worse the
+crop_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At North Ferryby, in Yorkshire, the following very instructive
+lines, are inscribed on a handsome tablet to the memory of Sir T.
+Etherington, an Alderman of Hull, and late a resident in the above
+place:--
+
+"Taught of God we should view losses, sickness, pain, and death,
+but as the several trying stages by which a good man, like Joseph,
+is conducted from a tent to a court; sin his disease, Christ his
+physician, pain his medicine, the Bible his support, the grave his
+rest, and death itself an angel expressly sent to relieve the worn out
+labourer, or crown the faithful soldier!"
+
+Louis XIV. was presented with an epitaph by an indifferent poet, on
+the celebrated Moliere. "I would to God," said he, "that Moliere had
+brought me yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ON MEMORY.
+
+What an unknown and unspeakable happiness would it be to a man of
+judgment, and who is engaged in the pursuit of knowledge, if he had
+but a power of stamping all his own best sentiments upon his memory in
+some indelible characters; and if he could but imprint every valuable
+paragraph and sentiment of the most excellent authors he has read,
+upon his mind, with the same speed and facility with which he read
+them?--_Watts_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Upon a stone in St. Margaret's churchyard, at Lynn, in Norfolk, is the
+following inscription to the memory of William Scrivenor, Cook to the
+Corporation, who died in the year 1684:--
+
+ Alas! alas! _Will Scrivenor's_ dead, who by his art,
+ Could make death's skeleton edible in each part,
+ Mourn, squeamish stomachs, and ye curious palates,
+ You've lost your dainty dishes and your salades;
+ Mourn for yourselves, but not for him i'th' least
+ He's gone to taste of a more heav'nly feast.
+
+At Whitchingham Magna, in the same county, is the following epitaph to
+Thomas Alleyne, gent. who died Feb. 3, 1650, and his two wives:--
+
+ Death here advantage hath of life I spye,
+ One husband with two wives at once may lye.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A recent American newspaper has the following notice to its
+readers:--"The editor, printer, publisher, foreman, and oldest
+apprentice (_two_ in all,) are confined by sickness, and the whole
+establishment is left in the care of the _devil_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+LIMBIRD'S EDITION OF THE
+
+Following Novels is already Published:
+
+ s. d.
+ Mackenzie's Man of Feeling 0 6
+ Paul and Virginia 0 6
+ The Castle of Otranto 0 6
+ Almoran and Hamet 0 6
+ Elizabeth, or the Exiles of Siberia 0 6
+ The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne 0 6
+ Rasselas 0 8
+ The Old English Baron 0 9
+ Nature and Art 0 8
+ Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield 0 10
+ Sicilian Romance 1 0
+ The Man of the World 1 0
+ A Simple Story 1 4
+ Joseph Andrews 1 6
+ Humphry Clinker 1 8
+ The Romance of the Forest 1 8
+ The Italian 2 0
+ Zeluco, by Dr. Moore 2 6
+ Edward, by Dr. Moore 2 6
+ Roderick Random 2 6
+ The Mysteries of Udolpho 3 6
+ Peregrine Pickle 4 6
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Printed and Published by J. LIMBIRD 143, Strand, (near Somerset
+House,) London; sold by ERNEST FLEISCHER, 626, New Market, Leipsic;
+and by all Newsmen and Booksellers._
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mirror Of Literature, Amusement,
+And Instruction, No. 391, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, ***
+
+***** This file should be named 13359.txt or 13359.zip *****
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